
You’re son created a cultural icon that resonated with millions of people. Bighead! The Fatheads wasn’t just a cartoon. An old cartoon show isn’t going to solve the kinds of problems you have.” Ok, that bit with Really Really Big Man (RRBM) being a darker version of himself in some Nolan/Snyder film knockoff, that was actually pretty funny. As if one or more previous episodes didn’t portray the neighborhood or town in the same way on a couple occasions for satirical purposes. Hilarious transition from that line too, showing how the neighborhood has changed. I don’t think we’re in the 90s anymore.Īll the more the pity. Which makes it irritating that it would even act like it had a sense of continuity in the first place.
#Rocko modern life hidden message series
So I guess I can’t really bitch about this continuity aspect that much when even the series itself couldn’t give two shits about it. On the other hand, Future Schlock lived up to the Schlock name by having Filburt transition from old to young by the end just for the fuck of it. Bighead and everyone else would be so old and decrepit they would be six feet under by now. But considering this is a sequel to the Future Schlock episode (which for the record wasn’t the last episode in the series), where Earth was already futuristic, and it showed everyone already aged into old people since this episode was set 20 years into the future already, you would hope that Mr. Ok, not that I should give a shit about continuity for a show like this at this point considering the series itself gives borderline fuck-all about it. Hey, alright! We got the proper name for that restaurant rather than the pussified Season 4 Chewy Chicken version. Hope that doesn’t end up being a cop-out to the one moment in the show where they had some form of continuity.

The point is Rocko’s Modern Life doesn’t get the right to take this stance.įilburt’s children had been lost while being dropped off at the pool– And Farscape… well ok, Farscape stayed consistent for its entire existence (though some characters are better than others with what we get in certain seasons). How Lexx differs considerably from any of its 4 seasons. Or any season of Cheers past season 3 (though season 6 wasn’t that bad). Or how Star Trek: The Next Generation‘s best seasons were 4-6, with only a few good episodes in all the other seasons. What show in existence hasn’t had its ups and downs with each season? I can already state from my viewing experience Seasons 1-2 of Rocko’s Modern Life are way better than Seasons 3-4 (that’s not to say there weren’t any good episodes in Season 3 at least).
