Blatant Racism Present in Amos 'n Andy Radio Show

A Look at What was Considered Normal at the Time

Shane Carney
Before this assignment, I had never actually listened to a recording of an Amos 'n Andy radio show. The stereotypical portrayal of Black Americans in the overwhelmingly racist media of the time became immediately apparent. It is fairly obvious that Amos and Andy are White Americans pretending to be Black Americans as the characters reflect the stereotype of a Black American during the time and not who an actual Black American is.

The characters of Amos and Andy reflect the stereotype of Black Americans being less intelligent than White Americans. In the show I listened to, the characters introduce each other as being "incompetent." They are able to fool each other very easily over insignificant matters. When they are discussing splitting money with each other, they have no idea how to perform any simple math operations and come up with random numbers. During one part of the show, they are reading a map and trying to figure out how to get to Alaska, but they continuously confuse roads with rivers and vice versa. The stereotypical "Black American vernacular" is a main focus in the show, attempting to reinforce the unintelligent Black American stereotype.

The White American actors in the show attempt to capture the Black American vernacular heard in the stereotypical media of the time. They attempt to do this by purposely using bad grammar and by mispronouncing and chopping words. There is never a "g" at the end of verbs ending in "ing." For example, loafing becomes loafin'. Other words and phrases such as "nuttin' here," "lumosine," and "overwhel-med" are consistently used to enhance the comical aspect of the stereotype for the audience. Aside from the stereotypical language, the show also makes fun of the physical attributes of Black Americans.

The show I listened to was about the possibility of one of the main characters going to live in Alaska. The reason they are unsure of going, however, is the fact that their "skin is allergic to cold weather." It clearly points out the different skin color of Black Americans and how it is supposedly a negative characteristic. During one scene of the show, a character is introduced as the "big head and big nose of business." Once again, the show makes notice of a stereotype, that all Blacks have big heads and/or big noses. After making fun of Black Americans' physical attributes, the show goes on to reflect the "typical" life of a Black American.

Throughout the show, there are constant remarks about Black Americans being "lazy" and "no good." At one point in the show, a character is asked how he managed to live in a certain situation. He responds that he lived off of his "unemployment insurance." Again, the show plays off of a stereotype of Black Americans.

The last stereotype of Black Americans I noticed while listening to the show was the first stereotype that wasn't completely negative. It was the stereotype that Black Americans are talented entertainers and singers, as the characters randomly break into song during the show. Despite this somewhat positive stereotype, the negative stereotypes of Black Americans are overwhelming in the Amos 'n Andy radio show.

Although I find the use of stereotypes in the Amos 'n Andy show to be racist, I do not think that I can say I am the least bit surprised. The show I listened to was originally played on the radio in 1947, long before the Civil Rights Movement. At that time in American History, racism towards Black Americans was a mainstay in popular culture and popular media. The racism signified by the stereotypical portrayals of the Black American characters is clearly used throughout the show as the main comical theme. A joke about a stereotypical attribute of a Black American will be made, and then the characters will pause for audience laughter before continuing on with the scene. The producers of the show do not appear to be hiding the racism at all, but rather they are basing the show completely on racist stereotypes. If the Black American characters in the show were actually played by Black American actors, then I think that the racism would not be as strong.

If this show was being ran in today's media, then I think there would be much more criticism of the racist aspects of the show. While there are shows in today's culture that use racial stereotypes as comedy, these shows are typically Black Americans making fun of Black Americans, people poking fun at their own race. At any point in the history of America, I think that the idea of people poking fun at their own race would be more easily accepted than the idea of people making fun of a different race.

Published by Shane Carney

I am a graduate of USC. I have worked for the USC Sports Information Department, the Los Angeles Avengers, Sports Fan Magazine and Realfootball365. I have been a freelance writer for the Contra Costa Times f...  View profile

  • Amos and Andy are two white actors pretending to be African Americans through stereotypes.
  • The racism is not hidden at all; in fact, it is the fuel for the humor within the dialogue.
  • A show with racism similar to this would never succeed in America today.
The radio show later made its way to television where producers used African American actors but forced them to portray the stereotypical roles.

