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What Did The Dukes of Hazzard Really Say About the South?

alaskanseminole

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Oct 20, 2002
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Interesting this 2015 article mentions Gone With The Wind...straight out of today's 2020 headlines.

https://time.com/3944668/dukes-of-hazzard-tv-land-confederate-flag/

What Did The Dukes of Hazzard Really Say About the South?
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From left to right: John Schneider, Tom Wopat and Ben Jones as Bo Duke, Luke Duke and Cooter, respectively, in the TV series 'The Dukes of Hazzard', circa 1983.
Fotos International/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
By James Poniewozik
July 2, 2015 11:25 AM EDT
“Someday the mountain might get ’em / But the law never will.” –Waylon Jennings

In the end, it was neither the law nor the mountain that got them Duke Boys. It was TV Land, which pulled reruns of The Dukes of Hazzard–whose muscle car the General Lee was emblazoned with the Confederate flag–amid the controversy after the racist massacre in Charleston whose perpetrator had posed with the banner. (The network hasn’t given a reason, but the timing is tough to overlook.) The move prompted an outraged reaction from costar John Schneider: “The Dukes of Hazzard was and is no more a show seated in racism than Breaking Bad was a show seated in reality.”

From many other folks, I expect, the reaction was more like: “Someone was rerunning The Dukes of Hazzard“? If you grew up with the show as I did, your memories probably mostly involve jean shorts, cars jumping over ponds and “Enos, you dipstick!” Was there really anything else to it?

The show’s no longer on TV Land, but you can watch the pilot free on Amazon (where subsequent episodes are $1.99 a pop). So I did.

It is still as gloriously shiny and empty as a collectors’ metal lunchbox, a Southern-fried cartoon (which later became an actual cartoon) jacked up with ’70s T&A. The plot involves the Dukes hijacking a shipment of illicit slot machines from Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane in order to save an orphanage; there’s a climatic prison escape involving a blow-up doll. The dialogue includes Luke’s immortal line, “Bo, you drive like my Aunt Fanny whips apple butter!” (Sidebar: They’re cousins. Isn’t it our Aunt Fanny?) There are some notable performances–Sorrell Booke’s gluttinously avaricious Boss Hogg, especially, is like Big Daddy filtered through John Waters–but the sensibility is more Tennessee Ernie Ford than Tennessee Williams.


But Dukes is also a fascinating document of its time in history–both TV and American. Dukes premiered in 1979, at the height of jiggle TV (Three’s Company, Charlie’s Angels) and the Carter-era pop fascination with Southern good-ole-boy stories (Convoy, Smokey and the Bandit). It was still firmly the post-Watergate era, in which the suspicion of The Man became mainstream, and some of the most popular screen heroes were charming rogues whose broke laws enforced by corrupt authorities (Han Solo, say, or many of Burt Reynolds’ ’70s roles). But the Reagan revolution, and its embrace of America’s past, was just a year away.

So the first messages you get from Waylon Jennings’ theme song are also the most essential: Bo and Luke were “good ol’ boys” but they were also “fightin’ the system.” They were traditionalists, but they were also rebels. The Duke boys weren’t political, but they were at least small-c conservative–they stood for old ways and ancient traditions.

And the show came along at a time when conservatism was figuring out a different way to present itself, not as the establishment but as the underdogs, the outsiders–essentially repurposing the hippie ideas of the people vs. the power into the little folks vs. the big government. (First Blood, which came out a few years later, cast Reagan-era icon Rambo as a solder betrayed by the powers-that-be–including, like the Duke Boys, a venal Southern sheriff.) Even the little things, like the Dukes’ bow-hunting, are about anti-government individualism: poor folks need food, and “Jesse don’t take kindly to no government assistance. He’d rather starve.”

This isn’t William F. Buckley’s elitist conservatism, standing athwart history and yelling “Stop!” It’s leaning out the window of a Dodge Charger and yelling “YEEEEHAWWWW!”

So about that rebel flag. The Dukes pilot doesn’t talk about it directly, but it does allude to the Civil War, in a scene that explains why Uncle Jesse (Denver Pyle) gave up the 200-year-old family moonshine business to save his nephews from jail: “They fought everybody from the British to the Confederacy to the U.S. government to stay in it.” On the one hand, the Duke boys’ car is the General Lee; on the other hand, their ultimate enemy–Jefferson Davis Hogg–is named for the president of the CSA.

