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  • THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW (CBS, 1960-1968) is not only Andy Griffith's first TV show, but his best. Griffith, who made his mark on Broadway, TV and screen adaptation of NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS, might have turned that into a weekly comedy series. Instead, Griffith was offered an original premise about the life and times of a southern sheriff in Mayberry. With the show's opening shows off a father and his young son walking towards the pond with fishing poles carried over their shoulders to whistling score, "The Fishing Hole," it's become one of those rare cases where a series, lasting eight successful seasons, to resume that same basic introduction. There were some minor changes over the years where it converted from black and white to color, and the growth of the sheriff's young son. During its eight seasons, this wholesome sit-com not only centered upon Sheriff Andy Taylor (Andy Griffith), but on the citizens of Mayberry, North Carolina. Naturally a series with such a lengthy run would go through some dramatic or necessary changes, such as the loss of certain characters, (Deputy Barney Fife), and addition of others (Goober Pyle, Howard Sprague), having one basic show with two different formats.

    Andy Taylor is described as an easy-going, sometimes laid back sheriff seldom in complete uniform, unlike his bumbling deputy, Barney Fife, who not only dresses accordingly, ranging from tie, hat and a gun in his holster containing one bullet.going strictly by the book of the law. Together Andy and Barney team up for some humorous police work with Andy playing the straight man, and Barney providing his quota of laughs. At times, Barney becomes the bumbling fool in the eyes of the people. It is up to Andy to prove them wrong by helping Barney restore his confidence usually by giving Barney the credit actually due to the sheriff himself. Aside from their professions in keeping law and order in Mayberry, certain episodes would set focus on their personal lives, particularly on Andy, a widower/ father to his young son named Opie (Ronny Howard), cared for at home by his matron Aunt Bee (Frances Bavier). The first season to THE GRIFFITH SHOW did find Andy romantically involved with Ellie Walker (Elinor Donahue), the lady druggist. Seasons two and three found Andy sporadically having new love interests. By the time he acquired one in Helen Crump (Aneta Corsaut), Opie's school teacher, Andy lost his strong Southern accent for more natural tone. As for Barney, he's a carefree bachelor with his heart set on Thelma Lou (Betty Lynn). Unlike Andy (who would make Helen his bride in the premiere spin off series of MAYBERRY RFD in 1968), Barney would never marry.

    After five seasons of black and white episodes, the remaining three seasons converted to color. Aside from that change, the Barney Fife character was gone, but not forever, making occasional returns once or twice a year for old times' sake. During Barney's absence, Andy acquired a substitute deputy, Warren (Jack Burns), written out of the show after 12 episodes, leaving Andy to sheriff about town alone and deputy position permanently vacant. With passage in time, Andy's police work would become less frequent, having ts main focus more on Andy's home-life and citizens of Mayberry. Otis (Hal Smith), the town drunk, would eventually be phased out.

    While normally programs such as this losing a key supporting character such as Don Knotts would suffer in the ratings, THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW continued to prosper for the next three years, becoming the number one show by the time Griffith gave up his badge by the end of the eighth season (1968). By then, the show acquired additional characters to the lineup: Goober Pyle (George Lindsay), Howard Sprague (Jack Dodson) and handyman, Emmett Clark (Paul Hartman), who replaced by Floyd, the Barber (Howard McNear), upon his death during the 1967-68 season; Clara Jackson, later Edwards (Hope Summers), Bee's closest friend; all new characters part of the Mayberry family.

    What has become the secret to the success of THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW? Was it the father and son relationship between Andy and Opie, (who affectionately calls addresses him as "Paw.")? The chemistry between best friends Andy and Barney? Or the now familiar faces and classic characters who took part as citizens of Mayberry that made the show special? One thing for sure, there's nothing dated about THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW. It could be set anywhere at anytime, since it hardly dealt with issues or political issues of the day.

