Culture How Rick and Morty finally gets incest right

Digital Spy (Archive) - September 22, 2022
David Opie

Rick and Morty season 6 episode 3 spoilers follow.

Rick and Morty has a rather odd relationship with incest, which is quite fitting given that incest is perhaps the ultimate when it comes to "odd relationships".

Earlier seasons often joked about it, like when an alternate version of Morty wished incest porn would have "more mainstream appeal… for a friend". And that makes sense, because Rick and Morty isn't exactly one to shy away from gross stuff. In fact, it's this desire to push through boundaries that often sets the show apart from other comedies of its ilk.

However, season five arguably took this too far with the much-maligned Giant Incest Baby episode. The concept itself probably isn't the most outrageous idea this show has ever had, but there was nothing smart to ground the joke. It was just dumb and gross for the sake of it.

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Then, a few weeks later, the seventh episode of season five, titled 'Gotron Jerrysis Rickvangelion’, doubled down on this with the return of Naruto, Morty and Summer's Giant Incest Baby.

It's a lot, especially when you combine all that with the "C-137cest" community. Oh, you're not a member? Basically, there's an online community who are obsessed with the notion that Rick and Morty must be banging somewhere in the multiverse. Because anything and everything is possible in the multiverse, right?

Also, there's a lot of disturbing artwork and fan fiction out there if you're keen to learn more about this "C-137cest" phenomenon. RIP to your search history if you do decide to look though.

Bearing all that in mind, Rick and Morty's relationship with incest is rivalled only by Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon's obsession with all-out family loving. So it's with much trepidation that we approached the latest episode of Rick and Morty where Space Beth and Earth Beth get closer than ever...

That's right. Rick's two cloned daughters make the 'Beth With Two Backs' in the third episode of season six, which sounds pretty grim on the surface. Off the back of that alone, you'd be forgiven for assuming that Rick and Morty is just playing more into incesty grossness for the sake of it again.

But that wouldn't be fair, because 'Bethic Twinstinct' is so much more than that. Not only is it the best episode of the season, it's probably the best Beth episode we've seen since The ABC's of Beth aired all the way back in season three.

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The story starts off innocently enough, aside from when Jerry says he'll kill himself if Beth would ever leave him. It's a classic Jerry-ism, but it also reminds us that Beth has long felt trapped by this idiot of a man. It's no wonder that she's able to find solace in another version of herself then, one who knows Beth better than anyone else ever could.

As we learned a few years back in Beth's origin episode, she's more like Rick than we ever realised before, so now, the only way she can survive suburbia is to suppress those darker, crueller aspects of herself. But that's not all she is. Beth is also loving in many ways too, and while she might not win a Mother of the Year award here, or anywhere else in the multiverse for that matter, she's always there for her family still.

Still, this claustrophobic existence remains suffocating for Beth, even as her father and children go off to explore the impossible and leave her behind in the house with Jerry. It seems that no one really understands her or the trauma Rick once put her through, except Space Beth, of course.

Space Beth is the carefree, independent version of herself that Beth's always wanted to be, and crucially, she hasn't had to change herself to reach this point. This maybe-a-clone-maybe-not-a-clone lives the life that Beth has long dreamed of, and now it's literally in her grasp.

Sure, there's an implication that Rick's special wine acts as some sort of catalyst for their attraction, but it runs deeper than any chemical sci-fi mojo. Beth has always wanted to love herself, but she's never been able to fully take that step. Too much guarded pain holds her back. Is it any wonder then that she would fall for the version of herself that she wants to be most?

Both Beths acknowledge that their love could be considered a weird form of narcissism, which was likely the case when Rick hooked up with his own double. Yet it's not a vain form of self-love in this case. It's a validating one for them both. Regardless of Rick's machinations and their own choices too, they're still both worthy of being loved and celebrated on their own merits.

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t's a passionate love too, which is where some of the incestuous ickiness hits a bit harder, but there's always an underlying tenderness that makes BethBeth – as we now ship them – more believable than any other romance seen on this show to date.

And besides, didn't we all celebrate Loki and Sylvie when they got it on in Loki? Well, not all of us did, to be fair. But that's because their relationship fed into some tired, misogynistic tropes that Marvel revels in far too often still. Here, Rick and Morty crafts a far more convincing romance which provides us with some real, vital insight into Beth(s).

