the thing is, it’s prolly targeted to 7 yr olds… but it starts at 13, maybe you have to learn at 10. then again, imagine a random 9 yr old boy who doesn’t know, just my opinion
I believe show casing period episodes is actually a great learning experience for young girls and even boys to know what females go through every month. Awareness like this is actually needed more. I have many friends who told me the first time they got their period they thought "they were going to die" or "they needed a doctor", In conclusion I believe no one should feel shy talking about this In the right contexts
@@dancesmokesmile344 I really don’t think kids should be learning about this without parent permission or just watching it and having their parents teach them about it
As a girl, I honestly think it's completely fine for a cartoon to have period stuff in it because it is just a natural thing that happens to every girl eventually. As long as the cartoons don't add TOO much stuff Edit: Don't want to be that person, but thanks for 100+ likes and top comment. YA'LL ARE BLOWING UP MY PHONE THO 🔥🔥
My thoughts on the period one is that it’s normal for a girl to have their period and it’s fine to show it in a good enough way that dosent show to much
Honestly, I always didn't understand why the "period talk" was something made up like it was embarrassing, periods are normal, they happen every month (unless ofc you're pregnant) and just mean "hey, you don't have a baby growing inside you!"
As a woman I belive it's actually great that more cartoons are showing kids what periods are. It's something they should know about and I don't think people need to look that deep into it (as long as the cartoon does a good job explaining the topic that is)
Its good as a young girl to see the characters on screen going thru the same things you are. Helping to normalize talking about periods is a good thing! Young boys also should be exposed to the idea of periods in a casual way thats not in a classroom setting.
Whats worse is that even they don't even talk about that stuff I'm classrooms when you're a boy they only talk about your genders anatomy they even split up the classes I still know nothing about periods tampons etc and I'm about the be in 11th grade
@@budo300 I mean, thankfully google exists now, but yeah, i know what you mean. I'm surprised , after all the progression, that 25 years later and kids are still saying what you just said. How tf is that still a thing.
Periods are a completely natural thing that should be talked about more and it’s actually pretty commendable that turning red was the big popular thing that started to normalize it. I’m sure there were others before then but it’s nice that young girls as well as boys can find something more relatable in cartoons and other media.
Yeah as a guy I never really got what the big deal was talking about periods. Literally 51% of the planet's population has the fucking things, get over it already. You can't like, try to downplay what is a perfectly natural human body function
As a girl i think its fine to put periods in cartoons for kids, as long as its not too far. I think its cool bc when i had my first period i thought i was dying and was extremly stressed😭
As a girl myself and also has experienced a period, I think girls need to know this at a young age, I knew this at a young age, and when it came, I was nervous, but I knew what it was But there is a line, as long as you don't cross that line you are fine
Periods aren’t inappropriate it’s a natural process and it’s good to talk about them because a lot of people don’t know what they are and acted weird about them when it’s mostly just cramps and bleeding
Every cartoon has its adult/nsfw stuff, but none had more than “Totally Spies.” “Totally Spies” was a “Barbie-like” cartoon about three female spy teenagers, and their adventures. Each episode followed the same formula: - The girls go on their mission - They pursue the episode’s villain - They get captured by the villain - They escape and save the day Every teenage girl in the show acts like a bimbo. The three main characters fight crime in shiny bodysuits that show off their figures. Whenever the villains capture them, they tie them up in some ways which look sexual. There was literally an episode where the mothers of the main trio get hypnotized by the villain to be his servants. They’re serving him in their swimsuits, and they fight their daughters in said swimsuits.
The Bubble Bass butt jokes are really common in SpongeBob ever since he returned in Season 9. Even then his appearence in the Season 1 episode "Fun" has Bubble Bass sitting on Plankton and moving his butt.
