Western Animation - Discuss American, Canadian, and European cartoons here (or just bitch about wokeshit, I guess)

Happy 80th anniversary to the 3rd Tom and Jerry cartoon

Released Just ONE... FRIGGIN DAY before the Japanese attack on Pearl harbor... talk about awkward timing.
Amazing how in a span of 80 years we went from influential cartoons like Tom and Jerry, to something like this:


I really don’t get it.
 
He's also not a virgin according to that one episode where they tried to virgin sacrifice him and it didn't work.
I like that detail, with his looks and muscle he would probably get laid once in a while but he's usually lucky to even get a date. It's easy to imagine him convinced he's a studly casanova because he has sex twice a year. If he was never successful he wouldn't try so hard or be so upbeat and happy.
 
The incel-who-thinks-he's-a-chad thing is a little too on the nose for current year.
My line of thinking is more that Johnny is a chiseled, blond haired, Elvis hairdo looking dude picking up actually attractively drawn cartoon chicks as the problem. Can't have good looking people in modern cartoons anymore.
 
My line of thinking is more that Johnny is a chiseled, blond haired, Elvis hairdo looking dude picking up actually attractively drawn cartoon chicks as the problem. Can't have good looking people in modern cartoons anymore.
You can't have ugly looking people either, though. When was the last time you saw one of those lovingly-painted gross faces?
 
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Can’t even lie: as someone who watched Code Lyoko growing up, seeing this on /co/ made me chuckle.
 
I like that detail, with his looks and muscle he would probably get laid once in a while but he's usually lucky to even get a date. It's easy to imagine him convinced he's a studly casanova because he has sex twice a year. If he was never successful he wouldn't try so hard or be so upbeat and happy.
My line of thinking is more that Johnny is a chiseled, blond haired, Elvis hairdo looking dude picking up actually attractively drawn cartoon chicks as the problem. Can't have good looking people in modern cartoons anymore.
Johnny Bravo is what happens when you bless a man with the charm of Elvis, the body of The Rock and then curse him with the love luck of Leisure Suit Larry. I'd do the monkey with him.:heart-full:

You can't have ugly looking people either, though. When was the last time you saw one of those lovingly-painted gross faces?
Spongebob's got you covered there. Especially that one episode where everyone made the most disgustingly fucked up faces until they got stuck. I stopped watching new episodes after that.
 
Might go on a slight (though, very light) rant on a show that was meaningful to me growing up, but since someone already mentioned it:

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This show was the perfect example of when it seems like you don’t have real life friends, but you can chill out and just enjoy the fact that ”friends“ like these existed, even if if was in a fictional form.

The one episode where I honestly think they hit it out of the park was when Mac had a new friend that was very talkative:


It speaks volumes that the woman who co-directed and wrote episode would go on to make My Little Pony, but it says a lot how Goo was such a wonderful, yet adorable character. She actually wants to make friends with Mac and she’s outright interested in wanting to make more friends, only to then get yelled at (which I thought was the first time they really nailed the dramatic approach on this show):


A lot of people might think she may have deserved it because she was annoying, but I disagree. Goo was very talkative and she wanted to be around people that really appreciated her for being herself, and was very open to wanting to make new friends, while coming up with a reason as to why they are imaginary — she never learned how to make real friends.

Looking back, I can’t say that I was the best at making friends because of ego or shyness, or the fact that I was alone all of the time. However, I have to say that in my mind, this was honestly one of the best episodes I’ve ever seen from a cartoon like this. It almost shocks me how I vividly remember this particular episode and I recommend anyone to watch it if they have time.

I secretly like to think that this was a subtle way on what it’s like for children to be classified as “special needs” while focusing on the mental health trend that has been famous over the last four to five years, but I’m probably looking into it too much.
Foster's had a knack for presenting a "dark" world without ever leaning too hard into drama or despair. They were able to do that because the premise of the show is lowkey a creepypasta, like, what if all your friends aren't real, and what if they regularly get abandoned? It's such a dark undertone that you just have to gently remind people of it every now and then to achieve real pathos and emotion, while the rest of the show can be whimsical and hilarious. Goo is a great example, as well as Wilt's backstory, and Mac's entire home life.

I need to check out Craig McCracken's new show, Kid Cosmos, but his Wander Over Yonder on Disney was absolutely brilliant at this as well. Candy-colored cartoon worlds that surprise you with their darker episodes. "The Black Cube" from WOY is about the best piece of media on depression I've ever seen, without being preachy or overly sentimental.
 
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