Nope. Its supposed to be made for MCU fans and be important to the MCU going forward. They can't make a shitty niche product while also making it essential viewing at the same time without criticism. If the show was just another Loeb produced pile of shit airing on FX or Hulu that didn't mean anything, I'd ignore it like I ignored stuff like Helstrom, Legion, Cloak & Dagger, etc.
The second the actual MCU produces a pile of shit then its back in my attention, and it will be getting criticized, regardless of what its increasingly defensive fans want.
1) I'm not reacting to your criticism. I'm reacting to your
anger towards the show and creators, which seems disproportionate to the crime of making a TV show you don't like.
2)
WandaVision almost certainly will not be essential viewing for future MCU projects. If you look at the previous MCU films... you didn't really have to see any of the other films to watch any of them except
Endgame. They're all designed to give you a feeling of reward if you
do recognize the shared continuity elements, but they're also all designed pretty carefully to make sure that randos off the street who have never seen an MCU movie before can follow things without any problems. I would be extremely, extremely surprised if they designed
Doctor Stronge and the Multiverse of Madness so that you couldn't watch it without seeing
WandaVision first. That would be very bad business practice -- and Marvel Studios are nothing if not good businesspeople.
3) I strongly disagree with your analysis of
WandaVision -- I think that the deliberate contrast between the conventions of 1950s and 1960s television domestic situation comedies and the darker story that's ticking away under the surface is really interesting and does a lot to subvert the sitcom tropes, and I think Wanda is coming across as a three-dimensional character for the first time (e.g., her apparent desire to hide from the world in the sitcom when she's confronting with something potentially threatening, her insistence that Vision be the one to deal with unpleasant situations that violate the conventions of the sitcom genre rather than dealing with them herself, etc.). But if that doesn't work for you, that's legit! Sometimes a given genre's aesthetics and conventions are so not to one's taste that even if they're well-executed, one doesn't enjoy it. That's fine. But I promise you -- I
promise you -- you will be happier if you turn
WandaVision off and don't spend your mental energy hurling vitriol at the show and its creators over the Internet.