1971
BUNKER HUMOR
It wasn't as if CBS didn't know what it had on its hands. Just
before the first episode of All in the Family on Jan. 12, the network
nervously announced that the show ''seeks to throw a humorous
spotlight on our frailties, prejudices, and concerns to show, in a
mature fashion, just how absurd they are.'' Then America got a load of
Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor), a bigoted, beer-bellied lout
ranting about ''spades,'' ''spics,'' and ''hebes,'' baiting his daughter
(Sally Struthers) and meatheaded son-in-law (Rob Reiner), all the
while catered to by his wifty but wise wife, Edith (Jean Stapleton).
A culture hero was born, and closed-minded Archie opened a lot of
eyes.
1971
A COP'S SUDDEN IMPACT
Long before the Terminator, audiences thrilled to a different
killing machine: the Clinterrogator. Same shades, same squint, but
much more of a way with words. Witness this monologue from Dirty
Harry: ''I know what you're thinking. Did he fire six shots or only
five? I've kind of lost track myself. But being that this is a .44
Magnum, the most powerful gun in the world, and would blow your head
clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question: Do I feel lucky?
Well, do you, punk?'' The gun was empty, but Eastwood's bravado
provided ammo for two decades of tough screen cops.
1972
THE STONES' BLAST-OFF BLUES
Exile on Main Street is the ultimate Rolling Stones album (a
double, in the pre-CD era). Meanspirited and druggy, even with a song
called ''Happy,'' the band exuded a sexy, bluesy, arrogant attitude
throughout. Having outlasted the Beatles and their own doomed 1969
Altamont concert, the Stones never rocked harder than on ''Rip This
Joint,'' never seemed more resigned to hopelessness than on ''I Just
Want to See His Face.'' At the time, Exile was widely perceived as a
downer; now it plays like a masterpiece.
1972
PORN GOES VERY PUBLIC
It was filmed for $25,000 over six days in Florida. Its stars
were Linda Boreman and Herbert Streicher, better known by their noms
de porn Linda Lovelace and Harry Reems and for their anatomical
accomplishments. When Deep Throat opened, judges played the critic's
role: ''A feast of carrion and squalor,'' said one. But viewers lined
up, and not just guys in raincoats. As trials raged on, Deep Throatmade $25 million, brought porn into the mainstream long before video
stores made it easy, and became raw-dical chic: Warren Beatty, Mike
Nichols, and Alan Dershowitz supported Reems when he was charged
with obscenity-conspiracy. Naturally, he got off.
1973
BEWITCHED, BEDEVILED, AND BOFFO
Little girls are made of sugar and spice and everything nice?
Yeah, sure tell us another. In The Exorcist the movie that
outgrossed its competitors, grossed out its audiences, opened a
market for hundreds of grade-Z horror flicks, and still snagged a
Best Picture nomination Linda Blair was made of different
ingredients: As little devil Regan MacNeil, she was composed, in
equal parts, of pea soup, pee, and pee-eeeuuuuww! As problem children
go, Regan was quite a specimen, your basic barfing, bed-levitating,
mooing, cursing, downright nasty kid with the devil inside her. But
say this-she could turn a head 360 degrees.


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