    During its initial years, THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW played funny without becoming too silly, except in some cases with the wild and crazy Ernest T. Bass (Howard Morris). The final years dealt more on serious issues without getting overly sentimental, though some early ones, "Opie the Birdman" (1962) and "Aunt Bee's Romance" (1964) went strictly on the dramatic side. The final three seasons moved towards a more wholesome, down to earth setting, even modernizing Aunt Bee from homemaker to independent woman acquiring both a driver's and pilot's license, and the teenage Opie having new friends (Johnny Paul and then Arnold), interests in girls and becoming part a rock and roll band.

    While the Andy Taylor character had been originally introduced in an episode of MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY (1959) starring Danny Thomas, characters introduced on THE GRIFFITH SHOW spawned spin-offs as well: Gomer Pyle (Jim Nabors), for GOMER PYLE, USMC, and Sam Jones (Ken Berry) for MAYBERRY, RFD.

    After THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW ended its run in 1968, it has never gone from view. Many of its 249 episodes in reruns have become favorites, even classics, especially those involving Barney Fife. These and other shows can still be seen and appreciate in its seasonal package on DVD or countless other cable TV channels. (****)
  • In celebration of the show's anniversary this was one of the most endearing sitcoms in television history for the eight seasons that it ran on CBS. The basis came from an episode of "Make Room For Daddy",aka "The Danny Thomas Show" titled "Danny In Mayberry"(Season 7,Episode 20) that originally aired on February 15, 1960. On the strength of that episode which was a bonafide hit the producers Sheldon Leonard along with Danny Thomas and Ronald Jacobs(who served as executive producers)gave the greenlight for this series which was placed on CBS' Monday night prime-time schedule producing a total of 249 episodes that ran from October 3, 1960 until the final episode of the series on April 1, 1968. Out of the 249 episodes,only 159(Seasons 1 thru 5)were in black and white from October 3, 1960 until May 3, 1965. Seasons 6 thru 8 produced 90 episodes in color from September 13, 1965 until April 1, 1968. Only Danny Thomas, Sheldon Leonard, Ronald Jacobs and Aaron Ruben were the producers from Seasons 1 thru 5. Bob Ross was the producer for Seasons 6 thru 8. The show launched two spin-offs "Gomer Pyle,USMC" (1964-1969),and "Mayberry RFD"(1968-1971). Throughout its eight-year run the show won six Emmys and was nominated for 8 Emmys including Best Comedy Series. Between 1961,1962,1963,1966 and 1967 actor Don Knotts won back-to-back Emmys for Outstanding Performance in a Supported Role for Prime-Time as Deputy Barney Fife for the episodes "The Return of Barney Fife"(Season 6, Episode 17-airdate January 10, 1966),and for the episode "Barney Comes To Mayberry"(Season 7, Episode 19-airdate January 23, 1967). Actress Frances Bavier(Aunt Bee) won the Emmy in 1966 for Best Supporting Actress for Outstanding Role in a Prime Time Series. The show's sponsors throughout it's run were The General Foods Corporation and the Ford Motor Company. The Chrysler Corporation sponsored its final season.

    The Andy Griffith Show was just that: the sheriff with a heart of gold and a big smile to match along bringing the moral values and lessons that you see in today's shows of this magnitude or any other,and it still holds up to this day. What really made that show what it is brings up to the great writing and storytelling,combining that with good ole North Carolina humor along with country comedy and add just a touch of Southern Gothic for a good measure. What really made that show hum like a fine motor for the first five seasons was the feisty spit and polish and by the book lawman deputy Barney Fife played with great precision and timing by Don Knotts who won five emmys for his work on that series. What really brought that show out was the father and son relationship of Sheriff Taylor and his son Opie(played by Ron Howard). Andy taught Opie valuable lessons on character and important values and morals as well as development of him from a boy into manhood. The characters that really brought that show out were certain individuals the gave Sheriff Taylor major fits(and Barney as well)like Goober,his cousin Gomer,and the nuttiest of them all: Ernest T. Bass,as well as Otis the town drunkard. After Knotts left the show to pursue other interests in 1965,the show wasn't the same as it was,but it never gave up on interest on the situations that went on in Mayberry. The black and white episodes were simply the greatest ever with Knotts in them,but kinda changed course when the show went to color. One of my all time best ever. Interesting Note on Andy Griffith: When the show left the airwaves on April 1, 1968 on the CBS network,it was the #1 show on television. *Commentary revised on December 10, 2015 in collaboration with the show's golden anniversary.
  • Andy Griffith starred as a small town sheriff who also married a few people as justice of the peace. There were more marriages in Mayberry than crime, the kind of idyllic small town that America so prizes.

