Henry
Autoexreginated
Hey, at least for your demographic you put more weight on the board than most everyone else! 
I think (should you ever get to see it) that you might have been pleasantly surprised by Wonderfalls. I don't think any particular religion or political leaning was really denigrated or supported on the 4 shows we saw - in fact, they spent more time talking about disaffected generation Y's than anything else. The characters' religious or political stance was not charicatured, it was presented more as one part of a complex whole; instead, their lives were presented with problems happening to everybody.
One thing I loved about Jaye's family was the sense I got that they all loved each other, very much. All internal problems were presented as minor, and something that could be worked out. One focus was on how Jaye's "delusions", if that's what they were, actually made things better. Part of the fun was figuring out what the rainbow trout clock meant by "Bring her back to him" or what the Pink Flamingo meant by "Get off of your ass!"

I think (should you ever get to see it) that you might have been pleasantly surprised by Wonderfalls. I don't think any particular religion or political leaning was really denigrated or supported on the 4 shows we saw - in fact, they spent more time talking about disaffected generation Y's than anything else. The characters' religious or political stance was not charicatured, it was presented more as one part of a complex whole; instead, their lives were presented with problems happening to everybody.
One thing I loved about Jaye's family was the sense I got that they all loved each other, very much. All internal problems were presented as minor, and something that could be worked out. One focus was on how Jaye's "delusions", if that's what they were, actually made things better. Part of the fun was figuring out what the rainbow trout clock meant by "Bring her back to him" or what the Pink Flamingo meant by "Get off of your ass!"
