• @Anticorp
    link
    English
    1716 days ago

    That’s a tired trope. By giving him character flaws they created a lot of opportunities to show personal growth, and teach lessons. His anonymous neighbor was usually the one to throw down the wisdom which he would take to heart.

    • FuglyDuck
      link
      English
      016 days ago

      Tim was cartoonishly flawed- the way he treated everyone was awful, even after all that character growth. His kids. His wife. Al. Even his wisdom-dispensing neighbor.

      Most of the wisdom that was dispensed was forgotten by the next episode.

      Which, I think might just have been the actor’s fault more recently he was on another show my parents tried to get me to start watching and I had to walk out of the room- the sexism was that bad.

      But it was the 90’s and sexist pigs was one of the only typecasting for male leads in sitcoms. Of the ones I watched, I think fraiser was the only one that wasn’t…. But that was a gay comedy…

      (Don’t judge I was in middle school, I wasn’t the one picking the shows.)

      • @Anticorp
        link
        English
        416 days ago

        Since when is Frasier gay? Sophistication isn’t gay, despite having some overlap.

        • FuglyDuck
          link
          English
          2
          edit-2
          16 days ago

          The show. Not the character

          https://screenrant.com/frasier-subverted-lgbtq-sitcom-tropes-jokes-progressive-how/

          It was understated, and another way to say it better might be “gay comedy for straight people”, but a fairly large number of the writers and characters were openly lgbtq.

          Maybe the show just wasn’t dicks to lgbtq, but it was the 90’s and that’s remarkable enough. It’s been a while, maybe I should watch it again.