| # | Air Date | Episode Name | Watched? |
|---|---|---|---|
| E1 | Sep 24, 1978 | ||
| E2 | Oct 01, 1978 | ||
| E3 | Oct 08, 1978 | ||
| E4 | Oct 15, 1978 | ||
| E5 | Oct 22, 1978 | ||
| E6 | Oct 29, 1978 | ||
| E7 | Nov 05, 1978 | ||
| E8 | Nov 19, 1978 | ||
| E9 | Nov 26, 1978 | ||
| E10 | Dec 03, 1978 | ||
| E11 | Dec 10, 1978 | ||
| E12 | Dec 17, 1978 | ||
| E13 | Dec 17, 1978 | ||
| E14 | Jan 07, 1979 | ||
| E15 | Jan 14, 1979 | ||
| E16 | Jan 21, 1979 | ||
| E17 | Jan 28, 1979 | ||
| E18 | Feb 04, 1979 | ||
| E19 | Feb 11, 1979 | ||
| E20 | Feb 18, 1979 | ||
| E21 | Feb 25, 1979 | ||
| E22 | Mar 04, 1979 | ||
| E23 | Mar 11, 1979 | ||
| E24 | Mar 25, 1979 | ||
| E25 | Apr 08, 1979 |
All in the Family remains a towering pillar of television history that fundamentally changed the medium's social conscience. Masterminded by the legendary Norman Lear, the show’s "Spark" was its fearless willingness to tackle bigotry, politics, and social upheaval from a Queens living room. Lear transformed the American sitcom from escapist fluff into a poignant, often uncomfortable mirror for a divided nation.
The series’ Cultural DNA is woven into every provocative comedy that followed. Archie Bunker’s bluster and Edith’s heart provided a raw look at generational friction that still resonates today. Fans rewatch it because the Bunker household captures the universal, messy struggle of families trying to love one another despite irreconcilable worldviews. It remains the gold standard for brave, character-driven storytelling that refuses to blink.