    Sheriff Andy Taylor's immediate family were his son Opie played by young Ron Howard and his Aunt Bea who was played by Frances Bavier. Andy was a widower and his great aunt provided the female mother figure in the home for Opie.

    In law enforcement Andy was aided and abetted by his deputy Barney Fife played by Don Knotts. The situations with Griffith and Knotts provided the base of the humor there with Knotts getting so officious and Andy just solving problems with humor and a kind word.

    Gradually we met the rest of Mayberry people like Howard McNear the barber, George Lindsey the gas station owner, Jack Dotson the town clerk. Charles Watts was the mayor and when he died Mayberry got a new mayor in Parley Baer.

    And there was Gomer Pyle and Jim Nabors proved so popular that he got a series of his own when he joined the Marines. My favorite was Hal Smith as Otis Campbell the town drunk. He was by far the jail's steadiest customer. Griffith just let him check in and lock himself in to sleep off a toot.

    The show lost something when Don Knotts left for the big screen and Jim Nabors got his own show. For the second half of its run it was never the same.

    Still for the richness in characters from small town America you could never beat the Andy Griffith Show.
  • I love this show so much. I'm 26 so I didn't get to see it when it originally aired. However I've watched this show my whole life. I remember watching it when I was a youngster. I think I was about four or five the first time I saw it.

    The Andy Griffith show is heart warming and enduring gem. It has made me laugh year after year for decades. It expounds on many social issues like single parenting, child rearing, relationships, and friendships. In the process it mixes a lot sarcastic, witty, and slapstick humor. Andy occasionally will play guitar and sing. It's just all around great entertainment for the whole family. The

    The plot of each episode varies from serious to hilarious. There's a nice variety to watch. I of course have my favorite episodes and those I don't like that much. In the end, I just enjoy spending some time each day with the gang from Mayberry.

    The character development is the best part about this show. Barney can at first can seem to be an idiot and anonying. However after awhile I began to enjoy his antics. Andy is simple and easy going. Floyd the barber is a busy body. Ronnie Howard is the cute kid, who's intelligence and maturity surpasses his age. In the end it's the characters that make this show fantastic.

