TheCrimsonMayhem your response about infinity train wasnt bad tbh i thought u were doing it for attention because thats the only video that sparked up views
I thought the same thing. It just seemed like a good roast. Someone please make a video with that clip followed by the crowd of people going "OOOOHHHHH!" (the "that's the wrong number" one)
"We both have a disability. I can't walk, and you can't be nice." That was completely out of nowhere and I am still laughing at how awfully that was conveyed in a children's cartoon.
NERD Incorporated Not the object of the fear in of itself, but the actions people take due to such fear. Their extreme "precautions" are what make their fear irrational.
The first time I heard of Mr. Enter was on a forum, where someone was complaining about him getting comments saying "it's just a kid's show". To add to their point, I referred to that very quote. Dalmatians 3, THE WORST GAME EVER MADE, was also the first Caddicarus episode I ever saw.
Caddy is just great. Especially his videos about Peppa Pig are very entertaining. *Announcer:* El Grande Memelord doesn't like peppa. He watches a Mr. Enter video now. He is knocking on my door. El Grande Memelord pulls out a... what? Ahhhhhhh!"
The Wild Thornberrys did a better job with this theme. Eliza, who has never been around a disabled person before, begins to treat her new paraplegic friend Bethany as helpless. Bethany, however, overestimates what she can do because she wants to be just like everyone else. Eliza ends up endangering Bethany with her own over-protectiveness and insulting her, and Bethany pushes her limitations too far until she endangers herself. Eliza learns it's disrespectful to treat a disabled person like they're helpless and Bethany learns that sometimes she can't do everything like everyone else does. It's actually fairly well done.
It works because it's a 'treat the disabled the way you treat everyone else' moral instead of a 'disabled people can do everything you can do' moral. I'd expect nothing less from my favorite childhood show. @Matthew Castillo, that reminds me of a Waltons episode where John Boy is hired to read to a blind girl who has used her disability as an excuse to withdraw from the world. Also, pardon my error. The girl's name was Bethany, not Sarah, and I edited my comment appropriately. I don't know where I got the name Sarah.
I never liked the "I can do everything" moral when media deals with disabilities, because it seems like it invalidates the struggles that go with it. I transported college students with disabilities for several years, some of which occurred later in life. Some took to it well, while others had trouble adjusting and were frustrated and angry, understandably so. These are normal human reactions, and instead of teaching kids that they are not selfish for feeling this way and how to cope with it, we instead say "you can do anything everyone else can and should be happy and cheerful all the time!". It's dehumanizing and ignorant.
ShiningDialga it sounds similar to what "feminists" say like a woman can do anything a man can do But "feminists" now think that men are evil and the scum of the earth but say that feminists say that feminists help both men and woman
ShiningDialga I've spent years and I'll spend years more-and I have tons of supports now and in the future-to cope with my autism and everything that goes with it. I'll probably be needing special support for the rest of my life. I'm on disability and right now we're organizing things so I can move out next summer, and I'm confident that I can do it because my mom is helping me get the support that I need. But, according to this episode, I don't need the extra support because "I can do anything a regular person can do." This episode upsets me greatly. It undermines the struggle people like me-and other disabled people-have to go through. I apologize to anyone who saw this episode, disabled or not. I know I had no part in it, but you deserve an apology from someone.
Fun fact: One of the former editors of Little Clowns of Happytown actually turned against it. He even called out the creators. "There's absolutely no passion with these people. There is no sense of honor, of anger, of deep emotion, of love. They're bland-izers; they try to hammer out all of the high and low points of being a human being. I can see we're not doing Dostoevsky on Saturday morning, but there has to be some leeway to create characters who are free to express themselves."
Plus the company behind the show (Q5) was responsible for ruining Pound Puppies and The Real Ghostbusters by heavily sanitizing them into being overly kid friendly
as a wheelchair bound person i cracked up when i heard "we both have disabilities. i cant walk, and you cant be nice!" because it sounds exactly like something i would say. XD
It reminds me of the groan-worthy puns my blind friend in high school would make. We had a kid not show up to class one day. The teacher went, "Has anyone seen [student]?" And what does Blind Friend say? "Well, I didn't see him." Whole classroom lost it.
Hey, there were parents who decided to name their children Winner and Loser. Ironically, Loser went on to become a police officer, while Winner turned to a dead-end life of crime.
I like how this show is encouraging crippled kids to throw themselves into the water to save a drowning person Isn't this basically like telling a blind kid that it's ok to drive and in fact you should go try it right now.
This is one of the most insulting things to children I've ever seen. You know, a lot of people have said Disney has done some pretty dark stuff in their movies. You know why that is? Because kids need darkness. A good story, be it for children or adults, needs conflict. And by conflict I don't mean some jackass singing about how he's evil for the sake of evil. I don't mean caricatures. Children's programming needs nuance, because the world isn't black and white. Sometimes there just are no easy answers, and kids need to be prepared for that in a way that eases them in so they can understand. Kids are stupid, but they're not this stupid. A lot of people would be surprised how they can understand things due to having an unbiased viewpoint. Seriously America, bring back recess in schools. Keeping them indoors won't stop bullying, and it's not right to stunt their growth out of fear of getting sued. Also, #LetsMakeAwfulBBadAMeme
One of my favorite quotes is the following. "Fairy tales do not give the child the idea of the evil or the ugly that is in the child already because it is in the world already. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of evil. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St George to kill the dragon." A child will still face problems, both in their youth and in their future. Something that is able to help make a growing mind consider other points of view, help them undertand complex problems, and being able to recognize that the world changes over time should not be feared because there is a possibility that they may misundertand it. If anything it should encourage a guardian to be interested or aware of what types of media their charge is consuming and talking about it with them so that it helps them grow as an individual, or at least entertains them without harming them.
I wholeheartedly agree. Adults have a tendency to try and shelter kids from absolutely everything and by constantly censoring kids' entertainment because "kids don't need to know about the dark things in the world", but they fail to realise that a lot of kids have already been exposed to the dark things in the world from a young age. Kids who have been bullied, abused by their parents, grown up in poverty, etc. and they're not doing those kids any favours by pretending like their problems don't exist. This is why I loved the Hunchback of Notre Dame when I was little, because it was one of the few movies that dared to speak to children like real people and treating them as smart enough to understand serious issues, unlike many other children's movies that just talk down to them and only show sugar and rainbows and unrealistic villains, like in this stupid happy clown show.
"HEY! You can't tell me to stop being mean because IT'S A DISABILITYYYYYYY!!!" The lessons of this show only help to show the flaws of the modern day even more. Also, thank you for bringing the FIRE on this one.
Ruby Aura Yeah, I just thought it was funny that this specific *kind* of error, which is something much more frequently associated with CGI, happened during a time where CGI barely existed. I mean, Pixar's "Luxo Jr."-that early experiment where the lamp in their logo comes from-had only been made the previous year. In retrospect, it seems fairly obvious that it COULD happen in 2D, but the possibility just never occurred to me before.
Swimming with arms alone is certainly possible. I personally cannot swim with my legs(not physically disabled btw, I just somehow cannot get it to work.). the problem is that swimming like that is super slow normally. either that kid in the show has superstrengh or him being able to get someone to safety is bullshit.
Kids TV shows in the 80's: Sunshine and Rainbows and unicorn vomit Kids movies in the 80s: The darkness will claim your soul as blood rains from the sky
TBH as a disabled person I just want to consume media (TV shows, movies) that for ONCE doesn't make the disabled character's only trait "Disabled". Does that make sense?
That makes complete sense. Too often in media disabled people are bland saints who happen to be in a wheelchair (that or blind). I'll have to go searching for more examples, but for now I'll suggest Avatar: The Last Airbender. One of the characters in that show is blind, but there's a whole lot more to her than that.
THIS! This is why Toph is one of my favourite characters of all time. she's blind, but she doesn't let that stop her - she's stronger because of it, to the point where characters forget that she's blind, but they don't just ignore the blindness either. They still have plenty of times when you see what she can't do because of it and how it affects her.
Toph: There it is! *points* *Everyone looks and sees nothing* Toph: That's what it'll sound like when one of you sees it *waves hand in front of her face* Best Toph joke ever
This show was created by Chuck Lorre the same guy who made Two and a Half Men. And it was produced by Marvel. So is Awful B Bad gonna be in the new Avengers movie?
ShaDHP23 Bah, Man, I just made an SR joke XD looks like ypu beat me to the punch XD If I ever do a Let's Play, I need to incorporate this song somehow :D
tell me about it, I may have been diagnosed at an early age but even with all the help i got earlier on...I still try to hide it, when you know what you have...you also know of the social stigmas that come with it...
I was diagnosed with Asperger's when I was 4 or 5 years old, and my parents sacrificed all they could to take me to speech therapy until I can communicate right. I have OCD, such as exercising to maintain my figure seven days a week. I don't often share enjoyment, interests, or achievements with other people. Sometimes, I have the inability to empathize. I've got a list of the symptoms of my Asperger's. I can go on!
I've been told my whole life that depression isn't an issue and that I needed to "get over it" but really, it's a disability, the inability to be happy. But will any show talking about disabilities consider that? No, because we're fine and have nothing to complain about compared to that kid who has no legs and can't walk, so we just need to be happy and stop complaining.
DEFSeattle While it is a disability in the literal sense, it normally isn't considered as such due to it's (technically) temporary nature. It's more of a long-lasting illness, and is classified as such. I do understand your position though, I've been there.
The good news is that it seems like with the escalation of technology, disabilities are becoming not only more rare, but fixable, if that makes any sense. There's also a lot that still needs to be learned about mental illness, though looking back on the days where acting the way that I did would result in me with a screwdriver being shoved into my eye socket in a dirty and over crowded mental asylum, I'd say we've come a long way.
Exactly... I've always hated these type of morals. Because mental illness has such a stigma that I can't be okay with being me because I have to keep depression, paranoia, and other stuff a secret. But no, a disabled person should be happy no matter what!
Though I haven't been diagnosed with it, I'm fairly certain I have some level of depression and social anxiety. In my case, I think it's mostly due to the wonders of gender dysphoria, which unfortunately often won't go away without both physical and mental treatment. It's certainly prevented me from doing a lot of things. I suppose I do have the ability to be happy though, but it's fairly rare, and often very brief when it happens. Hopefully I'll be able to work on fixing this soon, but with delay after delay in doing so, it's just been getting worse.
@@thezdude8512 major depression is usually temporary. Dysthymia is when you feel sadness/tiredness most of the time but you can still "function". Never goes up or down for years and years
I'm another woman with asgergers. His speech was awesome! it's so rare that people actually discuss the high functioning end of autism. I have had so many issues because of it.
SaviourInDistress I feel you, I have temper problems, paying attention and focusing on something are paradoxes to me half the time, I can't really tell how someone feels as well as the next guy, was plagued by anxiety during my school days, and that's all at the top of my head. But as the song goes, "I'm getting better all the time."
i feel like the goal shouldn't be "we're all the exact same yay!" but "we're all different and those differences should be respected" instead, as a physically disabled person who's also neurodivergent
The pretty much say its just a matter of being different. That someone like that has to do some things differently and you should understand and account for that (in the episode's case, the girl didn't answer when asked questions) She is shown to have sensory issues, and they show her having a small breakdown and how she was calmed down. As someone without the issue, It seemed like a pretty well done and would at the very least, show kids to understand some people can't react to things in the "normal" manner and that they should respect and try to work with it, not against it.
