clapham_gull
Legacy Fan
- Aug 20, 2003
- 25,877
Could "Till death us do part" be made now?
Which is a fascinating comment in itself, because it opens the debate about what the writer meant, how it was received by a live audience and how it was further received when broadcast into homes.
Obviously the writer wasn't racist and the joke was on the racist Alf Garnett.
However, the problem was (as is the problem with a number of programmes of that era) they were filmed live in front of a 60s studio audience.
Unfortunately the audience are laughing at the racist jokes and not the person telling them.
Some writers like to separate what they meant from the audience reaction. Unfortunately (in a lot of older sitcoms) the response they claimed didn't want is baked in and becomes part of the performance itself.
That's why a number of sitcoms have been edited or aren't shown any more on broadcast TV.
So the answer to your question is yes, but not as a sitcom with a live audience broadcast to the nation.