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Famed television producer Norman Lear, whose wildly successful TV sitcoms including “All in the Family” and “The Jeffersons” fused comedy with trenchant social commentary and dominated network ratings in the 1970s, died Tuesday at his home in Los Angeles, his family announced on his website. He was 101.

“Norman lived a life of curiosity, tenacity, and empathy. He deeply loved our country and spent a lifetime helping to preserve its founding ideals of justice and equality for all,” his family said. “He began his career in the earliest days of live television and discovered a passion for writing about the real lives of Americans, not a glossy ideal. At first, his ideas were met with closed doors and misunderstanding. However, he stuck to his conviction that the ‘foolishness of the human condition’ made great television, and eventually he was heard.”

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Norman Lear poses for a portrait in 2020.
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Lear, top right, joins Jerry Lewis and others for a rehearsal of "The Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis Show" in 1951. From left are Kingman T. Moore, Lewis, Ed Simmons, Lear and Ernie Glucksman. Lear was a writer for the show.
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Lear, at center in the dark blazer, talks with Carroll O'Connor on the set of "All in the Family" in 1971. That year, it won a Primetime Emmy for outstanding new series.
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Lear accepts an Emmy from Eve Arden in 1971. "All in the Family" was named best comedy series.
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President Jimmy Carter greets Lear and cast members from "All in the Family" as they visit the White House in 1978.
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Lear, right, oversees an episode of "The Baxters" in 1979.
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Lear dances with his second wife, Frances, at an event in Beverly Hills, California, in 1979. They were married from 1956-1986.
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Lear cuts a cake with the cast of "The Jeffersons" as they celebrated their 200th episode in 1983. From left are Marla Gibbs, Sherman Hemsley, Isabel Sanford, Lear, Ned Wertimer, Berlinda Tolbert, Roxie Roker and Franklin Cover.
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Lear relaxes at his home in Los Angeles in 1984.
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Lear, second from left, was one of the first inductees into the Television Academy Hall of Fame. With him, from left, are Milton Berle, Janet Murrow, Robert Sarnoff, Lucille Ball, William S. Paley and Bob Fosse.
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Lear and his third wife, Lyn, attend a Spirit of Liberty Awards Dinner Gala in 1994. They were married until his death.
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President Bill Clinton awards Lear with a National Medal of the Arts as first lady Hillary Clinton looks on in 1999.
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Lear sits at a conference room table in his Beverly Hills office in 2002. Behind him is a copy of an early draft of the Declaration of Independence. He was sponsoring a traveling exhibit about the original document.
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Rob Reiner, left, presents Lear with the Producers Guild Achievement Award in Television in 2006. Reiner was one of the stars of "All in the Family."
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Lear poses for a photo in 2007.
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Lear supports striking writers at a rally in Los Angeles in 2007.
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Lear, left, and Alan Alda won Special Founders Awards at the International Emmys in 2012.
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Lear holds his 2014 memoir, "Even This I Get to Experience."
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From left, Lear, Bob Saget, Mel Brooks and John Stamos attend the Los Angeles premiere of the documentary "Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You" in 2016.
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Everyone wears Lear's signature bucket hat while promoting the rebooted sitcom "One Day at a Time" in 2017.
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Lear and Carol Burnett present an award at the Primetime Emmys in 2017.
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Lear and other recipients of Kennedy Center Honors pose for a group photo in 2017. With Lear in the front row are Carmen de Lavallade, left, and Gloria Estefan. Behind him are LL Cool J, left, and Lionel Richie.
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Lear and Rita Moreno appear on the red carpet at the Golden Globe Awards in 2018.
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Lear looks at a statue of him that was unveiled at Emerson College in Boston in 2018. He attended the school before dropping out to join the military in 1942.
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In 2019, talk show host Jimmy Kimmel presented a live prime-time event that paid tribute to Lear's classic shows "All in the Family" and "The Jeffersons."
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From left, Jordan Peele, Lear, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Jackie Chan and Steve Coogan pose with awards they won at the Brittania Awards in 2019.
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Lear is embraced by Jane Fonda as they participate in one of her Fire Drill Fridays, a weekly climate protest, in 2020.
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Lear attends the TV special "Norman Lear: 100 Years of Music and Laughter" in 2022.

