I have fond memories of Married... With Children. I was still a kid when it aired, and when I was a teen and in my early 20's I was a shitlib, but I still loved Al Bundy. I just hope that that the showrunner isn't a faggot like Todd Phillips who resents the popularity of the character and the audience for 'not understanding satire'. Hell, that was the conclusion to a long running gag on the show, 'Psycho Dad'. It was Al Bundy's favorite tv show about a man who would be the avatar of 'toxic masculinity'. Al wrote a letter to the actor of the show, the actor was appalled that someone idolized the character, and the actor then quit the show while denouncing the fans, resulting in it's cancelation.
Actually it is Marcy that caused the cancellation of Psycho Dad. This drove Al to protest the cancellation which included protesting in front of a local station, the letter that caused the actor to denounce the character, and a trip to Washington to speak before the US Senate. It also includes a line from Officer Dan about violence in Chicago that rings true today.
I would love to see Al debate Kamala...his every response? well, You're a chicken!
Actually, I think Al Bundy would make a passionate speech about why he thinks women shouldn't be running this country.
I have fond memories of Married... With Children. I was still a kid when it aired, and when I was a teen and in my early 20's I was a shitlib, but I still loved Al Bundy. I just hope that that the showrunner isn't a faggot like Todd Phillips who resents the popularity of the character and the audience for 'not understanding satire'. Hell, that was the conclusion to a long running gag on the show, 'Psycho Dad'. It was Al Bundy's favorite tv show about a man who would be the avatar of 'toxic masculinity'. Al wrote a letter to the actor of the show, the actor was appalled that someone idolized the character, and the actor then quit the show while denouncing the fans, resulting in it's cancelation.
Actually it is Marcy that caused the cancellation of Psycho Dad. This drove Al to protest the cancellation which included protesting in front of a local station, the letter that caused the actor to denounce the character, and a trip to Washington to speak before the US Senate. It also includes a line from Officer Dan about violence in Chicago that rings true today.
Ah yes, that's right. It's been like 20 years since I've really watched it.
No ma’am is all Al needs to say.