Seinfeld Is Unfunny/Western Animation

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


Examples of Seinfeld Is Unfunny in Western Animation include:

  • Beavis and Butthead debuted in the very early nineties, at a time when the Animation Age Ghetto was still very strong, and The Simpsons was just breaking through, while still remaining relatively family friendly. Beavis and Butthead on the other hand was shocking and caused a panic among the Moral Guardians, being one of only a very very few animated programs for adults only. Nowadays we have Family Guy, South Park, the entire Adult Swim lineup, and countless other "Late Night Cartoons", to the point that Beavis and Butthead looks tame, and downright corny by comparison.
    • On top of that, the main reason it got such a diehard fanbase was because of all the shock and panic it caused (a lot of it undeserved). Now, years removed from the hype, explaining to today's kids what's so great about it is flat-out impossible. Why Mike Judge made any attempt to relaunch it is a mystery.
      • MTV's president said that today's culture is so weird that we need the duo's POV (they even riff Jersey Shore in the revival!).
    • Let's face it: before B and B, the "ignorant 14-year-old with no future" trope had virtually disappeared from popular fiction. Not only that, but this show was maybe the first on television to accurately portray the average 14-year-old's sex drive.
  • When Bugs Bunny first said, "What's up, Doc?" in the 1940 short, A Wild Hare, it was a shock in ways modern audiences simply can't imagine or appreciate. In 1940, audiences saw the hunter (Elmer Fudd, of course), heard the hunter say he was hunting wabbits (er, rabbits), and then they saw the rabbit. 1940 audiences were expecting that rabbit to scream, run, pick a fight, play dead, anything except strike up a casual conversation with the guy trying to kill him. So, when Bugs did that, he brought the house down - a response that led to it becoming his Catch Phrase. Nowadays, not only does nobody find, "What's up, Doc?" funny, most people don't even realize it was ever supposed to be funny in the first place. It's just that thing Bugs always says in every freakin cartoon he's in.
  • Disney movies. A few can appear rather corny today. Especially the ones where the characters were similar to their original fairy tale inspirations, before the writers decided to adapt some more characterization to the princesses. Especially some of the ones that had some experimental animation techniques, that look rather sketchy today. (Namely the stuff in the 60s; which was a pretty new technique for Disney then. Before, they mostly rotoscoped).
    • Disney princesses. Snow White, Princess Aurora, and Cinderella. Boy, they were rather shallow characters, weren't they? Especially after Belle, Mulan (considered a Disney princess), and Tiana had way more traits and conflict between other characters.
    • Genie in Aladdin. A-List actors did not star in speaking roles before this. They all did afterwards.
    • The relative tameness of old cartoons is lovingly parodied on The Simpsons with "That Happy Cat", an early Max Fleischer-style "Itchy and Scratchy" cartoon, in which all Scratchy does is walk along a street. Even the 20s and 30s Mickey could be subject to this after the rise of Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry.
  • The Ren and Stimpy Show. Unprecedented and freakish when it debuted, it practically invented the "gross cartoon" paradigm. The gratuitous amounts of snot, Toilet Humor and Family-Unfriendly Violence were something completely new and unknown to the audience. Nowadays, Ren and Stimpy wouldn't shock or disgust many people (unless we're talking about the adult version), with the spawn of many cartoons that used similar characters, humor and drawing style after Ren And Stimpy's success.
    • This is not entirely true. While it is hands-down one of the most ripped off cartoons ever, the DVD boxes for said series still sport parental guidance labels on them, and the website commonsensemedia.org rates it as unsuitable for viewers below 15. Many commenters on youtube who watch this show, most of them who hadn't seen it since childhood, often point out how "screwed up" and "insane" it is. Honestly, how many cartoons these days show characters pulling out their nerve endings with a pair of tweezers?
  • Shrek. Back in 2001, this iconoclastic take on Fairy Tales and use of pop-culture references felt like a welcome reprieve from the usual animated fare. Now, with several films, including a few from Shrek's own studio Dreamworks Animation, following the same formula, the sheen has worn off the franchise.
    • Most consider this trope to have reached Up to Eleven with the misleading ad campaign for Disney's Tangled, which tried to portray a more traditional fairy tale as a hip spoof of fairy tales--meaning, in essence, that the Trope Maker for such traditional movies is now scared to admit they're still making them.
  • ReBoot was the very first fully CGI television show that came out in the early nineties and was a pretty big success at the time. In this day and age, shows with CGI are completely common, and most people would consider ReBoot pretty tame in terms of computer accomplishments, although it had a great story, wonderful characters, and is still hailed today as one of the best, if not the best, CGI show of all time, with its biggest competitor for the title being another Mainframe series: Beast Wars.
  • The Simpsons. The first two seasons look really awkward to anyone who was introduced to it at a later date, but it's hard to overstate how revolutionary the show was at the time, and how quickly it became a phenomenon.
    • The Simpsons as a whole is very much a case of this trope by this point. During the shows golden age of the early to mid 90's, the show was extremely original, and not only because it was an animated program intended for adults. Its particular style of satirical, subversive humor made it stand out not only as a television cartoon, but as a comedy. To younger people who have spent their adolescent years watching shows like South Park and Family Guy, whose brand of humor is very much derived from The Simpsons, it is probably quite hard to appreciate just how groundbreaking the yellow skinned family and their show were back in their heyday.
    • And how controversial it was back then. The first season seems pretty tame, yet there were groups devoted to banning this show and its merchandise.
    • And don't forget the numerous film references in The Simpsons. They started this trend in animation and back then when they did it was often surprising, not done that often before and very amusing. Soon Disney movies like Aladdin, the Dreamworks films like Shrek and Shark Tale and every adult cartoon series, from South Park to Family Guy have been including references to popular films ever since.
    • Itchy and Scratchy's violent cartoons were originally intended as a parody of traditional cartoon violence like in Tom and Jerry and Looney Tunes, which was often very painful, but never bloody or fatal. So Itchy & Scratchy's gruesome battles surprised and shocked viewers because you never saw violence this extreme in mainstream animation. Nowadays, thanks to controversial and often gory shows like South Park, Family Guy, and Happy Tree Friends, the violence in Itchy and Scratchy doesn't seem that noticeable. Also, the disappearance of all classic 1930s-1950s cartoons on television means that the original reference target and thus the joke is lost on younger generations.
    • Celebrity guest appearances. Before The Simpsons, high-level celebrities didn't make appearances on animated programs. In fact, they generally didn't make appearances on TV at all, if their careers were going well. So, it doesn't seem like all that big of a deal that Michael Jackson voiced a character in the episode "Stark Raving Dad." However, in 1991, with Jackson at the height of his career, this was a HUGE deal, with much media speculation over who "John Jay Smith" actually was, and whether Jackson would actually voice a character on a cartoon. By 1994, a guest spot on The Simpsons had become a badge of honor, and is fairly passé today.
    • The concept of the trope itself is brought up in the first "Treehouse of Horror" episode. Lisa reads Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven to Bart as an example of a truly scary story. Bart is naturally unimpressed and wonders why anyone would find a poem scary. Lisa theorizes that people in the mid-19th century were just easier to scare, having not seen any of the modern day's gore-fests.

