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Essay:Greatest Conservative TV Shows

476 bytes added, 18:07, September 10, 2017
''The Andy Griffith Show'' ran on CBS for eight seasons, with the first five seasons filmed in black-and-white before switching to color for the remaining seasons. It was a Top Ten performer throughout its run, finishing its final season as the number-one show on American television, and it continues to air in syndication to the present.
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|''Antiques Roadshow''
|1997-
|[[PBS]]
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|Shows the real value (financial and historical) of handcrafts and traditional, old-fashioned things and memorabilia. One of the rare conservative shows to air on the ultra-liberal PBS.
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|''The Apprentice''
|CBS
|TV-PG
|Based on the standup stand-up comedy of Ray Romano, this classic sitcom stars Romano as sportswriter Raymond Barone, following his comical everyday life with his wacky but faithful family. It celebrates family values as the characters overcome obstacles in a comic fashion.
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|''The Exorcist''
|ABC
|TV-PG
|A television producer narrates his life growing up in the 1980s in a reverent throwback to the pro-family sitcoms of the decade. Although the daughter seems to support Ronald Reagan's liberal rival [[Walter Mondale]] in one episode concerning the 1984 Presidential election, she still claims in the same epsiode episode "America is the greatest country", but politics is otherwise downplayed in the series, and the kids do learn over time conservative values such as hard work and getting along with their elders.
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|''Hand of God''
|ABC
|TV-PG
|Thomas Kretchmann played the late pontiff, from his non-violent nonviolent resistance to Nazism and Communism to his elevations as priest, archbishop, cardinal and his life as the titular pontiff. Includes his confrontation of El Salvador's archbishop [[Oscar Romero]] about Romero's leftist [[liberation theology]], just before Romero's tragic assassination.
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|''Hawaii-Five-O''
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==Debatable whether conservativeWhether Conservative==
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|TV 14
|Although the plotline does involve fighting and showing the evils of terrorism, it delves into several leftist plot points such as a gay couple in the CTU, a reference to the race card, and a dig against law enforcement. Overall, this politically correct reboot was cancelled after one season.
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|''Antiques Roadshow''
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|[[PBS]]
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|Shows the real value (financial and historical) of handcrafts and traditional, old-fashioned things and memorabilia. One of the rare conservative shows to air on the ultra-liberal PBS.
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|''Ash vs Evil Dead''
|TV-PG
|The good guys protecting the public from criminals, yet arguably promotes police state and big government. Filmed on location in many exotic and mundane locales with actual law enforcement agencies, both here in the U.S. and abroad.
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|[[Friends]]
|1994-2004
|NBC
|TV-PG
|The sitcom about six young adults living in New York City. It often promotes alcoholism and sex outside marriage. But on a conservative note, the show condemns smoking and drug usage, and somewhat a condemnation of the homosexual agenda, as Ross’s life was negatively affected by his wife being gay. On top of that two of the characters; Ross and Monica are broth rans sister, which could also give the show a pro-family aspect.
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|''Happy Tree Friends''
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