    I'm glad DVD has made this wonderful gem available to past, present, and future generations. I know I'll be watching this show with my kids. I hope one day the first tune they whistle is the theme to the Andy Griffith Show.
  • This truly is a heartwarming and family acceptable show. There simply won't be anything like it again. The 50s and 60s were some great, acceptable years in many ways and fortunately, the Andy Griffith show was part of those days. I hope it will stand the test of time because this show brings us back to a better place, a better time and an all around better cast of characters. This truly is a classic. Sure, it's in black and white and sure it's not going to be appreciated by all but the fact of the matter is, this is something everyone can enjoy. This is a show without drug references, without non-stop violence and it's not that I'm against any of that in films today but I believe and it kind of does make sense, that if it can appeal to a wider audience, than chances are it's going to be good to a larger audience. This is a very enjoyable show and even though it's in black and white, it's still enjoyed by myself and many others. Like I said, with what's coming out on TV today, this is easily gem in television. Nothing can be duplicated to match it, it's just not possible in this day and age. A heartwarming and stupendous show.
  • "The Andy Griffith Show" is probably the greatest sitcom of all time. The writing, the direction, the characters, and the stories all combined to make one of the greatest television shows of any era. Andy Taylor (Griffith) is the sheriff of a small, fictional North Carolina town named Mayberry. He has all sorts of adventures that are so realistic and pure that one feels that they are really in Mayberry when watching the show. Andy lives with his Aunt Bea (Frances Bavier) and his young son Opie (Ron Howard) and works with his deputy sheriff Barney Fife (Don Knotts). The thing that sets "The Andy Griffith Show" apart from almost all other television shows is the realism of the characters. Even though the characters are silly at times, often you can relate these people to actual people that you know or have known. The amazing insight by the writers is truly uncanny. The number of characters that are well-developed is also amazing when one considers how poor writing for television shows usually is these days. The show started out a bit silly in the beginning, but hit a peak from seasons two to five when characters like Gomer Pyle (Jim Nabors), Otis Campbell (Hal Smith), Floyd Lawson (Howard McNear), and Goober Beasley (George Lindsey) became more prevalent in the series' plot. However, after the departure of Don Knotts in 1965, the series went from being exceptional to being fair at best the rest of the way. The magic that Knotts brought to the show was even more evident when he was gone. Also Nabors left to create his own series and McNear suffered from health problems throughout the entire run of the series. Smith and Betty Lynn (Thelma Lou) also had very little to do with the series after Knotts left. All in all a great series for about five years, but the show's magic slowly disappeared when the series went to color. 5 stars out of 5 for 1960-1965. 2.5 stars out of 5 for 1965-1968.
  • I love this show sooo much! I can't even put it into words just how great this show is. It's a classic that will be cherished for years to come. It's a shame that shows like this are rare to find on television in this day and age. It's way better than the junk we have on television today. The Andy Griffith Show is a program that can be enjoyed by all and it is generally a good, wholesome program. Andy, Barney, and Gomer were the best characters and the funniest. If you've never seen this show, than I strongly advise you see it sometime in the near future, you won't regret it. Not only will this show make you laugh, but it will give good lessons about life and the various hardships of it.
  • I remember The Andy Griffith Show well from its days as a Monday night staple on CBS to long-running reruns since the network first reran the show in daytime under the title Andy of Mayberry. To me, it was a very down home piece of life in a small southern town that is definitely the best known rural show of all-time.

    Griffith's folksy appeal was one key to the show's success. But the main reason the show became a hit was Don Knotts portrayal of deputy Barney Fife. His hyper tense mannerisms and comedic timing have made the character one of the funniest in sitcom history. When he left the show after five years, I felt the show jumped the shark. His replacement, Jack Burns wasn't as good as Knotts and he had a much shorter run.

    The show was also the spring board to Ron Howard's career. he started at age six as Opie and grew into his teens when Griffith quit the show in 1968. Also, there was Frances Bavier as Aunt Bee, best known for her cooking. The show also became the launching pad for Jim Nabors' career. After a season as Gomer Pyle, he got his own show, Gomer Pyle, USMC.

    The Andy Griffith Show is a true cult classic and a show that will never leave reruns on cable or local channels. From the whistled theme song to the closing credits, viewers can get a slice of small town life via Mayberry each day.
  • The Andy Griffith Show aired back when television shows had moral fiber. Every episode had a lesson to be learned, with a good combination of humor and seriousness. The characters were likable and funny. They all had a purpose. The pairing of Sheriff Andy Taylor and Deputy Barney Fife is absolutely hilarious. And Goomer and Goober Pyle mad the show even more comical. But it had its serious points. They could obviously not air a show like this nowadays because people nowadays don't really care about moral fiber. All they want to see are the stupid and mediocre programs to day.