There’s nothing about slavery or states’ rights in there, but the mythmaking is familiar enough. The Dukes fly the Confederate flag, the setup assures us, but they’re outside any negative ideas you have about the Confederacy. They’re just little guys going up against a succession of big guys. Just’a good old boys! There’s nothing overt there about the flag–and the series didn’t dwell on it after that–but it’s very much part of the “history not hate” message that led, by now, to a majority of American whites seeing the flag as a symbol of pride while most black Americans see it as one of racism, according to a CNN poll.

Of course, Ben Jones–the former Georgia congressman who played the Dukes’ coconspirator Cooter and now owns a chain of Hazzard-themed museums–recently insisted, “in Hazzard County there was never any racism.” More accurately, there just wasn’t much race. The black characters in the pilot are limited to a construction worker with no lines in the first chase scene, and a small part for the Dukes’ friend Brodie–played by Champ Laidler, credited with two episodes in total. (Later, there would be a minor recurring role for the African American sheriff of a neighboring county.)


That’s not to say The Dukes of Hazzard was some kind of diabolical historical whitewash so much as it was a network TV series in 1979, trying to pull in viewers nationwide for a story about the South without touching anything that inflamed people a decade or a century before.

So Northerners get a funny story of backwoods tricks played on backwoods hicks, loaded up with getaway music and casual stereotypes. (“If you weren’t my cousin, I’d marry you,” Bo tells Daisy in the pilot. “When did that ever stop anyone in this family before?” she asks him.) Southerners get a populist version of pride and rebellion without baggage. The kids get car chases with CB radios. The grown-ups get Daisy on a roadside in a bikini and/or Bo and Luke with their shirts unbuttoned to the waist. (There are more ’70s hormones floating around Hazzard County than during happy hour at the Regal Beagle.)

It may be right to say that no one ever tried to write politics into The Dukes of Hazzard, racial or otherwise. (Though there was a lot more politics in the pilot than I would have thought: there’s an election going on for Sheriff, and Coltrane went crooked when he lost his pension after a local bond initiative got voted down.) But that doesn’t mean it isn’t about them all the same. You can’t feature the flag of Dixie and not be about the South and race, like it or not, even if only by passively feeding into the argument that the flag is only about family pride, good ol’ boys and good ol’ times.

Does that mean the show should have been pulled off the air? I am a white man from the North: there may be no opinion on the Confederate flag less relevant than mine. But as someone who believes that pop-culture history is important history all the same, I agree with the Washington Post’s Alyssa Rosenberg, who argued for reading and watching Gone with the Wind despite and because of its race problems, as “a valuable document of the way the Lost Cause curdled into a regional religion.” The Dukes of Hazzard–like any TV in our past–is part of us, whether we watch it or not.

But you’re also not a killjoy if you watch it, get a kick out of it–and yet are weirded out by the awesome stunt car flying the flag of slavery. The Duke boys, like Waylon told us, wouldn’t change if they could. But the times, they change anyway.
 
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Theme from "The Dukes of Hazzard" (Good Ol' Boys)
Waylon Jennings

Just the good ol' boys
Never meanin' no harm
Beats all you never saw
Been in trouble with the law
Since the day they was born

Staightenin' the curves
Flattenin' the hills
Someday the mountain might get 'em
But the law never will

Makin' their way
The only way they know how
That's just a little bit more
Than the law will allow

Makin' their way
The only way they know how yeah
That's just a little bit more
Than the law will allow

I'm a good ol' boy
You know my momma loves me
But she don't understand
They keep a showin' my hands
And not my face on TV
 
The Dukes of Hazzard was good, wholesome family entertainment. The Dukes were the Good Guys and Rosco and JD Hogg were the Bad Guys (who were also good guys sometimes and the two sides really did look out for one another). It was a fun, car chased filled, action show that was a lesson in morality about right and wrong, that's about it. Don't try to make it out to be something it never was.

