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Difference between revisions of "Franklin Bluth"

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<blockquote>F: "I got childrens all over town."</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>F: "I got childrens all over town."</blockquote>
 
Sadly, the African-American studio engineer walked out in protest at this point, so we didn't hear the rest of what was surely going to be a sensitive and nuanced treatment of race.
 
Sadly, the African-American studio engineer walked out in protest at this point, so we didn't hear the rest of what was surely going to be a sensitive and nuanced treatment of race.
[[Category:Arrested Development|Bluth]]
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[[Category:2005|Bluth, Franklin]]
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[[Category:Arrested Development|Bluth, Franklin]]
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[[Category:Fictional nonhumans|Bluth, Franklin]]

Revision as of 05:42, 29 October 2018

Franklin and Gob in the studio.jpg
Franklin Comes Alive.jpg

From the TV series Arrested Development. An African-American ventriloquist dummy who promoted racial healing by duetting with George "Gob" Bluth II (Will Arnett) during "Righteous Brothers," the season-two finale (first aired 17 Apr. 2005). The duo spent $5,000 making the album Franklin Comes Alive as a birthday gift for Gob's brother Michael (Jason Bateman). (Gob borrowed the 5K from Michael, of course.) The album included a truly stunning cover of Bryan Adams' "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" and this wonderful musical exchange:

Gob: "It ain't easy being white."

Franklin: "It ain't easy being brown."

G: "All this pressure to be bright."

F: "I got childrens all over town."

Sadly, the African-American studio engineer walked out in protest at this point, so we didn't hear the rest of what was surely going to be a sensitive and nuanced treatment of race.