Sorry about that, but there's nothing that annoys me more than when people say something is bad when it's a matter of taste. There's a difference. Matter of taste is, "I don't like the Office, and I don't see the appeal. I really like Friends, though." Bad is...
well...
this for example
It has to have abhorrent quality no matter who you are. Universal unappeal, as it were. And while I'm sure a lot of people love cartoons from the 1970's and 80's, the rules and regulations (not to mention studio heads) at the time were just repressive and frustrating. Again, check out Mighty mouse the New Adventures. That was all those animators crying out after finding relative freedom. That's why the 90's had such high quality cartoons. barriers were being broken all the time. You NEVER would have seen shows like Ren and Stimpy or Rocko in the 80's. Nicktoons came in and changed the face how cartoons were handled. For the first time, probably since the 60's (if anything) we saw "Created By" credits in cartoon shows. Batman TAS... broke barriers of how violent and gritty you can be. They mentioned drug busts in one episode. There was occasional death.
And I really think people take this for granted now.
But above all, everything's cyclical....
Early 1960's... the first real wave of animated programming specifically for TV. It started in the 50's, and things were a bit more experimental. Out of the decade Hanna Barbera and Jay Ward rose into power. And we got some of the best cartoons for television we'll even see.
Late 1960's- the rise of the super hero action show. but at the same time we got Archies, Scooby-Doo, Wacky races... etc. Stuff that Hanna Barbera and Filmation would exploit in:
The 1970's... as I said, the decade was dominated by sometimes terrible kid band and fad cartoons. While there was a lot of action shows that were pretty good, and they reran classics on Saturdays, the rules and regulations (no thanks to the upstarting Action for Children's Television movement) started to form. A real shame that Jay Ward never got his "The new Bullwinkle Show," which he was pitching around then.
Which brings us to the 80's, which i touched upon... things were slightly better than in the 70's... there was a ruling that let toy and video game cartoons to be made (there's a long story about a 1970's Hot Wheels cartoons I don't want to get into)
Then came the early 90's, where everything changed, as I said. more people were getting into the toon business... Fox Kids, Kids WB, Cartoon Network... we had the Renaissance we were always wanting...
But it segwayed into to late 90's, where, because Pokemon was a hit, everyone copied it, leading to a lot of toy commercial based animes, and some good shows with bad, almost show destroying dubs to appeal to kids... Escaflowne and CardCaptor Sakura especially. But the worst part was the FCC rulings that were passed in the day... they didn't hurt the market yet... but they were about to. Especially when CBS said, "Heck with it" and started rerunning shows from another network they owned. Something that would eventually destroy Saturday mornings.
The first half of this decade was hunky dory... but then came the rise of live action kids programming... and somehow EVERYONE felt that this was a first, not bothering to remember the Krofft shows of the 70's and Power Rangers and Saved By the Bell in the 90's. Causing basically a monopoly. All the regulations passed a decade ago made children's programming unprofitable, less kids were watching TV... it was the perfect storm. now we got a few cable channels and 4Kids. that's basically it. It's a terrible time, but there are quality shows out there. unfortunately, they tend to last either too long, or way too short.