Whenever I see that scene of Kim Possible wearing that black dress. My two main thoughts are that while she does look gorgeous, I'm sure it made a lot of people at the time think that it's unbelievable that Kim's parents let her wear an outfit like that, I mean yeah all parents raise their kids differently but there are those who say that in real life no respectable parent would ever let their teenage daughter go out wearing an outfit like that. Especially because a dress as revealing as that one, Isn't the kind that you would wear on a date nope. That's the kind of dress you would wear if you were going to a bar or a night club. And in case anyone says anything, I know it seems like I'm taking it way too seriously but I'm just stating facts.
as a girl, I think that it is okay to put the period topic inside of a show as long as it's not mentioned too much. Kids have to learn about what it is anyway.
There's literally something that's between adult jokes and swearing in cartoons. It's called blood and I know the original Powerpuff Girls (usually in the intro) and The Loud House (in paciuliar with Clyde when he falls in love with Lori) have it.
For The Ghost and Molly McGee, periods aren't really an adult joke, they are a part of life in young girls. I have found two instances of adult jokes in The Ghost and Molly McGee. 1. In Season 1, Episode 2A, Howlin' Harriet, Scratch says he's got two balls up there. 2. In Season 1, Episode 20A, The Jig is Up, Jinx the joy-hunting ghost says she always finds her joy and as she says that to Scratch, she transforms into her scary form, while Scratch nervously says that they're going to have a lot of fun. For context, the Ghost Council sent Jinx to hunt down joy in Brighton and Molly was spreading joy and Scratch doesn't want her to her caught by Jinx. But the way the two ghosts spoke might be referring to...two people making out on a bed, if you know what this means.
7:54 What is this movie !? 8:30 Uhhhhh please nooooo. 8:59 Rita & Lynn Loud !! Shaking my head. 9:52 wooooow what are you doing bro. Not kids next door 10:37 I don't get it. Uhhhh please no more. Man there was a lot of adult jokes i've missed out on.
Im surprised that Calobi didn't mention the SpongeBob drop the sope joke literally what got an episode banned in the UK and i wouldn't be surprised if it got banned in other countries as well.
Do you know the pool scene so what time and my dad were swimming? There were random people in the pool who are doing that so we instantly got out and went home
I had a DVD player and a DVD of Johnny test back in the day even though the Johnny test was on TV back in the day so I wouldn't do using the dvd into the end of Johnny test cause i love tjevshow
Hungarian Folk Tales is a treasure trove of this. Especially the episodes "The Princess, Three Pigs and Three Birthmarks" and "The Mayor's Clever Daughter". The series is actually on RU-vid for free, including the english dub. Also 9:42 She says it's a PDA. Is she talking about the Personal Digital Assistant she's using or about his hands doing a Public Display of Affection?
Period talk in cartoons? All girls will at some point have a period. Sadly not all of those girls have parents that care enough explain that to them. That maybe the only way besides the few class periods spent talking about it in school that they learn anything about their period. So yeah, Completely acceptable.
Cartoons are created by adults, and there are bound to be some adult moments. It is the United States that went mad with the Comics' Code that only prepubescent children watch animations: This was never the original animations that were for motion picture theaters with paying adult customers.
4:25 As a woman, I actually think it’s great that they’re talking about it. When I first got it at 11, in the early 00s, I felt so embarrassed, because it was seen as “gross” or had some stigma around it. Cartoons mentioning it or just a scene like that can make kids more comfortable about the topic.
Seeing as more than one female friend of mine LITTERALLY thought they were dying (one started posting "goodbye everyone" entries on their online profiles and the other biked to the ER); I'm going to say that addressing menstruation in a cartoon isn't such a bad idea. Heath topics in general, actually. There are plenty of anatomical, hygiene and developmental misunderstandings that were alarmingly prevalent among my peers that still seem to pop up in younger generations to this day (even with them having access to the internet). If the topics are too uncomfortable for people to address face to face, then perhaps a medium that provides anonymity is the way to go.
I’m fine with it but for some kids if there’s a little boy or something watching they might not understand some kids might not be aloud to watch cause of it but it’s fine but be careful when showing period on shows
Honesty, I would approve of cartoons talking about periods just make children understand what it actually is and how to deal with it. Reason is because puberty for boys has been very talked about in shows, so why not girls. It would also help boys be less judgement and ignorant to it like I was.