mr naked in C tier

meisisters... whats your response?
*cracks fingers* let's see if I can summon the pedospirit of meiwaku:
Bashir putting Mr. Naked in “C tier” starts to look less like a casual ranking and more like a kind of symbolic judgment about imbalance, impurity, and incomplete transformation.
In Shinto thought, one of the central ideas is the distinction between
kiyome (purity) and
kegare (impurity). Mr. Naked, by design, embodies a kind of forced rawness—total exposure, no social armor, no constructed identity. On paper, that resembles a return to a “pure” state, something almost akin to pre-social innocence. But in practice, his interactions with the other contestants (the “fish”) don’t produce harmony or renewal; instead, they often create discomfort, disruption, or stagnation. In Shinto terms, that tips him away from
kiyome and into
kegare: not because nudity itself is impure, but because the social and emotional consequences of his presence accumulate as a kind of ritual pollution that is never properly cleansed.
Now layer in a bit of Zen philosophy. Zen places value on directness and authenticity, but also on
appropriateness—the right action in the right context (
upaya, or skillful means, if you want to borrow from broader Buddhist language). Mr. Naked is “authentic” in the most literal sense, but he lacks
skillful means. He does not modulate his behavior in a way that elevates the shared environment or catalyzes insight in others. Instead, his presence becomes noise rather than signal. From a Zen perspective, that’s a failure to actualize enlightenment in the lived, relational world. He’s stuck in a kind of half-realization—performing emptiness without integrating it.
You can even map him onto the concept of a
yōkai. Yōkai are not purely evil; they are disruptive, liminal beings that expose the boundaries of the normal world. Mr. Naked functions similarly: he unsettles, he draws attention, he creates moments of absurdity. But the most compelling yōkai in folklore either teach a lesson, enforce a moral boundary, or transform those they encounter. Mr. Naked’s arc, especially by the end of the season, doesn’t quite achieve that. His disruptions don’t crystallize into meaning. He remains liminal without becoming instructive.
So when Bashir places him in C tier, it can be read (through this overly elaborate lens) as a judgment that Mr. Naked failed to complete the arc from chaos to significance. He generated
kegare without purification, embodied authenticity without
skillful means, and acted like a yōkai without delivering the narrative or moral payoff that would elevate him into something memorable or transformative.
C tier, then, is not “bad” so much as “ontologically unresolved.” He existed, he disrupted, but he did not harmonize, cleanse, or enlighten—and in a system that (implicitly or not) rewards those who do, that leaves him squarely in the middle.