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Well it's just that Goth girl as we know it is definitely newer than Femme Fatale.Not really. It was there--albeit unnamed--when Lydia made her appearance in the Beetlejuice franchise (because Tim Burton himself always was dark and gothic-esque).

I miss goth girls... now we just got emo's, and they're like a lazier version of goth that isn't committed to dressing half as cool.Well it's just that Goth girl as we know it is definitely newer than Femme Fatale.![]()
Thay's is true. But as I remember it, A Pup Named Scooby Doo And The New Adventures Of Mighty Mouseis come out the same year as each other. Just pointing that out. But Ren and Stimpy and Mighty mouse were both John K. Creations. *shrugs*After the wildly animated and funny Mighty Mouse, the New Adventures aired in the 80's, other cartoon studios tried to copy that style and made crazy, off the wall, cartoony cartoons like A Pup Named Scooby Doo and the short lived new Beany and Cecil Show. And then came Ren and Stimpy.
Caricatures are fine with me in cartoons, just as long as they aren't sending off a negative image to kids, particularly girls.For me, it depends, because when kids start emulating those idols on TV--cartoons or otherwise--instead of being themselves, then it's time to step in (ex: kids demanding Bratz dolls, thereby enforcing the pornification of America, as Newsweek states).
PhCaricatures are fine with me in cartoons, just as long as they aren't sending off a negative image to kids, particularly girls.
. Makeup, clothing, and weight loss ads are ten times worst than cartoons could ever be IMHO. With cartoons you can not take them as seriously if your parents say so because they are not 'real'. But with those ads with supermodels and stars edited to look even thinner and more perfect than they really are, even though they are just as made up, little girls take them to heart because they look real...At least, I know I did
. Luckily, I never got body issues (besides hating the pores on my nose, but everyones got something like that
)
Oh definitely real life ads cause trouble too. But Bratz dolls and their various incarnations are way too thin, not a great body image to give. And the characters are held up as come kind of ideal, "real" or not. The only thing I like about them if how their movie spoke against cliques.Ph. Makeup, clothing, and weight loss ads are ten times worst than cartoons could ever be IMHO. With cartoons you can not take them as seriously if your parents say so because they are not 'real'. But with those ads with supermodels and stars edited to look even thinner and more perfect than they really are, even though they are just as made up, little girls take them to heart because they look real...At least, I know I did
. Luckily, I never got body issues (besides hating the pores on my nose, but everyones got something like that
)
