View Full Version : How did Gertie afford to make meatloaf for a family of five...


TMC
10-20-2023, 06:12 AM
But she can't afford (https://pontificating-randy.blogspot.com/2020/02/good-times-episode-dinner-party.html) human food for herself?

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Janice Johnson
10-20-2023, 06:34 AM
But she can't afford (https://pontificating-randy.blogspot.com/2020/02/good-times-episode-dinner-party.html) human food for herself?

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She splurged for her Friends. ;) By the way, that meatloaf looked kind of nasty and would have made sense if it really were dog food. Hmm. A YouTube Poster said something like,"Gertie's meatloaf looks kind of nasty because it's a PORK meatloaf, not a ground beef meatloaf. Pork meatloaf tends to look nastier than ground beef meatloaf but still tastes good." But Gertie said that the meatloaf was made out of ground beef IIRC.

hch
12-21-2025, 10:54 PM
The central tension is exactly what you noticed: the Evans family believes Gertie's meatloaf is the dog food they suspect she has been eating.

The show resolves this apparent contradiction through several narrative points

The Sacrifice of Pride
Gertie brings the meatloaf as a gesture of gratitude because Florida has invited her to dinner dozens of times. For an "old and stubborn" woman, spending her very last resources to provide a meal for her friends was a way to maintain her dignity rather than simply accepting a "handout".

Stretching the Meat
In the 1970s, meatloaf was often used by families with low incomes to "stretch" a small amount of real meat by adding inexpensive fillers like cereal, breadcrumbs, or crackers. This would allow her to create a larger meal for a family of five without using a large amount of actual ground beef.

The Plot Twist
While the kids are convinced the "secret ingredient" is dog food, Gertie eventually clarifies that she made the dish with "ground round"—real beef. This reveals that she used the tiny amount of money she had to buy one "good" meal for her friends, even if it meant she would have to return to eating pet food the next day.

The Government "Catch-22"
The episode explains her poverty through a systemic issue: for every two dollars Gertie earned teaching voice lessons, the government took one dollar away from her assistance, leaving her with no way to actually get ahead.

The episode was inspired by real-life reports from that era (such as a 60 Minutes investigation) which found that high inflation was forcing some elderly Americans on fixed incomes to resort to eating pet food.