    The black-and-white seasons are better than the Technicolor ones. Mostly the black and white one have Barney Fife. The show wasn't the same without him. Aunt Bee ads a moral standard to the show also. And Opie is the typical American baby-boomer generation kid. The show is great. It is as American as Aplee Pie.
  • this show could hardly have been improved on for the first five years,then came an abrupt drop off.Few of the later episodes are worth watching.Besides the obvious reason,the departure of Barney,Andy turned into a very unlikable character;stern, hypercritical.In the early episodes he was a goofball,similar to his character in the movie"No Time For Sergeants",gradually becoming more sensible but still likable.But he carried it too far, becoming totally serious and humorless.Jack Burns was totally unsuited to replace Don Knotts,being irritating rather than funny.He must have left the show under unpleasant and bitter circumstances ,as in the several Andy Griffith Show "reunions" aired in later years he is NEVER mentioned,they showed no footage with him in it.Burns became a "non person" so far as the show was concerned,just like Skitch Henderson after he quarreled with Johny Carson.After he left,Andy had no deputy,which left a serious gap.Certainly they could have found someone reasonably satisfactory to replace him, though no one would have been equal to Don Knotts.Perhaps Andy Griffith,having been upstaged for so long by Barney,didn't want it to happen again.

    Some people have wondered about the name "Opie" for Andy's son.There was a famous Southern humorist and writer,who wrote many books, Opie Read(1852-1939),who would have been well known to both Andy Griffith and Don Knotts.His humor was very similar to Andy Griffith,who probably got much of his material from him.
  • If you watch the entire 8 seasons you will see the turn in American culture. It starts with a "Leave it to Beaver" family values and end with leftist slant towards the feminist movement and multi-culturism. By the end of the eighth season, I was glad they didn't make a ninth. It's sad to see what was done to such a great show.
  • This warm and fuzzy 1960s classic is timeless and never shows its age. Don Knotts created one of the all-time great television characters in Deputy Barney Fife. His performances are consistently top-notch, and he was awarded a slew of emmys for his efforts. The scripts were usually excellent, and it is a testament to the genius of Andy Griffith himself (who had a hand in everything) that despite several different writers and directors, there was never a noticeable lapse in quality.

    In addition to Barney Fife, the series produced other classic characters. Jim Nabors left us with a handful of truly inspired performances during his season and a half as dimwitted but lovable Gomer Pyle. After leaving for his own show, George Lindsay replaced him as his slightly less confused cousin, Goober. This character was also memorable and lasted the length of the series, as well as its successor, "Mayberry R.F.D." Who can forget Howard Morris (who also directed a number of episodes) as the rock-throwing hillbilly Ernest T. Bass? Or Briscoe Darling and his family? How about the "fun girls" from Mount Pilot? Die hard fans will have their own favorites, and there are plenty to choose from.

    I have videotapes of most of these episodes (especially the black-and- white ones with Barney), but would really love to see a season-by-season box set series released on DVD. There are re-run watcher clubs all over the country, devoted to memorizing each precious line of the best episodes. I read a quote from someone once, stating that watching the Andy Griffith Show was guaranteed to lower your blood pressure and stress level. Is there a higher recommendation than that?
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It amazes me how Andy is always digging Barney out of one mess after another, and yet continues to make Barney the hero! This time Barney mistakenly teams up with the actual jewel thief when in a big city, believing the hotel house detective was the thief! Andy actually nabs the thief, once again giving the bungling deputy all the credit!
  • Due to the almost simple-minded nature of the humor in The Andy Griffith Show, I found this early-1960s Sit-Com only marginally entertaining and, often enough, I actually thought that it pushed the cuteness of down-home, country-fied wholesomeness to the point of being quite irritating.

    I know that a helluva lot of people really dig this show, but, I basically found it to be just "ok" and only once in a while did it ever rise above being more than just a run-of-the-mill comedy show.

    Set in North Carolina in the quaint, little town of Mayberry (where crime appears to be almost non-existent), the wide-grinning, bumpkin-of-a-sheriff, Andy Taylor, and his bungling, over-reactive deputy, Barney Fife, take care of the business of law-enforcement where there really is no business of this sort to speak of.

    This show's episodes are really quite unrealistic. They nostalgically hanker, with a great longing, for a time-gone-by where people implicitly trusted one another and no one thought anything of leaving their doors unlocked even when they weren't at home.

