I would venture a guess at 8-to-12 year olds during hte 1990s
well, it seems like the Toon Zone types were never super into it (then again those are teenagers and adults) and the people who would have grown up in the '90s and 2000s don't seem to be making cartoons with too much of it nowadays
The former I would attribute, in part, to snobbery; there is also the fact that most people probably don't want to admit to liking grossness-based humour. Not that it's particularly fashionable to begin with, however. Although there are some that continue to mine that seam...
its appeal comes from defying standards of social acceptability, and that larger category includes everyting from getting away with using swearwords to sexual double-entendres.
That's simultaneously unfair to John K and the mentally ill, but you do have a point about how far it can be taken. >->
My own post was referring to how in my written treatments for cartoons and such I avoid it unless it's supposed to have extra impact, like Boo Boo vividly describing to Yogi why he shouldn't want to go into Jellystone's swimming pool, or Cadpig fluttering her eyelashes at Spot over wanting to eat a used tissue.
Yeah, as someone who loved the original Ren and Stimpy but can't stand the idea of Adult Party Cartoon, I think the main appeal of the show was how unapologetically weird it was. The gross out humor was just something that came with the territory, I guess.
Yeah, the appeal of the original is that it was deeply, almost uncompromisingly surreal and constantly pushed the envelope of what you could show in an all-ages cartoon without quite crossing the line. I've seen very little of its later incarnation, but aside from amping up John K's really wild approach to animation itself, I can't see what would be improved through making it an adults-only affair.
He's a very angry man with some serious issues. That's part of what fuels his best work, granted, but it also makes his least controlled material really hard to take.
I am curious about Worker and Parasite, though, because of that alien, neurotic aspect.
Worker and Parasite as in the fictional cartoon-within-a-cartoon from The Simpsons?
...now I think I'm getting my titles confused. I know he worked on some weird stuff after Ren & Stimpy, but I'm not sure why I thought that was the title of one of his later works. I mean, he has done guest work on The Simpsons, but I'm not sure...
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Anything he does with total freedom just seems so alien
I am curious about Worker and Parasite, though, because of that alien, neurotic aspect.
...now I think I'm getting my titles confused. I know he worked on some weird stuff after Ren & Stimpy, but I'm not sure why I thought that was the title of one of his later works. I mean, he has done guest work on The Simpsons, but I'm not sure...