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Whether it be a joke that went too far, or a moment where a character was {{Flanderiz|ation}}ed to unacceptable levels, or an episode is a bit too OffModel to be tolerable, there are some moments in WesternAnimation that probably shouldn't have aired on TV.

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Whether it be a joke that went too far, or a moment where a character was {{Flanderiz|ation}}ed to unacceptable levels, or an episode is a bit too OffModel to be tolerable, there are [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSock some moments moments]] in WesternAnimation that probably shouldn't have aired on TV.
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->''"It's craptacular."'''
-->-- '''Bart Simpson''' summing this trope up, ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''

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->''"It's craptacular."'''
->''"WHAT HAVE THEY DONE?!?!"'''
-->-- '''Bart Simpson''' summing this trope up, ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''
'''Steven Universe''' and '''Peridot''', ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverseFuture''
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* ''DethroningMoment/RickAndMorty''
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* ''DethroningMoment/PhineasAndFerb''
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* No ALLCAPS, no [[AC:asscaps]], no '''bold''', and no ''italics'' unless it's the title of a work. We are not yelling the [=DMoSs=] out loud.

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* No ALLCAPS, no [[AC:asscaps]], no '''bold''', and no ''italics'' unless it's the title of a work. We are not yelling the [=DMoSs=] out loud.
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->''"It's craptacular."'''
-->-- '''Bart Simpson''' summing this trope up, ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''

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Note that this section is for short-form western animation. If you're looking for animated films, you may want to go [[DethroningMoment/AnimatedFilms this way]].



* ''DethroningMoment/AnimatedFilms''
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* ''DethroningMoment/DextersLaboratory

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[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:The Advertures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius]]
Boy, for a self-proclaimed genius, [[WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius Jimmy]] really made some serious mistakes over the years.
* Tropers/MadMan400096: For one of the biggest, stupidest {{Idiot Ball}}s in cartoon history, look no further than the episode "Stranded". While the opening can be considered stupid (an argument between Jimmy and Cindy whether the equator can be seen, even though most kids their age know that it's a theoretical point of reference), what did it for me was the ending, where they argue over their next problem: Cindy says that UsefulNotes/{{Australia}} is a continent, but Jimmy says it's not. What was that about Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius again?
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: In TheMovie, it was ten times worse when they have a debate about dinosaurs. First things first, Cindy's report is about how female dinosaurs are stronger than male dinosaurs. Ok so far, there is evidence of this being true[[note]]It's hypothesized by some paleontologists, and indeed there are animals closely related to dinosaurs, like crocodiles and birds, that have that exact sexual dimorphism, so it's not unlikely[[/note]]. Then, she claims that the dinosaur skeleton she constructed is a Plesiosaurus. Barring the fact that Plesiosauruses aren't even dinosaurs to begin with, the... thing she constructed looks nothing like a Plesiosaurus. A Plesiosaurus is well known to have a barrel shaped body, flippers, a long neck, a small head, and are purely aquatic sea creatures (or, in layman's terms, say the word "Plesiosaurus" and try not to picture the LochNessMonster--hint hint, it's impossible). This skeleton is more or less a Velociraptor with a Parasaurolophus crest. Jimmy responds by pointing out that the model is inaccurate... by telling the class that the crest belongs to a Megalosaurus. No such crest even remotely exists on Megalosaurus.
* Tropers/SkarmorySilver: Speaking of paleontology, I give you "Sorry, Wrong Era." Wrong indeed on so many levels, but special mention goes to the goddamn [[PteroSoarer Pteranodon]]. Pteranodons were neither scaly nor leathery-winged, they could not and did not pick up things with their feet, they did not fly anywhere inland, they did not live at the same time as T-Rex, they did not grow that big, and their babies were absolutely not the size of ten-year-old boys. Between this... atrocity and the shitload of AnachronismStew throughout the episode (and mind you, this was supposed to be in the Cretaceous period), this has to be my inner paleontology nerd's least favorite episode of any Western cartoon (seriously, they should have hired a paleontologist as a consultant for the show in general). About the only mitigating factor, from my POV at least, was that they didn't consider throwing in a 300-foot-long, T-rex-gobbling Spinosaurus.
** Tropers/BronyOfTheOctaves: To add to your criticism of the episode, this is where I feel the writers began go overboard with the "Hugh is TooDumbToLive but lovable guy!" trope, as half of the episode cuts to him abusing the time device and showing little to no remorse over the fact he sent his own son and friends 200 million years into the past. Same could be said to him making a woman experience giving birth again and again and again.
* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: For me, it's the Christmas episode. Jimmy acts like a {{Jerkass}} to Carl by trying to force his disbelief of Santa onto him, since Carl actually believes in Santa. Cindy and Libby call Jimmy on this and attempt to prove Santa real as reporters. Eventually, it turns out Santa is real and Jimmy ends up screwing up and incapacitating him, which threatens Christmas. When Cindy and Libby threaten to expose this back home, which would be perfect karma for the way Jimmy's been acting all this time, he uses an invention to physically launch them out of the North Pole! And the kicker comes at the end, after Jimmy, as usual, cleans up the mess he created to start with, Santa is able to make his deliveries... and he brings Cindy and Libby coal for trying to humiliate Jimmy! What!? Cindy and Libby, whose only crimes were actually giving a damn about Carl's feelings and doing their reporter duty to expose what Jimmy did and give him some well-deserved humbling, are punished by Santa while Jimmy is rewarded!? This pushed Jimmy into nigh MarySue territory for me, and really made me empathize with Cindy. It's no wonder Jimmy pisses her off.
** deathedge: "Holly Jolly Jimmy" wouldn't have been so bad if it wasn't for the fact that Jimmy gets the Dwarf star he had always wanted, and the reveal that Jimmy (as Sheen predicted) had been on the naughty list for a little while now. Jimmy should have gotten coal too for being a total jerk to Carl, and almost always being rather condescending towards everyone else around him.
* Tropers/AustinDR: For me, it's the episode "Send in the Clones". The premise is alright: Jimmy creates clones of himself to avoid his chores, and chaos ensues. The reason why this episode sucks is because no one noticed Jimmy's different hairstyles and voices. I mean, if they know anything about Jimmy, surely they would know that he wears his hair in a ice cream like whip, and surely they could distinguish his voice. One clone even had a frickin' mustache for Christ's sake!
** TylerFG: Not to mention how they end the episode. Jimmy is confronted by an angry mob, and they chase him away for it, and it's pretty obvious they're going to kick his ass. And they just end it there. This angry mob also included his own grandmother. [Gee, what an understanding family!
* Shadow200: "The Tomorrow Boys". The episode where Jimmy, Sheen, and Carl go to the BadFuture where Libby rules over all thanks to Jimmy's invention. Jimmy Moron, what may I ask got you the bright idea to create something that turns whoever uses it into a dictator? I'm starting to doubt the genius in him after that and other idiotic inventions he made.
** PrincessTogezo: I liked this episode for the most part, but I was not a fan of the scene where the boys sabotage Libby's birthday presents so she won't get her hands on the invention. After the boys unwrap/smash most of the presents, they still haven't found Jimmy's present, and it's then that they finally get the idea to ask someone where the present is (and Cindy said it was under 'Z' for "zero"). If they had just done that, Libby wouldn't have gotten mad at them and yelled at them in a rather uncomfortable scene. Even if Libby ended up not becoming a dictator because the boys destroyed the invention, they still ruined the rest of her presents, and this was at her birthday party, no less! The Graystar song playing over this part was pretty cool, but other than that, this scene is cringeworthy.
* Tropers/{{BronyOftheOctaves}}: "Normal Boy", in so many spades. The episode was basically in a huge sense of IdiotPlot had it not been for everyone's rather crude attitude towards Jimmy just because the kid is super smart. What boggles my mind is why was this such a big deal in this episode if Jimmy has done stuff like this before? And yet here we have Judy, Jimmy's own mom saying she wished he was normal, and then everyone in the class giving him smart just because of his intelligence impressed Miss Fowl and Willougby. And then just throw in the idea of Jimmy being "stupid" because of his invention and Carl and Sheen take a huge [[TookALevelInDumbass drop of intelligence]] and assume him being 'stupid' is normal. What a "great" episode huh?
* Topers/{{IAmNotAFunguy}}: I never really liked Cindy as a character because I thought she was bossy, arrogant, and materialistic (even though she's definitely had her positive moments), but the episode that really pushed me over was "The Science Fair Affair". In this episode Cindy successfully pushes to get Jimmy banned from the School Science Fair because he's beaten her (and everyone) every year in the past. On the day of the science fair everyone has inventions that are rather useless, including Cindy. Jimmy has designed a machine that grinds up garbage into a clean oil substitute which his father submits for a Nobel Prize. It all looks well for Jimmy until another kid messes up his machine and it nearly kills the science fair judges. Jimmy and Cindy instruct the others how to team up and destroy the machine and the judges decide to split First Prize among everybody whose invention helped stop Jimmy's machine, not Cindy whose invention was not used. Jimmy reminds her that by giving the group positive direction and making sure they all help out, she can feel the reward of personal satisfaction because she knows how to get a group to work together. Needless to say she doesn't take it well because some silly lesson like that was not the shiny gold medal she wanted. After all of the the kid who messed up Jimmy's machine in the first place is never in trouble. Also what was Cindy's invention? A machine that recycles rotten old gym socks into new sweaters, because who doesn't want a machine that can do that?
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Animaniacs]]
* Tropers/legomaniac90: The episode "I Got Yer Can" from ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' starts out like your normal Slappy Squirrel segment with Slappy getting annoyed by a cleanliness-obsessed chipmunk, but then takes a turn for the worse when Slappy proceeds to ruin the poor chipmunk's health and sanity. The reason? [[DisproportionateRetribution Said chipmunk asked her to put a can in her trash receptacle]]. And Slappy gets away with it! [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop So remember kids, if someone asks you to do something that you don't like, feel free to turn them into insane wrecks for the heck of it!]]
** Tropers/newborncolt: You think that's bad? For me, Slappy Squirrel's big low point was the episode "Rest In Pieces". Long story short, Slappy's nemesis Walter Wolf [[MoralEventHorizon sinks to the ultimate low]] in his near-century-long wave of schemes to get rid of her by faking his own death in order to make everybody start hating her for doing everything she ever did to him, including her nephew! Are you fucking kidding me?! Never mind the fact that considering Skippy's age, he was naïve enough to buy this story, but the way he was so quick to accuse her of being a "murderer" nearly made me lose all sympathy for the kid! Not to mention the fact that this reaction is coming from somebody who has admired and looked up to his [[CoolOldLady awesome aunt]] and seen all her old cartoons long enough so sooner or later, he'd have to look past her nemeses' schemes! I can understand everybody else, especially those attending Walter's "funeral", being this hateful towards Slappy when Walter pulls such a stunt, but coming from her own nephew, the one who has little to no reason to doubt her through her years of experience, that is just terrible on so many levels! That entire reason alone is why I hate this episode with a passion! And I don't care that Walter got found out and chased away at the end; it does not save this episode from being this cruel to poor Slappy!
* Shadow200: In the short episode "Fake" Dr. Scartchansniff takes the Warners to a Wrestling match and is enjoying it, however Yakko, Wakko, and Dot get into an argument with him complaining that it's fake and they don't want to be here while heckling the wrestlers while he tries to get them to behave. Naturally the Wrestlers overhear them and believe that it was poor Scartchansniff who was calling them fake and drag him into the ring and beat the stuffing out of him whilst The Warner Siblings are now interested and enjoying watching an old men get pounded on. Seriously, what happened to them saying that they love him and while tease him never want to see him get hurt?
* Tropers/CaptainTedium: In general, I was always annoyed by the constant {{Take That}}s towards Creator/{{Disney}} and their works made by the comedy-oriented Warner Bros. cartoons of the 90's because their digs frequently came off as mean-spirited and petty, but for me, their absolute lowest dig at Disney was the ''Animaniacs'' short "Jokahontas", which parodied ''Disney/{{Pocahontas}}'' and featured a musical number accusing Disney of rehashing the same old story in every movie they made with a female protagonist. The thing is that the same episode had a short called "Wakko at the Bat", which was basically an imitation of the ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' short "Buster at the Bat" in that it was a retelling of the poem ''Casey at the Bat'' with the TwistEnding of the story avoiding the original poem's DownerEnding, so their accusations of Disney recycling the same old stories come off as rather hypocritical.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Aqua Teen Hunger Force]]
"Gentlemen... '''BEHOLD!''' I have created a list of ''every moment'' when [[WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce this show]]... HAS FAILED! ''AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA!''"
* Tropers/{{Crazyrabbits}}: Season 4's "Party All The Time", where Frylock discovers he has melanoma (cancer) on his face. His condition grows worse, until his skin is pale, his face is severely scarred and all of the fries are gone from his head, while Master Shake and Meatwad attempt to cheer him up with a bunch of one-note tricks (including Shake shoving his hand into a bee hive and the group organizing a surprise performance by Andrew W.K.). The episode marked a severe shift from absurdest humor to dark and depressing. Also, after the numerous times death has been played for laughs in the series ([[TheyKilledKenny Carl, Shake, and Meatwad have each died more than once over the course of the series in absurd ways]]), saddling the mentor of the group with a disease and playing it straight doesn't have the same impact. A note to the writers: cancer is not funny. Ever.
* Animeking1108: As a cat lover, "Reedickyoulus" officially killed ATHF for me. It opened with Shake microwaving a cat, and how is he punished? [[KarmaHoudini By sleeping outside]]. No, a ''smart'' person would call the cops, especially considering that it was shown that he murdered pets all the time. Not only does Master Shake cross the MoralEventHorizon in doing this, but it makes me think that the writers hate cats enough to see them get murdered (Shake decapitating another cat with a saw and Meatwad crushing one with robot arms). Is it any coincidence why I stopped watching the show from there?
** {{Ecclytennysmithylove}}: I agree. At least all of Meatwad's pets Shake killed finally got their vengeance on him in the end, thanks to [[ChekhovsGun Carl's golden radioactive turds]].
*** Tropers/{{SoulCross}}: My problem with that episode is how Shake really didn't get his comeuppance. In fact it ended pretty well for him given that he willingly became a zombie through sex with a zombie gorilla and leaving on a gay zombie gorilla party bus. Out of all the ATHF episodes this is the one that he deserved a gruesome death himself and didn't get it.
* Tropers/{{Drcynic24}}: For me, it had to be "Global Grilling". This may have been the only episode that made me physically ill. Frankly, hocking up loogies isn't all that funny, and it's also disgusting. That was the whole episode. The worst of it all was that ItWasAllJustADream. In general, season 4 was about the time that the general decline in story quality began (as with the episode mentioned above) and others such as "Boost Mobile". The show really JumpedTheShark to me with this one though.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: The Boondocks]]
These are [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck the moments]] that are [[WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks definitely not gangsta]].
* Tropers/AustinDR: For the most part, I have a love-hate relationship with ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks'', some episodes work, some don't do it for me. In my honest opinion, I hated the episode "The Trial of Robert Kelly". I couldn't believe how stupid the jury members were! They saw the video of Kelly urinating on the girl, heck, they even saw his face on the phone while he was committing the crime! Even with all that evidence to prove him guilty, he gets [[KarmaHoudini off scot-free]]! What the heck?! They just saw pretty good evidence that he committed the crime, and yet they let him go free?! When [[OnlySaneMan Huey]] has every right to disagree with the verdict, he gets shunned. This is an episode I will never watch again.
** fluffything: Agreed. I'm not a fan of ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks'' in general, but this episode is just horrible on so many levels. Yes, I know the show takes place in a CrapsackWorld of sorts. Yes, I know it's supposed to be a social satire on urban culture especially regarding African-American citizens. Yes, I know many characters in the show tend to hold the IdiotBall for the sake of comedy or so someone else can provide social commentary. That doesn't excuse how utterly bad this episode was. I know there are fans of musicians that defend them no matter what horrible things said musicians have done (Chris Brown's fandom is a perfect example of this). But, there is no way any universe (not even one as fucked-up as the world portrayed in this cartoon) would have an entire (emphasis on "entire") jury declare a man innocent (despite blatant evidence to the contrary) just because he's a "good singer".
* @/LadyStardust: I have to go with the Tyler Perry episode. Now, I want to make it clear I am not a Tyler Perry fan, but this episode was just childish, with jokes basically being nothing more than homophobic and just unfunny.
* Animeking1108: The final episode (at least in broadcast order). What really ruined it for me was Grandad's {{Flanderization}} into a full-on [[AbusiveParents abusive grandfather]]. The episode was about Riley getting in trouble for using gay as an insult. In order to quell the fire, Grandad (unintentionally) states that Riley has special needs, which makes everyone sympathize with him. So, what does Grandad do after realizing his mistake? He goes along with it, and just to really add insult to injury, calls Riley retarded out of spite.
* SenorCornholio: I'm adding an episode from season 4, and that's "Freedomland". Basically, the Freemans end up working at a slavery reenactment and realize they're being treated like slaves themselves. Are there upsides? Well, one; the fight scene at the end was pretty awesome. But everything else didn't quite work for me. The worst of it, however, has to be the CharacterDerailment of Uncle Ruckus (no relation). In the previous seasons, Ruckus was a racist for sure, but he was also at least civil for the most part; even at the end of season 2 where he let the truck almost run over Huey and Riley, it's hinted that it wasn't out of malicious intent. He also had some good development episodes, especially in season 3, where he TookALevelInKindness. Above all though, at least back then the Freemans could consider him a friend, or at least an ally. This episode, however, sees Ruckus not only running said slavery reenactment, but also [[MoralEventHorizon willingly (and gleefully) allowing the idea of Huey getting his legs cut off so he doesn't escape]]. Something tells me that the Ruckus of old, racist as he was, would have drawn the line at the thought of a kid getting dismembered. And though the fight scene ensuing was awesome, Ruckus didn't even participate all that much. Didn't the other seasons paint him as a capable fighter in his own right, even managing to beat Huey with his own nunchaku? Wouldn't it be awesome to see a rematch between Huey and Ruckus, or in the case of pre-season 4 Ruckus, having a BackToBackBadasses moment? Either way, this episode partially destroyed Ruckus' character for me, and I say "partially" because [[FanonDiscontinuity as far as I'm aware, season 4 isn't canon]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Codename: Kids Next Door]]
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'': There is one moment I feel a good portion of the fandom would agree was the biggest WTF moment of the series. That of course being when they reveal that [[spoiler:Heinrich, Numbah 5's main rival for several episodes is really a girl named "Henrietta".]] Let that sink in for a moment. Esentially, the episode "Operation: C.A.R.A.M.E.L." that shows this reveal centers around magical caramels that require someone to sacrifice a part of themselves to make them delicious (IE: Talent, personality, etc.). Heinrich, we are told, gave up beauty to make said caramels and blamed Numbah 5 for it ever since. Not only was it, apart from the vague "was once beautiful" line, never stated beforehand that Heinrich was really [[spoiler:a girl]], but not once did Numbah 5 ever mention she [[spoiler: had a friend named Henrietta]]. The whole reveal comes completely out of nowhere and is so utterly ridiculous that it feels more like something out of a bad fanfic than an actual episode.
* MedicTf2: The one episode that I really did not like was "Operation F..O.O.D.F.I.T.E." For starters, it has the same amount of nausea you get when watching anthromorphic food be stuffed into children as the first Gramma Stuffum episode. However, this episode takes it one step further by having a giant sandwich devour the KND. To top it all off, the entire episode has heavy metal playing in the background, which I have zero-tolerance for.
* Animeking1108: Don't get me wrong: ''Operation G.R.A.D.U.A.T.E.S.'' was a good episode. However, one moment near the end rubbed me the wrong way. After finding out that [[spoiler: Tommy can't be let back in the KND]], Numbuh Four threatens to quit the team. However, the rest of the team responds with complete indifference, [[TheFriendNobodyLikes like as if they don't care about him]]. I expected that sort of thing out of Numbuh Five at least, but even [[ShipTease Numbuh Three]] didn't give a shit. Remember, this episode aired after ''Operation F.U.T.U.R.E.,'' which was Numbuh Four's Crowning Moment of Awesome. [[DudeWheresMyRespect You'd think they'd value him a little more]].
* bisonx: I've always hated the series. What finally caused me to snap at the series was ''Operation M.O.V.I.E.,'' which to me, is a massive insult to movies in general. First off, movies that are rated R are not for adults only, they're for people aged 17 and up. There's a rating for adults only, and it's the X rating. Secondly, when did adult movies become secret meetings for evil adults? And finally, what really upset me was when Numbuh Four said that adult movies were overrated.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Courage the Cowardly Dog]]
WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog is often one of those shows most people think of when they bring up Creator/CartoonNetwork's golden years, but even it tends to have a stinker now and again. We're all glad Courage is so... well, [[MeaningfulName courageous]]; he has to be if he can stand being associated with [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck these moments]].
* Tropers/WolfMan16: The ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' episode "Ball Of Revenge" portrays [[{{Jerkass}} Eustace's]] CharacterDerailment so extreme that he's very much suffered [[WesternAnimation/SouthPark Cartman]][[{{Flanderization}} ization]]. The episode has Eustace bringing in many of Courage's past rivals to kill him, [[DisproportionateRetribution all because Courage got a blanket that Eustace wanted]]! It also doesn't help that most of said villains have also tried to kill Eustace before. What's worse is that Eustace's strategy to lure Courage towards the villains is by using Muriel, his own wife, as bait! That's right, the same guy who, during earlier seasons, actually helped Courage with an incantation to exorcise a demon out of Muriel and suggested Muriel being used as bait for a sea serpent being extremely wrong, is doing these horrific acts. It actually makes this one of the most twisted episodes of the show.
** fluffything: I hate the episode "Ball Of Revenge" (to the point where I'll change the channel if it comes on) as well. Not only was it the lowest point for Eustace, but it also involved him teaming up with several of Courage's past villains (many of which tried to kill/hurt Eustace themselves). But, that's not the DMOS for me. Oh, no. The absolute low point this already awful episode throws at is is the way Courage defeats this enemy team-up. How? He screams at them. Let me repeat that. Courage defeats his worst enemies by screaming at them causing the floor to collapse and them to fall into a hole! I'd like to remind everyone that one of Courage's traits is that, despite being a coward, he's rather clever and usually defeats his enemies by outwitting them (though he does use his compassionate nature at times as well). Oh and let's not forget the fact that he [[PunctuatedForEmphasis never. Gives. Up.]] Or did we forget how he defeated Mecha-Courage by sheer determination alone? Having Courage defeat his enemies by screaming at them not only undermines Courage's whole character, but it utterly ruins the threat the villains possessed in the first place. This isn't a ChekhovsSkill or even anything remotely similar. This the writers [[AssPull pulling utter bull out their respective bums]] and trying to pass it off as good writing.
** Tropers/lloyd22: Eustace was especially dislikable in that episode. After all the times Courage reluctantly saved his ungrateful ass, how does Eustace repay him? He hires a bunch of villains to actually ''kill'' Courage, and even used ''his own wife'' as bait, not even thinking about how his wife would feel if Courage were to die. What especially makes me angry about that episode is Eustace's punishment at the end. The man tried to kill an innocent dog and how does Muriel punish him? By letting him sleep on the floor with the blanket he wanted. [[SarcasmMode Great punishment]]. Eustace should've been given a much worse punishment than what he got.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: Fourthed. Even though I don't hate this episode as much as most people (trust me, I'm very tolerable when it comes to TV episodes, for the most part), the entire episode definitely had problems up the wazoo. We've gone over Eustace's CharacterDerailment, his [[KarmaHoudini lack of a real punishment]], and the AssPull of Courage's trademark scream being turned into the [[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Unrelenting Force]], but let's count another flaw this episode has: the fact that TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot. An episode with Courage having to go up against his worst foes? Sounds great! There's one problem though (out of many): all the villains are from season 1 only. We have only two recurring villains: Katz and Le Quack. The others were one-shot villains who are either natural predators to begin with (the Weremole and the Queen of the Black Puddle) or pretty much dead (the Cajun Fox and the Big Toe). What about Benton Tarantella and Errol van Volkheim? What about Ma Bagge? What about [[StarterVillain the Chicken from Outer Space]]? He's appeared once in spite of being cooked alive, so I don't see a reason why he can't come back. And how do they decide to deal with Courage? Challenge him to a game of dodgeball. Yeah, it's a callback to Courage's first encounter with Katz as he wanted to play "a little sport before dying", but it's just too silly to even take seriously in this context. This was supposed to be one of the big finales to the show, people! Speaking of [[CatsAreMean Katz]], the diabolical feline that's been one of the biggest monsters in the show? What does he do to torture Muriel into bringing Courage down to the basement to begin with? [[PokeThePoodle Mix Muriel's lights with the darks]]. Come on Katz, you're a classier villain than that! Lastly, the Duck Brothers' cameo: all they do is perform a halftime song and then disappear with [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse Le Quack]]. The rest of WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog is great, for the most part; it's just this one that's considered the silver turd in a cave of diamonds and I can definitely agree with that.
*** Shadoboy: Just to twist the knife further in with the lackluster villains, at the end of the episode they show for a brief moment Freaky Fred threathening Courage from the TV. Yes, they relegated one of Courage's most memorable enemies to a cameo.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Danny Phantom]]
Not even WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom can keep these moments in the Fenton Thermos forever.
* Tropers/{{terlwyth}}: Okay I love ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' so far, but the episode "The Fright Before Christmas" that should be in good cheer, was just terrible. I mean, firstly they treat Danny's hatred of Christmas with no sympathy. It's perfectly reasonable to hate such a time when all your parents do is squabble and let nothing get done, yet it's treated like {{Wangst}}. After that he goes off to blow of some steam in The Ghost World and he accidentally destroys Ghost Writer's book. But the only mean thing he did was not apologize and claim to hate Christmas. What does GW do? He [[DisproportionateRetribution trapped Danny in a book, had the town get destroyed, all the presents stolen, and turned everyone against him and didn't let one thing for the poor guy go right]]. And somehow it's Danny's fault entirely? Not to mention it implies Amity Park is nothing but materialistic. Even the rhymes don't help this time.
* fluffything: For me, it was the ResetButton ending for the TV movie "Reality Trip". Long story short, Danny's parents say that they accept him for who he is and that they would never hunt down their own son when they find out he's half ghost. So, what does Danny do? Why, he uses the Reality Gauntlet to rewind time so that none of that ever happened. Umm... Danny? Just how stupid are you? Your parents just said that they accept your half-ghost status and would never try to hurt you, and your reaction is to essentially go back to the past and essentially erase that from history! At least "Phantom Planet" fixed that... somewhat, but it was still a really stupid thing for Danny to do.
** Tropers/{{ILikeCrows}}: Rewinding time made sense to me since his identity had been revealed to the whole world. That still leaves the question of why Danny, now that he knows his parents will accept him, still won't say he's half-ghost.
* Tropers/{{heartauthor}}: "Teacher of the Year", the episode where Danny has to deal with doing good on a test and stopping Technus from inside an online computer game, has a scene that's always rubbed me the wrong way. It's when Danny arrives home only to find that Mr. Lancer has told Danny's parents about his most recent flunked test. Danny's parents are understandably upset about the news. But then, [[FromBadToWorse the situation takes a sharp turn]] when Maddie declares that "[Danny is] a Fenton. And Fentons get A's" (except for Jack, who got B minuses); she then orders Danny to retake the test "and pass it with flying colors." It's also pretty clear that Jack agrees with Maddie. Now, don't get me wrong; if a kid's doing bad in school, parents have a right to be worried about it. But this scene seems to indicate that Maddie and Jack aren't just expecting Danny to do good in school; [[UnfortunateImplications they're expecting him to be perfect]], [[SarcasmMode because having a son who isn't as intellectually gifted as the rest of his family is absolutely horrible]]. Making sure a kid isn't failing is one thing, but [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop demanding them to do things perfectly so they don't disgrace the family name]] is quite another. Even notoriously serious [[BadassBookworm Jazz]] (who [[SecretSecretKeeper knew Danny's secret]] at the time) had more sympathy for Danny than his parents did.
* Tropers/{{Emmz}}: Even though I find Danny Phantom to be a good show, there was one episode's ending that I found to be a major slap in the face, and that was “Pirate Radio”. Basically, the episode is about Ember teaming up with Youngblood and all the adults in Amity Park being kidnapped as part of their plan, and Danny having to stop them. Since Danny can't use his ghost powers due to a forcefield preventing him, he has to resort to gathering up all the teens at his school to team up, get on the ghost ship where Ember, Youngblood, and Youngblood's minions reside, and fight back against the villains. So how exactly is this episode a Dethroning Moment of Suck to me? Well, the battle ends with Danny falling off the ship, Sam disabling the forcefield, and Danny going ghost and saving the day. What does Danny get in return? [[JerkJock Dash]] berating him for “bailing out” and everyone going back to ignoring him, completely forgetting the fact that he managed to assemble EVERY student at his school and fight against the ghosts without using his powers, proving Danny's leadership skills and to be efficient even when he’s not in his ghost form. To make matters worse, the episode ends with Danny getting in trouble with his parents for using the Ops Center and throwing a party (the latter not even being his fault), and him getting grounded for a month. Are you kidding me? I really liked the episode up until those scenes. It makes all the developement Danny went through seem pointless, and punishes him for absolutely no reason.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Daria]]
* Tropers/{{Eegah}}: The ''WesternAnimation/{{Daria}}'' episode "Depth Takes a Holiday". This wonderfully honest depiction of high school life suddenly takes a hard turn into ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' territory as Daria has to get fugitive holidays back to their dimension. It's completely beyond me how anyone working on the show thought this was a good idea.
* Tropers/{{Hungerismygame}}: While Daria almost never resorts to crude humor, in "See Jane Run" when Jane's love interest of the episode asks if Daria has ever seen Jane "run like the wind," Daria asks if he's ever seen Jane break wind. [[SarcasmMode Hilarity ensues.]]
* Tropers/{{Hyrin}}: The introduction of Tom Sloane. Before, the show was an interesting take on high school life told through the eyes of an outsider. After, it was a standard teen rom-com that descended into the cliched LoveTriangle. If they had wanted to do that, they should have stuck with the original plan and used Mack instead.
* Tropers/{{Eedwardgrey3}}: "Fizzed" tried to criticize corporate sponsoring of schools: good. Then it got ridiculously {{Anvilicious}}, with the cheerleaders forced to dress in soda cans by the evil Coca Cola/Pepsi {{Expy}} and ended with an over the top scene of miss Li running around [[AxCrazy with an axe]] because of a sugar high. Glen Eichler apparently didn't get the negative reactions.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Dexter's Laboratory]]
Not everyday can be a fine day for science. Same thing goes for [[WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory this show]].
* Kittens: I love ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'', but one moment in "Don't Be a Baby" was a [=DMoS=]. It was when Dexter and Deedee turned their parents into babies. It was cute and funny at first, but what annoyed me was when Dexter wanted to hold the babies and Deedee said that "Guys don't know how to take care of babies," so Dexter says that he can and so he tries to prove it. But when Deedee hands over their mother she accidentally drops her and she cries. So Deedee looks at Dexter like he did it when clearly Deedee did it! Wow, Deedee, when did you become such a witch! I still do personally like Dexter's Lab, but that moment in that episode was stupid.
** Tropers/{{KrazyTVWatcher}}: I agree, especially given that [[DumbBlonde Dee Dee was the one who caused this whole fiasco in the first place]].
* fluffything: For me, it was the episode "Dexter and Computress Get Mandark" that was "created" (IE: He provided the audio track) by a six year-old kid. No, saying "But he's just a child" doesn't excuse how utterly terrible it is. There have been children who have created far better works of entertainment than this. Long story short, the episode is about nothing but utter randomness... and not in a good way. Dexter and some robot (named Computress) cause Mandark's head to shrink and then accidentally cause it to grow until it explodes and tiny Mandark heads fall from the sky. Oh, and there's an OverlyLongGag involving Dexter calling Computress "stupid". It's like a poorly written TrollFic than anything else. About the only good thing about it is the ArtShift from the show's normal style to a more "crayon drawing" look, which I felt fit the whole "a kid made it" theme. Too bad the rest of the episode was horrible.
* Tropers/{{Philipnova798}}: "Dexter Vs. Santa's Claws". Now for me, it seemed like Dexter was in all-out [[{{Jerkass}} jackass]] mode. Trying to prove Santa wasn't real and ultimately pissing off his family definitely didn't make for a good idea. It just makes me feel sorry for Santa. Also, the ending just came out of nowhere, can you guys say commercialism? Because I know I can.
** {{DibKyle}}: Not to mention how utterly traumatizing the story is. A favorite cartoon character hunts down and nearly kills a beloved holiday icon, ruining Christmas in the process. Seriously, who thought this was a good idea for kids?
* {{Disney23}}: Mine has to be "Dexter Detention". Talk about your CruelTwistEnding. It has Dexter and some other students in detention and the situation is treated like a prison story. They dig an escape tunnel under the floorboard and Dexter comes out on the other side... at the state prison. The episode ends with Dexter in the striped outfit breaking rocks at gunpoint. The End. Dude, the hell?
** RAZ: Agreed that this was not that good an episode, and what really sets me off about this one is what results in Dexter getting detention in the first place. A {{Jerkass}} student continues to bug Dexter throughout at the beginning for a test answer. Dexter initially refuses to answer him, but the student hassles him so much Dexter loses his cool and accidentally blurts out the answer, leading to the detention. DisproportionateRetribution aside, the real kicker is the student that caused this in the first place doesn't even get [[KarmaHoudini any punishment]] at all.
** bisonx: The episode in general is this for me. When in the hell were students in detention treated as if they were low-life criminals? I've been to detention once, and not once am I treated like a criminal.
* {{DarkLadyCelebrian}}: "The Old Switcharooms". Deedee and Dexter break their dad's long-awaited bowling trophy and are sent to each other's rooms as punishment instead of their own. Reasonable, seeing as their rooms are basically a Toys R Us and an advanced research laboratory and it's a more effective punishment to ground them in rooms that don't contain things that appeal to them. However, Dexter goes [[{{Ax Crazy}} absolutely ripshit]] because he thinks Deedee is messing up his lab while he's not there, and he ends up going on a rampage and completely trashing Deedee's room. Okay, he overreacted and trashing the room wasn't cool, but it's Dexter and judging by Deedee's past behaviors, I could see where he was coming from. But then his dad finds out Dexter's trashed the room and what does he do as punishment? [[{{Abusive Parents}} Make Dexter sleep in the doghouse in the rain.]] This isn't ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' or ''WesternAnimation/{{Family Guy}}'', Dexter's parents are not {{Abusive Parents}} by characterization, so this was completely out of left field. ''Dexter's Laboratory'' is not the appropriate cartoon to be playing child abuse for laughs!
* {{Patworx}}: "A Third Dad Cartoon" was shockingly lazy to me even as a kid. The entire thing consists of Dad going to play golf while Dexter and Deedee stand their smiling (because I'm sure they wouldn't rather play with toys or work on inventions than watch their Dad play golf). The dad takes his sweet time setting everything up and getting himself into just the right position to hit the ball . . . and then it starts raining. Dad walks away and Dexter and Deedee (now frowning) follow him. The end! So uninteresting!
* TheSnowSquirrel: For me, it was a moment in "Dexter is Dirty". In said episode, Dexter's hands are dirty, so Mom makes him go upstairs to wash up before lunch, fair enough. After a while Dexter finishes and heads back to the kitchen, where he sees Deedee walking out while thanking their mom for the food. So you'd think he'd come up to Mom, and she'd give him his meal that she'd set aside for when he was ready, right? Wrong. She completely ignores him as he gets right up next to her and watches sadly as she scrapes the remains of the lunch into the trash. Really, [[UnNamedParent Dexter's Mom?]] So nice that you let your son go hungry because he was taking the time to do exactly as you said!
* cheedo: Even as a kid that episode where Dexter turns Deedee into their mom so she can show up for a PTA meeting (I forget the reason but he didn't want to use their action mom- probably because of a bad grade, I think). He and Deedee argue while waiting to see the principal and Dexter, in a totally OOC moment, HITS HER. The two other kids in the room give him a thumbs-up! Why is this okay to present to kids?
* alinhoalisson: The episode "Surprise!" It's Dexter's birthday party and his parents are out to buy him some gifts. He makes an invention that leaves him invisible and follows them to ensure they'll buy at least one thing he's always wanted: A Major Glory action-figure. His parents buy lots of stuff he ''doesn't'' want and seem like baby toys. Once Dexter puts the action-figure he wants in the cart, Mom picks it up and tosses it aside, claiming he "doesn't need junk." So, we have this moment when Dexter goes back home depressed that none of his birthday gifts were good. And then, we have a HopeSpot moment when he returns and guess what? One of his friends bought him the action figure as a gift, and not only that, Major Glory himself showed up at the party. This doesn't last long, as Dexter is still invisible, he gets attacked up by Major Glory who mistakes him as a malicious ghost. And then the episode ends with light upbeat music playing on the background while a child is mercilessly being beaten to a pulp by the hero he idolizes. Truly saddening.
* MightyMewtron: I considered putting "Chicken Scratch" because I find it gross and illogical, but even more illogical (and showcasing of SeasonalRot) is "The Babe Sitter". The premise of Dee Dee babysitting Mandark doesn't make sense because Mandark isn't more than two years younger than her, and this isn't even made into a joke. The episode plays with Dee Dee's obliviousness to the degree she barely seems like her own character at all, to the point where she keeps calling Mandark by his birth name of Susan even after he literally screams at her to stop, which she writes off as having a tantrum. It's more uncomfortable than funny and it seems to flanderize Dee Dee to ignore the most obvious complaints for the sake of a very fanficky plot.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: The Flintstones]]
WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones may have been the first prime time cartoon to have aired, causing a massive renaissance in its awakening, but sometimes older isn't always better. Whether it's [[ValuesDissonance a joke or entire episode that hasn't aged well]] or a steaming case of SeasonalRot, these are [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck the moments]] that we wish were converted into fossil fuels.
* RAZ: ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'' had one episode entitled "The Tycoon" that I caught when I was pretty young and even today I still remember just how extraordinarily pissed I was after watching this crapfest. The premise involves a rich snob who looks exactly like Fred getting tired of work and bailing on the job, and after his assistants panic they get Fred to fill in for him until he's found. Wilma, Betty, and Barney encounter the rich guy and confuse him for Fred, and he in turn treats them all like dirt and so they all blame Fred. The real Fred gets tired of all the work he has to do as well and also bails, happy to return to his wife and friends. But since they're all still angry after their encounter with Fake Fred, Barney kicks the real Fred's ass and Wilma and Betty yell at him for being a being a total dick when he didn't even do anything. The End. Now Fred can be kind of a jerk sometimes (all the characters can) but that one went beyond mean, especially since he gets completely treated like something a dog crapped out by the end for something he's one hundred percent innocent of. I remember screaming at my TV and wanting to kick it several times after that half-assed 30 minutes of unnecessary cruelty.
** Tropers/{{Komatsuzaki}}: I second this so hard. I remember literally nothing from the Flintstones except for this episode. I must have been 11 or 12 when I saw it, but it made me so angry that there was no restitution for what everyone did to Fred.
* kablammin45: As much as I like ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'', I just cannot ignore the convoluted plan Fred and Barney had at the end of "At The Races". Long story short, our favorite cavemen blew their funds on the dinosaur races, but fortunately won. Then things get crazy. Fred, for some reason, decides that telling Wilma would be a big mistake, so he decides to hide the check in Barney's pock- oh wait, I'm sorry, underneath a rock in a conspicuous area. Why they couldn't have hidden it somewhere easy to get to? Then what happens next wouldn't have happened; namely, Wilma is ecstatic prompting Fred and Barney to run for the hiding place and [[DownerEnding wind up having it stolen by a mugger and become completely broke]]. Pretty much all of this could have been avoided all together if Fred had realized the fact that Wilma wouldn't be ticked off and hidden the check in somewhere much easier, and less vulnerable to theft, to get to. (Like say, Barney's pocket for example.)
* Tropers/BaffleBlend: While this might be [[ValuesDissonance a tad unfair]], one episode above all has showed me exactly how poorly this series has aged; "The Happy Housewife". The gist of it is that Wilma gets a job as a host on a TV show, where she gives housewives advice. Fred is upset because her working means [[StayInTheKitchen she's not home to make elaborate dinners]]. Eventually, it turns into blackmail when a gossip column threatens to expose that the Happy Housewife's Happy Husband isn't so happy himself. Even if he didn't have such a terrible, selfish, and bratty reason to be unhappy in the first place (which he did have [[StayInTheKitchen a terrible, selfish, and bratty reason]]; this can't be emphasized enough.), that alone would have crossed the MoralEventHorizon. So after Wilma is essentially forced to quit her job... [[KarmaHoudini the episode ends with her singing a she brings Fred a chunk of meat]]. Needless to say, this was the last episode of ''The Flintstones'' that I ever watched, because after seeing it, Fred was unlikable, unwatchable, and [[MoralEventHorizon unforgivable]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Frozen]]
''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' may be one of Disney's biggest hits in recent memory, but it has some moments that are difficult to [[{{Pun}} let go.]]
* Tropers/FairyDreamer: Personally, I absolutely enjoyed Disney/{{Frozen}}, but there is one moment that will not stop bothering me. The trolls altered Anna's memories of her playtime with Elsa to make her forget Elsa has ice powers. The reason given is just to be safe, but it really served to do nothing except make things that much harder for Anna because she now hasn't a clue as to why her big sister she was so close to suddenly seems to want nothing to do with her. Thank goodness Anna is incredibly persistent or this movie may not have ended so happily.
** Tropers/{{Garfield2710}}: I thought it was also an incredible film, though it does have just one big problem. The entirety of "Fixer Upper." It's a decent tune and all, but the fact that the trolls are singing this [[spoiler: while Anna is slowly dying]] is just awkward. This kills both the momentum and tension stone dead, and then once the song is over, [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment it's completely forgotten about]]. Also, this felt like an awkward attempt to shoehorn in some romantic tension between Kristoff and Anna, especially when the trolls don't seem at all fazed that Anna is already engaged. Yes, [[spoiler: Hans was a bad guy, and Anna had only known him for a day]] but they certainly didn't know that. Yeah, [[SarcasmMode tearing apart a couple that you know nothing about so that she can get together with someone you think is more suitable is the essence of true love.]] That scene is why the rock trolls are TheScrappy to me.
*** [=TheBattyOne=]: Seconded. That song might have worked somewhere else in the film, but they put it in the exact spot to ruin the pacing. I might have forgiven it if "Fixer Upper" were a really good song, but it's pretty meh. It should have been cut. It really should have.
** [=JustHereToComment=]: While I enjoyed Frozen for the most part, I absolutely hated the reveal of [[spoiler: Prince Hans]] as the bad guy. For one, I felt it came out of nowhere. I had even read about the twist before watching and I still felt it came out of nowhere. Second, his plan makes no sense, since it could be foiled very easily by a wandering butler or maid discovering [[spoiler: a dying Anna]] in the locked room. He also fails to know that [[spoiler: a wedding is invalid unless there are witnesses there to see it]], so his plot to take over the kingdom should've fallen flat. Overall, when it comes to the BrokenBase over this character, I'm on the side calling him one of the worst Disney villains. (And I'm sorry if you like him, fans of him, but I just can't).
*** Tropers/{{Larkmarn}}: Yeah, that was... just bad. The fact he completely and utterly clutched the VillainBall and ran with it was really jarring. It's bad enough his plot centered on "guys, we're totally married now. Trust me," but leaving Anna to die was nonsensical. Why wouldn't he sit on his ass for five minutes and make sure she's dead. He's counting on the court not bothering to actually check on their dead princess, even if only to pay respects. "No, she's dead. But don't go in there. Seriously." And even if she did die before anyone saw her, what's to stop her from finding a pen? Man, evil just made the guy freaking dumb.
*** {{@/Psyga315}}: I agree with this, but not in the same way you are. I had no problems at all with his plan. Granted, I agree with the fact that it's flawed, but it's not why I consider it a Dethroning Moment. It's the fact that the writers decided to have Hans go completely "muwahahaha!" evil for the sake of having a villain. Given the facts that 1) Hans presented little to no villainous traits prior to the reveal and 2) they intended Elsa to be the villain but changed during the making of Let It Go, it's pretty clear that Hans was made into one at the last minute to have a villain... when it's pretty clear that we ''have'' one. Heck, they could have kept him as a villain, but in more of a WellIntentionedExtremist way as opposed to making him power hungry.
*** Maniacaldude: I personally found Frozen to be really underwhelming, even when I first watched it, but that twist involving Hans was the absolute low point. Like, I absolutely hated it with a fiery passion. A lot of why stems from the above arguments, that there's no foreshadowing, (with the mention that he's seventh in line being the only possible hint,) that it's a slap in the face that comes out of nowhere, that it radically alters Hans' personality to such a jarring, stereotypical degree, that it makes no sense, all that stuff. But something I should mention is that I've been told that this movie supposedly does things differently, that it bucks trends and is "progressive" and all that. Well, if that's the case, then why is this here? Rather than actually doing something different like commenting on adult relationships and choosing one over the other or keeping feelings as sort of the antagonistic opposition like it was intended or anything new or interesting, they had to include something that is becoming quite a cliche at this point: the surprise villain, the villain that shows himself during the movie's final act and is quickly thwarted, and I'm sorry, but if you're apparently trying to do things differently, then why include a last minute DesignatedVillain like this? It easily demonstrates one of my main problems with this movie: it tries way too hard, but at the same time, it somehow doesn't try enough.
** Tropers/LunaVeg87: For me, this movie was mediocre at best (thinking of WhatCouldHaveBeen with an adaptation of Literature/TheSnowQueen makes it disappointing), but yeah, this reveal was the biggest problem for me. Not only because it came off as really forced and last-minute (like the writers thought they needed a DesignatedVillain to make the movie work), but considering [[spoiler: Elsa's]] previous actions [[spoiler: (like abandoning her kingdom, refusing to go back after she's told what she's done, freezing Anna's heart, and upon seeing what she'd done, setting a giant killer snow golem after her and her traveling companions)]], it almost comes off like they just thought removing sympathy from one main character would put sympathy back on [[spoiler: her]]. To me, it came across as a lazy way to invoke one of my personal [[ProtagonistCenteredMorality most-hated tropes]].
** Tropers/{{Catmuto}}: No matter how great ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' may be, the worst moment for me was Elsa's song ''Let It Go''. Out of context, the song comes across as rather empowering, deciding to not be shackled by her own or society's fear of her powers and Elsa leaves to live on her own, not having to hide her powers from anyone. The problem is when the song is put into context with the movie -- I hated the song with its context, because it came shortly after Elsa's magic went out of control and was revealed to everyone in the kingdom, making them afraid of her, considering what her powers can do. Now, the song suddenly comes across as having the message 'I won't take responsibility for what my actions made, I'll just hide myself away and let others deal with it'. Yes, Elsa didn't know that she had inadvertedly caused winter to befall all of Arendelle. But no, I do not care how psychologically tortured Elsa has been, this caused her song to sound horrible and she doesn't even try to see if her powers can be removed until the end when ThePowerOfLove is the ultimate thawer.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: After some careful thinking, I decided to finally contribute a moment here, and that's how little Kristoph contributes in the final third of the movie. I personally liked Kristoph as a character; he was an {{Adorkable}} ManChild [[FriendToAllLivingThings with a]] [[LoyalAnimalCompanion dopey reindeer]]. It actually made him a bit unique from most Disney guys, and it made him a bit relatable especially since [[AllAnimalsAreDogs said reindeer reminded me of the first dog I ever owned]]. So we see Kristoph and Sven running across bad weather and melting ice to get to Anna, who's currently in some massive danger, trying to reach her before something happens to her... [[spoiler:and then Anna gets frozen anyway]]. And Kristoph ends up being unable to contribute jack all. It's [[spoiler:Elsa]] who [[spoiler:restores her with true love]]. I get that [[spoiler:"sibling love"]] is also a form of [[spoiler:true love]], but poor Kristoph's only contributions to the whole movie were helping Anna get to Elsa and then back to Arendelle. The guy doesn't get near as much love as [[GenkiGirl Anna]], [[DefrostingIceQueen Elsa]], [[spoiler:[[MagnificentBastard Hans]]]], or even [[PluckyComicRelief Olaf]], and the fact he contributes so damn little in the grand scheme of things may have something to do with that. It's dumb, is what I'm trying to say.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy]]
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'': I found the episode "Be A-Fred, Be Very A-Fred" where Fred Fredburger wins a contest and gets to spend time with Grim. It's just filled with so many facepalm-inducing moments that I just don't know where to begin. First, Grim is such a [[ButtMonkey loser]] now that the only work he can get is being in laxative commercials? And, not only that, but said laxative company is now doing poorly because apparently no one wants to buy something endorsed by death himself? Let me remind everyone that said laxatives are being sold to demons (IE: Immortal monsters of evil (or chaotic neutral in the case of TGAOBAM) that most likely speak to Grim on a daily basis). Second, Fred Fredburger is just more annoying than usual here. At least in ''Keeper Of The Reaper'' his annoying antics were funny. This? He's just stupid for the sake of being stupid (Though, I did find him being amazed by a simple lamp to be pretty amusing... but that's just a silver lining in this turd cloud of an episode). Third, [[OverlyLongGag the way too long and not funny at all]] gag of Grim trying to get his picture taken with Fred resulting in Fred losing his frozen yogurt (Which, by the way, was what Fred wanted to do with Grim). You know, you could just buy another one or waited until he was done eating, Grim. Instead, they take Fred to an amusement park where Fred is sent flying from a Tilt-A-Whirl (... What?) and ends up meeting a group of Yetis that all talk like him and offer him frozen yogurt, all while [[DudeNotFunny a crying Grim is violently beaten by the laxative company executives for letting Fred go.]] Yes, that's how the short ends. It's like watching a train filled with disabled orphans crash into a burning building. Not funny and painful to watch.
** Animeking1108: If they ever air "The Grim Show" in reruns, I tend to change the channel. After Grim becomes a TV sensation, he spends less time with Billy and Mandy. However, Mandy decides to humiliate Grim and get his show cancelled. Why? [[DisproportionateRetribution Because he wasn't doing her chores]]. The episode ends with Grim sobbing. [[SadistShow Apparently, for this show, it's not a good ending until Grim suffers]].
* Tropers/{{KiraDoom}}: Mine is the episode "Scythe For Sale". I can probably get over Irwin yelling at Billy for bothering him (Billy was being pretty obnoxious, and I've been aggravated too many times to count). But the whole rest of the episode is about Irwin buying Grim's scythe at Billy's garage sale... Then using it to cast a spell to make Mandy love him. [[FlatWhat What?]] Look, I know Irwin's crush is one-sided, but you usually feel a bit sorry for Irwin because [[EnfantTerrible Mandy is pure evil]]. This episode tries to paint Irwin as a horrible person, which he usually isn't. (The only other time he was is "King Tooten Pooten", but I'm only allowed one entry for this show.) As a fan who absolutely ''loves'' Irwin and relates to him on many levels (aside from the whole "crush on a horrible person" thing), this episode is, for the most part, ''horrible''. Thank God for ''Underfist''; without that special, along with some of the other episodes he was in, my view of him as a character would have been tarnished.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Hey Arnold!]]
For [[WesternAnimation/HeyArnold a relatively timeless show]], there are a few unpleasant moments in the series.
* Tropers/{{Lionheart0}}: The ending to "Arnold Betrays Iggy" episode had one of the most horrible endings I've ever seen in an animated series. After being accused of spreading Iggy's embarrassing secret, when it was actually Arnold's classmates who did so, Arnold is forced to take a humiliating Walk-of-shame in bunny pajamas, on National Television. In a show that normally manages to have understandable {{aesop}}s, to the life of me I still don't quite understand what was the point of taking the blame and forced to endure humiliation for something you were not responsible for.
** Tropers/{{Rage24}}: For me, the worst part of that episode was Arnold's Grandpa acting {{Out Of Character}}. When Arnold decides to go through with [[HumiliationConga the Bunny Pajama Walk]], his Grandpa says that [[DudeNotFunny he's going to take pictures of him for the photo album]]. [[WhatTheHellHero Why the hell would he do that?]]
** Tropers/{{futuremoviewriter}}: The episode is often considered the worst of the series for a reason. Even as a kid, I realized this episode was very uncomfortable to sit through and after seeing it a second time, knew I never wanted to see it again. They used a shot of Arnold in the suit looking sad at the end of the episode in a March Toon Mania promo and since I didn't know which promo it was, I'd always look away at those promos to avoid that reminder of the episode. It severely damaged my feeling about the show in general it was that bad. I became very cautious whenever I watched the show after that so I could get away whenever that episode came on. I think there was one occasion when it did come on and I left the room I had no desire to sit through it again. The second viewing I left the room during the ending or covered my face so I didn't have to look at it. I wonder how Steve Viksten (God rest his soul) didn't realize just how bad an idea everything in it was and how it didn't need rewrites before it aired. A YouTube commenter came up with better ideas for how the episode could have gone instead and it's unfathomable to me how Viksten couldn't have thought of those things himself before it aired. I thought maybe I didn't get it, but Craig Bartlett himself disliked it so much that it got very little air time since it came out. I'm upset that this episode ever existed, but I'm glad I wasn't wrong.
* Tropers/{{MsCC93}}: My moment would be the episode "Girl Trouble" when KarmaHoudini {{Jerkass}} Helga constantly harasses Arnold. When Arnold gets fed up with Helga and throws paint at her, Mr. Simmons punished Arnold, but only stood there and did nothing when Helga harassed him. Total CharacterDerailment for Mr. Simmons! And does Helga get her comeuppance? No... it's no wonder I can't stand this episode!
** Tropers/{{LunaVeg87}}: I second that. What actually got me the most about that episode was when Arnold got home after that incident, and his grandpa acted horrified, and then Arnold sighed, and said "you're right. I feel terrible." You know, wherever you stand on whether you [[{{Shipping}} ship Helga and Arnold]] (I personally don't even get involved), this was disturbing. Helga harasses him on a daily basis, he has no idea of her true feelings, or hell, even if she ever feels bad about treating him like dirt, yet the ONE time he does something back, he feels terrible? I get that he's supposed to be a good kid who always does the right thing, but this was borderline LoveMartyr territory (it would only be more disturbing if he were the one with a crush).
* [=FromtheWordsofBR=]: "Bag of Money". In this episode, Arnold, Gerald, and Sid find... well, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a bag with $3,937 in it]]. Arnold wants to return it to the police, but Gerald and Sid don't want him to, but once Arnold points out they could get a reward for returning it they agree and let him keep track of the bag. Sid even mentions how "Arnold is the most honest guy around", which bites him in the ass later on. Arnold goes on the city bus with the money and sits next to a pink-haired peg-legged one-eyebrow-donning lady with 4 bags, which are also the color of the bag of money Arnold has. However, the lady accidentally grabs Arnold's bag and he winds up with her bags of bird seeds. Sid and Gerald don't believe Arnold's silly but true story; so much so, Sid eventually convinces everybody that Arnold stole the money and what happened to him is actually an excuse, and the other kids actually believe him! And to rub more salt in the wound, remember that little statement Sid did a little earlier? He sure isn't acting like the poor guy is honest in this section of the episode. And then Sid starts spying on Arnold and says that he used the money to buy random stuff. The kids eventually grab Arnold and tie him up to the tether-ball pole. Then a police car comes and the lady Arnold described earlier comes to return Arnold's bus pass, and then everybody apologizes for hurting Arnold, yet Sid [[KarmaHoudini gets away with what he did]]. Sorry, but no, not even the ending can {{easily forgive|n}} that. Why would they think a kid like Arnold would steal the money? Easily one of the poorest-written episodes of the series.
* monkeyman224: I really hated "The Vacant Lot" because of how asinine it was. The kids find a vacant lot with mountains of junk in it, clean it up, and decide all of a sudden it's theirs. Then the adults take it over and kick the kids out. In the end the kids dump all the junk back in it and tell the adults that "they can have it the way they found it" before they cleaned it up. Yeah, that's real mature (don't tell me "they're just nine". Some of them have been written to have more maturity than the adults most of the time). The adults then feel bad and let them have it after remodeling it. Okay first off, a vacant lot isn't something you call dibs on after cleaning it. It's not their property, it's the city's. It doesn't belong to anybody until they actually buy it. That's why it's called a "vacant lot".
** KrisSimsters: I second this, this was a dethroning moment for all the characters; for the kids claiming that this was theirs (yes they cleaned up but as pointed out, its not yours until you buy it from the city) and the adults thinking they can just have whatever's cleaned up. This episode made me not like anybody, not even Arnold.
* SampaCM: I'd gladly watch all episodes of ''Hey Arnold!'' again, except for one: "The Stoop Kid". Long story short, the titular kid is an orphan who likes sitting on the doorstep of his house, and shouting insults to whoever walks by. The kids of the neighborhood are too scared of him as they consider him a CreepyChild, and even there is a legend about his origin, told by ''Gerald, no less!'' Their football fell over his doorstep, but they don't dare get close. However, when Arnold somehow manages to retrieve the football from the doorstep, what does Stoop Kid do? Instead of chasing Arnold, he limits to shouting him to stay away from his doorstep. Now, the next part is where we enter the [=DMOS=] zone: the kids realize that Stoop Kid is actually too scared to leave the doorstep, so they take advantage of it, and start picking on him, to the point of making him cry bitterly. What The Heck? It's true that Stoop Kid was being a {{Jerkass}}, but the kids mistreated him way worse than he to them. Arnold, however, feels sorry for him and helps him face his fears and leave the doorstep. Now, the ending with Stoop Kid finally leaving the doorstep and accepted by his community is a heartwarming moment, but the part where the kids pick on him is just too mean-spirited and painful to watch this episode ever again.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: House of Mouse]]
* Tropers/FroggoFan64: The episode in which Scrooge [=McDuck=] buys the club and makes everyone miserable with his budget cuts has rubbed me the wrong way for a good reason. Among the things Scrooge does to the club is that he frakkin' fires Huey, Dewey and Louie, his own grandnephews, from their position as the house band! After all those times they helped him search for treasures back in the comics and ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'', this is how he repays them?! Something must've really turned him sour between the last ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'' episode and this.
** Tropers/{{Mogo}}: It gets worse than that-- They get his characterization completely wrong. Despite being stingy (he may have even fired Donald, but he did that on a daily basis in the comics), he would fire the boys for not working for free, but he would probably force them to work elsewhere. Plus, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'' and the comics, he was business savvy-- he would know at least enough not to strip mine the club so bad that no one would want to come. This portrays him as everyone else sees him: just a stingy old man who counts his coins (Which Creator/DonRosa Lampshaded spectacularly in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'' with Donald)-- not the badass businessman he is everywhere else. For shame, Disney-- for shame.
* Tropers/CandyCane14: Scrooge wasn't the only character that got messed up in the show. Donald, Jose and Panchito were all out of character as well in the episode, "The Three Caballeros"! Donald would've been happy to meet his two friends, even if he felt bad that no one remembered he's a Caballero. Instead he and the two acted more like enemies then friends! Well... yeah, Panchito and Jose played pranks on Donald in 'The Three Caballeros' movie too, but if you pay attention, Donald was [[TooKinkyToTorture still having fun anyway]]... yeah. Plus it contradict those two comics ('The Three Caballeros ride again' and such) where Panchito and Jose looked up to Donald. At least in "Not so Goofy", they were better friends. This episode "The Three Caballeros" however was terrible.
* @/{{Ephriokko}}: In the episode "A Match Not Made In Heaven", the one where Hades tries to get a date with Maleficent, there's this part where Mickey offers to show Hades that being nice can work. He goes up to Maleficent and says in a bright, chipper tone: "Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, Maleficent! Golly! Oh, boy! Hot dog! Ain't it swell? Gee, I hope you're hap-hap-happy, 'cause we love to make things fun-fun-funny! Ha-ha, ha-ha! Oh, gosh." Even though I'm in general a forgiving, tolerant MickeyMouse fan, the speed and chipper tone at which all of his catchphrases were said in succession made me cringe.
** @/{{Manwiththeplan}}: And Maleficent doesn't even retaliate like you'd expect her to; she just grits her teeth in irritation and forces out something along the lines of "Yes, how... giddy." God damn it, Maleficent, I know Mickey's the host of the club, but the Mistress of Evil shouldn't have to put up with that shit!
* Tropers/{{Webby}}: The Scrooge episode again: Scrooge decides to provide the entertainment, by standing on stage showing off his Number One Dime, while everybody boos over the "stupid dime". Treating a major recurring plot device like junk is bad enough, but that Scrooge randomly dragged it to the House, rather than keeping it safe and guarded is ridiculous. Then, when he quits, he "sells" the House back to Pete by stealing all his cash and everything he bought and leaving him with the deed. [[CatchPhrase Made it square]], did ya Scrooge?
* Tropers/{{lilpurplebird}}: The entirety of ''House of Villains'' is a plot gone to waste. Honestly, who here wouldn't love to see the villains take over an entire show? And they do with a rather neat song to go along with it (about half-way through, sadly). But what do they do after they take over the house? They watch more Halloween Disney cartoons. Mickey and the gang try to take back without success a couple of times in between cartoons, but that's about it. And it has a rather anti-climatic battle where Mickey just dresses up in his apprentice outfit and zaps Jafar without another word and takes back the house like that. Yeah, it was a big disappointment.