    Please, don't get me wrong here - I don't completely condemn this show. But, from my perspective (being so jaded by the police shows of today) this program's episodes certainly did leave a whole lot to be desired when it came to taking an occasional reality check.

    Filmed in b&w, The Andy Griffith Show first aired on television in 1960 and, until its appeal finally petered out, it continued to run quite successfully for 8 solid seasons.
  • The black and white episodes of this program were the best, and I don't know what it was, but when it went to color, all the "magic" the show possessed disappeared!! I can tolerate the color episodes, but I HATED Jack Burns's character of Warren. That "Huh?, Yeah, Huh?" routine was a royal pain in the neck.

    And what happened to Andy in the color episodes?? He turned into a man who was always griping about something--cranky and mean. It seemed that no matter what Aunt Bee wanted to do, Andy was there to put a stop to it, or at least, he tried to. Remember the time when Aunt Bee wanted to learn how to drive a car? Wanted to learn how to fly a plane? When she wanted to wear a wig? When she wanted to open a restaurant? Andy Taylor was a very hateful character in the color episodes. They should have stopped production of the show when they changed to color.
  • I absolutely love show! I grew up watching it! I loved Barney! When Don Knotts died when I was 18 it torn me apart! This is a great show in ALL aspects! Dynamic Duo, Andy and Barney, are by far the best chemistry for characters! No one will ever have that something like they did! Great MORAL listen, and I wish the world could be like Mayberry! Kids could leave in the morning to play and not come back til dark, and the parents not know where they are, but they knew that they were OK! Everybody knows everybody! and it never hurts to be a comedy! This is the funniest show ever! The wits of Andy and the clumsiness of Barney make the whole show! I recommend this show! And think it should be put in school curriculum to teach the listens that it has to offer! God Bless and Rest in Peace Don Knotts!
  • This show is fun, innocent and entertaining.

    Don Knotts found his perfect acting role in this series. As Barney Fife, he keeps everyone entertained. All the characters in this series are perfectly matched. Watching this show makes you forget your troubles. It is never boring. Just pure fun and laughter.
  • It is pretty simple.

    This is a TV show that is not offense and can be watched by any age with any family.

    The stories are wholesome and entertaining.

    TV shows that are safe for families really do not exist anymore.

    This is a show that anyone can watch and enjoy it.

    Seasons 1-5 of course are the best of the series, and I would say focus on those seasons. Ironically as long as the show is black and white you cannot go wrong.

    Seasons 6+ you no longer have Don Knotts which really changes the function of the show which is a shame. Fortunately you do get 4-5 episodes in which ole Barney does come back, so make sure you at least watch each of those episodes.
  • sonya900288 February 2009
    What can I say? This show was without question, a 60s sitcom classic. It's at least in the same league as other superb sitcoms of it's era, such as Gilligan's Island, The Beverly Hillbillies, or The Dick Van Dyke Show.

    Some say that the earlier episodes of the show, were the very best. These were the episodes that featured Deputy Barney Fife, Earnest T. Bass, Gomer Pyle, Otis the drunk, Floyd the barber, etc. Those characters were wonderfully hilarious, to say the least. I thought that the last few seasons of the show, were also excellent. These were broadcast during the late 60s.

    By the time the newer episodes in the late 60s appeared, the characters in the early episodes of the show were long gone. At that time, a new menagerie of supporting cast members joined the show. These new characters were different, but just as funny as the ones on the older episodes. My favorites from the newer episodes, were county clerk Howard Sprague, grease-monkey (and Gomer's cousin) Goober Pyle, and Emmett the appliance dealer. I thought that the later shows, also showed more depth and maturity in the plot-lines, than the earlier shows did.

    The chemistry between the cast members, was what made this show so good. Don Knotts as Barney Fife, was a very talented comedian. His high-strung comedic mannerisms, were priceless. Andy Griffith's laid-back character Sheriff Taylor, was a perfect contrast against Barney's jumpy persona. Though the other characters were certainly very entertaining, the scenes between Andy and Barney, were the most enjoyable to watch on this show.

