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one of the best sitcoms ever
Bah, Scrubs is kinda like South Park. It becomes decidedly less funny as the most fractious character on the show (Cartman/Cox) becomes more fleshed out, and the plots involving said character become more convoluted. Usually after the second season. I mean, when's the last time you heard "Repect mah ahtoritah!"?
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predcon: Bah, Scrubs is kinda like South Park. It becomes decidedly less funny as the most fractious character on the show (Cartman/Cox) becomes more fleshed out, and the plots involving said character become more convoluted. Usually after the second season. I mean, when's the last time you heard "Repect mah ahtoritah!"?
Dude, all I have to say is "Scott Tenorman Must Die". I think that was fourth season or so, came out of left field and was awesome.
i liked that joke where the new chief of the hospital came and greeted everyone the same way except the black guy. He was saying "Pleased to meet you" to everyone, until he reached the black guy, and said "Yo, wassup, dawg!" instead.
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predcon: Bah, Scrubs is kinda like South Park. It becomes decidedly less funny as the most fractious character on the show (Cartman/Cox) becomes more fleshed out, and the plots involving said character become more convoluted. Usually after the second season. I mean, when's the last time you heard "Repect mah ahtoritah!"?
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orcishgamer: Dude, all I have to say is "Scott Tenorman Must Die". I think that was fourth season or so, came out of left field and was awesome.
I dunno, once they started the "Fourth Grade" titles, and replaced Kenny for a while.... I guess I just prefer it when South Park was more "Monty Python with a loose plot", and less "Scathing social commentary". Once you start getting preachy, no matter how you wrap it up, you start detracting from funny, and starkly. M*A*S*H* taught us that.

You know Parker and Stone did BASEketball because they'd expected the show to be cancelled by then? They didn't expect to be doing twice the work.
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orcishgamer: Dude, all I have to say is "Scott Tenorman Must Die". I think that was fourth season or so, came out of left field and was awesome.
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predcon: I dunno, once they started the "Fourth Grade" titles, and replaced Kenny for a while.... I guess I just prefer it when South Park was more "Monty Python with a loose plot", and less "Scathing social commentary". Once you start getting preachy, no matter how you wrap it up, you start detracting from funny, and starkly. M*A*S*H* taught us that.

You know Parker and Stone did BASEketball because they'd expected the show to be cancelled by then? They didn't expect to be doing twice the work.
Havent watched south park lately, but the last seasons i did watch, i think 8. or 9, they werent monty pyton with a loose plot, or even scathing social commentary, but plain stupid jokes told one after the other. Something they criticized family guy of doing.
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predcon: I dunno, once they started the "Fourth Grade" titles, and replaced Kenny for a while.... I guess I just prefer it when South Park was more "Monty Python with a loose plot", and less "Scathing social commentary". Once you start getting preachy, no matter how you wrap it up, you start detracting from funny, and starkly. M*A*S*H* taught us that.

You know Parker and Stone did BASEketball because they'd expected the show to be cancelled by then? They didn't expect to be doing twice the work.
I dunno scathing social commentary done right can actually be much funnier ... unless it becomes preachy I agree, but good writers can avoid that and the nice thing is that society always seems to provide fresh material. :)

However, Scrubs did go downhill - not because of social commentary but because it became the soap they were often mocking. I'd say the first few season were great, but after that - except for a few new bright lights, like Mahoney, it was very uneven. I found that JD got a little annoying. Personality quirks that I used to find amusing got tiresome and grating. Cox and Jordan however were always funny.
Post edited March 11, 2011 by crazy_dave
Most TV shows become soaps, whether the makers plan it or not. Seems like all that matters in us tv shows nowadays is "character development". "Our characters are really growing," One thing this actress was saying, referring to her character in a series. I think it's the chick that played sarah palin many times. I personally dont care for that.
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predcon: I dunno, once they started the "Fourth Grade" titles, and replaced Kenny for a while.... I guess I just prefer it when South Park was more "Monty Python with a loose plot", and less "Scathing social commentary". Once you start getting preachy, no matter how you wrap it up, you start detracting from funny, and starkly. M*A*S*H* taught us that.

You know Parker and Stone did BASEketball because they'd expected the show to be cancelled by then? They didn't expect to be doing twice the work.
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crazy_dave: I dunno scathing social commentary done right can actually be much funnier ... unless it becomes preachy I agree, but good writers can avoid that and the nice thing is that society always seems to provide fresh material. :)

However, Scrubs did go downhill - not because of social commentary but because it became the soap they were often mocking. I'd say the first few season were great, but after that - except for a few new bright lights, like Mahoney, it was very uneven. I found that JD got a little annoying. Personality quirks that I used to find amusing got tiresome and grating. Cox and Jordan however were always funny.
Cox is funny because McGinley is funny. If Martin Mull were playing Kelso, the show would never have been cancelled.
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Great site, I've discovered many great shows from them...
Post edited March 12, 2011 by rjspring
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drmlessgames: Most TV shows become soaps, whether the makers plan it or not. Seems like all that matters in us tv shows nowadays is "character development". "Our characters are really growing," One thing this actress was saying, referring to her character in a series. I think it's the chick that played sarah palin many times. I personally dont care for that.
I think the issue is that any premise has a certain amount of room to maneuver in. South Park clearly hit the limit years back. The Simpsons really hit its limit at about season 10 or so and has really been coasting since about season 8.

I used to love South Park, but the last few times I've watched, the shows just haven't been what they used to be. Same for the Simpsons, the show was still funny, but they had pretty much used all the material they had in past years, which meant that most of the jokes were minor tweaks on ones they'd previously done.

Few shows justify even 10 seasons worth of episodes.
I've never understood the "South Park isn't funny" mentality. If anything South Park's the funniest it's ever been.

http://www.southparkstudios.com/clips/360459/turning-dreams-into-nightmares

C'mon people. How can you hate this?
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Hawk52: I've never understood the "South Park isn't funny" mentality. If anything South Park's the funniest it's ever been.

http://www.southparkstudios.com/clips/360459/turning-dreams-into-nightmares

C'mon people. How can you hate this?
That was kind of funny, but there weren't really any jokes and in the past they wouldn't have wasted airtime on that.
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Hawk52: I've never understood the "South Park isn't funny" mentality. If anything South Park's the funniest it's ever been.

http://www.southparkstudios.com/clips/360459/turning-dreams-into-nightmares

C'mon people. How can you hate this?
The "big budget" special effects are a jab at movies today that use them. Like the revamping of Mecha-Streisand. Again, it's "social commentary" humour, which isn't what I'm into.
Community is another great comedy. I'm told it has a similar style to Scrubs, but never seen it.