* Tropers/CaptainTedium: The Thanksgiving episode. Mickey tries in vain to convince the turkey that the club members are not barbaric beasts, which only results in the guests all trying to kill and eat each other. How do things end? The turkey closes the episode pretending to be Mickey while the club guests chase away the real Mickey disguised as a turkey. DudeNotFunny
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Lilo & Stitch]]
* Ferigeras: I always enjoyed the [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries Lilo & Stitch]] TV series since I was a kid, and I watched practically every episode and enjoyed them. But there's an episode in it that has that one moment I really wish to forget. My Dethroning Moment of Suck comes from the episode that featured Experiment 113 (Called "Shoe"), a creature that causes bad luck or good luck depending on the position of his ears. The episode itself was pretty nice in general, with Lilo, Stich and Gantu having their usual shenanigans in catching the episode's experiment. Later into this episode, the three then discovered that upon changing the direction of Shoe's ears, good luck would happen. And this whole thing ended with Shoe's good luck powers causing a nice twist: [[ThrowtheDogaBone Gantu winning a check of about a million dollars. Completely overjoyed, Gantu calls Hämsterviel to tell him that he quits his job as an experiment hunter, and runs off with his cash to fulfill his dreams,]] which would be a great happy ending for Gantu because I just can't help wishing some good for the bad guy at times, but well... that's when my DMoS starts to strike in, in what could be the worst case of YankTheDogsChain since [[WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants "Plankton's Regular"]]. After a cute little moment after the climax, Lilo & Stitch use Shoe's bad luck powers once more to get Gantu's boat that he bought himself with the money to be taken away, along with crushing his dreams in the process... This was just stupid and unnecessary on so many levels. Putting aside that this was essentially taking away Gantu's moment of happiness, I think the stupidest thing about this whole scene is that Lilo & Stitch would have had no experiment hunter to worry about with Gantu having quit his job, meaning that they would have no longer have to fight him to protect the activated experiments. But no, [[AssPull they pull this out of their rectums]], all for the sake of StatusQuoIsGod. Look, if you want to keep the Status Quo, that's completely fine, but there are much better and less anger-inducing ways of keeping that status.
* Meso: My only issue with the episode was that a lot of the slapstick happens a lot to Stitch while Lilo heavily averts the SlapstickKnowsNoGender trope... even though certain other episodes has her getting slapsticked quite often.
* CabbitGirlEmi: If there's one thing about the TV series that I don't particularly like, it's how Nani seems to [[HairTriggerTemper get angry at the drop of a hat]]. The worst case would have to be "Bugby", an episode where Experiment 128 turns the characters into insects. In it, Nani forbids Lilo from bringing bugs into the house, which is understandable... But later on, while Bugby turns Stitch into an ant [[note]]appropriate due to his SuperStrength[[/note]], Lilo looks for more bugs when Nani practically attacks her! What the hell? It's so far against Nani's character to nearly assault her little sister over such minor things, especially if you've seen the original movie! What rubs salt in that wound is that Nani [[KarmaHoudini does not get any consequences, never apologizes, or anything]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: MAD]]
The [[WesternAnimation/{{Mad}} animated version]] of ''Magazine/{{Mad}}'' is known for being a massively mixed bag. No surprises for what parts of the bag are going here.
* Tropers/{{bobdrantz}}: ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'' (which I normally like) had the "Pokémon Park" (A parody of ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' and ''Franchise/JurassicPark'') skit. For one thing, the jokes made no sense (Pokémon randomly fight and evolve so they go crazy... what?), the characters do not match who they're supposed to parody (Why would Ash be the one in the Ian Malcolm role?), and they're inconsistent with which Pokémon represents which dinosaur (IE: It cannot make up its mind on whether the Pikachu is supposed to be {{Expy}} for the Velociraptors or if the Charmander are). It's like they just spent five seconds on a Wikipedia page on ''Pokémon'', watched only a few minutes of ''Jurassic Park'', and then just hastily threw this poor excuse for a "parody" together.
* fluffything: I can respect parody done well. I can respect parodies of my favorite shows done well. The MAD sketch "Ancient Greek Mythbusters" is not a parody done well by any stretch of the imagination. This feels more like a mean-spirited TakeThat towards an awesome series rather than an AffectionateParody. Oh, let me count the ways this sketch is a DMOS. You've got Grant being chewed-up by a T.Rex as a pointless throwaway gag. You've got Adam and Jamie being incompetent JerkAss morons not having any sense of logic to their "experiments" (InsaneTrollLogic would be considered the words of a genius compared to this). The utterly unfunny joke about Mythbusters only being watchable due to the sheer number of explosions (Because clearly we nerds only want to see explosions in an awesome educational series that debunks urban legends. Really? No.). Also, the pointless ''Film/BackToTheFuture'' reference at the end? Just... ugh...
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: I've seen one that was a personal punch right in the heart. ''"[[WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime The Land After The Land Before Time]]"''. Basically, it's the incredibly stale "Durr hurr, The Land Before Time [[{{Sequelitis}} has too many sequels]] it's funny! Durr hurr" joke that everyone (even sequel haters) is sick of by now. It reveals that the newest sequel involves a "heartwarming reunion". It then shows all five dinosaurs... as fossilized museum exhibits. Way to go ''MAD''. You turned my childhood heroes into corpses. You literally killed my childhood.
* Yuma: The sketch "Naru210". It shows very blatant research failure. The writers appeared to have only seen the first one or two episodes of Naruto. They claim that "all these Naruto fights happen off-screen," for one thing.
* philipthepatsy: I think ''MAD'' is ActuallyPrettyFunny, with a lot of the parodies being ok; some of them pretty good. However, one such parody wasn't either: [[DiaryOfAWimpyKid Diary of a Wimpy]] VideoGame/KidIcarus. Why? It wasn't really a parody of either, nor was it funny. There wasn't much to do with DiaryOfAWimpyKid, other than that Pit, playing the twofer of himself and Greg Heffley, tries to be popular, has an overbearing mom, and has a goofy best friend (in this case, ''Kirby'', as apposed to Rowley). Otherwise, nothing else. Even worse, there was even less to do with VideoGame/KidIcarus, other than Pit, and the fact that he came from VideoGame/KidIcarus. The jokes were mostly bad Video Game puns and references. Unlike their "Gaming's Next Top Princess" skit, this skit is badly done, unfunny, and doesn't even remotely parody its source materials well at all. They didn't even reference VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising, which is no doubt the reason this skit was even made in the first place.
* AveryvilAnimation: What absolutely solidified my hatred for ''Magazine/{{MAD}}'', was their ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' parody "[[IncrediblyLamePun Dolphineas and Ferb]] [[Film/DolphinTale Tale]]". At first it's just kinda boring, but then when this robot battle happens, a badly drawn version of my favorite character, Candace appears and says "I'm telling mom". Then she is promptly zapped into a pile of ash by a cyborg who then says "I hate tattletales". Fuck you, ''MAD''! ShallowParody does not even begin to describe this, this was a giant middle finger to all Candace fans. Sure, it's funny when Candace gets hurt in the actual show, much like Daffy Duck, but just killing her for no reason is the Seltzer and Friedberg route of comedy.
* EmperorOshron: I wanted to like ''MAD'', I gave it plenty of chances. I sat through several cringe-inducing episodes, almost none of which made me so much as smile, let alone laugh. As a whole, I absolutely hate it, right up there with fucking [[Creator/SeltzerAndFriedberg Friedberg and Seltzer]]. But the absolute worst one I have ever had the displeasure of seeing in an episode of ''MAD'' was "¡Ai Carly!", a rip-off of ''Series/ICarly'' set in Mexico with gratuitous and arguably racist Mexican stereotypes, particularly a guy with a big mustache, sombrero, poncho, and--for some reason--a potato for a head popping up every few seconds to say "¡Ai Carly!" in the most stereotypical Mexican accent you've ever heard. Just given the fact that it's an American show broadcast on an American television network, surely they must have realized that more than a few Mexican children (and conceivably their parents and siblings) would see this; there's reason that you don't see any of the old Speedy Gonzalez cartoons on TV anymore. What makes this even worse, instead of actually finishing the "Gaming's Next Top Princess" skit, they deliberately drew out the last several seconds of it as filler and then replayed the "¡Ai Carly!" thing again in Spanish with absolutely no changes to the animation, because clearly they're grasping at air trying to fill out just ten fucking minutes. This would be a bit more excusable in an hour-long or even half-hour-long show, but ten minutes?! Seriously?!
* Maxaphone: I usually find MAD hilarious, but one thing I thought crossed the line for them was their "Brutally Honest Obituary" of Michael Jackson (brutal, but full of lies) and making the respect shown for him after his death "the Stupidest Event of 2009". I have no idea why some people refuse to admit that, after an acquittal and a great deal of evidence (including a ''confession'' by his "victim" and recorded evidence by the father) that people still believe he was an actual pedophile.
* keybladeoverlord: I used to find this show pretty entertaining, but one skit ruined the entire thing for me. Go Dragon Ball Go... At first it seems like a fairly amusing concept, with Diego from Go Diego Go going on a hunt for the dragon balls with other Dragon Ball characters popping in and occasionally making jabs about both shows. Now I could almost forgive the subpar voice acting in this skit, but the one thing that effectively ruined the skit and the entire show for me was their potshot at Dragon Ball GT. Really? I know a good number of people don't like GT, but there's also plenty who love it (Myself included), but did you really have to make an awful forced joke like that which only about half the audience will find funny and the other half will find annoying? You couldn't make it a joke at the expense of Dragon Ball Evolution which is way worse than what GT could ever be? Some people may think I'm being a GT fanboy complaining about people making fun of something he likes, but my problem is that I've seen people complain about GT so much that I cannot stand to look at people calling it bad without giving good reasoning behind their opinions. In the end, this skit ruined this entire show for me.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Mickey Mouse (2013)]]
* Tropers/CaptainTedium: The 2013 ''WesternAnimation/{{Mickey Mouse|2013}}'' cartoon]] by Paul Rudish has been hit or miss most of the time, but one particular instant I found extremely deplorable would be the episode "[[Recap/MickeyMouseS2E19BroncoBusted Bronco Busted]]", where Mickey, Donald, and Goofy need money to repair their car. They decide to enter the rodeo to get the money they need and, failing to get an actual horse to cooperate, resort to having Donald impersonate a horse. After they win, the rodeo refuse to give them money because of hard times and a millionaire arrives to offer Mickey and Goofy the money they needs in exchange for Donald, having mistaken him for an actual horse. Donald accepts the offer before Mickey can correct the millionaire and says "So long, suckers!" Goofy then asks Mickey if they should tell Daisy about this and Mickey selfishly replies that they shouldn't. The worst part of it was that the short premiered on the anniversary of the first Donald Duck cartoon. Surely, there were better ways to celebrate Donald Duck's birthday aside from making a cartoon where he ditches his friends and his friends in turn choose to forget about him!
* Tropers/MysteriousZorua1994: Oh, god. This was absolutely disgraceful to how Donald is [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold normally portrayed]]. We've gotten moments in other canons, such as ''Kingdom Hearts'', where he rejoins Sora after a forced FaceHeelTurn and later attacks [[Disney/{{Mulan}} Yao]] after he punched Sora after cutting in line, or ''Mickey's Twice Upon A Christmas'', where he leads an orchestra to sing a Christmas carol after a rough day. But for Donald to pull a [[Franchise/SlyCooper Penelope]] is one of those points where one must question his true alignment.\\
I especially hate how mean-spirited this show is for the portrayals of the characters, even without Donald's sudden AdaptationalVillainy. I'm convinced that Western Animation has reached the "[[TookALevelInJerkass Age of Jerkassery]]" thanks to ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'', and even Disney has started to think that shows with unlikable protagonists and offensive humor are popular. [[AllAdultAnimationIsSouthPark And we have a trope for that]].
* Tropers/{{TommyTiger}}: I have a different DMOS. While I used to like the series, I now hate it (because Mickey was the [[ButtMonkey punchbag]] instead of Donald, who [[KarmaHoudini not only got away with everything, but got rewarded]]). What made me pull a "FaceHeelTurn" against the series? "Al Rojo Vivo", particularly its [[DudeNotFunny offensive ending]]. I'm describing it: Mickey and Minnie are together, and everything looks fine. But what happens next? Mickey gets kissed, and then [[spoiler:Mickey's pants fall, exposing his red shorts and getting the bulls against him to ensure he's not going to have a HappyEnding after all]]. Whoop de friggin doo. This is the worst case of YankTheDogsChain and DiabolusExMachina combined (edit: I've rewatched the series ever since I wrote this, and I now find it mediocre at worst. I still hate episodes like this, however).
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Peanuts]]
* LadyMima: The ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' special ''Someday You'll Find Her, Charlie Brown''. Oh my gosh, I don't even know where to start. Well, I do know where to start, but when it comes, it's just... well, it's a wallop in the face. It starts with Charlie Brown watching a football game on TV, and all of a sudden, he starts getting flustered. Linus is there as well, and when Charlie Brown tells him that he saw this cute girl in the stands, Linus' reaction is that he falls in love with a different girl every week. Throughout the whole special, Linus acts like this, yet he still helps Charlie Brown try to find the girl. Snoopy and Woodstock tag along too. Linus does do some iffy stuff along the way, but that's not what I'm so mad about. What really gets me... is this: Eventually, the boys find the girl Charlie Brown saw on TV. Because Charlie Brown is so shy, he asks Linus to go up and talk to the girl for him. Well, he does this. And then... [[spoiler: he sees the girl and is completely smitten. Not only that, she has a SecurityBlanket too! Because of this, Linus completely forgets to mention Charlie Brown and is invited in for some cookies, along with Snoopy and Woodstock. Poor Charlie Brown waits there all night, until they finally come out. The cat that had caused them problems earlier was all of a sudden friendly with Linus. Charlie Brown is clearly upset when he finds out Linus didn't mention him at all. And while he's yelling about this, Linus completely ignores him and keeps talking about how great the girl is. At one point, he even says "What are you talking about?". Finally, Charlie Brown gives up and runs home. Linus then wonders what Charlie Brown is so upset about.]] But that isn't even the end of it! No, to make matters worse, the song [[{{Tearjerker}} "Alone"]] plays as Charlie Brown [[spoiler: imagines that he and the girl got together. He sadly goes back to his house and lays in bed.]] The next morning, Charlie Brown and Linus meet up at the brick wall. Charlie Brown says a football metaphor, and Linus takes it literally. Then he says he has a date with the girl and leaves. Charlie Brown is now alone at the brick wall. The end. Look, I know it's a RunningGag that Charlie Brown is the loser, save for that one time he won at marbles, but isn't this taking it too far?! I mean, Linus is supposed to be Charlie Brown's best friend! And even his best friend isn't much of a friend at all! It's basically telling us that Charlie Brown will never be happy. Never. And sure, you could blame Charlie Brown for his faults, but Linus has his faults too, like carrying that stupid blanket around! Since this moment, I have hated Linus for everything about him.
* Blackjack254: ''It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown'' is the main reason why my watching of Animated Peanuts is now limited solely to the Original Christmas special. Lucy doing the infamous pulling the football away prank on Charlie Brown during an important game, and then having the gall to blame the losing of the game on him, and everyone agreeing with her (I've heard about them doing a so called minor retcon of a line of Peppermint Patty being cut out, big deal, only one less person blames Charlie brown for something not his fault). In my opinion, the whole episode should have been retconned.
** Powerpuffbats For what it's worth, after that trainwreck, they aired "It's Magic, Charlie Brown" which had Charlie finally kick that ball and having Lucy finally getting hit by Karma. That said, "It's Your First Kiss" is my Dethroning Moment for all of Animation... only Seahorse Seashell Party from Family Guy comes close (I still haven't seen Spongebob's One Coarse Meal yet). What makes this special even worse for me is that I'm a bit of a Charlie Brown/Lucy shipper, and Lucy's actions spit in the faces of Chuck/Lucy shippers... and Chuck/Peppermint Patty shippers too! Seriously, Patty and Linus don't even notice that Lucy is costing them the game! Remember that moment from Family Guy where Peter kicks Lucy (who is my favorite Peanuts character... and this special makes me hate her)? That clip is only tolerable (imo) after viewing this special! And again, how could no one... in the entire stadium notice Lucy pulling that football away?!?!
* jaredthedecimator: I'm recalling my previous entry to nominate "You're the Greatest, Charlie Brown". Most of the special is pretty good, honestly, but the climax is probably the biggest AssPull in the history of animation. Basically, Charlie Brown is leading in the final event of the decathlon, and he runs onto a side exit right off the track. Was the side exit there in any other shot? Yes, but, don't you think they could have blocked it off for the decathlon?
* Torpers/SpaceHunterDrakeRedcrest: One moment I have always hated from ''Peanuts'' is in ''It's Magic, Charlie Brown''. During Snoopy's magic show, one of the tricks involves cutting up a piece of fabric. Lucy, [[BigBrotherBully Big Sister Bully]] she is, yanks Linus' SecurityBlanket out of his hands and offers it to Sally for the trick. Linus begs for her to give it back, with Sally [[FalseReassurance assuring]] Linus that Snoopy's magic won't hurt the blanket. Snoopy then proceeds to cut Linus' blanket into several strips, all the while Linus is in utter pain. It culminates in Snoopy failing to magically put Linus' blanket back together, knocking Linus out cold. I know ''Peanuts'' have always had a DesignatedMonkey aspect to them, but Linus is one of the nicest characters in the franchise, and doesn't deserve having his heart broken just for the sake of a "[[DudeNotFunny joke]]." At least, during the credits, it seems his blanket was fixed.
* Tropers/Gojirob: All of the above-mentioned Peanuts ones are horrible moments, but its a subtler one that often seems the most vicious to me. In 'It Was A Short Summer, Charlie Brown', exactly how does everyone end up at the same summer camp? Easy, Lucy signed them up for it! She announced on the last day of school while everyone was exulting in their soon-to-be ruined plans. Okay, Mssrs. Schulz and Mendelsohn. We know you were obsessed with making Lucy a KarmaHoudini so fearsome, Megan from Drake & Josh, Ruthie Camden and all the demonic sitcom sibs tell stories of her to scare each other. Got it. But now, you assign her RealityWarper powers? She was another minor child. Her signature was worthless, even for herself. And what about all their parents, some of whom likely had summer plans, and the money they must shell out, even for a low-cost or subsidized camp? Even a parent who wanted to get rid of their kid for the summer would tell them about it, just to have prep time and no delay in leaving. So Lucy couldn't have done the action that drove the special, one which not only ButtMonkey Charlie Brown and scared little brother Linus were affected by, but all their friends and classmates. I spent a good part of my childhood thinking other kids could just sign you up for stuff. It's not too much of a stretch to say this led thematically to 'First Kiss'.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Phineas & Ferb]]
-->Aren't you a bit too young to [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck document your worst moments]]?
-->Yes. Yes we are.
* Marioking98341: Don't get me wrong. I liked ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerbTheMovieAcrossThe2ndDimension''. But don't you think Phineas was overreacting to Perry's [[TheReveal reveal?]] Honestly, it would've been more understandable if he hadn't tried to hide his own feats of superheroism from his own love interest.
** Tropers/{{Komatsuzaki}}: If they had just put a little bit of foreshadowing at the very beginning of the movie that Phineas would freak out at something like this, then it wouldn't have been so jarring. But for such a friendly character in such a silly show to react like that when he finds out his pet is a secret agent? Come on. It even sounds ridiculous to point out.
* @/{{LimeTH}} The completely mean-spirited visuals of "You're Going Down", where Candace imagines herself throwing Phineas and Ferb chained up in jail and locked in to pillories, preparing to shoot down a hot-air balloon with them in it, the goddamn Hindenburg with their faces on it burning to the ground, and the two of them in the back of a garbage truck.
* Kittens: The "Finding Mary McGuffin" episode was okay and decent. The musical number was good and the episode just a simple finding a childhood toy concept. But what annoyed me was the end where Vanessa discovers the doll being held by a little girl who seems to love it and she sees how much she likes the doll so does she let the little girl keep the doll and move on? Nope! She snatches the doll out of the girls hands and runs off while the kid cries her eyes out. What the heck writers? I understand if Vanessa acts a little evil just to make her dad happy but let her have a good side for once! And the little girl was happy with the doll so why did you have to pull a greedy jerkass move? Can't she just let her keep the doll? Man!.
* [=TotalDramaRox97=]: "Quietest Day Ever": Doofenshmirtz makes himself handsome by accident and ends up achieving his goal of ruling the Tri-State Area because of it. Just as Doofenshmirtz is about to become leader, Perry makes him ugly again. Once Perry turns him ugly again, everyone just immediately brushes him off and ruins his plans, again. [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop What's the lesson this episode teaches us? You can only achieve your goals by looking good and not looking good means your goals have no hope of happening.]] [[SarcasmMode Great lesson.]]
* {safind} : Whilst I am still getting back into the show (And have enjoyed most of Season 4 thus far), my DMOS would have to be "Bee Story", not the episode's plot though, but the song. "Waggle Dance" is the absolute worst song ever created for the entire show. Whilst some may like it (And those people do not believe in my opinion that the song is crap), there are those that agree with me that the song is awful. The lyrics are awful and the visuals.... Good god, do I even need to say it? They're something only a Pedophile could ever enjoy. Even as I type this, I feel an increasing need for {{Brain Bleach}}. On the plus side though, I've regained my liking of the other songs, but Waggle Dance is just so awful, I would rather swallow cyanide that even look at one second of the song or read through one word of its lyrics.
* {{Tropers/Midna}}: I ordinarily love ''Phineas and Ferb'', but there's this one Doofenshmirtz's Daily Dirt segment ([[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jR18Ic5h-vc this one]]) that... well, it's not really a pot-shot, but nevertheless it briefly flashes a caricature of the universe's favorite punching bag, [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic bronies]]. I don't normally get riled up about fandom jokes because, let's face it, overweight neckbearded fans are a fact of life, but the way the gag is executed it comes across like some writer at Disney is jealous of [=FiM=]'s overwhelming popularity and thought, "heh heh, hey, let's sneak in a TakeThat at a competing show's fanbase! That'll show them for having the balls to [[FelonyMisdemeanor like a cartoon that isn't ours!]]". (Doesn't help it's exactly the same kind of joke anyone with at least half a brain could make about ''any'' fandom, either.) All in all I'm not offended, but I really expected better from Disney of all companies.
* PrincessTogezo: The end of the episode "Candace Gets Busted" was just a kick in the teeth. After Candace spends the entire episode trying to put a stop to a party she didn't want, it at first seems like she's succeeded thanks to Doof's inator transporting the party guests into his pants (which was pretty funny). But then Doof tells Perry to [[YankTheDogsChain hit the reverse switch]], and the party guests return to the Flynn-Fletcher house just as the parents arrive. The scene where Linda is chewing out Candace (saying "I trusted you!" and all that stuff) was just painful to watch, and it made me think, "Why don't you just give her five seconds to explain?!" It's not like Candace deliberately threw a huge party; she just invited a few friends over and it got out of hand! This episode felt like a [[KickTheDog "Kick the Teenage Girl"]] fest, and I'm fairly certain it played a big role in my deciding not to watch the show anymore.
* Ivanov Troping 97: Normally, I like Phineas & Ferb, but the end of the episode "Invasion of the Ferb Snatchers" was just a huge middle finger to me. I was seriously expecting Candace to bust her brothers for real. I can understand the fake Linda robot body dissappearing, but a gift box containing a launch pad?! I mean, come on! Why did it dissapear when Linda is at the backyard? She should have seen the box! I just really don't understand. Like "Candace Gets Busted", the ending feels like a [[KickTheDog "Kick the Teenage Girl"]] moment. That's just how I feel, though.
* TomRoid: This was just a plot hole, but a pretty stupid one. "Agent Doof" has the titular duo turned into babies, and as expected Lindana won't be able to realize it and thus have the brothers busted or whatever. But at one point, Lindana gets sent a pic by Candace of the two in baby form and thinks it's just old photos of them. As we see in the Phineas and Ferb Busted episode, they didn't meet until they were very young, but not babies. You think a show with an existent continuity respect would avoid this.
* Tropers/MightyMewtron: "Act Your Age" was a [[BrokenBase divisive episode]] as a whole, and I'm on the side that considers it one of the worse episodes for being badly written and not fitting with the spirit of the show (I'm thankful that it aired near the end of the run anyway). The main DMOS for me, though, is [[spoiler:Ferb/Vanessa being canon.]] I tend to hate age gap ships in general, but most don't actually become canon on a kids' show. Dating someone you knew as a child when you were a teenager just feels... [[UnfortunateImplications icky,]] and considering [[spoiler:Ferb]] is only ''college aged'' in this episode, it comes across like TheJailBaitWait. Is that what they were going for? Probably not. But that doesn't make the unnecessary decision any less nasty. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking Also,]] it renders [[spoiler:the Monty/Vanessa plot]] totally pointless.
* Tropers/Ninja857142: "Last Day of Summer." If you like it, that's fine, but I found it to be incredibly disappointing and anticlimactic. This was the series finale. This was meant to be the episode that gave closure. So what happens? Phineas and Ferb do stuff, Candace tries to bust them, some time-shenanigans ensues, and then everything's back to normal! Sounds familiar... The only thing that really changed was [[spoiler:Doof turning good]] (which was a nice touch, I'll admit), but otherwise, this felt like a terrible finale. For all I know, Candace is still going to try to bust her brothers ([[AesopAmnesia she's learned to have fun with life multiple times before]]), Linda still has no idea about her sons' amazing creations, Perry's identity's still a secret, and Phineas and Ferb's "creation" is largely forgettable and hardly even appears! And by the way, where is everyone? What happened to Jeremy and Stacy? Weren't they a part of this great show as well? The memories? This episode is also partly at fault for not explaining what happened to Monty (along with the other finale episodes); Vanessa joins O.W.C.A., but what then? I actually liked "Act Your Age" a lot more; it may not have been as energetic, but it as least showed what happened to lots of characters in the future, and felt emotionally closing and had a real HappyEnding. Since the plot of this episode is a time loop, it all feels like a dream that's largely irrelevant and erased in the end (aside from the [[spoiler:Doof-turns-good thing]]). In a nutshell, "Last Day of Summer" might have been a decent episode, but it was a terrible finale. If it hadn't been for the contributions from other "finale" episodes, I might have been let down by the series' ending entirely.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Recess]]
* DarthJosh1108: ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' had the episode where Gus got jinxed. This episode, [[CharacterizationMarchesOn before Miss Finster and Principal Prickley grew redeeming qualities]], had them nearly get Gus arrested [[DisproportionateRetribution just because he wasn't allowed to talk]]. However, Gus isn't safe from the IdiotBall either. He was being interrogated by the teachers. What were the Ashleys going to do to him where there would be adult witnesses? He could have easily told them what happened. Keeping silent is part of the KIDS code of honor, so adult involvement oughta be a loop hole.
* Monkee Juice: The {{WesternAnimation/Recess}} episode "Tattletale Heart" is a bad one because of its BrokenAesop. When a [[FoodFight food fight]] breaks out in the cafeteria, Miss Finster cancels recess until someone comes clean on who started it. Gus is the only one who witnessed who started it but is forced by T.J. and his friends because it's considered tattling. And considering that T'J. and his friends love recess, it would like say that [[MoralEventHorizon some guy refuses to confess to the police that his best friend murdered his entire family]]. For most of the episode it wants to say that tattling is wrong but then it's reveal that Randall was the one who started it. That's right. The same kid who's hated on the playground for tattling on others. Then it's also revealed that every other kid said that Randall started it and they got angry at Gus thinking he tattled. If they wanted to say that no one likes a tattle tale, an episode of ''Series/TheBradyBunch'' did a much better job at that.
* Troper/BronyOfTheOctaves: I'm surprised nobody has ever mentioned the episode "Nobody Doesn't Like TJ". Putting aside [[WebVideo/TheMysteriousMrEnter John Enter's]] thoughts on the episode, I honestly loathe this episode. To explain, the episode is about TJ learning that this kid who we see as a background character, Gordy, doesn't like TJ. TJ is basically baffled as to why Gordy doesn't like him and tries to find out why. Throughout the episode, he tries to do good things for Gordy, but he's only annoyed by the end. Eventually TJ [[MoralEventHorizon gets Gordy and him detention]]. And for what reason? To show Gordy a good time and how much of an awesome guy he is. And when they finish up their hour in detention, TJ finally asks if Gordy likes him. Gordy says no. And TJ, fed up, finally (what he should have done earlier on...) asks why doesn't he like him. Gordy simply replies that [[InsaneTrollLogic he just doesn't like TJ]]. The episode put a bad taste in the troper's mouth, and this is saying a lot since he's not a huge fan of other episodes from the show (One being ''Jinxed!'').
*** Tropers/{{Catmuto}}: My personal [=DMoS=] from the above ''Nobody Doesn't Like TJ'' comes from one scene. TJ is offering Gordy some brownies and Gordy eats them, then realizes they have peanuts in them, spits it out and yells at TJ for giving him something that he's allergic to. Three problems, all of them are Gordy's fault: 1) TJ obviously didn't know Gordy had any allergy to specific food types. 2) Gordy didn't ask before eating offered food. 3) The peanuts were quite visible in the brownies, so Gordy is a moron for not seeing what he's eating. This moment doesn't come across as TJ being in the wrong, it's Gordy being TooDumbToLive, since his reaction makes it seem like his eating peanuts results in anaphylactic shock.
* TheLuckyCat: I loved Recess as a kid and I still like it now, but there's one episode that always infuriated me - ''No Strings Attached''. The basic plot of the episode is that the Ashleys give Spinelli tickets for a wrestling match. Now let's bear in mind that the Ashleys are a posse of [[AlphaBitch Alpha Bitches]] and have pulled a lot of mean-spirited crap before- ''Jinxed!'', ''First Name Ashley'', ''The Ratings Game'', etc. Spinelli and the others are understandably suspicious of this and try to find out what the Ashleys are planning. Eventually Mickey and Gus tell the others they're being paranoid and go off to the match, while Spinelli, Vince, Gretchen and TJ all get stuck in the Ashley clubhouse and the episode ends! I think the intended Aesop was "don't look a gift horse in the mouth", but it's absolutely ridiculous that Spinelli and the others were expected to do that here- why ''should'' they trust the Ashleys? This episode might have worked if the Ashleys had done something bad, were shown to genuinely feel guilty about it and were giving the tickets as an apology, but as it stands, it's like the writers were trying to say, "No matter how many times people screw you over, you should give them the benefit of the doubt just in case!" No, no, NO. I can't stand to watch this episode because the gang (sans Mickey and Gus, who honestly are the ones who would benefit the least from seeing the match) getting screwed over is so infuriating and unfair.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Rick and Morty]]
* Tropers/SWFMax: I love ''WesternAnimation/RickAndMorty'' - in fact, it's my favourite show. But there's one part that annoys me: in the episode "Raising Gazorpazorp", Rick says that men and women are treated equally in the United States, and Summer objects, saying that women make 70% of the salary that men make for the same job. I'm not sure if the writers were using Summer as a StrawFeminist or if they were using her to voice their opinion, but either way, it doesn't sit well with me. If they were using her as a StrawFeminist, then that's a CriticalResearchFailure, as very few if any feminists have ever claimed that. The only thing I've ever heard from a feminist about women being paid less than men in the United States is that women make 77-78% of the salary that men make for the same job (OK, some have said that it's even less for women who aren't white, but Summer is white, so I'm assuming that she was talking about women in general and not women who aren't white). Newsflash: 70% does not equal 77%, nor does it equal 78%. So, if they were using her as a StrawFeminist, they failed, in my opinion, as very few if any feminists have made the claim that Summer has made. Now, if they were using her to voice their opinion, that's also stupid, because apparently, they didn't bother to look up basic statistics. As I mentioned earlier, even feminists rarely if ever claim that women make 70% of the salary that men make for the same job. They claim that it's 77% or 78%. All in all, no matter for what reason the writers had Summer say that, it was a CriticalResearchFailure. (For the record, I am a feminist and I do believe that the wage gap in the United States exists, but that in itself is not why I consider this to be a [=DMoS=], even if they were using Summer as a StrawFeminist. It's not the presence of a StrawFeminist in a work that bothers me, it's the presence of a poorly-written StrawFeminist in a work that bothers me.)
* Animeking1108: I had a problem with ''Total Rickall,'' particularly how Morty realizes that Rick wasn't a parasite. He figured it out because he had a lot of bad memories with Rick. Now, that's understandable. However, it gets ruined by a montage of Rick ignoring Morty when he's in life-threatening situations and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking pantsing him in school and pushing him down the stairs]]. What made Rick a likable character was that despite his flaws, he cares about Morty and all of the moments that should be bad memories were usually unintentional on Rick's part.
* {{Tropers/Zuxtron}}: "Rixty Minutes" is one of the best episodes in the show, perfectly combining wacky, random comedy with serious, down-to-earth drama. Sadly, "Interdimensional Cable II" fails to live up to its predecessor. While the idea of having improvised comedy bits interspersed throughout an episode was unique enough to work the first time, using it again for a second episode makes it come off as forced. In the end, it feels like the normally very creative writers of the show had run out of ideas and had to resort to remaking an older episode to pad out the season. Even Justin Roiland himself was unhappy with the result, telling us several weeks in advance to not get our hopes up.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Star Wars: The Clone Wars]]
* Saieras: ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'' introduced us to 99, a malformed and physically weak clone working maintenance. He wasn't fit for combat, but he still wanted to help in any way he could. In one of the most important battles of the show he finally got his chance to be a hero, bringing munitions to Echo and Fives and showing them the fastest way to the barracks and armory. Even though he was a NonActionGuy he still helped his brothers win the day. Then the group he was with ran out of thermal detonators, so 99 goes to get more. However, rather than exercise any sort of caution, he just darts out into the hallway full o' laser beams like a dumbass and dies. Sure, you could justify it by saying he was overeager and undertrained, but the [[StupidSacrifice stupidity of his sacrifice]] really diminished the emotional effect of his death.
** Baronobeefdp: Agreed. Though, for me, the DMOS of 99's death wasn't the stupidity of it... but how suddenly it happened. I mean, we hardly even knew anything about this guy (Other than that he was a "defective clone" and that he still cared deeply for his, erm, "brothers"). And, yet, the series still expects us to feel sad when he dies? Psst, George Lucas, you need to build up more than one episode of CharacterDevelopment for us to really feel bad when a character dies. (Sigh) And this was the same series that made [[RescuedFromTheScrappyHeap Jar Jar Binks]] a likeable character.
* Tropers/OnSoaringWings: For me the biggest DMOS comes in "The Zillo Beast Strikes Back". After Palpatine has brought the [[LastOfHisKind giant Zillo Beast]] to Coruscant for study, [[spoiler: it escapes, causing thousands of casualties and billions in damages, necessitating the beast's killing.]] Mace Windu then laments that it's "our fault." Excuse me!? It was Palpatine's idea to bring the damn thing to Coruscant! Palpatine's punishment for causing the deaths of thousands, and the extinction of a rare species? Nothing! I mean at the very least Padme should have called him out on this. I know there's a war going on, and Palpatine is pulling a lot of strings. But come on... At least show someone being angry with the guy!
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Steven Universe]]
Even though WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse is often considered one of the best, if not ''the'' best show currently airing on Creator/CartoonNetwork, there are still [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentofSuck some moments]] that the Crystal Gems really need to poof and keep bubbled for life.
* djx1100: "Rose's Scabbard", I believe, was a very moving and well written episode. However I believe Pearl acted completely selfish in the episode and showed no regard for anybody else's feelings. Especially when she tells Steven [[TooSoon "You never even knew her!"]] Of course it's supposed to show how important Rose meant to Pearl but she comes off as incredibly selfish and rude. Worst part is that she never even apologizes for the line.
** bsw17: My moment also comes from "Rose's Scabbard". While I think for the most part it shows Pearl's grief well, the moment where Steven nearly falls to his death and she doesn't try to save him goes too far. I understand she's upset but considering she's the gem who constantly worries for Steven's safety this is wildly out of character for her.
* Skapokon: I really like ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'', but I hate ''WesternAnimation/UncleGrandpa'', so I wasn't very pleased when the Crossover Episode "Say Uncle" was revealed. While it resulted to be a pleasant surprise and much better than I expected, there's something about this episode that bugs me. Pearl's portrayal during the episode. I don't know why they did it, but this episode really destroyed the character and made me glad it's not canon. Why? Because they made her way too overprotective on Steven and made her overreact way too much. In the show, she cares of Steven and tries to protect him, but only a bit more than the other two Gems. Here, she is screaming all the time, makes weird faces every time and it just gets irritating. Seeing how this episode parodies parts of the Fandom (Gemsonas, Lars and Sadie's Ship...), something tells me that this is how fans see Pearl. If that's the case, I don't want to know how they portray the rest of the cast.
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: While I found the humor of the episode hilarious, something about "Too Far" really bothered me, and it wasn't until I saw [[http://mellowfilmmaker.tumblr.com/post/131253472409/mellow-frames-gem-jokes this post]] that I realized what it was: Amethyst's behavior. Her laughing at Peridot's unintentional humor was understandable at first, but later it gets pretty curvy when Amethyst starts goading Peridot into roasting the Crystal Gems. What follows is a(n admittedly funny) thinly veiled metaphor for homophobia (Peridot mocking Garnet's semi-permanent fusion) and a stab at Steven being a HalfHumanHybrid. Amethyst laughs at all of these... and then stops when Peridot turns around and starts making jokes about ''her''. Now granted, it makes sense that Amethyst would be offended (Peridot literally called her "defective") but she had just laughed hysterically at Peridot mocking her best friends--calling [[NiceGuy Steven]] an abomination, [[TeamMom Pearl]] a slave and [[HappilyMarried Garnet]] disgusting--and yet is outraged at what Peridot says to her personally. And at no point does ''anyone'' point out the hypocrisy of this. The sad thing is, this could have been a great lesson for ''Amethyst'' as well as Peridot, as Amethyst could have learned something to the effect of "if you can't take it, don't dish it out", but instead Peridot is expected to apologize to ''her'' (even though Amethyst took advantage of her lack of knowledge of Earth humor) and ''only'' her (i.e., not Garnet, Pearl or Steven).
* Tropers/OnTheHillside: For this troper, it's Log-date-7-15-2. Full stop. Garnet proposes fusing to Peridot, and when Peridot doesn't immediately jump at the idea, Garnet states as a fact that she "isn't ready" -- a condescending assumption that figures Peridot ''can't possibly'' be bawking at the idea of doing something new and intimate with Garnet, someone she still feels uneasy around. It's a challenge, and of course Peridot is going to try and save face by attempting it anyway. Their attempted fusion dance is more reminiscent of Lapis and Jasper's than anything, with Garnet grabbing Peridot forcefully by the hands and yanking her around while she's visibly uncomfortable, then demanding she "get ready." It's only then that Peridot pulls away and straight up says no, and while Garnet respects this, she also tells Peridot she's "proud of her" for ignoring her own limitations and allowing Garnet to do this to her at all. It's an absolutely disgusting, hypocritical scene that's come very close to turning me off the show as a whole.
** Stealthlock: I completely agree. I always felt, watching that scene, like Garnet was supposed to be coming off as polite, but it just made me uncomfortable for reasons I previously couldn't explain. The way she disregards Peridot's obvious discomfort during the fusion attempt without offering to back down, the way she treats Peridot like a paranoid amateur for her very legitimate hesitation, and the subtle pressure she puts on her to get over it by saying she's "proud of her". It felt like Garnet was saying, "It was very grown-up and mature of you to not say no even when you were uncomfortable! I hope you always say 'yes' even if you don't want it in the future." The way Peridot's legitimate aversion to fusion was treated just doesn't sit right with me.
* Tropers/Ciel12: The handling of the aesop in 'Barn Mates'. I guess the point of the episode is that we should always try to forgive and see the best in people, but it was handled very poorly. Lapis dislikes being around Peridot because Peridot was once her jailer. When she initially brushes off Peridot, both Peridot and Steven go to increasing lengths to win her over. Lapis tells Period all she wants is for Peridot to [[GetOut leave]], and (to her credit) Peridot immediately complies. My problem is with Steven chewing Lapis out afterwards - he tells her that she should give Peridot a chance and not decide that she dislikes Peridot without getting to know her. The thing is, this isn't about Lapis not liking Peridot - it's about Lapis being so angry at Peridot that she ''doesn't even want to be in the same vicinity as her''. Lapis had every right to be angry as she had been through some terrible things, but the episode casts Steven as being in the right because he's the AllLovingHero who fixes everything with friendship. The thing is, he expects Lapis to put aside her legitimate feelings of anger just to please him and Peridot and so he can have a happy family. But genuine forgiveness takes time - the aesop could have been so much better if it had been 'you can ask someone for forgiveness if you show them you've changed, but don't expect them to warm up to you when you tell them to.' Instead we get Steven essentially shaming Lapis into repressing her own feelings, rather than the episode admitting Lapis needed more time to heal (for contrast, Pearl and Greg's animosity went on for some time before it was addressed, and that was over their feelings for Rose, not severe harm one party had inflicted on another). Steven is usually wise beyond his years, but here he's just insufferably naive and insensitive, and the episode never calls him out on it.
* Animeking1108: Ronaldo’s subplot in ''Restaurant Wars.'' In order to get the Fryman and Pizza families to stop feuding, Steven suggests having Ronaldo and Kiki pretend to date each other. However, Ronaldo objects because he has a girlfriend. Naturally, nobody believes him. This leads to a very predictable gag where it turns out his made-up girlfriend was real after all and she breaks up with him because of the misunderstanding and he spends the rest of the episode moping. For starters, nobody comes to Ronaldo’s defense when he claims that it was just a ruse to get the families to stop fighting. Second, Steven never apologizes for unintentionally ruining Ronaldo’s relationship. Lastly, nobody, not even Ronaldo’s family, [[NoSympathy seems to care that he’s depressed]]. I get that Ronaldo [[TheScrappy isn’t exactly the most loved character in the series]], but sometimes even a TakeThatScrappy can [[DudeNotFunny go too far]] (as ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' can attest to). This wouldn’t be a problem if the breakup was caused by Ronaldo’s own stupidity, but it wasn’t.
* SenorCornholio: "Last One Out of Beach City" was just... bleh, to me. We hardly learned anything new from it; it was nothing more than a filler episode that had no business really even existing. Basically, Pearl wants to join Amethyst and Steven in going to a rock show, and while she's at it she tries to get her "bad girl" on by acting all cool and stuff despite several episodes showing that she's fine with who she normally is. Then she finds someone that just happened to have her hair dyed pink like Rose, with a similar hairstyle to boot, at a point where Pearl's been trying to get over Rose. What really bothers me is when Pearl decides to intentionally run a red stoplight and evade the police, which Pearl does admittedly berate herself for because she essentially ruined the trip by running out of gas during those points... and then Amethyst heaps a bunch of praise on Pearl for all this. And lo and behold, they just so happen to be at the show they were going to! And Rose-haired girl is there! What a twist! I'm sorry, but as a huge Steven Universe fan who likes (even partially) the above and below episodes, this one was almost impossible to salvage. I could tolerate the likes of Lars and Ronaldo, but I couldn't stand this episode; that says a lot. And if Pearl's relationship with Rose-head gets turned into a subplot, those are some episodes I'll watch probably once, then never rewatch again.
* Tropers/MightyMewtron: I considered putting "Bismuth" up here for its controversial message. But "Gem Harvest" is a ''double length episode'' that managed to introduce a more pointless and uncomfortable character to the show. We meet Greg's cousin Andy, who accuses Lapis and Peridot of being "hippies" who overtook his barn, calls the gems entitled, scorns at Greg for moving away and not marrying an American, and calls the Gems "illegal aliens". He's not even a [[FantasticRacism fantastic racist,]] as his lingo mirrors anti-immigrant ideology and he doesn't seem to know that the Gems are literally from outer space. Steven doesn't care that Andy is saying this to his family and believes, as usual, that he can change him by holding a feast. Most of the episode is filler (though at least all the Gems interact with one another) with Gems trying to act "more human", in the process ruining Andy's family heirloom (which he fumes over at first, then suddenly forgives them for?). Later Andy flies off, upset that nobody thanked him (even though he didn't help with the feast, and it was ''for him'') and because he doesn't like how everything is changing. Steven decides he's family anyway, and Andy never has to apologize for his insults towards the Gems. If the episode was about teaching Andy that the Gems are on Earth to save it and he shouldn't hate them on the basis of them being "un-American", or just educating him about not holding racist ideals, it wouldn't have been as bad, but it tried to act like having one feast with aliens would stop him from being racist- which, as far as we know, may not even be true. Not to mention the... [[RuleOfCautiousEditingJudgement very awkward timing]] considering this was the first episode to air after the U.S. election. Also, the first part of the episode, [[TrailersAlwaysLie which was the only part in the advertising,]] had nothing to do with the rest of the plot, and the pumpkin pup was only there to look cute and fit the Thanksgiving theme.
* Mazzafraz: Ugh, ''Rocknaldo''... let's ignore the [[BaitAndSwitch bait and switch]] pulled by the show's Facebook teasing a new Crystal Gem. I will also say that the episode's main lesson [[SomeAnvilsNeedToBeDropped is an important one]] which likely comes from a personal place on the part of the show's creators. I can even admit that the ending was pretty satisfactory and might signal the beginning of much-needed character development for Ronaldo. But jeez, did the episode really need to be so obnoxious? I get that this is an uncomfortable issue that can't be edged around lightly, and from a writing standpoint I guess we do need to see Ronaldo at his worst before we see his change at the end. But good god, Ronaldo at his worst is just plain hard to watch. His smugness, pretentiousness and tactlessness were really pushed beyond the limit, making the episode just an unpleasant experience. It's especially galling because we've just had two emotional rollercoasters for Steven, and watching Ronaldo going full-on douchequake on him is frustrating to watch. The episode could have really benefited from a few humorous moments, maybe a scene or two of Steven legitimately enjoying Ronaldo's company, but Steven barely catches a break. It makes you want to hug the kid and protect him from Ronaldo.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Teen Titans]]
* Calamity2007: After some thinking I decided to add an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans'' to this list. Specifically the final episode of the series, "Things Change". The episode itself wasn't bad, mind you, but due to the fact it was the last episode it rubbed me the wrong way. The episode basically features the Teen Titans going after this mysterious robotic creature who can change its body to match whatever material it came across, making it nearly impossible to incapacitate. Along the way Beast Boy finds this girl at school who looks like Terra and tries to find out if it is really her. When he does talk to her she denies it, but he brings her to different locations where he and Terra used to be, only to find Slade, or at least what Beast Boy think is Slade but is just a robot. After this ordeal though the girl refuses to talk to him telling him to move on and return to his team. FadeToWhite. Sounds like an awesome CliffHanger for a new season, raising some mysterious questions about Terra, Slade, and others... But again, this was the final episode. It didn't even show the Titans defeating the creature. Look, I can understand if there was some ExecutiveMeddling that cancelled a potential season but the fact that they had a perfectly good GrandFinale in the previous episode but decided to make this the finale annoys me. Especially since Terra is one of my favorite characters in the show and opening this loose end without closure is aggravating. Yes, in the comics (of the show, not the original comics) it did reveal [[spoiler:that girl was really Terra]], but the fact that her ultimate fate is only in the supplementary material is still an annoying cop-out.
* LawandDisorder: The ending of "Titans Together" still bothers me. It was a standard 'fight all the enemies from the series at once' thing, and the way they solved it was to [[spoiler:freeze them all with the Brotherhood of Evil's own machine]] and... that's it. They just close up the place and leave them. They villains are trapped in immobile solitary confinement for however long they can live like that, significantly worse than pretty well all of those villains deserved. It wouldn't have taken more than a couple seconds of animation time to show the police had been called and carted them off to jail, but instead it's evidently moral to do exactly what the villains were planning on as long you were the good guys originally.
* SenorCornholio: I loved the original Teen Titans and, after re-watching it fairly recently, I can see that it holds up rather well. That's not to say it doesn't have flaws, however, and my least favorite episode of the original show has to be ''Revved Up''. It's not a terrible episode to me, but it's pretty lackluster compared to the rest of the show. The episode's plot involves [[VillainOfTheWeek Ding Dong Daddy]] challenging the Titans to a cross country drag race to recover Robin's stolen case. First off, the Titans could have just stolen the case back from Ding Dong Daddy and ended the episode right there. Robin has good enough reflexes, Beast Boy could turn into an animal to get it back, and Raven has levitation, for starters. Second, we never actually learn what's in the case; there could be plenty of interpretations or theories, but it's never actually revealed, so we don't feel like we learn anything new. Third, though the episode had some funny moments (particularly involving Cyborg and Beast Boy fending off these weird workshop gremlin things), it didn't feel as clever or creative as something like ''Employee of the Month'' or ''Crash''. Fourth, Ding Dong Daddy is pretty bland as far as goofy villains in this show go; at least [[EvilBrit Mad Mod]] and [[MagiciansAreWizards Mumbo]] had more of an air to them. Fifth, there's a minor subplot where some of the villains hear from Gizmo about the whole race and want Robin's stuff to sell on the market... [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot and hardly any of them get any actual good moments.]] The only villain we get to see have a major role is [[AntiHero Red X]] (and I'll admit [[MomentOfAwesome the bike battle between him and Robin was pretty sweet]]), but that's it. I still love this show to death, but this episode just didn't do it for me.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012)]]
[[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012 The Turtles]] ought to be hiding in their shells from the shame of these moments.
* Shadow200 ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012'' is an alright show, pales in comparison to the 2003 version. But when Donatello gets beaten up by a giant Mutated Ape what does his brothers do? They laugh and mock him! In the 1987 version they might make some puns but be serious, in the 2003 version they would be out for revenge and help him recover (especially Raph who was protective of them even if he got annoyed with them, but in this series is little more than a bully and Jerkass). These guys laugh and makes jokes about him getting a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown!
** Candycane14: I despise that moment as well. Not only was it mean spirited, but they ruined what could've been a loving Leo and Don brotherly moment!
* mannowdog: What bugs me a bit more is in the episode "The Gauntlet" where only Raph is laughing at April for being hunted by a mutant pigeon. Here's to hoping that they tone down Raph's jerkassery in Season 2.
* fluffything: For me, it was when they decided to turn Dogpound into [[spoiler:Rahzar]]. Why, just, why? Dogpound was just fine as a separate character and villain. There was no reason to have him mutate further into a skeletal dog-thing and rename him [[spoiler:Rahzar]]. The two characters aren't really all that similar except for both being canines. Dogpound was a human mutated into a dog, and [[spoiler:Rahzar is a mutated wolf.]] It just feels like the writers wanted to throw in an EnsembleDarkhorse character just as a blatant attempt to get the attention of fans of the classic cartoons and the movies. However, if that's what they wanted, why not just have [[spoiler:Razhar]] be a separate character rather than have him be a transformed Dogpound? The whole thing just comes off as lazy. Guys, if you're going to bring [[spoiler:Rahzar]] into the series, then actually have the real deal instead of this pathetic skeletal Dogpound wannabe.
* Kereea: While the first episode of season 3, "Within the Woods" was overall a good episode, two moments, one right after the other, really pushed me over the edge. Raphael is missing and creepy things are going on. The other five split up, Casey going with April, Donnie with Mikey, and Leo on his own. This causes two major moments: 1) Leo has just come out of a coma and is walking with a crutch. Why exactly is he the one left alone? There were plenty of ways to wheedle him down to the last man standing without that blatant idiocy. And 2) Donnie's belated reaction to April going off with Casey. Yes, I know they have the love triangle and Donnie has seriously jealousy issues that are a whole other kettle of fish, but there are 3 problems with his reaction. A) The season finale made it clear April was not going to deal with his feelings at the moment and he seemed to let them go a bit, making this an awkward snap back. B) They are in a dangerous situation, looking for his missing brother, and all Donnie seems to care about is April maybe making out with Casey (or going further, depending on how much you think was intended to be implied). Finally, the worst is C) where two lines could have fixed it. Instead of handing Mikey the IdiotBall so he seemingly does not know what two teenagers would do alone, have him either mock or tease Donnie about being worried about such a thing at a time like this. Then have Donnie rebuke that he's worried because with any sort of horror movie scenario the pair of teens who even seem like a couple are the ones to be get picked off first. Also, make it so he's worried for their safety, not if Casey's "stealing April."
* darkrage6: For me it was when Irma was revealed to be a Krang, not only did it totally waste a character for no good reason, [[FridgeLogic it flat out doesn't make sense]] as the revelation itself conflicts with the episode "Mousers Attack" where it was established that April had knew Irma before the Krang ever knew about her, and April says she's known Irma for a year despite the events from "Mousers Attack" having happened two years ago. These errors make it look like the writers threw in the twist at the very last minute just for the sake of being shocking. Hopefully at some point there will turn out to be a real Irma after all.
* Disneylover818: Focusing too much on Donnie's "crush" for April is a bit distracting. Supposedly, this is for comedy, but I think it's overstayed its welcome. It's reached a point where Donnie isn't just acting on romantic feelings any more. He's acting on his obsession and clinginess for her. I get that he feels something for her, but he needs to establish healthy ground before pursuing her any further. It's especially bad since the writers are implying that April may feel the same way.
** CharlestonMan: The point of no return for this came in Season 1, in which Donnie made a chart algorithm that takes into account any situation where he could hang out with April, any excuse she might give about not wanting to, and ''any way to turn those "no"s into a "yes".'' This is ''classic'' entitled misogyny at play, where a man refuses to take a woman's "no" for an answer. This is the mentality that leads to ''rape''. But not only is this played for comedy, but it ''works'' and Donnie is ''never'' called out on it, punished, or learns anything at all. So it's basically saying that misogyny pays off and is rewarded. This is ''not'' a lesson kids should be taking away from this show.
** ZYL5_: At this point, it is practically a RomanticPlotTumor with how badly Donnie's characterization has been flanderized and how frequently it comes up in the episodes.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Time Squad]]
You wanna [[WesternAnimation/TimeSquad go back in time and correct the past]]? Let's start with these moments.
* Tropers/{{Nashimi}}: The episode "Hate and Let Hate" from ''WesternAnimation/TimeSquad'', [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming apart from Larry and Buck's reunion moment]], is a [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck Dethroning Episode Of Suck]]. First off, we don't see anything from the actual mission - and that would be perfectly fine if the rest of the episode wasn't so utterly sucky. What we get to see is Otto coming back from the bushes and saying they better go home quickly since the leaves here are really itchy. However, Buck and Larry are gone - presumably getting into an extraordinarily absorbing argument and forgetting about the boy. The fight turns out to end particularly bad, and the two decide to divide the space station into two with a white line. When they do this, they realize Larry's favorite place is on Buck's side and vice versa. [[FridgeLogic But they do not switch the halves - they just part with some insults.]] Naturally, Buck gets hungry and decides to try cooking, which is understandable. Larry however, enters Buck's weapon closet and tries to shoot one of the guns (despite being clearly instructed by the other to not touch his gear) and accidentally hits a photo of the Squad, burning a hole in the place where Buck's head was supposed to be; now, not only has he acted absolutely out of character by [[UnEvilLaugh laughing (somewhat) evilly afterwards]], but he also [[IdiotBall somehow failed to notice Otto was missing. His face was right there on the picture!]] Meanwhile, between the events from the station, we're shown short scenes of Otto on the abandoned island where he was left. [[DudeNotFunny It was utterly heartbreaking to see him hoping that Larry and Buck will return for him soon, but also finding nothing to eat save for some sand and branches. He chooses the sand.]] What in the bloody hell made the writers think that was funny?! Back in the station, we see [[ComedicSociopathy Larry acting like a lunatic killer, shooting everywhere he can, dressed unexpectedly manly for such a]] CampGay character, [[ComedicSociopathy with machine gun cartridges hanging from his shoulders]]. Thankfully, after Larry and Buck's rejoicement they quickly notice Otto's absence and teleport back for him (knowing the cartoon's mild SadistShow tendencies with Larry often playing the ButtMonkey role, it was not so obvious). Now that episode is a massive CharacterDerailment - it's impossible to not realize something's not right when you have such a loud kid, a goddamn home resident, a friend missing!
* Cherry Darling: Personally, I never cared for "Robin'n Stealin' with Mr. Hood". Maybe the pacing was off; maybe it was too short; maybe the writers couldn't come up with a wacky way Robin Hood could be acting out of character (robbing from the poor and giving to the rich just seems too predictable, especially when the show has depicted Edgar Allan Poe as overly cheerful [that's kinda predictable too, but, it made up for it by being funny], Winston Churchill as a nudist, General Patton as the manager of a florist shop, and Al Capone using clowns as gangsters while his gangsters become birthday party clowns), maybe because they ended the episode before [[spoiler:Larry could find out that Tuddrussel and Otto were using his golf clubs]] -- who knows? It's the only episode that I don't like -- even "Hate and Let Hate" was funny, despite the sudden FridgeHorror that washed over me after reading the above description of why the episode is a Dethroning Moment of Suck.
* Cranberries: For me the last episode, "Orphan Substitute". Good lord, Tuddrussel was going to deliberately leave Otto behind and just replace him for another kid like you would a tissue! And while Larry obviously didn't want him to be left behind he sure as hell didn't even try to stop Tuddrussel from doing this, he does have the time travel controls, he shouldn’t have to follow Tuddrussel's commands. While it's Otto's fault that he did go off on his own for this situation to happen, it could have been avoided entirely if Tuddrussel hadn't been such an ass and unplugged the game system before Otto could get a high score on it, and Otto had a valid point- "A grown man cheating an eight year old, that's pathetic." Oh and the fact that when they do find Otto, it was purely accidental and while Larry is thrilled to have found him, Tuddrussel is completely embarrassed to see him, and at the end they leave that other orphan they picked up along the way with Sister Thornley. For one that kid doesn't even live in that particular orphanage, second, for all we know that kid didn't even belong in that era, honestly he looked like he could have lived in the 1940's or something close to that, and they probably never even took him back... that's just sad.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Transformers Prime]]
* Blueshark: ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'' had a good cliffhanger that made it look like [[TheBigGuy Bulkhead]] was killed by [[TheBrute Hardshell]]. By the next episode says he won't be back to his old self for awhile. But then a few episodes later he is back in the fight. I mean really? So we can kill [[spoiler: Cliffjumper, Skyquake, Makeshift, Breakdown, Hardshell, and Silas]] But we can't even put Bulkhead in a coma! C'mon writers take a risk. This just felt like TheyWastedaPerfectlyGoodPlot to me.
* @/{{Peteman}}: How does Silas outfight Team Prime in hand to hand combat with Nemesis Prime? He boasts about his combat skill, but he's dealing with people who have been fighting longer than there has been a human species. I could understand if Nemesis Prime simply outgunned them, but between their own experience and Silas' dubiously effective interface, Nemesis really should have been dropped the moment he got into melee without getting surprising them.
* Vrahno: The conclusion of the "Orion Pax" three-parter for me. I've been on the fence about the show 'till then, saw it as SoOkayItsAverage, and waited to see whether season 2 would finally manage to 'wow' me. The set-up was really good: Optimus, having defeated Unicron, lost his memories of being an Autobot leader and regressed into his pre-war Orion Pax self. He joins the Decepticons who make him think that the Autobots are evil and that he's no leader-material. Up until then, Optimus Prime basically had no personality, and was as dull a character as any random Decepticon Mook. With his memories gone, I thought maybe they actually intended to write him that way, to add contrast to his potential S2 portrayal. And hey, the show was originally advertised as exploring "what it means to be a Prime". Perfect setup right there! Orion Pax relearns to be Optimus Prime, live up to his own name, the Autobots all learn to work better together and manage things without a leader to guide them, and we see just what makes a Prime. Instead, at the end of the three-parter, nearly everything goes back to how it was in S1 -- big events are wasted and developments undone. Orion Pax, who was actually an interesting character, is wiped away as the other characters restore Optimus Prime's memories through some techno-magic. His memories of being a Decepticon are cleansed, so he goes through no development, and he's back to being his wooden S1 self who isn't given any development afterwards either. He seemingly even forgot that he wanted to kill Megatron for good at the end of S1, because he just punches him real good instead of offing him when he had the chance to. So, the entire S1 story-arc with Unicron, Orion Pax as a Decepticon, the Autobots trying to cope with having no leader, the potential for Optimus Prime to actually become a developed character... all wasted, and for what? A handful of weapon cache coordinates that Orion Pax decoded while he was on the Decepticon ship. So the entire story was just a set-up for a tedious, season-long relic hunt? I'm not putting the blame entirely on the writers, as Hasbro apparently was against the idea of turning Prime into a Decepticon. And the development that Jack went through during these episodes was actually pretty cool. But literally everything else about the story was a gigantic waste. Many disappointments followed, but this was the one that cemented my dislike for the show the most.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'' was shaping up to be one of my favorite Transformers shows, even more so than the original cartoon. Season 2 had its annoyances, but I kept watching... but the death of Dreadwing is what finally killed my interest in the show for good. All throughout the season the writers had been setting Dreadwing up as an honorable Decepticon warrior who actually questioned his superior's motives, something not often seen in the Transformers franchise (Thundercracker [[InformedAttribute supposedly]] fit this mold, but never showed it [[AllThereInTheManual outside of his character bio]]). He was also interesting in that he had an actual reason to fight the Autobots besides conquest or just loving to fight -- he wanted revenge for his murdered twin. All in all one of the best characters to come out of the series... and how do the show writers send him off? [[DroppedABridgeOnHim By having Megatron shoot him in the back]] when he tries to kill Starscream, who was responsible for his brother's zombification. Excuse me? Given how much Megatron hates Starscream in this and virtually every other series, I have a very, very hard time believing he would kill one of his most loyal and competent soldiers to protect [[TheStarscream one of his most treacherous and unreliable]]. And don't tell me that he needed Starscream alive because he had the cyber keys -- there was nothing stopping him from taking the keys and then letting Dreadwing blast him to shrapnel. I don't know why the show writers decided to kill off one of the show's best Decepticon characters -- making way for Predaking in the next season, his voice actor quit, [[MerchandiseDriven his toy wasn't selling]], etc. -- but it felt like such a slap in the face to viewers that I refused to watch Season 3.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Ultimate Spider-Man]]
While ''WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan'' may be [[BrokenBase divisive]], these moments do nothing to help it status.
