World | sitcom We Need a Muslim Brady Bunch Iranian-American essayist: 'Sitcom diplomacy' can go a long way By John Johnson Posted Jan 30, 2011 11:36 AM CST Copied In this Jan. 20, 1977 file photo, actress Farrah Fawcett-Majors, right, joins her husband Lee Majors in a television appearance together in the sit-com "The Brady Bunch." (AP Photo/George Brich, file) Katie Couric floated the idea of a Muslim Cosby Show a while back, and Firoozeh Dumas thinks the notion of "sitcom diplomacy" is a great idea. When she and her family moved here from Iran in 1972, "the first Americans I met were the Bradys and the Partridges," she writes in the Los Angeles Times. The big lesson: Underneath the superficial stuff, American and Iranian families are pretty much the same. When she lectures around the country, Dumas often gets two reactions: "fear and surprise," she writes. "Fear of Middle Eastern immigrants, and surprise that I am nothing like the person they expected." The problem is that the mutterings of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and company have given Iranian Americans "a PR challenge worthy of Sisyphus." A sitcom can only help make one point clear: "Middle Easterners come in all shapes, sizes and belief levels, just like every other kind of American." Read These Next Prominent law firm chairman faces up to Epstein revelations. Trump calls out a 'moron' at National Prayer Breakfast. Theater got snarky with its Melania marquee, and Amazon was ticked. It's the cheapest GLP-1 pill yet. Report an error