FirstNameLastName said:
No offence, but when you create a thread devoted solely to the fact that someone on twitter likes a thing you like, then proceed to talk about how cartoons are unfairly looked over, it's hard to see this as anything other than insecure.
Fair enough...I suppose. I mean, it's not like I pointed out another side of this:
jamail77 said:
Not that negative opinion of this kind is overwhelming or tipping the scales or anything because I also think many animated fans take this too far and act like animation is being persecuted, which is also far from the truth. Sometimes it just depends on the source and venue for the animation that turns a positive or neutral opinion into the negative type I'm specifically talking about. However, it is still a bias against animation of a certain stripe that they wouldn't feel the same way towards live action of the same stripe.
People who are insecure are more likely to not add clarification like that and act more like...I don't know, this?
I just thought it was cool because it's not any old day something like this happens. It's that more than anything else I said. I didn't mean for this to turn into debates about whether Guillermo del Toro (who I wouldn't just call "someone on Twitter") is a manchild or whether my choice of sharing something I thought people around here might also find cool is indicative of some sort of insecurity. I don't like people who react to things in a kneejerk manner, provide poor reasoning, and close their minds off due to caricatures of the things they insult. They don't provide good conversation unlike people who do the opposite when insulting, no, criticizing, such things. I won't pretend that isn't my perspective, but that doesn't necessarily have to overlap with me taking their unconstructive criticism personally and not being comfortable with myself.
Also, I'm not sure why people bother saying, "No offense" before they say something because they know the thing they are saying is going to sound offensive. Hey, don't get mad, but I'm going to say something negatively critical of you that you have every right to object to. But, you know, I don't want to deal with that objection. Just saying. It's kind of a useless preemption, not that I don't understand the caution being taken because at the same time it is nice to take feelings into account but it really falls flat. No offense.
Fox12 said:
In the 90s the most mature, thought provoking, and sophisticated series on television were all cartoons.
As a child of the 90s I get really tired of "daz 90s werez deh bestz" memes and what not because, come on, there was a lot of terribleness too, but if there's anything that may very well have been the best it was the cartoons.
Xsjadoblayde said:
Rick and Morty is a cartoon. I...think. Unless i am the cartoon and it is the reali...no, it is definitely a cartoon. Contains more maturity in condensed nuggets than a lot of live-action T.V. Never heard of gravity falls. Does it have anything to do with the rapid descent of a weak force or some quirky name for an artificially designed waterfall in space? Lose face? Sorry, i just quoted captcha there solely because it rhymed. What was the question again? So sleepy...
Took me a while to get into it but I love me some Rick and Morty.
This isn't the best indication of what Gravity Falls is but here's somewhat of an idea:
Fox12 said:
Sadly, Gravity Falls is one of the best television series around. Though, this has more to do with awful state of television, and less to do with the genius of Gravity Falls.
Very true. If things were different Gravity Falls might just be considered filler while you wait for the top notch stuff.
FPLOON said:
But [more] seriously, that's pretty cool... It's one of those things that reminds you that someone you like is, at times, no more different than the rest of us
Nice to see people who get where I was going with this