* Tropers/GamerSlyRatchet: The pilot was already very painful to sit through, with its childish, bland humor and flat characters. But it only becomes truly obnoxious when Spider-Man takes the "Spider-Bike" out for a joyride. From the cringeworthy, shrill voice acting in Spidey, to the lame attempts at humor, and a [[MerchandiseDriven shamelessly blatant attempt to promote a Spider-Bike toy]], this overly long sequence [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment barely even contributes anything to the plot]]. And, I kid you not, this was written by PaulDini. What!?
* Tropers/SpiderFan14: "Doomed" is a horrible episode. Nova and Spidey get in a pissing contest over who's the coolest. They agree whoever captures Doctor Doom for SHIELD wins. The problem is that they don't think that DD has diplomatic immunity, isn't doing anything evil (at first) and consider this an uncalled for domestic invasion on foreign soil. No one thinks its a bad idea and that if Doom kills them he would be considered protecting himself. Granted it turns out he takes control over the Helicarrier with Doombots (but this is part of the team's fault) and almost destroys New York (really why is it always flying near a city?). After the day is saved and Fury chews them out, what does Spidey do? [[DesignatedHero Imagines him saying blah blah blah and ignoring him while thinking he was right all along.]] It takes a lot to make Spiderman horrible but this show crafts this eloquently.
** RAZ: I'm 100% with you. This episode is a slap in the face of everything Spider-Man is about. Peter rushing his team of novice heroes on an unauthorized mission without any proper supervision to capture [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Doctor]]-[[HeroKiller Freaking]]-[[BigBad Doom]] just to make himself look cool is bad enough, but the one moment that's really insulting is where right before embarking on the mission, he actually starts to wonder if he's really doing the right thing here, and instead should be the bigger person and call things off. And then immediately after this he turns to the camera and smugly says "Yeah right! Maybe next life!" Let me reiterate: this is the character who is the TropeNamer for [[ComesGreatResponsibility trying to be responsible]] and you have a version who essentially outright states "well f**k being responsible!" directly to the audience. Congratulations, Man of Action. You messed up Spider-Man, [[{{Understatement}} big time]].
* Tropers/Regu14: While I generally enjoy the series (I love Spider-man), the episode with the symbiotes first appearance followed the 90s series's example of introducing Venom far to early, but that's not what I hate about this episode. What I hate is when Harry and MJ want to eat lunch with Peter, who also wants to be with his best friends, the other heroes show up and basically ruin the moment. Then Nove has the gull to insinuate the Peter only likes Harry because he's rich, while Harry is in earshot! I hated this guy enough already, but that moment cemented him as a horrible character. He nearly ruined Pete and Harry's friendship! Did the writers just want to make people confuse this asshole for the Comic version of Nova?
* Tropers/Hyperion5: I was struggling through the series already, but the episode "Awesome" really made me cringe. Peter steals an experiment of Dr. Connors' (i.e. Awesome Andy) for a science show, rather than, say, making one himself. It was explained in the episode that he was too busy fighting the Juggernaut to make one, but really? That's not only horrible hand waving, but it implies that Peter does literally nothing but fight crime. The episode only gets worse from there. Rather than be an episode which builds on the relationship between Luke and Peter (as the previous one did with Peter and Danny), Luke acts just as badly as Peter does, basically expecting Peter to do all of the work on their science project. Juggernaut is defeated once his costume is destroyed, which goes against every version of the character. Worst of all, Awesome Andy is a completely unlikeable threat in this episode. I understand that they couldn't use the awesome (no pun intended) version of Andy from Dan Slott's She-Hulk run, but what was stopping them from using the classic Silver Age version of Andy? Basically, this episode failed to have a single enjoyable moment in it for me.
* Tropers/BGFU: "The Sinister Six" was pretty bad. It shouldn't be - it marks the first appearance of, well, Sinister Six, the famous team-up of Spidey's rogues, in this incarnation of Spider-Man. But unlike similar episodes in ''Spider-Man: The Animated Series'' and ''The Spectacular Spider-Man'', this one is just a huge mess. First of all, villain motivations are basically nonexistant. The only ones who actually have any reason to be there are Dr. Octopus and The Beetle. The Lizard turned back into Dr. Connors - but apparently Octopus found (or made?) more of the Lizard serum, just so his team can have a wild beast, who of course would only attack Spider-Man, and not any other team member that he would find a threat. But at least they gave some reason for Connors turning back into the Lizard. Electro doesn't get any explanation - at the end of his debut episode, he lost his extra-powers and transformed back into his weaker human form. But here he's back in his "Ultimate Electro" form, has extra-powers again, and no explanation is ever given as to why. The Rhino was remorseful for his actions and actually wanted to reform - but here all he wants is revenge on Spider-Man, once again, for no reason. And Kraven originally was after White Tiger, Spider-Man just helped her defeat him. If he's free now, why not go against her again? What does he care about Spider-Man? We may never know. Lack of motivations aside, this episode is also a disappointment, since The Sinister Six isn't very much of a threat, and Spidey is able to hold his own against six super-powered villains for an amount of time that's just enough for his teammates to arrive and help him. Not only this is a disappointment, but in the context of the series, this is bad writing, since in the very next episode Spidey gets defeated by three average criminals who only use some special armor.
* {{@/SomeoneImSure}}: The pacing in most of the episodes is just terrible, but it really stands out in the later ones when all the characters are trying to stay relevant. I could handle it until I got to the second episode in the Carnage Arc, in the fourth Season. That entire scene with Cloak and the other two was just rushed, and I couldn't get into it at all. There is nothing more self-destructive than bad pacing.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Winx Club]]
* Tropers/HappyMan: In ''WesternAnimation/WinxClub''
* Tropers/{{Dag1984}}: For me it was a certain revelation in Season 3. The revelation that Bloom in her base form is more powerful then five Enchantix fairies who have a fair amount of battle experience. Thank God season 4 improved on this.
* Tropers/FairyDreamer: It was several moments that did it for me in season five when it came to Bloom. She basically becomes an overgrown brat, crying every time something doesn't go how she wants (such as her boyfriend not answering his phone, despite that she knows he's busy). Now, yes, Bloom was caught in a love triangle, but how much clearer does Sky have to be that he loves Bloom and Bloom only? Worse, when Bloom is called out on her behavior a few times, rather than stop and think "maybe I do need to calm down", she acts like she did nothing wrong. MarySue is one thing. SpoiledBrat is another. Thankfully, season six fixed this.
* Tropers/CharlestonMan: Said love triangle, by the way, is another dethroning moment due to how it began in the first season. Diaspro is Sky's ''fiancé''. He keeps her a secret from Bloom as he pursues a relationship with her, which means he's cheating on Diaspro. Then, Bloom attacks Diaspro because she thinks she must be a Trix member in disguise due to being with Sky romantically. Sky stops it and comes clean about everything. And what is Bloom's reaction? She blames '''Diaspro''' for being in the way of her and Sky. She blames a completely innocent party who had no idea Bloom even ''existed'', and doesn't blame Sky for lying to her and cheating on Diaspro. The kicker is after this bit of victim-blaming is done, Diaspro is [[DesignatedVillain actually made into an antagonist]] [[DerailingLoveInterests solely for the convenience of Bloom/Sky,]] [[KarmaHoudini who get off scot-free.]] Let no-one claim that this is a feminist show, or else direct them to this wretched plot point.
** Tropers/{{fairygirl567}}: Wretched plot point? The Bloom/Sky relationship is kind of questinioing. She became instentily infatuied with him like she was becoming his lap dog or a Disney princess. The worse thing is after this, Bloom runs home! Not because the Trix attacked her, not because she got kicked out or suspended for attacking another fairy, not because her parents found out and forced her to leave for her protection, not even because the father was angry, she left because she got her poor little heart broken... are you serious? She's a fairy and just got attacked by the Trix's and found out she's adopted! This is what makes her run? And I can't even accept that fact that "Oh, this was the final straw for her to leave." Really? A boy? I get someone who cheats is messed up and can affect the hearbroken person, but she literally just abondeded her friends because of the mere fact that "Waaah my boyfriend had another girlfriend and didn't tell me!" No. Just. No. When you're a fairy who fights three evil witches in one season alone, I think that a man breaking your heart is priority number 2!
* Tropers/SloMotion: Mine was also a season 5 moment. Specifically, the moment When Aisha used her wish to save Nereus and not revive Nabu. Cousins or not, the writers knew damn well that pretty much every fan wanted Nabu back and they have the chance to revive him and it's used a character who we've barely seen (and in all honesty I don't give a damn about) in place of a character the fans know and love. And to add salt to the wound, all of a sudden Aisha likes Roy (who is a piss poor attempt at being Nabu 2.0) and Bloom gets her sister back. We get Daphne back, but no Nabu. What the hell, Winx Club writers?!
* SummerDays128: This was minor for the show but it was that Christmas episode... it was alright. Bloom celebrating Christmas with her friends is nice except this is apparently the first time she's ever told them about it. They make it clear they had no idea what Bloom was talking about when she said she was visiting her family for the holidays. This is season 5 right? You know that means she's known them for 4 seasons plus 2 movies put that all together it's about... 6 to 5 years and you're trying to convince me she never shared this holiday with them! Not once? There was a Halloween episode in season 2 where she took them to a party but no other holidays were ever brought up, I'm not saying talk about Thanksgiving (that'd be an awkward conversation) but come on Christmas is a huge holiday that nearly everyone celebrates and it shown Bloom loves the holiday but she never visited her family while going to Magix, never got any presents from the or even a freaking card or phone call? Was she still mad about the adoption thing? Well... I'll say no to that because she still talks to them and shows she loves them (even though she calls them by there first names). She never gushed about one of the best holidays ever to her best friends! That just shocked me beyond belief. I mean she talked more about her six flags trip then this holiday. If they had started the episode off with Bloom talking about how she's visiting her adoptive parents for Christmas and one of the girls could be like "Oh the day with the fat man who breaks into people's homes" then Bloom laughs and says yes. That would've been so much better because they would've known about the holiday! Not have Bloom apparently never tell them about it! Here they are just ignorant about it and she still didn't explain it to them, they had to google it! I know this shouldn't bother me so much but really, 6 years she's known these people and never once did she talk about this holiday with them? It took 6 years before they finally do a holiday special?! I mean season 4 was about them being on Earth! Sure it was summer (I think) but they didn't find out about the holiday then. Did the writers think that if they did the other way they'd look lazy, no doing a Christmas special in the middle of the season and have half of the characters not know what the holiday is, is what's lazy! It would've been so much better if her friends knew about said holiday but never actually celebrated it because they don't want to or have holidays similar to it, they had a mother's day in there world so why not Gift Day for each planet or even an episode dealing with telling her parents about the holiday (real ones not adopted) now that would've been awesome! They'd ask her to come over to have tea or something and she'd say "No I promised Mike and Vanessa that I'd celebrate Christmas with them." and they would've been like "What's Christmas?" Wouldn't that be interesting? Or having her try to celebrate the holiday with her friends but they didn't see into to them at first then she talks to her dead (not anymore) sister something along those lines. Her own freaking boyfriend/ fiance didn't know! What the hell Bloom? Aren't these her like closest friends and soon to be husband? I guess not.

* MewLettuceRush Miss Magix may already be well known for its UnfortunateImplications ,however its largest Dethroning moment lies with it's treatment of [[UnintentionallySympathetic Lucy]]. Sure she is not exactly a nice person but at the same time she is so obsessed with being popular she is willing to be in a one sided abusive friendship with the Trix who treat her like shit. In this episode this desire leads to her agreeing to have her appearance altered in order to compete in Miss Magix despite not knowing it was a trick by the witches. At first everything goes fine with her being a surprise favorite among the audience. However, at the end the witches [[ShootTheDog in a needlessly cruel scene]] undo the beauty spell on her [[CruelTwistEnding right when she is about to get the trophy]] and she runs off in tears. To make a bad situation worse a few episodes later show she is now being mocked by the entire school except Mirta for it. Even a semi villainous character doesn't deserve to be humiliated this badly! The 4kids edit makes it even worse by having [[DesignatedHero Bloom]] undo the spell herself and [[UnintentionallyUnsympathetic Stella]] having a KarmaHoudini at the end. This along with several other reasons is why I consider Bloom in the 4kids dub a bigger MarySue than the original Bloom ever was!
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Xiaolin Showdown]]
Tropers, we challenge you to a WesternAnimation/XiaolinShowdown. List the worst moments of this well-remembered classic with as much detail as you can, and do not argue with the other entries. Let's go: Xiaolin Showdown! Gong Yi Tan Pai!
* MetalMichelangelo: ''WesternAnimation/XiaolinShowdown'''s "The Black Vipers" episode. The monks return to Texas to find a new shen gong wu, only to come across The Black Vipers, an all-girls motorcycle gang led by Clay's jealous little sister, Jessie. At the episode's climax, Clay ends up losing the showdown because he decided to save Jessie who promptly kicked him off his bike and won the showdown resulting in the monks losing all of their shen gong wu. What makes this episode a DMOS is when Jessie shows some remorse and sends Clay a letter while returning the shen gong wu. Jessie's letter says "Well big brother, it took me a while, but I finally beat you. Just so there's no hard feelings, I'm returning all of your warts (that's what Jessie was calling the shen gong wu) except for one I was hoping to borrow (the Wings of Tinabi). Clay could've easily won the showdown but chose to save his sister's life instead, therefore, Jessie won through cheating (even though that's allowed in the showdowns). The real DMOS was the fact that this episode was Clay's last solo showdown. After this episode, the only showdowns Clay participated in were when all 4 monks competed as a team. Also, what would happen if Jessie decided to keep every shen gong wu? This pretty much borders on NiceJobBreakingItHero for Clay.
* TT454: For me, the worst episode was "The Apprentice". In my opinion the episode is such a mess that it's almost irredeemable. Not only is the plot really silly - Wuya challenging Jack Spicer and Katnappe to compete for the role of her apprentice - but everything else stuffed into the episode doesn't work either. From the random, out-of-place re-appearance of the "U-Bots" to the disturbing, unnecessary acid trip sequence caused by the Woozy Shooter, and the painfully unfunny sub-plot involving Jack Spicer turning "good" and being hired to do a lot of chores for the monks (resulting in the predictable twist that he would run off) and one of the strangest Xiaolin Showdowns in the series (a game of "truth and lies"), the whole thing feels really slapped together and frankly insulting.
* Loekman3: For me, its when Omi challenge Dojo to a showdown and used more than his wagered Wu (Changing Chopsticks) like Reversing Mirror and Shroud of Shadows. [[ProtagonistCenteredMorality This is not only ouright cheating but also narratively treated as a good thing]]. [[BrokenAesop Despite the fact that later when Wuya challenge the Xiaolin Warriors to a Showdown]], when she used a non-wagered Wu, it is treated as cheating including [[{{Hypocrite}} Omi]] himself.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Young Justice]]
There's no [[WesternAnimation/YoungJustice justice]] in these moments, no siree...
* AllsparkSpinOut: What finally made me hate ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice'' was the reveal of [[VillainSue the members of The Light]] - while ComicBook/LexLuthor, Ra's al Ghul, ComicBook/VandalSavage and [[BrainInAJar the Brain]] made sense, the other three members were [[ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} Ocean Master]], Queen Bee and [[SpoiledBrat Klarion the Witch Boy]]. I like Klarion, and I felt his voice was perfectly cast in ''Young Justice'', but Weisman really should have used [[MagnificentBastard skilled manipulators]] like [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitans Deathstroke]], Gorilla Grodd or ClockKing. Hell, he left out Amanda Waller, who has always been a major member of Project Cadmus in any operation - she could be the [[TokenGoodTeammate Token Morally Ambiguous Teammate]].
* REgu14: While I have to heartily disagree with the idea that Comics!Deathstroke is a good manipulator, the members of the Light are even stupider than the summary implies. Here's my DMOS. Ra's al Ghul, and Lex Luthor. [[CharacterDerailment Working Together.]] These two have enough Ego to fill a 747 Boeing each, and that's even getting into the massive personal philosophy differences. Ra's would never work together with someone like Luthor, not just because of his technology-focused methods, but because Luthor wants to conquer the world. Guess who also shares that goal? Ra's al fucking Ghul!!
* SpiderFan14: I'd like to add the "5 Years Later" season two opener. This was annoying and confusing. Why the time skip? The show had two plotlines going into the season with the search of the real Red Arrow and what the missing 16 hours were for the League during its mind control. We now have a bunch of new characters to quickly latch on while the other characters were spent the whole season with may not appear regularly. [[SarcasmMode Also we get the joy of watching the]] [[ShipSinking Miss Martian/Superboy relationship crumble offscreen and have to deal with it presumably all over again.]] All and all a horrible season opener no matter how much Creator/TimCurry or Lobo appears.
* Tropers/LLSmoothJ: "Bloodlines." Or otherwise known as "Let's make Wally look as useless as possible." New character Bart Allen (A.K.A Impulse) shows up from the future and already he's shown to be better than him. Not only is he shown to be faster than Wally (as in actually being able to keep up with The Flash), he's able to dodge traps that manage to trip him up as well. And when it looks like Bart screwed up? Oh no, he actually saved The Flash! And to add the icing on the cake people still can't seem to get his name right. This really is infuriating to watch as out of the original teammates, Wally ends up with the short end of the stick as everyone else at least get an awesome moment in the second season, never mind that this is the only place where he still exists (stupid [[ComicBook/{{New52}} Reboot]]...) and yet basically [[StrawLoser exists to make the Allens look better]]. I've heard that this was in the comic as well and it will a plot point for Wally to come back faster and stronger, but considering the [[DemotedToExtra unlikelihood of focusing on the old cast]] and the greater chance of focusing on the new blood, I'll believe it when I see it.
* Tropers/{{Gannetwhale}}: The utter failure of UsefulNotes/TheBechdelTest. I was willing to forgive Miss Martian's and Artemis first conversation, but once Zatanna and Artemis have a moment together is all "BOYS BOYS BOYS". Damnit Greg, you can write women, why can't you write DC superheroines!? Actually, Zatanna as a whole is infuriating, since she's just a [[SatelliteLoveInterest gratuitous love interest]] for Dick Grayson.
* Tropers/{{Silverblade2}}: How about the beginning of "Downtime"? A giant monster defeats all five members offscreen. Then Batman, a guy without any superpowers, comes just in time and [[CurbStompBattle curbstomps]] the monster with a taser. After that Batman gives to Aqualad a pep talk because apparently his failure as a leader was because he was thinking too much about his home and his crush... wait what?
** SpaceOutlaw: Batman is the penultimate meta human, so him beating the monster wasn't entirely unbelievable, I just felt the whole scene was jarring, since the kids have already spent a good bit of time on teamwork practice and fighting as a group, you would think they'd be able to handle some weak-shit eldritch fodder.
* Tropers/{{JtheDrafter}}: Throughout WesternAnimation/YoungJustice Wally and Artemis constantly snipe at and bicker with each other. They have a few moments where they aren't fighting, but their relationship is mostly defined by their antagonism. Their moments of positive interaction are few and far between, and two of those three moments take place under special circumstances. (Mutual amnesia and every adult in the world disappearing from the face of the planet.) Yet at the end of the season one finale Wally and Artemis kiss, and act like they should have kissed much earlier. Look, LoveHate is a legitimate trope, but it doesn't work if the two parties don't act legitimately attracted to each other! No reason is given as to why Wally would want to kiss Artemis after she'd been so constantly mean-spirited to him, and no reason is given as to why Artemis would want to kiss Wally after he'd been a near-constant JerkAss to her.
* Tropers/{{Falconwing}}: [[spoiler: Wally West's death.]] After an entire season of being out of focus Wally comes back into action... Only to [[spoiler: go out in a heroic sacrifice that would have been much better suited for Barry to make clearing the way for Wally to be the Flash.]] But no, Barry does nothing and just watches with a sad face as his nephew [[spoiler: Fades from existence.]] I don't know if Greg wrote this, or it was forced on him by higher ups, but either way it's nothing short of a middle finger to the eyeballs of every Wally West fan who feels screwed over by Flashpoint! Just when you thought DC couldn't sink any lower.
** XSpectreGreyX: I agree completely. [[spoiler:Wally's death]] just felt so unnecessary, and there wasn't even some meaning to it. Also, why the hell wasn't Jay Garrick there? This just felt like another fuck you to Wally fans. I don't know if it was mandated, but it certainly feels that way. And pretty much everything afterwards is also crap. Cassie and Tim getting together despite not even interacting (I know it can work in real life, but as a show, it doesn't). She hasn't even made mention of having any attraction to him whatsoever, nor was any implied. It just feels like a last minute PairTheSpares. Dick Grayson quitting the team due to grief (the latest issue of Nightwing has a good portrayal of how he'd deal with such an event), oh, and even after all of this, they still refuse to name the team. [[spoiler:Wally died]] and will be known as a founding member of "The Team". And then they have the gall to leave a SequelHook, when we know the show is done. Why not just have the Justice Leaguers on trial (who contributed absolutely nothing in this episode) stop Savage and the War World? All for this is just a horrible way to end the show, making an otherwise below average episode worst.
* Seiya: M'gann mindraping her boyfriend and that plot point never getting brought up again. AGAIN, she abused her boyfriend a who had a history of people messing with his mind and spent a whole season rubbing her new relationship in his face and we're supposed to cheer that they got back together.
* {{@/SomeoneImSure}}: It was really hard to pinpoint my DMOS with this series because it 'does' have a lot of potential. My main beef with it is the animation. In pretty much every scene where there's more than one person on screen, there is usually more than one person standing around like a statue in the background. The DC Animation department is supposed to be leagues ahead of Marvel's and yet Marvel's Ultimate Spiderman is so much better at animating background characters simply walking down the streets of New York. This lack of animation (plus the lack of crowds and random people on the streets in later episodes) on the Young Justice's animation department creates a feeling of lifelessness in this world that's supposed to at least feel like it's alive. I can't get invested when no one on screen is invested in what anyone is saying except the person saying it. Such as Speedy's denouncement of his mentor in the very first episode. Aquaman and Green Arrow are just standing there and staring until Speedy mentions that he knows about their HQ, then latter on while Speedy is talking to Green Arrow, Aquaman is just staring at him like he's not saying anything at all. Any scene where there's a crowd, expect most everyone to be stopped in time, even though they're supposed to be talking, moving, etc. The animation sucks. As for narrative, I cannot specifically pin down what exactly about the story offends me (mostly because a lot of unrelated things offend me) but the praise this show gets when it doesn't even have good animation is offensive to any self-respecting animator. I can look at youtube videos animated by Bronies and they are much better than this "professional animation". Admittedly, there are a few moments when the animation feels alive, but these are extremely rare. A scene in the second Season, when Miss Martian and Superboy are arguing in the Justice League's defense in an alien court room, and Miss Martian suddenly hugs Superboy and jumps around in excitement... that is the best scene in the whole series when it comes to animation. It is the kind of animation I expected from the beginning. Instead, I get a crowd full of statues and a bunch of people doing nothing but standing or crouching around in the background doing nothing, not even breathe.
* Tropers/{{CriticoMolesto}}: Disgraced Ocean Master. Alright, for starters “5 years later” is a cheap, cheap trick. You can just skip a bunch of character development and interactions with a shrug just to change the dynamics with no actual efforts. I mean, yeah, we get Blue Beetle and Tim Drake and Impulse and Wonder Girl and… I dunno, Lagoon Boy? Cool. But that still doesn’t make up for the fact that they just pressed a big ol’ button and went “Fuck it”. They got bored and shook the 8-ball. Out of all the things that we missed in those five years, the one that has always stuck out to me is the whole “Disgraced Ocean Master”. Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m glad we got Manta on board and the whole story with Aqualad was good. Really. I don’t have a problem with them changing Orm for Manta. The real problem is the fact that they completely wasted a character. One of Aquaman’s main foes. The fucker is Aquaman’s half brother, controls his armies and wants him dead. How much weight do you think he has in a story? A lot, right? We could see maybe an infiltration. Perhaps some development on Aquaman, as he (and almost everyone else in the League, for that matter) gets almost no character to speak of. But no. Orm gets one appearace out of his suit, and then sits in a shadowy room the rest of the episodes and as far as my knowledge goes, doesn’t even get dialogue beyond the first episode he shows up. And the cherry on top, the real kicker here, is that one line. One fucking line. “That poor, disgraced Ocean Master”. OK, I’m gonna have to stop you right there, Teen Titans Dark. Disgraced? He did nothing to begin with! Queen Bee, Klarion, al Ghul, The Brain, all those fuckers do something at some point, but the half-brother of one of the League’s founding members, a heir to the throne of Atlantis, the (self-proclaimed) Master Of The Ocean, about 13 episodes worth of storytelling with this dude, gets booted, off-screen, and all we get is: Disgraced. The entire goddamn Time Skip summed up right here, luv.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Others]]
* Tropers/{{Overlord347}}: I'm probably reading too much into this one, but one dethroning moment for me came in an episode of WesternAnimation/VeggieTales, in which Larry sings a song about his missing hairbrush. Now, from what I can tell, the song was about giving up things you don't need (like Larry's hairbrush since he has no hair) to someone else who does (like the Peach who does have hair). The problem with that is Larry never ''did'' give him the hairbrush; it was Bob the tomato. He basically just took the hairbrush without permission and gave it to the Peach on the grounds that he has hair and will make better use of it. His excuse for basically stealing from Larry? "Well, you don't really use or need it." That's it! It would be like if one of my friends had a stuffed toy that he no longer plays with and I just go ahead and take it to give to someone else simply because he doesn't use it anymore!
* Tropers/{{Baronbeefdip}}: For me, the episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily'' with the "psycho duck" certainly qualifies. It starts out good enough with Penny rescuing a mallard duck who can't swim and having him stay at the house until he recovers. The duck keeps stealing Oscar's food, but no one but Oscar ever sees the duck doing so. This in and of itself would make for a hilarious episode... But, then the duck goes batshit insane for no reason whatsoever. Seriously, it's a random shift from an episode about Penny rescuing a cute yet mischievous (towards Oscar at least) duck to an episode about the entire family (and friends) being terrified of an insane power-hungry duck. Why? Also, the seemingly tacked-on ending where the duck is revealed to have belonged to a billionaire and that [[LawyerFriendlyCameo Wizard Kelly]] (himself already a multi-billionaire in the series) had returned Chester (the psycho duck) to his owner and gotten the million dollar reward. The ending has no real purpose other than to serve as a YankTheDogsChain moment for Oscar. Yes, Oscar is the ButtMonkey of the series... but that was just cruel.
* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: [[spoiler: Cedric]] being the final villain of the second/final season of ''WesternAnimation/{{WITCH}}''. Creator/GregWeisman, I love you, but just because you can pull off a twist doesn't always mean you should, especially when it means sacrificing satisfying end battles with two menacing, well-developed villains for a final battle against a horrendously unimpressive, underdeveloped one who we've seen defeated about 100 times already.
* Loekman3: There is one ''[[WesternAnimation/BenTen Ben 10]]'' short that made me want to punch the creators whenever I experience the ending of "Hijacked". Basically, two criminals attempt to carjack the car and Ben, being [[ChronicHeroSyndrome Ben]] saves the day only for Gwen and Max later [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished to chastise him for using the Rust Bucket]] [[MadeOutToBeAJerkass against his grandpa's instructions]] [[NoSympathy without letting Ben explain what really happened]]. At least in other shorts most of Ben's ButtMonkey can be attributed to his own owndoings but here, Ben pretty much saves the Rust Bucket & subsequently the whole summer vacation and yet he gets absolutely no reward for doing this? [[DudeNotFunny This isn't funny at all]], it's just a slap in the face for Ben's good deeds.
* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: The first season finale to ''WesternAnimation/Ben10UltimateAlien''. After building up that dark and serious storyline, all the angst (and {{Wangst}}), all the promise that Ben's world would never be the same... everything is set to normal with the literal push of a button in the last two minutes. Kevin [[RomanticPlotTumor gets back with Gwen]] despite energy-raping her and he and Ben [[EasilyForgiven rush a shared apology for trying to kill one another]], then they go out for smoothies as if nothing happened. Not to mention the 5 aliens Aggregor killed being inexplicably resurrected and Darkstar hitting the depths of VillainDecay. What a freaking ShaggyDogStory! Some say ''Ben 10'' JumpedTheShark when it become ''Alien Force''; others when Vilgax came in ''Alien Force's'' third season. But for me, this is when ''Ben 10'' officially [[JumpingTheShark Jumped the Shark]].
** fluffything: For me, it was even earlier than that when Kevin mutates into a monster once again after absorbing the Omnitrix's powers. Now, you'd think the writers would have Kevin struggling once again with being a mutation and trying to live a somewhat normal life while being a monster or maybe trying to control his new-found powers and keep himself from turning evil again. But, nope, instead he just instantly turns insane and Ben now has to fight him once again. And, to make matters worse, the explanation as to why Kevin went insane again? Because it's what his species does when they absorb certain types of energy. That's right. The writers completely tossed aside the fact that Kevin was a sociopath from the start and gave him a crappy "It's in my DNA so it's not my fault" FreudianExcuse to explain his HeelFaceTurn and his FaceHeelTurn. No, just... god, no.
* Loekman3: Out of all the flaws from ''WesternAnimation/Ben10Omniverse'' that I hate the most, [[VillainDecay reducing threatening villains into a complete joke]] one of my most hated moments. ''Special Delivery'' is the epitome of this. Previously, each of the villains (Fisttrick, Sunder, Looma, Trumbipulor) that made up of Psyphon's gangs are capable of putting Ben and Rook to their limits. But here, [[VillainTeamUp when they all gang up on Ben himself]], [[ConservationOfNinjutsu he just swats them aside as if they are mere canon fodders]], even Psyphon himself, despite having the power of a dwarf star. And he did it while still retaining his obnoxious personality to the point that I would rather [[RootingForTheEmpire root Vilgax to steal his Omnitrix and blast him into the Null Void chamber]].
** Troper/KenyaStarflight: While I acknowledge that ''WesternAnimation/Ben10Omniverse'' is flawed, I was willing to look the other way and enjoy the show regardless despite them. The kicker for me came during the ''Rooters of All Evil'' story arc, which terribly and sloppily [[RetCon retcons]] not only Kevin Levin's past, but the pasts of the [[HalfHumanHybrid Amalgam Kids]] as well. (For those unfamiliar with the episode, Kevin's race, Osmosians, are no longer [[HumanAlien Human Aliens]] but just a genetic mutation, and the Amalgam Kids are no longer alien hybrids but ordinary humans infused with alien powers.) Worst of all, the retcon not only implies that dozens, if not hundreds, of high-ranking Plumbers have [[MindRape had their memories tampered with]], but it [[UnPerson completely erases Kevin's father from existence]]! I can forgive a retcon when it fixes a continuity error or problem with the world-building, but ''Omniverse's'' handling of it was awful.
** [[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Tropers/Worldofdrakan Worldofdrakan]]: A contributing moment of suck from a Troper that actually enjoys Omniverse, here! Though I am a fan, I will still acknowledge that the show does have its flaws. There was a particular moment that really rubbed me the wrong way in the episode "Mystery, Incorporeal." It would otherwise be a pretty good episode if not for how bad it makes you feel for Gwen. Basically, Ben shows up at Gwen's college and [[SpotlightStealingSquad steals the spotlight]] from her when she rightfully deserves it and gets her into trouble with one of her professors. The part that struck me as a dethroning moment of suck, though, came at the end when Ben just straight up walks away from the college with an honorary degree while Gwen still has to work her tail off for one.
* Tropers/{{Brokenshell}}: In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Hero 108}}'' (a show I usually find to be average) Mystique Sonia's Yaksha (a magic hat that is infatuated with her) gets burnt to death right in front of her eyes. Next scene, she is in prison and, upon hearing one of the imprisoned soldiers saying he loves her, tricks him into becoming her new Yaksha by having him say it 2 more times and laughs and hugs it as if the first one never existed. So 1) what was once a human being has sacrificed its life for the woman he loves and she doesn't care in the slightest, and 2) she manipulates a man into something he has no idea would happen for her own gain.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: ''WesternAnimation/HotelTransylvania'' is a pretty good movie overall, but hits a sour note for me with talk about a "zing" -- essentially the concept of LoveAtFirstSight -- and it's emphasized that you only get one "zing" in your life. A romantic enough notion, perhaps, but did the filmmakers think to consider how kids who come from divorced families might feel about this? Or really, anyone who's had a relationship end, either by death, divorce, or breaking up? The movie doesn't even justify it by saying that "zing" only applies to monsters, which might have made it a bit more tolerable -- basically the characters state you only get a single true love and that if you let them go, that's it. A cringe-worthy AccidentalAesop in an otherwise decent movie.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: The ''WesternAnimation/DragonTales'' episode "My Emmy Or Bust," where Max goes to Dragon Land without Emmy for the first time to help his friends find a missing sea dragon. He spends the entire episode missing his sister, with all his friends knocking themselves out trying to help him feel better, and when he gets home he tells Emmy about his adventure... only for her to blow him off and accuse him of making it up. [[FlatWhat Um... what?]] First of all, Emmy has been to Dragon Land many times before and done far weirder things than looking for sea dragons, so there's no reason for her to not believe Max's story. Second of all, when the entire episode has revolved around Max missing Emmy, setting things up for a possible CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming at the end, this comes across as a slap in the face to both Max and the audience. Yes, [[ThrowTheDogABone Max gets thrown a small bone in the final seconds of the episode]], but it still cemented my dislike for Emmy once and for all.
* Animeking1108: The ''WesternAnimation/BeavisAndButtHead'' episode "Wet Behind The Rears" has officially replaced "The Young, Gifted, and Crude" for the worst episode because of the massive CharacterDerailment of Principle [=McVicker=]. The episode was about Coach Buzzcut trying to get the boys to take a shower after gym class, but then the fire alarm goes off, leaving them to go outside in their underwear. Then it reveals that it was all a plan for Buzzcut and [=McVicker=] to humiliate the boys. I expected this sort of thing out of Buzzcut, considering that in my previous entry, he ordered his class to beat up a new student. However, this is inexcusable on [=McVicker=], who is usually a JerkassWoobie. Yeah, he wasn't the nicest guy, but he was like that because of the boys. In this episode, they didn't even do anything to provoke them. Add to it that it was implied that Buzzcut even planned for Beavis's hand to get pierced by the javelin to cover them in blood, it makes you wonder why Highland High School wasn't sued for this blatant abuse towards students.
** Tropers/travisbob: My dethroning moment comes from the episode "Drones." Disclaimer- I have nothing but respect for Mike Judge as an artist, I love Beavis & Butthead, and the revival season produced some of the funniest episodes of the show's run, including this episode. My dethroning moment is from the [[WhamEpisode deadmau5 music video segment]] of this episode, though. During the music video segment, [[NightmareFuel Beavis describes his encounter with a grief counselor who raped him]]. Nothing is described graphically, but the fairly realistic way he recounted his story in the way an actual rape victim would was shocking: Beavis was "invited over to have spaghetti" by his grief counselor, who invited him into his van and gave him drugged lemonade. Beavis states that he doesn't remember what happened, but that he woke up under a bridge, adding that the counselor "must have been psychic, because he said my butt would be sore the next day." [[TearJerker Beavis even says that the counselor told him that if he told anyone else, no one would believe him]]. The kicker? Even [[EvenEvilHasStandards Butthead is visibly unnerved by this whole story]], and states that it's "really weird." As much as I love this show, this was a massive dethroning moment for me. Beavis has usually been portrayed as the "nicer" and more "innocent" of the two; not to mention, the protagonists of the show are both fifteen years old. It was just an incredibly disturbing, nauseating, and saddening moment from an otherwise really funny episode. As someone who was molested at the same age as this character was, I felt like I was going to vomit. Whenever I re-watch this episode, I have to fast-forward through the music video segment. The idea of a 15-year-old child getting raped by a school counselor [[DudeNotFunny isn't funny to me]], it's just... incredibly horrific and sad, even if that 15-year-old is Beavis. I really want this show to come back, but I hope that Mike Judge never makes a joke about this sort of thing again. Even by the standards of the show, it kind of crossed the line of good taste.
* Tropers/kablammin45: When I was little, I wound up mad after watching a certain ''WesternAnimation/PinkPanther'' short, and I still don't like it very much now. Long story short, Pink is hungry and winds up in the hospital when (get this) a dog bites him and won't let go! Pink then has to deal with all sorts of pointless tests. But I thought the ending sucked! The dog is removed, and immediately attacks the doctor helping Pink. The man is shown waiting in the waiting room to be examined. It's meant to be a gag, but it just makes no sense considering that he's a doctor and had just been holding a formula for removing stubborn dogs! Then a mean orderly who has been bullying Pink in very rude ways throughout the short without consequence cements himself as one of my most hated [[KarmaHoudini Karma Houndinis]] via a very cruel KickTheDog moment to Pink. Pink is given a pie for his troubles only for the dude to snatch the food Pink had been trying to get as Pink walks out the door, for seemingly no other reason other than spite. When I was younger I wished that I could have beaten ever living crap out of that guy for being such a KarmaHoudini. Between that and feeling that the IdiotPlot was just a bit ''too'' idiotic, as well as Pink being too much of a ButtMonkey, it makes for an unenjoyable spectacle and I'm quick to name that short as my least favorite ''Pink Panther'' shorts.
* OnSoaringWings: ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'' "Drift Problem" Malory [[spoiler: stealing 8 year old Archer's bike. Refusing to get him another (he thought for years someone else had stolen it) and never giving it back, all to "teach him a lesson"]] That alone would have been bad enough. But in the same episode [[spoiler: she takes it a step further by getting Archer a new spy car for his birthday and doing it all again to him.]] For me, this KickTheDog moment was the absolute last straw. I stopped seeing Malory as a tolerable JerkWithAHeartOfJerk, and as started seeing her as the KarmaHoudini she is. Frankly if the series doesn't end with Archer snapping and brutally murdering her, I will be very pissed off. Archer is a total Jerkass but considering his mother who can blame him
* Tropers/SpiderFan14: [[ScoobyDoo "The Scooby]] [[Film/TheBlairWitchProject Doo Project"]] was alright in the beginning and in the middle, it was kinda funny but the ending I really hated. [[DownerEnding The gang all disappear and are likely killed by the monster.]] Outside of being scary as hell to see late at night and causing me a restless sleep, it was [[DudeNotFunny not funny]] to see the heroes of my kindergarten years to be offscreen killed by the monster. DeconstructiveParody, that's fine but this was just terrible.
* Tropers/{{mariic}}: Speaking of Franchise/ScoobyDoo, I always found WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooInWheresMyMummy to be one of the worse DTV films. When I was younger, I thought the twist of Velma setting it up to scare away Amelia von Butch was out of character for the former, but now I have another reason to hate it. Velma claims that they didn't let the rest of the gang in on it because it was "Too Dangerous". Because [[{{Expy}} evil]] [[Franchise/TombRaider Lara Croft]] is ''[[SarcasmMode clearly]]'' [[SarcasmMode much more dangerous than]] [[WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooOnZombieIsland a pair of soul-stealing werecats.]]
* Tropers/{{Krendall}}: An early episode of ''WesternAnimation/DungeonsAndDragons'' had the group fight a [[EldritchAbomination Beholder]]. The problem is, it's defeated by being near a flower! Even if Beholders hate beauty (a fact I've never read in any Monster Manual), there's no way something as simple as a basic flower would ever kill one.
* Tropers/kablammin45: I have a bone to pick with two of the ''Inspector'' shorts, but since I can only put one, I'm going to have to go with the short with the shopping cart. First off, it doesn't even feel like an Inspector short, no action, not enough comedy, just... [[BuffySpeak not-Inspectorish]], the plot seems more like it would be more fit for the Pink Panther. It starts with the Inspector going home from the store, borrowing a shopping cart... and the {{Narrator}} manages to convince him that he has [[FelonyMisdemeanor committed an abominable offense and is now a criminal]]. Sure, the Inspector isn't that bright, but he's not that [[TooDumbToLive stupid]].[[note]] not to mention that people who live right across the street from a Wal-Mart can do that with little repercussions[[/note]] And later the Inspector activates a security system when he finally decides to [[JustEatGilligan just return the cart]], and instantly the police come shoot at him without question and the short ends with the Inspector on the run with guns firing. Ummm, they just assumed that the Inspector would just do that? That's something you'd see in, yes, a Pink Panther cartoon where [[DiabolusExMachina Diabolus Ex Machinas]] are common. The short was really poorly done, and used before.
* Tropers/{{Spinosegnosaurus77}}: I love ''WesternAnimation/DinosaurTrain'', I really do, but "Dinosaur Camouflage" [[BrokenAesop broke an Aesop]] (birds being dinosaurs) that's enforced in essentially every other episode of the series. ''DT'' is usually a pretty solid, composed kids' show; what went wrong here?
* fluffything:''WesternAnimation/KungFuPandaLegendsOfAwesomeness'': I find the episode in which Po has to rely on the help of some elderly former kung-fu masters to be poorly handled. The episode in-and-of itself is quite good, and I really enjoyed the whole sequence with the various magical helmets. But the moral of [[AnAesop "don't judge a book by its cover"]] and [[CoolOldGuy "old people can do amazing things too."]] is pretty much [[BrokenAesop busted by one simple observation:]] Po's reasoning for not wanting the elderly kung-fu fighters to help is that he was afraid they'd get hurt due to their old age, which is actually a rather valid argument. Yes, he did point out that he believed they weren't as "awesome" as they were in their prime, but his main concern was their well-being. Yet, the episode treats it like he was being disrespectful. Why?
** SamMax: I never paid too much attention to the show, the episode "Mind Over Manners" made sure I won't watch it much, if at all. Basically, Po suddenly gets mind reading powers. He is warned that that he could go insane from them. He ignores this, but then, as time goes on, he really does start to go mad from them. The Furious Five witness this, and they head back to the training grounds. You would think they'd try to calm him down, right? If you said yes, then you're not the writer of this episode, since instead, they start thinking thoughts solely to aggravate him further. Shifu tells them to stop, but Po's ran away by then. [[DudeNotFunny This wasn't funny]], and made the Furious Five come off as {{Jerkass}}es. To make matters worse, [[KarmaHoudini they don't receive punishment for this]], nor even a WhatTheHellHero moment, giving me a nagging feeling that [[DesignatedHero we're supposed to agree with this act]]. WithFriendsLikeThese, I wonder why Po even hangs around them.
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/TUFFPuppy'': The episode where Professor Birdbrain discovers a parallel dimension where Booby Birds rule and live in paradise and wants to go there to have the biggest YankTheDogsChain I've ever seen. Long story short, Birdbrain kidnapps a monkey boy band (don't ask) and wants to use their singing powers to open a portal to the other dimension. Ok, apart from the kidnapping, his plans aren't really that evil. But, the DMOS comes in when Keswick reveals that traveling from one dimension to another causes the former dimension to be destroyed. I'm sorry... What? So, rather than just allowing Birdbrain to finally [[EarnYourHappyEnding be able to find happiness and fly (his main goal)]], they have to throw in this utterly ridiculous twist? Again, apart from the kidnapping, Birdbrain's plans were not evil. He just wanted to go somewhere where he could fit in.
* Tropers/PyroWildcat: In ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManUnlimited'', the end of "One is the Loneliest Number", when Dr. Yamato-Jones chews out Spider-Man for destroying her clinic. She had dealt with Spider-Man on numerous occasions (including several in which Spidey saved the lives of both her and her son), and has been shown be okay with him. Which means that she should have had no reason to blatantly ignore the fact that the incident started by Carnage attacking the clinic, and he and Venom were obviously the ones who did all the damage while Spider-Man was trying to fight them off, especially since she's been shown to be [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure a more reasonable character than that]]. This was blatantly another poorly shoehorned-in "SpiderMan will never be anything but a FailureHero" moment.
* Tropers/DangerArtistNexus60: The episode [[WesternAnimation/YinYangYo Yin Yang Who?]] had been bugging me for a long time for good reasons that got me into writing fanfics like [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/5626292/1 Re: Yin Yang Who? or Yin Yang Yo! Forever]] for example:
## [[AdultsAreUseless The idiocy of the parents.]] Though justifiable due to short notice of [[UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist Yin and Yang's]] rushed training against Eradicus and the experience their children had with the rabbits in the past sixty four episodes their response still made me feel like it was borderline unrealistic with emphasis on the 'un' prefix; I mean, look at Lena's father: he threatened to ground her even as he was being held in the swinging grasp of that HumongousMecha instead of gasping for air.
## [[LukeIAmYourFather Master Yo being the father]] of these twin rabbits. [[FridgeBrilliance While I've remembered about genetics]] how does that explain his characteristics as a father?! It's mostly unjustifiable despite his mentors [[LaserGuidedAmnesia wiping his memories about them altogether]] for good reason.
## The fact that it was the SeriesFinale! There were so many plot holes and new villains being churned out in a mere instant it was just downright uncalled for, [[ThisIsUnforgivable not to mention the lies that followed afterwards on Wikipedia.]] No new episodes yet [[SarcasmMode (Thanks, Michael Eisner)]].
* Tropers/MadMan400096: For an atrocious episode of a classic series, there's "Hero Hamton" of ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'', which I have to say is the worst episode of the entire series. Between the atrocious animation by Encore Cartoons, the thin cliche premise that stretches itself way too long, Plucky Duck being somewhat of a bigger [[{{Jerkass}} douche]] than usual (not that he accomplished anything major), and absolutely none of the gags coming anywhere close to funny, I'm shocked this pile of [[StealthPun pig]]shit ever got greenlit.
** taylorkerekes: Presumably even worse than [[EnsembleDarkhorse Fifi LaFume]]'s [[DownerEnding fate in "Out of Odor"]], in the Spring Break Special, [[WhatTheHellHero Plucky is minding his own business and just tries to get a girl to like him. Buster and Babs are running from Elmyra and... just as he's about to get his girl, the bunnies use him as bait. This was not because Plucky did anything wrong, aside trying to sell a bad product which I don't really think was his fault to begin with, but rather because he was unfortunate enough to be there. After it happens, they don't show regret or even pretend it didn't just happen... instead they make jokes about it! How are we supposed to root for these guys anymore?! A good number of fans of this show, including myself, have lost all sympathy for the two stars of the show after seeing that scene.]] The only uplifting part is [[PetTheDog Hamton getting the girl in the end.]] Even that is really up to you to be happy or sad about.
* Tropers/CyberTiger88: I'm a fan of ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'' but the ending of the episode "Changing of the Guard" is flat-out painful to sit through. The episode has Rattrap and Silverbolt go retrieve [[McGuffin the Sentinel program]] from their ship while dealing with Inferno, and Depth Charge battles with his arch-foe Rampage. It eventully leads up to Depth Charge crashing into Silverbolt who has the module, leading to Inferno grabbing it, making the Maximals lose. This show is no stranger to TheBadGuyWins trope, but that's because of [[MagnificentBastard Megatron's]] planing. In this episode, the Maximals lost because of a bone-headed collision that would make ''Film/TheThreeStooges'' proud. If the writers wanted the audience to like Depth Charge as a badass loner despite his {{jerkass}}-tendencies, they shouldn't have made him cost the good guys an episode's worth of effort and cause a flat out cop-out.
* fluffything:''Series/OffTheAir'': I found the "Body" episode to be nothing but a huge disappointment feeling it was more along the lines of their usual immature humor than the brilliant series I've come to know and love. However, if I had to pick the absolute worst moment from the worst episode (of an, again, otherwise great series), it would have to be the "Hot Dog Stand" segment. Long story short, it involves a hot dog becoming sentient and saving his fellow hot dogs while brutally murdering the vendor and selling his body parts as food. Just... what? Ok, I know ''WesternAnimation/OffTheAir'' can be [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs on the completely insane side of things]] at times, but this was just terrible. I expect something like this from an episode of ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' (a latter-season episode of the show, to be specific), not from a brilliant series like this.
* ''WesternAnimation/DragonsRidersOfBerk'':
** fluffything: The 2013 season finale has one of the most annoying, pointless, utterly [[YankTheDogsChain yank the audience's chain]] twists I have ever seen. For over a week, Creator/CartoonNetwork kept showing us advertisements on Hiccup finding out hints of an island full of Night Furies. So, what happens? [[spoiler:It turns out the whole thing was a fake and was a trap set by Alvin and Mildew.]] Seriously, just fuckin' seriously? Why use a major plot element regarding one of the main characters of the series just for a bloody cop-out involving two re-occuring villains that have worn out their welcome already? I looked forward to this episode hoping I'd see more Night Furies (or at least a big reveal as to what happened to them). Not the cliched [[MemeticMutation "It's a trap!"]] scenario that we've seen a thousand times before.
** [=Julia1984=]: The romantic B-plot of "To Heather or Not To Heather." Heather briefly mentioning Fishlegs is her type last season was amusing because of the irony (Hiccup also fits the description she gives perfectly, which neither girl comments on), but the two of them actually being attracted to each other seemed completely random, forced, and awkward to watch. And, yes, half of that is due to the beautiful, natural chemistry Heather had with Astrid in all her previous appearances and the conspicuous scene in her premiere two-parter where she hugs Astrid good-bye and completely ignores Hiccup's attempt to get the same. No, this isn't ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'', but the way the show portrays Dagur's feelings for Hiccup, the plot of "Big Man on Berk," and how [=DreamWorks=] loved boasting about that "one other reason" line from the second film made it easy to believe Heather's door doesn't swing that way, and the writers were aware of and okay with that. The series must be ''really'' out of touch with its fanbase to think ''this'' is the turn fans who loved the interaction between Heather and Astrid or consider Hiccup, Astrid, and Heather their OT3 would want to see Heather's love life take.
* PieQueen: I thought ''WesternAnimation/TheGarfieldShow'' was a pretty decent show (it's no ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends'' but it's still an okay show), but one episode really rubbed me the wrong way: "King Nermal". In this awful episode, Nermal is staying at Garfield's house much to Garfield and Odie's displeasure. He pretty much annoys the living daylights out of the two to the point that Garfield had it and threw him out the pet door. After that, Nermal "breaks his leg" and Jon blames Garfield and Odie for being mean to Nermal. As punishment, they have treat the kitten like royalty by doing whatever the hell Nermal tells them to do. Late on we find out that Nermal was [[WoundedGazelleGambit faking his injury this whole time]] when we see him walking with the cast on. Garfield tries to get Jon to turn around to see that he's faking it, but every time Jon turns around Nermal gives him a [[DeliberatelyCuteChild cute innocent look on his face]], so Jon is not the least bit convinced. To make matters worse, there was a part where Nermal's bandages come off, and Jon thinks that [[WhatAnIdiot Nermal healed quickly]]. [[FlatWhat What?]] Garfield finally had it and decided to take matters to his own hands. Unfortunately Garfield and Odie fall down the stairs and injure themselves. Now they have full body casts. After all that mess [[KarmaHoudini Nermal gets away with every bad thing he did]] and poor Garfield and Odie suffer in one of the worst {{Downer Ending}}s in the whole show. This episode was awful. What were they thinking when they wrote this episode. The sad thing is that Nermal was actually my favorite character in the comic strips and in ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends''. Why did this show had to make Nermal so [[TookALevelInJerkass much of a dick]]? Why? He was actually likable in the other cartoon, so he had to be [[CharacterDerailment derailed this badly]]? Turning him to this much of a {{jerkass}} was why I didn't enjoy this show as much as older one. Seriously, they should have kept Nermal's personality from the older cartoon.
** heartauthor: I grew up watching the animated {{WesternAnimation/Garfield Specials}}, so they all hold a special place in my heart. However, one scene in ''Garfield on the Town'' just rubs me the wrong way no matter how I try to think of it. Basically, after Garfield [[ItMakesSenseInContext goes missing on the way to a visit to the vet]], Jon decides to call Liz at the pet hospital. In this scene, not once does Jon act [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness how he usually acts around Liz]]; he doesn't even ask her for a date once. Instead, he simply tells her that Garfield is missing, and expresses concern that he might get "hit by a car or something." Liz's response? To say in an annoyed tone "Well, in that case, you don't want a pet hospital. [[DudeNotFunny You want a tow truck!]]" and slam her phone down, ending the conversation right then and there. So, in other words, Liz (a ''veterinarian'', mind you) just told a concerned pet owner that [[UnintentionallyUnsympathetic she didn't give a crap that his pet was missing and potentially injured]]. ''Wow.'' Thank goodness the rest of the special is a {{Crowning Moment Of Heartwarming}}; otherwise that one scene might have ruined the whole thing.
* Halfstep: ''Iron Man: Extremis'' goes hurtling off into stupidity in episode 2, which is basically an anvilicious speech given by AuthorAvatar Sal, who was a former professor of Tony Stark's and [[TheManBehindTheMan Maya's]] (ItMakesSenseInContext... the previous pothole, not the speech). Obviously, this speech is aimed at people in the real world. The problem with it is that it is extremely contradictory, overgeneralizing, and doesn't apply to the two characters at all, save for a bit of foreshadowing that could have been done by Maya herself at a bar. The problem with the speech is this: Sal posits that Stark and Maya are basically working for the military industrial complex, that nothing they've done has been really useful, that Stark is wasting his time and money doing what he is doing, and that Maya is being held down because she's a woman, and if she had the resources Stark had, she'd be doing far better. About the only part of the entire speech that has any validity is that they are working for the MIC, regardless of what they would like to believe. That said, the whole thing kind of derails when Sal starts saying how useless the Iron Man suit is, and how much more Maya could get done if she had Stark's resources. First off, not knocking cancer in the slightest, but in the Marvel Universe, Fin Fang Foom, Dr. Doom, and Galactus are real and present dangers, that kill or enslave quite a few people on a regular basis. These are not entities that the police or the army are equipped to handle. At all. Saying that the Iron Man suit is only good for beating these people up therefore, isn't as much of an insult or even rebuke as Sal intended: these are entities that need to be beaten up by Iron Man and whoever else, and it's kinda hard to say that their world would be a better place without Iron Man, seeing how there's a planetary invasion or mutant revolt or inter-dimensional cosmic horror attack every six months with Iron Man there and doing his level best to prevent such. In real life terms, it would be like knocking someone for failing to cure cancer, but reducing diabetes, heart disease, and auto accident deaths by 50%. As for Maya being better off if she had Tony's resources: the reason this doesn't work is because of in-universe ignorance that Sal has, that the readers do not: namely, we know that in most every version of Iron Man, Tony Stark is kidnapped by some foreign combatants, after being gravely wounded, and is forced to make weapons for said combatants with anything from spare parts lying around to pieces of his own weapons. Stark then uses said pieces to create a war suit that saves his own life and allows him to escape his captors. Iron Man is about as self made as you can get: if Maya hasn't done anything comparable, it can hardly be said that it is because anyone is "holding her back". Furthermore, why would Sal even want to see such a thing: he just got done mocking Maya earlier for "poking biological molecular constructs until they give up and do what she wants" (paraphrased). Wouldn't curing cancer just be doing the same thing? What's the difference between poking around for the MIC, and curing diabetes, hepatitis, and that weird disease that strikes 300 people in the world, and curing cancer? Is curing a disease shameful unless it has a name value to it? Really, the whole speech was bad and unnecessary, the whole thing boiled down to "you're a bunch of idiots, why have you not followed the path I the wise shaman have laid out for you", by trivializing all of the good that both of them had done, and oversimplifying a bunch of actions and motives into some pop-cultural mumbo jumbo that really didn't apply.
* Animeking1108: ''WesternAnimation/CodeMonkeys'', I admit, was too good to last. However, I always skip the episode with Todd's brother because of a really painful scene. Todd's brother reveals to Dave that the reason Todd [[CloudCuckoolander acts the way he does]] is because he has Asperger's Syndrome. That alone can be considered UnfortunateImplications, but then Dave precedes to insult Todd because of that. As someone with Asperger's, I tell Adam De La Pena to go fuck himself.
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow''. Good lords was the episode "The DMV" where Daffy, Lola, and Porky have to go to the DMV to get their driver's licenses an absolute mess. I couldn't even sit through the whole thing. That's how bad it was. Why? Let me count the ways. First, every character is holding the IdiotBall. I can understand Lola not knowing what a driver's licence is since she's [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} a bit dim-witted and crazy]] but Daffy? The guy makes a habit out of using fake names all the time! You'd think he'd have a fake licence or two lying around. Second, they use the [[PunctuatedForEmphasis exact. Same. Jokes. Within. The. Same. Ten. Minutes.]] The most prominent being characters not knowing what a driver's licence is and them switching their tests with Porky's resulting in him failing. There's lazy writing, and then there's just using copy-n-paste on a computer and switching a few names around to fill a half-hour series. For the love of Mel Blanc, I expect this kind of sloppy work from a latter-season episode of ''WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants'' or ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'', not from this otherwise fun series.
* Tropers/CabbitGirlEmi: Apparently, TheMysteriousMrEnter plans to take down ''WesternAnimation/SethMacFarlanesCavalcadeOfCartoonComedy'', so in advance, I watched about 50 minutes worth of skits to see how bad they could be, and wow... While skits such as "Cat Staff Meeting" were funny, others, ESPECIALLY "Creator/QuentinTarantino Performs a Circumcision" were just awful. This specific skit involves Tarantino at a bris, using a katana to circumcise a baby. As this happens, blood flies everywhere as the baby wails. Very, very thankfully, the baby is fine (somehow), at the cost of me left horrified by this. The moment the baby starts crying, I couldn't help but cringe. I know about Tarantino's reputation for CrossingTheLineTwice at times, but there are some boundaries that you shouldn't cross!
* Tropers/{{Treb}}: Now, I am an absolutely huge fan of ''WesternAnimation/MoralOrel''. Its clever writing, endearing characters and hidden depth are just a few of the show's qualities... qualities which are completely absent from the more recent TV Special "Beforel Orel". First of all, [[TheOtherDarrin Ms. Censordoll has a VERY different voice than that of the series and it feels out of place]], and [[OffModel the animation seems to have lost a lot of the fluidity of the original series, looking a lot more stiff.]] Beyond just the technical problems though, is the writing here seems as though it were written by someone who had never seen the series before. Too much of the humor is focused on attacking Christianity (rather than the series's focus on character building, and affectionate parodying of Christianity and 50s culture in general) not unlike more recent episodes of ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy''. One scene in particular that is the biggest DMOS for me is the one where [[spoiler:Ms. Censordoll tries to scare Orel into Christianity, and Reverend Putty gets legitimately scared as a result.]] This is a CharacterDerailment for the [[spoiler:reverend,]] who was one of the most reasonable and rational people in Moralton.
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/ScaredySquirrel'': The episode involving the robot vacuum had one of the most blatant, idiotic, and utterly god-awful examples of KarmaHoudini I've ever seen. Basically, the episode involves Scaredy purchasing a robot vacuum from a crocodile salesman (No, he's not a villain, surprisingly) and absolutely adoring it. This causes Dave to become jealous (Despite Dave knowing Scaredy is [[SuperOCD obsessed with cleaning and organization]]) and spills his drink onto the vacuum. This causes the vacuum to go berserk and summon an army of robot vacuums to terrorize the city. Let's review exactly who is at fault here in the episode. Absolutely none of the problems that occurred would've happened had it not been for Dave. And, what sort of punishment does Dave get for not only causing the vacuum to break but for breaking his best friend's prized possession? Absolutely nothing! That's right. Not once is Dave even called-out for his actions in the episode. He gets away with his actions. Scaredy, erm, maybe you should find friends who don't blatantly break your possessions and cause a city-wide disaster!
* XSpectreGreyX: ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Unlimited'', "Divided We Fall", an otherwise epic episode of an epic show has one. The conference the Justice League holds after the battle with Brainiac, specifically, Green Arrow's otherwise Crowning SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome, calling out the Justice League. He specifically addresses the Justice League the whole time, but he ends by specifically saying that the Justice League needs Superman... um, what's everyone else, [[MyFriendsAndZoidberg chopped liver?]] Flash is the guy who beat Brainiac and is the morality pet. Batman is the one who indirectly stopped Brainiac downloading himself into a new body by being the guy who didn't turn himself in. If anything, he just showed how he was different from the rest of them. Because Supes didn't kill Lex? Yeah, but neither did anyone else. In fact, Superman was the only one to attempt it at all. I don't hate Superman, but that one line could've easily addressed the entire League and it wouldn't have lost anything other than the unnecessary focus on Superman. Also, afterwards, the line "who guards the guardians", Green Arrow's interpretation of the Latin phrase Batman says... to guard is to protect, is it not? So he basically said that he's the one who will protect the original seven... But the meaning, in this case at least, was definitely supposed to be 'who watches the watchmen', as a reference to Green Arrow's role as being the MoralityPet for the Justice League. Apparently, this is the more literal translation of the phrase, but anyone who doesn't know that will just be confused on the moral of the thing. Why did they not just say 'watchmen'? Could you not risk that reference? Would it be so bad to just speak the damn word? While it is a less accurate translation, in modern English it makes more sense. But no, let's instead go for awkward in an already awkward scene, thanks to the aforementioned Superman focus.
** Troper/Silverblade2: "Epilogue": [[{{Asspull}} the reveal]] that Terry Mcginnis is [[spoiler: sort of a clone of Bruce Wayne that Amanda Waller created in a ridiculously complex plan]] which more or less was intended to explain why he has black hair despite having both parents brown haired. Yes this would be awful as a fanfiction yet it is 100% canon. Putting aside the huge amount of FridgeLogic or the fact that [[spoiler: Terry doesn't react when Amanda Waller reveals she planned to kill his parents]], what makes me dislike the revelation is the fact that it [[BrokenAesop underwhelms]] the premise of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'' where Terry had to work hard to be worthy of Batman's legacy [[spoiler: but no, crap, he was always destined to be Batman]].