I'm disabled too (physically and neurologically), and I also hate "inspiration porn". I'm not inspiring or morally superior or whatever just because I'm living with disabilities. I think the general message that disabled people are people too is important, but you don't have to be able to do everything with minimal help to count as a person! I really like Tommy Edison's channel because he's obviously his own person but he also doesn't ignore his disability. He has a great sense of self deprecating humor: there was one episode where he went to a car dealership and acted like he was going to buy a car, but he kept asking the salesman to describe the color of the car or use sighted-guide to help him cross the parking lot. That's what disability inclusion looks like: disabled people are people who can do a lot of things, but they are still disabled!!! TLDR; I agree with Mr. Enter and have plenty of feelings on the subject of ableism. Also go watch Tommy Edison.
I have Asperger's Syndrome and I hate when people tell me I'm an inspiration for graduating high school. I'm proud of myself because I worked hard to get where I am, but it's not anything heroic. However, if somebody does something exceptional while having a handicap, I do think that is inspiring. For example, somebody with social anxiety winning American Idol.
I've been in a wheelchair since 2012 and I've learned a lot about how to do things for myself again and all that. However, I too don't feel better than anyone else because of it and I even feel really awkward when people praise me for how far I've come. It' really awkward when people treat everyday tasks like you've just split the atom or something.
My brother has autism and I think the message was on the right track but they went at it the wrong way. Sure, a disabled person can do stuff like a person without said disability (or no disability at all) but depending on the disability, they may have to make a few adjustments and/or need more help or time to learn and to do that certain thing. There are some things that people with certain disabilities cannot do while others they can. I think a better moral is: I have a disability, which limits me from doing certain things and tasks, this doesn't mean, however, I can't do anything at all.
I totally agree. Having asperger's myself, I've experienced the mindset of "you are just like the others and can do what they do", too, and it's bad. Because, in this logic, not being able to do something just means you're not trying hard enough. It's good to encourage someone to become better, but in every disability, there's just some things you simply cannot do. And it's disastrous for a person's self esteem, to continue to hold them to this unachievable standard.
This is why Toph is one of my favorite characters in all of cartoons. Even though she's blind she's also strong, bold, skillful, a quick learner, and expert earth bender, quick whittled, and refuses to have special treatment for being blind. She even make jokes about how she blind. Plus the way she's written has us not feel sympathy towards her because she's blind, we're supposed to feel sympathy towards her because she had over bearing parents who hired men to kidnap her. Also the writers don't put her on a moral pedestal just because she's blind. Toph is how you write a character with a disability the right way. Don't make their disability as sypatuedic as possible and their one dimension as characters, write them as regular people who adapt their their environment in a different way. Like a legless kid that's able to draw and write with their feet or a blind person that can read books in brail.
The Little Clowns of Happy Town was an animated series created by DIC entertainment with the emphasis on "DIC" that had only four episodes aired from VHS copies they released as the remaining 14 are missing and yet to be found but his videos containing the found episodes were taken down along with his account last year (yes you guys got a Blameitonjorge lesson, you're welcome.)
I have dyscalculia, and dysgraphia. I'll bet money you don't know what these conditions are. Dyscalculia makes it nearly impossible to do math, and dysgraphia makes it so that I feel the same after four words of writing, as you do after four straight pages. But my disabilities don't get metaphorical "wheelchairs". Infact, they're are hardly recognized by every teacher I've ever had. Most people claim they don't exist. Yet, if I had dyslexia; it'd be a whole different story. People would likely bend over backwards to read things to me. Simply because I have dyslexia's sister conditions, I have to go through hell everyday to do things that would be simple for anyone else. I can fully agree that having a disability *does not* still mean you can do things.
In agreement with you. I don’t have a condition quite like yours but I do have epilepsy. I had slow learning problems up through fifth grade and if it weren’t for some very good teachers I wouldn’t have made it to high school. This is why this upset me. I believe in being confident and following your dreams but I also know what my limits are.
I know what dyscalculia is (or at least, the fact that it makes math super difficult - idk how it does that exactly), but I've never heard of dysgraphia. So, do I owe you money, or is it the other way around?
Katawa Shoujo has probably one of the best representations of disabled characters in media, which is kind of sad when you realize that this show was made by professional writers and Katawa Shoujo is a hentai game made by 4chan.
The bar is higher to be a member of 4chan than to be a professional. A professional just does something for pay. 4chan has actual values they believe in.
I just realized that Big Top clown was making fun of the paraplegic kid on the horse... Wow. Way to go, Little Clowns of Happy town for rubbing in the salt.
Personally, I'd like to see a kid's show be one of those sugarbowl worlds where the main character is a rather gloomy, all-black wearing young boy whose realistic outlook on the world ends up solving the problems of the townspeople.
I like that idea a lot. In cutesy cartoons, characters like that get treated like they're always wrong, and it's super annoying. Making them the hero who actually gets things done right despite their gloomy attitude would be pretty unique and fun to watch. Incidentally, mind if I try and use that idea? I'm working on making cartoons myself, and I'd love to try and make something of that.
PurpleWind64 Maybe have the other characters break into song all the time and the main character is the only one who can't sing. Think about it: How many animated main characters do you know who officially have a bad singing voice? I can only think of one, Shinichi Kudo from the Anime Detective Conan. Officially bad singing voices are pretty much unheard of in Western Animation, they all have officially perfect voices even if the singing is actually bad. Maybe even have the other characters flat-out judge people by how well they can sing. That would be a really nice parody jab.
We need more kids' shows that promote a realistic view of the world. Like, say, you build up to the standard 'The Complainer Is Always Wrong' moral, but then at the end it turns out either the complainer was right, or _everyone was wrong,_ or an episode of a show that teaches that sometimes violence is *an* answer, just not *the* answer.
Alpha Shitlord Or maybe that sometimes people should not decide what to do when the person has Asbergers. make the deciders make the wrong choice and keep going with it. An example could be the person with Asbergers is an expert with cars and have the deciders screw up the car. Then once the car seems to be broken beyond repair the person with Asbergers can just adjust one thing and the car becomes functional again. The moral: "Let the expert do his/her job."
So, Undertale. You can play the Genocide run all you want, but you would not get a happy ending. In fact, Chara corrupts your game, so that you can't have a happy ending, even if you do True Pacifist.
Steven Universe did the "Violence is an answer" moral. Usually, when Steven meets an enemy, he just talks to them until they realize the error of their ways and befriend him. But there are enemies who are just so stubborn with their ideals that talking would either do nothing, or they would have more of a motivation to kill him.
You are one of the greatest most honest youtube creaters ever. My brother who has autism will neber be able to live normally, he certainly cannot do what most people do as he cannot talk or comprehend many things. I love my brother, and if someone tried to put him by the same standards of a able bodied fifteen year old, he would not do very well. Thank you for your commentary on this, it was needed to be said!
Addressing your gripes on their "lifeguard training", I'm an actual lifeguard. They're talking about what is known as the "Ladder Approach": Talk, Throw, Reach, Wade, Row, Swim, Tow, Carry. Most of these steps seem ridiculous, but they made it into a really easy-to-follow checklist so that people remember to use the simplest and safest solutions first. I know some of them sound REALLY ridiculous, but you've gotta understand that it is the truth. Although, the first rule of lifeguarding is to make sure you don't die, so your point about "if you can't swim, going in to save someone ensures you'll both die" is entirely true and would never be recommended by a lifeguard.
STLLR As a fellow lifeguard it’s kinda funny to me that the show pretends that a person who can’t use their legs could be a lifeguard, it would be literally impossible to do a deep-water spinal without using your legs.
So what happens if you CAN swim but you dont have the training to save someone from drowning? Like he said, it's still dangerous to save a drowning person even if you can swim because they're panicking. Besides I just doggy paddle.
as someone else with Asperger's syndrome, I have at least some inkling of what you've gone through, and your frustrations, especially the social issues.
Which is hilarious because if you call someone differently-abled, you're calling their disability special, which is equally if not more offensive. "Oh you're paralyzed from the waist down? You're just special."
I do not like that the euphemism for disability changes regularly. I understand the linguistic and cultural reasons, but changing the therm regularly does not solve the underlaying issue.
The only time I've ever seen "differently-abled" used sincerely BY people with the affliction are Deaf people, who, more often than not, embrace the culture and language and the positive sides and everything it means to be Deaf. I've never met a Deaf person who would actually choose to hear if given the chance. Outside of the Deaf, however...yeah, differently-abled has no place. At least, in my social experience.
-Posting videos on TH-cam is not advertiser friendly. -Being offended is not advertiser friendly. -Stating your opinion is not advertiser friendly. -Having an opinion is not advertiser friendly.
Thank you for this video. I have also grown up with a disability. I have sensory processing disorder, and I interpret sensory information far different than normal people. This heavily affected me as a young child, constantly having temper tantrums and having improper speech. I've had therapy up until middle school, and I have had speech lesson until 8th grade. It is literally impossible for me to do some things, like hold a pencil properly, put on sunscreen, or put on hand sanitizer because the discomfort is too much. The last thing I want people to do is treat me like I'm a big deal and can do everything just like everyone, because I'm not. The worst thing is is that people like teachers don't know about this, so they don't know that it is physically impossible for me to have good handwriting or to have a good nights sleep. My sensitive skin often burns in sunlight because I cannot stand sunscreen. I feel kind of guilty for rarely washing my hands and touching public things but is there anything I can really do about any of this? But that's just the limitations I have to live with, and as much as I want to conquer it, I am limited. Pretending that I'm perfect and able to do these things are just unrealistic. I think that its healthy for me to realize that this is who I am and I don't have to be like the others. Life isn't hunky dory, and I don't want it to be that way.
Very insightful. I hope you get through life fine despite your limitations. I hate these "everything is cool! Disabilities do absolutely nothing!" messages and don't think they're helpful at all.
I've noticed that you're either paralyzed from the waist down and confined to wheelchair, and on the rare occasion deaf or blind. But anyone who is paralyzed from the neck down, or has Down Syndrome, Autism, ADHD, Paranoia, Anxiety, Depression, Schizophrenia, Anti-Social Personality Disorder, a physical deformity (example Neurofirbro Mitosis, a disease that cause a person to grow tumors all over their body and often leaves them deformed as a result), an amputate who has to wear a false limb, has been badly burned, is bald because of cancer treatment, has PTSD, Diabetes, or heaven forbid is a victim of physical and mental abuse at the hands of a family member, you don't exist the only thing that counts as a disability is paralyzed from the waist down, and they never go into detail about how said person became paralyzed to begin with. While we're on the topic whenever they tackle drug abuse or alcohol abuse it's always the same thing: Peer Pressure causes a kid to start smoking or drinking, not say a bad decision on their part or problems at home. Hell they rarely show what alcohol abuse does to adults.
Purple Tomato Studio Wanna know something? This dumb cartoon has some episodes missing and is listed on the Lost Media Wiki under partially found media. Little Clowns of Happytown may be forgettable considering the fact that it's Care Bears on positive steroids, but I didn't know it had episodes forgotten by time!
There is definitely some overlap there. For a while my parents thought I was high-functioning autistic, but then they met one of my closest friend who *actually is* autistic...
