RE: Wubba-Lubba-Dub-Dub!
September 20, 2017 at 11:48 am
(This post was last modified: September 20, 2017 at 11:52 am by Der/die AtheistIn.)
Some of you might be shocked or surprised, but I don't like Rick and Morty. I used to like it before the 3rd season, now the show seems a lot like Family Guy to me, not quite as bad but pretty close. Beth became a bitch, Jerry a looser, Morty a cynic with asshole tendencies, Summer was a badass in one episode and in the other she messed up with Rick's inventions to make her tits bigger. And don't let me get started with Rick. I personally think that the humor lost it's touch too, in some episodes at the very least.
Come to think about it, the show had problems from the first season. In Rick Potion No.9 Rick and Morty destroyed their own planet and burried dead versions of themselves from another universe in order to take their places. Why did Morty accept this so easily? He was shocked at the beginning and he remembers the tragedy to this day, but he's just 14 years old and his whole planet got destroyed, while real life adults get traumatized for life when their countries get destroyed. Yes it is fiction, but tell me, if Morty got over this tragedy fast, why was it so hard for him to accept that his parents got divorced? How does this make any sense? How is this entertaining?
Also how can I buy that Rick cares for Morty, or anyone for that matter, after doing this? Yes, he had moments in which he showed that he cared, but I to methese moments contradict the ones when he's abusive.
To be fair, the show is creative, and I'm sure that the people behind it have good intentions. Also, it does try harder than most of the other adult cartoons.
Come to think about it, the show had problems from the first season. In Rick Potion No.9 Rick and Morty destroyed their own planet and burried dead versions of themselves from another universe in order to take their places. Why did Morty accept this so easily? He was shocked at the beginning and he remembers the tragedy to this day, but he's just 14 years old and his whole planet got destroyed, while real life adults get traumatized for life when their countries get destroyed. Yes it is fiction, but tell me, if Morty got over this tragedy fast, why was it so hard for him to accept that his parents got divorced? How does this make any sense? How is this entertaining?
Also how can I buy that Rick cares for Morty, or anyone for that matter, after doing this? Yes, he had moments in which he showed that he cared, but I to methese moments contradict the ones when he's abusive.
To be fair, the show is creative, and I'm sure that the people behind it have good intentions. Also, it does try harder than most of the other adult cartoons.
(September 20, 2017 at 11:48 am)Die Atheistin Wrote: Some of you might be shocked or surprised, but I don't like Rick and Morty. I used to like it before the 3rd season, now the show seems a lot like Family Guy to me, not quite as bad but pretty close. Beth became a bitch, Jerry a looser, Morty a cynic with asshole tendencies, Summer was a badass in one episode and in another she messed up with Rick's inventions to make her tits bigger. And don't let me get started with Rick. I personally think that the humor lost it's touch too, in some episodes at the very least.
Come to think about it, the show had problems from the first season. In Rick Potion No.9 Rick and Morty destroyed their own planet and burried dead versions of themselves from another universe in order to take their places. Why did Morty accept this so easily? He was shocked at the beginning and he remembers the tragedy to this day, but he's just 14 years old and his whole planet got destroyed, while real life adults get traumatized for life when their countries get destroyed. Yes it is fiction, but tell me, if Morty got over this tragedy fast, why was it so hard for him to accept that his parents got divorced? How does this make any sense? How is this entertaining?
Also how can I buy that Rick cares for Morty, or anyone for that matter, after doing this? Yes, he had moments in which he showed that he cared, but I to me these moments contradict the ones when he's abusive.
To be fair, the show is creative, and I'm sure that the people behind it have good intentions. Also, it does try harder than most of the other adult cartoons.
"By simple common sense I don't believe in God, in none"
Charlie Chaplin
Charlie Chaplin