@cheese_greater to Ask Lemmy • 3 months agoIs the back and forth between Rick and Morty a good example of unmasking/being who they truly are, as they are?message-square6arrow-up124arrow-down14
arrow-up120arrow-down1message-squareIs the back and forth between Rick and Morty a good example of unmasking/being who they truly are, as they are?@cheese_greater to Ask Lemmy • 3 months agomessage-square6
minus-square@cheese_greaterOPlink3•edit-23 months agoMore authenticity wise, like they are unburdened with feeling the need to hide who they are or how they feel and verbalize
minus-squareVanthlinkfedilinkEnglish11•3 months agoIt’s a caricature based on the creators’ own experiences, blown to cartoonish proportions. Literally cartoonish. No, it is not authentic.
minus-square@dragontamerlinkEnglish5•3 months agoI mean, King of the Hill is also a cartoon. A better one with more authenticity.
minus-squareVanthlinkfedilinkEnglish7•3 months agoHank Hill? Idk if he’s canonically autistic, but he sure seems closer to some real life people on the spectrum that I know versus Rick & Morty.
minus-square@dragontamerlinkEnglish4•edit-23 months agoSomehow they wrote Hank Hill to be a very nonpolitical Texan. I’m not sure if on the spectrum describes him as much as he’s a slightly exaggerated Texas hard ass character.
More authenticity wise, like they are unburdened with feeling the need to hide who they are or how they feel and verbalize
It’s a caricature based on the creators’ own experiences, blown to cartoonish proportions. Literally cartoonish. No, it is not authentic.
I mean, King of the Hill is also a cartoon. A better one with more authenticity.
Hank Hill? Idk if he’s canonically autistic, but he sure seems closer to some real life people on the spectrum that I know versus Rick & Morty.
Somehow they wrote Hank Hill to be a very nonpolitical Texan. I’m not sure if on the spectrum describes him as much as he’s a slightly exaggerated Texas hard ass character.