Wow. You took down two arguments with one massive swing. You have my gratitude. I am blind and also have Asperger's. Funny enough I too wasn't diagnosed until I was 19. All my life I grew up around, mostly adults, who wanted to believe all disabled children were special angels with nothing wrong with them. I hated it. As you stated, disability is called that for a reason. Give me all the print books you want, but that won't make me able to read them. Give me the same book in Braille or in audio and I would be able to follow along just fine. I am physically unable to do certain things. Driving as you used for an example. I've been counting the days till I can buy a self driving car. Disabilities are disabilities for a reason. They stop you from being able to do tasks that an average person can do without difficulty. The trick is to find a creative way to do that same task in a modified manner. Different, yet equal. Why isn't that taught more? Being different isn't always a negative thing. Everyone is different some how. Different race, religion, political affiliation, gender, sexuality, ect. Why can't we see that as positive rather than negative? Instead of seeing everyone who is different than you as oppressors and all who are like you as victims; why not see differences as learning experiences? Not everyone is going to like every "subject". That's understandable. But maybe you may find something new to think over or to accept. Simply respecting differences rather than outright abolishing them can help create a more well rounded and interesting individual. That's my thought anyway...
The Blind Sass Master Blind... Is able to elliquently type out and properly format a long youtube comment. Most speech to text programs don't format paragraphs that well. *Doubt [x]*
1Kenny30 Rude. Look up screen readers like JAWS or Voice Over. They are much more robust than basic Narrator. You honestly believe blind people are unable to use a computer independently?
1Kenny30 Ever notice how the F and J key on a keyboard have a bump on them? From my understanding, they serve to help people keep a proper hand position while typing, without having to constantly look down at the keyboard. This can also help blind people learn to type after they learn where each key is. But this is my understanding from several years ago.
+Zack “Zynacle” Kraemer plus there are keyboards made for blind people. With lumps representing braille code. In my university there are computers programmed for blind people with narrator settings and these lumped keyboards. So yeah, blind people can use computers just fine. Like danm, they can even use smartphones without the need to look at the screen. The blind girl in my university uses the sound of the flick motion to navegate and voice controls.
Kid talking to Billy: We have a lot in common! We both have disabilities! I can't walk and you can't be nice! Me watching that part: * laughing my ass off * OHHHH! DAMN! BETTER PUT SOME ICE ON THAT SICK BURN YOU JUST GOT BILLY!
I just realized the Spongebob episode "Spongeguard on duty" was basically just a response to shit swim advice like in this show Like go ahead and try throwing a raft or reaching for them despite them obviously flailing just to stay afloat Its not gonna work unless someone who knows what they're doing is their Sincerely from: a guy who can swim That episode just became a million times better
(WARNING THIS COMMENT IS NOT ADVERTISER FRIENDLY) do you know how sad it is when a whole bunch of people from 4chan can come together and make a game that everyone agrees handles disabilities in a much better way than literally any professionally made piece of media? pretty fuckin sad
A better message is "You can't do everything, but that doesn't mean you can't do anything. You can do some things, and there's nothing wrong with that."
The problem is that he isn't meaning it to be an insult. Moral Guardians: "KID SHOWS CANNOT HAVE CHILDREN INSULT EACH OTHER!!! MY CHILD WILL PICK IT UP!!!"
So if the paraplegic child can only swim with his arms, and he uses both arms to rescue a drowning person, how did he swim back to the dock? This show indeed didn't have much thought put in. -_-
12:07 HOLD ON DID THEY JUST WALK *THROUGH* THE DOOR FRAME? I'M TEARING UP FROM LAUGHING SO HARD I absolutely need a gif of that one scene just so I can poke fun of how they kept the models so that they were ghosts going through a wall instead of walking out the door
This cartoon is so cheesy that my sugar level will probably skyrocket, and that's not a good because Easter was just yesterday... Getting diabetes now would awful b. bad.
The one good thing was the romance between the princesses and the generals. (Even when the marriage didn't make sense). And some of the songs are decent.
@@ChantelCarter-cc7cu The message of "marrying for love" doesn't work in the context of the movie, since the forced marriage was necessary in order to stabilize the bond between China's allies and stop the war from erupting. While I love the princesses, they pretty much doomed China.
@@ChantelCarter-cc7cu I don’t hate it but it does have flaws and Mulan...acts a little different also the ending doesn’t address the invasion conflict 😅
So basically all matter in the universe is advertiser friendly, even the (this curse word with the prefix "ing" is not advertiser friendly) air we breath isn't considered advertiser friendly. Is Viacom doing this (this curse that is also waste that comes out of humans after they ingested-) Why does it keep doing this?!
Ok. This is gonna sound lame, but I just gotta say it. I'm Aspergic too, and seriously dude, that bit at 14:10 has made me feel SO much better about myself. Cause my interests DO change literally every month and for some reason I've never connected it to Aspergers before. So, thanks man. That really helped. Also love the fact that you added bees next to bears and wolves in the list of scary things in the woods.
Hey, I think I've seen you a few other places :) Five years ago, I had my heart set on being an author. Four years ago, I really wanted to be a meteorologist. Three years ago, I felt I was destined to be a guitarist in a rock band Two years ago, being a singer sounded like the dream job A year ago, I was certain I was gonna be an author again. Now, I've wanted to be a cartoon creator for months, and it's the only thing I've ever truly stuck with and been successful at.
Same. Honestly gotten to the point where I've kinda stopped worrying about what I'm gonna end up doing since my interest in it will die after a few months anyway. Good luck to you.
Same here. I like swing full force into something and then move onto something else with the same swing. Of course there are some things I like all the time, just that I tend to not have multiple hobbies or interests at once. It manifests the most when watching old shows. I marathon them and just them until I finish then move onto something else.
Magic Ma'am Almost the same here, except for the timing and the being proactive. I've wanted to get into animation and cinematography for years now but before that it was astronaut, train engineer, inventor and other things.
Matthew Chester Productions same here, however I do not think it is the case for me as I'm 17 and my socializing problems are most likely due to my way of seeing people I don't know well as bothersome obstacles rather than a genetic communication problem. What grinds my gears is that a teacher at my school as well as the specialized educator that I know have been suggesting I have asperger's just because I have trouble blending in with the other people in my class -. -
Duntem Draws: I feel like I am in a similar boat. Even though I have been diagnosed as Autistic people who have gotten to know, and know what Autism is, do not think I have Autism. I personally think that I am just quite and an Introvert. I can communicate just fine, but chose not to. I have a hard time making friends because it is hard to find people with the same interests as me which are Pokemon, Star Wars, history, Religion, music and other things.
Doc von Schmeltwick I was honestly hoping it was a fake out where he actually talked about the ova on Admirable Animation or he complained about all the good parts and he was brainwashed or something.
'Being treated like a real boy' yeah there's a lot wrong with this show, but if you've never been in a wheelchair or another mobility device.. you don't get it. People don't treat you like you're a person. They treat you like an object. They treat you lesser. They talk down to you like you're stupid or something. It's a very weird way to put it but yeah, I would say 'not like a real person' and that it's worded fine for what it's like. Not everyone does the stuff that makes you feel like that but a lot of people do. I'm glad my time in a wheelchair was temporary, even if I may have to use it again or use it from time to time. It was a very sobering experience and shed light on what life is like for people who are bound to a wheelchair. Sorry but this show, as bad as it is, got that part spot on, and I especially imagine all this was worse in the 80s too.
BlackBearCJ Thanks to chronic pain which I had the misfortune to be born with (which is extremely rare, even among chronic pain patients) I have around 30 minutes on my feet at a time. I get so fucking tired of being told you look fine your just making excuses or you can do it. I have to intentialy put myself in painful situations to build up tolerance to stay as mobile as I am.
Well... that sucks. It really is a bummer that people act like that around you. I grew up on a "højskole" (basically a danish version of college) for people with disabilities, all kinds of disabilities, and also normal people. Both students and the helpers of the disabled. And if there is one thing I have learned, you just need to know what they need, and how to communicate with them. And then you learn pretty quickly how awesome they can be and talk with :) I also remember an article with some of the disabled and regular students from the school, It was called, basically "do you have the balls to party with a disabled person?" Basically the disabled was left with some strangers as a prank for the strangers. Both the regular and the disabled was in on the joke and had some fun messing with them. So yeah I've never had problem seeing past peoples disability, hell I have a wheelchair bound cousin that married into the family. And although they could never really diagnose me, I have a mental disability. Not as bad as mrEnters, but it is a type of adhd, which makes me a little slower when learning and I also have suspected that it is the reason I need a break from people in general. You know, just be in my own head for a bit and just think of nothing really. Sorry if this comment got a bit long 😅 Basically, hope you have a good life and find someone that just is normal when around you :)
Im pretty sure that if these people made something that tackled mentle Illness they would do this. A mom learns to overcome the hardships of raising a child with scitzophrenia (however it's spelled) and how she overcomes the annoyance of her kid constantly coming to her in tears all of the while completely ignoring the child's trouble with having constant terrifying hallucinations.
I've honestly hate those sorts of things. I mean, I'm sure raising a child with a mental illness is challenging, but what about the person actually suffering from the mental illness? In Wonder (both the book and movie), I've always liked how it showed Auggie's struggles with being deformed while also showing Via's struggle with being in a family that are always paying attention to him. She understood that Auggie needed extra attention because he would constantly have surgeries as a kid and would definitely go through some difficult times as a deformed kid, and she loved her little brother, she just wished that her parents would also pay more attention to her. When she went to her new school and nobody knew about Auggie, she was happy to finally be known for something other than having a deformed little brother. She wanted to be her own person, which is why she was hesitant about letting Auggie come to her school to see her play. I felt like it was a very human, very real way of portraying those sorts of families, while not overshadowing Auggie's own struggles with being deformed. I know that disabilities/mental disorders are different from deformities, but I feel that the same sort of family concept applies.
MegaSoulHero I'll some up Mulan 2, Genghis Khan was able to conquer China because Mulan forces her values of following your heart and true love is more important than the life's of innocent millions. True story
Someone please cut off the part where he's like "I can't walk and you can't be nice" so it looks like Billy just calls the guy retarded and watches him leave angrily or something, lol
" it's just a kids show its not for you" I'm not an artist, but I know what good art looks like I'm not an film maker, but I know what a bad movie is The "it's just for kids" crap makes me want to kms
Okay if disabled people can do anything a "normal" person can do. Why doesn't that kid get up and walk? "OH DISABLED people can do anything quote on quote normal people can do so..." God I fucking hate the normal quota shit.
4:25 "Congratulations Mrs bad , Its a boy !" "What are you going to name him ?" "AWFUL ! YOUR HOSPITAL FOOD IS AWFUL ! " " I want to name him brad, just like his grandpa " " Awful it is ..."
I am currently studying to become a physical therapist, a career known to treat people with disabilities. In the episode, the wheelchair seems more like a token than a necessary assistive device. How can Rodney swim? There is a very very slim possibility to know how to swim, even if you can't walk. But the show doesn't explain how Rodney could swim when he is wheelchair bound. At least when Joe from Family Guy swims, it shows that he has really good upper body strength, so he is able to move even with his disability. As MrEnter said in the review, we don't know how he got his injury or any details about it. Even with the term "paraplegia," such a diagnosis comes in many variations. Rodney is able to swim and carry a drowning child, but not walk. To be able to rescue a drowning person takes a lot of strength from both the upper and lower halves of the body. It's kinda confusing when it comes to Rodney's strength. MrEnter explained all of that beautifully in the review. The Hiccups bit really disturbed me. She is hiccuping non-stop, somebody should address that, as that could be a sign for some serious issues. Also, regarding the "over-protective" parent. I feel in this era parents should be well-informed about their kid's disability and know how to help them in any way they can. This includes being on the safer side to prevent any more complications or additional injuries. So yea "Little Clowns of Happy Town," this mom should act the way she does.
