704 Hauser

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704 Hauser
Format Situation comedy
Created by Norman Lear
Starring John Amos
Lynnie Godfrey
T.E. Russell
Maura Tierney
Country of origin Flag of the United States United States
No. of episodes 6
Production
Running time 30 minutes (per episode)
Broadcast
Original channel CBS
Chronology
Preceded by All in the Family
Related shows Maude
The Jeffersons
Archie Bunker's Place
Gloria
External links
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

704 Hauser is a short-lived CBS television series that aired in 1994. It is a spin-off of All in the Family (the final of many), and is built around the concept of an African American family, the Cumberbatches, moving into the former Queens home of Archie Bunker years after Bunker had sold the house. The All in the Family character Joey Stivic makes a cameo in the first episode.

Norman Lear created the series during the time when conservative talk radio was experiencing its initial upswing in popularity in the United States, particularly in the form of Rush Limbaugh. Lear felt that the time was right for a new show to explore some of the issues being discussed, and 704 Hauser was even more explicitly political than All in the Family.

John Amos, a veteran of the earlier Maude spin-off (itself a spin-off of All in the Family) Good Times, starred as Ernie Cumberbatch, while Lynnie Godfrey played his wife, Rose. T.E. Russell played their live-at-home son, Thurgood Marshall "Goodie" Cumberbatch.

The show featured a reversal of the original All in the Family formula. Ernie and Rose Cumberbatch were blue collar, working class Democrats, while their son Goodie was an assertive conservative activist in the vein of Armstrong Williams, Walter Williams, or Thomas Sowell. To add further conflict, Goodie's girlfriend was a white Jewish woman (played by Maura Tierney). Only six episodes were filmed, and only five were aired.

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