minor muppetz
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2005
- Messages
- 16,071
- Reaction score
- 2,655
Some tropes seem to be very similar to each other (I guess similar to how this forum has threads that are similar, like the "Questions About Anything" and "You ever notice... and what's the deal?" threads... and in a way the "You know what" thread is kinda similar to the "You ever notice..." thread). For example, I can't comprehend the difference between "Villainy-free villain" and "Designated villain". In fact some of the same characters are featured on both pages.
And I don't see why "Long Runners" and "Archive Panic" need separate pages. "Archive Panic" refers to when a series or comic or something (the main page description seems to focus on long-running web comics) has so many installments that it can take a really long time to get through everything. And Archive Panic doesn't mention every long runner.... The "Newspaper Comics" section is really short, it seems to be limited to just a few comics that either have every strip on a single website or complete book collections (well, attempts to be complete, we still have a few more years before the last volume of The Complete Peanuts).
I would think maybe the "Archive Panic" section is for long-runners where every installment is available, but then it also lists Saturday Night Live, The Simpsons, and Sesame Street, all of which are still on the air, all of which don't have every episode on DVD (they can't put every episode on DVD until the shows end, though Sesame Street and SNL still have a long way to go). Until recently almost every episode of SNL (albeit heavily edited) was on Netflix (last I checked it only has episodes from seasons 37 and 38), and I recently read that two episodes were actually not on Netflix. It seems like whenever I watch reruns of The Simpsons, it's always episodes not on DVD (I had recently wondered if they stopped rerunning full frame episodes, but saw one the other day). And of course there's hundreds of Sesame Street episodes not seen in years (and don't have Muppet Wiki pages).
And speaking of the Long Runners page, it lists various things that SNL has survived. While some do seem like a big deal that they survived (numerous cast and crew changes, writers strikes, seasons so bad the show was almost canceled), some of them don't seem like a big deal. Like the deaths of certain cast members, most of whom were no longer on the show when they died (there's a few names there I don't recall knowing about), having three producers (I would think that a TV show can have different directors for different episodes), three announcers, and a few other things I can't remember right now (I'm on a roll with all the things I'm thinking about today).
And I don't see why "Long Runners" and "Archive Panic" need separate pages. "Archive Panic" refers to when a series or comic or something (the main page description seems to focus on long-running web comics) has so many installments that it can take a really long time to get through everything. And Archive Panic doesn't mention every long runner.... The "Newspaper Comics" section is really short, it seems to be limited to just a few comics that either have every strip on a single website or complete book collections (well, attempts to be complete, we still have a few more years before the last volume of The Complete Peanuts).
I would think maybe the "Archive Panic" section is for long-runners where every installment is available, but then it also lists Saturday Night Live, The Simpsons, and Sesame Street, all of which are still on the air, all of which don't have every episode on DVD (they can't put every episode on DVD until the shows end, though Sesame Street and SNL still have a long way to go). Until recently almost every episode of SNL (albeit heavily edited) was on Netflix (last I checked it only has episodes from seasons 37 and 38), and I recently read that two episodes were actually not on Netflix. It seems like whenever I watch reruns of The Simpsons, it's always episodes not on DVD (I had recently wondered if they stopped rerunning full frame episodes, but saw one the other day). And of course there's hundreds of Sesame Street episodes not seen in years (and don't have Muppet Wiki pages).
And speaking of the Long Runners page, it lists various things that SNL has survived. While some do seem like a big deal that they survived (numerous cast and crew changes, writers strikes, seasons so bad the show was almost canceled), some of them don't seem like a big deal. Like the deaths of certain cast members, most of whom were no longer on the show when they died (there's a few names there I don't recall knowing about), having three producers (I would think that a TV show can have different directors for different episodes), three announcers, and a few other things I can't remember right now (I'm on a roll with all the things I'm thinking about today).