+Oliver Kigar Well, if they made the Angry Birds movie then I doubt they'd let some bad press stop them from making use of what animation they've finished. Besides, wasn't the Trolls movie somewhat successful? We have to continue the trend of trying to re-create the Lego Movie's success without understanding why it worked so well somehow!!!
As a person with aspergers I had to deal with verbal teasing for 10 years in grade school. Also some other things that are too personal to talk about and I want to forget about. As a teen I wasn't in the good state of mind and I had suicidal thoughts but 11th grade came in and sure enough high school was much more pleasant. I dunno why it stopped but it did because I did call people out a few times. I even punch a kid in the face in 9th grade for just telling me that I "Sucked many dicks". Normally I would never do that but I had too since at the time that kid was harassing me with his innuendos before. Treating disabilities like its special or a disease or a problem is really not the right way to treat people with disabilities. Anyways you keep doing a great job Mr. Enter.
Barney the dinosaur is more hardore then this cause even that show has conflict i mean really boring conflict but ya...and the songs are a lot less grating then this.. also now that i think about it...even sesame street and the better shows that tackle disabilites better like arthur (Even with some badly written characters it has) does it better... and its really sad when my little pony g3 (not 3.5 i think thats tied with this)...does conflict then this and has better songs ugh...
I mean, in My Little Pony they go over self inflicted harming, self hate, disabilities (actually does it right) and FUCKING STALIN LIKE SOCIETIES AND WHY MARXISM IS WRONG..... So yeah.
As your editor, please spread this around: #LetsMakeAwfulBBadAMeme
TheCrimsonMayhem At least it'll be better than The Nutshack. or "Hey Beter"
Going to the courthouse to legally change my name to Awful B. Bad.
frankensteinmoneymac Right now??? It's 12:25 am
TheCrimsonMayhem your response about infinity train wasnt bad tbh i thought u were doing it for attention because thats the only video that sparked up views
TheCrimsonMayhem he's my spirit animal
"We both have disabilities. I can't walk, and you can't be nice!"
It's not, but that SOUNDS like it should be really savage.
*insert meme clip of that group going OOOOOH! after savage burn comments*
IKR I JUST COMMENTED THAT
I ended up bursting out laughing after the initial shock wore off.
Sick burn.
I thought the same thing. It just seemed like a good roast. Someone please make a video with that clip followed by the crowd of people going "OOOOHHHHH!" (the "that's the wrong number" one)
"We both have a disability. I can't walk, and you can't be nice."
That was completely out of nowhere and I am still laughing at how awfully that was conveyed in a children's cartoon.
Apache Mapache we both have disabilities. I can't walk, and you don't have a life
Apache Mapache This will probably become a meme.
Honestly it seems more like he was trying to diss him there.
Apache Mapache Same here dude. It's murder on my ribs right now
TackyRackyComixNEO that would've been clever if it was intentional
"a kids show designed to be as inoffensive as possible"
with crippling coulrophobia, i'd say they failed
How do you stand to look at your avatar?
Not to mention it still gives off bad implications
How can you possibly find THESE clowns scary when they are meant to be less scary than actual circus clowns?
Redjed 1 Funny thing about phobias: they don't particularly follow logic. It's why they're called "irrational".
NERD Incorporated Not the object of the fear in of itself, but the actions people take due to such fear. Their extreme "precautions" are what make their fear irrational.
"Kids may be easy to entertain, but they're not stupid." - Caddicarus
The first time I heard of Mr. Enter was on a forum, where someone was complaining about him getting comments saying "it's just a kid's show". To add to their point, I referred to that very quote. Dalmatians 3, THE WORST GAME EVER MADE, was also the first Caddicarus episode I ever saw.
Caddy knows whats up!
Caddy is just great. Especially his videos about Peppa Pig are very entertaining.
*Announcer:* El Grande Memelord doesn't like peppa. He watches a Mr. Enter video now. He is knocking on my door. El Grande Memelord pulls out a... what? Ahhhhhhh!"
Blazer the Delphox Spectacular spiderman to ultimate in a nutshell
Yeah, even as a child I knew The Secret of NIMH 2 was terrible.
They missed the prefect Opportunity to call him
Awful. E. Bad
Awfully bad show.
Luigi's Mansion scooped that one up years later.
+PieFace Or... a VARIATION but close enough XD
Oooh that'd been good.
They couldn't even get that right! XD
Puns are not advertiser friendly!
I was thinking just that!
The Wild Thornberrys did a better job with this theme. Eliza, who has never been around a disabled person before, begins to treat her new paraplegic friend Bethany as helpless. Bethany, however, overestimates what she can do because she wants to be just like everyone else. Eliza ends up endangering Bethany with her own over-protectiveness and insulting her, and Bethany pushes her limitations too far until she endangers herself. Eliza learns it's disrespectful to treat a disabled person like they're helpless and Bethany learns that sometimes she can't do everything like everyone else does. It's actually fairly well done.
SunnysFilms Funny you mentioned them, I just started a marathon of going through the show
Really liked that episode. It the one I'd point to as well for "how to do this premise."
It works because it's a 'treat the disabled the way you treat everyone else' moral instead of a 'disabled people can do everything you can do' moral. I'd expect nothing less from my favorite childhood show.
@Matthew Castillo, that reminds me of a Waltons episode where John Boy is hired to read to a blind girl who has used her disability as an excuse to withdraw from the world.
Also, pardon my error. The girl's name was Bethany, not Sarah, and I edited my comment appropriately. I don't know where I got the name Sarah.
+SunnysFilms I reread the comment and was VERY confused XD
Yeah, sorry about that. I have a near encyclopedic knowledge of this show. You'd think I'd have gotten the name right. lol XD
I never liked the "I can do everything" moral when media deals with disabilities, because it seems like it invalidates the struggles that go with it. I transported college students with disabilities for several years, some of which occurred later in life. Some took to it well, while others had trouble adjusting and were frustrated and angry, understandably so. These are normal human reactions, and instead of teaching kids that they are not selfish for feeling this way and how to cope with it, we instead say "you can do anything everyone else can and should be happy and cheerful all the time!". It's dehumanizing and ignorant.
ShiningDialga Amen dude
Now I want to see an episode of a cartoon that teaches the message ShiningDialga wants to see.
ShiningDialga Exactly. Sometimes you need the "This sucks and that's ok."
ShiningDialga it sounds similar to what "feminists" say like a woman can do anything a man can do
But "feminists" now think that men are evil and the scum of the earth but say that feminists say that feminists help both men and woman
ShiningDialga I've spent years and I'll spend years more-and I have tons of supports now and in the future-to cope with my autism and everything that goes with it. I'll probably be needing special support for the rest of my life. I'm on disability and right now we're organizing things so I can move out next summer, and I'm confident that I can do it because my mom is helping me get the support that I need.
But, according to this episode, I don't need the extra support because "I can do anything a regular person can do."
This episode upsets me greatly. It undermines the struggle people like me-and other disabled people-have to go through.
I apologize to anyone who saw this episode, disabled or not. I know I had no part in it, but you deserve an apology from someone.
Fun fact: One of the former editors of Little Clowns of Happytown actually turned against it.
He even called out the creators.
"There's absolutely no passion with these people. There is no sense of honor, of anger, of deep emotion, of love. They're bland-izers; they try to hammer out all of the high and low points of being a human being. I can see we're not doing Dostoevsky on Saturday morning, but there has to be some leeway to create characters who are free to express themselves."
Some Dude damn, he took the words right out of my mouth
what is the editors name?
I forgot that I put the editor's quote in the original comment. I guess I'll edit that out of the new reply of mine. My bad!
Good.
Plus the company behind the show (Q5) was responsible for ruining Pound Puppies and The Real Ghostbusters by heavily sanitizing them into being overly kid friendly
as a wheelchair bound person i cracked up when i heard "we both have disabilities. i cant walk, and you cant be nice!" because it sounds exactly like something i would say. XD
MIHARU rokujo that is just sickest of burns
Burn level: Atmospheric reentry
It reminds me of the groan-worthy puns my blind friend in high school would make. We had a kid not show up to class one day. The teacher went, "Has anyone seen [student]?" And what does Blind Friend say? "Well, I didn't see him."
Whole classroom lost it.
Much prefer "We both have disabilities. I can't walk..."
*pushes the kid down the stairs*
"Now you can't either."
this is by far the best reply to any comment i've posted. Ever.
Just take in the fact someone thought it would be a good idea to name their child "Awful"
By the size of his chin I'm sure he was awfully painful to come to this world.
Maybe he had it legally changed.
Actually, there was someone who was named Awful Bad. Anyone besides me listen to Donald Davis?
I wonder what the B stands for
Hey, there were parents who decided to name their children Winner and Loser. Ironically, Loser went on to become a police officer, while Winner turned to a dead-end life of crime.
"What if you find the boats are all gone?"
"Then go in yourself!"
*Spits out coffee*
Spitting is not Advertiser-Friendly.
I like how this show is encouraging crippled kids to throw themselves into the water to save a drowning person
Isn't this basically like telling a blind kid that it's ok to drive and in fact you should go try it right now.
Darby's Drawings THAT WAS THE FUNNIEST THING I HAVE SEEN ALL MONTH 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣☺️🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
XD
Darby's Drawings BEING SHOCKED IS NOT ADVERTIZER FRIENDLY
This is one of the most insulting things to children I've ever seen. You know, a lot of people have said Disney has done some pretty dark stuff in their movies. You know why that is? Because kids need darkness. A good story, be it for children or adults, needs conflict. And by conflict I don't mean some jackass singing about how he's evil for the sake of evil. I don't mean caricatures. Children's programming needs nuance, because the world isn't black and white. Sometimes there just are no easy answers, and kids need to be prepared for that in a way that eases them in so they can understand. Kids are stupid, but they're not this stupid. A lot of people would be surprised how they can understand things due to having an unbiased viewpoint.
Seriously America, bring back recess in schools. Keeping them indoors won't stop bullying, and it's not right to stunt their growth out of fear of getting sued.
Also, #LetsMakeAwfulBBadAMeme
One of my favorite quotes is the following. "Fairy tales do not give the child the idea of the evil or the ugly that is in the child already because it is in the world already. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of evil. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St George to kill the dragon." A child will still face problems, both in their youth and in their future. Something that is able to help make a growing mind consider other points of view, help them undertand complex problems, and being able to recognize that the world changes over time should not be feared because there is a possibility that they may misundertand it. If anything it should encourage a guardian to be interested or aware of what types of media their charge is consuming and talking about it with them so that it helps them grow as an individual, or at least entertains them without harming them.
I wholeheartedly agree. Adults have a tendency to try and shelter kids from absolutely everything and by constantly censoring kids' entertainment because "kids don't need to know about the dark things in the world", but they fail to realise that a lot of kids have already been exposed to the dark things in the world from a young age. Kids who have been bullied, abused by their parents, grown up in poverty, etc. and they're not doing those kids any favours by pretending like their problems don't exist.