* CaptainLhurgoyf: Now, let me make one thing perfectly clear. I love ''Webcomic/AxeCop'', I love [[WesternAnimation/AxeCop the animated series]], and it really pains me to add it to the list, but there's no excuse for having the (male) bank robbers in "Zombie Island in Space" wear shirts that say "I <3 Men" on them. Even putting aside the UnfortunateImplications of making all the robbers gay, it was a pointless joke that didn't fit the tone of the show at all and had no reason to be in there, and I also found it very inappropriate to insert a crass homophobic joke into a show based on a story written by a child. The rest of the show displays a great sense of humour that fits the wacky-yet-innocuous feel of the comics perfectly, so why sink this low?
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/SkunkFu'': My DMOS is how [[ADogNamedDog Dragon]] (the main antagonist) [[StartOfDarkness turned evil in the first place.]] See, sometime prior to the start of the series, Dragon was good. The Heavens decide to test Dragon's loyalty by causing a drought in the valley. Dragon asks if he can use his water powers to save the valley, and the heavens respond by saying nothing. Here's where it starts to get stupid. The Heavens then punish Dragon because he decided to use his water powers to stop the drought. They then accuse Dragon of being arrogant and remove his water powers causing him to be in constant, burning pain from his fire powers. Ok, even if Dragon was acting cocky about saving everyone, he still used his powers for good. That doesn't exactly warrant a punishment for disobedience. Plus, Dragon didn't know he wasn't supposed to use his powers. It seems rather unfair to punish something if they don't know what they did wrong. Oh, but it gets even worse. How? Well, it's then stated that The Heavens knew that Dragon was going to turn evil and swear vengeance on the valley. So they punish him for trying to save the valley effectively causing him to turn evil and want revenge on everyone that lives there? What? This isn't YouCantFightFate. This is more like "Too lazy to change fate". And not once did The Heavens or any of the animals in the valley (including Dragon's best friend, Panda) even consider trying to prevent Dragon from turning evil? There was nothing stopping them from turning Dragon mortal or giving him amnesia. Heck, if The Heavens feared Dragon was going to be such a threat, why not just kill him? Oh, and to make matters even worse, not once do any of the animals in the village ever stand up for Dragon. Not once do they try to reason with The Heavens or try to justify his actions. WithFriendsLikeThese is it any wonder he wants revenge?
* RAZ: Most people feel that ''[[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003 Ninja Turtles 2k3]]'' fell apart during the Fast Forward or Back to the Sewers seasons, or in a few cases right before that with the Ninja Tribunal. I have to disagree: the show started losing steam as early as when Bishop was introduced. But I'm not here to argue about SeasonalRot, and as much as I hate Bishop, his introduction isn't the real DMOS for me. No, the moment that ruined the show forever for me was the giant slap in the face that was Exodus. At the very end the Turtles prepare a huge HeroicSacrifice ready to stop the Shredder. It's a real dramatic, borderline {{Tearjerker}} moment, and it gets utterly ruined thanks to the sudden copout rescue of Utroms borderline on DeusExMachina levels. Everything turns out a-okay, the worst being that Leo gets a minor scar and some resulting {{Wangst}} to go with it for a couple episodes afterward before that's dropped too. It's especially insulting considering that previously the season had greatly foreshadowed that the Turtles would likely have to make some sort of great sacrifice to ultimately stop the Shredder for good, which is also a huge load of bull since he did in fact come back (meaning it was also a huge case of LyingCreator since everyone said he'd be gone for good after this). So I hope you take the lesson to heart kids: [[SarcasmMode if things aren't going your way, some sort of huge out-of-nowhere save will come in and make everything just fine at the very last second]]!
** Tropers/TheLemsterPju: Viral is a villain that appears to be slowly growing in popularity, in spite of her limited screen time. So when she [[BackFromTheDead came back from the dead]] in the Back to the Sewer season, the writers had the chance to finally break the mold of having a Shredder-related antagonist each in season, and could have opened up some possiblities for having the first major female adversary for the turtles to not be associated with the Foot Clan. But nope, [[spoiler: Viral dies]] in favor of introducing yet another Shredder as the central villain for the entire season. Wasted potential for such a unique character, replaced by basically a male version of her.
* Tropers/AustinDR: I like the show ''WesternAnimation/WordGirl'', however, I'm often bewildered by the town's stupidity. For this list, however, the one moment from the show that really irked me was the episode "Victoria is the best... [=WordGirl=]"? After Becky/[=WordGirl=] successfully defeated another villain, our news reporter Scoops sees [=WordGirl=] going around the corner and Victoria Best walks out of the direction Word Girl went thus making Scoops implicate that Victoria was Word Girl. [[{{Beat}} *Face palm*]]. Okay, first off, Word Girl has dark skin, doesn't wear her hair in matching ponytails, and her face is pretty much exposed to viewing. How can Scoops [[WhatAnIdiot possibly think that Victoria was Word Girl with these facts]]? It seemed like they just made the characters [[CharacterDerailment even dumber]] for this episode to work. This is possibly the one episode I won't see again anytime soon.
** Tropers/SpaceBird: That wasn't the first time, either. Almost every episode that Granny May appears in, she manages to charm the townspeople into turning against [=WordGirl=], despite being one of the most notorious villains that went to jail several times. You would've thought that the townspeople would've gained some knowledge of her deception after each episode, but nope, she keeps on manipulating them even without Mr. Big's use of mind control! What's worse about this is that each time it happens, everyone starts showing [=WordGirl=] extremely hostile behavior and threaten to run her out of town! Although Granny's the main villain who manages to turn everyone against [=WordGirl=] most of the time, the Butcher once managed to do so just by saying that his bootleg artwork is real and that [=WordGirl=]'s just trying to lie to everyone, and even with that lame excuse they believed him and threatened to arrest [=WordGirl=] if she interrupted his next auction. WhatTheHellTownspeople
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: I didn't like ''Disney/{{Tangled}}'', and the climax is a main reason for that. [[spoiler: Basically, Gothel has Rapunzel BoundAndGagged]] [[labelnote:(wtf?)]][[FridgeLogic How the hell did an old woman overpower the young and competent Rapunzel anyway]]? Rapunzel confronting Gothel instead of sneaking away to the kingdom was pretty dumb too.[[/labelnote]] [[spoiler: and has stabbed Eugene]] [[labelnote:(what?!)]]You'd think he'd watch his back considering that he got whacked with a FryingPanOfDoom the first time he tried to enter the tower and Rapunzel didn't answer when he told her to let down her hair (an obvious sign that something is very wrong), but nope.[[/labelnote]]. [[spoiler:Rapunzel tells about how she'll [[{{Determinator}} never stop fighting Gothel]],]] which is [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome awesome]]... until [[spoiler:she promises to [[FateWorseThanDeath stay with Gothel forever]] if she's allowed to heal Eugene.]] It's clearly supposed to be [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments heartwarming]] when she [[spoiler:gives up her freedom for the man she loves,]] but it [[StupidSacrifice falls apart]] if you try to think about it for more than two seconds. Gothel has shown repeatedly that she doesn't give a damn about anyone but herself, and there's no reason whatsoever to believe that she'll [[HeelFaceTurn change her ways]]. If anything, [[spoiler:killing Eugene and blaming Rapunzel for it]] pushes her over the MoralEventHorizon if you don't think she has crossed it already. She has demonstrated that she's a liar and a [[spoiler:murderer]], which means that [[spoiler:attempting to negotiate with her]] is [[WhatAnIdiot very idiotic]]. Thus, Gothel will probably just [[spoiler:go back and kill Eugene later]], rendering [[spoiler:Rapunzel's sacrifice]] worthless. It's made even worse by the fact that Rapunzel [[spoiler:can never escape because she's [[IGaveMyWord irrationally committed to her promises]], [[SkewedPriorities even though keeping that one will ruin her life without accomplishing anything except for prolonging the life of an abuser that doesn't deserve to live. Plus, staying with Gothel means ignoring her duties as a princess and making sure that her parents will never see their daughter again.]] Very irresponsible.]] Why the hell is this supposed to show a positive quality and not a FatalFlaw? Even if we assume that Gothel [[spoiler:is too lazy to go back and kill Eugene, it's heavily implied that she'll leave him chained up in the tower. Which means that he'll be stuck there and die of dehydration in a few painful days/weeks anyway, considering that a rescue is extremely unlikely.]][[labelnote:why?]]The only ones who wouldn't want to kill Eugene are Maximus and the mimes, and I doubt that they'll even be able to enter the tower. Even if they somehow do that, they won't be able to unchain him.[[/labelnote]] This also takes away the selflessness of [[spoiler:Eugene's "HeroicSacrifice" [[labelnote:explanation]]cutting Rapunzel's hair to prevent her from healing him[[/labelnote]]. If he would otherwise spend his last days/weeks being tormented to death by dehydration and starvation (or waiting for Gothel to come back and kill him), why not save himself this drawn-out suffering and let his wound kill him?]] This action is kind of stupid as well because if [[spoiler:he cuts Rapunzel's hair, nothing is left to prevent Gothel from killing her. It's probably a better fate than having to stay with Gothel forever, and Rapunzel kind of asked for it by being stupid enough to make a promise when she could have suggested the deal to Gothel without promising anything, but still.]] Neither he [[DeusExMachina nor the audience]][[note]]To be fair, there's a scene in the opening where Gothel cuts some of Rapunzel's hair while touching it and ages a little as a result of it. It's hardly noticeable, especially the first time, and it might as well have been just something Gothel imagined as she believed the flower's healing powers would never be hers again. Gothel aging rapidly when Eugene cuts the hair while she's touching it still makes as much sense as saving yourself from a snakebite by killing the snake that bit you. Touching the snake as it's killed may or may not be necessary.[[/note]] had any way of predicting [[spoiler:the NoImmortalInertia that kills Gothel almost immediately after the cutting of the hair. After that, Eugene dies, Rapunzel whines a little[[note]]Yes, she has a legitimate reason to be sad. I just put it that way to emphasize that she has screwed up royally and gets a solution for free; i.e. she doesn't have to work for it or anything.[[/note]], then another DeusExMachina revives him.]]\\
\\
To sum it up: The writers use contrived stupidity to put the main characters into a nearly impossible situation. Instead of at least letting them use their skills to get out themselves, Rapunzel's contrived horrible decision makes the situation worse.[[labelnote:avoidable problem]]We know that Rapunzel is capable of LoopholeAbuse, so she could've formulated the promise slightly differently, pretended to go to heal Eugene, then suddenly attack Gothel and say something like "I said we'd be together forever, but not that you'd be alive!" or even "I said you could stay with me forever, but not where. You're going to the kingdom with me when this is over.". Once Gothel is knocked out, Rapunzel heals Eugene, frees him and they live happily ever after, with or without Gothel.[[/labelnote]] Then a decision that is the least of two evils[[note]]which would result in two deaths instead of a death and a FateWorseThanDeath[[/note]] for both characters is for some reason portrayed as heroic. Then the writers DeusExMachina the characters out of it to force a happy ending.
** cheedo: Personally, I hated the emotional manipulation of Tangled. So Rapunzel is a very sweet girl who truly believes deceiving Gothel and sneaking out is morally wrong. Her decision? "I am going to see those lanterns!" She isn't sneaking out to get away from Gothel's teasing and using her; it's the equivalent to a teenager being told they can't go to a party and sneaking out to go anyway. What Rapunzel wants is more important than following her own moral compass. Great lesson for kids there, Disney. On top of that, seeing the lanterns isn't even particularly important or life-changing at all.
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: The documentary series ''WesternAnimation/MarchOfTheDinosaurs'' had a dethroner in the form of the... monstrosities they claim are [[PteroSoarer "Quetzalcoatlus"]], shown [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwmavdUXyUc here, at the 9:05 mark]]. For a list of how awful they are *deep breath*... they're scaly and lacking pycnofibers, their wings are pointy and look just a bit too short, they are scavengers (something that would have been forgivable if it weren't made in 2011), they are bipedal and lack their small wing fingers and are just [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking super ugly]]. As a paleonut and a pterosaur fan, I can't really forgive all of these blatant examples of CriticalResearchFailure. Keep in mind, this is supposed to be a documentary that is educational, but with the [[InNameOnly "Quetzalcoatlus"]], at least, it's clear that they didn't even try.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: ''WesternAnimation/{{Brave}}'' was pretty good, but for some reason, Creator/{{Pixar}} decided to ruin [[spoiler:the heartwarming scene where Elinor and the triplets are changed back to their human selves]] with embarrassing and juvenile NakedPeopleAreFunny jokes.
** cheedo: On top of that- I loved the fact that it portrayed a rare realistic relationship between a mother and daughter, but I really disliked that only Elinor was presented as wrong for burning Merida's bow- something she does AFTER Merida, in a rage, rips the tapestry Elinor had been working hard on. A bow can be replaced but that tapestry will have to be made over. And Merida isn't presented as equally wrong for doing it as Elinor is for her action.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: While I love most of Disney's output, one scene in ''Disney/TheAristocats'' drives me absolutely nuts -- the scene with the goose sisters. They're meant to be comic relief but come across as irritating, pushy, and [[UnwantedAssistance doing more to hinder O'Malley than actually help him]] -- even almost killing him at one point with their interference! They seem added only to pad out the story, and end up having little to no effect on the plot -- the cats could have found their way out of the river and to Paris without their "help."
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: Another Disney one -- this time ''Disney/{{Zootopia}}''. During the scene where people tell Judy off for giving them parking tickets, a child tells her "My mommy says she wishes you were dead." When is it ever okay to say this to a police officer who is just doing their job, even if it's one that mildly inconveniences you? Maybe I'm just suffering from HarsherInHindsight given the horrific shootings of police officers that have taken place this year (2016), but wishing death upon an officer for simply upholding the law is inexcusable, even as a throwaway line in a movie.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: Even though ''[[Disney/TheEmperorsNewGroove Kronk's New Groove]]'' wasn't as good as the first film, I didn't find it bad at all. The one moment I hate is when the naked Rudy busts into Kronk's house and asks for more of [[SnakeOilSalesman Yzma's youth potion]]. I understand that Creator/{{Disney}} wanted to show that Rudy is badly addicted to the stuff, but having him selling his clothes and making the scene FanDisservice was unnecessary and {{squick}}y. It also demeans Rudy as a character. Why couldn't Creator/{{Disney}} at least have made him "borrow" a carpet (or something like that) and wrap it around himself? That would have kept some of his dignity and wouldn't have interfered with anything else in the film.
* RAZ: While ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'' has been a childhood favorite of mine and still holds up surprisingly well decades later, I've found myself having trouble watching "New Gizmo Kids on the Block", mainly because it flat out throws Webby's MarySue status into the viewer's face. Huey, Dewey, and Louie all get to hold the IdiotBall and are reduced to petty, squabbling morons who can't work together all so Webby can be "Little Miss Perfect" and save the day like usual. What's really insulting though is how Fenton is treated: Previous episodes in the series cemented him as both a CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass who despite some of his eccentricities and [[IronButtMonkey the general abuse he receives]] could also be extremely competent even without using his Gizmo-Duck suit. Here, he's portrayed as being completely helpless and of no use to anyone as long as he doesn't have his suit. So that's four characters derailed all to make Webby look good.
* {{Tropers/Woddor}}: I think ''WesternAnimation/CampLazlo'' is one of the better shows to come out of CN's DorkAge in the mid 2000s, but one episode that I will never defend is "Meatman". This was an episode that deliberately wanted the viewers to have nightmares. Lazlo and friends annoy the chef, so his response is to [[DisproportionateRetribution give them "mystery meat".]] After a few go-nowhere jokes, the meat comes alive, attacks the campers, [[NightmareFuel KILLS Chef McMusely,]] and almost eats Lazlo when it is revealed that the entire thing was a campfire story. Except not, because then Lazlo's nose is made of meat in real life. So kids, your favorite characters are now dead! Happy?
* {{Tropers/TheSnowSquirrel}}: Say what you will about {{WesternAnimation/Loonatics Unleashed}}, but one episode that I just can't stand is "The Cloak of Black Velvet". Why? Because, the story begins with Danger Duck making a deal with Tech E. Coyote that if he can go a week without using any technological gadgets, Tech has to buy him a fancy new costume. If Duck looses, he buys the outfit for Tech. Later on the Villian Of The Week shows up, builds a machine to black out the sun, plus kidnaps and brainwashes none other than [[GadgeteerGenius Tech]] to help her. The rest of the gang show up but no one is able to snap Tech out of his trance. Other than Duck, after he gets the idea [[MostAnnoyingSound to use his cell phone's annoying ringtone.]] At the end of the episode, Tech suddenly shows up in the costume Duck wanted, and smugly says he went ahead and ordered it since he won the bet. Duck tries to explain that he only used his phone to help save Tech, and without him doing so, the world would be doomed. What do Ace and Lexi do? [[KickTheDog Just stand there with smirks and tease him about how he should call Zadavia and tell her, if he can get a good cell signal.]] Look, I would have accepted an ending where everyone thanks Duck, and then Tech walks in in the new costume claiming that even if he saved him, he still lost the bet. But this ending... I get that Duck's a [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold jerk]] and the show's ButtMonkey, but the whole team being [[UngratefulBastard thoroughly Ungrateful Bastards]] to him like that is just over doing it.
** {{Tropers/starofjusticev21}}: As was somewhat hinted above this show had a little problem with ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Ace and Lexi are the leaders of the team and "cool" and "funny," so they were were always right, where as Danger Duck was kind of a jerk and gloryhound, so he was always wrong. The episode of this show I can't forgive is the one where that problem exploded, “It Came From Outer Space.” In it Tech warns his teammates for the umpteen-millionth time that his crime fighting inventions aren’t toys and for the umpteen-millionth time they don’t listen with Rev and Lexi messing with something they think is a video game. It’s actually the controls to some kind of weapon system, and they just launched actual missiles at an actual spaceship. The owner, Melvin the Martian, rather understandably, actually, demands reparation after this unprovoked attack, and eventually agrees not to destroy the world if Lexi agrees to come aboard his ship and be his opponent in two-player games. Ace immediately refuses and says “you want a war, you’ll get one,” even after Tech does an analysis and basically says Melvin is packing enough ordinance to destroy the world ten times over and any attempt to fight him would be suicide. Danger Duck tries to get Ace to change his mind, and I get that he’s supposed to be chickening out and just trying to save his own skin. But consider that the Loonatics are the world’s superhero team who are supposed to save people from danger, not put them in even more danger. Yeah the show’s supposed to be a comedy but 99% of the time the superhero aspect is played totally straight; the Loonatics are treated as deserving every bit of trust and respect they get. I probably wouldn’t bat an eye if the show had gone for more of a ''WesternAnimation/MegasXLR'' vibe where the good guys are comedically incompetent and destructive, but it didn't do that, and we're evidently supposed to see this as them bravely standing by their friend no matter what, instead of facing up to a bad and thoughtless thing they did. I'm not saying Ace should've thrown his teammate and minimally-established love interest to the wolves the first time she made a mistake. But by automatically deciding to fight it out Ace is endangering everyone on the planet he's supposed to be protecting over an extremely idiotic thing his teammates totally did do, and were specifically told not to. Duck isn't the only one being a selfish jerk, but he's the only one acknowledged by the show.
* Tropers/IAmNotBeast: The first episode of ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'', "Teddygozilla". Instead of starting at the beginning, the show just jumps into the middle of the story without any explanation. Why is there a girl trapped in a computer? How can a computer program manipulate reality? How did the main characters find out about Lyoko to begin with? If the main heroes can travel back and forth from the game world, why can't they free the trapped girl using the same device? Who is this "Xana" they keep mentioning? What is Xana's motivation? Why is there a computer world? Why do the characters look different in the computer world? Why did time reset at the end? These are all questions that were running through my head when first viewing "Teddygozilla". I can only imagine how it was received back in 2003 when it premiered. Back then, there was no "Rise of XANA" two-parter, so there was no explanation for any of the things that happen in the first episode. The worst part of "Teddygozilla" was probably the lack of focus on the main characters. Instead, the episode focuses on some random girl with a teddy bear. In the first episode of the whole series. Then at the halfway point, the episode suddenly started putting more focus on what had essentially been background characters.
* Tropers/Ralph180: I removed my DMOS for Zig & Sharko's "Hair Story" because i still watch Zig & Sharko, and i decided to put another one: the "Bride of the Internet" from ''[[WesternAnimation/MonstersVsAliens2013 Monsters vs. Aliens]]''. Now, unlike Zig & Sharko, ''Monsters vs. Aliens'' TV Series is a bad show. It made everyone look uglier (except for General Monger), made Monsters a dysfunctional team of lousy "heroes" who dick around the base, and added three cliched aliens: [[MarySue Sqweep]], [[ObviouslyEvil Coverton]] and [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Sta'abi]], who come off as insecure (Sqweep), lame (Coverton) or outright xenophobic (Sta'abi)! But what really made me quit this failure of a show is this episode. Basically, because of a video [[{{Squick}} involving pickles on Susan's butt]], Sqweep reveals that the Internet is an alien and is Sqweep's former classmate. Internet does erase the video, but he falls in love with Susan and even manages to change the American national anthem to a lame Justin Bieber-esque song that Susan loves. Now, Internet isn't that bad of a character, and is probably the only sympathetic alien character in the show. My problem is about the juvenile internet jokes, the sheer stupidity of the whole Internet being an alien, and the writers think that humans are completely obsessed with Internet, think that if a video doesn't exist, it doesn't exist, and that they love cat jokes. Also, the episode is annoying and the song is just irritating. To think that Dreamworks made this is disgusting, and this show [[WeReStillRelevantDammit thinks it's still relevant.]]
* Tropers/{{Eddy1215}}: Believe it or not, I've got one for ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible''. While a few PostScriptSeason episodes bug me, one that really leaves a bad taste in my mouth is "Stop Team Go". Basically, Shego has been turned good, and Kim is enjoying spending time with her. The problem is that she's preferring to spend time with her over Ron, her boyfriend. Then, to add injury to insult, during the climatic battle with the VillainOfTheWeek, Ron accidentally gets turned evil again, much to Kim's annoyance. Basically, the entire episode episode was to appease Kigo fans, and before you start saying that I'm complaining about my FanPreferredCouple, may I remind you that the pairing in question is suppose to be canon? Think about that.
* SamMax: I wish I had never laid eyes on ''{{WesternAnimation/Brickleberry}}''. I never saw the entire series, but what I've seen of this GrossoutShow makes even ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' look wholesome in comparison. [[DudeNotFunny It's not funny]], and didn't they say [[RefugeInAudacity it was supposed to offend]]? [[GoneHorriblyRight It does that too well for its own good]]. But I can't make entire series entries, so I'll just list [[NeverLiveItDown the moment that defined the show for me]]. There was a golf game between two individuals (whose names I cannot remember), nothing special, but nothing terrible, either. Then comes a scene where there's a homeless person in the golfing area. What does one of the guys do? Spoilered for {{Squick}}: [[spoiler:hit the ball into his mouth, and then he poor sap craps it out. Then one of the golfers eats it, and the other golfer tells him it might not be his ball]]. It was so disgusting I swore never to watch the series again if I could help it. Quite frankly, I question how it made it to TV in the first place.
* WRM5: From ''WesternAnimation/GeneratorRex'', Six's amnesia. So you've got a really awesome character who's been really well developed. He's wise, intelligent, and dedicated. He has a darker side which he put behind him because he knew it was wrong. What do you do with this character? Why, you hit the "Reset" switch on him, of course! Six's amnesia completely erased absolutely everything that made the coolest character on the show cool and is hands-down the worst thing the show ever did.
* JustHereToComment: One of my favorite childhood shows is ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinniethePooh''. However, one moment from the show has always bothered me, from the episode ''The Masked Offender''. In it, Tigger becomes a masked crime-fighting, similar to that of Zorro. However, in typical Tigger fashion, he makes things worse. The worst scene from the episode, and the show, is when Tigger destroys Rabbit's scarecrow, thinking it to be someone trying to attack Rabbit. Rabbit begs for him not to do so, and when Tigger leaves, the crows show up to eat Rabbit's vegetables. Now, this is a RunningGag in the show, Rabbit having to deal with crows, but here, [[UpToEleven seemingly every crow]] in the Hundred-Acre Woods cover the garden and the surrounding land and eat everything in sight, leaving his garden as a barren wasteland [[FridgeHorror that will probably never grow anything again]]. It's just a really [[DudeNotFunny mean-spirited]] KickTheDog moment towards a charcter who [[DesignatedMonkey did absolutely nothing wrong earlier]].
* Troper/MagnusForce: ''WesternAnimation/JimmyTwoShoes'' is a fairly fun show to watch overall, but there is one episode that I absolutely hate: "Heloise Schmeloise". So basically, Heloise creates a robot duplicate of herself. The episode falls apart shortly after that when Jimmy falls in love with the robot. [[NiceGuy Jimmy]] acts completely [[OutOfCharacterMoment out-of-character]] by being a JerkAss to Heloise for no reason and his idiocy is taken UpToEleven [[ObliviousToLove (Not to mention Jimmy is supposed to be uninterested in love)]]. The jokes are 90% [[DudeNotFunny Beezy shouting "Burn!"]] at Heloise while she is at the receiving end of all the harm as well. And to place the expired milk on top of the steaming crap, Jimmy is never punished but [[UnfortunateImplications instead it's all directed to the innocent Schmeloise (she didn't seduce Jimmy just Jimmy noticed her)]]. It was just way too mean-spirited towards Heloise for my tastes and not to mention [[CreatorsPet Beezy]] [[JerkAss is being obnoxious rather than funny]] for the entire episode.
* PrincessTogezo: ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' was one of the shows I grew up with, and I still like to watch it every now and then. But one moment I find hard to justify is in the episode "[=CatDog=] Catcher". In this episode, Rancid Rabbit (a dogcatcher in this episode) wants some more money, so he goes around arresting everyone who doesn't have a license. Cat happens to be the only character who has a license, and the rest of Nearburg (including Cat's brother Dog) ends up in jail. So Cat goes to save his brother, his friends, and the rest of Nearburg from being wrongfully imprisoned, right...? Yeah, no. Instead, he just lounges outside of the jail with a drink, enjoying his alone time. Look, I enjoy having time to myself as much as the next person, but if a relative of mine (or heck, anyone I was close to) was unfairly put in jail, I would not be happy about it at all, and I would try to find a way to get them out as soon as possible. Cat, on the other hand, has to be persuaded into saving the citizens of Nearburg. Even though, while jerks like the Greasers happen to be imprisoned, so are Cat's friends (like Mervis and Dunglap) and his own brother! Even ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold'''s [[TheUnfavorite Helga]] [[{{Jerkass}} Pataki]] knows that when your sibling's in trouble, you have to do something about it, regardless of whether or not you like them; when you're making her look like a saint, something is very wrong here.
** Tropers/Candycane14: I always felt that Cat did this because of how Nearburg and Dog always treated Cat like shit, so I didn't blame him. At least Olga tries to think of Helga's feelings which is why Helga helped her. Dog on the other hand is a selfish prick who dosen't care about his own brother. One example is "Trespassing" where Dog cared more about his stupid fire hydrant then his brother! All Cat wanted to do was watch a TV event at home that he paid for. Dog physically forces him to stay by a fire hydrant because another dog marked it. The end result is not only Cat missing his TV event, but his house and everything he owns in the world being burned to the ground. Then their house is burning down and Cat calls the fire department, Dog refuses to let them use it to save their house, even when Cat begs him in tears that if he values Cat in any way he'll let them use the hydrant. He doesn't. We learn that Dog doesn't value his own brother! It's episodes like this, that makes me want to punch that selfish, close-minded mutt! Dog gives other dogs(characters outside this show, dogs in real life) a bad name!
* fluffything: For me, it was during the series finale of ''WesternAnimation/XMenEvolution'' when Kurt and Rogue pretty much diss Mystique who is clearly trying to at the very least apologize for her behavior. Yes, Mystique is a villain, yes she has done horrible things to the X-Men (Kurt and Rogue included), but, there's a difference between trying to destroy your enemies and trying to make amends with your own children. Now, I can understand Rogue refusing to accept her apologies, but Kurt? One of Kurt's main character traits is that he's compassionate, understanding, and forgiving. Not to mention that, earlier in the season, he was genuinely heartbroken when he thought his own mother had died. [[SarcasmMode Way to be a great son, Kurt! Instead of forgiving your mother's actions and trying to start anew with her, just blow her off like a petty child!]]
* Tropers/Kablammin45: I remember little about the 1980s TV show they made of ''Literature/TheBerenstainBears'', but what I do remember is that the opening of the adaptation of "The Berenstain Bears Forget Their Manners" bothered me. The episode opens at Sister and Brother Bear's cousin Freddy's birthday party... and TheBully Too-Tall Bear is there. Unless he and his Mooks sneaked their way in, why would Freddy invite a known bully to his party? Maybe he was just being nice, but still, this leads up to Too-Tall and his buddies causing the events leading up to Sister and Brother's nasty moods by doing things like stealing 98% of the party favors right before the siblings got any...and no one calls them out on it! They still leave with their ill-gotten gains without anyone stopping them. Not only do they totally mess things at the party up, steal things, and cause Brother and Sister Bear to become cranky and rude in the process, [[KarmaHoudini no one bothers to call them out for any actions at all]]. Just about anyone else would have done so...or better yet just not invited known troublemakers to their party at all. I haven't seen the 80s series in years and yet, this still comes up when I think about it and it kinda irritates me.
* Tropers/{{PPPSSC}}: The ''WesternAnimation/GoofTroop'' episode "Inspector Goofy" could have been a perfectly serviceable episode, but the "Pete gets kicked out of his house" subplot makes it one of the weakest in the series. Not only is it completely unnecessary for the plot, but it results in both of the nicest characters in the cast (and one who is sometimes ruthless but ultimately altruistic) carrying massive {{Jerkass Ball}}s. [[AllLovingHero Goofy]] engages in SelectiveEnforcement after promising not to, Peg has no sympathy for Pete and taunts him with food, and PJ suggests selling Pistol to the circus to get Pete back in the house, which, in addition to being extremely out of character, serves no real purpose. The only purpose this subplot seems to serve is to turn a joke that's hilarious in moderation into a tiring OverlyLongGag. The only character in this episode who is remotely likable is Pistol, who barely does anything (Max isn't in it at all). I even find [[TheWoobie PJ]] (my favorite character on the show) completely unsympathetic in this episode, due to his uncharacteristic meanness, lack of focus, and surprising good fortune.
* Tropers/{{Theenglishman}}: The [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment very sudden and out-of-place]] ShoutOut to ''Film/{{Chinatown}}'' in the middle of WesternAnimation/InsideOut's climactic chase scene. Up until then, every ParentalBonus gag had either been in the background or was integrated into the plot somehow, but this one brought the entire chase to a complete halt for one joke which only a film buff would understand, and anyone who didn't would just think [[BlackComedy some poor cloud woman had been killed with two policemen making a quip about it]] [[MoodWhiplash for no good reason]]. Thankfully it's just one ''moment'' of suck, and the film picks up where it left off almost immediately afterward.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: I had very little sympathy for King Triton in the original ''Disney/TheLittleMermaid''. He started off as an unlikable, intolerant and incompetent {{Jerkass}}, and while he did show some improvement later, it was too little, too late. Then comes ''The Little Mermaid III'', which shows how he became a bigot. That'd make him a tragic character whom I'd finally understand and respect, right? Wrong. It turns out that this is the "explanation": He gives his wife, Athena, a music box. Then a pirate ship appears, and everyone escapes while the pirates are trying to steal their stuff. That is, everyone but Athena. She throws herself in front of the ship to try to save the music box. Unsurprisingly, she is crushed to death, and Triton blames the humans. The problem? If anyone is responsible for her death, which is essentially a stupid accident, it's Athena herself. It's not like some cruel humans murder her ForTheEvulz. She puts herself in harm's way for the stupid music box and has to pay the price[[note]]I'm not saying that she deserved to die for her stupidity, but still...[[/note]]. Okay, the pirates probably didn't care that their ship killed her, but they didn't have much of a chance to avoid her. All in all, this attempt at making Triton a TragicBigot only made him even more unlikable to me. I realize that his bigotry isn't supposed to be justified, but it should at least be understandable. Otherwise, he just ends up looking like a villain. Him having some resent towards humans would be okay, but this is just stupid. \\
However, the problems with the scene don't end with that. As a result of this incident, Triton bans music. It would have been understandable if he only forbade his subjects from playing music in his presence[[note]]there could still be a plot, e.g. "Triton's daughters try to help him cope with Athena's death and make him enjoy music again"[[/note]], but he takes music away from everyone and is a jerk about it. Sure, [[spoiler:the ban is eventually lifted and he ends up enjoying music again]], but ''The Little Mermaid'' shows us that he learns nothing about this "don't get mad at Ariel because of her interests, especially not if you won't even explain your feelings properly" thing. Thus, Athena's death is my [=DMoS=] for the series because it could have made the unsympathetic Triton more likable, but instead makes the situation worse. It shows us that he's the type who lets his emotions get the better of him, even when it obviously hurts his subjects. It shows us that his actions in ''The Little Mermaid'' are the result of him failing to learn his lesson the first time around. And it's all for the sake of his TooDumbToLive wife. What an awful king. I can honestly say that [[RootingForTheEmpire Ursula ends up being far more likable than he is]].
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: A scene from "The Great Race", a ''WesternAnimation/CareBears1986'' episode. There's a race, and the prize is becoming King for a day. This concept is stupid, as evidenced by the fact that there's a villain out to win the race and abuse the power. Unsurprisingly, he cheats. The [=DMoS=] is when he pours concrete into a water pit and makes a bear fall into it. Once the concrete sets, he/she[[note]]I don't remember the victim's gender, and frankly, I don't care[[/note]] can barely move. Wow. That's cruel. I know he's a villain, but this is supposed to be a cute children's cartoon. To make matters worse, the episode didn't make it clear that the victim ever recovered, so [[FridgeHorror I assumed that he/she was stuck forever being barely able to move]]. This may sound trivial now, but it made such a big impression on my younger self that not only did I never watch another ''Care Bears'' episode, but even now, probably more than a decade later, I can't enjoy the ''WesternAnimation/GummiBears''. [[note]]I know I could make an effort to give the Gummi Bears a proper chance, but I doubt it's worth it.[[/note]]
** Tropers/creativelyGreen: The victim was Cheer Bear, and she was seen in a wheelchair at the episode's end if memeory serves me correctly. Take that as you will.
* Tropers/{{ianolivia}}: For me, the ''WesternAnimation/{{Breadwinners}}'' episode "Bad to the Duck Bone". [=SwaySway=] gets [[DisproportionateRetribution run over by a motorcycle if he doesn't take life threatening drugs]], takes life threatening drugs that he knows are dangerous, changes his entire personality to [[GettingCrapPastTheRadar seduce Jenny Quackles, a 10 year old girl]], [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything licks her face in a disturbing manner without her permission]], eats her, and when he stops being evil [[RestrainedRevenge because Buhduece choked him]], [[{{Jerkass}} Jenny spits in his face and has him run over by a motorcycle because he isn't evil]]. [[KillItWithFire Kill this episode with fire]].
* {{InsertCleverNameHere}}: I did not like [[Creator/DreamWorksAnimation DreamWorks Animation's]] ''WesternAnimation/BeeMovie'' at all, but one scene in particular infuriated me. After Barry wins the jury, we see him ordering all of the honey-producing factories to be shut down so that the bees can be free from their work and have the honey brought back to their hive. Okay, fair enough. But then they show a gag of an agent shooting [[Franchise/WinniethePooh Winnie the Pooh]] with a dart! Seriously?! I suppose some people would of found it to be [[CrossesTheLineTwice hilarious]], but to me this scene is not only completely unnecessary, but it is also a stab in the back of many people's childhoods and plays animal cruelty [[DudeNotFunny for laughs]].
* jmac9345: For me, it’s ''WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow'' episode “Double Header”. I agree with WebOriginal/TheMysteriousMrEnter for the most part: the bad episodes (namely a majority of the Games era) didn’t go too far, except for this one. The episode is about Ren wanting Stimpy to take a trip to Ursa Minor in order to get some alone time from him. And the line that kills this episode for me is when Ren says “Well, I just don’t like you.” It kills it for me because not only does it identify that Ren completely TookALevelInJerkass, but it pains me because I know that Ren can have some incredibly heartwarming moments for such an angry character. Ren may be a jerk, but he has had numerous instances where he shows that he cares about Stimpy, like in “Son of Stimpy”. Outright saying that he doesn’t like Stimpy is just too cruel and mean-spirited, even for Ren. While this may be the main reason I don’t like this episode, I don’t like the plot that follows with Ren and Stimpy being combined into an EldritchAbomination due to a car crash because of how [[Creator/JohnKricfalusi John K.]] showed us in the Spumco episodes that he can sometimes be a caring person, and doesn’t deserve this mean a treatment, even with his ButtMonkey status.
* [=InTheGallbladder=]: I absolutely love WesternAnimation/WeBareBears, with the exception of "The Road." I don't like the cubs--they aren't well-written, and their actors are too young to have the necessary experience. Giving them the lead roles for an entire episode was a dangerous decision. Said episode featuring a serious musical number was a suicidal one.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: While not enough to ruin the short for me, the ending of "A Very Goofy Christmas" is the most disappointing part of ''WesternAnimation/MickeysOnceUponAChristmas''. To recap the plot: Pete tells Max that Santa doesn't exist. After examining some facts, asking critical questions and not getting satisfactory answers, Max gloomily concludes that Santa probably isn't real. Goofy tells Max to believe in Santa and he dresses up as him, but the plan fails when a kid exposes Goofy, and Max gets angry as he believes that Goofy lied about Santa. Then Goofy tries to prove Santa's existence, only to become sad when Santa doesn't come. Max tries to cheer him up, and they eventually accept the fact that Santa probably isn't real - but they don't need him because they have each other. Then, the [=DMoS=]. It turns out that Santa is real after all, and he gives Max a snowboard. The critical questions Max had about Santa? Never answered, unless you count Goofy's {{Hand Wave}}s as answers. Sure, it's nice that Max gets the snowboard he wanted, but way to use an AssPull to ruin a good message about scepticism and render the whole "coming to terms with Santa's nonexistence" plot pointless.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: The ''[[WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse Mickey [=MouseWorks=]]]'' adaptation of ''The Nutcracker'' is in my opinion pretty good (at least on its own, as I've never seen the original), but it has one ugly moment: At one point, the Mouse King[[note]]played by Donald Duck for some weird reason. Why didn't they give the role to Mortimer instead, which would've made so much more sense?[[/note]] traps the Snow Fairy inside his scepter. This in itself is fine because the Mouse King is evil and benefits from doing it. The [=DMoS=] is when the Mouse King ends up trapped there too, and it's revealed that neither will ever get out. It's supposed to be funny because the Snow Fairy annoys the Mouse King with his card games, but it's just nasty when you think about it. The Snow Fairy is stuck there for the rest of his life, and a FateWorseThanDeath is entirely possible. Sure, he doesn't seem to mind at the moment, but card games can't entertain him for long. The short also seems to forget that he's stuck with the Mouse King, who is not happy about his fate and will probably take it out on the poor Snow Fairy. Thus a sympathetic character gets a horrible fate just so we can laugh at the Mouse King's annoyance - as if his being stuck in a tiny place for the rest of his life weren't bad enough already. Yes, he deserved it. I'm just saying that he could for instance have a comical fit of rage even without the Snow Fairy there to annoy him. Oh, and did I mention that even though the Snow Fairy helped the main characters, they don't even care that he's gone? Yes, I know it just happens in a dream, but it's still needlessly harsh, especially in a Christmas-themed short.
* Tropers/Psi001: While ''WesternAnimation/TheDreamstone'' nearly always ran on an uneasy formula due to the Urpneys being {{Designated Villain}}s, it could at least often be excused if you didn't think about the plot hard enough. There are episodes however, where the heroes are just such priggish, sadistic little asswipes compared to the Urpneys, you wonder exactly why the writers thought they would look benevolent against the latter. "The Dream Beam Invasion" is a key example. The plot revolves around the Urpneys shrinking into kids' dreams and ruining. While it's kinda sad on the little kids' part, it's as usual a pretty petty crime and one Frizz and Nug as usual had to be PressGanged into. When the heroes find out what they were doing however? They too shrink into the dream, corner a pleading Frizz and Nug and give them a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown. It gets better though. They do it for so long that the two's shrink spell wears off and they turn giant compared to them. Despite the Urpneys not even bothering to attack them, [[DirtyCoward the Noops run off screaming like pansies]], unwilling to battle a ''real'' threat, and moan they are fighting dirty to the Dream Maker, who resorts to just magicing the bubble away so the Urpneys don't get the last laugh (which he supposedly could have done anytime, [[BondVillainStupidity but where's the fun in that?]]). The episode makes the Noops equivalent to those nasty little bullies in the playground that pick fights with wimps to look big, and then run off sobbing bullshit to the nearest authority figure the moment they fight back. Note this is all played sincerely, complete with dramatic music, a huge {{Determinator}} speech beforehand and of course, the Urpneys still being the butt of the final gag despite being far less odious and doing far less to provoke their punishment.
* Tropers/{{mariic}}: Though I've only read the book for it, I didn't like ''WesternAnimation/TheMagicSchoolBus'' episode Recap/TheMagicSchoolBusS2E12ColdFeet. Quick recap: Liz was kidnapped, so the kids have to go and rescue her. Along the way, they learned a lot about warm and cold-blooded animals, but they almost died several times. But surprise! Mrs. Frizzle was in control the whole time, and they were never in any real danger. She said that she did it because [[ForScience it would have been a more effective teaching method.]] [[FlatWhat Seriously?]] Not only would that experience have [[FridgeHorror most likely traumatized her students for the rest of their lives,]] her teaching method was [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment comparable to the controversial, and downright illegal, Milgram experiment]].
* Tropers/{{Iheartgod175}}: I love Creator/HannaBarbera cartoons, and one of my favorites are the ''RicochetRabbitAndDroopALongCoyote'' cartoons. Being that the show was made over 40 years ago, there are some weak episodes, and a few annoying ones (''Rapid Romance'', ''Will O' the Whip'', and a few others), but it never made me go "What the heck, Hanna-Barbera?" There is one episode that made me do that, though, and that's the episode "Annie Hoaxley". In this episode, a dangerous criminal named Buzzard Bates comes to Ricochet's town, and Ricochet orders everyone to treat it as serious business. He ends up being fooled, however, when [[DisguisedInDrag Bates dresses up as an old lady]] and ends up letting "her" get away. This plot has been done before, but that's not the [=DMoS=]. What makes this episode a [=DMoS=] is that Ricochet does find out that the "old lady" was Buzzard Bates thanks to Droop-a-Long fumbling Bates' disguise, but the minute the guy pulls out the helpless old lady act, Ricochet falls for it--twice. Basically, they gave Ricochet the IdiotBall for the later half of the episode and let him run away with it for the sake of laughs, resulting in serious CharacterDerailment for him. Out of the pair, I'd expect Droop-a-Long to do something like this, not Ricochet, who's normally the smart one and is a bit of a trickster himself. To see him act ''this'' gullible is kind of an insult to his character. This, along with the low animation quality, is what made this a [=DMoS=] for me.
* Tropers/{{aziuka}}: By no means was ''Disney/AtlantisTheLostEmpire'' a good movie, but the cataclismically stupid idea of Atlanteans being capable of speaking every Indo-European language ever by virtue of having an unspecified root language as their mother tongue made me want to tear my hair out. Sure, they don't know how to read in their own frigging native language, but this apparently doesn't hinder them in understanding multiple others, including modern ones that are separated from their own by several millennia. Not to mention that from a dramatic standpoint, it was a wasted opportunity to focus on Milo as a character intrinsically important to the relationship with the Atlanteans as he'd have been the only one who actually spoke their language. Instead, we got a cheap and lazy HandWave that mirrors the lack of creativity and imagination that plagues the movie as a whole.
* Tropers/{{Jatboy1000}}: I am a huge fan of ''WesternAnimation/WanderOverYonder'', as most episodes are usually very enjoyable for me. While, not every episode was perfect, most of their flaws tend to be very minor. However, there was one episode that I would classify as a Dethroning Moment, and that episode would be "The Party Poopers". To summarize, this episode was basically an episode that centered around ToiletHumour, which of course is a problem in itself. While I do know the history of this episode, where it started out as an interesting idea to "make a Cartoon filled with nothing but low brow and crass jokes but do it in a way where you actually don’t SEE anything gross or disgusting.", which I must admit, is pretty clever, still doesn't give me much to enjoy. Though, I guess this sort of comes down to a matter of opinions rather than the actual quality of the episode, as humor is very subjective, and toilet humor is especially so. I think what bothers me the most about this episode is that it aired so late in the show's life (which was more of a fault of the show being ScrewedByTheNetwork), that it felt like more of a waste of the show's life than if it would have been aired in something like season one. Not to mention, this episode was experimental, and was apparently more of a challenge for the show's crew than anything else, so I applaud them for that, but it still felt like a weaker episode to me.
** TheSnowSquirrel: I absolutely love this show, but one element really bugs me. The newest villain Lord Dominator's motivation for being a psychopath who ruthlessly destroys anything and anyone she pleases with sadistic glee is implied to be...loneliness. That's all. Not some huge tragedy that drove her insane and screwed up her morality. Not severe abuse that made her feel the need to kill everyone to prove that she was the strongest force in the universe and could not be hurt again. The writers on tumblr have pretty much stated that the reason Dominator is evil is that she wants friends secretly. They claim they will not go into a backstory for her simply because they think it's not needed. Sorry, but no. People who write DracoInLeatherPants fanfiction for these kinds of characters think of better ways to give them sympathy for Grop's sake! When you have a villain in a show like this, you want to see them have a sympathetic side, because you want to root for them rising above their problems and reforming themselves. Come on Craig, you gotta have a better reason for this lady's insane cruelty than having no buddies to hang with!
** HSRW101: It's very rare for me to complain about this show as nothing really made me angry, but one thing that always rubbed me the wrong way was in The Robomechabotatron episode. Very basic lesson about learning to work as a team in order to pilot the giant mech as Wander tries to get Sylvia, Lord Hater and Peepers to cooperate as a team to save the galaxy from Dominator, and it makes sense that the 3 wouldn't get along with all that has happened before. But the problem that got in their way to actually saving the galaxy? WANDER HIMSELF! I get that he always preferred the method without violence to solve problems, that's how he is...but dude...you KNOW the galaxy is in danger cause of Dominator...YOU'RE the one who said that you all need to work as a team to pilot the mech and save said galaxy...and YOU'RE the one who literally prevented everyone who finally managed to put their differences aside to work together when you should've KNOWN they were planning on fighting Dominator to do so. And for what reason? Your HONOUR?! You know its a bad sign when Hater, a bad guy mind you, accurately predicted that Wander would want to use the mech to give out hugs instead of what it was intended to do, FIGHT EVIL! In fairness, I get the anti-climax gag in the end, but its just so frustrating to think that Wander should've known better that not everyone was on the same page with how they planned to use the mech, especially at a time when the galaxy needed it most. And he refused to work as a team after all the preaching he did about how they should ALL work as a team, all because he doesn't want to use violence in a mech specifically designed to use violence against bad guys, which was what 3/4 of the team wanted to do! Never thought we'd see one of the most optimistic and positive characters of this generation actually make a hypocritical move, what were the writers thinking?!
* SenorCornholio: Since I am allowed to put one moment per work, I feel it only fitting that I give my two cents on something I recently decided to marathon. I actually bothered with the entirety of [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyG3 My Little Pony's 3rd generation]] and found myself...not as hateful towards it, at first. I'm definitely not a fan of this generation, but they at least seemed to have their own continuity for a time, and even had some somewhat likeable characters (Thistle Whistle, Rarity, Lily Lightly, Kimono, and ''especially'' Minty come to mind). All in all, G3 was harmless. Then the Core 7 shorts were introduced and I finally began to understand why G3 has such a bad rep (Generation 3.5's "Twinkle Wish Adventures" notwithstanding). These shorts did nothing but pander, showing the ponies either getting ready for a party, or having said party, on top of making some really major changes (Rainbow Dash doesn't have her trademark pseudo-British accent, Cheerilee's an earth pony instead of a unicorn, etc). However, what I'm mentioning is the absolute low point of Generation 3 (and after careful consideration, the entire MyLittlePony franchise aside from the dreaded Newborn Cuties) is the "Special Day" series. There are two of these, but I decided to add both of them because they're equally terrible. [[CaptainObvious These shorts centered around a special day for Pinkie Pie and Rainbow Dash]] that is never really explained. They mainly consisted of a still background with nothing but a waving rainbow and either Pinkie Pie or Rainbow Dash's official G3 artwork plastered on it before basically giving us a WholeEpisodeFlashback. The flashbacks were basically just the earlier Generation 3 specials, from "Dancing in the Clouds" to "Positively Pink", with no editing done except having Rainbow Dash's voice actress redo all of the older one's lines, sometimes even with new (re: worse) dialogue. It's especially notable when Fiesta Flair, a pony who was cut and replaced for her supposed UnfortunateImplications, keeps her speaking role in the "Ladybug Jamboree" flashback. Even if we count G3.5, that just makes it worse; what little continuity there may be is completely thrown out of whack, since G3.5 shows the Core 7 as fillies hanging out together, before either Butterfly Island (pegasi) or Unicornia [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin (unicorns)]] were discovered. Because of this, Starsong and Sweetie Belle, two Core 7 members who are a pegasus and unicorn respectively, are now living plotholes because their races had not yet unified, yet here they are acting as though these conflicts never existed. Not only that, but as previously mentioned, Cheerilee did a complete race change inbetween continuities, so none of this should even be in the same universe. These are mainly on here because they're just flashback episodes, but the other big reason is that now it can't decide which continuity it wants to have: the pre-Core 7 canon or the post-Core 7 canon. I know I'm getting worked up over what's considered the DorkAge of Franchise/MyLittlePony, but the amount of laziness in these specials is just mind-boggling. I'd have put Newborn Cuties on here, but those belong on the SoBadItsHorrible page as much as this belongs on the DethroningMomentOfSuck page because NC was always horrible; this is where Generation 3 went from "meh" status to outright deserving some of the flak it gets. It could be seen as JumpingTheShark, but I'd say it was more like jumping the goldfish to be honest. All I have to say after that is thank Celestia for [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Generation 4]].
* Tropers/{{TommyTiger}}: I have a bad opinion of WesternAnimation/SausageParty, perhaps even worse than most people's opinion of Disney/ChickenLittle [[note]]which I like, by the way[[/note]]. And I hate it because of [[NightmareFuel the scene where Camille Toh prepares her meal]]. This is what happened: I was channel surfing, when suddenly I came across a montage of happenings so violent even TheSimpsons and SouthPark aren't as violent as this. The potato getting [[FlayingAlive peeled]] and boiled alive got me to cringe. The tomato getting cut in half made me shiver. The bacon strips getting fried (where [[EyeScream the eye of one pops]]) made my stomach start to get nervous. The lettuce getting its eyes gouged out and getting torn in half made me want to leave the room screaming. The bread getting cut made me get ready to throw up. The cheese getting grated to death finally made me puke. The nachos getting microwaved made me puke more. The bottle of wine getting opened made me puke even more. The baby carrots getting [[EatenAlive chewed to death]] made my mouth regurgitate 60% puke. Sadly, I couldn't leave because my baby cousin was sitting on my laps (and before you ask, no, I was covering his eyes so he wouldn't see such violent things). The remote control was also out of batteries so I couldn't change the channel either. And so I was forced to watch a two-minute long horror movie. [[BrainBleach I'm still trying to forget this]]. Now for someone who hasn't even flinched at [[SpongeBobSquarePants House Fancy]] and [[WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy Peter Problems]], I get sick if this. This, along with the food orgy at the end, make this a completely [[DudeNotFunny unfunny]] film. And the horrific treatment staff members recieved just makes it [[UpToEleven even worse]].
* Tropers/{{KoopaKid17}}: I'm indifferent to the ''WesternAnimation/SonicBoom'' cartoon but "The Biggest Fan" was more of a TakeThat against a franchise's already UnpleasableFanbase than it needed to be. In this episode, Sonic meets an [[StalkerWithoutACrush obsessive fan]] who [[Literature/{{Misery}} "accidentally" injures him and his friends for the purpose of keeping them around]]. [[SarcasmMode Wonderful]], especially when he tries to get Sonic to act out fan-fiction and it's implied that [[NoodleIncident this fan has written]] [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids some works that aren't kid-friendly]]. It doesn't help that the fan is an obvious {{Expy}} of [[Webcomic/{{Sonichu}} Chris Chan]], down to him complaining about Sonic's arms (although WordOfGod [[BlatantLies denies this]]. [[SureLetsGoWithThat Okay]]). The team has enough of his neurotic behavior and they attempt to [[CringeComedy take him down while wearing body casts]] until they [[EpicFail realize they were never injured in the first place]]. Sonic resolves this by [[BoundAndGagged wrapping him up in sports tape]] [[DesignatedHero and leaving him there]]. The [[AnAesop Aesop]]: Keep a healthy relationship with your fans which Sonic [[AesopAmnesia immediately ignores]] when he screams and runs from a girl asking for his autograph. Episodes like these were done with much more sincerity in ''WesternAnimation/BobsBurgers'' and ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic''. In both cases, they taught that you shouldn't let the worst of a fan base keep you from something you like while praising the reasonable qualities of good fans. According to ''Sonic Boom'', a bad experience with even one of your fans gives you the right to treat the rest of them like shit even if they've done nothing to deserve it.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: I actually kinda like this episode, and happen to really like the show in general, but I can sympathize with a good portion of what Tropers/{{KoopaKid17}} said, especially when it comes to the ending. I understand completely the issues of this episode; not everyone is going to think the same way. But to me at least, the rest of the episode would have been perfectly fine if not for Sonic running in fear from a normal fan. Just take that out, and you have a truly great episode; heck, edit it so that Sonic hangs out with the fan (albeit still slightly traumatized from Mark) and you have a perfect representation of the moral they wanted to go with. I get that WesternAnimation/SonicBoom is a comedy, but not everything has to be PlayedForLaughs; it's okay to be serious about a moral while still keeping the rest of the episode fairly comedic. Heck, there's a later episode, "Knuck Knuck! Who's Here?" which does just that and it turned out to be one of my favorite episodes of the show because of it. But for what it's worth, [[DamnedByFaintPraise at least "The Biggest Fan" didn't take]] [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo the "Let's Get Serious" approach]]. All this episode was was an otherwise fun episode that was hindered by a sloppy ending.
* Tropers/AsForMyHandle: While ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse'' isn't a bad show, it does have a bunch of issues. What stuck out the most was this moment in the episode "Heavy Meddle". The sisters are willing to defend Lincoln from his bully... [[DoubleStandardAbuseFemaleOnMale until they learn that the bully is a girl]]. Then they {{squee}} because [[SarcasmMode obviously the only reason a girl bullies a guy]] [[LovingBully is because she likes him]]. It actually went in a good direction when Lincoln goes to kiss her, only to get socked, because then it would not only give AnAesop on bullying, but also maybe a lesson on meddling and assuming. But of course, the girl does turn out to be a LovingBully, and then they become and OfficialCouple. How touching. As a victim of bullying, you can probably see how this rubbed me the wrong way.
** Tropers/{{PRStorm}}: "Brawl in The Family" is the worst for me. The message the episode is basically going for, is that "You shouldn't try to get involved in other peoples' fights, or you'll only make things worse". Not to mention the 'sister fight protocol' goes against everything "Space Invader" stands for. Fuck this episode.
* Tropers/{{ilovededede}}: Since "Brawl in the Family" is taken I'll go with "Come Sale Away", because not only is nearly everyone flanderized into idiots for the sake of the cliche sibling competition plot with no comedy to make it worth it but has a victory dance gag that makes me wanna punch a hole through my computer. And this isn't even a one-time joke, it's a RunningGag, and the episode ends with a long, cringey, and painful sequence of this running gag. Just... screw this episode.
** Tropers/{{fairygirl567}}: I freaking hate "Come Sale Away"! Not the ending, not the beginning, ALL. OF. IT. I don't hate a lot of episodes in tv shows, it'll take a lot to make me hate an episode, but this one actually did it! The beginning is boring because their having a garage sell and seeing who the winner will be so they can do a dumb victory dance, we have one joke where Leni actually tries to sell their garage because no one in the family thought to tell the dumb sister what a garage sell actually is. Anyways, Lincoln wants to win, but after realizing he's losing, he starts selling everything in the living room and after Lori calls him out on this, he plays it off like he's doing nothing wrong and so, instead of telling on him for you know, selling everything that's not supposed to be sold! They actually start doing the same thing so they can win a competition! And yeah I know it's a competiton, but that doesn't make it better! Then they think they sold Lilly's blanket, search all over town, and all get tricked by this old man into giving him all their garage money, respectively (except Leni who's dumber then a sack of rocks and comes back with a napkin) and it turns out the mother had the blanket all along and just washed it. Then she discovers her kids sold everything in the living room and grounds them. Yeah, she only grounds them! I'm sorry, but a thing like this warrants a full scale hunt to get all their stuff back! They managed to sell their freaking couch and lost all their money! And then the ending... good night the ending. These episodes usually have lessons in it. I assumed this one would be, 'Don't let competiton cloud your judgement." Which it should have been. Nope! The episode ends with Lincoln doing his dumbass victory dance along with the entire family... FOR NOTHING! They didn't accomplish a damn thing! Just to recount: They lost all their stuff, lost all their money, and look like idiots, what the flying freak do they have to dance about? They learned nothing! The butt dancing is just so cringe-fest too and looks weird because the viewer knows they didn't gain anything. I cannot watch this episode with how terrible it is, espeically that god awful ending. I don't even think No Such Luck ended that badly, oh yeah I went there! At least a conflict was resolved, in this they still don't get their stuff back. I actually was expecting a two part episode, but nope it just ended there. Seriously this episode can bite me.
* Tropers/TommyTiger: I like the ''WesternAnimation/TheMrMenShow'' (it's not as good as the original series, but still watchable), but Mr. Stubborn's plot of the episode "Caves" had one ugly moment: Miss Naughty encounters the Fangosaurus, and it starts torturing her. [[{{Jerkass}} Mr. Stubborn]] does not believe her at all, and when they go away, Miss Naughty is too scared to even speak. In most episodes of this show, when Miss Naughty gets bad luck, it's [[LaserGuidedKarma because she did something to deserve it]]. Here, the worst thing she did was play some non-malicious pranks on the others... and yet she reaches a state of insanity [[FridgeHorror she would never snap out of]] without StatusQuoIsGod. Mr. Stubborn would count as UnintentionallyUnsympathetic but I don't think we were meant to root for him. What I ''do'' know however, is that he counts as a KarmaHoudini. It's just a [[DudeNotFunny really mean-spirited]] KickTheDog moment towards [[UnintentionallySympathetic a character who didn't deserve it this time]]. And at the ending, we get the Fangosaurus still torturing Miss Naughty. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking You know the worst part?]] This plot was adapted for a book (specifically, "Mr. Stubborn says there are no Monsters in this Book"), and the book version of it is better than the original.
* Tropers/{{Pgj1997}}: Probably the most infamous episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThomasTheTankEngine'' is "[[Recap/ThomasTheTankEngineS15E17WonkyWhistle Wonky Whistle]]", and I couldn't agree more. Most Thomas fans already know the plethora of problems with this episode, but for the sake of everyone else, I'll go over them anyway. So the plot of the episode is that Thomas is getting his whistle fixed when Sir Topham Hatt asks him to pick up and deliver animals to the "country show", and advertise it on the way. Thomas (who's supposed to be a role model for children by the way) rushes off excitedly before the repairmen finish fixing his whistle. Okay, two problems right off the bat. First off, [[Recap/ThomasTheTankEngineS1E5ThomasTrain Thomas already learned the importance of patience way back in season one]], so Thomas shouldn't have to learn this moral again. Really, you can replace Thomas with any other engine, and this wouldn't be a problem. Secondly, the writers fail to stay accurate to how a steam engine actually works. A whistle doesn't just magically become a slide whistle when it breaks like it does in the episode. If you want to know what an ''actual'' broken whistle sounds like, watch the episode "[[Recap/ThomasTheTankEngineS1E20WhistlesAndSneezes Whistles & Sneezes]]", it's much more accurate. Continuing on with the story, Thomas collects the animals, but rushes off before the farmworkers fully close the door on the car. He's blissfully unaware about the constant banging the door is making right behind him as he travels. On his way to the country show, Thomas stops to advertise it, blowing his whistle afterwards. This causes one of the animals to escape from the car, and we reach the exact same problem. He's blissfully unaware that there's something wrong with his whistle that he's heard like a million times before hand, and that the animals are escaping right behind him. Yes, they try to tell him but, get this, he mistakes it for them saying hello... [[WhatAnIdiot as he's leaving]]. Thomas does not get punished for doing any of this one bit. He's even called a "really useful engine" by the end of it. Why? The only thing we get is him realizing his mistake, and recapping what we already know. [[SpaceWhaleAesop Yes kids, you can be as ignorant as all hell, but as long as you admit that you were, you won't suffer any consequences]]. Now, I can't talk about Wonky Whistle without talking about what's arguably the biggest problem with this episode: the constant rhyming and alliteration. Of course, this is a Miller-era episode, so that sort of thing is expected, but it's really apparent here, and it gets really grating. I've counted. There's a total of 54 rhymes and alliterations in this episode. 54. Imagine hearing that for 8 minutes straight. That's this episode. So even if you try to look past the story problems, you're still annoyed by the dialogue. So there's nothing salvageable. It's not hard to see why people hate this episode so much. It's annoying, frustrating, and makes a character incomprehensibly stupid for the sake of the plot. Thankfully, the person who wrote this episode, Neil Ben, [[NoHitWonder never wrote another Thomas episode ever again]], and praise the lord for that.
