Jeysie wrote:Dagon wrote:If you don't like something, you're just a jerk who's shallow and stuck in the past.
I never said that.
Dagon wrote:I don't really think that I should be considered a shallow person because I didn't like a cartoon.
I never said that either.
I don't have a problem with people who don't like Animated as a general thing. There's some people who didn't like the actual substance of Animated: didn't like the heavy G1 references, didn't like that it was human villain-centric, didn't like the humor, etc. That's fine, that's their taste.
It is the thought of not liking a story
based on how it looks style-wise that I find shallow. As then you're judging something on its superficial features rather than on its substance. (Now, if the art was so bad it interfered with telling the story, that'd be different, but the G1 cartoon, at least, had far, far more mistakes in that regard than Animated did!)
Just for clarity, I never said that you said those things up there. I was speaking generally. And oh yeah, did/does G1 have animation mistakes.
But in all reality, we constantly- as human beings-judge things on their superficial qualities. We don't eat things that look or smell horrible based on the idea that they look or smell horrible, which is superfical. They may taste great, and may be super nutritious, but if they look or smell awful, we probably don't eat them. I for one, have been saved a few uncomfortably nights by heeding that internal wisdom, cause some of the stuff in my fridge gets way rancid.

It may be a damn blast to go skydiving, but I won't try it becuase it looks dangerous and pants-wettingly-frightening, based solely on its surface appearance.
And that's not as stupid an example as people may be wanting to call it. We make decisions based on the information we gather immediately, and that's just sort of a fact. To try and make it seem less like I'm grasping at an assinine example I give you this:
This past spring, my girlfriend and I took a class on Russian literature. One of the books on the list was (predictably) War and Peace, widely considered as one of the 'greatest novels ever written'. Now, that's a totally subjective statement. My girlfriend didn't even attempt to read it, based on the grounds that it was 'a really big book' and 'looked boring'. Don't blame me, I've read War and Peace three times.
I completely agree that we shouldn't judge books by their covers, which seems like the meat of this topic really, but we do. Maybe it's not right, but we do it.
Animated still is not the cause of the death of television as we know it though, and it's all still a matter of opinion.