This is why I loved the Hunchback of Notre Dame when I was little, because it was one of the few movies that dared to speak to children like real people and treating them as smart enough to understand serious issues, unlike many other children's movies that just talk down to them and only show sugar and rainbows and unrealistic villains, like in this stupid happy clown show.
That's why Disney movies still hold up when you watch them as an adult.
Yamishi Ikeda
I know! Mr Enter is insulting to children.
Wait, America doesn't even have Recess anymore?
"Anything you can do I can do too."
Me: *gets up and takes a step forward* Your move, kid.
Xee W exactly
Making fun of the disabled is not advertiser-friendly.
Xee W daaaamn son XDDDDD
Your move, OH WAIT, YOU CAN'T SCRUB.
Him: wheelchair basketball match
"HEY! You can't tell me to stop being mean because IT'S A DISABILITYYYYYYY!!!"
The lessons of this show only help to show the flaws of the modern day even more.
Also, thank you for bringing the FIRE on this one.
I agree completly
MindOfGenius so true man
4:50 Look very, very closely. His leg and hip clips through the henchman with goggles.
I repeat.
There is a _clipping error_ in a _2D cartoon._
Maybe his henchmen are just figments of his imagination.
Baffle Blend To be fair animation errors like this we're surprisingly common in cartoons back then, even in the 80s and 90s.
Ruby Aura Yeah, I just thought it was funny that this specific *kind* of error, which is something much more frequently associated with CGI, happened during a time where CGI barely existed. I mean, Pixar's "Luxo Jr."-that early experiment where the lamp in their logo comes from-had only been made the previous year.
In retrospect, it seems fairly obvious that it COULD happen in 2D, but the possibility just never occurred to me before.
Baffle Blend look at Transformers G1 so many animation errors. Still love it though
12:42
I'm unreasonably annoyed that the name is not Awful Lee Bad.
Dac85 I was just thinking that
Or even Awful E. Bad
im annoyed its not Awful Bad Man
Awful B. Bad
Awful D Bad
Every
Villain
Is
Lemons.
For some reason, I thought "Lemons" was "Read more" so I tried to press "Lemons" to read more of your comment
ThatGuyfromBrazil _WHEN LIVE GIVES YOU VILLAINS, DON'T MAKE VILLIANADE, MAKE LIVE TAKE THE VILLAINS BACK!
Every
Villain
Is
Combustible Lemons
cuz it's EEEEEEVVVVVVIIIIIIILLLLLLL
Except Obake he's fruit punch lol .
"Anything you can do, I can do, too."
Okay, stand on one leg.
So tasteless, you may as well call me "tofu".
Anything you can do, I can do better.
I can do anything better than you.
No, you can't. Yes, I can.
No, you can't. Yes, I can, yes, I can.
Hello, Tofu
*o JOKES ABOUT HOW TASTELESS TOFU IS ARE OFFENSIVE TO VEGANS!*
@@BronyNumber4096 vegans deserve to be offended
Wait, how can that kid swim perectly IF HE'S ON A WHEELCHAIR!? Is, there any logic by that?
He would need a lot of upper body strength to keep himself afloat
Well, Link can somehow swim with just one arm, so...
I was also wondering how that kid would be treading water
@@someidiotmetalhead you can tread water without using your legs. Just try in next time you swim.
Swimming with arms alone is certainly possible. I personally cannot swim with my legs(not physically disabled btw, I just somehow cannot get it to work.). the problem is that swimming like that is super slow normally. either that kid in the show has superstrengh or him being able to get someone to safety is bullshit.
Kids TV shows in the 80's: Sunshine and Rainbows and unicorn vomit
Kids movies in the 80s: The darkness will claim your soul as blood rains from the sky
This is why movies were more popular.
Kids movies now: LGBT go strip down the street
TBH as a disabled person I just want to consume media (TV shows, movies) that for ONCE doesn't make the disabled character's only trait "Disabled". Does that make sense?
That makes complete sense. Too often in media disabled people are bland saints who happen to be in a wheelchair (that or blind).
I'll have to go searching for more examples, but for now I'll suggest Avatar: The Last Airbender. One of the characters in that show is blind, but there's a whole lot more to her than that.
Pejk Um, Toph from Avatar?
That's actually the only one I can think of.
Jimmy from South Park? He pretty much acts like any boy his age. Walter Jr. from Breaking Bad also comes to mind.
I mean there's Johnny Joestar.... wait never mind, I take it back.
lol Jimmy is amazing XD
THIS! This is why Toph is one of my favourite characters of all time. she's blind, but she doesn't let that stop her - she's stronger because of it, to the point where characters forget that she's blind, but they don't just ignore the blindness either. They still have plenty of times when you see what she can't do because of it and how it affects her.
SuchName MuchProfile not only that she and the others accepted it so much they can joke about it.
Yes! Avatar FTW!
Sokka: "I can't see!"
Toph: "Oh no! What a nightmare!
Toph: *bumps into Sokka*
Sokka: Can't you watch where you're-*pauses*
Toph: No
Sokka: Right, sorry
Toph: There it is! *points*
*Everyone looks and sees nothing*
Toph: That's what it'll sound like when one of you sees it *waves hand in front of her face*
Best Toph joke ever
"Little Clowns of Happy Town" is that cheery alternative that Lemony Snicket offers the readers of "A Series of Unfortunate Events".
Star Gamer 3120 I chuckled
White Mage Mission Accomplished.
This show was created by Chuck Lorre the same guy who made Two and a Half Men. And it was produced by Marvel.
So is Awful B Bad gonna be in the new Avengers movie?
He better.
I would actually get a DVD of a Marvel movie for him.
Wow.
Joke: I heard that The Little Clowns are going to have a crossover with Howard the Duck
It's been 3 years and this man awful still hasn't won against the big guys, do we need to make a petition?
You made a joke that the theme song is what you'd hear in hell but let me reassure you that even satan has limits on punishments
*Playing that theme song in Hell is not advertiser-friendly.*
Troper H'ghar LMAO
Troper H'ghar I can actually imagine this being Satan's ringtone
Troper H'ghar
Me: "Speaking from experience?"
Johnny Gat: *"Yes."*
*sorry not sorry*
ShaDHP23 Bah, Man, I just made an SR joke XD looks like ypu beat me to the punch XD
If I ever do a Let's Play, I need to incorporate this song somehow :D
As someone who has Asperger's syndrome too. Your reasons for hating this episodes ring so true to my heart that all I can say is thank you...
tell me about it, I may have been diagnosed at an early age but even with all the help i got earlier on...I still try to hide it, when you know what you have...you also know of the social stigmas that come with it...
Blaze Blockade I honestly don't care you sensitive piece of shit. You aren't special lol
I was diagnosed with Asperger's when I was 4 or 5 years old, and my parents sacrificed all they could to take me to speech therapy until I can communicate right.
I have OCD, such as exercising to maintain my figure seven days a week.
I don't often share enjoyment, interests, or achievements with other people.
Sometimes, I have the inability to empathize.
I've got a list of the symptoms of my Asperger's. I can go on!
Hotshotter3000 I have a cousin who has Asberger and according to a psychologist I have traces of it myself. I feel your pain.
I'm a fellow Aspie who was originally diagnosed with ADD or ADHD or something like that at the age of 4
"What if you can't swim?"
"Then go in yourself!"
....what were they thinking.
yep Can't argue with that bullshit
Meat Machine ikt
I've been told my whole life that depression isn't an issue and that I needed to "get over it" but really, it's a disability, the inability to be happy. But will any show talking about disabilities consider that? No, because we're fine and have nothing to complain about compared to that kid who has no legs and can't walk, so we just need to be happy and stop complaining.
DEFSeattle
While it is a disability in the literal sense, it normally isn't considered as such due to it's (technically) temporary nature. It's more of a long-lasting illness, and is classified as such. I do understand your position though, I've been there.
The good news is that it seems like with the escalation of technology, disabilities are becoming not only more rare, but fixable, if that makes any sense.
There's also a lot that still needs to be learned about mental illness, though looking back on the days where acting the way that I did would result in me with a screwdriver being shoved into my eye socket in a dirty and over crowded mental asylum, I'd say we've come a long way.
Exactly... I've always hated these type of morals. Because mental illness has such a stigma that I can't be okay with being me because I have to keep depression, paranoia, and other stuff a secret. But no, a disabled person should be happy no matter what!
Though I haven't been diagnosed with it, I'm fairly certain I have some level of depression and social anxiety. In my case, I think it's mostly due to the wonders of gender dysphoria, which unfortunately often won't go away without both physical and mental treatment. It's certainly prevented me from doing a lot of things. I suppose I do have the ability to be happy though, but it's fairly rare, and often very brief when it happens. Hopefully I'll be able to work on fixing this soon, but with delay after delay in doing so, it's just been getting worse.
@@thezdude8512 major depression is usually temporary. Dysthymia is when you feel sadness/tiredness most of the time but you can still "function". Never goes up or down for years and years
*BEING A TH-camR IN GENERAL IS NOT ADVERTISER FRIENDLY*
Rowan Brett *COMMENTING SELF AWARE COMMENTS ABOUT TH-cam BEING SJW FUCKS IS NOT ADVERTISER FRIENDLY.*
Rowan Brett
*I'M DOGGO AND THAT'S NOT ADVERTISER FRIENDLY*
At this point, who gives a shit?
HOW ABOUT I DO IT ANYWAY?!
Rowan Brett existing is not advertiser friendly
As a woman with Aspergers, I totally understand and admire your speech on disabilities.
Ṩћαī ツ Кưɱα Me too, I'm a high functioning autism kinda guy myself.
I'm another woman with asgergers. His speech was awesome! it's so rare that people actually discuss the high functioning end of autism. I have had so many issues because of it.
SaviourInDistress I feel you, I have temper problems, paying attention and focusing on something are paradoxes to me half the time, I can't really tell how someone feels as well as the next guy, was plagued by anxiety during my school days, and that's all at the top of my head.
But as the song goes, "I'm getting better all the time."
I have Aspergers too... my boyfriend also has Aspergers ... so its kinda hard for us to talk to eachother although he talks more than I do
Ṩћαī ツ Кưɱα I'm sure you will get better soon, break a leg out there
i feel like the goal shouldn't be "we're all the exact same yay!" but "we're all different and those differences should be respected" instead, as a physically disabled person who's also neurodivergent
That’s what the message should have been
Sesame Street just did an episode on autism, and it was well-researched and had great morals. I'd think you'd like it
VeryHarry That's because it's Sesame Street and they know what the heck they're doing.
Why else had it been on the air for nearly half a century? 😊
It's too bad Elmo basically took it over.
VeryHarry If it can do death, it can do disabilities
The pretty much say its just a matter of being different. That someone like that has to do some things differently and you should understand and account for that (in the episode's case, the girl didn't answer when asked questions) She is shown to have sensory issues, and they show her having a small breakdown and how she was calmed down.
As someone without the issue, It seemed like a pretty well done and would at the very least, show kids to understand some people can't react to things in the "normal" manner and that they should respect and try to work with it, not against it.