ETA: Thanks, now I just pulled it up on Amazon Prime and am watching Season 1 Episode 9 - Deputy Dukes. Daisy looking fine. She's from Faith, SD.
 
My son was crazy for that show. His Friday Night go-to was the DoH and Incredible Hulk. Heaven for a three year old.
He'd be very embarassed now - he'll be 43 in September with kids of his own. :p
Why would that embarrass him? I'm the same age and thought it was cool. Didn't get into hulk tho. To dramatic. I liked the bozo show with the grand prize game. Of course Looney tunes. Mostly sports and playing outside for me.
 
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The Dukes of Hazzard was good, wholesome family entertainment. The Dukes were the Good Guys and Rosco and JD Hogg were the Bad Guys (who were also good guys sometimes and the two sides really did look out for one another). It was a fun, car chased filled, action show that was a lesson in morality about right and wrong, that's about it. Don't try to make it out to be something it never was.

ETA: Thanks, now I just pulled it up on Amazon Prime and am watching Season 1 Episode 9 - Deputy Dukes. Daisy looking fine. She's from Faith, SD.
The Dukes ran moonshine.
 
The Dukes ran moonshine.
Used to run moonshine. They was reformed. As of the start of the series they had given up running shine and Uncle Jessie had promised the U.S. Government to never run shine again as a condition of Bo and Luke's parole. First time the Dukes had not made moonshine in 200 years.
 
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My son was crazy for that show. His Friday Night go-to was the DoH and Incredible Hulk. Heaven for a three year old.
He'd be very embarassed now - he'll be 43 in September with kids of his own. :p
That was me and my younger brothers Friday night. We had to take a bath after supper before we could watch those, and damn sure we did! And my mom had a helluva time getting us to go to bed afterwards, as we'd be bouncing off the walls, reenacting all the shenanigans those darn duke boys and hulk seems to get in and out of. Hell I had a dukes of hazard lunch box in 1st grade. My brother named his bassett hound Flash. My friend had to get stitches in his head cause he tried to enter his parent's car through the window like the duke boys did. Its a damn shame they pulled that show.

Lost Sheep to Shepard, got your ears on? Bo peep is caught in a pickle and can use some help. The General Lee spins in a hasty 180, dust fills the air. The dukes ram through an old barn, boards and splinters fly everywhere with a "yeehaw", and just as they are about to jump a river, the screen pauses on their faces. Waylon's voice-over comes on questioning their judgment and fate. Then comes the classic guitar riff followed by "Just the good ol boys...". And 5 yr old me was rock hard as a diamond and ready to run through a brick wall.
 
The Dukes of Hazzard was good, wholesome family entertainment. The Dukes were the Good Guys and Rosco and JD Hogg were the Bad Guys (who were also good guys sometimes and the two sides really did look out for one another). It was a fun, car chased filled, action show that was a lesson in morality about right and wrong, that's about it. Don't try to make it out to be something it never was.

ETA: Thanks, now I just pulled it up on Amazon Prime and am watching Season 1 Episode 9 - Deputy Dukes. Daisy looking fine. She's from Faith, SD.
You'd better watch quickly because Amazon is considering pulling it from their inventory. Apparently it's a racist show.
 
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A stranger is just a friend the Dukes haven’t met yet- Uncle Jesse

I always thought of the show as having a liberal slant. A two modern day Robin Hood always looking out for poor folks. Hazard County must’ve had the fanciest orphanage in the South considering how much money the Dukes donated.
 
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I watched that show when I was 9 or 10. My friends and I would ride our bikes pretending to be the Duke boys or others. Jumping ramps and exploring trails in the woods.

I knew the show had a connection to the Civil war, but it never really entered my mind beyond the flag and the name General Lee. I knew a little about the war because my grandparents lived about 10 miles from Shiloh National Military Park.

Several years later I caught it in reruns and my 9 year old daughter watched it with me. She had not studied the Civil War at all, so she couldn’t make that connection. But she lived the show. She thought it was funny.

People just can’t enjoy anything anymore it seems.
 
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The episode where Rosco and Enos serve a no knock warrant and kill the unarmed black woman and Boss Hogg then tries to cover it up is particularly hard to watch nowadays.
 
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