Sunday, June 26, 2016

Tellevision Westerns



The Lone Ranger and Tonto


Bat Masterson
The Cartwrights - Bonanza
Mark andLLucas McCain - The Rifleman
The Cisco Kid and Pancho


Annie Oakley

    From 1951 thru 1970 over 100 western series galloped across the screens of our TV's. Many were short-lived while others hung around for a while; then there were those that became immortal in our memories. All of them were the morality plays of our youth; teaching us that good invariably triumphs over evil

    As Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, The Lone Ranger, The Cisco Kid and others fought the weekly foe they remained true to their ethic of honesty and fair play. As a result "Cowboys & Indians" was a popular pastime of our youth. They were a large part of the popular culture of the day.

Gil Favor and Rowdy Yates - Rawhide
    Yet, in later years self-appointed experts deemed the genre too violent for young minds, failing to recognize that these plays went a long way toward instilling a moral ethic in us far better than any lecture ever could. An ethic that is missing in far too many today.

    

Paladin - Have Gun Will Travel
While there may have been violence, very seldom was anyone ever killed. The Lone Ranger only shot to wound. Roy Rogers killed a man in only one movie (Dark Command). Other western stars shot a lot of bullets but invariably subdued the villain by using their fists, and brought them to the courts for judgement.

    Later westerns such as Bonanza stressed the strength that exists in family unity. Even the adult western, Gunsmoke, was about an ordinary man forced by circumstances to perform extraordinary tasks in a rapidly changing environment.

Cheyenne Bodie
    From 26 Men, about the Arizona Rangers, to Zorro the westerns managed to cover the entire range of human emotions, conflicts and ethical choices it's possible for an individual to encounter in their lifetime. Perhaps the line between good and evil was too sharply drawn for some people because by the time the end of the 60's loomed, various shades of grey were beginning to be introduced into an ambiguous morality and it signaled the death knell for the venerable western on TV.

    As we grew older and went on to high school and college we left these shows behind and pursued other things but our memories hold dear those exciting adventures and as a result they continue to live on. So, "Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear...."

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