I love every season of SouthPark, but one of their issues with jokes I've noticed is repeatedly "Beating the dead horse". This trope is itself referenced in the episode involving Jared from Subways Aids. Basically, pretty much every episode of SouthPark has one central joke that is repeated throughout. Jared's Aids, The Police Chief having sex with clients while undercover as a prostitute, Kyles's dad cheesing, etc. This main joke of the episode is played at least 3 times an episode with slight variation. Sometimes the jokes are the same, sometimes it involves different characters, or it will subvert the joke or even take the joke to it's extreme. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't, and I started to really notice this trend around Southparks later seasons where there was some continuity in the story that kind of made the dead horse beating of the jokes not really work sometimes.
Family Guy is dumb humor South Park is smart humor used to think family guy was funny when I was Young and dumb. As I get older and smarter South Park has always made jokes that make fun of the Times we live in
No one else could have made Lalo as simultaneously bone-chilling and charming as Tony Dalton. Everything about his body language tells you he’s literally afraid of nothing and no-one, even when he’s literally facing death. It doesn’t get any scarier than facing someone like that!
I don’t need to watch no 30min video to know, wholeheartedly, that the comedy stylings of Matt Stone & Trey Parker shit ALL OVER any other animation; especially family guy. 😁✌🏽❤️🇦🇺
This movie is about the second father. I'm not smart enough to explain the second father concept but I think anyone who had a drill instructor, angry football coach, etc. knows him. You are terrified of this person and hate him all at the same time. Years down the road you just wish you could thank him.
This is like the 19th video I’ve seen that calls Andrew tate Tyler durden. I think that’s a bit silly since Andrew tate is real and durden was a imaginary friend But what do I know
I loved this movie. The backstory is not needed because the movie hints at the protagonist's craziness from very early on. It just went over your head buddy, i can't break it down in a comment. It's a good movie.
Mostly everyone Walt manipulated deserved It in way or another. Walt wanted to die, Skylar wouldn’t let him, then Walt decides to live and set his family up. Then Skylar drops him.
Sorry, fully disagree. The aesthetics were gorgeous. But the narrative and acting were truly inferior to Minghella's tighter film. This ripley was textbook style over substance. Dicky was dull. Ripley was soulless. And this Freddy was insufferable. A gorgeous bore of a series.
while i normally enjoy your essays and mostly agree with your points of view, i feel like this time you have been misguided. i find it quite curious that at least half of the footage you are using throughout the video is from Pixar movies. and yes, i am aware that Pixar is owned by Disney (basically like pretty much else in existence...), but that merge didn't happen until 2006, which makes Toy Story and Finding Nemo definitely Pixar movies. and even after the merge, movies like Up, Inside Out and Soul are still distinctively Pixar and anyone who has ever watched one of those movies will immediately notice that style. only because a company is owned by a larger conglomerate doesn't mean that the company's past products can be retroactively attributed to the new owner. it's as if Apple would decide to buy McDonald's and then someone would come along, saying "Well, next to the iPhone, the BigMac is one of Apple's most iconic products." a much more compelling essay (and being mislead by the video's title i've been expecting something like that), would have been an analysis about the once so prominent and unique magic of Disney movies and why and how that magic has disappeared. there's a reason why classics like Snow White, Dumbo, Bambi, The Jungle Book and even more modern classics like Aladdin, The Lion King and The Little Mermaid have enchanted and inspired generations of children for the better part of a century and still do so today, captivating that unmistakable Disney magic that transcended the years, upbringings and circumstances of those who watched them. and while there are without a doubt still commercially successful Disney movies nowadays and some of them can even be considered really good, there is no doubt that somewhere along the line, that unique and distinctive magic has been lost. i would have loved to hear your opinions on that.
It was terrible that the breaking bad universe was casting American actors with broken Spanish to play Latin-American drug dealers. They probably didn't believe in latino talent and so happy that when they gave the chance to just one....he blew everyone out of the water. In fact he was supposed to be around for a few episodes, but they saw how perfect he was that the script had to be rewritten
One other thing. Off the top of my head Lalo is the only major cartel character in the BB universe who’s played by a native Spanish speaker. As a native Spanish speaker, listening to gus, hector, and the twins to name a few speak Spanish is just painful and diminishes their characters. It’s my only complaint about the series
I found Saul’s compassion/ethics/morality very interesting. Yes, he was “slipping Jimmy”, but paying for the medical bills of the skateboarders, defending the elderly, helping his brother, and sacrificing for Kim at the end showed his compassionate side .
Just wanted to say I learned alot about mental health and how to better manage my own from watching your analysis of fictional characters you do good work 💯 your sopranos video going over Tony soprano helped me better understand how "depression is rage turned inward".