* [=SenorCornholio=]: I happen to like all the VidegGame/SonicTheHedgehog cartoons; yes, even WesternAnimation/SonicUnderground and WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog. The latter in particular may have been pretty flawed, but it had a campy charm to it, some legitimately funny jokes, and has had some great episodes in my opinion, such as "Tails' New Home", "Grounder the Genius", "Tails in Charge", the entire Chaos Emerald 4-parter, and my personal favorite from this show: "Mass Transit Trouble" just to name a few. "Baby-Sitter Jitters" however, is not one of those episodes. Sonic and Tails have to babysit three baby beavers, and of course HilarityEnsues. For one, I'm not exactly a fan of the BadlyBatteredBabySitter trope to begin with; it was bad when WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry did it, and it's bad here. Seeing our heroes in this situation is kind of a disservice; they're clearly trying their hardest, but the babies don't make it easy for them. In fact, you can see that sometimes the babies outright intentionally make their job more difficult. And their [[MostAnnoyingSound crying]]...sweet Mobius, their crying! These creatures are literally the spawn of [[VideoGame/SonicUnleashed Dark Gaia]]! I normally like kids, but these little cretins deserve to be ranked below even the worst of [[TheScrappy scrappies]] in terms of hated Sonic characters! To Hell with WesternAnimation/MegaBabies; this is what'll scare your kids into never having unprotected sex for life! Then Robotnik and his bumbling minions kidnap them (I think it was for blackmail or something, it's been a while sorry) and have just as much trouble with the kids to the point of the villains pretty much [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere throwing in the towel]] to escape the little beasts. Finally, when the parents get back home, they outright admit that they had to get away from the babies; even they didn't want anything to do with them! And the episode ends with Sonic and Tails getting more jobs with them later. I mainly decided to put this on here because of the "one per work" thing, and because it is, to me at least, the worst episode of a Sonic cartoon ever made. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking Oh, and the production order for this episode was right off the heels of the Chaos Emerald arc.]]
* TVLegend: ''{{WesternAnimation/Pingu}}'' is one of those shows which I have a love/hate relationship with. Some of the episodes I like include the one with the Organ Grinder, the one where they go to the funfair, the one where Pingu and Robby play hide and go seek and the one where Pingu introduces Robby to his school. Episodes I don't like include the one where Pingu breaks a vase, the one where Pinga keeps crying because her Dad accidentally drove over her Teddy Bear and the one where Pingu tries to get revenge on one of his friends. But, in my opinion, the absolute worst episode of ''Pingu'' is the one called "Pingu Quarrels with his Mother". The premise for this one is that Pingu needs to bring in the firewood, but he wants to go and play with Pingo. His mother, however, won't let him go and play and orders him to chop more firewood. I'm sorry, but isn't Pingu a child? You're basically asking a child to wield a hazardously sharp object to do something which an adult should do. However, the worst part of this episode has to be when Pingu gets frustrated and throws the wood everywhere, hurting his foot. Does his mother care? No! Look, your son hurt his foot! Tend to him! See if he's OK! After that, Pingu randomly decides to kick a table for no good reason. This last action prompts his mother to slap Pingu across the face. Only when Pingu runs crying into his room does his mother realise her mistake. Yes, you should feel guilty. No, scratch that, you should feel beyond guilty. I'm not entirely sure that you realise what you just did. I understand that the point of this episode is to show what a quarrel between a mother and son could look like, but even if you wanted her to act out of character, there's a limit and it's a few miles before this. Not even an admittedly heartwarming ending could save this episode from being the worst episode of ''Pingu'', in my opinion. You know what the sad part is? There's actually a WebAnimation/YouTubePoop of this episode which is much better than this episode! (The YTP in question: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtnBjfK98CI&t=8s)
* Tropers/TommyTiger: I normally like WesternAnimation/PinkPantherAndPals, except for a select few episodes. Other times, I might like an episode but hate one part of it. Such is the case of "Pink, Pink, Pink, Pink". It was a really funny episode, but I hate the [[DownerEnding ending]]. While not enough to ruin the epsiode for me, it's the worst part in the episode. After the Pink Panther gets decloned, Big Nose follows him, and what happens next? Does he make amends with Pinky? Does he help him destroy the machine? No, he clones himself and the clones all chase Pinky. [[FridgeHorror It is very possible]] they wanted to ''kill'' him! First of all, the ending is a very good example of TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot. The endings I listed before would have made the episode more enjoyable, but no! We get this ending. Second, Big Nose can be a JerkWithAHeartOfGold if he wants too, even having a lot of EnemyMine moments with Pinky, and this ending makes these moments somewhat uncomfortable. Third, Big Nose [[KarmaHoudini gets of scot-free]]. Fourth, [[DudeNotFunny the series treats this ending as funny]]. Yes, it's always hilarious whenever [[NiceGuy Pinky]] is chased to be possibly ''killed''. I'm a very tolerant animation fan (I've even managed to read a comic version of [[WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants One Coarse Meal]] and stomach it). This and my other Western Animation-related DMOS', however, are too bad to even tolerate. It was an otherwise fun episode that was almost ruined by a sloppy ending.
* squadallahthistle: For me, just the entire latter half of Season 2 of WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil was enough to turn me off of the show. Now, I'm OK with a show veering into dramatic territory every once in a while, ''Gravity Falls'' did it well (except for "Dipper and Mabel VS the Future"), but the way ''Star VS the Forces Of Evil'' did it just seemed uncomfortable to me. First, Marco and Jackie got together. Then, Starco, which I used to ship HARD, became possible pedophilia after Marco spent 16 years trapped in another dimension. They tried to justify it by saying he doesn't remember much, but it still doesn't feel right. Then, the world just seems to keep beating down on Star, culminating in her [[spoiler:having to leave Earth]]. I'm sorry, didn't this show used to be a comedy? The comedic elements that made me love the show in the first place seem to be overshadowed so much by the drama (and creepiness) of the latter half of Season 2 that I don't even care about when the next episodes will come out. Everyone else on this site sees it as improvement, but I see it as jumping the shark. I'm not the only one who thinks this either, many of my friends on YouTube feel the same way.
* Loekman3: While I enjoyed episode XCVII from ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'' aka the ContinuityCavalcade episode where every character that I loved made a reappearance and the [[spoiler:return of Scaramouce]], one scene that I could not enjoy is [[spoiler:Demongo's sudden reappearance]]. Considering that previously he is unambigously and straight up killed on-screen by Aku for failing him, there is absolutely no reason he should even appear but then this episode he suddenly appears and disappears as quickly, making it a BigLippedAlligatorMoment. How? Why? When? There is absolutely no explanation for his sudden reappearance aside from being an EnsembleDarkhorse but just because he is popular doesn't mean he deserves to come back, especially when there is absolutely no indication that he even survived the ordeal in the first place.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: For me personally, episode XCIX was this. No, it's not the fact that Jashi became canon; I have several reasons why the pairing wouldn't normally work, but I can see why people would ship it and I could honestly forgive the end result if it wasn't all packaged into one episode. All the stuff that could explicitly be seen as ShipTease material was thrust in at once, and the whole thing just felt like it was [[StrangledByTheRedString forcing them together]]. If they wanted this pairing to work, [[MayDecemberRomance age gap be damned]], then I feel they should have spread the teasing across more than one episode. But nope: obvious hints at the beginning of the episode, thrust into a life-or-death situation in the middle, and then at the end they exhaustively look at one another after their near-death experience, then finally...[[BigDamnKiss they suddenly kiss]]. No prompting, no major buildup, just locked lips without a cause. Again, I see why others like this couple, but if they want me to find it believable, they shouldn't have rushed it like they did. It just puts a huge blemish on what was otherwise a fantastic show. On the plus side however, the fan drama that arose from the event was pretty epic; props to Genndy for that at least.
** Tropers/{{Peridonyx}}: Episode C, specifically [[spoiler:The Guardian being KilledOffscreen and his portal being destroyed after all -- thus wasting an EnsembleDarkhorse and reducing all of that ChosenOne hype to a disappointing AntiClimax and RedHerring]].
** Tropers//{{ScotieRw}} I have an issue or two with the final episode, most of them forgivable, except for one. Ashi's cessation of existence. Why did she not vanish when Aku died, but instead last long enough to plan a wedding and gather people from all over the world to attend? It feels like they creators wanted to play with our emotions by tricking us into thinking we'd get a happy ending, only to be like "Lol I lied." or something. Very dickish.
* [=SampaCM=]: I'll start by telling I didn't have a good experience with the animated adaptations of my favorite video games, ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda'', ''WesternAnimation/MegaMan'' and [[WesternAnimation/TheSuperMarioBrosSuperShow The]] [[WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfSuperMarioBros3 Mario]] [[WesternAnimation/SuperMarioWorld trilogy]] kept me from trying the actual games for years, because I was afraid of what I was going to find (For instance, I avoided playing ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaI'' because I was concerned about meeting the cocky, goggles-wearing Simon Belmont from ''WesternAnimation/CaptainNTheGameMaster''). However, there is one moment in particular that made angry like anything else: The episode "A Little Learning", from ''Super Mario World''. In this episode, Iggy and Lemmy Koopa (I refuse to call them their cartoon names) are attending school, run by Princess Toadstool, along with Yoshi and (*sigh*) [[TheScrappy Oogtar]]. As expected, there are fights between the two pairs, with princess even blaming Oogtar for a fight that was clearly started by the Koopa siblings (She's technically correct, as Oogtar got them into trouble to begin with). But the very worst moment comes at the end: at the science fair, Iggy and Lemmy built a volcano, which uses ''real lava!''. At first it seems they know what they're doing, but goes out of control due to Bowser's meddling, so the school gets destroyed, and Iggy, Lemmy and Bowser are thrown down a warp pipe back to the Neon Castle. Now that episode made me angry for various reasons: Iggy and Lemmy really wanted to go to school, but Oogtar, who was being more of a {{Jerkass}} than usual, got them into trouble with the princess, which is the reason why they decided to start a fight, and showing them off in the science fair, and in the end they were expelled for an accident that was Bowser's fault, essentially ruining the chance of a HeelFaceTurn by the siblings.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes about. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. And here's where my moment starts: just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything from inside his bubble. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, [[IdiotHero Link]] decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!
* Tropers/{{Statzkeen}}: ''Disney/{{Moana}}'' had the best music of any Disney movie since Lion King, and then nearly ruined it with that awful pop cover version of "How Far I'll Go" in the credits.

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[[folder:The Advertures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius]]
Boy, for a self-proclaimed genius, [[WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius Jimmy]] really made some serious mistakes over the years.

* Tropers/MadMan400096: For one of the biggest, stupidest {{Idiot Ball}}s in cartoon history, look no further than the episode "Stranded". While the opening can be considered stupid (an argument between Jimmy and Cindy whether the equator can be seen, even though most kids their age know that it's a theoretical point of reference), what did it for me was the ending, where they argue over their next problem: Cindy says that UsefulNotes/{{Australia}} is a continent, but Jimmy says it's not. What was that about Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius again?
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: In TheMovie, it was ten times worse when they have a debate about dinosaurs. First things first, Cindy's report is about how female dinosaurs are stronger than male dinosaurs. Ok so far, there is evidence of this being true[[note]]It's hypothesized by some paleontologists, and indeed there are animals closely related
[[DethroningMoment/WesternAnimationAToJ A to dinosaurs, like crocodiles and birds, that have that exact sexual dimorphism, so it's not unlikely[[/note]]. Then, she claims that the dinosaur skeleton she constructed is a Plesiosaurus. Barring the fact that Plesiosauruses aren't even dinosaurs J]]
* [[DethroningMoment/WesternAnimationKToZ K
to begin with, the... thing she constructed looks nothing like a Plesiosaurus. A Plesiosaurus is well known to have a barrel shaped body, flippers, a long neck, a small head, and are purely aquatic sea creatures (or, in layman's terms, say the word "Plesiosaurus" and try not to picture the LochNessMonster--hint hint, it's impossible). This skeleton is more or less a Velociraptor with a Parasaurolophus crest. Jimmy responds by pointing out that the model is inaccurate... by telling the class that the crest belongs to a Megalosaurus. No such crest even remotely exists on Megalosaurus.
* Tropers/SkarmorySilver: Speaking of paleontology, I give you "Sorry, Wrong Era." Wrong indeed on so many levels, but special mention goes to the goddamn [[PteroSoarer Pteranodon]]. Pteranodons were neither scaly nor leathery-winged, they could not and did not pick up things with their feet, they did not fly anywhere inland, they did not live at the same time as T-Rex, they did not grow that big, and their babies were absolutely not the size of ten-year-old boys. Between this... atrocity and the shitload of AnachronismStew throughout the episode (and mind you, this was supposed to be in the Cretaceous period), this has to be my inner paleontology nerd's least favorite episode of any Western cartoon (seriously, they should have hired a paleontologist as a consultant for the show in general). About the only mitigating factor, from my POV at least, was that they didn't consider throwing in a 300-foot-long, T-rex-gobbling Spinosaurus.
** Tropers/BronyOfTheOctaves: To add to your criticism of the episode, this is where I feel the writers began go overboard with the "Hugh is TooDumbToLive but lovable guy!" trope, as half of the episode cuts to him abusing the time device and showing little to no remorse over the fact he sent his own son and friends 200 million years into the past. Same could be said to him making a woman experience giving birth again and again and again.
* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: For me, it's the Christmas episode. Jimmy acts like a {{Jerkass}} to Carl by trying to force his disbelief of Santa onto him, since Carl actually believes in Santa. Cindy and Libby call Jimmy on this and attempt to prove Santa real as reporters. Eventually, it turns out Santa is real and Jimmy ends up screwing up and incapacitating him, which threatens Christmas. When Cindy and Libby threaten to expose this back home, which would be perfect karma for the way Jimmy's been acting all this time, he uses an invention to physically launch them out of the North Pole! And the kicker comes at the end, after Jimmy, as usual, cleans up the mess he created to start with, Santa is able to make his deliveries... and he brings Cindy and Libby coal for trying to humiliate Jimmy! What!? Cindy and Libby, whose only crimes were actually giving a damn about Carl's feelings and doing their reporter duty to expose what Jimmy did and give him some well-deserved humbling, are punished by Santa while Jimmy is rewarded!? This pushed Jimmy into nigh MarySue territory for me, and really made me empathize with Cindy. It's no wonder Jimmy pisses her off.
** deathedge: "Holly Jolly Jimmy" wouldn't have been so bad if it wasn't for the fact that Jimmy gets the Dwarf star he had always wanted, and the reveal that Jimmy (as Sheen predicted) had been on the naughty list for a little while now. Jimmy should have gotten coal too for being a total jerk to Carl, and almost always being rather condescending towards everyone else around him.
* Tropers/AustinDR: For me, it's the episode "Send in the Clones". The premise is alright: Jimmy creates clones of himself to avoid his chores, and chaos ensues. The reason why this episode sucks is because no one noticed Jimmy's different hairstyles and voices. I mean, if they know anything about Jimmy, surely they would know that he wears his hair in a ice cream like whip, and surely they could distinguish his voice. One clone even had a frickin' mustache for Christ's sake!
** TylerFG: Not to mention how they end the episode. Jimmy is confronted by an angry mob, and they chase him away for it, and it's pretty obvious they're going to kick his ass. And they just end it there. This angry mob also included his own grandmother. [Gee, what an understanding family!
* Shadow200: "The Tomorrow Boys". The episode where Jimmy, Sheen, and Carl go to the BadFuture where Libby rules over all thanks to Jimmy's invention. Jimmy Moron, what may I ask got you the bright idea to create something that turns whoever uses it into a dictator? I'm starting to doubt the genius in him after that and other idiotic inventions he made.
** PrincessTogezo: I liked this episode for the most part, but I was not a fan of the scene where the boys sabotage Libby's birthday presents so she won't get her hands on the invention. After the boys unwrap/smash most of the presents, they still haven't found Jimmy's present, and it's then that they finally get the idea to ask someone where the present is (and Cindy said it was under 'Z' for "zero"). If they had just done that, Libby wouldn't have gotten mad at them and yelled at them in a rather uncomfortable scene. Even if Libby ended up not becoming a dictator because the boys destroyed the invention, they still ruined the rest of her presents, and this was at her birthday party, no less! The Graystar song playing over this part was pretty cool, but other than that, this scene is cringeworthy.
* Tropers/{{BronyOftheOctaves}}: "Normal Boy", in so many spades. The episode was basically in a huge sense of IdiotPlot had it not been for everyone's rather crude attitude towards Jimmy just because the kid is super smart. What boggles my mind is why was this such a big deal in this episode if Jimmy has done stuff like this before? And yet here we have Judy, Jimmy's own mom saying she wished he was normal, and then everyone in the class giving him smart just because of his intelligence impressed Miss Fowl and Willougby. And then just throw in the idea of Jimmy being "stupid" because of his invention and Carl and Sheen take a huge [[TookALevelInDumbass drop of intelligence]] and assume him being 'stupid' is normal. What a "great" episode huh?
* Topers/{{IAmNotAFunguy}}: I never really liked Cindy as a character because I thought she was bossy, arrogant, and materialistic (even though she's definitely had her positive moments), but the episode that really pushed me over was "The Science Fair Affair". In this episode Cindy successfully pushes to get Jimmy banned from the School Science Fair because he's beaten her (and everyone) every year in the past. On the day of the science fair everyone has inventions that are rather useless, including Cindy. Jimmy has designed a machine that grinds up garbage into a clean oil substitute which his father submits for a Nobel Prize. It all looks well for Jimmy until another kid messes up his machine and it nearly kills the science fair judges. Jimmy and Cindy instruct the others how to team up and destroy the machine and the judges decide to split First Prize among everybody whose invention helped stop Jimmy's machine, not Cindy whose invention was not used. Jimmy reminds her that by giving the group positive direction and making sure they all help out, she can feel the reward of personal satisfaction because she knows how to get a group to work together. Needless to say she doesn't take it well because some silly lesson like that was not the shiny gold medal she wanted. After all of the the kid who messed up Jimmy's machine in the first place is never in trouble. Also what was Cindy's invention? A machine that recycles rotten old gym socks into new sweaters, because who doesn't want a machine that can do that?
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Animaniacs]]
* Tropers/legomaniac90: The episode "I Got Yer Can" from ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' starts out like your normal Slappy Squirrel segment with Slappy getting annoyed by a cleanliness-obsessed chipmunk, but then takes a turn for the worse when Slappy proceeds to ruin the poor chipmunk's health and sanity. The reason? [[DisproportionateRetribution Said chipmunk asked her to put a can in her trash receptacle]]. And Slappy gets away with it! [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop So remember kids, if someone asks you to do something that you don't like, feel free to turn them into insane wrecks for the heck of it!]]
** Tropers/newborncolt: You think that's bad? For me, Slappy Squirrel's big low point was the episode "Rest In Pieces". Long story short, Slappy's nemesis Walter Wolf [[MoralEventHorizon sinks to the ultimate low]] in his near-century-long wave of schemes to get rid of her by faking his own death in order to make everybody start hating her for doing everything she ever did to him, including her nephew! Are you fucking kidding me?! Never mind the fact that considering Skippy's age, he was naïve enough to buy this story, but the way he was so quick to accuse her of being a "murderer" nearly made me lose all sympathy for the kid! Not to mention the fact that this reaction is coming from somebody who has admired and looked up to his [[CoolOldLady awesome aunt]] and seen all her old cartoons long enough so sooner or later, he'd have to look past her nemeses' schemes! I can understand everybody else, especially those attending Walter's "funeral", being this hateful towards Slappy when Walter pulls such a stunt, but coming from her own nephew, the one who has little to no reason to doubt her through her years of experience, that is just terrible on so many levels! That entire reason alone is why I hate this episode with a passion! And I don't care that Walter got found out and chased away at the end; it does not save this episode from being this cruel to poor Slappy!
* Shadow200: In the short episode "Fake" Dr. Scartchansniff takes the Warners to a Wrestling match and is enjoying it, however Yakko, Wakko, and Dot get into an argument with him complaining that it's fake and they don't want to be here while heckling the wrestlers while he tries to get them to behave. Naturally the Wrestlers overhear them and believe that it was poor Scartchansniff who was calling them fake and drag him into the ring and beat the stuffing out of him whilst The Warner Siblings are now interested and enjoying watching an old men get pounded on. Seriously, what happened to them saying that they love him and while tease him never want to see him get hurt?
* Tropers/CaptainTedium: In general, I was always annoyed by the constant {{Take That}}s towards Creator/{{Disney}} and their works made by the comedy-oriented Warner Bros. cartoons of the 90's because their digs frequently came off as mean-spirited and petty, but for me, their absolute lowest dig at Disney was the ''Animaniacs'' short "Jokahontas", which parodied ''Disney/{{Pocahontas}}'' and featured a musical number accusing Disney of rehashing the same old story in every movie they made with a female protagonist. The thing is that the same episode had a short called "Wakko at the Bat", which was basically an imitation of the ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' short "Buster at the Bat" in that it was a retelling of the poem ''Casey at the Bat'' with the TwistEnding of the story avoiding the original poem's DownerEnding, so their accusations of Disney recycling the same old stories come off as rather hypocritical.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Aqua Teen Hunger Force]]
"Gentlemen... '''BEHOLD!''' I have created a list of ''every moment'' when [[WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce this show]]... HAS FAILED! ''AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA!''"
* Tropers/{{Crazyrabbits}}: Season 4's "Party All The Time", where Frylock discovers he has melanoma (cancer) on his face. His condition grows worse, until his skin is pale, his face is severely scarred and all of the fries are gone from his head, while Master Shake and Meatwad attempt to cheer him up with a bunch of one-note tricks (including Shake shoving his hand into a bee hive and the group organizing a surprise performance by Andrew W.K.). The episode marked a severe shift from absurdest humor to dark and depressing. Also, after the numerous times death has been played for laughs in the series ([[TheyKilledKenny Carl, Shake, and Meatwad have each died more than once over the course of the series in absurd ways]]), saddling the mentor of the group with a disease and playing it straight doesn't have the same impact. A note to the writers: cancer is not funny. Ever.
* Animeking1108: As a cat lover, "Reedickyoulus" officially killed ATHF for me. It opened with Shake microwaving a cat, and how is he punished? [[KarmaHoudini By sleeping outside]]. No, a ''smart'' person would call the cops, especially considering that it was shown that he murdered pets all the time. Not only does Master Shake cross the MoralEventHorizon in doing this, but it makes me think that the writers hate cats enough to see them get murdered (Shake decapitating another cat with a saw and Meatwad crushing one with robot arms). Is it any coincidence why I stopped watching the show from there?
** {{Ecclytennysmithylove}}: I agree. At least all of Meatwad's pets Shake killed finally got their vengeance on him in the end, thanks to [[ChekhovsGun Carl's golden radioactive turds]].
*** Tropers/{{SoulCross}}: My problem with that episode is how Shake really didn't get his comeuppance. In fact it ended pretty well for him given that he willingly became a zombie through sex with a zombie gorilla and leaving on a gay zombie gorilla party bus. Out of all the ATHF episodes this is the one that he deserved a gruesome death himself and didn't get it.
* Tropers/{{Drcynic24}}: For me, it had to be "Global Grilling". This may have been the only episode that made me physically ill. Frankly, hocking up loogies isn't all that funny, and it's also disgusting. That was the whole episode. The worst of it all was that ItWasAllJustADream. In general, season 4 was about the time that the general decline in story quality began (as with the episode mentioned above) and others such as "Boost Mobile". The show really JumpedTheShark to me with this one though.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: The Boondocks]]
These are [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck the moments]] that are [[WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks definitely not gangsta]].
* Tropers/AustinDR: For the most part, I have a love-hate relationship with ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks'', some episodes work, some don't do it for me. In my honest opinion, I hated the episode "The Trial of Robert Kelly". I couldn't believe how stupid the jury members were! They saw the video of Kelly urinating on the girl, heck, they even saw his face on the phone while he was committing the crime! Even with all that evidence to prove him guilty, he gets [[KarmaHoudini off scot-free]]! What the heck?! They just saw pretty good evidence that he committed the crime, and yet they let him go free?! When [[OnlySaneMan Huey]] has every right to disagree with the verdict, he gets shunned. This is an episode I will never watch again.
** fluffything: Agreed. I'm not a fan of ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks'' in general, but this episode is just horrible on so many levels. Yes, I know the show takes place in a CrapsackWorld of sorts. Yes, I know it's supposed to be a social satire on urban culture especially regarding African-American citizens. Yes, I know many characters in the show tend to hold the IdiotBall for the sake of comedy or so someone else can provide social commentary. That doesn't excuse how utterly bad this episode was. I know there are fans of musicians that defend them no matter what horrible things said musicians have done (Chris Brown's fandom is a perfect example of this). But, there is no way any universe (not even one as fucked-up as the world portrayed in this cartoon) would have an entire (emphasis on "entire") jury declare a man innocent (despite blatant evidence to the contrary) just because he's a "good singer".
* @/LadyStardust: I have to go with the Tyler Perry episode. Now, I want to make it clear I am not a Tyler Perry fan, but this episode was just childish, with jokes basically being nothing more than homophobic and just unfunny.
* Animeking1108: The final episode (at least in broadcast order). What really ruined it for me was Grandad's {{Flanderization}} into a full-on [[AbusiveParents abusive grandfather]]. The episode was about Riley getting in trouble for using gay as an insult. In order to quell the fire, Grandad (unintentionally) states that Riley has special needs, which makes everyone sympathize with him. So, what does Grandad do after realizing his mistake? He goes along with it, and just to really add insult to injury, calls Riley retarded out of spite.
* SenorCornholio: I'm adding an episode from season 4, and that's "Freedomland". Basically, the Freemans end up working at a slavery reenactment and realize they're being treated like slaves themselves. Are there upsides? Well, one; the fight scene at the end was pretty awesome. But everything else didn't quite work for me. The worst of it, however, has to be the CharacterDerailment of Uncle Ruckus (no relation). In the previous seasons, Ruckus was a racist for sure, but he was also at least civil for the most part; even at the end of season 2 where he let the truck almost run over Huey and Riley, it's hinted that it wasn't out of malicious intent. He also had some good development episodes, especially in season 3, where he TookALevelInKindness. Above all though, at least back then the Freemans could consider him a friend, or at least an ally. This episode, however, sees Ruckus not only running said slavery reenactment, but also [[MoralEventHorizon willingly (and gleefully) allowing the idea of Huey getting his legs cut off so he doesn't escape]]. Something tells me that the Ruckus of old, racist as he was, would have drawn the line at the thought of a kid getting dismembered. And though the fight scene ensuing was awesome, Ruckus didn't even participate all that much. Didn't the other seasons paint him as a capable fighter in his own right, even managing to beat Huey with his own nunchaku? Wouldn't it be awesome to see a rematch between Huey and Ruckus, or in the case of pre-season 4 Ruckus, having a BackToBackBadasses moment? Either way, this episode partially destroyed Ruckus' character for me, and I say "partially" because [[FanonDiscontinuity as far as I'm aware, season 4 isn't canon]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Codename: Kids Next Door]]
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'': There is one moment I feel a good portion of the fandom would agree was the biggest WTF moment of the series. That of course being when they reveal that [[spoiler:Heinrich, Numbah 5's main rival for several episodes is really a girl named "Henrietta".]] Let that sink in for a moment. Esentially, the episode "Operation: C.A.R.A.M.E.L." that shows this reveal centers around magical caramels that require someone to sacrifice a part of themselves to make them delicious (IE: Talent, personality, etc.). Heinrich, we are told, gave up beauty to make said caramels and blamed Numbah 5 for it ever since. Not only was it, apart from the vague "was once beautiful" line, never stated beforehand that Heinrich was really [[spoiler:a girl]], but not once did Numbah 5 ever mention she [[spoiler: had a friend named Henrietta]]. The whole reveal comes completely out of nowhere and is so utterly ridiculous that it feels more like something out of a bad fanfic than an actual episode.
* MedicTf2: The one episode that I really did not like was "Operation F..O.O.D.F.I.T.E." For starters, it has the same amount of nausea you get when watching anthromorphic food be stuffed into children as the first Gramma Stuffum episode. However, this episode takes it one step further by having a giant sandwich devour the KND. To top it all off, the entire episode has heavy metal playing in the background, which I have zero-tolerance for.
* Animeking1108: Don't get me wrong: ''Operation G.R.A.D.U.A.T.E.S.'' was a good episode. However, one moment near the end rubbed me the wrong way. After finding out that [[spoiler: Tommy can't be let back in the KND]], Numbuh Four threatens to quit the team. However, the rest of the team responds with complete indifference, [[TheFriendNobodyLikes like as if they don't care about him]]. I expected that sort of thing out of Numbuh Five at least, but even [[ShipTease Numbuh Three]] didn't give a shit. Remember, this episode aired after ''Operation F.U.T.U.R.E.,'' which was Numbuh Four's Crowning Moment of Awesome. [[DudeWheresMyRespect You'd think they'd value him a little more]].
* bisonx: I've always hated the series. What finally caused me to snap at the series was ''Operation M.O.V.I.E.,'' which to me, is a massive insult to movies in general. First off, movies that are rated R are not for adults only, they're for people aged 17 and up. There's a rating for adults only, and it's the X rating. Secondly, when did adult movies become secret meetings for evil adults? And finally, what really upset me was when Numbuh Four said that adult movies were overrated.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Courage the Cowardly Dog]]
WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog is often one of those shows most people think of when they bring up Creator/CartoonNetwork's golden years, but even it tends to have a stinker now and again. We're all glad Courage is so... well, [[MeaningfulName courageous]]; he has to be if he can stand being associated with [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck these moments]].
* Tropers/WolfMan16: The ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' episode "Ball Of Revenge" portrays [[{{Jerkass}} Eustace's]] CharacterDerailment so extreme that he's very much suffered [[WesternAnimation/SouthPark Cartman]][[{{Flanderization}} ization]]. The episode has Eustace bringing in many of Courage's past rivals to kill him, [[DisproportionateRetribution all because Courage got a blanket that Eustace wanted]]! It also doesn't help that most of said villains have also tried to kill Eustace before. What's worse is that Eustace's strategy to lure Courage towards the villains is by using Muriel, his own wife, as bait! That's right, the same guy who, during earlier seasons, actually helped Courage with an incantation to exorcise a demon out of Muriel and suggested Muriel being used as bait for a sea serpent being extremely wrong, is doing these horrific acts. It actually makes this one of the most twisted episodes of the show.
** fluffything: I hate the episode "Ball Of Revenge" (to the point where I'll change the channel if it comes on) as well. Not only was it the lowest point for Eustace, but it also involved him teaming up with several of Courage's past villains (many of which tried to kill/hurt Eustace themselves). But, that's not the DMOS for me. Oh, no. The absolute low point this already awful episode throws at is is the way Courage defeats this enemy team-up. How? He screams at them. Let me repeat that. Courage defeats his worst enemies by screaming at them causing the floor to collapse and them to fall into a hole! I'd like to remind everyone that one of Courage's traits is that, despite being a coward, he's rather clever and usually defeats his enemies by outwitting them (though he does use his compassionate nature at times as well). Oh and let's not forget the fact that he [[PunctuatedForEmphasis never. Gives. Up.]] Or did we forget how he defeated Mecha-Courage by sheer determination alone? Having Courage defeat his enemies by screaming at them not only undermines Courage's whole character, but it utterly ruins the threat the villains possessed in the first place. This isn't a ChekhovsSkill or even anything remotely similar. This the writers [[AssPull pulling utter bull out their respective bums]] and trying to pass it off as good writing.
** Tropers/lloyd22: Eustace was especially dislikable in that episode. After all the times Courage reluctantly saved his ungrateful ass, how does Eustace repay him? He hires a bunch of villains to actually ''kill'' Courage, and even used ''his own wife'' as bait, not even thinking about how his wife would feel if Courage were to die. What especially makes me angry about that episode is Eustace's punishment at the end. The man tried to kill an innocent dog and how does Muriel punish him? By letting him sleep on the floor with the blanket he wanted. [[SarcasmMode Great punishment]]. Eustace should've been given a much worse punishment than what he got.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: Fourthed. Even though I don't hate this episode as much as most people (trust me, I'm very tolerable when it comes to TV episodes, for the most part), the entire episode definitely had problems up the wazoo. We've gone over Eustace's CharacterDerailment, his [[KarmaHoudini lack of a real punishment]], and the AssPull of Courage's trademark scream being turned into the [[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Unrelenting Force]], but let's count another flaw this episode has: the fact that TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot. An episode with Courage having to go up against his worst foes? Sounds great! There's one problem though (out of many): all the villains are from season 1 only. We have only two recurring villains: Katz and Le Quack. The others were one-shot villains who are either natural predators to begin with (the Weremole and the Queen of the Black Puddle) or pretty much dead (the Cajun Fox and the Big Toe). What about Benton Tarantella and Errol van Volkheim? What about Ma Bagge? What about [[StarterVillain the Chicken from Outer Space]]? He's appeared once in spite of being cooked alive, so I don't see a reason why he can't come back. And how do they decide to deal with Courage? Challenge him to a game of dodgeball. Yeah, it's a callback to Courage's first encounter with Katz as he wanted to play "a little sport before dying", but it's just too silly to even take seriously in this context. This was supposed to be one of the big finales to the show, people! Speaking of [[CatsAreMean Katz]], the diabolical feline that's been one of the biggest monsters in the show? What does he do to torture Muriel into bringing Courage down to the basement to begin with? [[PokeThePoodle Mix Muriel's lights with the darks]]. Come on Katz, you're a classier villain than that! Lastly, the Duck Brothers' cameo: all they do is perform a halftime song and then disappear with [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse Le Quack]]. The rest of WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog is great, for the most part; it's just this one that's considered the silver turd in a cave of diamonds and I can definitely agree with that.
*** Shadoboy: Just to twist the knife further in with the lackluster villains, at the end of the episode they show for a brief moment Freaky Fred threathening Courage from the TV. Yes, they relegated one of Courage's most memorable enemies to a cameo.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Danny Phantom]]
Not even WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom can keep these moments in the Fenton Thermos forever.
* Tropers/{{terlwyth}}: Okay I love ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' so far, but the episode "The Fright Before Christmas" that should be in good cheer, was just terrible. I mean, firstly they treat Danny's hatred of Christmas with no sympathy. It's perfectly reasonable to hate such a time when all your parents do is squabble and let nothing get done, yet it's treated like {{Wangst}}. After that he goes off to blow of some steam in The Ghost World and he accidentally destroys Ghost Writer's book. But the only mean thing he did was not apologize and claim to hate Christmas. What does GW do? He [[DisproportionateRetribution trapped Danny in a book, had the town get destroyed, all the presents stolen, and turned everyone against him and didn't let one thing for the poor guy go right]]. And somehow it's Danny's fault entirely? Not to mention it implies Amity Park is nothing but materialistic. Even the rhymes don't help this time.
* fluffything: For me, it was the ResetButton ending for the TV movie "Reality Trip". Long story short, Danny's parents say that they accept him for who he is and that they would never hunt down their own son when they find out he's half ghost. So, what does Danny do? Why, he uses the Reality Gauntlet to rewind time so that none of that ever happened. Umm... Danny? Just how stupid are you? Your parents just said that they accept your half-ghost status and would never try to hurt you, and your reaction is to essentially go back to the past and essentially erase that from history! At least "Phantom Planet" fixed that... somewhat, but it was still a really stupid thing for Danny to do.
** Tropers/{{ILikeCrows}}: Rewinding time made sense to me since his identity had been revealed to the whole world. That still leaves the question of why Danny, now that he knows his parents will accept him, still won't say he's half-ghost.
* Tropers/{{heartauthor}}: "Teacher of the Year", the episode where Danny has to deal with doing good on a test and stopping Technus from inside an online computer game, has a scene that's always rubbed me the wrong way. It's when Danny arrives home only to find that Mr. Lancer has told Danny's parents about his most recent flunked test. Danny's parents are understandably upset about the news. But then, [[FromBadToWorse the situation takes a sharp turn]] when Maddie declares that "[Danny is] a Fenton. And Fentons get A's" (except for Jack, who got B minuses); she then orders Danny to retake the test "and pass it with flying colors." It's also pretty clear that Jack agrees with Maddie. Now, don't get me wrong; if a kid's doing bad in school, parents have a right to be worried about it. But this scene seems to indicate that Maddie and Jack aren't just expecting Danny to do good in school; [[UnfortunateImplications they're expecting him to be perfect]], [[SarcasmMode because having a son who isn't as intellectually gifted as the rest of his family is absolutely horrible]]. Making sure a kid isn't failing is one thing, but [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop demanding them to do things perfectly so they don't disgrace the family name]] is quite another. Even notoriously serious [[BadassBookworm Jazz]] (who [[SecretSecretKeeper knew Danny's secret]] at the time) had more sympathy for Danny than his parents did.
* Tropers/{{Emmz}}: Even though I find Danny Phantom to be a good show, there was one episode's ending that I found to be a major slap in the face, and that was “Pirate Radio”. Basically, the episode is about Ember teaming up with Youngblood and all the adults in Amity Park being kidnapped as part of their plan, and Danny having to stop them. Since Danny can't use his ghost powers due to a forcefield preventing him, he has to resort to gathering up all the teens at his school to team up, get on the ghost ship where Ember, Youngblood, and Youngblood's minions reside, and fight back against the villains. So how exactly is this episode a Dethroning Moment of Suck to me? Well, the battle ends with Danny falling off the ship, Sam disabling the forcefield, and Danny going ghost and saving the day. What does Danny get in return? [[JerkJock Dash]] berating him for “bailing out” and everyone going back to ignoring him, completely forgetting the fact that he managed to assemble EVERY student at his school and fight against the ghosts without using his powers, proving Danny's leadership skills and to be efficient even when he’s not in his ghost form. To make matters worse, the episode ends with Danny getting in trouble with his parents for using the Ops Center and throwing a party (the latter not even being his fault), and him getting grounded for a month. Are you kidding me? I really liked the episode up until those scenes. It makes all the developement Danny went through seem pointless, and punishes him for absolutely no reason.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Daria]]
* Tropers/{{Eegah}}: The ''WesternAnimation/{{Daria}}'' episode "Depth Takes a Holiday". This wonderfully honest depiction of high school life suddenly takes a hard turn into ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' territory as Daria has to get fugitive holidays back to their dimension. It's completely beyond me how anyone working on the show thought this was a good idea.
* Tropers/{{Hungerismygame}}: While Daria almost never resorts to crude humor, in "See Jane Run" when Jane's love interest of the episode asks if Daria has ever seen Jane "run like the wind," Daria asks if he's ever seen Jane break wind. [[SarcasmMode Hilarity ensues.]]
* Tropers/{{Hyrin}}: The introduction of Tom Sloane. Before, the show was an interesting take on high school life told through the eyes of an outsider. After, it was a standard teen rom-com that descended into the cliched LoveTriangle. If they had wanted to do that, they should have stuck with the original plan and used Mack instead.
* Tropers/{{Eedwardgrey3}}: "Fizzed" tried to criticize corporate sponsoring of schools: good. Then it got ridiculously {{Anvilicious}}, with the cheerleaders forced to dress in soda cans by the evil Coca Cola/Pepsi {{Expy}} and ended with an over the top scene of miss Li running around [[AxCrazy with an axe]] because of a sugar high. Glen Eichler apparently didn't get the negative reactions.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Dexter's Laboratory]]
Not everyday can be a fine day for science. Same thing goes for [[WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory this show]].
* Kittens: I love ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'', but one moment in "Don't Be a Baby" was a [=DMoS=]. It was when Dexter and Deedee turned their parents into babies. It was cute and funny at first, but what annoyed me was when Dexter wanted to hold the babies and Deedee said that "Guys don't know how to take care of babies," so Dexter says that he can and so he tries to prove it. But when Deedee hands over their mother she accidentally drops her and she cries. So Deedee looks at Dexter like he did it when clearly Deedee did it! Wow, Deedee, when did you become such a witch! I still do personally like Dexter's Lab, but that moment in that episode was stupid.
** Tropers/{{KrazyTVWatcher}}: I agree, especially given that [[DumbBlonde Dee Dee was the one who caused this whole fiasco in the first place]].
* fluffything: For me, it was the episode "Dexter and Computress Get Mandark" that was "created" (IE: He provided the audio track) by a six year-old kid. No, saying "But he's just a child" doesn't excuse how utterly terrible it is. There have been children who have created far better works of entertainment than this. Long story short, the episode is about nothing but utter randomness... and not in a good way. Dexter and some robot (named Computress) cause Mandark's head to shrink and then accidentally cause it to grow until it explodes and tiny Mandark heads fall from the sky. Oh, and there's an OverlyLongGag involving Dexter calling Computress "stupid". It's like a poorly written TrollFic than anything else. About the only good thing about it is the ArtShift from the show's normal style to a more "crayon drawing" look, which I felt fit the whole "a kid made it" theme. Too bad the rest of the episode was horrible.
* Tropers/{{Philipnova798}}: "Dexter Vs. Santa's Claws". Now for me, it seemed like Dexter was in all-out [[{{Jerkass}} jackass]] mode. Trying to prove Santa wasn't real and ultimately pissing off his family definitely didn't make for a good idea. It just makes me feel sorry for Santa. Also, the ending just came out of nowhere, can you guys say commercialism? Because I know I can.
** {{DibKyle}}: Not to mention how utterly traumatizing the story is. A favorite cartoon character hunts down and nearly kills a beloved holiday icon, ruining Christmas in the process. Seriously, who thought this was a good idea for kids?
* {{Disney23}}: Mine has to be "Dexter Detention". Talk about your CruelTwistEnding. It has Dexter and some other students in detention and the situation is treated like a prison story. They dig an escape tunnel under the floorboard and Dexter comes out on the other side... at the state prison. The episode ends with Dexter in the striped outfit breaking rocks at gunpoint. The End. Dude, the hell?
** RAZ: Agreed that this was not that good an episode, and what really sets me off about this one is what results in Dexter getting detention in the first place. A {{Jerkass}} student continues to bug Dexter throughout at the beginning for a test answer. Dexter initially refuses to answer him, but the student hassles him so much Dexter loses his cool and accidentally blurts out the answer, leading to the detention. DisproportionateRetribution aside, the real kicker is the student that caused this in the first place doesn't even get [[KarmaHoudini any punishment]] at all.
** bisonx: The episode in general is this for me. When in the hell were students in detention treated as if they were low-life criminals? I've been to detention once, and not once am I treated like a criminal.
* {{DarkLadyCelebrian}}: "The Old Switcharooms". Deedee and Dexter break their dad's long-awaited bowling trophy and are sent to each other's rooms as punishment instead of their own. Reasonable, seeing as their rooms are basically a Toys R Us and an advanced research laboratory and it's a more effective punishment to ground them in rooms that don't contain things that appeal to them. However, Dexter goes [[{{Ax Crazy}} absolutely ripshit]] because he thinks Deedee is messing up his lab while he's not there, and he ends up going on a rampage and completely trashing Deedee's room. Okay, he overreacted and trashing the room wasn't cool, but it's Dexter and judging by Deedee's past behaviors, I could see where he was coming from. But then his dad finds out Dexter's trashed the room and what does he do as punishment? [[{{Abusive Parents}} Make Dexter sleep in the doghouse in the rain.]] This isn't ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' or ''WesternAnimation/{{Family Guy}}'', Dexter's parents are not {{Abusive Parents}} by characterization, so this was completely out of left field. ''Dexter's Laboratory'' is not the appropriate cartoon to be playing child abuse for laughs!
* {{Patworx}}: "A Third Dad Cartoon" was shockingly lazy to me even as a kid. The entire thing consists of Dad going to play golf while Dexter and Deedee stand their smiling (because I'm sure they wouldn't rather play with toys or work on inventions than watch their Dad play golf). The dad takes his sweet time setting everything up and getting himself into just the right position to hit the ball . . . and then it starts raining. Dad walks away and Dexter and Deedee (now frowning) follow him. The end! So uninteresting!
* TheSnowSquirrel: For me, it was a moment in "Dexter is Dirty". In said episode, Dexter's hands are dirty, so Mom makes him go upstairs to wash up before lunch, fair enough. After a while Dexter finishes and heads back to the kitchen, where he sees Deedee walking out while thanking their mom for the food. So you'd think he'd come up to Mom, and she'd give him his meal that she'd set aside for when he was ready, right? Wrong. She completely ignores him as he gets right up next to her and watches sadly as she scrapes the remains of the lunch into the trash. Really, [[UnNamedParent Dexter's Mom?]] So nice that you let your son go hungry because he was taking the time to do exactly as you said!
* cheedo: Even as a kid that episode where Dexter turns Deedee into their mom so she can show up for a PTA meeting (I forget the reason but he didn't want to use their action mom- probably because of a bad grade, I think). He and Deedee argue while waiting to see the principal and Dexter, in a totally OOC moment, HITS HER. The two other kids in the room give him a thumbs-up! Why is this okay to present to kids?
* alinhoalisson: The episode "Surprise!" It's Dexter's birthday party and his parents are out to buy him some gifts. He makes an invention that leaves him invisible and follows them to ensure they'll buy at least one thing he's always wanted: A Major Glory action-figure. His parents buy lots of stuff he ''doesn't'' want and seem like baby toys. Once Dexter puts the action-figure he wants in the cart, Mom picks it up and tosses it aside, claiming he "doesn't need junk." So, we have this moment when Dexter goes back home depressed that none of his birthday gifts were good. And then, we have a HopeSpot moment when he returns and guess what? One of his friends bought him the action figure as a gift, and not only that, Major Glory himself showed up at the party. This doesn't last long, as Dexter is still invisible, he gets attacked up by Major Glory who mistakes him as a malicious ghost. And then the episode ends with light upbeat music playing on the background while a child is mercilessly being beaten to a pulp by the hero he idolizes. Truly saddening.
* MightyMewtron: I considered putting "Chicken Scratch" because I find it gross and illogical, but even more illogical (and showcasing of SeasonalRot) is "The Babe Sitter". The premise of Dee Dee babysitting Mandark doesn't make sense because Mandark isn't more than two years younger than her, and this isn't even made into a joke. The episode plays with Dee Dee's obliviousness to the degree she barely seems like her own character at all, to the point where she keeps calling Mandark by his birth name of Susan even after he literally screams at her to stop, which she writes off as having a tantrum. It's more uncomfortable than funny and it seems to flanderize Dee Dee to ignore the most obvious complaints for the sake of a very fanficky plot.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: The Flintstones]]
WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones may have been the first prime time cartoon to have aired, causing a massive renaissance in its awakening, but sometimes older isn't always better. Whether it's [[ValuesDissonance a joke or entire episode that hasn't aged well]] or a steaming case of SeasonalRot, these are [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck the moments]] that we wish were converted into fossil fuels.
* RAZ: ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'' had one episode entitled "The Tycoon" that I caught when I was pretty young and even today I still remember just how extraordinarily pissed I was after watching this crapfest. The premise involves a rich snob who looks exactly like Fred getting tired of work and bailing on the job, and after his assistants panic they get Fred to fill in for him until he's found. Wilma, Betty, and Barney encounter the rich guy and confuse him for Fred, and he in turn treats them all like dirt and so they all blame Fred. The real Fred gets tired of all the work he has to do as well and also bails, happy to return to his wife and friends. But since they're all still angry after their encounter with Fake Fred, Barney kicks the real Fred's ass and Wilma and Betty yell at him for being a being a total dick when he didn't even do anything. The End. Now Fred can be kind of a jerk sometimes (all the characters can) but that one went beyond mean, especially since he gets completely treated like something a dog crapped out by the end for something he's one hundred percent innocent of. I remember screaming at my TV and wanting to kick it several times after that half-assed 30 minutes of unnecessary cruelty.
** Tropers/{{Komatsuzaki}}: I second this so hard. I remember literally nothing from the Flintstones except for this episode. I must have been 11 or 12 when I saw it, but it made me so angry that there was no restitution for what everyone did to Fred.
* kablammin45: As much as I like ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'', I just cannot ignore the convoluted plan Fred and Barney had at the end of "At The Races". Long story short, our favorite cavemen blew their funds on the dinosaur races, but fortunately won. Then things get crazy. Fred, for some reason, decides that telling Wilma would be a big mistake, so he decides to hide the check in Barney's pock- oh wait, I'm sorry, underneath a rock in a conspicuous area. Why they couldn't have hidden it somewhere easy to get to? Then what happens next wouldn't have happened; namely, Wilma is ecstatic prompting Fred and Barney to run for the hiding place and [[DownerEnding wind up having it stolen by a mugger and become completely broke]]. Pretty much all of this could have been avoided all together if Fred had realized the fact that Wilma wouldn't be ticked off and hidden the check in somewhere much easier, and less vulnerable to theft, to get to. (Like say, Barney's pocket for example.)
* Tropers/BaffleBlend: While this might be [[ValuesDissonance a tad unfair]], one episode above all has showed me exactly how poorly this series has aged; "The Happy Housewife". The gist of it is that Wilma gets a job as a host on a TV show, where she gives housewives advice. Fred is upset because her working means [[StayInTheKitchen she's not home to make elaborate dinners]]. Eventually, it turns into blackmail when a gossip column threatens to expose that the Happy Housewife's Happy Husband isn't so happy himself. Even if he didn't have such a terrible, selfish, and bratty reason to be unhappy in the first place (which he did have [[StayInTheKitchen a terrible, selfish, and bratty reason]]; this can't be emphasized enough.), that alone would have crossed the MoralEventHorizon. So after Wilma is essentially forced to quit her job... [[KarmaHoudini the episode ends with her singing a she brings Fred a chunk of meat]]. Needless to say, this was the last episode of ''The Flintstones'' that I ever watched, because after seeing it, Fred was unlikable, unwatchable, and [[MoralEventHorizon unforgivable]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Frozen]]
''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' may be one of Disney's biggest hits in recent memory, but it has some moments that are difficult to [[{{Pun}} let go.]]
* Tropers/FairyDreamer: Personally, I absolutely enjoyed Disney/{{Frozen}}, but there is one moment that will not stop bothering me. The trolls altered Anna's memories of her playtime with Elsa to make her forget Elsa has ice powers. The reason given is just to be safe, but it really served to do nothing except make things that much harder for Anna because she now hasn't a clue as to why her big sister she was so close to suddenly seems to want nothing to do with her. Thank goodness Anna is incredibly persistent or this movie may not have ended so happily.
** Tropers/{{Garfield2710}}: I thought it was also an incredible film, though it does have just one big problem. The entirety of "Fixer Upper." It's a decent tune and all, but the fact that the trolls are singing this [[spoiler: while Anna is slowly dying]] is just awkward. This kills both the momentum and tension stone dead, and then once the song is over, [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment it's completely forgotten about]]. Also, this felt like an awkward attempt to shoehorn in some romantic tension between Kristoff and Anna, especially when the trolls don't seem at all fazed that Anna is already engaged. Yes, [[spoiler: Hans was a bad guy, and Anna had only known him for a day]] but they certainly didn't know that. Yeah, [[SarcasmMode tearing apart a couple that you know nothing about so that she can get together with someone you think is more suitable is the essence of true love.]] That scene is why the rock trolls are TheScrappy to me.
*** [=TheBattyOne=]: Seconded. That song might have worked somewhere else in the film, but they put it in the exact spot to ruin the pacing. I might have forgiven it if "Fixer Upper" were a really good song, but it's pretty meh. It should have been cut. It really should have.
** [=JustHereToComment=]: While I enjoyed Frozen for the most part, I absolutely hated the reveal of [[spoiler: Prince Hans]] as the bad guy. For one, I felt it came out of nowhere. I had even read about the twist before watching and I still felt it came out of nowhere. Second, his plan makes no sense, since it could be foiled very easily by a wandering butler or maid discovering [[spoiler: a dying Anna]] in the locked room. He also fails to know that [[spoiler: a wedding is invalid unless there are witnesses there to see it]], so his plot to take over the kingdom should've fallen flat. Overall, when it comes to the BrokenBase over this character, I'm on the side calling him one of the worst Disney villains. (And I'm sorry if you like him, fans of him, but I just can't).
*** Tropers/{{Larkmarn}}: Yeah, that was... just bad. The fact he completely and utterly clutched the VillainBall and ran with it was really jarring. It's bad enough his plot centered on "guys, we're totally married now. Trust me," but leaving Anna to die was nonsensical. Why wouldn't he sit on his ass for five minutes and make sure she's dead. He's counting on the court not bothering to actually check on their dead princess, even if only to pay respects. "No, she's dead. But don't go in there. Seriously." And even if she did die before anyone saw her, what's to stop her from finding a pen? Man, evil just made the guy freaking dumb.
*** {{@/Psyga315}}: I agree with this, but not in the same way you are. I had no problems at all with his plan. Granted, I agree with the fact that it's flawed, but it's not why I consider it a Dethroning Moment. It's the fact that the writers decided to have Hans go completely "muwahahaha!" evil for the sake of having a villain. Given the facts that 1) Hans presented little to no villainous traits prior to the reveal and 2) they intended Elsa to be the villain but changed during the making of Let It Go, it's pretty clear that Hans was made into one at the last minute to have a villain... when it's pretty clear that we ''have'' one. Heck, they could have kept him as a villain, but in more of a WellIntentionedExtremist way as opposed to making him power hungry.
*** Maniacaldude: I personally found Frozen to be really underwhelming, even when I first watched it, but that twist involving Hans was the absolute low point. Like, I absolutely hated it with a fiery passion. A lot of why stems from the above arguments, that there's no foreshadowing, (with the mention that he's seventh in line being the only possible hint,) that it's a slap in the face that comes out of nowhere, that it radically alters Hans' personality to such a jarring, stereotypical degree, that it makes no sense, all that stuff. But something I should mention is that I've been told that this movie supposedly does things differently, that it bucks trends and is "progressive" and all that. Well, if that's the case, then why is this here? Rather than actually doing something different like commenting on adult relationships and choosing one over the other or keeping feelings as sort of the antagonistic opposition like it was intended or anything new or interesting, they had to include something that is becoming quite a cliche at this point: the surprise villain, the villain that shows himself during the movie's final act and is quickly thwarted, and I'm sorry, but if you're apparently trying to do things differently, then why include a last minute DesignatedVillain like this? It easily demonstrates one of my main problems with this movie: it tries way too hard, but at the same time, it somehow doesn't try enough.
** Tropers/LunaVeg87: For me, this movie was mediocre at best (thinking of WhatCouldHaveBeen with an adaptation of Literature/TheSnowQueen makes it disappointing), but yeah, this reveal was the biggest problem for me. Not only because it came off as really forced and last-minute (like the writers thought they needed a DesignatedVillain to make the movie work), but considering [[spoiler: Elsa's]] previous actions [[spoiler: (like abandoning her kingdom, refusing to go back after she's told what she's done, freezing Anna's heart, and upon seeing what she'd done, setting a giant killer snow golem after her and her traveling companions)]], it almost comes off like they just thought removing sympathy from one main character would put sympathy back on [[spoiler: her]]. To me, it came across as a lazy way to invoke one of my personal [[ProtagonistCenteredMorality most-hated tropes]].
** Tropers/{{Catmuto}}: No matter how great ''Disney/{{Frozen}}'' may be, the worst moment for me was Elsa's song ''Let It Go''. Out of context, the song comes across as rather empowering, deciding to not be shackled by her own or society's fear of her powers and Elsa leaves to live on her own, not having to hide her powers from anyone. The problem is when the song is put into context with the movie -- I hated the song with its context, because it came shortly after Elsa's magic went out of control and was revealed to everyone in the kingdom, making them afraid of her, considering what her powers can do. Now, the song suddenly comes across as having the message 'I won't take responsibility for what my actions made, I'll just hide myself away and let others deal with it'. Yes, Elsa didn't know that she had inadvertedly caused winter to befall all of Arendelle. But no, I do not care how psychologically tortured Elsa has been, this caused her song to sound horrible and she doesn't even try to see if her powers can be removed until the end when ThePowerOfLove is the ultimate thawer.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: After some careful thinking, I decided to finally contribute a moment here, and that's how little Kristoph contributes in the final third of the movie. I personally liked Kristoph as a character; he was an {{Adorkable}} ManChild [[FriendToAllLivingThings with a]] [[LoyalAnimalCompanion dopey reindeer]]. It actually made him a bit unique from most Disney guys, and it made him a bit relatable especially since [[AllAnimalsAreDogs said reindeer reminded me of the first dog I ever owned]]. So we see Kristoph and Sven running across bad weather and melting ice to get to Anna, who's currently in some massive danger, trying to reach her before something happens to her... [[spoiler:and then Anna gets frozen anyway]]. And Kristoph ends up being unable to contribute jack all. It's [[spoiler:Elsa]] who [[spoiler:restores her with true love]]. I get that [[spoiler:"sibling love"]] is also a form of [[spoiler:true love]], but poor Kristoph's only contributions to the whole movie were helping Anna get to Elsa and then back to Arendelle. The guy doesn't get near as much love as [[GenkiGirl Anna]], [[DefrostingIceQueen Elsa]], [[spoiler:[[MagnificentBastard Hans]]]], or even [[PluckyComicRelief Olaf]], and the fact he contributes so damn little in the grand scheme of things may have something to do with that. It's dumb, is what I'm trying to say.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy]]
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'': I found the episode "Be A-Fred, Be Very A-Fred" where Fred Fredburger wins a contest and gets to spend time with Grim. It's just filled with so many facepalm-inducing moments that I just don't know where to begin. First, Grim is such a [[ButtMonkey loser]] now that the only work he can get is being in laxative commercials? And, not only that, but said laxative company is now doing poorly because apparently no one wants to buy something endorsed by death himself? Let me remind everyone that said laxatives are being sold to demons (IE: Immortal monsters of evil (or chaotic neutral in the case of TGAOBAM) that most likely speak to Grim on a daily basis). Second, Fred Fredburger is just more annoying than usual here. At least in ''Keeper Of The Reaper'' his annoying antics were funny. This? He's just stupid for the sake of being stupid (Though, I did find him being amazed by a simple lamp to be pretty amusing... but that's just a silver lining in this turd cloud of an episode). Third, [[OverlyLongGag the way too long and not funny at all]] gag of Grim trying to get his picture taken with Fred resulting in Fred losing his frozen yogurt (Which, by the way, was what Fred wanted to do with Grim). You know, you could just buy another one or waited until he was done eating, Grim. Instead, they take Fred to an amusement park where Fred is sent flying from a Tilt-A-Whirl (... What?) and ends up meeting a group of Yetis that all talk like him and offer him frozen yogurt, all while [[DudeNotFunny a crying Grim is violently beaten by the laxative company executives for letting Fred go.]] Yes, that's how the short ends. It's like watching a train filled with disabled orphans crash into a burning building. Not funny and painful to watch.
** Animeking1108: If they ever air "The Grim Show" in reruns, I tend to change the channel. After Grim becomes a TV sensation, he spends less time with Billy and Mandy. However, Mandy decides to humiliate Grim and get his show cancelled. Why? [[DisproportionateRetribution Because he wasn't doing her chores]]. The episode ends with Grim sobbing. [[SadistShow Apparently, for this show, it's not a good ending until Grim suffers]].
* Tropers/{{KiraDoom}}: Mine is the episode "Scythe For Sale". I can probably get over Irwin yelling at Billy for bothering him (Billy was being pretty obnoxious, and I've been aggravated too many times to count). But the whole rest of the episode is about Irwin buying Grim's scythe at Billy's garage sale... Then using it to cast a spell to make Mandy love him. [[FlatWhat What?]] Look, I know Irwin's crush is one-sided, but you usually feel a bit sorry for Irwin because [[EnfantTerrible Mandy is pure evil]]. This episode tries to paint Irwin as a horrible person, which he usually isn't. (The only other time he was is "King Tooten Pooten", but I'm only allowed one entry for this show.) As a fan who absolutely ''loves'' Irwin and relates to him on many levels (aside from the whole "crush on a horrible person" thing), this episode is, for the most part, ''horrible''. Thank God for ''Underfist''; without that special, along with some of the other episodes he was in, my view of him as a character would have been tarnished.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Hey Arnold!]]
For [[WesternAnimation/HeyArnold a relatively timeless show]], there are a few unpleasant moments in the series.
* Tropers/{{Lionheart0}}: The ending to "Arnold Betrays Iggy" episode had one of the most horrible endings I've ever seen in an animated series. After being accused of spreading Iggy's embarrassing secret, when it was actually Arnold's classmates who did so, Arnold is forced to take a humiliating Walk-of-shame in bunny pajamas, on National Television. In a show that normally manages to have understandable {{aesop}}s, to the life of me I still don't quite understand what was the point of taking the blame and forced to endure humiliation for something you were not responsible for.
** Tropers/{{Rage24}}: For me, the worst part of that episode was Arnold's Grandpa acting {{Out Of Character}}. When Arnold decides to go through with [[HumiliationConga the Bunny Pajama Walk]], his Grandpa says that [[DudeNotFunny he's going to take pictures of him for the photo album]]. [[WhatTheHellHero Why the hell would he do that?]]
