what have we always said is the most important thing? breakfast. family. family. yeah. family is key to the sitcom mama! it s something that we all can relate to. shake, shake, shake up the in these people s homes for years. you re a part of the family. one good thing about moving here is i have no friends and no distractions. that s why i got all grandma, what does fonzie say? hey. the family sitcom brings people together in a really unexpected way. there s so many different dynamics at work in families. i want you here. it will give us a chance to get reacquainted. that implies we are acquainted at one point. there s a lot of pain. a lot of laughter. you sort of recognize your dynamic in there and go well, their family s just as crazy as mine. i don t care who kissed who and who s got a pimple on her head and who is wearing an outrageously inappropriate dress. we are going to get together and act like a normal family for one tenth of
a much more sort of safe kind of here s us living every day, the black-ish family is very unapologetic about their blackness in ways that really hadn t been seen on prime-time television before. so next saturday, when you turn 13, you re becoming a man, too, a black man. because i m throwing you an african rites of passage ceremony. that does not sound as fun. no, it does not. black-ish was a show that was really good about talking about individual social issues in a way that we hadn t really seen since norman lear. and that leads us right up to the reboot of norman lear s 1970s classic, one day at a time. ugh, i get it, we re cuban. azucar! it follows three generations of latinas. come on! everything that we would get into as a normal family, but then it also tackles a lot of things that are going on in the world that normally are seen as taboo like queer issues. where are we with the idea telling him? who thinks it s a good idea to greet my latino ve