Yeah, I do. I've seen the clips they've posted.
Okay. Having seen the full episodes, I think it all makes sense in context (and thus far in
Rebels, Thrawn has always won), but fair enough that you've seen bits and pieces and don't like it.
It clearly shows they screwed him up exactly as I knew they would. Its the same saturday morning cartoon "genius" villain that's been around since long before I was born...
What specifically doesn't work about the character on the show? Blanket statements are fine for getting opinions across, but not so helpful for understanding the reasoning behind it.
...but on Rebels he has blue skin and likes making huge leaps in logic while looking at random paintings.
Like I said, I find it to be a very accurate depiction of the original character.

Okay, all kidding aside, in Legends, Thrawn made plenty of magical deductions from paintings. The farther down you go, the more magical they become, to the point where he was more or less a Mary Sue of observation and planning. Having seen the episode in question, Thrawn's actions and chains of reasoning are actually a lot more rational than some of the stuff he was doing in Legends.
Because we all have different opinions? People generally don't give as much of a crap about this stuff as I do, and let things go that I won't.That's not a knock, but I don't give any leeway when it comes to Thrawn, or really anything like that.
Since the TV show is
adapting the character, does it
need to be 100% the same?
TCW could be great, but it could be absolutely terrible. Based on rebels, I'd put the Jar Jar and Droids episodes on filoni, and the great episodes on other writers.
Not sure about all the shows, but the D-Squad episodes were largely George Lucas's idea; "A Sunny Day in the Void" was a show he wanted to make, at least.
TCW was also rated for an older audience, and wasn't run by Disney. It also, I presume, had at least a partially different team.
Not all of them.
The story group's job is to do what Disney wants them to do.
And it practice, Disney hasn't been micromanaging.
Also, Rebels has had literally no effect on most of the books, and none of the movies. Lords of the Sith had Hera's Dad, but that was a tie in to TCW. Dark Disciple was just TCW. Tarkin had nothing.
The show is also resolving a lot of unanswered questions left over from
The Clone Wars.
A few of the episodes tie into the Death Star's construction, making them part of the build-up to
Rogue One that can be picked out of the franchise ("The Honorable Ones" also retroactively foreshadows Vader's trip to Geonosis in the
Darth Vader comic series). The
Servants of the Empire series has massive ties to
Rebels, with Zare Leonis appearing in a couple
Rebels episodes (that advance his book's story), and the
Ghost's crew appearing in the final novel. Lothal has factored into the
Adventures in Wild Space series. Lothal's Imperial Academy is mentioned in
Lost Stars. Ezra Bridger's role in sending off the message in "A Call to Action" was referred to in the
Beware the Dark Side! novelization of ROTJ. The novel
Ahsoka has ties to the series with the Inquisitors becoming involved (as well as acting as an origin story for some bits of the TV show). Hondo Onaka's appearance on
Freemaker Adventures owed more to his
Rebels apperances than his
Clone Wars ones (if I recall correctly). The Lasat massacre even slipped into the Legends book
Imperial Handbook!
On top of that, there have been several tie-in books and series; There was the
New Dawn prequel novel (which also affected some of the short stories in that
Rise of the Empire omnibus). Kanan had a comic series. Ezra starred in his own book,
Ezra's Gamble. There have been replica journals for both Sabine and Ezra, a la the
Survival Guide and
Flight Log tie-ins Rey and Poe got. There's an official magazine with short comic stories. The entirety of season one has been novelized.
Beyond print, part of
Star Wars's online materials included an entire Holonet "news" broadcast that tied into the show. Some of the
Rebels characters have been given action figures in the
Star Wars Black toy line.
Rebels characters were among the very few
Star Wars characters to be represented in the late
Disney Infinity video game
and got their own DLC bonus content for the
Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens game (not to mention their own Lego toys).
So, no, it's actually having a pretty big impact for a couple-years-old show and has had a stronger reception from the fanbase than
Clone Wars did when it first started out.
Rebels is a cartoon for little kids, its not the foundation of a franchise made for a general audience.
Logical fallacy; I never said that, nor does have any relevance to the discussion.
Libel is never a valid tool for reasoning, debate, or discussion.
As for Zahn, he's a writer by profession. He'd probably say Dave Filoni was the greatest visionary that ever lived if it meant he'd still get work. I don't hold that against him, its his job. Its like when actors give interviews about how good their latest movie is, but it ends up being trash and they probably knew that. Again, people lie, especially when its either lie or annoy people who give you work.
Has it ever occurred to you that A). he might be a better judge of the accuracy of
Rebels Thrawn than any of us are and B.) that he could be conceivably telling the truth as he sees it?