Better luck next time NBC.![]()
So you're saying that NBC didn't get to kill the episode and take its stuff ....
but did it still get any XP?
Better luck next time NBC.![]()
The posts preceding mine conveyed the attitude that this episode was somehow more respectful of D&D than previous depictions of D&D in mainstream media. I disagreed. Your reply seems to do little but champion the right of Community to make people the buff of jokes, which in no way refutes my post.You and I both know there are people like this who play D&D, and worse.
And I would hope you know that no group of people, no matter how much like us they may be, should be above parody and satire.
Everyone deserves time being the butt of the joke, or else comedy is just an excuse for bigotry. It's got to be equal-opportunity.
Your supposed point is not only wildly incompatible with the rest of your post--you defend the right of this episode to ridicule gamers as a whole, then proceed to say that your point is that it wasn't ridiculing them--but it is also a canard. It could be applied to the KnightErrant's examples of the SNL skit and Airheads. Heck, you could apply it to Amos & Andy. "They're not making a group the butt of the joke, just the individual member(s) of that group being depicted".The point was that D&D players as a wole were not the joke in the episode.
There was one D&D gamer to portray in this episode, and that one was portrayed as a man-child loser.
I'll give you some genuine credit for providing food for thought. At the very least, the study group walks away with a somewhat higher opinion of D&D, as opposed to, say, Christina Applegate's Jessie killing off her fellow players so she can leave early.In short, a small sampling of the kinds of people who have historically had a hand in ridiculing the game and it's players. Most of whom expected (or previously experienced) greater from life than GCC can do for them. Of the entire study group, only Abed is favorably predisposed to the game.
So their initial attitude towards the game is understandable...and (most of) their learning something positive from playing the game is at odds with their initial worldview.
THEY change- a little- but Neil doesn't. He simply reveals a depth of character that some of them wish they had.
The posts preceding mine conveyed the attitude that this episode was somehow more respectful of D&D than previous depictions of D&D in mainstream media. I disagreed. Your reply seems to do little but champion the right of Community to make people the buff of jokes, which in no way refutes my post.
Assuming that Community falls somewhere under the umbrella of "comedy in all forms", the very next sentence that followed this remark constitutes the very advocacy I was referring to. As I said before, it has no place as a rebuttal to anything I've said.I'm not sure whose posts you've been reading. I've only ever seen one episode of Community; why would I champion its rights to do anything?
I believe I was saying, and do believe, that comedy in all forms needs to take potshots at everyone, or else it's just thinly veiled bigotry.
Awful? DumbPaladin, the first sentence of my first post was:It's fine that you think the episode was awful, and I'm sure somewhere some other people feel as you do, that any episode depicting people playing D&D must be entirely positive towards them or else ... but I disagree, which is why I posted what I did.
That was pretty hard to miss.Although I liked the episode in question....
This was my thinking as well. D&D is a very arbitrary game. My guess is that what he was trying to emphasize was that you make rulings on the fly based on what seems plausible rather than refer to rules to see what the consequence of a given action is.WTF #1This guy claims to have played D&D? Any edition/era has far more "weird [and sometimes seemingly] arbitrary rules" than poker. (I'm not a poker fan.) And it has never been "more accessible" than any card game.
And my point of view comes from someone who loves D&D and wishes more people knew and played it.
Well, it's from the actual events of the TV show. One of the characters does some sword-stealing and family-raping. You had to be there.WTF #2Just WTF? Having this phrase in the same sentence with D&D makes me uncomfortable. (In the context of a TV show.
As you claim to be a comedian
Like I said, whose posts are you reading? Well, whatever, it's not my job to make sure you understand other people.
You posted your opinion, and more than one person disagreed, as we're allowed to do. We posted because we did, in fact, disagree. It doesn't mean you're wrong.
But it's definitely time to get over people disagreeing with you. I know I've got better things to do, so this'll be the last post on this nonsense, and I'm back to discussing the actual episode from here in.![]()