*Bending to Advertiser Friendly Robot's will is not Advertiser Friendly*
SonicSceptileWarrior this gave me a laugh 😅
That's not welcome in a school invierment
Sorry for bad grammar
*CREATING MATERIAL OF POOR QUALITY IS NOT ADVERTISER FRIENDLY*
Claiming that Friend Computer’s rules are contradictory is treason.
I'm disabled too (physically and neurologically), and I also hate "inspiration porn". I'm not inspiring or morally superior or whatever just because I'm living with disabilities. I think the general message that disabled people are people too is important, but you don't have to be able to do everything with minimal help to count as a person! I really like Tommy Edison's channel because he's obviously his own person but he also doesn't ignore his disability. He has a great sense of self deprecating humor: there was one episode where he went to a car dealership and acted like he was going to buy a car, but he kept asking the salesman to describe the color of the car or use sighted-guide to help him cross the parking lot. That's what disability inclusion looks like: disabled people are people who can do a lot of things, but they are still disabled!!!
TLDR; I agree with Mr. Enter and have plenty of feelings on the subject of ableism. Also go watch Tommy Edison.
I have Asperger's Syndrome and I hate when people tell me I'm an inspiration for graduating high school. I'm proud of myself because I worked hard to get where I am, but it's not anything heroic. However, if somebody does something exceptional while having a handicap, I do think that is inspiring. For example, somebody with social anxiety winning American Idol.
Spotted Hyena exactly
I've been in a wheelchair since 2012 and I've learned a lot about how to do things for myself again and all that. However, I too don't feel better than anyone else because of it and I even feel really awkward when people praise me for how far I've come. It' really awkward when people treat everyday tasks like you've just split the atom or something.
My brother has autism and I think the message was on the right track but they went at it the wrong way. Sure, a disabled person can do stuff like a person without said disability (or no disability at all) but depending on the disability, they may have to make a few adjustments and/or need more help or time to learn and to do that certain thing. There are some things that people with certain disabilities cannot do while others they can. I think a better moral is: I have a disability, which limits me from doing certain things and tasks, this doesn't mean, however, I can't do anything at all.
I totally agree. Having asperger's myself, I've experienced the mindset of "you are just like the others and can do what they do", too, and it's bad. Because, in this logic, not being able to do something just means you're not trying hard enough. It's good to encourage someone to become better, but in every disability, there's just some things you simply cannot do. And it's disastrous for a person's self esteem, to continue to hold them to this unachievable standard.
Same
This is why Toph is one of my favorite characters in all of cartoons. Even though she's blind she's also strong, bold, skillful, a quick learner, and expert earth bender, quick whittled, and refuses to have special treatment for being blind. She even make jokes about how she blind. Plus the way she's written has us not feel sympathy towards her because she's blind, we're supposed to feel sympathy towards her because she had over bearing parents who hired men to kidnap her. Also the writers don't put her on a moral pedestal just because she's blind. Toph is how you write a character with a disability the right way. Don't make their disability as sypatuedic as possible and their one dimension as characters, write them as regular people who adapt their their environment in a different way. Like a legless kid that's able to draw and write with their feet or a blind person that can read books in brail.
Don’t you mean “armless”?
That Advertiser Friendly rant might be one of the best things Mr Enter's done in a loooooooooong time. It was beautiful!
...but not advertiser friendly.
I think the I.M. Meen song was actually a little better than the one you're comparing it to.
Holy shit.
The Little Clowns of Happy Town was an animated series created by DIC entertainment with the emphasis on "DIC" that had only four episodes aired from VHS copies they released as the remaining 14 are missing and yet to be found but his videos containing the found episodes were taken down along with his account last year (yes you guys got a Blameitonjorge lesson, you're welcome.)
Maurice Bear Oh it's the same company that originally dubbed Sailor Moon terribly (not voice acting wise anyways).
damonika09 Yes you are correct.
Maurice Bear I like DIC Entertainment But This Is a Garbage Animation for DIC.
you cant say DİC without saying DİCK :P
Maurice Bear saying DIC is too offensive
I have dyscalculia, and dysgraphia. I'll bet money you don't know what these conditions are. Dyscalculia makes it nearly impossible to do math, and dysgraphia makes it so that I feel the same after four words of writing, as you do after four straight pages. But my disabilities don't get metaphorical "wheelchairs". Infact, they're are hardly recognized by every teacher I've ever had. Most people claim they don't exist. Yet, if I had dyslexia; it'd be a whole different story. People would likely bend over backwards to read things to me. Simply because I have dyslexia's sister conditions, I have to go through hell everyday to do things that would be simple for anyone else. I can fully agree that having a disability *does not* still mean you can do things.
In agreement with you. I don’t have a condition quite like yours but I do have epilepsy. I had slow learning problems up through fifth grade and if it weren’t for some very good teachers I wouldn’t have made it to high school. This is why this upset me. I believe in being confident and following your dreams but I also know what my limits are.
I know what dyscalculia is (or at least, the fact that it makes math super difficult - idk how it does that exactly), but I've never heard of dysgraphia.
So, do I owe you money, or is it the other way around?
Katawa Shoujo has probably one of the best representations of disabled characters in media, which is kind of sad when you realize that this show was made by professional writers and Katawa Shoujo is a hentai game made by 4chan.
O_O
The bar is higher to be a member of 4chan than to be a professional. A professional just does something for pay. 4chan has actual values they believe in.
That feel when 4chan has better morals than your crappy kids show.
I just realized that Big Top clown was making fun of the paraplegic kid on the horse... Wow. Way to go, Little Clowns of Happy town for rubbing in the salt.
Ikr
Personally, I'd like to see a kid's show be one of those sugarbowl worlds where the main character is a rather gloomy, all-black wearing young boy whose realistic outlook on the world ends up solving the problems of the townspeople.
I like that idea a lot. In cutesy cartoons, characters like that get treated like they're always wrong, and it's super annoying. Making them the hero who actually gets things done right despite their gloomy attitude would be pretty unique and fun to watch.
Incidentally, mind if I try and use that idea? I'm working on making cartoons myself, and I'd love to try and make something of that.
PurpleWind64 Maybe have the other characters break into song all the time and the main character is the only one who can't sing. Think about it: How many animated main characters do you know who officially have a bad singing voice? I can only think of one, Shinichi Kudo from the Anime Detective Conan. Officially bad singing voices are pretty much unheard of in Western Animation, they all have officially perfect voices even if the singing is actually bad. Maybe even have the other characters flat-out judge people by how well they can sing. That would be a really nice parody jab.
you mean the troll's movie?
I swear, if THAT's the plot of the Emoji Movie...
Sounds like the interplay between Duckman and Fluffy & Uranus if I may be honest.
If anything, concept is proven.
We need more kids' shows that promote a realistic view of the world. Like, say, you build up to the standard 'The Complainer Is Always Wrong' moral, but then at the end it turns out either the complainer was right, or _everyone was wrong,_ or an episode of a show that teaches that sometimes violence is *an* answer, just not *the* answer.
Alpha Shitlord Not a bad idea.
Alpha Shitlord Or maybe that sometimes people should not decide what to do when the person has Asbergers. make the deciders make the wrong choice and keep going with it. An example could be the person with Asbergers is an expert with cars and have the deciders screw up the car. Then once the car seems to be broken beyond repair the person with Asbergers can just adjust one thing and the car becomes functional again.
The moral: "Let the expert do his/her job."
Alpha Shitlord And grant that opposing ideas both have their upsides and downsides. More than black and white!
So, Undertale. You can play the Genocide run all you want, but you would not get a happy ending. In fact, Chara corrupts your game, so that you can't have a happy ending, even if you do True Pacifist.
Steven Universe did the "Violence is an answer" moral. Usually, when Steven meets an enemy, he just talks to them until they realize the error of their ways and befriend him. But there are enemies who are just so stubborn with their ideals that talking would either do nothing, or they would have more of a motivation to kill him.
You are one of the greatest most honest youtube creaters ever. My brother who has autism will neber be able to live normally, he certainly cannot do what most people do as he cannot talk or comprehend many things. I love my brother, and if someone tried to put him by the same standards of a able bodied fifteen year old, he would not do very well. Thank you for your commentary on this, it was needed to be said!
Addressing your gripes on their "lifeguard training", I'm an actual lifeguard. They're talking about what is known as the "Ladder Approach":
Talk, Throw, Reach, Wade, Row, Swim, Tow, Carry.
Most of these steps seem ridiculous, but they made it into a really easy-to-follow checklist so that people remember to use the simplest and safest solutions first. I know some of them sound REALLY ridiculous, but you've gotta understand that it is the truth. Although, the first rule of lifeguarding is to make sure you don't die, so your point about "if you can't swim, going in to save someone ensures you'll both die" is entirely true and would never be recommended by a lifeguard.
STLLR As a fellow lifeguard it’s kinda funny to me that the show pretends that a person who can’t use their legs could be a lifeguard, it would be literally impossible to do a deep-water spinal without using your legs.
So what happens if you CAN swim but you dont have the training to save someone from drowning? Like he said, it's still dangerous to save a drowning person even if you can swim because they're panicking. Besides I just doggy paddle.
@@NylaTheWolf dont if you have no training the person can pull you under and you both drown
XWierdThingsHappenX Thanks!!
@@NylaTheWolf no problem!
as someone else with Asperger's syndrome, I have at least some inkling of what you've gone through, and your frustrations, especially the social issues.
deathstinger13 I used to be obsessed about certain shows like adventure time , now I don't feel any strong passion towards anything and that bugs me
I have aspergers btw
+willow wisp I think the reason why is because CN hardly advertise it and never aired reruns of it like they used to.
nega-venom naaaahh I just don't like adventure time as much anymore
+willow wisp that's sad. :(
Advertiser Friendly Bot: "Disabled? You mean differently-abled!"
*Removes video*
Which is hilarious because if you call someone differently-abled, you're calling their disability special, which is equally if not more offensive.
"Oh you're paralyzed from the waist down? You're just special."
ProfCarson I laughed so hard at this comment.
God, I get heartburn every time I see someone say "differently-abled" with 100% sincerity.
I do not like that the euphemism for disability changes regularly.
I understand the linguistic and cultural reasons, but changing the therm regularly does not solve the underlaying issue.
The only time I've ever seen "differently-abled" used sincerely BY people with the affliction are Deaf people, who, more often than not, embrace the culture and language and the positive sides and everything it means to be Deaf. I've never met a Deaf person who would actually choose to hear if given the chance.
Outside of the Deaf, however...yeah, differently-abled has no place. At least, in my social experience.
When you watched the video before it's gets taken down
-Posting videos on TH-cam is not advertiser friendly.
-Being offended is not advertiser friendly.
-Stating your opinion is not advertiser friendly.
-Having an opinion is not advertiser friendly.
-existing is not advertiser friendly.
Advertiser-friendliness isn’t advertiser-friendly
*god is not advertiser friendly*
Criticizing our policies on your video is not advertiser friendly
*breating is not advertiser friendly*
Awful B Bad as a name makes Bane, Discord, Maleficent and Dr. Doom sound cuddly.
