ABC aired a show that could have brought America together, but no one noticed until Trump was president

the middle abc returning shows
the middle abc returning shows

(ABC's "The Middle" is enjoying a moment in the spotlight after the 2016 election.ABC/Michael Ansell)

For eight seasons, ABC has aired a comedy called "The Middle." It has never been a mega hit, but it has earned steady ratings. Critics like it, but it hasn't generated the think pieces and day-after recaps popular among highbrow cable shows.

Then Donald Trump became president.

"It was sort of funny how all of a sudden the phone started ringing," DeAnn Heline, the cocreator of ABC comedy "The Middle," told Business Insider of the newfound interest in the show by the media.

In today's television "The Middle" is an anomaly. It follows a lower-middle-class family that lives paycheck-to-paycheck and somehow makes it work. They live in Indiana, refer to themselves as "Hoosiers," and use humor to deflect some of the hard feelings about the tough times.

"People realized, 'Hey, wait, you guys are a Midwest show about blue-collar people,' and all of a sudden we felt like the show kind of had a new attention brought to it," Heline said.

While the show once flew under the media radar, it started getting press.

The Los Angeles Times published a feature about the show's "rare" emphasis on the anxiety of working-class Americans. And ABC's programming president referred to "The Middle" as an example of how well the network was featuring the working class in its comedies, while saying she'd like to do the same with its drama offerings.

40 million viewers

all in the family
all in the family

("All in the Family" was famous for portraying an average family, differing opinions, and conversation around controversial issues.CBS)

A half-century ago, a show like "The Middle" might have driven the national conversation. In the 1970s, programs like "Maude," "The Jeffersons," and "All in the Family" featured diverse characters from across the country and attracted wide audiences. Before cable and the internet, there weren't many entertainment options.

"We had 30 and 40 million viewers, and if we were encouraging conversations about issues, we had that many more people encouraged to converse, to think about these issues," producer Norman Lear told Business Insider. In the 1970s, Lear produced those shows and many other network hits. "Right now, it's far more fractured and far fewer people are being influenced or consciences raised, because there's just so many places for drama and entertainment."

Lear's shows' depictions of people on the fringes, character types that rarely were the focus of TV shows then and now, had a huge influence on the national conversation.

Lear's groundbreaking "All in the Family" followed family man Archie Bunker whose conservative and bigoted views were artfully portrayed by actor Carroll O'Connor. The show dealt with topics ranging from homosexuality to women's rights and war. The next day, viewers would discuss the issues with their families, friends, and coworkers. Few, if any, shows today have that kind of effect.