Over half of American marriages end in divorce. Should mainstream media change the way
that it depicts the traditional family unit, to incorporate divorce and second marriages?
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The depiction of divorce in popular media has gone through a huge shift throughout recent many years. This shift concurs with an adjustment of cultural assumptions about divorce and family esteems.
- Be that as it may, mentalities about divorce to a great extent stay negative, no matter what society's overall acknowledgment of it.
- During when divorce was to a great extent viewed as a taboo in the public arena, it was normal to see popular media depict a customary family as great, while families impacted by divorce were described as broken.
- Since the 1950s, popular television programs revolved around the idea of a working nuclear family, and the significance of family esteems, for example, "Leave it to Beaver," "Father Knows Best," and, surprisingly, the more f r e a k i s h show, "The Adams Family."
- Conversely, divorce has frequently been depicted as an abnormal situation.
- A few films and television shows portray divorce as something to keep away from or "fix." For example, in the 1961 film "The Parent Trap," the story centers around the youngsters' endeavors to revive their divorced guardians' affection, finishing up with their choice to remarry.
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