Thank you for this video. I have also grown up with a disability. I have sensory processing disorder, and I interpret sensory information far different than normal people. This heavily affected me as a young child, constantly having temper tantrums and having improper speech. I've had therapy up until middle school, and I have had speech lesson until 8th grade. It is literally impossible for me to do some things, like hold a pencil properly, put on sunscreen, or put on hand sanitizer because the discomfort is too much. The last thing I want people to do is treat me like I'm a big deal and can do everything just like everyone, because I'm not. The worst thing is is that people like teachers don't know about this, so they don't know that it is physically impossible for me to have good handwriting or to have a good nights sleep. My sensitive skin often burns in sunlight because I cannot stand sunscreen. I feel kind of guilty for rarely washing my hands and touching public things but is there anything I can really do about any of this? But that's just the limitations I have to live with, and as much as I want to conquer it, I am limited. Pretending that I'm perfect and able to do these things are just unrealistic. I think that its healthy for me to realize that this is who I am and I don't have to be like the others. Life isn't hunky dory, and I don't want it to be that way.
Very insightful. I hope you get through life fine despite your limitations. I hate these "everything is cool! Disabilities do absolutely nothing!" messages and don't think they're helpful at all.
Don't be silly, everyone knows that in bad-cartoon-land there is only one disability, Wheelchair.
On rare occasion they acknowledge the other disability, Crutches!
And even more rarely, a Cast (Arm Edition)
And in the rarest case, blind!
Psychological disabilities? Pssh, never heard of it!
I've noticed that you're either paralyzed from the waist down and confined to wheelchair, and on the rare occasion deaf or blind. But anyone who is paralyzed from the neck down, or has Down Syndrome, Autism, ADHD, Paranoia, Anxiety, Depression, Schizophrenia, Anti-Social Personality Disorder, a physical deformity (example Neurofirbro Mitosis, a disease that cause a person to grow tumors all over their body and often leaves them deformed as a result), an amputate who has to wear a false limb, has been badly burned, is bald because of cancer treatment, has PTSD, Diabetes, or heaven forbid is a victim of physical and mental abuse at the hands of a family member, you don't exist the only thing that counts as a disability is paralyzed from the waist down, and they never go into detail about how said person became paralyzed to begin with.
While we're on the topic whenever they tackle drug abuse or alcohol abuse it's always the same thing: Peer Pressure causes a kid to start smoking or drinking, not say a bad decision on their part or problems at home. Hell they rarely show what alcohol abuse does to adults.
The massive leap between “row a boat” and “jump in yourself” will never fail to make me laugh.
11:44
Jimmy why are you crying?
I'm in this dumb cartoon
Purple Tomato Studio Wanna know something? This dumb cartoon has some episodes missing and is listed on the Lost Media Wiki under partially found media. Little Clowns of Happytown may be forgettable considering the fact that it's Care Bears on positive steroids, but I didn't know it had episodes forgotten by time!
@@TommyDeonauthsArchives no wonder Disney wanted to forget this
*Being advertiser-friendly is not advertiser-friendly.*
Logical paradoxes are not advertiser-friendly.
TH-camr references are not advertiser friendly😀
may mays are not ad🅱er🅱iser 🅱riendly
I see you a lot.
Cringe God Emojis are not advertiser friendly
I have high functioning autism and ADHD. I think of their effects as personality traits more than "disabilities".
There is definitely some overlap there. For a while my parents thought I was high-functioning autistic, but then they met one of my closest friend who *actually is* autistic...
What would this episode be like if they had a quadriplegic in this episode? Who literally couldn't swim?
Wow. You took down two arguments with one massive swing. You have my gratitude.
I am blind and also have Asperger's. Funny enough I too wasn't diagnosed until I was 19. All my life I grew up around, mostly adults, who wanted to believe all disabled children were special angels with nothing wrong with them. I hated it.
As you stated, disability is called that for a reason. Give me all the print books you want, but that won't make me able to read them. Give me the same book in Braille or in audio and I would be able to follow along just fine. I am physically unable to do certain things. Driving as you used for an example. I've been counting the days till I can buy a self driving car.
Disabilities are disabilities for a reason. They stop you from being able to do tasks that an average person can do without difficulty. The trick is to find a creative way to do that same task in a modified manner. Different, yet equal. Why isn't that taught more?
Being different isn't always a negative thing. Everyone is different some how. Different race, religion, political affiliation, gender, sexuality, ect. Why can't we see that as positive rather than negative? Instead of seeing everyone who is different than you as oppressors and all who are like you as victims; why not see differences as learning experiences? Not everyone is going to like every "subject". That's understandable. But maybe you may find something new to think over or to accept. Simply respecting differences rather than outright abolishing them can help create a more well rounded and interesting individual. That's my thought anyway...
The Blind Sass Master
Blind... Is able to elliquently type out and properly format a long youtube comment. Most speech to text programs don't format paragraphs that well. *Doubt [x]*
1Kenny30 Rude. Look up screen readers like JAWS or Voice Over. They are much more robust than basic Narrator. You honestly believe blind people are unable to use a computer independently?
1Kenny30 Ever notice how the F and J key on a keyboard have a bump on them? From my understanding, they serve to help people keep a proper hand position while typing, without having to constantly look down at the keyboard. This can also help blind people learn to type after they learn where each key is. But this is my understanding from several years ago.
+Zack “Zynacle” Kraemer plus there are keyboards made for blind people. With lumps representing braille code. In my university there are computers programmed for blind people with narrator settings and these lumped keyboards. So yeah, blind people can use computers just fine. Like danm, they can even use smartphones without the need to look at the screen. The blind girl in my university uses the sound of the flick motion to navegate and voice controls.
Milenart Meire That is fascinating!
Kid talking to Billy: We have a lot in common! We both have disabilities! I can't walk and you can't be nice!
Me watching that part: * laughing my ass off * OHHHH! DAMN! BETTER PUT SOME ICE ON THAT SICK BURN YOU JUST GOT BILLY!
i thought that was a sick burn too
Mad Hatter should I call 911?
Snuggle Hyena obviously, they gotta take Billy to the hospital's burn unit!
Mad Hatter should I call the waabulince?
"We both have disabilities. I can't walk, and you can't be nice!"
R O A S T E D
As someone who also has Asperger's, I can't help but feel offended myself.
Also, talking is not advertiser friendly.
lightyearpig12 breathing is not advertiser friendly
Making a video is not advertiser friendly.
Being born is not advertiser friendly.
Being advertiser friendly is not advertiser friendly.
Sleeping is not advertiser friendly
boy, when an episode gets Mr. Enter on a personal level, the review is gonna be good.
'Then go in yourself'
Are you sure B. Bad is the bad guy here?
Hell man clowns are evil of course Awful b bad is the hero.
IKR
That’s the most bs advice I heard
I just realized the Spongebob episode "Spongeguard on duty" was basically just a response to shit swim advice like in this show
Like go ahead and try throwing a raft or reaching for them despite them obviously flailing just to stay afloat
Its not gonna work unless someone who knows what they're doing is their
Sincerely from: a guy who can swim
That episode just became a million times better
Video demonitized for scary imagry
Reasons: Clowns
^basicly youtube
If it wasn't for "It", then we would've not have that problem
Poor Ronald McDonald he can't help what he is.
>implying TH-cam gives reasons for its actions
I have a feeling that's why he made this video
Was this video monetized in the first place? I thought he said he didn't monetize his videos
(WARNING THIS COMMENT IS NOT ADVERTISER FRIENDLY)
do you know how sad it is when a whole bunch of people from 4chan can come together and make a game that everyone agrees handles disabilities in a much better way than literally any professionally made piece of media?
pretty fuckin sad
Katawa Shoujo?
yupperdoodles, that one
hanyuukawaiinanodesu also said game predicted that feminists take over
thanks for the warning
can i get the name of that game please?
A better message is "You can't do everything, but that doesn't mean you can't do anything. You can do some things, and there's nothing wrong with that."
"Maybe I'll..."
>Not advertiser friendly.
"Okay, how about..."
>Not advertiser friendly.
"Fuck it, I'll set up a patreon."
TH-cam in a nutshell...
Swearing is not Advertisement Friendly.
setting up a patreon is not advertiser friendly
10:29 To be fair, that was a sick insult.
The problem is that he isn't meaning it to be an insult.
Moral Guardians: "KID SHOWS CANNOT HAVE CHILDREN INSULT EACH OTHER!!! MY CHILD WILL PICK IT UP!!!"
Alexei Strife It wasn't as sick as it was sad.
I can't walk, and you're a fucking douchebag.
Arthur Fine ikr
Wait....are you serious?
I though Enter was just being too literal?
Did the kid actually mean that? Like literally?
*BEING ADVERTISER FRIENDLY IS NOT ADVERTISER FRIENDLY*
LOL
I hate how true that is
We've got Townsville, citysville, and Happytown
Ketchup Heinz why not zoibergland?
XB1Gaming Creeper I wish....
Lazytown vs Happytown. What show is better? Of course it's Lazytown.
John A. Zoidberg and Lazytown
Now we just need Townhappy.
So if the paraplegic child can only swim with his arms, and he uses both arms to rescue a drowning person, how did he swim back to the dock?
This show indeed didn't have much thought put in. -_-
12:07 HOLD ON
DID THEY JUST WALK *THROUGH* THE DOOR FRAME?
I'M TEARING UP FROM LAUGHING SO HARD
I absolutely need a gif of that one scene just so I can poke fun of how they kept the models so that they were ghosts going through a wall instead of walking out the door
Louise Barbosa Seems like there's a mystery on our hands.
TheSaiyanWarlordX let's split up gang!
This cartoon is so cheesy that my sugar level will probably skyrocket, and that's not a good because Easter was just yesterday... Getting diabetes now would awful b. bad.
Dziga Yu thank you for the comment
It would be cool to see a Mulan 2 review as it deserves a thrashing.
The one good thing was the romance between the princesses and the generals. (Even when the marriage didn't make sense). And some of the songs are decent.
@@ChantelCarter-cc7cu It took a dumb on everything that made the first movie great.
It's a fine movie on it's own, but it sucks as a sequel to Mulan.
@@ChantelCarter-cc7cu The message of "marrying for love" doesn't work in the context of the movie, since the forced marriage was necessary in order to stabilize the bond between China's allies and stop the war from erupting.
While I love the princesses, they pretty much doomed China.
@Inacio's Second Channel Same
@@ChantelCarter-cc7cu I don’t hate it but it does have flaws and Mulan...acts a little different also the ending doesn’t address the invasion conflict 😅
Anything that is animated, live action, has colors, sounds, shapes, letters, or numbers is not advertiser friendly.
Should've just said "anything is not advertiser friendly"
You forget abstract thought
So basically all matter in the universe is advertiser friendly, even the (this curse word with the prefix "ing" is not advertiser friendly) air we breath isn't considered advertiser friendly.
Is Viacom doing this (this curse that is also waste that comes out of humans after they ingested-) Why does it keep doing this?!
I'm watching static on screen. Is it friendly?
I do not think so, it might be offensive to the blind or something heck sneezing is offensive.
I. M. Meen is a way better villain than Awful B. Bad will ever be though.
Perfect profile name and pic for that comment.
Oh gosh, I remember that character.
King Harkinian I. P. Freely is a better name too. Supernatural reference by the way.
#PutAwefulBBadInSuperSmashBrosLawl
Ok. This is gonna sound lame, but I just gotta say it. I'm Aspergic too, and seriously dude, that bit at 14:10 has made me feel SO much better about myself. Cause my interests DO change literally every month and for some reason I've never connected it to Aspergers before.
So, thanks man. That really helped.
