All in the Family, Blazing Saddles, and the Racist Word Association Interview sketch in Saturday Night Live's first season) is often misunderstood by modern audiences. Use of the N-word by productions in which it is specifically used as a criticism/condemnation of racism (e.g. For example, "nigger babies" used to be a name for a popular candy, while Agatha Christie even used the title Ten Little Niggers for her arguably most famous work even back then the N-word was considered risky so it was retitled Ten Little Indians for US publication, which annoyed another group of people, so they eventually settled on And Then There Were None. The infamous "N-word" (which is so virulent it cannot be even used clinically in many places anymore) used to be common language, even without racist overtones. Racist terminology is also a prime example of this. The advent of social media however has allowed for more push back. note It's actually been that way in the disability activist community since the 'Social Model of Disability' was pioneered by British Disability Rights activists in the 1970s, but frequently actually disabled people get spoken over by educators and media professionals. As of the mid-2010s, the treadmill turned again, and now "disabled" is again the preferred term. The term used to describe people with life-changing diseases or injuries followed a similar path, from "crippled" to "handicapped" to "disabled" to "physically challenged" when terms like "handi-capable" and "differently abled" were proposed, it came across as too clunky and people generally agreed to stop messing with it. After decades of that being used as an insult, "retarded" is now considered so offensive that some people want it classified as hate speech.
As these terms fell into common use as insults, they were replaced by a kinder and gentler term: "mentally retarded". The words "idiot", "moron", and "imbecile" started as clinical terms, referring to people with IQs below 75, 50, and 25, respectively. Some of these examples result from the euphemism treadmill, whereby terms are repeatedly replaced as the previous word falls into such a state of misuse that it cannot be recovered.