** Tropers/{{futuremoviewriter}}: The episode is often considered the worst of the series for a reason. Even as a kid, I realized this episode was very uncomfortable to sit through and after seeing it a second time, knew I never wanted to see it again. They used a shot of Arnold in the suit looking sad at the end of the episode in a March Toon Mania promo and since I didn't know which promo it was, I'd always look away at those promos to avoid that reminder of the episode. It severely damaged my feeling about the show in general it was that bad. I became very cautious whenever I watched the show after that so I could get away whenever that episode came on. I think there was one occasion when it did come on and I left the room I had no desire to sit through it again. The second viewing I left the room during the ending or covered my face so I didn't have to look at it. I wonder how Steve Viksten (God rest his soul) didn't realize just how bad an idea everything in it was and how it didn't need rewrites before it aired. A YouTube commenter came up with better ideas for how the episode could have gone instead and it's unfathomable to me how Viksten couldn't have thought of those things himself before it aired. I thought maybe I didn't get it, but Craig Bartlett himself disliked it so much that it got very little air time since it came out. I'm upset that this episode ever existed, but I'm glad I wasn't wrong.
* Tropers/{{MsCC93}}: My moment would be the episode "Girl Trouble" when KarmaHoudini {{Jerkass}} Helga constantly harasses Arnold. When Arnold gets fed up with Helga and throws paint at her, Mr. Simmons punished Arnold, but only stood there and did nothing when Helga harassed him. Total CharacterDerailment for Mr. Simmons! And does Helga get her comeuppance? No... it's no wonder I can't stand this episode!
** Tropers/{{LunaVeg87}}: I second that. What actually got me the most about that episode was when Arnold got home after that incident, and his grandpa acted horrified, and then Arnold sighed, and said "you're right. I feel terrible." You know, wherever you stand on whether you [[{{Shipping}} ship Helga and Arnold]] (I personally don't even get involved), this was disturbing. Helga harasses him on a daily basis, he has no idea of her true feelings, or hell, even if she ever feels bad about treating him like dirt, yet the ONE time he does something back, he feels terrible? I get that he's supposed to be a good kid who always does the right thing, but this was borderline LoveMartyr territory (it would only be more disturbing if he were the one with a crush).
* [=FromtheWordsofBR=]: "Bag of Money". In this episode, Arnold, Gerald, and Sid find... well, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a bag with $3,937 in it]]. Arnold wants to return it to the police, but Gerald and Sid don't want him to, but once Arnold points out they could get a reward for returning it they agree and let him keep track of the bag. Sid even mentions how "Arnold is the most honest guy around", which bites him in the ass later on. Arnold goes on the city bus with the money and sits next to a pink-haired peg-legged one-eyebrow-donning lady with 4 bags, which are also the color of the bag of money Arnold has. However, the lady accidentally grabs Arnold's bag and he winds up with her bags of bird seeds. Sid and Gerald don't believe Arnold's silly but true story; so much so, Sid eventually convinces everybody that Arnold stole the money and what happened to him is actually an excuse, and the other kids actually believe him! And to rub more salt in the wound, remember that little statement Sid did a little earlier? He sure isn't acting like the poor guy is honest in this section of the episode. And then Sid starts spying on Arnold and says that he used the money to buy random stuff. The kids eventually grab Arnold and tie him up to the tether-ball pole. Then a police car comes and the lady Arnold described earlier comes to return Arnold's bus pass, and then everybody apologizes for hurting Arnold, yet Sid [[KarmaHoudini gets away with what he did]]. Sorry, but no, not even the ending can {{easily forgive|n}} that. Why would they think a kid like Arnold would steal the money? Easily one of the poorest-written episodes of the series.
* monkeyman224: I really hated "The Vacant Lot" because of how asinine it was. The kids find a vacant lot with mountains of junk in it, clean it up, and decide all of a sudden it's theirs. Then the adults take it over and kick the kids out. In the end the kids dump all the junk back in it and tell the adults that "they can have it the way they found it" before they cleaned it up. Yeah, that's real mature (don't tell me "they're just nine". Some of them have been written to have more maturity than the adults most of the time). The adults then feel bad and let them have it after remodeling it. Okay first off, a vacant lot isn't something you call dibs on after cleaning it. It's not their property, it's the city's. It doesn't belong to anybody until they actually buy it. That's why it's called a "vacant lot".
** KrisSimsters: I second this, this was a dethroning moment for all the characters; for the kids claiming that this was theirs (yes they cleaned up but as pointed out, its not yours until you buy it from the city) and the adults thinking they can just have whatever's cleaned up. This episode made me not like anybody, not even Arnold.
* SampaCM: I'd gladly watch all episodes of ''Hey Arnold!'' again, except for one: "The Stoop Kid". Long story short, the titular kid is an orphan who likes sitting on the doorstep of his house, and shouting insults to whoever walks by. The kids of the neighborhood are too scared of him as they consider him a CreepyChild, and even there is a legend about his origin, told by ''Gerald, no less!'' Their football fell over his doorstep, but they don't dare get close. However, when Arnold somehow manages to retrieve the football from the doorstep, what does Stoop Kid do? Instead of chasing Arnold, he limits to shouting him to stay away from his doorstep. Now, the next part is where we enter the [=DMOS=] zone: the kids realize that Stoop Kid is actually too scared to leave the doorstep, so they take advantage of it, and start picking on him, to the point of making him cry bitterly. What The Heck? It's true that Stoop Kid was being a {{Jerkass}}, but the kids mistreated him way worse than he to them. Arnold, however, feels sorry for him and helps him face his fears and leave the doorstep. Now, the ending with Stoop Kid finally leaving the doorstep and accepted by his community is a heartwarming moment, but the part where the kids pick on him is just too mean-spirited and painful to watch this episode ever again.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: House of Mouse]]
* Tropers/FroggoFan64: The episode in which Scrooge [=McDuck=] buys the club and makes everyone miserable with his budget cuts has rubbed me the wrong way for a good reason. Among the things Scrooge does to the club is that he frakkin' fires Huey, Dewey and Louie, his own grandnephews, from their position as the house band! After all those times they helped him search for treasures back in the comics and ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'', this is how he repays them?! Something must've really turned him sour between the last ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'' episode and this.
** Tropers/{{Mogo}}: It gets worse than that-- They get his characterization completely wrong. Despite being stingy (he may have even fired Donald, but he did that on a daily basis in the comics), he would fire the boys for not working for free, but he would probably force them to work elsewhere. Plus, in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'' and the comics, he was business savvy-- he would know at least enough not to strip mine the club so bad that no one would want to come. This portrays him as everyone else sees him: just a stingy old man who counts his coins (Which Creator/DonRosa Lampshaded spectacularly in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'' with Donald)-- not the badass businessman he is everywhere else. For shame, Disney-- for shame.
* Tropers/CandyCane14: Scrooge wasn't the only character that got messed up in the show. Donald, Jose and Panchito were all out of character as well in the episode, "The Three Caballeros"! Donald would've been happy to meet his two friends, even if he felt bad that no one remembered he's a Caballero. Instead he and the two acted more like enemies then friends! Well... yeah, Panchito and Jose played pranks on Donald in 'The Three Caballeros' movie too, but if you pay attention, Donald was [[TooKinkyToTorture still having fun anyway]]... yeah. Plus it contradict those two comics ('The Three Caballeros ride again' and such) where Panchito and Jose looked up to Donald. At least in "Not so Goofy", they were better friends. This episode "The Three Caballeros" however was terrible.
* @/{{Ephriokko}}: In the episode "A Match Not Made In Heaven", the one where Hades tries to get a date with Maleficent, there's this part where Mickey offers to show Hades that being nice can work. He goes up to Maleficent and says in a bright, chipper tone: "Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, Maleficent! Golly! Oh, boy! Hot dog! Ain't it swell? Gee, I hope you're hap-hap-happy, 'cause we love to make things fun-fun-funny! Ha-ha, ha-ha! Oh, gosh." Even though I'm in general a forgiving, tolerant MickeyMouse fan, the speed and chipper tone at which all of his catchphrases were said in succession made me cringe.
** @/{{Manwiththeplan}}: And Maleficent doesn't even retaliate like you'd expect her to; she just grits her teeth in irritation and forces out something along the lines of "Yes, how... giddy." God damn it, Maleficent, I know Mickey's the host of the club, but the Mistress of Evil shouldn't have to put up with that shit!
* Tropers/{{Webby}}: The Scrooge episode again: Scrooge decides to provide the entertainment, by standing on stage showing off his Number One Dime, while everybody boos over the "stupid dime". Treating a major recurring plot device like junk is bad enough, but that Scrooge randomly dragged it to the House, rather than keeping it safe and guarded is ridiculous. Then, when he quits, he "sells" the House back to Pete by stealing all his cash and everything he bought and leaving him with the deed. [[CatchPhrase Made it square]], did ya Scrooge?
* Tropers/{{lilpurplebird}}: The entirety of ''House of Villains'' is a plot gone to waste. Honestly, who here wouldn't love to see the villains take over an entire show? And they do with a rather neat song to go along with it (about half-way through, sadly). But what do they do after they take over the house? They watch more Halloween Disney cartoons. Mickey and the gang try to take back without success a couple of times in between cartoons, but that's about it. And it has a rather anti-climatic battle where Mickey just dresses up in his apprentice outfit and zaps Jafar without another word and takes back the house like that. Yeah, it was a big disappointment.
* Tropers/CaptainTedium: The Thanksgiving episode. Mickey tries in vain to convince the turkey that the club members are not barbaric beasts, which only results in the guests all trying to kill and eat each other. How do things end? The turkey closes the episode pretending to be Mickey while the club guests chase away the real Mickey disguised as a turkey. DudeNotFunny
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Lilo & Stitch]]
* Ferigeras: I always enjoyed the [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries Lilo & Stitch]] TV series since I was a kid, and I watched practically every episode and enjoyed them. But there's an episode in it that has that one moment I really wish to forget. My Dethroning Moment of Suck comes from the episode that featured Experiment 113 (Called "Shoe"), a creature that causes bad luck or good luck depending on the position of his ears. The episode itself was pretty nice in general, with Lilo, Stich and Gantu having their usual shenanigans in catching the episode's experiment. Later into this episode, the three then discovered that upon changing the direction of Shoe's ears, good luck would happen. And this whole thing ended with Shoe's good luck powers causing a nice twist: [[ThrowtheDogaBone Gantu winning a check of about a million dollars. Completely overjoyed, Gantu calls Hämsterviel to tell him that he quits his job as an experiment hunter, and runs off with his cash to fulfill his dreams,]] which would be a great happy ending for Gantu because I just can't help wishing some good for the bad guy at times, but well... that's when my DMoS starts to strike in, in what could be the worst case of YankTheDogsChain since [[WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants "Plankton's Regular"]]. After a cute little moment after the climax, Lilo & Stitch use Shoe's bad luck powers once more to get Gantu's boat that he bought himself with the money to be taken away, along with crushing his dreams in the process... This was just stupid and unnecessary on so many levels. Putting aside that this was essentially taking away Gantu's moment of happiness, I think the stupidest thing about this whole scene is that Lilo & Stitch would have had no experiment hunter to worry about with Gantu having quit his job, meaning that they would have no longer have to fight him to protect the activated experiments. But no, [[AssPull they pull this out of their rectums]], all for the sake of StatusQuoIsGod. Look, if you want to keep the Status Quo, that's completely fine, but there are much better and less anger-inducing ways of keeping that status.
* Meso: My only issue with the episode was that a lot of the slapstick happens a lot to Stitch while Lilo heavily averts the SlapstickKnowsNoGender trope... even though certain other episodes has her getting slapsticked quite often.
* CabbitGirlEmi: If there's one thing about the TV series that I don't particularly like, it's how Nani seems to [[HairTriggerTemper get angry at the drop of a hat]]. The worst case would have to be "Bugby", an episode where Experiment 128 turns the characters into insects. In it, Nani forbids Lilo from bringing bugs into the house, which is understandable... But later on, while Bugby turns Stitch into an ant [[note]]appropriate due to his SuperStrength[[/note]], Lilo looks for more bugs when Nani practically attacks her! What the hell? It's so far against Nani's character to nearly assault her little sister over such minor things, especially if you've seen the original movie! What rubs salt in that wound is that Nani [[KarmaHoudini does not get any consequences, never apologizes, or anything]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: MAD]]
The [[WesternAnimation/{{Mad}} animated version]] of ''Magazine/{{Mad}}'' is known for being a massively mixed bag. No surprises for what parts of the bag are going here.
* Tropers/{{bobdrantz}}: ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'' (which I normally like) had the "Pokémon Park" (A parody of ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' and ''Franchise/JurassicPark'') skit. For one thing, the jokes made no sense (Pokémon randomly fight and evolve so they go crazy... what?), the characters do not match who they're supposed to parody (Why would Ash be the one in the Ian Malcolm role?), and they're inconsistent with which Pokémon represents which dinosaur (IE: It cannot make up its mind on whether the Pikachu is supposed to be {{Expy}} for the Velociraptors or if the Charmander are). It's like they just spent five seconds on a Wikipedia page on ''Pokémon'', watched only a few minutes of ''Jurassic Park'', and then just hastily threw this poor excuse for a "parody" together.
* fluffything: I can respect parody done well. I can respect parodies of my favorite shows done well. The MAD sketch "Ancient Greek Mythbusters" is not a parody done well by any stretch of the imagination. This feels more like a mean-spirited TakeThat towards an awesome series rather than an AffectionateParody. Oh, let me count the ways this sketch is a DMOS. You've got Grant being chewed-up by a T.Rex as a pointless throwaway gag. You've got Adam and Jamie being incompetent JerkAss morons not having any sense of logic to their "experiments" (InsaneTrollLogic would be considered the words of a genius compared to this). The utterly unfunny joke about Mythbusters only being watchable due to the sheer number of explosions (Because clearly we nerds only want to see explosions in an awesome educational series that debunks urban legends. Really? No.). Also, the pointless ''Film/BackToTheFuture'' reference at the end? Just... ugh...
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: I've seen one that was a personal punch right in the heart. ''"[[WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime The Land After The Land Before Time]]"''. Basically, it's the incredibly stale "Durr hurr, The Land Before Time [[{{Sequelitis}} has too many sequels]] it's funny! Durr hurr" joke that everyone (even sequel haters) is sick of by now. It reveals that the newest sequel involves a "heartwarming reunion". It then shows all five dinosaurs... as fossilized museum exhibits. Way to go ''MAD''. You turned my childhood heroes into corpses. You literally killed my childhood.
* Yuma: The sketch "Naru210". It shows very blatant research failure. The writers appeared to have only seen the first one or two episodes of Naruto. They claim that "all these Naruto fights happen off-screen," for one thing.
* philipthepatsy: I think ''MAD'' is ActuallyPrettyFunny, with a lot of the parodies being ok; some of them pretty good. However, one such parody wasn't either: [[DiaryOfAWimpyKid Diary of a Wimpy]] VideoGame/KidIcarus. Why? It wasn't really a parody of either, nor was it funny. There wasn't much to do with DiaryOfAWimpyKid, other than that Pit, playing the twofer of himself and Greg Heffley, tries to be popular, has an overbearing mom, and has a goofy best friend (in this case, ''Kirby'', as apposed to Rowley). Otherwise, nothing else. Even worse, there was even less to do with VideoGame/KidIcarus, other than Pit, and the fact that he came from VideoGame/KidIcarus. The jokes were mostly bad Video Game puns and references. Unlike their "Gaming's Next Top Princess" skit, this skit is badly done, unfunny, and doesn't even remotely parody its source materials well at all. They didn't even reference VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising, which is no doubt the reason this skit was even made in the first place.
* AveryvilAnimation: What absolutely solidified my hatred for ''Magazine/{{MAD}}'', was their ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' parody "[[IncrediblyLamePun Dolphineas and Ferb]] [[Film/DolphinTale Tale]]". At first it's just kinda boring, but then when this robot battle happens, a badly drawn version of my favorite character, Candace appears and says "I'm telling mom". Then she is promptly zapped into a pile of ash by a cyborg who then says "I hate tattletales". Fuck you, ''MAD''! ShallowParody does not even begin to describe this, this was a giant middle finger to all Candace fans. Sure, it's funny when Candace gets hurt in the actual show, much like Daffy Duck, but just killing her for no reason is the Seltzer and Friedberg route of comedy.
* EmperorOshron: I wanted to like ''MAD'', I gave it plenty of chances. I sat through several cringe-inducing episodes, almost none of which made me so much as smile, let alone laugh. As a whole, I absolutely hate it, right up there with fucking [[Creator/SeltzerAndFriedberg Friedberg and Seltzer]]. But the absolute worst one I have ever had the displeasure of seeing in an episode of ''MAD'' was "¡Ai Carly!", a rip-off of ''Series/ICarly'' set in Mexico with gratuitous and arguably racist Mexican stereotypes, particularly a guy with a big mustache, sombrero, poncho, and--for some reason--a potato for a head popping up every few seconds to say "¡Ai Carly!" in the most stereotypical Mexican accent you've ever heard. Just given the fact that it's an American show broadcast on an American television network, surely they must have realized that more than a few Mexican children (and conceivably their parents and siblings) would see this; there's reason that you don't see any of the old Speedy Gonzalez cartoons on TV anymore. What makes this even worse, instead of actually finishing the "Gaming's Next Top Princess" skit, they deliberately drew out the last several seconds of it as filler and then replayed the "¡Ai Carly!" thing again in Spanish with absolutely no changes to the animation, because clearly they're grasping at air trying to fill out just ten fucking minutes. This would be a bit more excusable in an hour-long or even half-hour-long show, but ten minutes?! Seriously?!
* Maxaphone: I usually find MAD hilarious, but one thing I thought crossed the line for them was their "Brutally Honest Obituary" of Michael Jackson (brutal, but full of lies) and making the respect shown for him after his death "the Stupidest Event of 2009". I have no idea why some people refuse to admit that, after an acquittal and a great deal of evidence (including a ''confession'' by his "victim" and recorded evidence by the father) that people still believe he was an actual pedophile.
* keybladeoverlord: I used to find this show pretty entertaining, but one skit ruined the entire thing for me. Go Dragon Ball Go... At first it seems like a fairly amusing concept, with Diego from Go Diego Go going on a hunt for the dragon balls with other Dragon Ball characters popping in and occasionally making jabs about both shows. Now I could almost forgive the subpar voice acting in this skit, but the one thing that effectively ruined the skit and the entire show for me was their potshot at Dragon Ball GT. Really? I know a good number of people don't like GT, but there's also plenty who love it (Myself included), but did you really have to make an awful forced joke like that which only about half the audience will find funny and the other half will find annoying? You couldn't make it a joke at the expense of Dragon Ball Evolution which is way worse than what GT could ever be? Some people may think I'm being a GT fanboy complaining about people making fun of something he likes, but my problem is that I've seen people complain about GT so much that I cannot stand to look at people calling it bad without giving good reasoning behind their opinions. In the end, this skit ruined this entire show for me.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Mickey Mouse (2013)]]
* Tropers/CaptainTedium: The 2013 ''WesternAnimation/{{Mickey Mouse|2013}}'' cartoon]] by Paul Rudish has been hit or miss most of the time, but one particular instant I found extremely deplorable would be the episode "[[Recap/MickeyMouseS2E19BroncoBusted Bronco Busted]]", where Mickey, Donald, and Goofy need money to repair their car. They decide to enter the rodeo to get the money they need and, failing to get an actual horse to cooperate, resort to having Donald impersonate a horse. After they win, the rodeo refuse to give them money because of hard times and a millionaire arrives to offer Mickey and Goofy the money they needs in exchange for Donald, having mistaken him for an actual horse. Donald accepts the offer before Mickey can correct the millionaire and says "So long, suckers!" Goofy then asks Mickey if they should tell Daisy about this and Mickey selfishly replies that they shouldn't. The worst part of it was that the short premiered on the anniversary of the first Donald Duck cartoon. Surely, there were better ways to celebrate Donald Duck's birthday aside from making a cartoon where he ditches his friends and his friends in turn choose to forget about him!
* Tropers/MysteriousZorua1994: Oh, god. This was absolutely disgraceful to how Donald is [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold normally portrayed]]. We've gotten moments in other canons, such as ''Kingdom Hearts'', where he rejoins Sora after a forced FaceHeelTurn and later attacks [[Disney/{{Mulan}} Yao]] after he punched Sora after cutting in line, or ''Mickey's Twice Upon A Christmas'', where he leads an orchestra to sing a Christmas carol after a rough day. But for Donald to pull a [[Franchise/SlyCooper Penelope]] is one of those points where one must question his true alignment.\\
I especially hate how mean-spirited this show is for the portrayals of the characters, even without Donald's sudden AdaptationalVillainy. I'm convinced that Western Animation has reached the "[[TookALevelInJerkass Age of Jerkassery]]" thanks to ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'', and even Disney has started to think that shows with unlikable protagonists and offensive humor are popular. [[AllAdultAnimationIsSouthPark And we have a trope for that]].
* Tropers/{{TommyTiger}}: I have a different DMOS. While I used to like the series, I now hate it (because Mickey was the [[ButtMonkey punchbag]] instead of Donald, who [[KarmaHoudini not only got away with everything, but got rewarded]]). What made me pull a "FaceHeelTurn" against the series? "Al Rojo Vivo", particularly its [[DudeNotFunny offensive ending]]. I'm describing it: Mickey and Minnie are together, and everything looks fine. But what happens next? Mickey gets kissed, and then [[spoiler:Mickey's pants fall, exposing his red shorts and getting the bulls against him to ensure he's not going to have a HappyEnding after all]]. Whoop de friggin doo. This is the worst case of YankTheDogsChain and DiabolusExMachina combined (edit: I've rewatched the series ever since I wrote this, and I now find it mediocre at worst. I still hate episodes like this, however).
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Peanuts]]
* LadyMima: The ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' special ''Someday You'll Find Her, Charlie Brown''. Oh my gosh, I don't even know where to start. Well, I do know where to start, but when it comes, it's just... well, it's a wallop in the face. It starts with Charlie Brown watching a football game on TV, and all of a sudden, he starts getting flustered. Linus is there as well, and when Charlie Brown tells him that he saw this cute girl in the stands, Linus' reaction is that he falls in love with a different girl every week. Throughout the whole special, Linus acts like this, yet he still helps Charlie Brown try to find the girl. Snoopy and Woodstock tag along too. Linus does do some iffy stuff along the way, but that's not what I'm so mad about. What really gets me... is this: Eventually, the boys find the girl Charlie Brown saw on TV. Because Charlie Brown is so shy, he asks Linus to go up and talk to the girl for him. Well, he does this. And then... [[spoiler: he sees the girl and is completely smitten. Not only that, she has a SecurityBlanket too! Because of this, Linus completely forgets to mention Charlie Brown and is invited in for some cookies, along with Snoopy and Woodstock. Poor Charlie Brown waits there all night, until they finally come out. The cat that had caused them problems earlier was all of a sudden friendly with Linus. Charlie Brown is clearly upset when he finds out Linus didn't mention him at all. And while he's yelling about this, Linus completely ignores him and keeps talking about how great the girl is. At one point, he even says "What are you talking about?". Finally, Charlie Brown gives up and runs home. Linus then wonders what Charlie Brown is so upset about.]] But that isn't even the end of it! No, to make matters worse, the song [[{{Tearjerker}} "Alone"]] plays as Charlie Brown [[spoiler: imagines that he and the girl got together. He sadly goes back to his house and lays in bed.]] The next morning, Charlie Brown and Linus meet up at the brick wall. Charlie Brown says a football metaphor, and Linus takes it literally. Then he says he has a date with the girl and leaves. Charlie Brown is now alone at the brick wall. The end. Look, I know it's a RunningGag that Charlie Brown is the loser, save for that one time he won at marbles, but isn't this taking it too far?! I mean, Linus is supposed to be Charlie Brown's best friend! And even his best friend isn't much of a friend at all! It's basically telling us that Charlie Brown will never be happy. Never. And sure, you could blame Charlie Brown for his faults, but Linus has his faults too, like carrying that stupid blanket around! Since this moment, I have hated Linus for everything about him.
* Blackjack254: ''It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown'' is the main reason why my watching of Animated Peanuts is now limited solely to the Original Christmas special. Lucy doing the infamous pulling the football away prank on Charlie Brown during an important game, and then having the gall to blame the losing of the game on him, and everyone agreeing with her (I've heard about them doing a so called minor retcon of a line of Peppermint Patty being cut out, big deal, only one less person blames Charlie brown for something not his fault). In my opinion, the whole episode should have been retconned.
** Powerpuffbats For what it's worth, after that trainwreck, they aired "It's Magic, Charlie Brown" which had Charlie finally kick that ball and having Lucy finally getting hit by Karma. That said, "It's Your First Kiss" is my Dethroning Moment for all of Animation... only Seahorse Seashell Party from Family Guy comes close (I still haven't seen Spongebob's One Coarse Meal yet). What makes this special even worse for me is that I'm a bit of a Charlie Brown/Lucy shipper, and Lucy's actions spit in the faces of Chuck/Lucy shippers... and Chuck/Peppermint Patty shippers too! Seriously, Patty and Linus don't even notice that Lucy is costing them the game! Remember that moment from Family Guy where Peter kicks Lucy (who is my favorite Peanuts character... and this special makes me hate her)? That clip is only tolerable (imo) after viewing this special! And again, how could no one... in the entire stadium notice Lucy pulling that football away?!?!
* jaredthedecimator: I'm recalling my previous entry to nominate "You're the Greatest, Charlie Brown". Most of the special is pretty good, honestly, but the climax is probably the biggest AssPull in the history of animation. Basically, Charlie Brown is leading in the final event of the decathlon, and he runs onto a side exit right off the track. Was the side exit there in any other shot? Yes, but, don't you think they could have blocked it off for the decathlon?
* Torpers/SpaceHunterDrakeRedcrest: One moment I have always hated from ''Peanuts'' is in ''It's Magic, Charlie Brown''. During Snoopy's magic show, one of the tricks involves cutting up a piece of fabric. Lucy, [[BigBrotherBully Big Sister Bully]] she is, yanks Linus' SecurityBlanket out of his hands and offers it to Sally for the trick. Linus begs for her to give it back, with Sally [[FalseReassurance assuring]] Linus that Snoopy's magic won't hurt the blanket. Snoopy then proceeds to cut Linus' blanket into several strips, all the while Linus is in utter pain. It culminates in Snoopy failing to magically put Linus' blanket back together, knocking Linus out cold. I know ''Peanuts'' have always had a DesignatedMonkey aspect to them, but Linus is one of the nicest characters in the franchise, and doesn't deserve having his heart broken just for the sake of a "[[DudeNotFunny joke]]." At least, during the credits, it seems his blanket was fixed.
* Tropers/Gojirob: All of the above-mentioned Peanuts ones are horrible moments, but its a subtler one that often seems the most vicious to me. In 'It Was A Short Summer, Charlie Brown', exactly how does everyone end up at the same summer camp? Easy, Lucy signed them up for it! She announced on the last day of school while everyone was exulting in their soon-to-be ruined plans. Okay, Mssrs. Schulz and Mendelsohn. We know you were obsessed with making Lucy a KarmaHoudini so fearsome, Megan from Drake & Josh, Ruthie Camden and all the demonic sitcom sibs tell stories of her to scare each other. Got it. But now, you assign her RealityWarper powers? She was another minor child. Her signature was worthless, even for herself. And what about all their parents, some of whom likely had summer plans, and the money they must shell out, even for a low-cost or subsidized camp? Even a parent who wanted to get rid of their kid for the summer would tell them about it, just to have prep time and no delay in leaving. So Lucy couldn't have done the action that drove the special, one which not only ButtMonkey Charlie Brown and scared little brother Linus were affected by, but all their friends and classmates. I spent a good part of my childhood thinking other kids could just sign you up for stuff. It's not too much of a stretch to say this led thematically to 'First Kiss'.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Phineas & Ferb]]
-->Aren't you a bit too young to [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck document your worst moments]]?
-->Yes. Yes we are.
* Marioking98341: Don't get me wrong. I liked ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerbTheMovieAcrossThe2ndDimension''. But don't you think Phineas was overreacting to Perry's [[TheReveal reveal?]] Honestly, it would've been more understandable if he hadn't tried to hide his own feats of superheroism from his own love interest.
** Tropers/{{Komatsuzaki}}: If they had just put a little bit of foreshadowing at the very beginning of the movie that Phineas would freak out at something like this, then it wouldn't have been so jarring. But for such a friendly character in such a silly show to react like that when he finds out his pet is a secret agent? Come on. It even sounds ridiculous to point out.
* @/{{LimeTH}} The completely mean-spirited visuals of "You're Going Down", where Candace imagines herself throwing Phineas and Ferb chained up in jail and locked in to pillories, preparing to shoot down a hot-air balloon with them in it, the goddamn Hindenburg with their faces on it burning to the ground, and the two of them in the back of a garbage truck.
* Kittens: The "Finding Mary McGuffin" episode was okay and decent. The musical number was good and the episode just a simple finding a childhood toy concept. But what annoyed me was the end where Vanessa discovers the doll being held by a little girl who seems to love it and she sees how much she likes the doll so does she let the little girl keep the doll and move on? Nope! She snatches the doll out of the girls hands and runs off while the kid cries her eyes out. What the heck writers? I understand if Vanessa acts a little evil just to make her dad happy but let her have a good side for once! And the little girl was happy with the doll so why did you have to pull a greedy jerkass move? Can't she just let her keep the doll? Man!.
* [=TotalDramaRox97=]: "Quietest Day Ever": Doofenshmirtz makes himself handsome by accident and ends up achieving his goal of ruling the Tri-State Area because of it. Just as Doofenshmirtz is about to become leader, Perry makes him ugly again. Once Perry turns him ugly again, everyone just immediately brushes him off and ruins his plans, again. [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop What's the lesson this episode teaches us? You can only achieve your goals by looking good and not looking good means your goals have no hope of happening.]] [[SarcasmMode Great lesson.]]
* {safind} : Whilst I am still getting back into the show (And have enjoyed most of Season 4 thus far), my DMOS would have to be "Bee Story", not the episode's plot though, but the song. "Waggle Dance" is the absolute worst song ever created for the entire show. Whilst some may like it (And those people do not believe in my opinion that the song is crap), there are those that agree with me that the song is awful. The lyrics are awful and the visuals.... Good god, do I even need to say it? They're something only a Pedophile could ever enjoy. Even as I type this, I feel an increasing need for {{Brain Bleach}}. On the plus side though, I've regained my liking of the other songs, but Waggle Dance is just so awful, I would rather swallow cyanide that even look at one second of the song or read through one word of its lyrics.
* {{Tropers/Midna}}: I ordinarily love ''Phineas and Ferb'', but there's this one Doofenshmirtz's Daily Dirt segment ([[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jR18Ic5h-vc this one]]) that... well, it's not really a pot-shot, but nevertheless it briefly flashes a caricature of the universe's favorite punching bag, [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic bronies]]. I don't normally get riled up about fandom jokes because, let's face it, overweight neckbearded fans are a fact of life, but the way the gag is executed it comes across like some writer at Disney is jealous of [=FiM=]'s overwhelming popularity and thought, "heh heh, hey, let's sneak in a TakeThat at a competing show's fanbase! That'll show them for having the balls to [[FelonyMisdemeanor like a cartoon that isn't ours!]]". (Doesn't help it's exactly the same kind of joke anyone with at least half a brain could make about ''any'' fandom, either.) All in all I'm not offended, but I really expected better from Disney of all companies.
* PrincessTogezo: The end of the episode "Candace Gets Busted" was just a kick in the teeth. After Candace spends the entire episode trying to put a stop to a party she didn't want, it at first seems like she's succeeded thanks to Doof's inator transporting the party guests into his pants (which was pretty funny). But then Doof tells Perry to [[YankTheDogsChain hit the reverse switch]], and the party guests return to the Flynn-Fletcher house just as the parents arrive. The scene where Linda is chewing out Candace (saying "I trusted you!" and all that stuff) was just painful to watch, and it made me think, "Why don't you just give her five seconds to explain?!" It's not like Candace deliberately threw a huge party; she just invited a few friends over and it got out of hand! This episode felt like a [[KickTheDog "Kick the Teenage Girl"]] fest, and I'm fairly certain it played a big role in my deciding not to watch the show anymore.
* Ivanov Troping 97: Normally, I like Phineas & Ferb, but the end of the episode "Invasion of the Ferb Snatchers" was just a huge middle finger to me. I was seriously expecting Candace to bust her brothers for real. I can understand the fake Linda robot body dissappearing, but a gift box containing a launch pad?! I mean, come on! Why did it dissapear when Linda is at the backyard? She should have seen the box! I just really don't understand. Like "Candace Gets Busted", the ending feels like a [[KickTheDog "Kick the Teenage Girl"]] moment. That's just how I feel, though.
* TomRoid: This was just a plot hole, but a pretty stupid one. "Agent Doof" has the titular duo turned into babies, and as expected Lindana won't be able to realize it and thus have the brothers busted or whatever. But at one point, Lindana gets sent a pic by Candace of the two in baby form and thinks it's just old photos of them. As we see in the Phineas and Ferb Busted episode, they didn't meet until they were very young, but not babies. You think a show with an existent continuity respect would avoid this.
* Tropers/MightyMewtron: "Act Your Age" was a [[BrokenBase divisive episode]] as a whole, and I'm on the side that considers it one of the worse episodes for being badly written and not fitting with the spirit of the show (I'm thankful that it aired near the end of the run anyway). The main DMOS for me, though, is [[spoiler:Ferb/Vanessa being canon.]] I tend to hate age gap ships in general, but most don't actually become canon on a kids' show. Dating someone you knew as a child when you were a teenager just feels... [[UnfortunateImplications icky,]] and considering [[spoiler:Ferb]] is only ''college aged'' in this episode, it comes across like TheJailBaitWait. Is that what they were going for? Probably not. But that doesn't make the unnecessary decision any less nasty. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking Also,]] it renders [[spoiler:the Monty/Vanessa plot]] totally pointless.
* Tropers/Ninja857142: "Last Day of Summer." If you like it, that's fine, but I found it to be incredibly disappointing and anticlimactic. This was the series finale. This was meant to be the episode that gave closure. So what happens? Phineas and Ferb do stuff, Candace tries to bust them, some time-shenanigans ensues, and then everything's back to normal! Sounds familiar... The only thing that really changed was [[spoiler:Doof turning good]] (which was a nice touch, I'll admit), but otherwise, this felt like a terrible finale. For all I know, Candace is still going to try to bust her brothers ([[AesopAmnesia she's learned to have fun with life multiple times before]]), Linda still has no idea about her sons' amazing creations, Perry's identity's still a secret, and Phineas and Ferb's "creation" is largely forgettable and hardly even appears! And by the way, where is everyone? What happened to Jeremy and Stacy? Weren't they a part of this great show as well? The memories? This episode is also partly at fault for not explaining what happened to Monty (along with the other finale episodes); Vanessa joins O.W.C.A., but what then? I actually liked "Act Your Age" a lot more; it may not have been as energetic, but it as least showed what happened to lots of characters in the future, and felt emotionally closing and had a real HappyEnding. Since the plot of this episode is a time loop, it all feels like a dream that's largely irrelevant and erased in the end (aside from the [[spoiler:Doof-turns-good thing]]). In a nutshell, "Last Day of Summer" might have been a decent episode, but it was a terrible finale. If it hadn't been for the contributions from other "finale" episodes, I might have been let down by the series' ending entirely.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Recess]]
* DarthJosh1108: ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' had the episode where Gus got jinxed. This episode, [[CharacterizationMarchesOn before Miss Finster and Principal Prickley grew redeeming qualities]], had them nearly get Gus arrested [[DisproportionateRetribution just because he wasn't allowed to talk]]. However, Gus isn't safe from the IdiotBall either. He was being interrogated by the teachers. What were the Ashleys going to do to him where there would be adult witnesses? He could have easily told them what happened. Keeping silent is part of the KIDS code of honor, so adult involvement oughta be a loop hole.
* Monkee Juice: The {{WesternAnimation/Recess}} episode "Tattletale Heart" is a bad one because of its BrokenAesop. When a [[FoodFight food fight]] breaks out in the cafeteria, Miss Finster cancels recess until someone comes clean on who started it. Gus is the only one who witnessed who started it but is forced by T.J. and his friends because it's considered tattling. And considering that T'J. and his friends love recess, it would like say that [[MoralEventHorizon some guy refuses to confess to the police that his best friend murdered his entire family]]. For most of the episode it wants to say that tattling is wrong but then it's reveal that Randall was the one who started it. That's right. The same kid who's hated on the playground for tattling on others. Then it's also revealed that every other kid said that Randall started it and they got angry at Gus thinking he tattled. If they wanted to say that no one likes a tattle tale, an episode of ''Series/TheBradyBunch'' did a much better job at that.
* Troper/BronyOfTheOctaves: I'm surprised nobody has ever mentioned the episode "Nobody Doesn't Like TJ". Putting aside [[WebVideo/TheMysteriousMrEnter John Enter's]] thoughts on the episode, I honestly loathe this episode. To explain, the episode is about TJ learning that this kid who we see as a background character, Gordy, doesn't like TJ. TJ is basically baffled as to why Gordy doesn't like him and tries to find out why. Throughout the episode, he tries to do good things for Gordy, but he's only annoyed by the end. Eventually TJ [[MoralEventHorizon gets Gordy and him detention]]. And for what reason? To show Gordy a good time and how much of an awesome guy he is. And when they finish up their hour in detention, TJ finally asks if Gordy likes him. Gordy says no. And TJ, fed up, finally (what he should have done earlier on...) asks why doesn't he like him. Gordy simply replies that [[InsaneTrollLogic he just doesn't like TJ]]. The episode put a bad taste in the troper's mouth, and this is saying a lot since he's not a huge fan of other episodes from the show (One being ''Jinxed!'').
*** Tropers/{{Catmuto}}: My personal [=DMoS=] from the above ''Nobody Doesn't Like TJ'' comes from one scene. TJ is offering Gordy some brownies and Gordy eats them, then realizes they have peanuts in them, spits it out and yells at TJ for giving him something that he's allergic to. Three problems, all of them are Gordy's fault: 1) TJ obviously didn't know Gordy had any allergy to specific food types. 2) Gordy didn't ask before eating offered food. 3) The peanuts were quite visible in the brownies, so Gordy is a moron for not seeing what he's eating. This moment doesn't come across as TJ being in the wrong, it's Gordy being TooDumbToLive, since his reaction makes it seem like his eating peanuts results in anaphylactic shock.
* TheLuckyCat: I loved Recess as a kid and I still like it now, but there's one episode that always infuriated me - ''No Strings Attached''. The basic plot of the episode is that the Ashleys give Spinelli tickets for a wrestling match. Now let's bear in mind that the Ashleys are a posse of [[AlphaBitch Alpha Bitches]] and have pulled a lot of mean-spirited crap before- ''Jinxed!'', ''First Name Ashley'', ''The Ratings Game'', etc. Spinelli and the others are understandably suspicious of this and try to find out what the Ashleys are planning. Eventually Mickey and Gus tell the others they're being paranoid and go off to the match, while Spinelli, Vince, Gretchen and TJ all get stuck in the Ashley clubhouse and the episode ends! I think the intended Aesop was "don't look a gift horse in the mouth", but it's absolutely ridiculous that Spinelli and the others were expected to do that here- why ''should'' they trust the Ashleys? This episode might have worked if the Ashleys had done something bad, were shown to genuinely feel guilty about it and were giving the tickets as an apology, but as it stands, it's like the writers were trying to say, "No matter how many times people screw you over, you should give them the benefit of the doubt just in case!" No, no, NO. I can't stand to watch this episode because the gang (sans Mickey and Gus, who honestly are the ones who would benefit the least from seeing the match) getting screwed over is so infuriating and unfair.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Rick and Morty]]
* Tropers/SWFMax: I love ''WesternAnimation/RickAndMorty'' - in fact, it's my favourite show. But there's one part that annoys me: in the episode "Raising Gazorpazorp", Rick says that men and women are treated equally in the United States, and Summer objects, saying that women make 70% of the salary that men make for the same job. I'm not sure if the writers were using Summer as a StrawFeminist or if they were using her to voice their opinion, but either way, it doesn't sit well with me. If they were using her as a StrawFeminist, then that's a CriticalResearchFailure, as very few if any feminists have ever claimed that. The only thing I've ever heard from a feminist about women being paid less than men in the United States is that women make 77-78% of the salary that men make for the same job (OK, some have said that it's even less for women who aren't white, but Summer is white, so I'm assuming that she was talking about women in general and not women who aren't white). Newsflash: 70% does not equal 77%, nor does it equal 78%. So, if they were using her as a StrawFeminist, they failed, in my opinion, as very few if any feminists have made the claim that Summer has made. Now, if they were using her to voice their opinion, that's also stupid, because apparently, they didn't bother to look up basic statistics. As I mentioned earlier, even feminists rarely if ever claim that women make 70% of the salary that men make for the same job. They claim that it's 77% or 78%. All in all, no matter for what reason the writers had Summer say that, it was a CriticalResearchFailure. (For the record, I am a feminist and I do believe that the wage gap in the United States exists, but that in itself is not why I consider this to be a [=DMoS=], even if they were using Summer as a StrawFeminist. It's not the presence of a StrawFeminist in a work that bothers me, it's the presence of a poorly-written StrawFeminist in a work that bothers me.)
* Animeking1108: I had a problem with ''Total Rickall,'' particularly how Morty realizes that Rick wasn't a parasite. He figured it out because he had a lot of bad memories with Rick. Now, that's understandable. However, it gets ruined by a montage of Rick ignoring Morty when he's in life-threatening situations and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking pantsing him in school and pushing him down the stairs]]. What made Rick a likable character was that despite his flaws, he cares about Morty and all of the moments that should be bad memories were usually unintentional on Rick's part.
* {{Tropers/Zuxtron}}: "Rixty Minutes" is one of the best episodes in the show, perfectly combining wacky, random comedy with serious, down-to-earth drama. Sadly, "Interdimensional Cable II" fails to live up to its predecessor. While the idea of having improvised comedy bits interspersed throughout an episode was unique enough to work the first time, using it again for a second episode makes it come off as forced. In the end, it feels like the normally very creative writers of the show had run out of ideas and had to resort to remaking an older episode to pad out the season. Even Justin Roiland himself was unhappy with the result, telling us several weeks in advance to not get our hopes up.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Star Wars: The Clone Wars]]
* Saieras: ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'' introduced us to 99, a malformed and physically weak clone working maintenance. He wasn't fit for combat, but he still wanted to help in any way he could. In one of the most important battles of the show he finally got his chance to be a hero, bringing munitions to Echo and Fives and showing them the fastest way to the barracks and armory. Even though he was a NonActionGuy he still helped his brothers win the day. Then the group he was with ran out of thermal detonators, so 99 goes to get more. However, rather than exercise any sort of caution, he just darts out into the hallway full o' laser beams like a dumbass and dies. Sure, you could justify it by saying he was overeager and undertrained, but the [[StupidSacrifice stupidity of his sacrifice]] really diminished the emotional effect of his death.
** Baronobeefdp: Agreed. Though, for me, the DMOS of 99's death wasn't the stupidity of it... but how suddenly it happened. I mean, we hardly even knew anything about this guy (Other than that he was a "defective clone" and that he still cared deeply for his, erm, "brothers"). And, yet, the series still expects us to feel sad when he dies? Psst, George Lucas, you need to build up more than one episode of CharacterDevelopment for us to really feel bad when a character dies. (Sigh) And this was the same series that made [[RescuedFromTheScrappyHeap Jar Jar Binks]] a likeable character.
* Tropers/OnSoaringWings: For me the biggest DMOS comes in "The Zillo Beast Strikes Back". After Palpatine has brought the [[LastOfHisKind giant Zillo Beast]] to Coruscant for study, [[spoiler: it escapes, causing thousands of casualties and billions in damages, necessitating the beast's killing.]] Mace Windu then laments that it's "our fault." Excuse me!? It was Palpatine's idea to bring the damn thing to Coruscant! Palpatine's punishment for causing the deaths of thousands, and the extinction of a rare species? Nothing! I mean at the very least Padme should have called him out on this. I know there's a war going on, and Palpatine is pulling a lot of strings. But come on... At least show someone being angry with the guy!
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Steven Universe]]
Even though WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse is often considered one of the best, if not ''the'' best show currently airing on Creator/CartoonNetwork, there are still [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentofSuck some moments]] that the Crystal Gems really need to poof and keep bubbled for life.
* djx1100: "Rose's Scabbard", I believe, was a very moving and well written episode. However I believe Pearl acted completely selfish in the episode and showed no regard for anybody else's feelings. Especially when she tells Steven [[TooSoon "You never even knew her!"]] Of course it's supposed to show how important Rose meant to Pearl but she comes off as incredibly selfish and rude. Worst part is that she never even apologizes for the line.
** bsw17: My moment also comes from "Rose's Scabbard". While I think for the most part it shows Pearl's grief well, the moment where Steven nearly falls to his death and she doesn't try to save him goes too far. I understand she's upset but considering she's the gem who constantly worries for Steven's safety this is wildly out of character for her.
* Skapokon: I really like ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'', but I hate ''WesternAnimation/UncleGrandpa'', so I wasn't very pleased when the Crossover Episode "Say Uncle" was revealed. While it resulted to be a pleasant surprise and much better than I expected, there's something about this episode that bugs me. Pearl's portrayal during the episode. I don't know why they did it, but this episode really destroyed the character and made me glad it's not canon. Why? Because they made her way too overprotective on Steven and made her overreact way too much. In the show, she cares of Steven and tries to protect him, but only a bit more than the other two Gems. Here, she is screaming all the time, makes weird faces every time and it just gets irritating. Seeing how this episode parodies parts of the Fandom (Gemsonas, Lars and Sadie's Ship...), something tells me that this is how fans see Pearl. If that's the case, I don't want to know how they portray the rest of the cast.
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: While I found the humor of the episode hilarious, something about "Too Far" really bothered me, and it wasn't until I saw [[http://mellowfilmmaker.tumblr.com/post/131253472409/mellow-frames-gem-jokes this post]] that I realized what it was: Amethyst's behavior. Her laughing at Peridot's unintentional humor was understandable at first, but later it gets pretty curvy when Amethyst starts goading Peridot into roasting the Crystal Gems. What follows is a(n admittedly funny) thinly veiled metaphor for homophobia (Peridot mocking Garnet's semi-permanent fusion) and a stab at Steven being a HalfHumanHybrid. Amethyst laughs at all of these... and then stops when Peridot turns around and starts making jokes about ''her''. Now granted, it makes sense that Amethyst would be offended (Peridot literally called her "defective") but she had just laughed hysterically at Peridot mocking her best friends--calling [[NiceGuy Steven]] an abomination, [[TeamMom Pearl]] a slave and [[HappilyMarried Garnet]] disgusting--and yet is outraged at what Peridot says to her personally. And at no point does ''anyone'' point out the hypocrisy of this. The sad thing is, this could have been a great lesson for ''Amethyst'' as well as Peridot, as Amethyst could have learned something to the effect of "if you can't take it, don't dish it out", but instead Peridot is expected to apologize to ''her'' (even though Amethyst took advantage of her lack of knowledge of Earth humor) and ''only'' her (i.e., not Garnet, Pearl or Steven).
* Tropers/OnTheHillside: For this troper, it's Log-date-7-15-2. Full stop. Garnet proposes fusing to Peridot, and when Peridot doesn't immediately jump at the idea, Garnet states as a fact that she "isn't ready" -- a condescending assumption that figures Peridot ''can't possibly'' be bawking at the idea of doing something new and intimate with Garnet, someone she still feels uneasy around. It's a challenge, and of course Peridot is going to try and save face by attempting it anyway. Their attempted fusion dance is more reminiscent of Lapis and Jasper's than anything, with Garnet grabbing Peridot forcefully by the hands and yanking her around while she's visibly uncomfortable, then demanding she "get ready." It's only then that Peridot pulls away and straight up says no, and while Garnet respects this, she also tells Peridot she's "proud of her" for ignoring her own limitations and allowing Garnet to do this to her at all. It's an absolutely disgusting, hypocritical scene that's come very close to turning me off the show as a whole.
** Stealthlock: I completely agree. I always felt, watching that scene, like Garnet was supposed to be coming off as polite, but it just made me uncomfortable for reasons I previously couldn't explain. The way she disregards Peridot's obvious discomfort during the fusion attempt without offering to back down, the way she treats Peridot like a paranoid amateur for her very legitimate hesitation, and the subtle pressure she puts on her to get over it by saying she's "proud of her". It felt like Garnet was saying, "It was very grown-up and mature of you to not say no even when you were uncomfortable! I hope you always say 'yes' even if you don't want it in the future." The way Peridot's legitimate aversion to fusion was treated just doesn't sit right with me.
* Tropers/Ciel12: The handling of the aesop in 'Barn Mates'. I guess the point of the episode is that we should always try to forgive and see the best in people, but it was handled very poorly. Lapis dislikes being around Peridot because Peridot was once her jailer. When she initially brushes off Peridot, both Peridot and Steven go to increasing lengths to win her over. Lapis tells Period all she wants is for Peridot to [[GetOut leave]], and (to her credit) Peridot immediately complies. My problem is with Steven chewing Lapis out afterwards - he tells her that she should give Peridot a chance and not decide that she dislikes Peridot without getting to know her. The thing is, this isn't about Lapis not liking Peridot - it's about Lapis being so angry at Peridot that she ''doesn't even want to be in the same vicinity as her''. Lapis had every right to be angry as she had been through some terrible things, but the episode casts Steven as being in the right because he's the AllLovingHero who fixes everything with friendship. The thing is, he expects Lapis to put aside her legitimate feelings of anger just to please him and Peridot and so he can have a happy family. But genuine forgiveness takes time - the aesop could have been so much better if it had been 'you can ask someone for forgiveness if you show them you've changed, but don't expect them to warm up to you when you tell them to.' Instead we get Steven essentially shaming Lapis into repressing her own feelings, rather than the episode admitting Lapis needed more time to heal (for contrast, Pearl and Greg's animosity went on for some time before it was addressed, and that was over their feelings for Rose, not severe harm one party had inflicted on another). Steven is usually wise beyond his years, but here he's just insufferably naive and insensitive, and the episode never calls him out on it.
* Animeking1108: Ronaldo’s subplot in ''Restaurant Wars.'' In order to get the Fryman and Pizza families to stop feuding, Steven suggests having Ronaldo and Kiki pretend to date each other. However, Ronaldo objects because he has a girlfriend. Naturally, nobody believes him. This leads to a very predictable gag where it turns out his made-up girlfriend was real after all and she breaks up with him because of the misunderstanding and he spends the rest of the episode moping. For starters, nobody comes to Ronaldo’s defense when he claims that it was just a ruse to get the families to stop fighting. Second, Steven never apologizes for unintentionally ruining Ronaldo’s relationship. Lastly, nobody, not even Ronaldo’s family, [[NoSympathy seems to care that he’s depressed]]. I get that Ronaldo [[TheScrappy isn’t exactly the most loved character in the series]], but sometimes even a TakeThatScrappy can [[DudeNotFunny go too far]] (as ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' can attest to). This wouldn’t be a problem if the breakup was caused by Ronaldo’s own stupidity, but it wasn’t.
* SenorCornholio: "Last One Out of Beach City" was just... bleh, to me. We hardly learned anything new from it; it was nothing more than a filler episode that had no business really even existing. Basically, Pearl wants to join Amethyst and Steven in going to a rock show, and while she's at it she tries to get her "bad girl" on by acting all cool and stuff despite several episodes showing that she's fine with who she normally is. Then she finds someone that just happened to have her hair dyed pink like Rose, with a similar hairstyle to boot, at a point where Pearl's been trying to get over Rose. What really bothers me is when Pearl decides to intentionally run a red stoplight and evade the police, which Pearl does admittedly berate herself for because she essentially ruined the trip by running out of gas during those points... and then Amethyst heaps a bunch of praise on Pearl for all this. And lo and behold, they just so happen to be at the show they were going to! And Rose-haired girl is there! What a twist! I'm sorry, but as a huge Steven Universe fan who likes (even partially) the above and below episodes, this one was almost impossible to salvage. I could tolerate the likes of Lars and Ronaldo, but I couldn't stand this episode; that says a lot. And if Pearl's relationship with Rose-head gets turned into a subplot, those are some episodes I'll watch probably once, then never rewatch again.
* Tropers/MightyMewtron: I considered putting "Bismuth" up here for its controversial message. But "Gem Harvest" is a ''double length episode'' that managed to introduce a more pointless and uncomfortable character to the show. We meet Greg's cousin Andy, who accuses Lapis and Peridot of being "hippies" who overtook his barn, calls the gems entitled, scorns at Greg for moving away and not marrying an American, and calls the Gems "illegal aliens". He's not even a [[FantasticRacism fantastic racist,]] as his lingo mirrors anti-immigrant ideology and he doesn't seem to know that the Gems are literally from outer space. Steven doesn't care that Andy is saying this to his family and believes, as usual, that he can change him by holding a feast. Most of the episode is filler (though at least all the Gems interact with one another) with Gems trying to act "more human", in the process ruining Andy's family heirloom (which he fumes over at first, then suddenly forgives them for?). Later Andy flies off, upset that nobody thanked him (even though he didn't help with the feast, and it was ''for him'') and because he doesn't like how everything is changing. Steven decides he's family anyway, and Andy never has to apologize for his insults towards the Gems. If the episode was about teaching Andy that the Gems are on Earth to save it and he shouldn't hate them on the basis of them being "un-American", or just educating him about not holding racist ideals, it wouldn't have been as bad, but it tried to act like having one feast with aliens would stop him from being racist- which, as far as we know, may not even be true. Not to mention the... [[RuleOfCautiousEditingJudgement very awkward timing]] considering this was the first episode to air after the U.S. election. Also, the first part of the episode, [[TrailersAlwaysLie which was the only part in the advertising,]] had nothing to do with the rest of the plot, and the pumpkin pup was only there to look cute and fit the Thanksgiving theme.
* Mazzafraz: Ugh, ''Rocknaldo''... let's ignore the [[BaitAndSwitch bait and switch]] pulled by the show's Facebook teasing a new Crystal Gem. I will also say that the episode's main lesson [[SomeAnvilsNeedToBeDropped is an important one]] which likely comes from a personal place on the part of the show's creators. I can even admit that the ending was pretty satisfactory and might signal the beginning of much-needed character development for Ronaldo. But jeez, did the episode really need to be so obnoxious? I get that this is an uncomfortable issue that can't be edged around lightly, and from a writing standpoint I guess we do need to see Ronaldo at his worst before we see his change at the end. But good god, Ronaldo at his worst is just plain hard to watch. His smugness, pretentiousness and tactlessness were really pushed beyond the limit, making the episode just an unpleasant experience. It's especially galling because we've just had two emotional rollercoasters for Steven, and watching Ronaldo going full-on douchequake on him is frustrating to watch. The episode could have really benefited from a few humorous moments, maybe a scene or two of Steven legitimately enjoying Ronaldo's company, but Steven barely catches a break. It makes you want to hug the kid and protect him from Ronaldo.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Teen Titans]]
* Calamity2007: After some thinking I decided to add an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans'' to this list. Specifically the final episode of the series, "Things Change". The episode itself wasn't bad, mind you, but due to the fact it was the last episode it rubbed me the wrong way. The episode basically features the Teen Titans going after this mysterious robotic creature who can change its body to match whatever material it came across, making it nearly impossible to incapacitate. Along the way Beast Boy finds this girl at school who looks like Terra and tries to find out if it is really her. When he does talk to her she denies it, but he brings her to different locations where he and Terra used to be, only to find Slade, or at least what Beast Boy think is Slade but is just a robot. After this ordeal though the girl refuses to talk to him telling him to move on and return to his team. FadeToWhite. Sounds like an awesome CliffHanger for a new season, raising some mysterious questions about Terra, Slade, and others... But again, this was the final episode. It didn't even show the Titans defeating the creature. Look, I can understand if there was some ExecutiveMeddling that cancelled a potential season but the fact that they had a perfectly good GrandFinale in the previous episode but decided to make this the finale annoys me. Especially since Terra is one of my favorite characters in the show and opening this loose end without closure is aggravating. Yes, in the comics (of the show, not the original comics) it did reveal [[spoiler:that girl was really Terra]], but the fact that her ultimate fate is only in the supplementary material is still an annoying cop-out.
* LawandDisorder: The ending of "Titans Together" still bothers me. It was a standard 'fight all the enemies from the series at once' thing, and the way they solved it was to [[spoiler:freeze them all with the Brotherhood of Evil's own machine]] and... that's it. They just close up the place and leave them. They villains are trapped in immobile solitary confinement for however long they can live like that, significantly worse than pretty well all of those villains deserved. It wouldn't have taken more than a couple seconds of animation time to show the police had been called and carted them off to jail, but instead it's evidently moral to do exactly what the villains were planning on as long you were the good guys originally.
* SenorCornholio: I loved the original Teen Titans and, after re-watching it fairly recently, I can see that it holds up rather well. That's not to say it doesn't have flaws, however, and my least favorite episode of the original show has to be ''Revved Up''. It's not a terrible episode to me, but it's pretty lackluster compared to the rest of the show. The episode's plot involves [[VillainOfTheWeek Ding Dong Daddy]] challenging the Titans to a cross country drag race to recover Robin's stolen case. First off, the Titans could have just stolen the case back from Ding Dong Daddy and ended the episode right there. Robin has good enough reflexes, Beast Boy could turn into an animal to get it back, and Raven has levitation, for starters. Second, we never actually learn what's in the case; there could be plenty of interpretations or theories, but it's never actually revealed, so we don't feel like we learn anything new. Third, though the episode had some funny moments (particularly involving Cyborg and Beast Boy fending off these weird workshop gremlin things), it didn't feel as clever or creative as something like ''Employee of the Month'' or ''Crash''. Fourth, Ding Dong Daddy is pretty bland as far as goofy villains in this show go; at least [[EvilBrit Mad Mod]] and [[MagiciansAreWizards Mumbo]] had more of an air to them. Fifth, there's a minor subplot where some of the villains hear from Gizmo about the whole race and want Robin's stuff to sell on the market... [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot and hardly any of them get any actual good moments.]] The only villain we get to see have a major role is [[AntiHero Red X]] (and I'll admit [[MomentOfAwesome the bike battle between him and Robin was pretty sweet]]), but that's it. I still love this show to death, but this episode just didn't do it for me.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012)]]
[[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012 The Turtles]] ought to be hiding in their shells from the shame of these moments.
* Shadow200 ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012'' is an alright show, pales in comparison to the 2003 version. But when Donatello gets beaten up by a giant Mutated Ape what does his brothers do? They laugh and mock him! In the 1987 version they might make some puns but be serious, in the 2003 version they would be out for revenge and help him recover (especially Raph who was protective of them even if he got annoyed with them, but in this series is little more than a bully and Jerkass). These guys laugh and makes jokes about him getting a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown!
** Candycane14: I despise that moment as well. Not only was it mean spirited, but they ruined what could've been a loving Leo and Don brotherly moment!
* mannowdog: What bugs me a bit more is in the episode "The Gauntlet" where only Raph is laughing at April for being hunted by a mutant pigeon. Here's to hoping that they tone down Raph's jerkassery in Season 2.
* fluffything: For me, it was when they decided to turn Dogpound into [[spoiler:Rahzar]]. Why, just, why? Dogpound was just fine as a separate character and villain. There was no reason to have him mutate further into a skeletal dog-thing and rename him [[spoiler:Rahzar]]. The two characters aren't really all that similar except for both being canines. Dogpound was a human mutated into a dog, and [[spoiler:Rahzar is a mutated wolf.]] It just feels like the writers wanted to throw in an EnsembleDarkhorse character just as a blatant attempt to get the attention of fans of the classic cartoons and the movies. However, if that's what they wanted, why not just have [[spoiler:Razhar]] be a separate character rather than have him be a transformed Dogpound? The whole thing just comes off as lazy. Guys, if you're going to bring [[spoiler:Rahzar]] into the series, then actually have the real deal instead of this pathetic skeletal Dogpound wannabe.
* Kereea: While the first episode of season 3, "Within the Woods" was overall a good episode, two moments, one right after the other, really pushed me over the edge. Raphael is missing and creepy things are going on. The other five split up, Casey going with April, Donnie with Mikey, and Leo on his own. This causes two major moments: 1) Leo has just come out of a coma and is walking with a crutch. Why exactly is he the one left alone? There were plenty of ways to wheedle him down to the last man standing without that blatant idiocy. And 2) Donnie's belated reaction to April going off with Casey. Yes, I know they have the love triangle and Donnie has seriously jealousy issues that are a whole other kettle of fish, but there are 3 problems with his reaction. A) The season finale made it clear April was not going to deal with his feelings at the moment and he seemed to let them go a bit, making this an awkward snap back. B) They are in a dangerous situation, looking for his missing brother, and all Donnie seems to care about is April maybe making out with Casey (or going further, depending on how much you think was intended to be implied). Finally, the worst is C) where two lines could have fixed it. Instead of handing Mikey the IdiotBall so he seemingly does not know what two teenagers would do alone, have him either mock or tease Donnie about being worried about such a thing at a time like this. Then have Donnie rebuke that he's worried because with any sort of horror movie scenario the pair of teens who even seem like a couple are the ones to be get picked off first. Also, make it so he's worried for their safety, not if Casey's "stealing April."
* darkrage6: For me it was when Irma was revealed to be a Krang, not only did it totally waste a character for no good reason, [[FridgeLogic it flat out doesn't make sense]] as the revelation itself conflicts with the episode "Mousers Attack" where it was established that April had knew Irma before the Krang ever knew about her, and April says she's known Irma for a year despite the events from "Mousers Attack" having happened two years ago. These errors make it look like the writers threw in the twist at the very last minute just for the sake of being shocking. Hopefully at some point there will turn out to be a real Irma after all.