Beginning with “All in the Family” in 1971, Lear’s shows tackled fraught topics of racism, feminism and social inequalities that no one had yet dared touch. The show – which won the Emmy for Outstanding New Series – focused on the white working class Bunker family and its small-minded, irascible, prejudiced and oddly likable patriarch Archie Bunker.

Director Rob Reiner, who played Bunker’s politically polar opposite son-in-law Michael “Meathead” Stivic on the sitcom, paid tribute to Lear on social media on Wednesday.

“I loved Norman Lear with all my heart. He was my second father. Sending my love to Lyn and the whole Lear family,” Reiner shared in a statement.

“All in the Family” spurred a series of similarly popular and political spinoffs, including “Sanford and Son,” “Maude,” and “Good Times.”

In his 2014 memoir, “Even This I Get to Experience,” Lear attributed the success of his series to stories drawn from the real experiences of his writers that lent to the authenticity of the characters they developed.

“The audiences themselves taught me that you can get some wonderful laughs on the surface with funny performers and good jokes,” he wrote, “But if you want them laughing from the belly, you stand a better chance if you can get them caring first.”

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Norman Lear ain 2017.

He was executive producer of the cult movie classics “The Princess Bride” and “Fried Green Tomatoes” and was nominated for an Academy Award for best screenplay for “Divorce American Style.” His political advocacy led to the establishment of the liberal political organization People for the American Way.

The popularity of his shows and his subsequent outspoken liberal views, which he pursued both with his public advocacy and his considerable wealth, made him a target of those on the political right. That included a spot on President Richard Nixon’s “enemies list,” a badge which he wore proudly; and being labeled the “No. 1 enemy of the American family” by Moral Majority founder Jerry Falwell.

In a 2016 documentary about Lear’s life and career, “Everybody Loves Raymond” creator Phil Rosenthal said, “Television can be broken into two parts, BN and AN: Before Norman and After Norman.” Lear later participated in another documentary from his friend and then-fellow nonagenarian Carl Reiner titled “If You’re Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast.”

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Even in his 90s, Lear kept working. Along with Jimmy Kimmel, a 95-year-old Lear produced and hosted three episodes of “Live in Front of a Studio Audience,” which won Primetime Emmy Awards in 2019 and 2020. The series used current stars like Jamie Fox, Woody Harrelson and Viola Davis to re-create original episodes of “The Jeffersons,” “All in the Family” and “Good Times.”

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John Amos, Ralph Carter, Esther Rolle, BernNadette Stanis, and Jimmie 'JJ' Walker in "Good Times." (1974)

Lear lived long enough to become not only an elder statesman of the entertainment industry but to receive accolades that spanned generations, being presented the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Clinton in 1999, getting inducted into the Kennedy Center at its annual honors in 2017 and becoming the oldest nominee and winner of an Emmy, at 97, in 2019, then breaking his own record in 2020.

Prior to his 100th birthday in 2022, Lear credited work, lox and bagels, the love of his family and laughter for his longevity.

“I like getting up in the morning with something on my mind, something I can work on … to some conclusion,” Lear said.

He married three times, most recently to wife Lyn in 1987, having six children in all, with a 47-year age gap between the oldest and youngest.

In a 2020 interview with CNN, Lear reflected on the continuing relevance of the politically conscious comedy he pioneered. He also joked about the continuing reluctance of networks to deal with hot-button issues.

“It’s a new set of executives, [but] the same old buildings,” he quipped. “They are reincarnated.”

But Lear did take issue with the description of his shows as “edgy,” either then or now.

“Edgy is what others wrote about it, but I never thought it was edgy,” he said. “We were simply dealing with the problems that existed in our culture.”

CNN’s Sandee LaMotte contributed to this report.