Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 2014 | Page 15

11 strong values. Most everybody goes to church and is pretty family oriented” (19). Whether or not his perceptions of the Atlanta area can be bom out in facts is largely irrelevant. What he is evoking is less a specific geographic place and more an imagined community of likeminded individuals that can accommodate Americans across the continent. Therefore, far from embracing the stereotypical qualities of a redneck, he criticizes those stereotypes that have been employed to denigrate people like him. In fact, he reveals that part of the raison d ’etre of his comedy is as a coping mechanism for negative views of “redneck”: “One reason I make Redneck jokes is, well . . . I have to. Otherwise, having to endure an attitude from the rest of the country that Southerners are stupid and backward would be too depressing” (18). Foxworthy recasts himself as an honest, Christian, family man with traditional family values that supersede his role as celebrity millionaire. In an interview with CMT before his 2005 hosting of the CMT Country Music awards, Foxworthy says, “I'm a great husband and a great daddy, to the point that I have turned down so many things, workwise. I just turned down a movie, a chance to do something with Robin Williams because I was going to have to be gone for seven or eight weeks in Vancouver. I was like, T am not going seven or eight weeks without seeing my wife a