adbright

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

friction from the class system in America

friction from the class system in America

edward w pritchard


There is a hierarchy in America based on wealth. No better place to look for the ramifications of the invisible timeless war between rich and poor in America than in Mayberry, North Carolina where the characters were effected day to day in their choice of career, marriage and social position by how much money their Daddy had or the amount of money they owned and parked in the local bank.

Delectable Thelma Lou worked at some sort of office, had a tidy house and had weekends free for picnics, movies with friends or cooking for church charities.[1] In the end however, she refused to marry poor deputy sheriff Barney Fife. Was it because of wealth or was it Fife's cold feet in committing to marriage with a woman with secret family roots going back to slave holding times. Fife dreamed of owning a fine Home with Thelma with a private study for him with no women allowed within and a proper kitchen for her but in the end the union never occurred; a Marxist interpretation would look for a class distinction because of money causing the disruption.

Of course Andy Taylor humble Sheriff wanted wealthy Miss Peggy [McMillan] but was intimidated by her Daddy's immense wealth and the unknown beaus who rode with her in her fancy automobile, bought with her Father's immense wealth. Sheriff Taylor settled for a school teacher for a second wife.

Miss Peggy's wealth haunted choir director John McMasters as well:


John Mc Masters, the secret life of a choir director in Mayberry North Carolina

fiction
edward w pritchard

A work of parody. No copy right infringement is intended of characters created by Mr. Andrew Griffith.

It's difficult to be stuck in a small town in the middle of North Carolina. It's not even on the ocean. First working as a desk clerk at a very small hotel and then as the choir director. As choir director we always do traditional things and for excitement we let a farmer/moonshiner or a gas station mechanic sing solo.

The reason I started the choir director job was to meet girls. Not that there are many here to meet. The local Sheriff gets all the desirable girls here anyway. The Sheriff, what can I say about a guy who shoots rats at the dump for fun. Still he sings well and plays the guitar.

My perversion started at the try outs for the founders day pageant. I became fixated on women wearing a bonnet, you know the kind of hat proper women wore in the late 1700's. I had each woman here in town who auditioned for the best part in the pageant as the leading female citizen of our town just before the battle of Mayberry read in character by wearing an early pioneer style dress and a bonnet. It's the bonnet that has come to possess my thoughts.

Clara E. widow should have got the part for she has the most acting talent and she plays piano. I didn't pick Clara for the lead, begging off that I needed her at piano and she bought that. Miss Bee was just ordinary at tryouts so I selected her to be in charge of cooking pies and cakes.

I picked the nurse Miss Peggy as the female lead. She sings well but I picked Peggy for how she looked in that bonnet. I think about her all the time now, years later even after she left town. I didn't get anywhere with Peggy. Miss Peggy dated that Sheriff I mentioned earlier who got all the women here. Sometimes I fantasize about Miss Peggy coming by and cooking me dinner and us eating by candle light. After we would sit on the porch and sing together.

That was a long time ago. I live in a much bigger City now. I moved to Morgan town WVA for a while but now I am in Mt. Pilot, just twelve miles from Mayberry, but it seems worlds apart. Looking back now all that happened in Mayberry seems less than real to me at times.
end

a Marxist interpretation of  television history by poor but aspiring author ed pritchard

[1] coming soon by author pritchard " religious divide in Mayberry, North Carolina, the role of the 30 years war in seventeenth century Germany on urban development in the American post civil war South."also coming soon by same author "Buddhism's eight fold path, right occupation and job choice in Mayberry, North Carolina."
 

No comments:

Post a Comment