Bart: Oh yeah! It's like watching Friday the 13 th: Part 1. Pretty tame by today's standards.

  • While Toy Story still holds up remarkably well, the graphics that were state of the art back in 1995 pale in comparison to what's being done today. The humans look almost as plastic as the toys, there's an airless quality to the outside scenes, and the animation is not as fluid and nuanced as what we see today. Not that the movie has now become unwatchable, far from it, but compare it to Toy Story 2 just four years later and the improvement is remarkable. And then compare that to Toy Story 3 eleven years after, and you appreciate how much CGI has evolved in such a short time. Also, consider the fact that before Toy Story, the number of fully computer-generated feature films was exactly zero, and it would be another two years before there was another one. With CGI so ubiquitous today, it's hard to imagine how mindblowing an experience it was to see Woody and Buzz for the first time.
    • Compare to Tin Toy to really see the evolution.
    • When you watch the behind-the-scenes features about Toy Story, it's clear that John Lasseter and the late Joe Ranft were aware of this issue. They made sure they put as much effort into the story and the characters as they did into the technology. Which is why people will probably still be watching Toy Story in fifty years, long after its technology has become outdated.
  • Tex Avery created many jokes and situations in animated cartoons that were once surprising and hilariously funny, but have been imitated and plagiarized so much by other cartoon studios that these jokes can make a modern audience yawn because they are so predictable and overdone. Examples are eyes flying out of their sockets, enormous long tongues, endless chases, characters using sticks of dynamite or dropping anvils on each other, characters walking on thin air before realizing that there's nothing beneath them whereupon they fall down, painted tunnels the hero can drive through while the villain simply crashes against the wall, and so on.
  • In 1985, Adventures of the Gummi Bears was praised for its animation and writing, which were superior to other shows that were on the air at the time. Nowadays, with shows like Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated, Gravity Falls, and The Owl House, it's hard for modern viewers to see why the show was so revolutionary for animation.
  • The first three seasons of South Park are fairly tame by today's standards, but they caused a big uproar from the Moral Guardians in the late 90s.