Plus, it's quite literally worlds away from all the gratuitous uncle-f**king that goes on over in Westeros.

Meanwhile, back in Rick and Morty, the rest of the Sanchez family, is pretty freaked out by it all, aside from Rick. But by the end, Jerry sneaks off to tongue another version of himself, plus Morty and Summer are still reckoning with their Giant Incest Baby, so, hypocritical much?

Bethic Twinstinct might be a bit lighter on the jokes than we're used to, but that's no bad thing when the writing is this good, especially in regard to something Rick and Morty isn't historically known to nail. Ahem.

So grab a glass of Venusian wine and join us as we raise a toast to BethBeth, the oddest, yet most likeable example of incest — or self-love, or whatever the hell it is — that we've seen on our screens all year.
 
Ye gads, this show is a cancerous growth on popular culture. I say that because Marvel Studios poached many of its writers from the early seasons, including Jennifer Gao (writer of the "Pickle Rick" episode) is the showrunner for She-Hulk. Other "illustrious" R&M alumni include Michael Waldron (Loki and Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness) and Jeff Loveness (Ant-Man & The Wasp: Quantumania), which explains why Phase 4 is such an incoherent mess. Dan Harmon and these knobs confused meta-commentary and self-referential humor for intelligent and mature writing when it's the exact opposite.

There are times where the show makes forays into interesting philosophical questions, but it's almost always by accident rather than design.
 
To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand incest. The eroticism is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical human sexuality most of the sex will go over a typical incest porn viewer's head. There's also my father's nihilistic outlook, which is deftly woven into his characterisation - his personal philosophy draws heavily from Vātsyāyana literature, for instance. The incestuous understand this stuff; they have the intellectual capacity to truly appreciate the depths of these sexual acts, to realize that they're not just hot - they say something deep about LIFE. As a consequence people who dislike incest truly ARE idiots- of course they wouldn't appreciate, for instance, the eroticism in my existencial catchphrase "Fuck me daddy I'm your little girl," which itself is a cryptic reference to Turgenev's Russian homoerotic epic Fathers and Sons. I'm smirking right now just imagining one of those addlepated simpletons scratching their heads in confusion as my father's cock engorges itself on their television screens. What fools... how I pity them. 😂 And yes by the way, I DO have a "I fuck my father" tattoo. And no, you cannot see it. It's for Father's eyes only- And even they have to demonstrate that they're within 5 IQ points of my own (preferably lower) beforehand.
 
I am sure that the author has no siblings at all....
Heard somewhere that the only people with incest fetishes are the ones who never had a sibling in the house.
Probably true. I think it's mostly a thing where people assume sibling = sis to "explore" during puberty
Without realizing that if they actually had a sibling they'd be a complete nuisance and their Mr Nobody sex fantasy would be foiled by the Westermarck Effect.
 
Now they're normalizing incest seeing how people aren't too willing to engage in dating anymore. A little known fact about the Black Community. There is an incest epidemic down there due to the women who completely eat up the feminist lie being unable to find men and thus engage in screwing relatives.
I didn't think it was so much the "can't find men", but more the "don't know who's related". The worst concentration of blacks, tends to also be the area where one guy can have anywhere from 6 to 30 offspring, who may or may not know who actually fathered them. Have multiple guys like that, and 40-60 years of that behavior (assuming someone could actually trace a geneology back to the 1960's and the free-love/Black Panthers shit), and a certain percentage in that area are all going to be cousins, and not even know it.
 
God I fucking hate this show so fucking much...

And this is coming from someone who loved it during the S2 days.

So basically, Beth is a narcissist that can fuck herself. Sure you can throw some "symbolic self love" but dont act like anyone in the Sanchez household (or fanbase for that matter) is mentally healthy when Jerry is the closest one of a "Normal" person even if he is the show's punching bag for the writers to get some payback towards their daddy issues.

I miss when this show was about wacky ocassionally "smart" science with an asshole scientist grandfather with hidden depths and his idealistic naive grandson.

Then again, what did I expect when one of the writers seem to love the Karl Marx look?

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Agreed, S1-3 we're good then it just went off the rails.

It'll occasionally have good episodes but Dan Harmon, the fat wannabe communist, now just used it to cry about his unresolved issues.
 
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