* Disneylover818: Focusing too much on Donnie's "crush" for April is a bit distracting. Supposedly, this is for comedy, but I think it's overstayed its welcome. It's reached a point where Donnie isn't just acting on romantic feelings any more. He's acting on his obsession and clinginess for her. I get that he feels something for her, but he needs to establish healthy ground before pursuing her any further. It's especially bad since the writers are implying that April may feel the same way.
** CharlestonMan: The point of no return for this came in Season 1, in which Donnie made a chart algorithm that takes into account any situation where he could hang out with April, any excuse she might give about not wanting to, and ''any way to turn those "no"s into a "yes".'' This is ''classic'' entitled misogyny at play, where a man refuses to take a woman's "no" for an answer. This is the mentality that leads to ''rape''. But not only is this played for comedy, but it ''works'' and Donnie is ''never'' called out on it, punished, or learns anything at all. So it's basically saying that misogyny pays off and is rewarded. This is ''not'' a lesson kids should be taking away from this show.
** ZYL5_: At this point, it is practically a RomanticPlotTumor with how badly Donnie's characterization has been flanderized and how frequently it comes up in the episodes.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Time Squad]]
You wanna [[WesternAnimation/TimeSquad go back in time and correct the past]]? Let's start with these moments.
* Tropers/{{Nashimi}}: The episode "Hate and Let Hate" from ''WesternAnimation/TimeSquad'', [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming apart from Larry and Buck's reunion moment]], is a [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck Dethroning Episode Of Suck]]. First off, we don't see anything from the actual mission - and that would be perfectly fine if the rest of the episode wasn't so utterly sucky. What we get to see is Otto coming back from the bushes and saying they better go home quickly since the leaves here are really itchy. However, Buck and Larry are gone - presumably getting into an extraordinarily absorbing argument and forgetting about the boy. The fight turns out to end particularly bad, and the two decide to divide the space station into two with a white line. When they do this, they realize Larry's favorite place is on Buck's side and vice versa. [[FridgeLogic But they do not switch the halves - they just part with some insults.]] Naturally, Buck gets hungry and decides to try cooking, which is understandable. Larry however, enters Buck's weapon closet and tries to shoot one of the guns (despite being clearly instructed by the other to not touch his gear) and accidentally hits a photo of the Squad, burning a hole in the place where Buck's head was supposed to be; now, not only has he acted absolutely out of character by [[UnEvilLaugh laughing (somewhat) evilly afterwards]], but he also [[IdiotBall somehow failed to notice Otto was missing. His face was right there on the picture!]] Meanwhile, between the events from the station, we're shown short scenes of Otto on the abandoned island where he was left. [[DudeNotFunny It was utterly heartbreaking to see him hoping that Larry and Buck will return for him soon, but also finding nothing to eat save for some sand and branches. He chooses the sand.]] What in the bloody hell made the writers think that was funny?! Back in the station, we see [[ComedicSociopathy Larry acting like a lunatic killer, shooting everywhere he can, dressed unexpectedly manly for such a]] CampGay character, [[ComedicSociopathy with machine gun cartridges hanging from his shoulders]]. Thankfully, after Larry and Buck's rejoicement they quickly notice Otto's absence and teleport back for him (knowing the cartoon's mild SadistShow tendencies with Larry often playing the ButtMonkey role, it was not so obvious). Now that episode is a massive CharacterDerailment - it's impossible to not realize something's not right when you have such a loud kid, a goddamn home resident, a friend missing!
* Cherry Darling: Personally, I never cared for "Robin'n Stealin' with Mr. Hood". Maybe the pacing was off; maybe it was too short; maybe the writers couldn't come up with a wacky way Robin Hood could be acting out of character (robbing from the poor and giving to the rich just seems too predictable, especially when the show has depicted Edgar Allan Poe as overly cheerful [that's kinda predictable too, but, it made up for it by being funny], Winston Churchill as a nudist, General Patton as the manager of a florist shop, and Al Capone using clowns as gangsters while his gangsters become birthday party clowns), maybe because they ended the episode before [[spoiler:Larry could find out that Tuddrussel and Otto were using his golf clubs]] -- who knows? It's the only episode that I don't like -- even "Hate and Let Hate" was funny, despite the sudden FridgeHorror that washed over me after reading the above description of why the episode is a Dethroning Moment of Suck.
* Cranberries: For me the last episode, "Orphan Substitute". Good lord, Tuddrussel was going to deliberately leave Otto behind and just replace him for another kid like you would a tissue! And while Larry obviously didn't want him to be left behind he sure as hell didn't even try to stop Tuddrussel from doing this, he does have the time travel controls, he shouldn’t have to follow Tuddrussel's commands. While it's Otto's fault that he did go off on his own for this situation to happen, it could have been avoided entirely if Tuddrussel hadn't been such an ass and unplugged the game system before Otto could get a high score on it, and Otto had a valid point- "A grown man cheating an eight year old, that's pathetic." Oh and the fact that when they do find Otto, it was purely accidental and while Larry is thrilled to have found him, Tuddrussel is completely embarrassed to see him, and at the end they leave that other orphan they picked up along the way with Sister Thornley. For one that kid doesn't even live in that particular orphanage, second, for all we know that kid didn't even belong in that era, honestly he looked like he could have lived in the 1940's or something close to that, and they probably never even took him back... that's just sad.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Transformers Prime]]
* Blueshark: ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'' had a good cliffhanger that made it look like [[TheBigGuy Bulkhead]] was killed by [[TheBrute Hardshell]]. By the next episode says he won't be back to his old self for awhile. But then a few episodes later he is back in the fight. I mean really? So we can kill [[spoiler: Cliffjumper, Skyquake, Makeshift, Breakdown, Hardshell, and Silas]] But we can't even put Bulkhead in a coma! C'mon writers take a risk. This just felt like TheyWastedaPerfectlyGoodPlot to me.
* @/{{Peteman}}: How does Silas outfight Team Prime in hand to hand combat with Nemesis Prime? He boasts about his combat skill, but he's dealing with people who have been fighting longer than there has been a human species. I could understand if Nemesis Prime simply outgunned them, but between their own experience and Silas' dubiously effective interface, Nemesis really should have been dropped the moment he got into melee without getting surprising them.
* Vrahno: The conclusion of the "Orion Pax" three-parter for me. I've been on the fence about the show 'till then, saw it as SoOkayItsAverage, and waited to see whether season 2 would finally manage to 'wow' me. The set-up was really good: Optimus, having defeated Unicron, lost his memories of being an Autobot leader and regressed into his pre-war Orion Pax self. He joins the Decepticons who make him think that the Autobots are evil and that he's no leader-material. Up until then, Optimus Prime basically had no personality, and was as dull a character as any random Decepticon Mook. With his memories gone, I thought maybe they actually intended to write him that way, to add contrast to his potential S2 portrayal. And hey, the show was originally advertised as exploring "what it means to be a Prime". Perfect setup right there! Orion Pax relearns to be Optimus Prime, live up to his own name, the Autobots all learn to work better together and manage things without a leader to guide them, and we see just what makes a Prime. Instead, at the end of the three-parter, nearly everything goes back to how it was in S1 -- big events are wasted and developments undone. Orion Pax, who was actually an interesting character, is wiped away as the other characters restore Optimus Prime's memories through some techno-magic. His memories of being a Decepticon are cleansed, so he goes through no development, and he's back to being his wooden S1 self who isn't given any development afterwards either. He seemingly even forgot that he wanted to kill Megatron for good at the end of S1, because he just punches him real good instead of offing him when he had the chance to. So, the entire S1 story-arc with Unicron, Orion Pax as a Decepticon, the Autobots trying to cope with having no leader, the potential for Optimus Prime to actually become a developed character... all wasted, and for what? A handful of weapon cache coordinates that Orion Pax decoded while he was on the Decepticon ship. So the entire story was just a set-up for a tedious, season-long relic hunt? I'm not putting the blame entirely on the writers, as Hasbro apparently was against the idea of turning Prime into a Decepticon. And the development that Jack went through during these episodes was actually pretty cool. But literally everything else about the story was a gigantic waste. Many disappointments followed, but this was the one that cemented my dislike for the show the most.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'' was shaping up to be one of my favorite Transformers shows, even more so than the original cartoon. Season 2 had its annoyances, but I kept watching... but the death of Dreadwing is what finally killed my interest in the show for good. All throughout the season the writers had been setting Dreadwing up as an honorable Decepticon warrior who actually questioned his superior's motives, something not often seen in the Transformers franchise (Thundercracker [[InformedAttribute supposedly]] fit this mold, but never showed it [[AllThereInTheManual outside of his character bio]]). He was also interesting in that he had an actual reason to fight the Autobots besides conquest or just loving to fight -- he wanted revenge for his murdered twin. All in all one of the best characters to come out of the series... and how do the show writers send him off? [[DroppedABridgeOnHim By having Megatron shoot him in the back]] when he tries to kill Starscream, who was responsible for his brother's zombification. Excuse me? Given how much Megatron hates Starscream in this and virtually every other series, I have a very, very hard time believing he would kill one of his most loyal and competent soldiers to protect [[TheStarscream one of his most treacherous and unreliable]]. And don't tell me that he needed Starscream alive because he had the cyber keys -- there was nothing stopping him from taking the keys and then letting Dreadwing blast him to shrapnel. I don't know why the show writers decided to kill off one of the show's best Decepticon characters -- making way for Predaking in the next season, his voice actor quit, [[MerchandiseDriven his toy wasn't selling]], etc. -- but it felt like such a slap in the face to viewers that I refused to watch Season 3.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Ultimate Spider-Man]]
While ''WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan'' may be [[BrokenBase divisive]], these moments do nothing to help it status.
* Tropers/GamerSlyRatchet: The pilot was already very painful to sit through, with its childish, bland humor and flat characters. But it only becomes truly obnoxious when Spider-Man takes the "Spider-Bike" out for a joyride. From the cringeworthy, shrill voice acting in Spidey, to the lame attempts at humor, and a [[MerchandiseDriven shamelessly blatant attempt to promote a Spider-Bike toy]], this overly long sequence [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment barely even contributes anything to the plot]]. And, I kid you not, this was written by PaulDini. What!?
* Tropers/SpiderFan14: "Doomed" is a horrible episode. Nova and Spidey get in a pissing contest over who's the coolest. They agree whoever captures Doctor Doom for SHIELD wins. The problem is that they don't think that DD has diplomatic immunity, isn't doing anything evil (at first) and consider this an uncalled for domestic invasion on foreign soil. No one thinks its a bad idea and that if Doom kills them he would be considered protecting himself. Granted it turns out he takes control over the Helicarrier with Doombots (but this is part of the team's fault) and almost destroys New York (really why is it always flying near a city?). After the day is saved and Fury chews them out, what does Spidey do? [[DesignatedHero Imagines him saying blah blah blah and ignoring him while thinking he was right all along.]] It takes a lot to make Spiderman horrible but this show crafts this eloquently.
** RAZ: I'm 100% with you. This episode is a slap in the face of everything Spider-Man is about. Peter rushing his team of novice heroes on an unauthorized mission without any proper supervision to capture [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Doctor]]-[[HeroKiller Freaking]]-[[BigBad Doom]] just to make himself look cool is bad enough, but the one moment that's really insulting is where right before embarking on the mission, he actually starts to wonder if he's really doing the right thing here, and instead should be the bigger person and call things off. And then immediately after this he turns to the camera and smugly says "Yeah right! Maybe next life!" Let me reiterate: this is the character who is the TropeNamer for [[ComesGreatResponsibility trying to be responsible]] and you have a version who essentially outright states "well f**k being responsible!" directly to the audience. Congratulations, Man of Action. You messed up Spider-Man, [[{{Understatement}} big time]].
* Tropers/Regu14: While I generally enjoy the series (I love Spider-man), the episode with the symbiotes first appearance followed the 90s series's example of introducing Venom far to early, but that's not what I hate about this episode. What I hate is when Harry and MJ want to eat lunch with Peter, who also wants to be with his best friends, the other heroes show up and basically ruin the moment. Then Nove has the gull to insinuate the Peter only likes Harry because he's rich, while Harry is in earshot! I hated this guy enough already, but that moment cemented him as a horrible character. He nearly ruined Pete and Harry's friendship! Did the writers just want to make people confuse this asshole for the Comic version of Nova?
* Tropers/Hyperion5: I was struggling through the series already, but the episode "Awesome" really made me cringe. Peter steals an experiment of Dr. Connors' (i.e. Awesome Andy) for a science show, rather than, say, making one himself. It was explained in the episode that he was too busy fighting the Juggernaut to make one, but really? That's not only horrible hand waving, but it implies that Peter does literally nothing but fight crime. The episode only gets worse from there. Rather than be an episode which builds on the relationship between Luke and Peter (as the previous one did with Peter and Danny), Luke acts just as badly as Peter does, basically expecting Peter to do all of the work on their science project. Juggernaut is defeated once his costume is destroyed, which goes against every version of the character. Worst of all, Awesome Andy is a completely unlikeable threat in this episode. I understand that they couldn't use the awesome (no pun intended) version of Andy from Dan Slott's She-Hulk run, but what was stopping them from using the classic Silver Age version of Andy? Basically, this episode failed to have a single enjoyable moment in it for me.
* Tropers/BGFU: "The Sinister Six" was pretty bad. It shouldn't be - it marks the first appearance of, well, Sinister Six, the famous team-up of Spidey's rogues, in this incarnation of Spider-Man. But unlike similar episodes in ''Spider-Man: The Animated Series'' and ''The Spectacular Spider-Man'', this one is just a huge mess. First of all, villain motivations are basically nonexistant. The only ones who actually have any reason to be there are Dr. Octopus and The Beetle. The Lizard turned back into Dr. Connors - but apparently Octopus found (or made?) more of the Lizard serum, just so his team can have a wild beast, who of course would only attack Spider-Man, and not any other team member that he would find a threat. But at least they gave some reason for Connors turning back into the Lizard. Electro doesn't get any explanation - at the end of his debut episode, he lost his extra-powers and transformed back into his weaker human form. But here he's back in his "Ultimate Electro" form, has extra-powers again, and no explanation is ever given as to why. The Rhino was remorseful for his actions and actually wanted to reform - but here all he wants is revenge on Spider-Man, once again, for no reason. And Kraven originally was after White Tiger, Spider-Man just helped her defeat him. If he's free now, why not go against her again? What does he care about Spider-Man? We may never know. Lack of motivations aside, this episode is also a disappointment, since The Sinister Six isn't very much of a threat, and Spidey is able to hold his own against six super-powered villains for an amount of time that's just enough for his teammates to arrive and help him. Not only this is a disappointment, but in the context of the series, this is bad writing, since in the very next episode Spidey gets defeated by three average criminals who only use some special armor.
* {{@/SomeoneImSure}}: The pacing in most of the episodes is just terrible, but it really stands out in the later ones when all the characters are trying to stay relevant. I could handle it until I got to the second episode in the Carnage Arc, in the fourth Season. That entire scene with Cloak and the other two was just rushed, and I couldn't get into it at all. There is nothing more self-destructive than bad pacing.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Winx Club]]
* Tropers/HappyMan: In ''WesternAnimation/WinxClub''
* Tropers/{{Dag1984}}: For me it was a certain revelation in Season 3. The revelation that Bloom in her base form is more powerful then five Enchantix fairies who have a fair amount of battle experience. Thank God season 4 improved on this.
* Tropers/FairyDreamer: It was several moments that did it for me in season five when it came to Bloom. She basically becomes an overgrown brat, crying every time something doesn't go how she wants (such as her boyfriend not answering his phone, despite that she knows he's busy). Now, yes, Bloom was caught in a love triangle, but how much clearer does Sky have to be that he loves Bloom and Bloom only? Worse, when Bloom is called out on her behavior a few times, rather than stop and think "maybe I do need to calm down", she acts like she did nothing wrong. MarySue is one thing. SpoiledBrat is another. Thankfully, season six fixed this.
* Tropers/CharlestonMan: Said love triangle, by the way, is another dethroning moment due to how it began in the first season. Diaspro is Sky's ''fiancé''. He keeps her a secret from Bloom as he pursues a relationship with her, which means he's cheating on Diaspro. Then, Bloom attacks Diaspro because she thinks she must be a Trix member in disguise due to being with Sky romantically. Sky stops it and comes clean about everything. And what is Bloom's reaction? She blames '''Diaspro''' for being in the way of her and Sky. She blames a completely innocent party who had no idea Bloom even ''existed'', and doesn't blame Sky for lying to her and cheating on Diaspro. The kicker is after this bit of victim-blaming is done, Diaspro is [[DesignatedVillain actually made into an antagonist]] [[DerailingLoveInterests solely for the convenience of Bloom/Sky,]] [[KarmaHoudini who get off scot-free.]] Let no-one claim that this is a feminist show, or else direct them to this wretched plot point.
** Tropers/{{fairygirl567}}: Wretched plot point? The Bloom/Sky relationship is kind of questinioing. She became instentily infatuied with him like she was becoming his lap dog or a Disney princess. The worse thing is after this, Bloom runs home! Not because the Trix attacked her, not because she got kicked out or suspended for attacking another fairy, not because her parents found out and forced her to leave for her protection, not even because the father was angry, she left because she got her poor little heart broken... are you serious? She's a fairy and just got attacked by the Trix's and found out she's adopted! This is what makes her run? And I can't even accept that fact that "Oh, this was the final straw for her to leave." Really? A boy? I get someone who cheats is messed up and can affect the hearbroken person, but she literally just abondeded her friends because of the mere fact that "Waaah my boyfriend had another girlfriend and didn't tell me!" No. Just. No. When you're a fairy who fights three evil witches in one season alone, I think that a man breaking your heart is priority number 2!
* Tropers/SloMotion: Mine was also a season 5 moment. Specifically, the moment When Aisha used her wish to save Nereus and not revive Nabu. Cousins or not, the writers knew damn well that pretty much every fan wanted Nabu back and they have the chance to revive him and it's used a character who we've barely seen (and in all honesty I don't give a damn about) in place of a character the fans know and love. And to add salt to the wound, all of a sudden Aisha likes Roy (who is a piss poor attempt at being Nabu 2.0) and Bloom gets her sister back. We get Daphne back, but no Nabu. What the hell, Winx Club writers?!
* SummerDays128: This was minor for the show but it was that Christmas episode... it was alright. Bloom celebrating Christmas with her friends is nice except this is apparently the first time she's ever told them about it. They make it clear they had no idea what Bloom was talking about when she said she was visiting her family for the holidays. This is season 5 right? You know that means she's known them for 4 seasons plus 2 movies put that all together it's about... 6 to 5 years and you're trying to convince me she never shared this holiday with them! Not once? There was a Halloween episode in season 2 where she took them to a party but no other holidays were ever brought up, I'm not saying talk about Thanksgiving (that'd be an awkward conversation) but come on Christmas is a huge holiday that nearly everyone celebrates and it shown Bloom loves the holiday but she never visited her family while going to Magix, never got any presents from the or even a freaking card or phone call? Was she still mad about the adoption thing? Well... I'll say no to that because she still talks to them and shows she loves them (even though she calls them by there first names). She never gushed about one of the best holidays ever to her best friends! That just shocked me beyond belief. I mean she talked more about her six flags trip then this holiday. If they had started the episode off with Bloom talking about how she's visiting her adoptive parents for Christmas and one of the girls could be like "Oh the day with the fat man who breaks into people's homes" then Bloom laughs and says yes. That would've been so much better because they would've known about the holiday! Not have Bloom apparently never tell them about it! Here they are just ignorant about it and she still didn't explain it to them, they had to google it! I know this shouldn't bother me so much but really, 6 years she's known these people and never once did she talk about this holiday with them? It took 6 years before they finally do a holiday special?! I mean season 4 was about them being on Earth! Sure it was summer (I think) but they didn't find out about the holiday then. Did the writers think that if they did the other way they'd look lazy, no doing a Christmas special in the middle of the season and have half of the characters not know what the holiday is, is what's lazy! It would've been so much better if her friends knew about said holiday but never actually celebrated it because they don't want to or have holidays similar to it, they had a mother's day in there world so why not Gift Day for each planet or even an episode dealing with telling her parents about the holiday (real ones not adopted) now that would've been awesome! They'd ask her to come over to have tea or something and she'd say "No I promised Mike and Vanessa that I'd celebrate Christmas with them." and they would've been like "What's Christmas?" Wouldn't that be interesting? Or having her try to celebrate the holiday with her friends but they didn't see into to them at first then she talks to her dead (not anymore) sister something along those lines. Her own freaking boyfriend/ fiance didn't know! What the hell Bloom? Aren't these her like closest friends and soon to be husband? I guess not.

* MewLettuceRush Miss Magix may already be well known for its UnfortunateImplications ,however its largest Dethroning moment lies with it's treatment of [[UnintentionallySympathetic Lucy]]. Sure she is not exactly a nice person but at the same time she is so obsessed with being popular she is willing to be in a one sided abusive friendship with the Trix who treat her like shit. In this episode this desire leads to her agreeing to have her appearance altered in order to compete in Miss Magix despite not knowing it was a trick by the witches. At first everything goes fine with her being a surprise favorite among the audience. However, at the end the witches [[ShootTheDog in a needlessly cruel scene]] undo the beauty spell on her [[CruelTwistEnding right when she is about to get the trophy]] and she runs off in tears. To make a bad situation worse a few episodes later show she is now being mocked by the entire school except Mirta for it. Even a semi villainous character doesn't deserve to be humiliated this badly! The 4kids edit makes it even worse by having [[DesignatedHero Bloom]] undo the spell herself and [[UnintentionallyUnsympathetic Stella]] having a KarmaHoudini at the end. This along with several other reasons is why I consider Bloom in the 4kids dub a bigger MarySue than the original Bloom ever was!
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Xiaolin Showdown]]
Tropers, we challenge you to a WesternAnimation/XiaolinShowdown. List the worst moments of this well-remembered classic with as much detail as you can, and do not argue with the other entries. Let's go: Xiaolin Showdown! Gong Yi Tan Pai!
* MetalMichelangelo: ''WesternAnimation/XiaolinShowdown'''s "The Black Vipers" episode. The monks return to Texas to find a new shen gong wu, only to come across The Black Vipers, an all-girls motorcycle gang led by Clay's jealous little sister, Jessie. At the episode's climax, Clay ends up losing the showdown because he decided to save Jessie who promptly kicked him off his bike and won the showdown resulting in the monks losing all of their shen gong wu. What makes this episode a DMOS is when Jessie shows some remorse and sends Clay a letter while returning the shen gong wu. Jessie's letter says "Well big brother, it took me a while, but I finally beat you. Just so there's no hard feelings, I'm returning all of your warts (that's what Jessie was calling the shen gong wu) except for one I was hoping to borrow (the Wings of Tinabi). Clay could've easily won the showdown but chose to save his sister's life instead, therefore, Jessie won through cheating (even though that's allowed in the showdowns). The real DMOS was the fact that this episode was Clay's last solo showdown. After this episode, the only showdowns Clay participated in were when all 4 monks competed as a team. Also, what would happen if Jessie decided to keep every shen gong wu? This pretty much borders on NiceJobBreakingItHero for Clay.
* TT454: For me, the worst episode was "The Apprentice". In my opinion the episode is such a mess that it's almost irredeemable. Not only is the plot really silly - Wuya challenging Jack Spicer and Katnappe to compete for the role of her apprentice - but everything else stuffed into the episode doesn't work either. From the random, out-of-place re-appearance of the "U-Bots" to the disturbing, unnecessary acid trip sequence caused by the Woozy Shooter, and the painfully unfunny sub-plot involving Jack Spicer turning "good" and being hired to do a lot of chores for the monks (resulting in the predictable twist that he would run off) and one of the strangest Xiaolin Showdowns in the series (a game of "truth and lies"), the whole thing feels really slapped together and frankly insulting.
* Loekman3: For me, its when Omi challenge Dojo to a showdown and used more than his wagered Wu (Changing Chopsticks) like Reversing Mirror and Shroud of Shadows. [[ProtagonistCenteredMorality This is not only ouright cheating but also narratively treated as a good thing]]. [[BrokenAesop Despite the fact that later when Wuya challenge the Xiaolin Warriors to a Showdown]], when she used a non-wagered Wu, it is treated as cheating including [[{{Hypocrite}} Omi]] himself.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Young Justice]]
There's no [[WesternAnimation/YoungJustice justice]] in these moments, no siree...
* AllsparkSpinOut: What finally made me hate ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice'' was the reveal of [[VillainSue the members of The Light]] - while ComicBook/LexLuthor, Ra's al Ghul, ComicBook/VandalSavage and [[BrainInAJar the Brain]] made sense, the other three members were [[ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} Ocean Master]], Queen Bee and [[SpoiledBrat Klarion the Witch Boy]]. I like Klarion, and I felt his voice was perfectly cast in ''Young Justice'', but Weisman really should have used [[MagnificentBastard skilled manipulators]] like [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitans Deathstroke]], Gorilla Grodd or ClockKing. Hell, he left out Amanda Waller, who has always been a major member of Project Cadmus in any operation - she could be the [[TokenGoodTeammate Token Morally Ambiguous Teammate]].
* REgu14: While I have to heartily disagree with the idea that Comics!Deathstroke is a good manipulator, the members of the Light are even stupider than the summary implies. Here's my DMOS. Ra's al Ghul, and Lex Luthor. [[CharacterDerailment Working Together.]] These two have enough Ego to fill a 747 Boeing each, and that's even getting into the massive personal philosophy differences. Ra's would never work together with someone like Luthor, not just because of his technology-focused methods, but because Luthor wants to conquer the world. Guess who also shares that goal? Ra's al fucking Ghul!!
* SpiderFan14: I'd like to add the "5 Years Later" season two opener. This was annoying and confusing. Why the time skip? The show had two plotlines going into the season with the search of the real Red Arrow and what the missing 16 hours were for the League during its mind control. We now have a bunch of new characters to quickly latch on while the other characters were spent the whole season with may not appear regularly. [[SarcasmMode Also we get the joy of watching the]] [[ShipSinking Miss Martian/Superboy relationship crumble offscreen and have to deal with it presumably all over again.]] All and all a horrible season opener no matter how much Creator/TimCurry or Lobo appears.
* Tropers/LLSmoothJ: "Bloodlines." Or otherwise known as "Let's make Wally look as useless as possible." New character Bart Allen (A.K.A Impulse) shows up from the future and already he's shown to be better than him. Not only is he shown to be faster than Wally (as in actually being able to keep up with The Flash), he's able to dodge traps that manage to trip him up as well. And when it looks like Bart screwed up? Oh no, he actually saved The Flash! And to add the icing on the cake people still can't seem to get his name right. This really is infuriating to watch as out of the original teammates, Wally ends up with the short end of the stick as everyone else at least get an awesome moment in the second season, never mind that this is the only place where he still exists (stupid [[ComicBook/{{New52}} Reboot]]...) and yet basically [[StrawLoser exists to make the Allens look better]]. I've heard that this was in the comic as well and it will a plot point for Wally to come back faster and stronger, but considering the [[DemotedToExtra unlikelihood of focusing on the old cast]] and the greater chance of focusing on the new blood, I'll believe it when I see it.
* Tropers/{{Gannetwhale}}: The utter failure of UsefulNotes/TheBechdelTest. I was willing to forgive Miss Martian's and Artemis first conversation, but once Zatanna and Artemis have a moment together is all "BOYS BOYS BOYS". Damnit Greg, you can write women, why can't you write DC superheroines!? Actually, Zatanna as a whole is infuriating, since she's just a [[SatelliteLoveInterest gratuitous love interest]] for Dick Grayson.
* Tropers/{{Silverblade2}}: How about the beginning of "Downtime"? A giant monster defeats all five members offscreen. Then Batman, a guy without any superpowers, comes just in time and [[CurbStompBattle curbstomps]] the monster with a taser. After that Batman gives to Aqualad a pep talk because apparently his failure as a leader was because he was thinking too much about his home and his crush... wait what?
** SpaceOutlaw: Batman is the penultimate meta human, so him beating the monster wasn't entirely unbelievable, I just felt the whole scene was jarring, since the kids have already spent a good bit of time on teamwork practice and fighting as a group, you would think they'd be able to handle some weak-shit eldritch fodder.
* Tropers/{{JtheDrafter}}: Throughout WesternAnimation/YoungJustice Wally and Artemis constantly snipe at and bicker with each other. They have a few moments where they aren't fighting, but their relationship is mostly defined by their antagonism. Their moments of positive interaction are few and far between, and two of those three moments take place under special circumstances. (Mutual amnesia and every adult in the world disappearing from the face of the planet.) Yet at the end of the season one finale Wally and Artemis kiss, and act like they should have kissed much earlier. Look, LoveHate is a legitimate trope, but it doesn't work if the two parties don't act legitimately attracted to each other! No reason is given as to why Wally would want to kiss Artemis after she'd been so constantly mean-spirited to him, and no reason is given as to why Artemis would want to kiss Wally after he'd been a near-constant JerkAss to her.
* Tropers/{{Falconwing}}: [[spoiler: Wally West's death.]] After an entire season of being out of focus Wally comes back into action... Only to [[spoiler: go out in a heroic sacrifice that would have been much better suited for Barry to make clearing the way for Wally to be the Flash.]] But no, Barry does nothing and just watches with a sad face as his nephew [[spoiler: Fades from existence.]] I don't know if Greg wrote this, or it was forced on him by higher ups, but either way it's nothing short of a middle finger to the eyeballs of every Wally West fan who feels screwed over by Flashpoint! Just when you thought DC couldn't sink any lower.
** XSpectreGreyX: I agree completely. [[spoiler:Wally's death]] just felt so unnecessary, and there wasn't even some meaning to it. Also, why the hell wasn't Jay Garrick there? This just felt like another fuck you to Wally fans. I don't know if it was mandated, but it certainly feels that way. And pretty much everything afterwards is also crap. Cassie and Tim getting together despite not even interacting (I know it can work in real life, but as a show, it doesn't). She hasn't even made mention of having any attraction to him whatsoever, nor was any implied. It just feels like a last minute PairTheSpares. Dick Grayson quitting the team due to grief (the latest issue of Nightwing has a good portrayal of how he'd deal with such an event), oh, and even after all of this, they still refuse to name the team. [[spoiler:Wally died]] and will be known as a founding member of "The Team". And then they have the gall to leave a SequelHook, when we know the show is done. Why not just have the Justice Leaguers on trial (who contributed absolutely nothing in this episode) stop Savage and the War World? All for this is just a horrible way to end the show, making an otherwise below average episode worst.
* Seiya: M'gann mindraping her boyfriend and that plot point never getting brought up again. AGAIN, she abused her boyfriend a who had a history of people messing with his mind and spent a whole season rubbing her new relationship in his face and we're supposed to cheer that they got back together.
* {{@/SomeoneImSure}}: It was really hard to pinpoint my DMOS with this series because it 'does' have a lot of potential. My main beef with it is the animation. In pretty much every scene where there's more than one person on screen, there is usually more than one person standing around like a statue in the background. The DC Animation department is supposed to be leagues ahead of Marvel's and yet Marvel's Ultimate Spiderman is so much better at animating background characters simply walking down the streets of New York. This lack of animation (plus the lack of crowds and random people on the streets in later episodes) on the Young Justice's animation department creates a feeling of lifelessness in this world that's supposed to at least feel like it's alive. I can't get invested when no one on screen is invested in what anyone is saying except the person saying it. Such as Speedy's denouncement of his mentor in the very first episode. Aquaman and Green Arrow are just standing there and staring until Speedy mentions that he knows about their HQ, then latter on while Speedy is talking to Green Arrow, Aquaman is just staring at him like he's not saying anything at all. Any scene where there's a crowd, expect most everyone to be stopped in time, even though they're supposed to be talking, moving, etc. The animation sucks. As for narrative, I cannot specifically pin down what exactly about the story offends me (mostly because a lot of unrelated things offend me) but the praise this show gets when it doesn't even have good animation is offensive to any self-respecting animator. I can look at youtube videos animated by Bronies and they are much better than this "professional animation". Admittedly, there are a few moments when the animation feels alive, but these are extremely rare. A scene in the second Season, when Miss Martian and Superboy are arguing in the Justice League's defense in an alien court room, and Miss Martian suddenly hugs Superboy and jumps around in excitement... that is the best scene in the whole series when it comes to animation. It is the kind of animation I expected from the beginning. Instead, I get a crowd full of statues and a bunch of people doing nothing but standing or crouching around in the background doing nothing, not even breathe.
* Tropers/{{CriticoMolesto}}: Disgraced Ocean Master. Alright, for starters “5 years later” is a cheap, cheap trick. You can just skip a bunch of character development and interactions with a shrug just to change the dynamics with no actual efforts. I mean, yeah, we get Blue Beetle and Tim Drake and Impulse and Wonder Girl and… I dunno, Lagoon Boy? Cool. But that still doesn’t make up for the fact that they just pressed a big ol’ button and went “Fuck it”. They got bored and shook the 8-ball. Out of all the things that we missed in those five years, the one that has always stuck out to me is the whole “Disgraced Ocean Master”. Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m glad we got Manta on board and the whole story with Aqualad was good. Really. I don’t have a problem with them changing Orm for Manta. The real problem is the fact that they completely wasted a character. One of Aquaman’s main foes. The fucker is Aquaman’s half brother, controls his armies and wants him dead. How much weight do you think he has in a story? A lot, right? We could see maybe an infiltration. Perhaps some development on Aquaman, as he (and almost everyone else in the League, for that matter) gets almost no character to speak of. But no. Orm gets one appearace out of his suit, and then sits in a shadowy room the rest of the episodes and as far as my knowledge goes, doesn’t even get dialogue beyond the first episode he shows up. And the cherry on top, the real kicker here, is that one line. One fucking line. “That poor, disgraced Ocean Master”. OK, I’m gonna have to stop you right there, Teen Titans Dark. Disgraced? He did nothing to begin with! Queen Bee, Klarion, al Ghul, The Brain, all those fuckers do something at some point, but the half-brother of one of the League’s founding members, a heir to the throne of Atlantis, the (self-proclaimed) Master Of The Ocean, about 13 episodes worth of storytelling with this dude, gets booted, off-screen, and all we get is: Disgraced. The entire goddamn Time Skip summed up right here, luv.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Others]]
* Tropers/{{Overlord347}}: I'm probably reading too much into this one, but one dethroning moment for me came in an episode of WesternAnimation/VeggieTales, in which Larry sings a song about his missing hairbrush. Now, from what I can tell, the song was about giving up things you don't need (like Larry's hairbrush since he has no hair) to someone else who does (like the Peach who does have hair). The problem with that is Larry never ''did'' give him the hairbrush; it was Bob the tomato. He basically just took the hairbrush without permission and gave it to the Peach on the grounds that he has hair and will make better use of it. His excuse for basically stealing from Larry? "Well, you don't really use or need it." That's it! It would be like if one of my friends had a stuffed toy that he no longer plays with and I just go ahead and take it to give to someone else simply because he doesn't use it anymore!
* Tropers/{{Baronbeefdip}}: For me, the episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily'' with the "psycho duck" certainly qualifies. It starts out good enough with Penny rescuing a mallard duck who can't swim and having him stay at the house until he recovers. The duck keeps stealing Oscar's food, but no one but Oscar ever sees the duck doing so. This in and of itself would make for a hilarious episode... But, then the duck goes batshit insane for no reason whatsoever. Seriously, it's a random shift from an episode about Penny rescuing a cute yet mischievous (towards Oscar at least) duck to an episode about the entire family (and friends) being terrified of an insane power-hungry duck. Why? Also, the seemingly tacked-on ending where the duck is revealed to have belonged to a billionaire and that [[LawyerFriendlyCameo Wizard Kelly]] (himself already a multi-billionaire in the series) had returned Chester (the psycho duck) to his owner and gotten the million dollar reward. The ending has no real purpose other than to serve as a YankTheDogsChain moment for Oscar. Yes, Oscar is the ButtMonkey of the series... but that was just cruel.
* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: [[spoiler: Cedric]] being the final villain of the second/final season of ''WesternAnimation/{{WITCH}}''. Creator/GregWeisman, I love you, but just because you can pull off a twist doesn't always mean you should, especially when it means sacrificing satisfying end battles with two menacing, well-developed villains for a final battle against a horrendously unimpressive, underdeveloped one who we've seen defeated about 100 times already.
* Loekman3: There is one ''[[WesternAnimation/BenTen Ben 10]]'' short that made me want to punch the creators whenever I experience the ending of "Hijacked". Basically, two criminals attempt to carjack the car and Ben, being [[ChronicHeroSyndrome Ben]] saves the day only for Gwen and Max later [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished to chastise him for using the Rust Bucket]] [[MadeOutToBeAJerkass against his grandpa's instructions]] [[NoSympathy without letting Ben explain what really happened]]. At least in other shorts most of Ben's ButtMonkey can be attributed to his own owndoings but here, Ben pretty much saves the Rust Bucket & subsequently the whole summer vacation and yet he gets absolutely no reward for doing this? [[DudeNotFunny This isn't funny at all]], it's just a slap in the face for Ben's good deeds.
* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: The first season finale to ''WesternAnimation/Ben10UltimateAlien''. After building up that dark and serious storyline, all the angst (and {{Wangst}}), all the promise that Ben's world would never be the same... everything is set to normal with the literal push of a button in the last two minutes. Kevin [[RomanticPlotTumor gets back with Gwen]] despite energy-raping her and he and Ben [[EasilyForgiven rush a shared apology for trying to kill one another]], then they go out for smoothies as if nothing happened. Not to mention the 5 aliens Aggregor killed being inexplicably resurrected and Darkstar hitting the depths of VillainDecay. What a freaking ShaggyDogStory! Some say ''Ben 10'' JumpedTheShark when it become ''Alien Force''; others when Vilgax came in ''Alien Force's'' third season. But for me, this is when ''Ben 10'' officially [[JumpingTheShark Jumped the Shark]].
** fluffything: For me, it was even earlier than that when Kevin mutates into a monster once again after absorbing the Omnitrix's powers. Now, you'd think the writers would have Kevin struggling once again with being a mutation and trying to live a somewhat normal life while being a monster or maybe trying to control his new-found powers and keep himself from turning evil again. But, nope, instead he just instantly turns insane and Ben now has to fight him once again. And, to make matters worse, the explanation as to why Kevin went insane again? Because it's what his species does when they absorb certain types of energy. That's right. The writers completely tossed aside the fact that Kevin was a sociopath from the start and gave him a crappy "It's in my DNA so it's not my fault" FreudianExcuse to explain his HeelFaceTurn and his FaceHeelTurn. No, just... god, no.
* Loekman3: Out of all the flaws from ''WesternAnimation/Ben10Omniverse'' that I hate the most, [[VillainDecay reducing threatening villains into a complete joke]] one of my most hated moments. ''Special Delivery'' is the epitome of this. Previously, each of the villains (Fisttrick, Sunder, Looma, Trumbipulor) that made up of Psyphon's gangs are capable of putting Ben and Rook to their limits. But here, [[VillainTeamUp when they all gang up on Ben himself]], [[ConservationOfNinjutsu he just swats them aside as if they are mere canon fodders]], even Psyphon himself, despite having the power of a dwarf star. And he did it while still retaining his obnoxious personality to the point that I would rather [[RootingForTheEmpire root Vilgax to steal his Omnitrix and blast him into the Null Void chamber]].
** Troper/KenyaStarflight: While I acknowledge that ''WesternAnimation/Ben10Omniverse'' is flawed, I was willing to look the other way and enjoy the show regardless despite them. The kicker for me came during the ''Rooters of All Evil'' story arc, which terribly and sloppily [[RetCon retcons]] not only Kevin Levin's past, but the pasts of the [[HalfHumanHybrid Amalgam Kids]] as well. (For those unfamiliar with the episode, Kevin's race, Osmosians, are no longer [[HumanAlien Human Aliens]] but just a genetic mutation, and the Amalgam Kids are no longer alien hybrids but ordinary humans infused with alien powers.) Worst of all, the retcon not only implies that dozens, if not hundreds, of high-ranking Plumbers have [[MindRape had their memories tampered with]], but it [[UnPerson completely erases Kevin's father from existence]]! I can forgive a retcon when it fixes a continuity error or problem with the world-building, but ''Omniverse's'' handling of it was awful.
** [[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Tropers/Worldofdrakan Worldofdrakan]]: A contributing moment of suck from a Troper that actually enjoys Omniverse, here! Though I am a fan, I will still acknowledge that the show does have its flaws. There was a particular moment that really rubbed me the wrong way in the episode "Mystery, Incorporeal." It would otherwise be a pretty good episode if not for how bad it makes you feel for Gwen. Basically, Ben shows up at Gwen's college and [[SpotlightStealingSquad steals the spotlight]] from her when she rightfully deserves it and gets her into trouble with one of her professors. The part that struck me as a dethroning moment of suck, though, came at the end when Ben just straight up walks away from the college with an honorary degree while Gwen still has to work her tail off for one.
* Tropers/{{Brokenshell}}: In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Hero 108}}'' (a show I usually find to be average) Mystique Sonia's Yaksha (a magic hat that is infatuated with her) gets burnt to death right in front of her eyes. Next scene, she is in prison and, upon hearing one of the imprisoned soldiers saying he loves her, tricks him into becoming her new Yaksha by having him say it 2 more times and laughs and hugs it as if the first one never existed. So 1) what was once a human being has sacrificed its life for the woman he loves and she doesn't care in the slightest, and 2) she manipulates a man into something he has no idea would happen for her own gain.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: ''WesternAnimation/HotelTransylvania'' is a pretty good movie overall, but hits a sour note for me with talk about a "zing" -- essentially the concept of LoveAtFirstSight -- and it's emphasized that you only get one "zing" in your life. A romantic enough notion, perhaps, but did the filmmakers think to consider how kids who come from divorced families might feel about this? Or really, anyone who's had a relationship end, either by death, divorce, or breaking up? The movie doesn't even justify it by saying that "zing" only applies to monsters, which might have made it a bit more tolerable -- basically the characters state you only get a single true love and that if you let them go, that's it. A cringe-worthy AccidentalAesop in an otherwise decent movie.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: The ''WesternAnimation/DragonTales'' episode "My Emmy Or Bust," where Max goes to Dragon Land without Emmy for the first time to help his friends find a missing sea dragon. He spends the entire episode missing his sister, with all his friends knocking themselves out trying to help him feel better, and when he gets home he tells Emmy about his adventure... only for her to blow him off and accuse him of making it up. [[FlatWhat Um... what?]] First of all, Emmy has been to Dragon Land many times before and done far weirder things than looking for sea dragons, so there's no reason for her to not believe Max's story. Second of all, when the entire episode has revolved around Max missing Emmy, setting things up for a possible CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming at the end, this comes across as a slap in the face to both Max and the audience. Yes, [[ThrowTheDogABone Max gets thrown a small bone in the final seconds of the episode]], but it still cemented my dislike for Emmy once and for all.
* Animeking1108: The ''WesternAnimation/BeavisAndButtHead'' episode "Wet Behind The Rears" has officially replaced "The Young, Gifted, and Crude" for the worst episode because of the massive CharacterDerailment of Principle [=McVicker=]. The episode was about Coach Buzzcut trying to get the boys to take a shower after gym class, but then the fire alarm goes off, leaving them to go outside in their underwear. Then it reveals that it was all a plan for Buzzcut and [=McVicker=] to humiliate the boys. I expected this sort of thing out of Buzzcut, considering that in my previous entry, he ordered his class to beat up a new student. However, this is inexcusable on [=McVicker=], who is usually a JerkassWoobie. Yeah, he wasn't the nicest guy, but he was like that because of the boys. In this episode, they didn't even do anything to provoke them. Add to it that it was implied that Buzzcut even planned for Beavis's hand to get pierced by the javelin to cover them in blood, it makes you wonder why Highland High School wasn't sued for this blatant abuse towards students.
** Tropers/travisbob: My dethroning moment comes from the episode "Drones." Disclaimer- I have nothing but respect for Mike Judge as an artist, I love Beavis & Butthead, and the revival season produced some of the funniest episodes of the show's run, including this episode. My dethroning moment is from the [[WhamEpisode deadmau5 music video segment]] of this episode, though. During the music video segment, [[NightmareFuel Beavis describes his encounter with a grief counselor who raped him]]. Nothing is described graphically, but the fairly realistic way he recounted his story in the way an actual rape victim would was shocking: Beavis was "invited over to have spaghetti" by his grief counselor, who invited him into his van and gave him drugged lemonade. Beavis states that he doesn't remember what happened, but that he woke up under a bridge, adding that the counselor "must have been psychic, because he said my butt would be sore the next day." [[TearJerker Beavis even says that the counselor told him that if he told anyone else, no one would believe him]]. The kicker? Even [[EvenEvilHasStandards Butthead is visibly unnerved by this whole story]], and states that it's "really weird." As much as I love this show, this was a massive dethroning moment for me. Beavis has usually been portrayed as the "nicer" and more "innocent" of the two; not to mention, the protagonists of the show are both fifteen years old. It was just an incredibly disturbing, nauseating, and saddening moment from an otherwise really funny episode. As someone who was molested at the same age as this character was, I felt like I was going to vomit. Whenever I re-watch this episode, I have to fast-forward through the music video segment. The idea of a 15-year-old child getting raped by a school counselor [[DudeNotFunny isn't funny to me]], it's just... incredibly horrific and sad, even if that 15-year-old is Beavis. I really want this show to come back, but I hope that Mike Judge never makes a joke about this sort of thing again. Even by the standards of the show, it kind of crossed the line of good taste.
* Tropers/kablammin45: When I was little, I wound up mad after watching a certain ''WesternAnimation/PinkPanther'' short, and I still don't like it very much now. Long story short, Pink is hungry and winds up in the hospital when (get this) a dog bites him and won't let go! Pink then has to deal with all sorts of pointless tests. But I thought the ending sucked! The dog is removed, and immediately attacks the doctor helping Pink. The man is shown waiting in the waiting room to be examined. It's meant to be a gag, but it just makes no sense considering that he's a doctor and had just been holding a formula for removing stubborn dogs! Then a mean orderly who has been bullying Pink in very rude ways throughout the short without consequence cements himself as one of my most hated [[KarmaHoudini Karma Houndinis]] via a very cruel KickTheDog moment to Pink. Pink is given a pie for his troubles only for the dude to snatch the food Pink had been trying to get as Pink walks out the door, for seemingly no other reason other than spite. When I was younger I wished that I could have beaten ever living crap out of that guy for being such a KarmaHoudini. Between that and feeling that the IdiotPlot was just a bit ''too'' idiotic, as well as Pink being too much of a ButtMonkey, it makes for an unenjoyable spectacle and I'm quick to name that short as my least favorite ''Pink Panther'' shorts.
* OnSoaringWings: ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'' "Drift Problem" Malory [[spoiler: stealing 8 year old Archer's bike. Refusing to get him another (he thought for years someone else had stolen it) and never giving it back, all to "teach him a lesson"]] That alone would have been bad enough. But in the same episode [[spoiler: she takes it a step further by getting Archer a new spy car for his birthday and doing it all again to him.]] For me, this KickTheDog moment was the absolute last straw. I stopped seeing Malory as a tolerable JerkWithAHeartOfJerk, and as started seeing her as the KarmaHoudini she is. Frankly if the series doesn't end with Archer snapping and brutally murdering her, I will be very pissed off. Archer is a total Jerkass but considering his mother who can blame him
* Tropers/SpiderFan14: [[ScoobyDoo "The Scooby]] [[Film/TheBlairWitchProject Doo Project"]] was alright in the beginning and in the middle, it was kinda funny but the ending I really hated. [[DownerEnding The gang all disappear and are likely killed by the monster.]] Outside of being scary as hell to see late at night and causing me a restless sleep, it was [[DudeNotFunny not funny]] to see the heroes of my kindergarten years to be offscreen killed by the monster. DeconstructiveParody, that's fine but this was just terrible.
* Tropers/{{mariic}}: Speaking of Franchise/ScoobyDoo, I always found WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooInWheresMyMummy to be one of the worse DTV films. When I was younger, I thought the twist of Velma setting it up to scare away Amelia von Butch was out of character for the former, but now I have another reason to hate it. Velma claims that they didn't let the rest of the gang in on it because it was "Too Dangerous". Because [[{{Expy}} evil]] [[Franchise/TombRaider Lara Croft]] is ''[[SarcasmMode clearly]]'' [[SarcasmMode much more dangerous than]] [[WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooOnZombieIsland a pair of soul-stealing werecats.]]
* Tropers/{{Krendall}}: An early episode of ''WesternAnimation/DungeonsAndDragons'' had the group fight a [[EldritchAbomination Beholder]]. The problem is, it's defeated by being near a flower! Even if Beholders hate beauty (a fact I've never read in any Monster Manual), there's no way something as simple as a basic flower would ever kill one.
* Tropers/kablammin45: I have a bone to pick with two of the ''Inspector'' shorts, but since I can only put one, I'm going to have to go with the short with the shopping cart. First off, it doesn't even feel like an Inspector short, no action, not enough comedy, just... [[BuffySpeak not-Inspectorish]], the plot seems more like it would be more fit for the Pink Panther. It starts with the Inspector going home from the store, borrowing a shopping cart... and the {{Narrator}} manages to convince him that he has [[FelonyMisdemeanor committed an abominable offense and is now a criminal]]. Sure, the Inspector isn't that bright, but he's not that [[TooDumbToLive stupid]].[[note]] not to mention that people who live right across the street from a Wal-Mart can do that with little repercussions[[/note]] And later the Inspector activates a security system when he finally decides to [[JustEatGilligan just return the cart]], and instantly the police come shoot at him without question and the short ends with the Inspector on the run with guns firing. Ummm, they just assumed that the Inspector would just do that? That's something you'd see in, yes, a Pink Panther cartoon where [[DiabolusExMachina Diabolus Ex Machinas]] are common. The short was really poorly done, and used before.
* Tropers/{{Spinosegnosaurus77}}: I love ''WesternAnimation/DinosaurTrain'', I really do, but "Dinosaur Camouflage" [[BrokenAesop broke an Aesop]] (birds being dinosaurs) that's enforced in essentially every other episode of the series. ''DT'' is usually a pretty solid, composed kids' show; what went wrong here?
* fluffything:''WesternAnimation/KungFuPandaLegendsOfAwesomeness'': I find the episode in which Po has to rely on the help of some elderly former kung-fu masters to be poorly handled. The episode in-and-of itself is quite good, and I really enjoyed the whole sequence with the various magical helmets. But the moral of [[AnAesop "don't judge a book by its cover"]] and [[CoolOldGuy "old people can do amazing things too."]] is pretty much [[BrokenAesop busted by one simple observation:]] Po's reasoning for not wanting the elderly kung-fu fighters to help is that he was afraid they'd get hurt due to their old age, which is actually a rather valid argument. Yes, he did point out that he believed they weren't as "awesome" as they were in their prime, but his main concern was their well-being. Yet, the episode treats it like he was being disrespectful. Why?
** SamMax: I never paid too much attention to the show, the episode "Mind Over Manners" made sure I won't watch it much, if at all. Basically, Po suddenly gets mind reading powers. He is warned that that he could go insane from them. He ignores this, but then, as time goes on, he really does start to go mad from them. The Furious Five witness this, and they head back to the training grounds. You would think they'd try to calm him down, right? If you said yes, then you're not the writer of this episode, since instead, they start thinking thoughts solely to aggravate him further. Shifu tells them to stop, but Po's ran away by then. [[DudeNotFunny This wasn't funny]], and made the Furious Five come off as {{Jerkass}}es. To make matters worse, [[KarmaHoudini they don't receive punishment for this]], nor even a WhatTheHellHero moment, giving me a nagging feeling that [[DesignatedHero we're supposed to agree with this act]]. WithFriendsLikeThese, I wonder why Po even hangs around them.
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/TUFFPuppy'': The episode where Professor Birdbrain discovers a parallel dimension where Booby Birds rule and live in paradise and wants to go there to have the biggest YankTheDogsChain I've ever seen. Long story short, Birdbrain kidnapps a monkey boy band (don't ask) and wants to use their singing powers to open a portal to the other dimension. Ok, apart from the kidnapping, his plans aren't really that evil. But, the DMOS comes in when Keswick reveals that traveling from one dimension to another causes the former dimension to be destroyed. I'm sorry... What? So, rather than just allowing Birdbrain to finally [[EarnYourHappyEnding be able to find happiness and fly (his main goal)]], they have to throw in this utterly ridiculous twist? Again, apart from the kidnapping, Birdbrain's plans were not evil. He just wanted to go somewhere where he could fit in.
* Tropers/PyroWildcat: In ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManUnlimited'', the end of "One is the Loneliest Number", when Dr. Yamato-Jones chews out Spider-Man for destroying her clinic. She had dealt with Spider-Man on numerous occasions (including several in which Spidey saved the lives of both her and her son), and has been shown be okay with him. Which means that she should have had no reason to blatantly ignore the fact that the incident started by Carnage attacking the clinic, and he and Venom were obviously the ones who did all the damage while Spider-Man was trying to fight them off, especially since she's been shown to be [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure a more reasonable character than that]]. This was blatantly another poorly shoehorned-in "SpiderMan will never be anything but a FailureHero" moment.
* Tropers/DangerArtistNexus60: The episode [[WesternAnimation/YinYangYo Yin Yang Who?]] had been bugging me for a long time for good reasons that got me into writing fanfics like [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/5626292/1 Re: Yin Yang Who? or Yin Yang Yo! Forever]] for example:
## [[AdultsAreUseless The idiocy of the parents.]] Though justifiable due to short notice of [[UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist Yin and Yang's]] rushed training against Eradicus and the experience their children had with the rabbits in the past sixty four episodes their response still made me feel like it was borderline unrealistic with emphasis on the 'un' prefix; I mean, look at Lena's father: he threatened to ground her even as he was being held in the swinging grasp of that HumongousMecha instead of gasping for air.
## [[LukeIAmYourFather Master Yo being the father]] of these twin rabbits. [[FridgeBrilliance While I've remembered about genetics]] how does that explain his characteristics as a father?! It's mostly unjustifiable despite his mentors [[LaserGuidedAmnesia wiping his memories about them altogether]] for good reason.
## The fact that it was the SeriesFinale! There were so many plot holes and new villains being churned out in a mere instant it was just downright uncalled for, [[ThisIsUnforgivable not to mention the lies that followed afterwards on Wikipedia.]] No new episodes yet [[SarcasmMode (Thanks, Michael Eisner)]].
* Tropers/MadMan400096: For an atrocious episode of a classic series, there's "Hero Hamton" of ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'', which I have to say is the worst episode of the entire series. Between the atrocious animation by Encore Cartoons, the thin cliche premise that stretches itself way too long, Plucky Duck being somewhat of a bigger [[{{Jerkass}} douche]] than usual (not that he accomplished anything major), and absolutely none of the gags coming anywhere close to funny, I'm shocked this pile of [[StealthPun pig]]shit ever got greenlit.
** taylorkerekes: Presumably even worse than [[EnsembleDarkhorse Fifi LaFume]]'s [[DownerEnding fate in "Out of Odor"]], in the Spring Break Special, [[WhatTheHellHero Plucky is minding his own business and just tries to get a girl to like him. Buster and Babs are running from Elmyra and... just as he's about to get his girl, the bunnies use him as bait. This was not because Plucky did anything wrong, aside trying to sell a bad product which I don't really think was his fault to begin with, but rather because he was unfortunate enough to be there. After it happens, they don't show regret or even pretend it didn't just happen... instead they make jokes about it! How are we supposed to root for these guys anymore?! A good number of fans of this show, including myself, have lost all sympathy for the two stars of the show after seeing that scene.]] The only uplifting part is [[PetTheDog Hamton getting the girl in the end.]] Even that is really up to you to be happy or sad about.
* Tropers/CyberTiger88: I'm a fan of ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'' but the ending of the episode "Changing of the Guard" is flat-out painful to sit through. The episode has Rattrap and Silverbolt go retrieve [[McGuffin the Sentinel program]] from their ship while dealing with Inferno, and Depth Charge battles with his arch-foe Rampage. It eventully leads up to Depth Charge crashing into Silverbolt who has the module, leading to Inferno grabbing it, making the Maximals lose. This show is no stranger to TheBadGuyWins trope, but that's because of [[MagnificentBastard Megatron's]] planing. In this episode, the Maximals lost because of a bone-headed collision that would make ''Film/TheThreeStooges'' proud. If the writers wanted the audience to like Depth Charge as a badass loner despite his {{jerkass}}-tendencies, they shouldn't have made him cost the good guys an episode's worth of effort and cause a flat out cop-out.
* fluffything:''Series/OffTheAir'': I found the "Body" episode to be nothing but a huge disappointment feeling it was more along the lines of their usual immature humor than the brilliant series I've come to know and love. However, if I had to pick the absolute worst moment from the worst episode (of an, again, otherwise great series), it would have to be the "Hot Dog Stand" segment. Long story short, it involves a hot dog becoming sentient and saving his fellow hot dogs while brutally murdering the vendor and selling his body parts as food. Just... what? Ok, I know ''WesternAnimation/OffTheAir'' can be [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs on the completely insane side of things]] at times, but this was just terrible. I expect something like this from an episode of ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' (a latter-season episode of the show, to be specific), not from a brilliant series like this.
* ''WesternAnimation/DragonsRidersOfBerk'':
** fluffything: The 2013 season finale has one of the most annoying, pointless, utterly [[YankTheDogsChain yank the audience's chain]] twists I have ever seen. For over a week, Creator/CartoonNetwork kept showing us advertisements on Hiccup finding out hints of an island full of Night Furies. So, what happens? [[spoiler:It turns out the whole thing was a fake and was a trap set by Alvin and Mildew.]] Seriously, just fuckin' seriously? Why use a major plot element regarding one of the main characters of the series just for a bloody cop-out involving two re-occuring villains that have worn out their welcome already? I looked forward to this episode hoping I'd see more Night Furies (or at least a big reveal as to what happened to them). Not the cliched [[MemeticMutation "It's a trap!"]] scenario that we've seen a thousand times before.
** [=Julia1984=]: The romantic B-plot of "To Heather or Not To Heather." Heather briefly mentioning Fishlegs is her type last season was amusing because of the irony (Hiccup also fits the description she gives perfectly, which neither girl comments on), but the two of them actually being attracted to each other seemed completely random, forced, and awkward to watch. And, yes, half of that is due to the beautiful, natural chemistry Heather had with Astrid in all her previous appearances and the conspicuous scene in her premiere two-parter where she hugs Astrid good-bye and completely ignores Hiccup's attempt to get the same. No, this isn't ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'', but the way the show portrays Dagur's feelings for Hiccup, the plot of "Big Man on Berk," and how [=DreamWorks=] loved boasting about that "one other reason" line from the second film made it easy to believe Heather's door doesn't swing that way, and the writers were aware of and okay with that. The series must be ''really'' out of touch with its fanbase to think ''this'' is the turn fans who loved the interaction between Heather and Astrid or consider Hiccup, Astrid, and Heather their OT3 would want to see Heather's love life take.
* PieQueen: I thought ''WesternAnimation/TheGarfieldShow'' was a pretty decent show (it's no ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends'' but it's still an okay show), but one episode really rubbed me the wrong way: "King Nermal". In this awful episode, Nermal is staying at Garfield's house much to Garfield and Odie's displeasure. He pretty much annoys the living daylights out of the two to the point that Garfield had it and threw him out the pet door. After that, Nermal "breaks his leg" and Jon blames Garfield and Odie for being mean to Nermal. As punishment, they have treat the kitten like royalty by doing whatever the hell Nermal tells them to do. Late on we find out that Nermal was [[WoundedGazelleGambit faking his injury this whole time]] when we see him walking with the cast on. Garfield tries to get Jon to turn around to see that he's faking it, but every time Jon turns around Nermal gives him a [[DeliberatelyCuteChild cute innocent look on his face]], so Jon is not the least bit convinced. To make matters worse, there was a part where Nermal's bandages come off, and Jon thinks that [[WhatAnIdiot Nermal healed quickly]]. [[FlatWhat What?]] Garfield finally had it and decided to take matters to his own hands. Unfortunately Garfield and Odie fall down the stairs and injure themselves. Now they have full body casts. After all that mess [[KarmaHoudini Nermal gets away with every bad thing he did]] and poor Garfield and Odie suffer in one of the worst {{Downer Ending}}s in the whole show. This episode was awful. What were they thinking when they wrote this episode. The sad thing is that Nermal was actually my favorite character in the comic strips and in ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends''. Why did this show had to make Nermal so [[TookALevelInJerkass much of a dick]]? Why? He was actually likable in the other cartoon, so he had to be [[CharacterDerailment derailed this badly]]? Turning him to this much of a {{jerkass}} was why I didn't enjoy this show as much as older one. Seriously, they should have kept Nermal's personality from the older cartoon.
** heartauthor: I grew up watching the animated {{WesternAnimation/Garfield Specials}}, so they all hold a special place in my heart. However, one scene in ''Garfield on the Town'' just rubs me the wrong way no matter how I try to think of it. Basically, after Garfield [[ItMakesSenseInContext goes missing on the way to a visit to the vet]], Jon decides to call Liz at the pet hospital. In this scene, not once does Jon act [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness how he usually acts around Liz]]; he doesn't even ask her for a date once. Instead, he simply tells her that Garfield is missing, and expresses concern that he might get "hit by a car or something." Liz's response? To say in an annoyed tone "Well, in that case, you don't want a pet hospital. [[DudeNotFunny You want a tow truck!]]" and slam her phone down, ending the conversation right then and there. So, in other words, Liz (a ''veterinarian'', mind you) just told a concerned pet owner that [[UnintentionallyUnsympathetic she didn't give a crap that his pet was missing and potentially injured]]. ''Wow.'' Thank goodness the rest of the special is a {{Crowning Moment Of Heartwarming}}; otherwise that one scene might have ruined the whole thing.