    The Andy Griffith show, was among the best of the 60s family sitcoms. It was very-well written, and each episode had a moral lesson to it, without being too preachy. It was always a show of stellar quality, and I highly recommend it.
  • Grew up watching re-runs of this show as a little kid and loved it!! Good family values, moral lessons and lots of love and laughs. Love Andy, Aunt Bea, Opie, and alot of the other hilarious characters, But Don Knotts as Barney was the most hilarious character on this show, and Otis the town drunk along with Ernest T. Bass. Sadly once Knotts left the show a lot of the magic left with him. :( I have DVD's of the early seasons which I still love to watch today. The episode with Aunt Bea as The Warden is one of my favorites with Otis."GET TO IT!!" hahahaha Still makes my ribs hurt from laughing so hard. :D
  • When "The Andy Griffith Show" was at its best, it was a perfect or near-perfect show. It is because of this I give the show a score of 10. I loved how unlike most sitcoms, the characters were much more important. Cheap laughs and silly situations were rarely seen in the show and showing a character grow and connect with the viewer were what set this show apart. However, it would also be unfair to mention that the show slipped dramatically in quality once Don Knotts left the show. As for me, I really wish they had just stopped the show then, as replacements such as Goober, Emmett and Howard just weren't up to filling Barney's shoes. Part of this was because Barney was such a great character, but these three were also just very dull characters--particularly Emmett and Howard. Blocks of wood would have been as interesting! And, Barney's short-term replacement (Avery Shriber) was annoying and Barney's special appearances painful. My advice is watch the original Barney episodes...then stop. Why mess with perfection?!
  • Had Andy acting as dumb as barney. He was soo country. Sometimes he was embarrassing.
  • In the long list of old shows throughout television history, not all are true classics. Some are just curiosity series; others are entertaining but lacking in anything strongly admirable. And then you have the true greats, including the masterfully-written and acted "Perry Mason", the suspenseful and brilliant "The Twilight Zone", and this one. "The Andy Griffith Show" will always be remembered as one of the greatest TV shows ever made; it is hard to achieve what Griffith, Knotts and Howard did in this outstanding program. While comedy is part of what makes it work, the really great thing about this series was not just humor, but the characters. The chemistry of these characters is truly outstanding; each one plays its part to perfection in being what they are supposed to be, and fit together so well it is no wonder it is so recognized even today.

    The setting is that of the stereotypical small southern town, filled with a cast of characters that work amazingly well together. To name the main ones, the character of Andy Griffith is Andy Taylor, the sheriff of the town, a friendly and easy-going type who takes his job with a grain of salt (he doesn't even carry a gun!) His best is brought out in the deputy sheriff Barney Fife, the most enjoyable, endearing character on the program, played by the brilliant Don Knotts. The way these two characters alone work together is just stupendous, sort of in the manner of a comedy duo: Andy is the straight man, while Barney is an incompetent yet lovable character full of pride in his job, but also extremely socially awkward (yes, it is rather cringey how much so he is at times). He is always messing up and making a fool of himself so much that you also have to feel sorry for him and root him on. This pair is already gold, so much in fact that both were brought back together to appear in Griffith's second best-known series, "Matlock" in the 80's and 90's (though that show isn't as good and I haven't seen any episodes featuring Knotts).

    Supporting characters include Andy's son, Opie, a young boy portrayed by the young Ronny Howard. His father-son relationship with Andy is also great and believable, as is his comedic interactions with Barney. And Aunt Bee, depicted by Frances Bavier, makes a wonderful mother figure, with enough comedy of her own to make her part also convincing. The supporting characters, such as Gomer Pyle at the gas station, Floyd the barber, Otis the town drunk, etc. are great, with plenty of great charm and laughs to bring to the show. Put together, all these characters have tremendous chemistry, being lovable and unforgettable in their own special ways. There is not one character on the show that does not mix well with any other character: that's how great they work together!

