I know. But they haven't evolved much.The Simpsons and Family Guy are still on.
I know. But they haven't evolved much.The Simpsons and Family Guy are still on.
Unless it's bloody obvious, like that was then.Unless the original writer wants to chime in, it is all open to interpretation. Being born in 1971, I can really only interpret the line through the world I grew up in.
Unless it's bloody obvious, like that was then.
Oh, please, it's a joke about whose going to wear the pants in the family after they're married (to use a contemporary colloquialism from the same era as the joke was written.)Obviously it isn’t as obvious as you want it to be or else folks wouldn’t have differing interpretations.
Unless it's bloody obvious, like that was then.
I see people still trying to judge a 1966 line of dialog by 2025 standards.
In 1966, "temporarily at least, I am still your superior officer" was a joke about wives casting off the submissive, demure guise used to "catch" their man, and becoming "the boss" of the house once they were married.
I grew up with the show and first saw it just a few years after the episode was made. It's not a "bloody obvious" joke. It can absolutely be taken more than one way. My sister and I discussed it when we were younger and she still shakes her head at it because of how she interprets the line.Oh, please, it's a joke about whose going to wear the pants in the family after they're married (to use a contemporary colloquialism from the same era as the joke was written.)
Really, fans will squabble over anything here.
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