Also love the fact that you added bees next to bears and wolves in the list of scary things in the woods.
Hey, I think I've seen you a few other places :)
Five years ago, I had my heart set on being an author.
Four years ago, I really wanted to be a meteorologist.
Three years ago, I felt I was destined to be a guitarist in a rock band
Two years ago, being a singer sounded like the dream job
A year ago, I was certain I was gonna be an author again.
Now, I've wanted to be a cartoon creator for months, and it's the only thing I've ever truly stuck with and been successful at.
Same. Honestly gotten to the point where I've kinda stopped worrying about what I'm gonna end up doing since my interest in it will die after a few months anyway.
Good luck to you.
Same here. I like swing full force into something and then move onto something else with the same swing. Of course there are some things I like all the time, just that I tend to not have multiple hobbies or interests at once.
It manifests the most when watching old shows. I marathon them and just them until I finish then move onto something else.
Oh, man. Me too. Like, that's exactly how my mind goes.
It's so annoying.
Magic Ma'am Almost the same here, except for the timing and the being proactive. I've wanted to get into animation and cinematography for years now but before that it was astronaut, train engineer, inventor and other things.
I'm so glad I found this video again after so many years, got diagnosed at the same age as you and this channel is such a home for me, thank you
Your speech about autism just gave me an existential crisis
I can relate to much to it
If I am autistic then gosh golly gee that explains alot
Matthew Chester Productions same here, however I do not think it is the case for me as I'm 17 and my socializing problems are most likely due to my way of seeing people I don't know well as bothersome obstacles rather than a genetic communication problem. What grinds my gears is that a teacher at my school as well as the specialized educator that I know have been suggesting I have asperger's just because I have trouble blending in with the other people in my class -. -
Duntem Draws Maybe you are sociopath. Do you feel empathy for others?
nah I do feel empathy, but not often because most people I know annoy me so I let them be.
Duntem Draws: I feel like I am in a similar boat. Even though I have been diagnosed as Autistic people who have gotten to know, and know what Autism is, do not think I have Autism. I personally think that I am just quite and an Introvert. I can communicate just fine, but chose not to. I have a hard time making friends because it is hard to find people with the same interests as me which are Pokemon, Star Wars, history, Religion, music and other things.
Matthew Chester Productions I myself have autism
I almost got excited when he started, I really thought this was a review on that adorable animal crossing movie.
On Animated Atrocities? Hopefully not. More likely on Admirable Animation.
I take it you didn't bother to read the title...
Doc von Schmeltwick I was honestly hoping it was a fake out where he actually talked about the ova on Admirable Animation or he complained about all the good parts and he was brainwashed or something.
Yeah, I just sorta rushed into the vid, not even paying much mind to the title, as I just pretty much impulse clicked.
they made a movie? also is it in eng dub?
'Being treated like a real boy' yeah there's a lot wrong with this show, but if you've never been in a wheelchair or another mobility device.. you don't get it. People don't treat you like you're a person. They treat you like an object. They treat you lesser. They talk down to you like you're stupid or something. It's a very weird way to put it but yeah, I would say 'not like a real person' and that it's worded fine for what it's like. Not everyone does the stuff that makes you feel like that but a lot of people do. I'm glad my time in a wheelchair was temporary, even if I may have to use it again or use it from time to time. It was a very sobering experience and shed light on what life is like for people who are bound to a wheelchair.
Sorry but this show, as bad as it is, got that part spot on, and I especially imagine all this was worse in the 80s too.
BlackBearCJ Thanks to chronic pain which I had the misfortune to be born with (which is extremely rare, even among chronic pain patients) I have around 30 minutes on my feet at a time. I get so fucking tired of being told you look fine your just making excuses or you can do it. I have to intentialy put myself in painful situations to build up tolerance to stay as mobile as I am.
Well... that sucks. It really is a bummer that people act like that around you. I grew up on a "højskole" (basically a danish version of college) for people with disabilities, all kinds of disabilities, and also normal people. Both students and the helpers of the disabled. And if there is one thing I have learned, you just need to know what they need, and how to communicate with them. And then you learn pretty quickly how awesome they can be and talk with :) I also remember an article with some of the disabled and regular students from the school, It was called, basically "do you have the balls to party with a disabled person?" Basically the disabled was left with some strangers as a prank for the strangers. Both the regular and the disabled was in on the joke and had some fun messing with them. So yeah I've never had problem seeing past peoples disability, hell I have a wheelchair bound cousin that married into the family. And although they could never really diagnose me, I have a mental disability. Not as bad as mrEnters, but it is a type of adhd, which makes me a little slower when learning and I also have suspected that it is the reason I need a break from people in general. You know, just be in my own head for a bit and just think of nothing really. Sorry if this comment got a bit long 😅
Basically, hope you have a good life and find someone that just is normal when around you :)
Im pretty sure that if these people made something that tackled mentle Illness they would do this. A mom learns to overcome the hardships of raising a child with scitzophrenia (however it's spelled) and how she overcomes the annoyance of her kid constantly coming to her in tears all of the while completely ignoring the child's trouble with having constant terrifying hallucinations.
*schizophrenia
I've honestly hate those sorts of things. I mean, I'm sure raising a child with a mental illness is challenging, but what about the person actually suffering from the mental illness?
In Wonder (both the book and movie), I've always liked how it showed Auggie's struggles with being deformed while also showing Via's struggle with being in a family that are always paying attention to him. She understood that Auggie needed extra attention because he would constantly have surgeries as a kid and would definitely go through some difficult times as a deformed kid, and she loved her little brother, she just wished that her parents would also pay more attention to her. When she went to her new school and nobody knew about Auggie, she was happy to finally be known for something other than having a deformed little brother. She wanted to be her own person, which is why she was hesitant about letting Auggie come to her school to see her play. I felt like it was a very human, very real way of portraying those sorts of families, while not overshadowing Auggie's own struggles with being deformed.
I know that disabilities/mental disorders are different from deformities, but I feel that the same sort of family concept applies.
So we're not getting a Mulan II review? I was really looking forward to that one.
MegaSoulHero We most likely will. It was in the trailer so don't lose hope
MegaSoulHero I'll some up Mulan 2, Genghis Khan was able to conquer China because Mulan forces her values of following your heart and true love is more important than the life's of innocent millions. True story
Tim Jordan ...Well your half right
Tim Jordan Yeah I saw the movie. It's the worst Disney sequel in my opinion.
Someone bust out the Szechuan sauce.
"You and I both have a lot in common, we both have disabilities!"
That might be the most unintentionally funny thing I've heard in a while.
Someone please cut off the part where he's like "I can't walk and you can't be nice" so it looks like Billy just calls the guy retarded and watches him leave angrily or something, lol
I heard that and was all like "OOOOOH, BURN!"
" it's just a kids show its not for you"
I'm not an artist, but I know what good art looks like
I'm not an film maker, but I know what a bad movie is
The "it's just for kids" crap makes me want to kms
How about the people who make that argument in the first place?
Okay if disabled people can do anything a "normal" person can do. Why doesn't that kid get up and walk? "OH DISABLED people can do anything quote on quote normal people can do so..." God I fucking hate the normal quota shit.
SJW kids show in a nutshell, tumblr would love this shit show
Casper The Ghost are you talking about Steven Universe or Little Clowns?
one armed man kicked out of lake for continuously rowing in a circle
4:25 "Congratulations Mrs bad , Its a boy !"
"What are you going to name him ?"
"AWFUL ! YOUR HOSPITAL FOOD IS AWFUL ! "
" I want to name him brad, just like his grandpa "
" Awful it is ..."
I am currently studying to become a physical therapist, a career known to treat people with disabilities. In the episode, the wheelchair seems more like a token than a necessary assistive device. How can Rodney swim? There is a very very slim possibility to know how to swim, even if you can't walk. But the show doesn't explain how Rodney could swim when he is wheelchair bound. At least when Joe from Family Guy swims, it shows that he has really good upper body strength, so he is able to move even with his disability. As MrEnter said in the review, we don't know how he got his injury or any details about it. Even with the term "paraplegia," such a diagnosis comes in many variations. Rodney is able to swim and carry a drowning child, but not walk. To be able to rescue a drowning person takes a lot of strength from both the upper and lower halves of the body. It's kinda confusing when it comes to Rodney's strength. MrEnter explained all of that beautifully in the review. The Hiccups bit really disturbed me. She is hiccuping non-stop, somebody should address that, as that could be a sign for some serious issues.
Also, regarding the "over-protective" parent. I feel in this era parents should be well-informed about their kid's disability and know how to help them in any way they can. This includes being on the safer side to prevent any more complications or additional injuries. So yea "Little Clowns of Happy Town," this mom should act the way she does.
"We both have disabilities. I can't walk, and you can't be nice!"
Damn kid, now he really IS disabled, because you just turned him into a burn victim!
Mysterious Mr. Enter is my new favorite political TH-camr.
I can't wait for you to tear apart the Emoji movie when it comes out
Making fun of other people's emotions is not advertiser friendly....seriously if they take down that...I'm blowing a gasket.
I await that day so very much
I thought they cancelled it due to backlash.
Kat-toons me too
+Oliver Kigar
Well, if they made the Angry Birds movie then I doubt they'd let some bad press stop them from making use of what animation they've finished. Besides, wasn't the Trolls movie somewhat successful? We have to continue the trend of trying to re-create the Lego Movie's success without understanding why it worked so well somehow!!!
At least I.M.Meen is good material for YTPoops.
My favorite episode of the YTP anime is the one I.M Meen fights Docter Rabbit
As a person with aspergers I had to deal with verbal teasing for 10 years in grade school. Also some other things that are too personal to talk about and I want to forget about. As a teen I wasn't in the good state of mind and I had suicidal thoughts but 11th grade came in and sure enough high school was much more pleasant. I dunno why it stopped but it did because I did call people out a few times. I even punch a kid in the face in 9th grade for just telling me that I "Sucked many dicks". Normally I would never do that but I had too since at the time that kid was harassing me with his innuendos before. Treating disabilities like its special or a disease or a problem is really not the right way to treat people with disabilities. Anyways you keep doing a great job Mr. Enter.
Im sorry you were going through all of that. I'm glad high school was a lot better for you though!
My Little Pony is more hardcore than this.
MY. LITTLE. FUCKING. PONY.
Care bears looks like Nightmare on Elm Street compared to this
Barney the dinosaur is more hardore then this cause even that show has conflict i mean really boring conflict but ya...and the songs are a lot less grating then this..
also now that i think about it...even sesame street and the better shows that tackle disabilites better like arthur (Even with some badly written characters it has) does it better...
and its really sad when my little pony g3 (not 3.5 i think thats tied with this)...does conflict then this and has better songs ugh...
MLP G1 looks like the deepest pits of hell compared to this. Wait...
*Talking about hell is not advertiser-friendly towards any religion!*
Modest Heliolisk
REEEEEEEEEEEEE
[INTOLERANCE DETECTED: PURGING WRONGTHINK]
REEEEEEEEEEEEE
I mean, in My Little Pony they go over self inflicted harming, self hate, disabilities (actually does it right) and FUCKING STALIN LIKE SOCIETIES AND WHY MARXISM IS WRONG..... So yeah.
When they are making this show to be as inoffensive as possible, they all forgot the possibility of PEOPLE WITH A PHOBIA OF CLOWNS!!!!!