The golden age of black television — the late 1960s to 1970s — introduced us to something more than just seeing ourselves on television. It provided the outlet for black families and communities to become comfortable with seeing various representations of ourselves on the major networks, in the evenings when everyone was at home and watching television. From the single working mom that was Julia, to the South Central L.A. junk yard of Sanford & Son, to the Chicago projects in Good Times, and then the nouveaux riche family in The Jeffersons, the prime-time sitcom shows were a reflection of the hopes we had for ourselves – hopes of seeing us succeed.
Suddenly, the concept of ‘moving on up’ was not just a theme song, it was our expectation as a society, and as a country. The idea of being upwardly mobile was accepted quickly by black audiences, and television would begin to reflect the change in mainstream perception of black American class and wealth as well. The Jeffersons allowed for the world to start seeing more of us in places like the Brooklyn brownstone of The Cosby Show and later, the mansion in The Fresh Prince of Bel Air. No longer could the black character in a sitcom serve solely as comedic relief. There were new issues to be introduced, and wealth, class and upward mobility could not be left out of the conversation.
The character of George Jefferson, and the late actor who played him, Sherman Hemsley, represented a lot of firsts. He was the first successful black millionaire on television, though the show was adamant in maintaining the humble aspects of his family-oriented and stubborn persona.
According to the Archive of American Television, The Jeffersons became one of only three mainstream shows by the 1970s to highlight blacks in leading roles, following the cancellation of slapstick duo Amos and Andy in 1953. It was the first show to feature an interracial couple, and became the longest running black sitcom on mainstream television, lasting 11 seasons before its cancellation in 1985.
In the wake of its success, by the 1980s we had been introduced to The Cosby Show, Diff’rent Strokes, Webster, 227 and plenty of other shows that chronicled the black American experience.
But just as it seemed that mainstream American television had openly embraced these programs (suddenly there were over 50 shows scattered around television featuring black leads and ensemble casts), by the 1990s the downfall happened just as quickly. Shows like The Cosby Show, which single-handedly revived the American sitcom, were ousted from network television and replaced with shows like Friends and Seinfeld. And mainstream America wanted more of those types of shows following their evening news programs. All of the networks – NBC, ABC, and CBS had largely dropped their black sitcoms by the year 2000.
Newer networks like Fox, the WB and UPN (which later merged to become The CW) capitalized on the new abundance of available black viewers for their late 90s programming, and initially shows like Martin, Girlfriends and Living Single brought in the kinds of ratings that could sustain their evening line-ups. But eventually the WB was gone, UPN was gone, FOX looked different, and the shows didn’t survive.
The New York Times writes that from 1997 to the year 2001, the number of successful black sitcoms had dropped from 15 to six. The last survivors included The Steve Harvey Show, Moesha, The Bernie Mac Show, The Parkers, The Jamie Foxx Show, Girlfriends and The Hughleys. Today, there is one to rule them all — Tyler Perry’s House of Payne, which may eventually surpass The Jeffersons as the longest running black situation comedy in television history. Perry is also behind TBS’ For Better or Worse, but the steady disinterest in situation comedies altogether has proved to be especially devastating to black programs aiming for a mainstream or network audience.
The effort to revive the interest in these shows has been mildly successful on BET with The Game, Reed Between the Lines and Let’s Stay Together — and also on TBS with Perry’s shows, Ice Cube’s Are We There Yet? and animated Family Guy spin-off The Cleveland Show (though this doesn’t feature an all-black voice cast), but the fact that these are particularly niche cable channels can’t be ignored. The abundance of reality television — particularly the types of shows that have struck a chord with black audiences — has also proven to be a hindrance to the success of scripted black television.
There isn’t a clear remedy, but much of the fault lies in the lack of demand. Looking back, the black community was quick to unite around the need for change in the way we were portrayed. With the onslaught of the civil rights movement came the need for a shift in the way blacks were portrayed on television — and the networks were receptive to the criticism.
Through the 70s, what shows like The Jeffersons were able to convey were hopes, dreams and struggles to attain those things that signified our success. What The Cosby Show brought to the 80s and 90s was an unprecedented window into the black family like we’d never been seen before – as normal, for lack of better words.
And what we have on television today simply has not been able to ignite the same curiosity that keeps us interested in ourselves, and America interested in us, like we have done for the past three decades.