bazooka_beak
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2004
- Messages
- 1,452
- Reaction score
- 47
^ I know you can buy the episodes off iTunes for about $3, but that's about it right now.
Vulgarity is usually just an admission of total weakness on the part of the writer/comedian that they're not skilled enough to come up with something funny or clever. Cursing almost never gets a huge laugh...unless there's some actual comic skill behind it -but again it's very rare and can only be done by the truly talented to make it actually laugh out loud funny (Case in point, Gilda Radner's Emily Litella sketches on Saturday Night Live. After she had done a good number of them, and everyone knew the "formula" of her routines, after Jane Curtin corrects her on her latest mix-up, instead of the expected "Never mind" (or a moment after it, don't remember off the top of my head) Gilda just so ever so sweetly mutters "B****" and it's so unexpected, perfectly set up and delivered that it just had you rolling on the floor.If it's one lesson learned from Ren and Stimpy Adult Cartoon Party its that sometimes working around censorship is funnier than not having as much. Heck, I watched a Phineas and Ferb that had cat whipped reference (and we ALL know what that means), and that's a kid's show. I personally find subversive jokes subliminally hidden funnier and more clever than outright saying it. it has to do with the unexpected factor.
I think that joke would've worked better if she hadn't lingered on the word 'his', it just made it seem that she was waiting to be interrupted. However, it still makes me laugh, regardless....and look at the recently released Dog City for a perfect example of how working around it ends up much more hilarious than if you flat out said the word (again with the same word in question as the above example) - during Colleen's song, she sets up a lyric clearly meant to end with the B word, but before she sings it, Rowlf interrupts with a cacophony on the piano and says to the camera, "Welcome to family programming!" That made the joke laugh-out-loud funny more than going ahead and using the word would have been.
I have to agree with you on those points. It seems they're being dirty for the sake of being dirty. I'm still watching them, but...eh, me and Robert are divided on how we feel about them. He loves them, and I'm just eh on them.I have to say, while I love Futurama, I don't like the direction they seem to be heading in. I liked them better when they simply had harmless innuendo, now they are just going all out. Case in point: Amy's dominatrix outfit :/ The ending to the second episode made me completely uncomfortable, to boot. Leela was SERIOUSLY out of character in that one.
Nope--loved it. Especially "Inter-racial" marriage featuring the two black/white races from Trek's "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield." Great gag.Did everyone forget about the new episode on Thursday, or was that just me?