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Rob Reiner once participated in a television storyline that eerily foreshadowed a real-life tragedy he now faces. During his early acting days, Reiner portrayed Mike, the son-in-law of Archie Bunker, in the iconic 1971 sitcom “All in the Family.” In one particularly memorable episode, the topic of the death penalty was front and center.
The scene featured a heated exchange between Archie and Mike, where Archie posed a chilling hypothetical: “Suppose you was to come home some fine day and find your wife’s throat cut,” he questioned, pressing Mike on whether he would be eager for retribution against the perpetrator.
Fast forward nearly 55 years, and this fictional discussion has become a grim reality for Reiner. Both he and his wife, Michele, were tragically attacked, suffering fatal injuries. Their son, Nick, now 32, stands accused of the horrific double murder. As the legal process unfolds, prosecutors are deliberating on whether to pursue the death penalty in this heartbreaking case.
‘Are you gonna tell me you wouldn’t be itchin’ to fry the guy that cut that throat?’
Now, nearly 55 years after the show first aired, Rob’s real-life wife Michele did have her throat slashed – as did Reiner himself.
Their son Nick, 32, is being held in custody after being charged with the double murder while prosecutors decide whether to seek the death penalty.
Back in 1971 ultra-liberal Mike had no doubt where he stood on the issue.
‘No, what good would that do?’ ‘Meathead’ Mike responded to Archie’s question.
One eerie clip uncovered from the hit sitcom All in the Family shows a debate between patriarch Archie Bunker and his son-in-law, played by Rob Reiner, where they argue over the death penalty in the hypothetical situation that a murderer slit his wife’s throat
The eerie clip was almost prophetic as Reiner and his wife Michele were found dead at their Brentwood, Los Angeles, home on Sunday with their throats slashed allegedly at the hands of their son
Their troubled son Nick, 32, appeared in court for the first time on Wednesday dressed in an anti-suicide vest to face homicide charges in the alleged double murder of his parents
‘Do you see what you married?’ Archie levels at his daughter Gloria, played by Sally Struthers – now, at 78, the sole surviving member of the fictional Bunker family.
‘Some fiend could come in here and murder you and he ain’t going to lift a finger to help you.’
With an air of finality, Mike responds: ‘Archie, if I killed that murderer, would that bring Gloria back?’
The episode, which aired on March 9, 1971, centers on Archie’s wife Edith’s jury duty, igniting a tense, table-thumping debate over capital punishment at the Bunker family dining room table.
Edith faces a moral dilemma: she’s on a high-profile murder case that appears to be a slam-dunk conviction, yet a gut feeling makes her the lone holdout, convinced the man is innocent.
After a heated argument between family members representing both sides of the death penalty debate, Edith’s intuition proves correct and the man is ultimately found not guilty.
The scene has taken on a haunting new resonance since Rob and Michele Reiner were found dead at their home in the Brentwood district of Los Angeles on December 14
The Reiners’ troubled son Nick, 32, appeared in a Los Angeles courtroom on Wednesday for the first time to face double murder charges.
He cut a stark figure, appearing in jeans with an anti-suicide vest over his bare torso. He did not enter a plea, and his arraignment was postponed until January 7.
Prosecutors added special circumstances of multiple murders and use of a dangerous weapon, a knife, meaning, if he is convicted, Nick could face life in prison without the possibility of parole or even the death penalty.
More than 45 years after All in the Family wrapped in 1979, the jury duty episode feels profoundly unsettling – underscoring just how fearless it was in confronting taboo subjects.
The series, created in 1971 by Norman Lear, was one of the first to directly have its characters speak about taboo subjects such as racism, sexism and even menopause, forcing audiences to hear both extremes from the viewpoint of Archie Bunker and Reiner’s character.
The scene comes from an episode centers on Archie’s wife Edith’s jury duty where the accused faces the death penalty if found guilty, igniting a tense, table-thumping debate over capital punishment at the Bunker family dining room table
All in the Family shocked the sitcom landscape for its bold take on addressing major societal issues in the wake of the Vietnam War, with patriarch Archie Bunker taking on the extreme conservative while Reiner’s character Mike Stivic played his political foil as a liberal hippy
Rob Reiner’s liberal views were widely known, and he was outspoken in his criticism of President Trump. The President appeared to notice, posting online in a controversial move that Reiner’s death was attributed to ‘Trump Derangement Syndrome’
Mike and Gloria – played by Rob Reiner and Sally Struthers – represented the younger generation on the classic sitcom All in the Family
All in the Family ran for nine seasons in the 1970s, never backing down from discussing sensitive items such as impotence, women’s issues and even rape
Archie, played by Carroll O’Connor, was the Nixon-loving, cigar smoking, blue collar patriarch who would openly espouse segregation, believed in male superiority and threw around ‘homosexual’ as an insult. O’Connor – who, in real life was a die-hard liberal – died in 2001 aged 76.
Jean Stapleton, who died in 2013 aged 90, was Edith, Archie’s long-suffering wife – regularly called a ‘dingbat’ by her husband.
Serving as Archie’s liberal counterpoint, Mike was an long-haired idealistic, Polish-American, whose hippie ideals frequently sparked fiery, culture-clash arguments, while blonde Struthers provided the show’s eye-candy.
The show presented an unflinching look at generational and cultural clashes, reflecting the tensions of the Vietnam era, while still weaving it all into a sitcom.
Much like his character, Reiner identified as liberal and was a staunch critic of President Trump and his administration, accusing him of being ‘mentally unfit’ and warning against his authoritarian tendencies over the past decade.
This didn’t go unnoticed by Trump, who controversially posted on Truth Social after news of Reiner and his wife’s murder broke.
‘A very sad thing happened last night in Hollywood,’ Trump began his post. ‘Rob Reiner, a tortured and struggling, but once very talented movie director and comedy star, has passed away, together with his wife, Michele, reportedly due to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction with a mind crippling disease known as TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME, sometimes referred to as TDS.’
In the rambling statement, in which he referred to himself in the third person, Trump said that Reiner was ‘known to have driven people CRAZY by his raging obsession of President Donald J. Trump, with his obvious paranoia reaching new heights as the Trump Administration surpassed all goals and expectations of greatness, and with the Golden Age of America upon us, perhaps like never before. May Rob and Michele rest in peace!’
Despite the widespread criticism of the tasteless post, Trump doubled down when he was asked about it by reporters later.
‘Well, I wasn’t a fan of his at all. He was a deranged person. As far as Trump was concerned,’ he said, again referring to himself in the third person.
‘I think he hurt himself, career-wise. He became like a deranged person, [with] Trump derangement syndrome. So I was not a fan of Rob Reiner at all, in any way, shape or form. I thought he was very bad for our country.’
Reiner leaves behind a prestigious career as a movie director, helming This is Spinal Tap, When Harry Met Sally, Misery, Stand by Me and A Few Good Men, among other big-screen hits.