    The morals this show occasionally drops on audiences certainly isn't intended to be annoying, but actually increases the show's value. Most of the situations presented within the show are actually very believable, involving true-to-life stories such as Opie's lesson when he meets a spoiled kid, or when he sees his friends run off to misbehave with a kid who's a bad influence. That's another part that makes "The Andy Griffith Show" so outstanding: it has plenty of realistic situations where the characters learn a lesson in an endearing yet funny way. It gives the show more value than just the typical sitcom (which I wouldn't even classify this show as being, since it is more than just laughs) and as such makes it one of the best American comedy series I've seen.

    Now, it wouldn't be fair if I did not mention how "The Andy Griffith Show" did go in a bit of a decline after the first five seasons. In 1965, the series turned to color rather than the infamous black and white, which was certainly an interesting change to have happen. However, most fans have complained when discussing these last three seasons, saying they were not nearly as good as the earlier ones. It's certainly not just the color that brought this on; what was the real reason? The answer: Don Knotts left the show to make movies (including the great "The Ghost and Mr. Chicken"), returning as a guest star for only five of the color episodes. As the funniest character who brought much of the real humor into the show, and Griffith's main counterpart, his missing presence was deeply felt by the fans, and as some say, Andy became less likable because of it (which I can definitely understand). So, because of being left without a deputy, they brought in Jack Burns, who filled the vacuum Barney left behind. His character was called Warren Ferguson, and after eleven episodes he too left the show due to fans despising this new deputy (considering him incredibly annoying). Personally, having seen two episodes featuring Warren, I don't entirely agree with this: Burns definitely couldn't have been anywhere near as good as Knotts, but still could have been a fairly fun character if the writers and cast had worked toward creating a good chemistry. Sadly, this never happened. Andy and Warren's 'chemistry' (which was like mixing oil and water) consisted of Warren making some uncalled for remark and Andy giving him a look that said "Shut up, you're not helping matters". They didn't get along, plain and simple. Perhaps it might have worked if, like I said, everyone had worked towards fitting him in, but fans simply didn't give Burns a chance.

    In conclusion, "The Andy Griffith Show" is just incredible, even if the last three seasons were more lackluster. The characters are lovable, the comedy is great, and it is just a wonderful feel-good program all around. There's no way any studio nowadays could possibly create something this endearing; the golden age is over, and most shows today rely on violence and sex rather than making anything truly worthwhile. One of the classic great television shows that will never die.
  • I've watched, mostly involuntarily dozens of episodes of this show. As a child I thought the jokes were lame. The older I got the dumber the jokes got. Fife's 1 bullet character was good for a few episodes but it just went on and on and on. Most episodes were light on laughs as the series tried to be a drama in the guise of a comedy and failed at both. I think I'd lightly chuckle once maybe every fifth episode. Most of the characters were not people I'd choose to associate with. Busy bodies, idiots and better than thous for the most part. It's not that I do not like Southern culture, quite the opposite. This to me doesn't represent Southern or rural culture. More like an urban stereotype of it written by somebody who'd never set foot in a small town and hated rural people.
  • The Andy Griffith Show will always be remembered as one of the great slice of life series that ever came on television. It represented the ideal small town full of not only ordinary citizens but the crazies that inhabited it as well, especially characters like Ernest T. Bass and the Darlings. The thing that really made this show great was the relationship between the ever cool Sheriff Andy Taylor and the hyperactive Barney Fife. It was Barney as well as the characters of Aunt Bea, Floyd, Otis, Gomer, Goober and, later, Howard and Emmitt that made this show the classic that it was. Also, in later years this show was criticized for not having any black characters on it. If you think about it, this show was merely a reflection of the times that the show took place in, the early to mid 1960's. Despite that, this show will always be a classic.

    Also, one of my favortite episodes will always be the bootlegging episode with the two sisters when you get to see Barney let loose and go POW, POW, POW with his trusty ax.
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