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Remind Magazine looks back at the fathers who anchored a decade of big changes with steady hands and familiar lessons.
The ’70s TV Dads Who Taught America How to Keep Its Balance
Remind Magazine was out with a warm, timely piece celebrating the best TV dads of the 1970s—the fathers who, week after week, helped define what the decade felt like in America’s living rooms.
The article rounds up the familiar faces many of us still picture without trying: the steady provider, the well-meaning bumbler, the no-nonsense coach, the patient stepdad, the dad who learned alongside his kids because the world was changing fast. Remind’s point isn’t that every TV father was perfect—far from it. It’s that these characters became a kind of shared language for families. You could watch a half hour of television and come away with a small reminder about responsibility, apologies, humor in hard times, and how a man ought to show up for the people counting on him.
What makes the list click is the way it captures the spirit of the ’70s itself: a decade that asked a lot of families. Prices were up, trust in institutions was shaken, roles at home were shifting, and yet—somehow—dinner still needed to get on the table, kids still needed guidance, and dads still had to be dads. Remind frames these TV fathers as cultural touchstones: fictional, sure, but rooted in the real hopes and worries of the era, and still worth revisiting today.
📺 Jack's Thoughts: I read pieces like this and I think about how television used to function like a front porch. You didn’t just tune in for noise—you tuned in for company. And those old TV dads, even the ones written to be funny or flawed, usually carried one quiet message: the family is worth your best effort. Not your perfect effort. Your best. That’s a value that doesn’t go out of style, no matter what decade you’re living in. What’s also striking is how often those shows made room for a dad to be steady without being cold. He could be firm, but still affectionate. He could be wrong, but willing to say so. A lot of today’s culture acts like the only options are to idolize fathers or tear them down. The ’70s TV dads—at their best—showed a third option: respect the role, tell the truth about the man, and keep aiming him toward duty and decency. That’s not nostalgia talking. That’s practical wisdom. If there’s a “what happens next” here, it’s pretty simple: we can choose what we model in our own homes. A good dad isn’t a punchline and he isn’t a myth. He’s a daily presence—patient on the rough days, generous with praise, careful with correction, and reliable when it counts. And even if your own father wasn’t like that, those old shows remind us that the ideal was still visible on the horizon. We’re allowed to reach for it. Read the full story at Remind Magazine.
Read the full story at Remind Magazine →
Thanks for spending a little of your evening with me. However noisy the world gets, the old virtues still work—show up, do your best, love your people—and that’s a future worth feeling hopeful about.
— Jack Reynolds