9 Comments

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  • John5/16/2012

    fail, not racist at all, the radio show was brilliant, i guess some people just have to grasp at the obvious..

  • T.A. Stanton11/19/2010

    I'd wager the purveyors of Amos & Andy thought they were being racially-sensitive at the time. In truth, some of the musical bits between acts featured very talented black singers and musicians. Who knows what other opportunities they might have had to reach a large audience. As for the characters stupidity--Lou Costello was no prodigy. Jack Benny was often bumbling things too. For all the sense she might have really made--Gracie Allen put the "ditz" in ditzy. Naive characters were the craze.

  • Nick Stoliaroff2/22/2010

    "Amos n' Andy" was a huge national hit on radio then onto television. The creators and stars of the show, Freeman Fisher Gosden and Charles J. Correll, originally started out entertaining folks in Chicago on WMAQ. These white men portrayed black men. Only Robert Downey Jr. can get away with doing this in the film Tropic Thunder because this is eighty years later. The people being entertained by Amos n' Andy were not laughing with African Americans but at them. Remember, this was still a time when black folks were looked down on and generalized. It even describes Andy as a clever, conniving, and somewhat lazy individual who usually took credit for Amos' ideas. How is this not racist? White racists created the description/ stereotype of Andy and how black people are "all lazy." These were the ridiculous views people had toward blacks during that time period. I am sure some of you are wondering about shows like the "Family Guy." Family Guy makes fun of everything, there is no

  • Shennekia Grimshaw2/20/2010

    Although the Amos and Andy show was very stereotypical I do not believe they were racist. Amos and Andy are comedians which makes joking about the African American race acceptable. These were very common stereotypes among the Africa American community. In the "courtroom" radio show, one of the African American characters weren't able to spell fear while spelling it F-E-E-R. It was normal for Black people to be uneducated back in the early 50's. I view this show as just a form of entertainment as it is now in the 21st century.

  • Rose191Dreamer10/21/2009

    I am an avid fan of Amos & Andy, and truly enjoy old time radio, which runs circles around the rubbish which tries to pass itself off as entertainment. Take ghetto rap for example where violence, pedophilia, cop killing, violence against whites, and women.

    Rose191Dreamer

  • ex_cathedra2/16/2009

    I'm watching an episode now and Andy gets a job as a Santa to buy his God-daughter a doll he cannot afford.It was wonderful.The show ends with Andy and his daughter listening to the Lord's prayer on the radio.Everyone is dressed nice,suits,and overcoats ,ties,nice hats and strong family associations. No one called anyone a ho,or a bee hotch.It was terrible.Oh Dear yes.

  • Your name12/8/2008

    Isn't one of the main aspects of physical comedy disrespect and sterotypes? I Love Lucy made fun of women and Latinos? Not really, just made fun of Lucy and Ricky. Did Leave it to Beaver make fun of children? Only to the point that kids, and all people, share some characteristics, but mainly it poked fun of the Mathers family and friends. The Beverly Hillbillies makes fun of poor mountain whites, but it's not mean... just affectionate and--COMEDIC!

    What a concept. People don't watch comedies to be "educated" with propagandist promotional material aimed at crafting an image of a particular race or gender. People watch comedy to laugh and be entertained. That process is NOT going to be politically correct, you can almost bet on it.

    How unfair is it to burden the Amos 'n Andy show with representing the entire population of African-Americans? It's impossible, for one thing. Yes, racism existed in those days... no surprise. But it's not due to Amos 'n Andy. They were great comics with

  • A.M. Morgan11/9/2007

    There is definitely a difference between blatant and hidden racism.

  • Da Keengfish11/11/2006

    Well, if it wasn't true then, why is it true now?

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