Movie Analysis: Modern Family

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“Modern Family” series analysis “One big (straight, gay, multi-cultural, traditional) happy family” Modern Family first aired on television in September 23, 2009. The series was co-created by Steven Leviton and Christopher Lloyd and had a team of about twenty well-known writers, such as Danny Zucker, Jeffery Richman, Dan O’Shannon, and many others. It has an estimated budget of $250,000 per week and its gross sales is about $2.13 million per half hour (imbd.com). This series is effective, because its shows that not all families are conventional- they come in all shapes and sizes, but no matter what they still all love each other. Not only is the show funny, but also it makes a point about the evolving idea of what constitutes 'family’. Taped in a mockumentary style, the comedy series revolves around the lives of three different but related families. Now in his second marriage to his beautiful yet much younger Colombian wife, Gloria (Sophia Vergara), Jay Pritchet (Ed O’Neill) is trying to make the most of his second …show more content…

The show hints the irony of the name by putting together all the modern day clichés into one family, and that is the biggest reason why this show is so successful. The intended audience for Modern Family is any family who have a very modern lifestyle. In an interview, Christopher Lloyd said that everyone has a character they can relate to. Grandparents can relate to Jay and his unwillingness to show affection. Parents can relate to how hard and at the same time rewarding parenting can be. Kids can relate to how difficult things can be at their age, such as school, fitting in, and trying to deal with their parents (nytimes.com). This shows that the series is targeting an audience who can relate to the everyday things the characters in the show go

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