Sometimes characters devolve to stereotypes for the sake of comedy, a trend that I don't really enjoy. A couple of examples: Kirstey Alley's Rebecca Howe on Cheers was a cold, professional, matter of fact woman in her first few episodes, but they later devolved her to an indecisive overly emotional cliché; Britta on Community in the first few episodes was a confident, generally competent activist who was just too much always in activist mode, but they devolved her to an idiot to the point where they started using the word Britta to mean incompetent. The same thing has happened on Big Bang, I mean hell, in the first or second episode Sheldon was going to a sperm bank. He wasn't the borderline ASD near sociopath that he later became.
I always use Felix Unger as an example. Early in the Odd Couple he was merely an eccentric fussbudget with some annoying habits, but still human. As the show went on, he became a cliche cartoon of himself, ALWAYS doing the most annoying, cliche, selfish thing possible, for the sake of the comedic 'situation.' Sheldon has followed the same unfortunate character path.Sometimes characters devolve to stereotypes for the sake of comedy, a trend that I don't really enjoy. A couple of examples: Kirstey Alley's Rebecca Howe on Cheers was a cold, professional, matter of fact woman in her first few episodes, but they later devolved her to an indecisive overly emotional cliché; Britta on Community in the first few episodes was a confident, generally competent activist who was just too much always in activist mode, but they devolved her to an idiot to the point where they started using the word Britta to mean incompetent. The same thing has happened on Big Bang, I mean hell, in the first or second episode Sheldon was going to a sperm bank. He wasn't the borderline ASD near sociopath that he later became.
I've tried, periodically, to watch episodes and see them in a different light, but the guys always come off as sexist, gender role enforcing, insult throwing jerks. The humor is unfunny, and the writing is dull, uninspired pablum. Not once have I ever thought "this is my life as a nerd! Isn't this great fun?!" On the other hand, I have a friend who loves the show, and figures that's how nerds really are, so... mission accomplished?It's not a problem with comedies or men in general. I adore It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia where the characters are monsters, but that's the premise. They're awful, constantly fail due to their flaws, ignore anything they learned and just double-down. BBT has creeps presented as the heroes and sympathetic. But it's a garbage show, so I saw a handful and completely abandoned it.
I've always had trouble figuring out where the line was between the show being a comedy for geeks versus being a comedy about geeks.
I could never get into that one either. I didn't find any of the characters pleasant.
This last episode was essentially “gee, I guess we’ve all grown up now, should we buy a house? should we have children? should we get engaged?” Ugh. The writers ran the nerd humor tanks dry years ago, and have been churning out the same old tired, overused relationship storylines that we have seen in every other boring sitcom.I mean...that's certainly better and probably more realistic than the show being (primarily) about four nerds who remain bachelors for their entire lives...
That said, the argument that the show's outlived its premise probably has some validity.
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