Kenobi was not a kiddie adventure.I didn't like "adventures with kids" when I was a kid, and I have not grown more tolerant of that kind of story as I've gotten older, so this show is an easy skip for me. But at least this show is blatantly a kiddie adventure show from its very premise, unlike Obi-Wan that pretended to be about the title character before having half the shows runtime taken up by a precocious brat (yes, I'm still bitter about that, and probably always will be).
Oh, come on. The burning body definitely was for kids!Kenobi was not a kiddie adventure.
I guess by the "one kid standard" The Phantom Menace was a kiddie adventureKenobi was not a kiddie adventure.
It was just a flesh wound.The burning body definitely was for kids
Is that the push back that people are like "Oh, if only these kids thought for a minute?"I think a lot of it has to do with overexaggerated teen angst and artificially manufactured drama that stems from a child's general inexperience with life. Most of it is unnecessary and self-destructive, if only they would take a second to actually think through the consequences of their actions, would solve a multitude of problems before they ever happen. Then again, there are apparently a lot of people who like to watch these kinds of dumpster fires occur. Such subject matter is well over 90% of Disney and Nickelodeon programming content. They want to attract new/younger viewers - methinks this is the kind of formula they're looking to exploit. If they get a few of the older folks like us on board, that's just gravy money for them.
My guess on such things, anyway.
To be fair to Lucasfilm, they did also give us The Clone Wars, Rebels, and The Bad Batch, which also had kids as main characters and they were great.
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