* Halfstep: ''Iron Man: Extremis'' goes hurtling off into stupidity in episode 2, which is basically an anvilicious speech given by AuthorAvatar Sal, who was a former professor of Tony Stark's and [[TheManBehindTheMan Maya's]] (ItMakesSenseInContext... the previous pothole, not the speech). Obviously, this speech is aimed at people in the real world. The problem with it is that it is extremely contradictory, overgeneralizing, and doesn't apply to the two characters at all, save for a bit of foreshadowing that could have been done by Maya herself at a bar. The problem with the speech is this: Sal posits that Stark and Maya are basically working for the military industrial complex, that nothing they've done has been really useful, that Stark is wasting his time and money doing what he is doing, and that Maya is being held down because she's a woman, and if she had the resources Stark had, she'd be doing far better. About the only part of the entire speech that has any validity is that they are working for the MIC, regardless of what they would like to believe. That said, the whole thing kind of derails when Sal starts saying how useless the Iron Man suit is, and how much more Maya could get done if she had Stark's resources. First off, not knocking cancer in the slightest, but in the Marvel Universe, Fin Fang Foom, Dr. Doom, and Galactus are real and present dangers, that kill or enslave quite a few people on a regular basis. These are not entities that the police or the army are equipped to handle. At all. Saying that the Iron Man suit is only good for beating these people up therefore, isn't as much of an insult or even rebuke as Sal intended: these are entities that need to be beaten up by Iron Man and whoever else, and it's kinda hard to say that their world would be a better place without Iron Man, seeing how there's a planetary invasion or mutant revolt or inter-dimensional cosmic horror attack every six months with Iron Man there and doing his level best to prevent such. In real life terms, it would be like knocking someone for failing to cure cancer, but reducing diabetes, heart disease, and auto accident deaths by 50%. As for Maya being better off if she had Tony's resources: the reason this doesn't work is because of in-universe ignorance that Sal has, that the readers do not: namely, we know that in most every version of Iron Man, Tony Stark is kidnapped by some foreign combatants, after being gravely wounded, and is forced to make weapons for said combatants with anything from spare parts lying around to pieces of his own weapons. Stark then uses said pieces to create a war suit that saves his own life and allows him to escape his captors. Iron Man is about as self made as you can get: if Maya hasn't done anything comparable, it can hardly be said that it is because anyone is "holding her back". Furthermore, why would Sal even want to see such a thing: he just got done mocking Maya earlier for "poking biological molecular constructs until they give up and do what she wants" (paraphrased). Wouldn't curing cancer just be doing the same thing? What's the difference between poking around for the MIC, and curing diabetes, hepatitis, and that weird disease that strikes 300 people in the world, and curing cancer? Is curing a disease shameful unless it has a name value to it? Really, the whole speech was bad and unnecessary, the whole thing boiled down to "you're a bunch of idiots, why have you not followed the path I the wise shaman have laid out for you", by trivializing all of the good that both of them had done, and oversimplifying a bunch of actions and motives into some pop-cultural mumbo jumbo that really didn't apply.
* Animeking1108: ''WesternAnimation/CodeMonkeys'', I admit, was too good to last. However, I always skip the episode with Todd's brother because of a really painful scene. Todd's brother reveals to Dave that the reason Todd [[CloudCuckoolander acts the way he does]] is because he has Asperger's Syndrome. That alone can be considered UnfortunateImplications, but then Dave precedes to insult Todd because of that. As someone with Asperger's, I tell Adam De La Pena to go fuck himself.
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow''. Good lords was the episode "The DMV" where Daffy, Lola, and Porky have to go to the DMV to get their driver's licenses an absolute mess. I couldn't even sit through the whole thing. That's how bad it was. Why? Let me count the ways. First, every character is holding the IdiotBall. I can understand Lola not knowing what a driver's licence is since she's [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} a bit dim-witted and crazy]] but Daffy? The guy makes a habit out of using fake names all the time! You'd think he'd have a fake licence or two lying around. Second, they use the [[PunctuatedForEmphasis exact. Same. Jokes. Within. The. Same. Ten. Minutes.]] The most prominent being characters not knowing what a driver's licence is and them switching their tests with Porky's resulting in him failing. There's lazy writing, and then there's just using copy-n-paste on a computer and switching a few names around to fill a half-hour series. For the love of Mel Blanc, I expect this kind of sloppy work from a latter-season episode of ''WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants'' or ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'', not from this otherwise fun series.
* Tropers/CabbitGirlEmi: Apparently, TheMysteriousMrEnter plans to take down ''WesternAnimation/SethMacFarlanesCavalcadeOfCartoonComedy'', so in advance, I watched about 50 minutes worth of skits to see how bad they could be, and wow... While skits such as "Cat Staff Meeting" were funny, others, ESPECIALLY "Creator/QuentinTarantino Performs a Circumcision" were just awful. This specific skit involves Tarantino at a bris, using a katana to circumcise a baby. As this happens, blood flies everywhere as the baby wails. Very, very thankfully, the baby is fine (somehow), at the cost of me left horrified by this. The moment the baby starts crying, I couldn't help but cringe. I know about Tarantino's reputation for CrossingTheLineTwice at times, but there are some boundaries that you shouldn't cross!
* Tropers/{{Treb}}: Now, I am an absolutely huge fan of ''WesternAnimation/MoralOrel''. Its clever writing, endearing characters and hidden depth are just a few of the show's qualities... qualities which are completely absent from the more recent TV Special "Beforel Orel". First of all, [[TheOtherDarrin Ms. Censordoll has a VERY different voice than that of the series and it feels out of place]], and [[OffModel the animation seems to have lost a lot of the fluidity of the original series, looking a lot more stiff.]] Beyond just the technical problems though, is the writing here seems as though it were written by someone who had never seen the series before. Too much of the humor is focused on attacking Christianity (rather than the series's focus on character building, and affectionate parodying of Christianity and 50s culture in general) not unlike more recent episodes of ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy''. One scene in particular that is the biggest DMOS for me is the one where [[spoiler:Ms. Censordoll tries to scare Orel into Christianity, and Reverend Putty gets legitimately scared as a result.]] This is a CharacterDerailment for the [[spoiler:reverend,]] who was one of the most reasonable and rational people in Moralton.
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/ScaredySquirrel'': The episode involving the robot vacuum had one of the most blatant, idiotic, and utterly god-awful examples of KarmaHoudini I've ever seen. Basically, the episode involves Scaredy purchasing a robot vacuum from a crocodile salesman (No, he's not a villain, surprisingly) and absolutely adoring it. This causes Dave to become jealous (Despite Dave knowing Scaredy is [[SuperOCD obsessed with cleaning and organization]]) and spills his drink onto the vacuum. This causes the vacuum to go berserk and summon an army of robot vacuums to terrorize the city. Let's review exactly who is at fault here in the episode. Absolutely none of the problems that occurred would've happened had it not been for Dave. And, what sort of punishment does Dave get for not only causing the vacuum to break but for breaking his best friend's prized possession? Absolutely nothing! That's right. Not once is Dave even called-out for his actions in the episode. He gets away with his actions. Scaredy, erm, maybe you should find friends who don't blatantly break your possessions and cause a city-wide disaster!
* XSpectreGreyX: ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Unlimited'', "Divided We Fall", an otherwise epic episode of an epic show has one. The conference the Justice League holds after the battle with Brainiac, specifically, Green Arrow's otherwise Crowning SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome, calling out the Justice League. He specifically addresses the Justice League the whole time, but he ends by specifically saying that the Justice League needs Superman... um, what's everyone else, [[MyFriendsAndZoidberg chopped liver?]] Flash is the guy who beat Brainiac and is the morality pet. Batman is the one who indirectly stopped Brainiac downloading himself into a new body by being the guy who didn't turn himself in. If anything, he just showed how he was different from the rest of them. Because Supes didn't kill Lex? Yeah, but neither did anyone else. In fact, Superman was the only one to attempt it at all. I don't hate Superman, but that one line could've easily addressed the entire League and it wouldn't have lost anything other than the unnecessary focus on Superman. Also, afterwards, the line "who guards the guardians", Green Arrow's interpretation of the Latin phrase Batman says... to guard is to protect, is it not? So he basically said that he's the one who will protect the original seven... But the meaning, in this case at least, was definitely supposed to be 'who watches the watchmen', as a reference to Green Arrow's role as being the MoralityPet for the Justice League. Apparently, this is the more literal translation of the phrase, but anyone who doesn't know that will just be confused on the moral of the thing. Why did they not just say 'watchmen'? Could you not risk that reference? Would it be so bad to just speak the damn word? While it is a less accurate translation, in modern English it makes more sense. But no, let's instead go for awkward in an already awkward scene, thanks to the aforementioned Superman focus.
** Troper/Silverblade2: "Epilogue": [[{{Asspull}} the reveal]] that Terry Mcginnis is [[spoiler: sort of a clone of Bruce Wayne that Amanda Waller created in a ridiculously complex plan]] which more or less was intended to explain why he has black hair despite having both parents brown haired. Yes this would be awful as a fanfiction yet it is 100% canon. Putting aside the huge amount of FridgeLogic or the fact that [[spoiler: Terry doesn't react when Amanda Waller reveals she planned to kill his parents]], what makes me dislike the revelation is the fact that it [[BrokenAesop underwhelms]] the premise of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'' where Terry had to work hard to be worthy of Batman's legacy [[spoiler: but no, crap, he was always destined to be Batman]].
* CaptainLhurgoyf: Now, let me make one thing perfectly clear. I love ''Webcomic/AxeCop'', I love [[WesternAnimation/AxeCop the animated series]], and it really pains me to add it to the list, but there's no excuse for having the (male) bank robbers in "Zombie Island in Space" wear shirts that say "I <3 Men" on them. Even putting aside the UnfortunateImplications of making all the robbers gay, it was a pointless joke that didn't fit the tone of the show at all and had no reason to be in there, and I also found it very inappropriate to insert a crass homophobic joke into a show based on a story written by a child. The rest of the show displays a great sense of humour that fits the wacky-yet-innocuous feel of the comics perfectly, so why sink this low?
* fluffything: ''WesternAnimation/SkunkFu'': My DMOS is how [[ADogNamedDog Dragon]] (the main antagonist) [[StartOfDarkness turned evil in the first place.]] See, sometime prior to the start of the series, Dragon was good. The Heavens decide to test Dragon's loyalty by causing a drought in the valley. Dragon asks if he can use his water powers to save the valley, and the heavens respond by saying nothing. Here's where it starts to get stupid. The Heavens then punish Dragon because he decided to use his water powers to stop the drought. They then accuse Dragon of being arrogant and remove his water powers causing him to be in constant, burning pain from his fire powers. Ok, even if Dragon was acting cocky about saving everyone, he still used his powers for good. That doesn't exactly warrant a punishment for disobedience. Plus, Dragon didn't know he wasn't supposed to use his powers. It seems rather unfair to punish something if they don't know what they did wrong. Oh, but it gets even worse. How? Well, it's then stated that The Heavens knew that Dragon was going to turn evil and swear vengeance on the valley. So they punish him for trying to save the valley effectively causing him to turn evil and want revenge on everyone that lives there? What? This isn't YouCantFightFate. This is more like "Too lazy to change fate". And not once did The Heavens or any of the animals in the valley (including Dragon's best friend, Panda) even consider trying to prevent Dragon from turning evil? There was nothing stopping them from turning Dragon mortal or giving him amnesia. Heck, if The Heavens feared Dragon was going to be such a threat, why not just kill him? Oh, and to make matters even worse, not once do any of the animals in the village ever stand up for Dragon. Not once do they try to reason with The Heavens or try to justify his actions. WithFriendsLikeThese is it any wonder he wants revenge?
* RAZ: Most people feel that ''[[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003 Ninja Turtles 2k3]]'' fell apart during the Fast Forward or Back to the Sewers seasons, or in a few cases right before that with the Ninja Tribunal. I have to disagree: the show started losing steam as early as when Bishop was introduced. But I'm not here to argue about SeasonalRot, and as much as I hate Bishop, his introduction isn't the real DMOS for me. No, the moment that ruined the show forever for me was the giant slap in the face that was Exodus. At the very end the Turtles prepare a huge HeroicSacrifice ready to stop the Shredder. It's a real dramatic, borderline {{Tearjerker}} moment, and it gets utterly ruined thanks to the sudden copout rescue of Utroms borderline on DeusExMachina levels. Everything turns out a-okay, the worst being that Leo gets a minor scar and some resulting {{Wangst}} to go with it for a couple episodes afterward before that's dropped too. It's especially insulting considering that previously the season had greatly foreshadowed that the Turtles would likely have to make some sort of great sacrifice to ultimately stop the Shredder for good, which is also a huge load of bull since he did in fact come back (meaning it was also a huge case of LyingCreator since everyone said he'd be gone for good after this). So I hope you take the lesson to heart kids: [[SarcasmMode if things aren't going your way, some sort of huge out-of-nowhere save will come in and make everything just fine at the very last second]]!
** Tropers/TheLemsterPju: Viral is a villain that appears to be slowly growing in popularity, in spite of her limited screen time. So when she [[BackFromTheDead came back from the dead]] in the Back to the Sewer season, the writers had the chance to finally break the mold of having a Shredder-related antagonist each in season, and could have opened up some possiblities for having the first major female adversary for the turtles to not be associated with the Foot Clan. But nope, [[spoiler: Viral dies]] in favor of introducing yet another Shredder as the central villain for the entire season. Wasted potential for such a unique character, replaced by basically a male version of her.
* Tropers/AustinDR: I like the show ''WesternAnimation/WordGirl'', however, I'm often bewildered by the town's stupidity. For this list, however, the one moment from the show that really irked me was the episode "Victoria is the best... [=WordGirl=]"? After Becky/[=WordGirl=] successfully defeated another villain, our news reporter Scoops sees [=WordGirl=] going around the corner and Victoria Best walks out of the direction Word Girl went thus making Scoops implicate that Victoria was Word Girl. [[{{Beat}} *Face palm*]]. Okay, first off, Word Girl has dark skin, doesn't wear her hair in matching ponytails, and her face is pretty much exposed to viewing. How can Scoops [[WhatAnIdiot possibly think that Victoria was Word Girl with these facts]]? It seemed like they just made the characters [[CharacterDerailment even dumber]] for this episode to work. This is possibly the one episode I won't see again anytime soon.
** Tropers/SpaceBird: That wasn't the first time, either. Almost every episode that Granny May appears in, she manages to charm the townspeople into turning against [=WordGirl=], despite being one of the most notorious villains that went to jail several times. You would've thought that the townspeople would've gained some knowledge of her deception after each episode, but nope, she keeps on manipulating them even without Mr. Big's use of mind control! What's worse about this is that each time it happens, everyone starts showing [=WordGirl=] extremely hostile behavior and threaten to run her out of town! Although Granny's the main villain who manages to turn everyone against [=WordGirl=] most of the time, the Butcher once managed to do so just by saying that his bootleg artwork is real and that [=WordGirl=]'s just trying to lie to everyone, and even with that lame excuse they believed him and threatened to arrest [=WordGirl=] if she interrupted his next auction. WhatTheHellTownspeople
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: I didn't like ''Disney/{{Tangled}}'', and the climax is a main reason for that. [[spoiler: Basically, Gothel has Rapunzel BoundAndGagged]] [[labelnote:(wtf?)]][[FridgeLogic How the hell did an old woman overpower the young and competent Rapunzel anyway]]? Rapunzel confronting Gothel instead of sneaking away to the kingdom was pretty dumb too.[[/labelnote]] [[spoiler: and has stabbed Eugene]] [[labelnote:(what?!)]]You'd think he'd watch his back considering that he got whacked with a FryingPanOfDoom the first time he tried to enter the tower and Rapunzel didn't answer when he told her to let down her hair (an obvious sign that something is very wrong), but nope.[[/labelnote]]. [[spoiler:Rapunzel tells about how she'll [[{{Determinator}} never stop fighting Gothel]],]] which is [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome awesome]]... until [[spoiler:she promises to [[FateWorseThanDeath stay with Gothel forever]] if she's allowed to heal Eugene.]] It's clearly supposed to be [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments heartwarming]] when she [[spoiler:gives up her freedom for the man she loves,]] but it [[StupidSacrifice falls apart]] if you try to think about it for more than two seconds. Gothel has shown repeatedly that she doesn't give a damn about anyone but herself, and there's no reason whatsoever to believe that she'll [[HeelFaceTurn change her ways]]. If anything, [[spoiler:killing Eugene and blaming Rapunzel for it]] pushes her over the MoralEventHorizon if you don't think she has crossed it already. She has demonstrated that she's a liar and a [[spoiler:murderer]], which means that [[spoiler:attempting to negotiate with her]] is [[WhatAnIdiot very idiotic]]. Thus, Gothel will probably just [[spoiler:go back and kill Eugene later]], rendering [[spoiler:Rapunzel's sacrifice]] worthless. It's made even worse by the fact that Rapunzel [[spoiler:can never escape because she's [[IGaveMyWord irrationally committed to her promises]], [[SkewedPriorities even though keeping that one will ruin her life without accomplishing anything except for prolonging the life of an abuser that doesn't deserve to live. Plus, staying with Gothel means ignoring her duties as a princess and making sure that her parents will never see their daughter again.]] Very irresponsible.]] Why the hell is this supposed to show a positive quality and not a FatalFlaw? Even if we assume that Gothel [[spoiler:is too lazy to go back and kill Eugene, it's heavily implied that she'll leave him chained up in the tower. Which means that he'll be stuck there and die of dehydration in a few painful days/weeks anyway, considering that a rescue is extremely unlikely.]][[labelnote:why?]]The only ones who wouldn't want to kill Eugene are Maximus and the mimes, and I doubt that they'll even be able to enter the tower. Even if they somehow do that, they won't be able to unchain him.[[/labelnote]] This also takes away the selflessness of [[spoiler:Eugene's "HeroicSacrifice" [[labelnote:explanation]]cutting Rapunzel's hair to prevent her from healing him[[/labelnote]]. If he would otherwise spend his last days/weeks being tormented to death by dehydration and starvation (or waiting for Gothel to come back and kill him), why not save himself this drawn-out suffering and let his wound kill him?]] This action is kind of stupid as well because if [[spoiler:he cuts Rapunzel's hair, nothing is left to prevent Gothel from killing her. It's probably a better fate than having to stay with Gothel forever, and Rapunzel kind of asked for it by being stupid enough to make a promise when she could have suggested the deal to Gothel without promising anything, but still.]] Neither he [[DeusExMachina nor the audience]][[note]]To be fair, there's a scene in the opening where Gothel cuts some of Rapunzel's hair while touching it and ages a little as a result of it. It's hardly noticeable, especially the first time, and it might as well have been just something Gothel imagined as she believed the flower's healing powers would never be hers again. Gothel aging rapidly when Eugene cuts the hair while she's touching it still makes as much sense as saving yourself from a snakebite by killing the snake that bit you. Touching the snake as it's killed may or may not be necessary.[[/note]] had any way of predicting [[spoiler:the NoImmortalInertia that kills Gothel almost immediately after the cutting of the hair. After that, Eugene dies, Rapunzel whines a little[[note]]Yes, she has a legitimate reason to be sad. I just put it that way to emphasize that she has screwed up royally and gets a solution for free; i.e. she doesn't have to work for it or anything.[[/note]], then another DeusExMachina revives him.]]\\
\\
To sum it up: The writers use contrived stupidity to put the main characters into a nearly impossible situation. Instead of at least letting them use their skills to get out themselves, Rapunzel's contrived horrible decision makes the situation worse.[[labelnote:avoidable problem]]We know that Rapunzel is capable of LoopholeAbuse, so she could've formulated the promise slightly differently, pretended to go to heal Eugene, then suddenly attack Gothel and say something like "I said we'd be together forever, but not that you'd be alive!" or even "I said you could stay with me forever, but not where. You're going to the kingdom with me when this is over.". Once Gothel is knocked out, Rapunzel heals Eugene, frees him and they live happily ever after, with or without Gothel.[[/labelnote]] Then a decision that is the least of two evils[[note]]which would result in two deaths instead of a death and a FateWorseThanDeath[[/note]] for both characters is for some reason portrayed as heroic. Then the writers DeusExMachina the characters out of it to force a happy ending.
** cheedo: Personally, I hated the emotional manipulation of Tangled. So Rapunzel is a very sweet girl who truly believes deceiving Gothel and sneaking out is morally wrong. Her decision? "I am going to see those lanterns!" She isn't sneaking out to get away from Gothel's teasing and using her; it's the equivalent to a teenager being told they can't go to a party and sneaking out to go anyway. What Rapunzel wants is more important than following her own moral compass. Great lesson for kids there, Disney. On top of that, seeing the lanterns isn't even particularly important or life-changing at all.
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: The documentary series ''WesternAnimation/MarchOfTheDinosaurs'' had a dethroner in the form of the... monstrosities they claim are [[PteroSoarer "Quetzalcoatlus"]], shown [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwmavdUXyUc here, at the 9:05 mark]]. For a list of how awful they are *deep breath*... they're scaly and lacking pycnofibers, their wings are pointy and look just a bit too short, they are scavengers (something that would have been forgivable if it weren't made in 2011), they are bipedal and lack their small wing fingers and are just [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking super ugly]]. As a paleonut and a pterosaur fan, I can't really forgive all of these blatant examples of CriticalResearchFailure. Keep in mind, this is supposed to be a documentary that is educational, but with the [[InNameOnly "Quetzalcoatlus"]], at least, it's clear that they didn't even try.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: ''WesternAnimation/{{Brave}}'' was pretty good, but for some reason, Creator/{{Pixar}} decided to ruin [[spoiler:the heartwarming scene where Elinor and the triplets are changed back to their human selves]] with embarrassing and juvenile NakedPeopleAreFunny jokes.
** cheedo: On top of that- I loved the fact that it portrayed a rare realistic relationship between a mother and daughter, but I really disliked that only Elinor was presented as wrong for burning Merida's bow- something she does AFTER Merida, in a rage, rips the tapestry Elinor had been working hard on. A bow can be replaced but that tapestry will have to be made over. And Merida isn't presented as equally wrong for doing it as Elinor is for her action.
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: While I love most of Disney's output, one scene in ''Disney/TheAristocats'' drives me absolutely nuts -- the scene with the goose sisters. They're meant to be comic relief but come across as irritating, pushy, and [[UnwantedAssistance doing more to hinder O'Malley than actually help him]] -- even almost killing him at one point with their interference! They seem added only to pad out the story, and end up having little to no effect on the plot -- the cats could have found their way out of the river and to Paris without their "help."
* Tropers/KenyaStarflight: Another Disney one -- this time ''Disney/{{Zootopia}}''. During the scene where people tell Judy off for giving them parking tickets, a child tells her "My mommy says she wishes you were dead." When is it ever okay to say this to a police officer who is just doing their job, even if it's one that mildly inconveniences you? Maybe I'm just suffering from HarsherInHindsight given the horrific shootings of police officers that have taken place this year (2016), but wishing death upon an officer for simply upholding the law is inexcusable, even as a throwaway line in a movie.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: Even though ''[[Disney/TheEmperorsNewGroove Kronk's New Groove]]'' wasn't as good as the first film, I didn't find it bad at all. The one moment I hate is when the naked Rudy busts into Kronk's house and asks for more of [[SnakeOilSalesman Yzma's youth potion]]. I understand that Creator/{{Disney}} wanted to show that Rudy is badly addicted to the stuff, but having him selling his clothes and making the scene FanDisservice was unnecessary and {{squick}}y. It also demeans Rudy as a character. Why couldn't Creator/{{Disney}} at least have made him "borrow" a carpet (or something like that) and wrap it around himself? That would have kept some of his dignity and wouldn't have interfered with anything else in the film.
* RAZ: While ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales'' has been a childhood favorite of mine and still holds up surprisingly well decades later, I've found myself having trouble watching "New Gizmo Kids on the Block", mainly because it flat out throws Webby's MarySue status into the viewer's face. Huey, Dewey, and Louie all get to hold the IdiotBall and are reduced to petty, squabbling morons who can't work together all so Webby can be "Little Miss Perfect" and save the day like usual. What's really insulting though is how Fenton is treated: Previous episodes in the series cemented him as both a CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass who despite some of his eccentricities and [[IronButtMonkey the general abuse he receives]] could also be extremely competent even without using his Gizmo-Duck suit. Here, he's portrayed as being completely helpless and of no use to anyone as long as he doesn't have his suit. So that's four characters derailed all to make Webby look good.
* {{Tropers/Woddor}}: I think ''WesternAnimation/CampLazlo'' is one of the better shows to come out of CN's DorkAge in the mid 2000s, but one episode that I will never defend is "Meatman". This was an episode that deliberately wanted the viewers to have nightmares. Lazlo and friends annoy the chef, so his response is to [[DisproportionateRetribution give them "mystery meat".]] After a few go-nowhere jokes, the meat comes alive, attacks the campers, [[NightmareFuel KILLS Chef McMusely,]] and almost eats Lazlo when it is revealed that the entire thing was a campfire story. Except not, because then Lazlo's nose is made of meat in real life. So kids, your favorite characters are now dead! Happy?
* {{Tropers/TheSnowSquirrel}}: Say what you will about {{WesternAnimation/Loonatics Unleashed}}, but one episode that I just can't stand is "The Cloak of Black Velvet". Why? Because, the story begins with Danger Duck making a deal with Tech E. Coyote that if he can go a week without using any technological gadgets, Tech has to buy him a fancy new costume. If Duck looses, he buys the outfit for Tech. Later on the Villian Of The Week shows up, builds a machine to black out the sun, plus kidnaps and brainwashes none other than [[GadgeteerGenius Tech]] to help her. The rest of the gang show up but no one is able to snap Tech out of his trance. Other than Duck, after he gets the idea [[MostAnnoyingSound to use his cell phone's annoying ringtone.]] At the end of the episode, Tech suddenly shows up in the costume Duck wanted, and smugly says he went ahead and ordered it since he won the bet. Duck tries to explain that he only used his phone to help save Tech, and without him doing so, the world would be doomed. What do Ace and Lexi do? [[KickTheDog Just stand there with smirks and tease him about how he should call Zadavia and tell her, if he can get a good cell signal.]] Look, I would have accepted an ending where everyone thanks Duck, and then Tech walks in in the new costume claiming that even if he saved him, he still lost the bet. But this ending... I get that Duck's a [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold jerk]] and the show's ButtMonkey, but the whole team being [[UngratefulBastard thoroughly Ungrateful Bastards]] to him like that is just over doing it.
** {{Tropers/starofjusticev21}}: As was somewhat hinted above this show had a little problem with ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Ace and Lexi are the leaders of the team and "cool" and "funny," so they were were always right, where as Danger Duck was kind of a jerk and gloryhound, so he was always wrong. The episode of this show I can't forgive is the one where that problem exploded, “It Came From Outer Space.” In it Tech warns his teammates for the umpteen-millionth time that his crime fighting inventions aren’t toys and for the umpteen-millionth time they don’t listen with Rev and Lexi messing with something they think is a video game. It’s actually the controls to some kind of weapon system, and they just launched actual missiles at an actual spaceship. The owner, Melvin the Martian, rather understandably, actually, demands reparation after this unprovoked attack, and eventually agrees not to destroy the world if Lexi agrees to come aboard his ship and be his opponent in two-player games. Ace immediately refuses and says “you want a war, you’ll get one,” even after Tech does an analysis and basically says Melvin is packing enough ordinance to destroy the world ten times over and any attempt to fight him would be suicide. Danger Duck tries to get Ace to change his mind, and I get that he’s supposed to be chickening out and just trying to save his own skin. But consider that the Loonatics are the world’s superhero team who are supposed to save people from danger, not put them in even more danger. Yeah the show’s supposed to be a comedy but 99% of the time the superhero aspect is played totally straight; the Loonatics are treated as deserving every bit of trust and respect they get. I probably wouldn’t bat an eye if the show had gone for more of a ''WesternAnimation/MegasXLR'' vibe where the good guys are comedically incompetent and destructive, but it didn't do that, and we're evidently supposed to see this as them bravely standing by their friend no matter what, instead of facing up to a bad and thoughtless thing they did. I'm not saying Ace should've thrown his teammate and minimally-established love interest to the wolves the first time she made a mistake. But by automatically deciding to fight it out Ace is endangering everyone on the planet he's supposed to be protecting over an extremely idiotic thing his teammates totally did do, and were specifically told not to. Duck isn't the only one being a selfish jerk, but he's the only one acknowledged by the show.
* Tropers/IAmNotBeast: The first episode of ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'', "Teddygozilla". Instead of starting at the beginning, the show just jumps into the middle of the story without any explanation. Why is there a girl trapped in a computer? How can a computer program manipulate reality? How did the main characters find out about Lyoko to begin with? If the main heroes can travel back and forth from the game world, why can't they free the trapped girl using the same device? Who is this "Xana" they keep mentioning? What is Xana's motivation? Why is there a computer world? Why do the characters look different in the computer world? Why did time reset at the end? These are all questions that were running through my head when first viewing "Teddygozilla". I can only imagine how it was received back in 2003 when it premiered. Back then, there was no "Rise of XANA" two-parter, so there was no explanation for any of the things that happen in the first episode. The worst part of "Teddygozilla" was probably the lack of focus on the main characters. Instead, the episode focuses on some random girl with a teddy bear. In the first episode of the whole series. Then at the halfway point, the episode suddenly started putting more focus on what had essentially been background characters.
* Tropers/Ralph180: I removed my DMOS for Zig & Sharko's "Hair Story" because i still watch Zig & Sharko, and i decided to put another one: the "Bride of the Internet" from ''[[WesternAnimation/MonstersVsAliens2013 Monsters vs. Aliens]]''. Now, unlike Zig & Sharko, ''Monsters vs. Aliens'' TV Series is a bad show. It made everyone look uglier (except for General Monger), made Monsters a dysfunctional team of lousy "heroes" who dick around the base, and added three cliched aliens: [[MarySue Sqweep]], [[ObviouslyEvil Coverton]] and [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Sta'abi]], who come off as insecure (Sqweep), lame (Coverton) or outright xenophobic (Sta'abi)! But what really made me quit this failure of a show is this episode. Basically, because of a video [[{{Squick}} involving pickles on Susan's butt]], Sqweep reveals that the Internet is an alien and is Sqweep's former classmate. Internet does erase the video, but he falls in love with Susan and even manages to change the American national anthem to a lame Justin Bieber-esque song that Susan loves. Now, Internet isn't that bad of a character, and is probably the only sympathetic alien character in the show. My problem is about the juvenile internet jokes, the sheer stupidity of the whole Internet being an alien, and the writers think that humans are completely obsessed with Internet, think that if a video doesn't exist, it doesn't exist, and that they love cat jokes. Also, the episode is annoying and the song is just irritating. To think that Dreamworks made this is disgusting, and this show [[WeReStillRelevantDammit thinks it's still relevant.]]
* Tropers/{{Eddy1215}}: Believe it or not, I've got one for ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible''. While a few PostScriptSeason episodes bug me, one that really leaves a bad taste in my mouth is "Stop Team Go". Basically, Shego has been turned good, and Kim is enjoying spending time with her. The problem is that she's preferring to spend time with her over Ron, her boyfriend. Then, to add injury to insult, during the climatic battle with the VillainOfTheWeek, Ron accidentally gets turned evil again, much to Kim's annoyance. Basically, the entire episode episode was to appease Kigo fans, and before you start saying that I'm complaining about my FanPreferredCouple, may I remind you that the pairing in question is suppose to be canon? Think about that.
* SamMax: I wish I had never laid eyes on ''{{WesternAnimation/Brickleberry}}''. I never saw the entire series, but what I've seen of this GrossoutShow makes even ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' look wholesome in comparison. [[DudeNotFunny It's not funny]], and didn't they say [[RefugeInAudacity it was supposed to offend]]? [[GoneHorriblyRight It does that too well for its own good]]. But I can't make entire series entries, so I'll just list [[NeverLiveItDown the moment that defined the show for me]]. There was a golf game between two individuals (whose names I cannot remember), nothing special, but nothing terrible, either. Then comes a scene where there's a homeless person in the golfing area. What does one of the guys do? Spoilered for {{Squick}}: [[spoiler:hit the ball into his mouth, and then he poor sap craps it out. Then one of the golfers eats it, and the other golfer tells him it might not be his ball]]. It was so disgusting I swore never to watch the series again if I could help it. Quite frankly, I question how it made it to TV in the first place.
* WRM5: From ''WesternAnimation/GeneratorRex'', Six's amnesia. So you've got a really awesome character who's been really well developed. He's wise, intelligent, and dedicated. He has a darker side which he put behind him because he knew it was wrong. What do you do with this character? Why, you hit the "Reset" switch on him, of course! Six's amnesia completely erased absolutely everything that made the coolest character on the show cool and is hands-down the worst thing the show ever did.
* JustHereToComment: One of my favorite childhood shows is ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinniethePooh''. However, one moment from the show has always bothered me, from the episode ''The Masked Offender''. In it, Tigger becomes a masked crime-fighting, similar to that of Zorro. However, in typical Tigger fashion, he makes things worse. The worst scene from the episode, and the show, is when Tigger destroys Rabbit's scarecrow, thinking it to be someone trying to attack Rabbit. Rabbit begs for him not to do so, and when Tigger leaves, the crows show up to eat Rabbit's vegetables. Now, this is a RunningGag in the show, Rabbit having to deal with crows, but here, [[UpToEleven seemingly every crow]] in the Hundred-Acre Woods cover the garden and the surrounding land and eat everything in sight, leaving his garden as a barren wasteland [[FridgeHorror that will probably never grow anything again]]. It's just a really [[DudeNotFunny mean-spirited]] KickTheDog moment towards a charcter who [[DesignatedMonkey did absolutely nothing wrong earlier]].
* Troper/MagnusForce: ''WesternAnimation/JimmyTwoShoes'' is a fairly fun show to watch overall, but there is one episode that I absolutely hate: "Heloise Schmeloise". So basically, Heloise creates a robot duplicate of herself. The episode falls apart shortly after that when Jimmy falls in love with the robot. [[NiceGuy Jimmy]] acts completely [[OutOfCharacterMoment out-of-character]] by being a JerkAss to Heloise for no reason and his idiocy is taken UpToEleven [[ObliviousToLove (Not to mention Jimmy is supposed to be uninterested in love)]]. The jokes are 90% [[DudeNotFunny Beezy shouting "Burn!"]] at Heloise while she is at the receiving end of all the harm as well. And to place the expired milk on top of the steaming crap, Jimmy is never punished but [[UnfortunateImplications instead it's all directed to the innocent Schmeloise (she didn't seduce Jimmy just Jimmy noticed her)]]. It was just way too mean-spirited towards Heloise for my tastes and not to mention [[CreatorsPet Beezy]] [[JerkAss is being obnoxious rather than funny]] for the entire episode.
* PrincessTogezo: ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' was one of the shows I grew up with, and I still like to watch it every now and then. But one moment I find hard to justify is in the episode "[=CatDog=] Catcher". In this episode, Rancid Rabbit (a dogcatcher in this episode) wants some more money, so he goes around arresting everyone who doesn't have a license. Cat happens to be the only character who has a license, and the rest of Nearburg (including Cat's brother Dog) ends up in jail. So Cat goes to save his brother, his friends, and the rest of Nearburg from being wrongfully imprisoned, right...? Yeah, no. Instead, he just lounges outside of the jail with a drink, enjoying his alone time. Look, I enjoy having time to myself as much as the next person, but if a relative of mine (or heck, anyone I was close to) was unfairly put in jail, I would not be happy about it at all, and I would try to find a way to get them out as soon as possible. Cat, on the other hand, has to be persuaded into saving the citizens of Nearburg. Even though, while jerks like the Greasers happen to be imprisoned, so are Cat's friends (like Mervis and Dunglap) and his own brother! Even ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold'''s [[TheUnfavorite Helga]] [[{{Jerkass}} Pataki]] knows that when your sibling's in trouble, you have to do something about it, regardless of whether or not you like them; when you're making her look like a saint, something is very wrong here.
** Tropers/Candycane14: I always felt that Cat did this because of how Nearburg and Dog always treated Cat like shit, so I didn't blame him. At least Olga tries to think of Helga's feelings which is why Helga helped her. Dog on the other hand is a selfish prick who dosen't care about his own brother. One example is "Trespassing" where Dog cared more about his stupid fire hydrant then his brother! All Cat wanted to do was watch a TV event at home that he paid for. Dog physically forces him to stay by a fire hydrant because another dog marked it. The end result is not only Cat missing his TV event, but his house and everything he owns in the world being burned to the ground. Then their house is burning down and Cat calls the fire department, Dog refuses to let them use it to save their house, even when Cat begs him in tears that if he values Cat in any way he'll let them use the hydrant. He doesn't. We learn that Dog doesn't value his own brother! It's episodes like this, that makes me want to punch that selfish, close-minded mutt! Dog gives other dogs(characters outside this show, dogs in real life) a bad name!
* fluffything: For me, it was during the series finale of ''WesternAnimation/XMenEvolution'' when Kurt and Rogue pretty much diss Mystique who is clearly trying to at the very least apologize for her behavior. Yes, Mystique is a villain, yes she has done horrible things to the X-Men (Kurt and Rogue included), but, there's a difference between trying to destroy your enemies and trying to make amends with your own children. Now, I can understand Rogue refusing to accept her apologies, but Kurt? One of Kurt's main character traits is that he's compassionate, understanding, and forgiving. Not to mention that, earlier in the season, he was genuinely heartbroken when he thought his own mother had died. [[SarcasmMode Way to be a great son, Kurt! Instead of forgiving your mother's actions and trying to start anew with her, just blow her off like a petty child!]]
* Tropers/Kablammin45: I remember little about the 1980s TV show they made of ''Literature/TheBerenstainBears'', but what I do remember is that the opening of the adaptation of "The Berenstain Bears Forget Their Manners" bothered me. The episode opens at Sister and Brother Bear's cousin Freddy's birthday party... and TheBully Too-Tall Bear is there. Unless he and his Mooks sneaked their way in, why would Freddy invite a known bully to his party? Maybe he was just being nice, but still, this leads up to Too-Tall and his buddies causing the events leading up to Sister and Brother's nasty moods by doing things like stealing 98% of the party favors right before the siblings got any...and no one calls them out on it! They still leave with their ill-gotten gains without anyone stopping them. Not only do they totally mess things at the party up, steal things, and cause Brother and Sister Bear to become cranky and rude in the process, [[KarmaHoudini no one bothers to call them out for any actions at all]]. Just about anyone else would have done so...or better yet just not invited known troublemakers to their party at all. I haven't seen the 80s series in years and yet, this still comes up when I think about it and it kinda irritates me.
* Tropers/{{PPPSSC}}: The ''WesternAnimation/GoofTroop'' episode "Inspector Goofy" could have been a perfectly serviceable episode, but the "Pete gets kicked out of his house" subplot makes it one of the weakest in the series. Not only is it completely unnecessary for the plot, but it results in both of the nicest characters in the cast (and one who is sometimes ruthless but ultimately altruistic) carrying massive {{Jerkass Ball}}s. [[AllLovingHero Goofy]] engages in SelectiveEnforcement after promising not to, Peg has no sympathy for Pete and taunts him with food, and PJ suggests selling Pistol to the circus to get Pete back in the house, which, in addition to being extremely out of character, serves no real purpose. The only purpose this subplot seems to serve is to turn a joke that's hilarious in moderation into a tiring OverlyLongGag. The only character in this episode who is remotely likable is Pistol, who barely does anything (Max isn't in it at all). I even find [[TheWoobie PJ]] (my favorite character on the show) completely unsympathetic in this episode, due to his uncharacteristic meanness, lack of focus, and surprising good fortune.
* Tropers/{{Theenglishman}}: The [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment very sudden and out-of-place]] ShoutOut to ''Film/{{Chinatown}}'' in the middle of WesternAnimation/InsideOut's climactic chase scene. Up until then, every ParentalBonus gag had either been in the background or was integrated into the plot somehow, but this one brought the entire chase to a complete halt for one joke which only a film buff would understand, and anyone who didn't would just think [[BlackComedy some poor cloud woman had been killed with two policemen making a quip about it]] [[MoodWhiplash for no good reason]]. Thankfully it's just one ''moment'' of suck, and the film picks up where it left off almost immediately afterward.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: I had very little sympathy for King Triton in the original ''Disney/TheLittleMermaid''. He started off as an unlikable, intolerant and incompetent {{Jerkass}}, and while he did show some improvement later, it was too little, too late. Then comes ''The Little Mermaid III'', which shows how he became a bigot. That'd make him a tragic character whom I'd finally understand and respect, right? Wrong. It turns out that this is the "explanation": He gives his wife, Athena, a music box. Then a pirate ship appears, and everyone escapes while the pirates are trying to steal their stuff. That is, everyone but Athena. She throws herself in front of the ship to try to save the music box. Unsurprisingly, she is crushed to death, and Triton blames the humans. The problem? If anyone is responsible for her death, which is essentially a stupid accident, it's Athena herself. It's not like some cruel humans murder her ForTheEvulz. She puts herself in harm's way for the stupid music box and has to pay the price[[note]]I'm not saying that she deserved to die for her stupidity, but still...[[/note]]. Okay, the pirates probably didn't care that their ship killed her, but they didn't have much of a chance to avoid her. All in all, this attempt at making Triton a TragicBigot only made him even more unlikable to me. I realize that his bigotry isn't supposed to be justified, but it should at least be understandable. Otherwise, he just ends up looking like a villain. Him having some resent towards humans would be okay, but this is just stupid. \\
However, the problems with the scene don't end with that. As a result of this incident, Triton bans music. It would have been understandable if he only forbade his subjects from playing music in his presence[[note]]there could still be a plot, e.g. "Triton's daughters try to help him cope with Athena's death and make him enjoy music again"[[/note]], but he takes music away from everyone and is a jerk about it. Sure, [[spoiler:the ban is eventually lifted and he ends up enjoying music again]], but ''The Little Mermaid'' shows us that he learns nothing about this "don't get mad at Ariel because of her interests, especially not if you won't even explain your feelings properly" thing. Thus, Athena's death is my [=DMoS=] for the series because it could have made the unsympathetic Triton more likable, but instead makes the situation worse. It shows us that he's the type who lets his emotions get the better of him, even when it obviously hurts his subjects. It shows us that his actions in ''The Little Mermaid'' are the result of him failing to learn his lesson the first time around. And it's all for the sake of his TooDumbToLive wife. What an awful king. I can honestly say that [[RootingForTheEmpire Ursula ends up being far more likable than he is]].
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: A scene from "The Great Race", a ''WesternAnimation/CareBears1986'' episode. There's a race, and the prize is becoming King for a day. This concept is stupid, as evidenced by the fact that there's a villain out to win the race and abuse the power. Unsurprisingly, he cheats. The [=DMoS=] is when he pours concrete into a water pit and makes a bear fall into it. Once the concrete sets, he/she[[note]]I don't remember the victim's gender, and frankly, I don't care[[/note]] can barely move. Wow. That's cruel. I know he's a villain, but this is supposed to be a cute children's cartoon. To make matters worse, the episode didn't make it clear that the victim ever recovered, so [[FridgeHorror I assumed that he/she was stuck forever being barely able to move]]. This may sound trivial now, but it made such a big impression on my younger self that not only did I never watch another ''Care Bears'' episode, but even now, probably more than a decade later, I can't enjoy the ''WesternAnimation/GummiBears''. [[note]]I know I could make an effort to give the Gummi Bears a proper chance, but I doubt it's worth it.[[/note]]
** Tropers/creativelyGreen: The victim was Cheer Bear, and she was seen in a wheelchair at the episode's end if memeory serves me correctly. Take that as you will.
* Tropers/{{ianolivia}}: For me, the ''WesternAnimation/{{Breadwinners}}'' episode "Bad to the Duck Bone". [=SwaySway=] gets [[DisproportionateRetribution run over by a motorcycle if he doesn't take life threatening drugs]], takes life threatening drugs that he knows are dangerous, changes his entire personality to [[GettingCrapPastTheRadar seduce Jenny Quackles, a 10 year old girl]], [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything licks her face in a disturbing manner without her permission]], eats her, and when he stops being evil [[RestrainedRevenge because Buhduece choked him]], [[{{Jerkass}} Jenny spits in his face and has him run over by a motorcycle because he isn't evil]]. [[KillItWithFire Kill this episode with fire]].
* {{InsertCleverNameHere}}: I did not like [[Creator/DreamWorksAnimation DreamWorks Animation's]] ''WesternAnimation/BeeMovie'' at all, but one scene in particular infuriated me. After Barry wins the jury, we see him ordering all of the honey-producing factories to be shut down so that the bees can be free from their work and have the honey brought back to their hive. Okay, fair enough. But then they show a gag of an agent shooting [[Franchise/WinniethePooh Winnie the Pooh]] with a dart! Seriously?! I suppose some people would of found it to be [[CrossesTheLineTwice hilarious]], but to me this scene is not only completely unnecessary, but it is also a stab in the back of many people's childhoods and plays animal cruelty [[DudeNotFunny for laughs]].
* jmac9345: For me, it’s ''WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow'' episode “Double Header”. I agree with WebOriginal/TheMysteriousMrEnter for the most part: the bad episodes (namely a majority of the Games era) didn’t go too far, except for this one. The episode is about Ren wanting Stimpy to take a trip to Ursa Minor in order to get some alone time from him. And the line that kills this episode for me is when Ren says “Well, I just don’t like you.” It kills it for me because not only does it identify that Ren completely TookALevelInJerkass, but it pains me because I know that Ren can have some incredibly heartwarming moments for such an angry character. Ren may be a jerk, but he has had numerous instances where he shows that he cares about Stimpy, like in “Son of Stimpy”. Outright saying that he doesn’t like Stimpy is just too cruel and mean-spirited, even for Ren. While this may be the main reason I don’t like this episode, I don’t like the plot that follows with Ren and Stimpy being combined into an EldritchAbomination due to a car crash because of how [[Creator/JohnKricfalusi John K.]] showed us in the Spumco episodes that he can sometimes be a caring person, and doesn’t deserve this mean a treatment, even with his ButtMonkey status.
* [=InTheGallbladder=]: I absolutely love WesternAnimation/WeBareBears, with the exception of "The Road." I don't like the cubs--they aren't well-written, and their actors are too young to have the necessary experience. Giving them the lead roles for an entire episode was a dangerous decision. Said episode featuring a serious musical number was a suicidal one.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: While not enough to ruin the short for me, the ending of "A Very Goofy Christmas" is the most disappointing part of ''WesternAnimation/MickeysOnceUponAChristmas''. To recap the plot: Pete tells Max that Santa doesn't exist. After examining some facts, asking critical questions and not getting satisfactory answers, Max gloomily concludes that Santa probably isn't real. Goofy tells Max to believe in Santa and he dresses up as him, but the plan fails when a kid exposes Goofy, and Max gets angry as he believes that Goofy lied about Santa. Then Goofy tries to prove Santa's existence, only to become sad when Santa doesn't come. Max tries to cheer him up, and they eventually accept the fact that Santa probably isn't real - but they don't need him because they have each other. Then, the [=DMoS=]. It turns out that Santa is real after all, and he gives Max a snowboard. The critical questions Max had about Santa? Never answered, unless you count Goofy's {{Hand Wave}}s as answers. Sure, it's nice that Max gets the snowboard he wanted, but way to use an AssPull to ruin a good message about scepticism and render the whole "coming to terms with Santa's nonexistence" plot pointless.
* Tropers/MathsAngelicVersion: The ''[[WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse Mickey [=MouseWorks=]]]'' adaptation of ''The Nutcracker'' is in my opinion pretty good (at least on its own, as I've never seen the original), but it has one ugly moment: At one point, the Mouse King[[note]]played by Donald Duck for some weird reason. Why didn't they give the role to Mortimer instead, which would've made so much more sense?[[/note]] traps the Snow Fairy inside his scepter. This in itself is fine because the Mouse King is evil and benefits from doing it. The [=DMoS=] is when the Mouse King ends up trapped there too, and it's revealed that neither will ever get out. It's supposed to be funny because the Snow Fairy annoys the Mouse King with his card games, but it's just nasty when you think about it. The Snow Fairy is stuck there for the rest of his life, and a FateWorseThanDeath is entirely possible. Sure, he doesn't seem to mind at the moment, but card games can't entertain him for long. The short also seems to forget that he's stuck with the Mouse King, who is not happy about his fate and will probably take it out on the poor Snow Fairy. Thus a sympathetic character gets a horrible fate just so we can laugh at the Mouse King's annoyance - as if his being stuck in a tiny place for the rest of his life weren't bad enough already. Yes, he deserved it. I'm just saying that he could for instance have a comical fit of rage even without the Snow Fairy there to annoy him. Oh, and did I mention that even though the Snow Fairy helped the main characters, they don't even care that he's gone? Yes, I know it just happens in a dream, but it's still needlessly harsh, especially in a Christmas-themed short.
* Tropers/Psi001: While ''WesternAnimation/TheDreamstone'' nearly always ran on an uneasy formula due to the Urpneys being {{Designated Villain}}s, it could at least often be excused if you didn't think about the plot hard enough. There are episodes however, where the heroes are just such priggish, sadistic little asswipes compared to the Urpneys, you wonder exactly why the writers thought they would look benevolent against the latter. "The Dream Beam Invasion" is a key example. The plot revolves around the Urpneys shrinking into kids' dreams and ruining. While it's kinda sad on the little kids' part, it's as usual a pretty petty crime and one Frizz and Nug as usual had to be PressGanged into. When the heroes find out what they were doing however? They too shrink into the dream, corner a pleading Frizz and Nug and give them a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown. It gets better though. They do it for so long that the two's shrink spell wears off and they turn giant compared to them. Despite the Urpneys not even bothering to attack them, [[DirtyCoward the Noops run off screaming like pansies]], unwilling to battle a ''real'' threat, and moan they are fighting dirty to the Dream Maker, who resorts to just magicing the bubble away so the Urpneys don't get the last laugh (which he supposedly could have done anytime, [[BondVillainStupidity but where's the fun in that?]]). The episode makes the Noops equivalent to those nasty little bullies in the playground that pick fights with wimps to look big, and then run off sobbing bullshit to the nearest authority figure the moment they fight back. Note this is all played sincerely, complete with dramatic music, a huge {{Determinator}} speech beforehand and of course, the Urpneys still being the butt of the final gag despite being far less odious and doing far less to provoke their punishment.
* Tropers/{{mariic}}: Though I've only read the book for it, I didn't like ''WesternAnimation/TheMagicSchoolBus'' episode Recap/TheMagicSchoolBusS2E12ColdFeet. Quick recap: Liz was kidnapped, so the kids have to go and rescue her. Along the way, they learned a lot about warm and cold-blooded animals, but they almost died several times. But surprise! Mrs. Frizzle was in control the whole time, and they were never in any real danger. She said that she did it because [[ForScience it would have been a more effective teaching method.]] [[FlatWhat Seriously?]] Not only would that experience have [[FridgeHorror most likely traumatized her students for the rest of their lives,]] her teaching method was [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment comparable to the controversial, and downright illegal, Milgram experiment]].
* Tropers/{{Iheartgod175}}: I love Creator/HannaBarbera cartoons, and one of my favorites are the ''RicochetRabbitAndDroopALongCoyote'' cartoons. Being that the show was made over 40 years ago, there are some weak episodes, and a few annoying ones (''Rapid Romance'', ''Will O' the Whip'', and a few others), but it never made me go "What the heck, Hanna-Barbera?" There is one episode that made me do that, though, and that's the episode "Annie Hoaxley". In this episode, a dangerous criminal named Buzzard Bates comes to Ricochet's town, and Ricochet orders everyone to treat it as serious business. He ends up being fooled, however, when [[DisguisedInDrag Bates dresses up as an old lady]] and ends up letting "her" get away. This plot has been done before, but that's not the [=DMoS=]. What makes this episode a [=DMoS=] is that Ricochet does find out that the "old lady" was Buzzard Bates thanks to Droop-a-Long fumbling Bates' disguise, but the minute the guy pulls out the helpless old lady act, Ricochet falls for it--twice. Basically, they gave Ricochet the IdiotBall for the later half of the episode and let him run away with it for the sake of laughs, resulting in serious CharacterDerailment for him. Out of the pair, I'd expect Droop-a-Long to do something like this, not Ricochet, who's normally the smart one and is a bit of a trickster himself. To see him act ''this'' gullible is kind of an insult to his character. This, along with the low animation quality, is what made this a [=DMoS=] for me.
* Tropers/{{aziuka}}: By no means was ''Disney/AtlantisTheLostEmpire'' a good movie, but the cataclismically stupid idea of Atlanteans being capable of speaking every Indo-European language ever by virtue of having an unspecified root language as their mother tongue made me want to tear my hair out. Sure, they don't know how to read in their own frigging native language, but this apparently doesn't hinder them in understanding multiple others, including modern ones that are separated from their own by several millennia. Not to mention that from a dramatic standpoint, it was a wasted opportunity to focus on Milo as a character intrinsically important to the relationship with the Atlanteans as he'd have been the only one who actually spoke their language. Instead, we got a cheap and lazy HandWave that mirrors the lack of creativity and imagination that plagues the movie as a whole.
* Tropers/{{Jatboy1000}}: I am a huge fan of ''WesternAnimation/WanderOverYonder'', as most episodes are usually very enjoyable for me. While, not every episode was perfect, most of their flaws tend to be very minor. However, there was one episode that I would classify as a Dethroning Moment, and that episode would be "The Party Poopers". To summarize, this episode was basically an episode that centered around ToiletHumour, which of course is a problem in itself. While I do know the history of this episode, where it started out as an interesting idea to "make a Cartoon filled with nothing but low brow and crass jokes but do it in a way where you actually don’t SEE anything gross or disgusting.", which I must admit, is pretty clever, still doesn't give me much to enjoy. Though, I guess this sort of comes down to a matter of opinions rather than the actual quality of the episode, as humor is very subjective, and toilet humor is especially so. I think what bothers me the most about this episode is that it aired so late in the show's life (which was more of a fault of the show being ScrewedByTheNetwork), that it felt like more of a waste of the show's life than if it would have been aired in something like season one. Not to mention, this episode was experimental, and was apparently more of a challenge for the show's crew than anything else, so I applaud them for that, but it still felt like a weaker episode to me.
** TheSnowSquirrel: I absolutely love this show, but one element really bugs me. The newest villain Lord Dominator's motivation for being a psychopath who ruthlessly destroys anything and anyone she pleases with sadistic glee is implied to be...loneliness. That's all. Not some huge tragedy that drove her insane and screwed up her morality. Not severe abuse that made her feel the need to kill everyone to prove that she was the strongest force in the universe and could not be hurt again. The writers on tumblr have pretty much stated that the reason Dominator is evil is that she wants friends secretly. They claim they will not go into a backstory for her simply because they think it's not needed. Sorry, but no. People who write DracoInLeatherPants fanfiction for these kinds of characters think of better ways to give them sympathy for Grop's sake! When you have a villain in a show like this, you want to see them have a sympathetic side, because you want to root for them rising above their problems and reforming themselves. Come on Craig, you gotta have a better reason for this lady's insane cruelty than having no buddies to hang with!
** HSRW101: It's very rare for me to complain about this show as nothing really made me angry, but one thing that always rubbed me the wrong way was in The Robomechabotatron episode. Very basic lesson about learning to work as a team in order to pilot the giant mech as Wander tries to get Sylvia, Lord Hater and Peepers to cooperate as a team to save the galaxy from Dominator, and it makes sense that the 3 wouldn't get along with all that has happened before. But the problem that got in their way to actually saving the galaxy? WANDER HIMSELF! I get that he always preferred the method without violence to solve problems, that's how he is...but dude...you KNOW the galaxy is in danger cause of Dominator...YOU'RE the one who said that you all need to work as a team to pilot the mech and save said galaxy...and YOU'RE the one who literally prevented everyone who finally managed to put their differences aside to work together when you should've KNOWN they were planning on fighting Dominator to do so. And for what reason? Your HONOUR?! You know its a bad sign when Hater, a bad guy mind you, accurately predicted that Wander would want to use the mech to give out hugs instead of what it was intended to do, FIGHT EVIL! In fairness, I get the anti-climax gag in the end, but its just so frustrating to think that Wander should've known better that not everyone was on the same page with how they planned to use the mech, especially at a time when the galaxy needed it most. And he refused to work as a team after all the preaching he did about how they should ALL work as a team, all because he doesn't want to use violence in a mech specifically designed to use violence against bad guys, which was what 3/4 of the team wanted to do! Never thought we'd see one of the most optimistic and positive characters of this generation actually make a hypocritical move, what were the writers thinking?!
* SenorCornholio: Since I am allowed to put one moment per work, I feel it only fitting that I give my two cents on something I recently decided to marathon. I actually bothered with the entirety of [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyG3 My Little Pony's 3rd generation]] and found myself...not as hateful towards it, at first. I'm definitely not a fan of this generation, but they at least seemed to have their own continuity for a time, and even had some somewhat likeable characters (Thistle Whistle, Rarity, Lily Lightly, Kimono, and ''especially'' Minty come to mind). All in all, G3 was harmless. Then the Core 7 shorts were introduced and I finally began to understand why G3 has such a bad rep (Generation 3.5's "Twinkle Wish Adventures" notwithstanding). These shorts did nothing but pander, showing the ponies either getting ready for a party, or having said party, on top of making some really major changes (Rainbow Dash doesn't have her trademark pseudo-British accent, Cheerilee's an earth pony instead of a unicorn, etc). However, what I'm mentioning is the absolute low point of Generation 3 (and after careful consideration, the entire MyLittlePony franchise aside from the dreaded Newborn Cuties) is the "Special Day" series. There are two of these, but I decided to add both of them because they're equally terrible. [[CaptainObvious These shorts centered around a special day for Pinkie Pie and Rainbow Dash]] that is never really explained. They mainly consisted of a still background with nothing but a waving rainbow and either Pinkie Pie or Rainbow Dash's official G3 artwork plastered on it before basically giving us a WholeEpisodeFlashback. The flashbacks were basically just the earlier Generation 3 specials, from "Dancing in the Clouds" to "Positively Pink", with no editing done except having Rainbow Dash's voice actress redo all of the older one's lines, sometimes even with new (re: worse) dialogue. It's especially notable when Fiesta Flair, a pony who was cut and replaced for her supposed UnfortunateImplications, keeps her speaking role in the "Ladybug Jamboree" flashback. Even if we count G3.5, that just makes it worse; what little continuity there may be is completely thrown out of whack, since G3.5 shows the Core 7 as fillies hanging out together, before either Butterfly Island (pegasi) or Unicornia [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin (unicorns)]] were discovered. Because of this, Starsong and Sweetie Belle, two Core 7 members who are a pegasus and unicorn respectively, are now living plotholes because their races had not yet unified, yet here they are acting as though these conflicts never existed. Not only that, but as previously mentioned, Cheerilee did a complete race change inbetween continuities, so none of this should even be in the same universe. These are mainly on here because they're just flashback episodes, but the other big reason is that now it can't decide which continuity it wants to have: the pre-Core 7 canon or the post-Core 7 canon. I know I'm getting worked up over what's considered the DorkAge of Franchise/MyLittlePony, but the amount of laziness in these specials is just mind-boggling. I'd have put Newborn Cuties on here, but those belong on the SoBadItsHorrible page as much as this belongs on the DethroningMomentOfSuck page because NC was always horrible; this is where Generation 3 went from "meh" status to outright deserving some of the flak it gets. It could be seen as JumpingTheShark, but I'd say it was more like jumping the goldfish to be honest. All I have to say after that is thank Celestia for [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Generation 4]].
* Tropers/{{TommyTiger}}: I have a bad opinion of WesternAnimation/SausageParty, perhaps even worse than most people's opinion of Disney/ChickenLittle [[note]]which I like, by the way[[/note]]. And I hate it because of [[NightmareFuel the scene where Camille Toh prepares her meal]]. This is what happened: I was channel surfing, when suddenly I came across a montage of happenings so violent even TheSimpsons and SouthPark aren't as violent as this. The potato getting [[FlayingAlive peeled]] and boiled alive got me to cringe. The tomato getting cut in half made me shiver. The bacon strips getting fried (where [[EyeScream the eye of one pops]]) made my stomach start to get nervous. The lettuce getting its eyes gouged out and getting torn in half made me want to leave the room screaming. The bread getting cut made me get ready to throw up. The cheese getting grated to death finally made me puke. The nachos getting microwaved made me puke more. The bottle of wine getting opened made me puke even more. The baby carrots getting [[EatenAlive chewed to death]] made my mouth regurgitate 60% puke. Sadly, I couldn't leave because my baby cousin was sitting on my laps (and before you ask, no, I was covering his eyes so he wouldn't see such violent things). The remote control was also out of batteries so I couldn't change the channel either. And so I was forced to watch a two-minute long horror movie. [[BrainBleach I'm still trying to forget this]]. Now for someone who hasn't even flinched at [[SpongeBobSquarePants House Fancy]] and [[WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy Peter Problems]], I get sick if this. This, along with the food orgy at the end, make this a completely [[DudeNotFunny unfunny]] film. And the horrific treatment staff members recieved just makes it [[UpToEleven even worse]].
* Tropers/{{KoopaKid17}}: I'm indifferent to the ''WesternAnimation/SonicBoom'' cartoon but "The Biggest Fan" was more of a TakeThat against a franchise's already UnpleasableFanbase than it needed to be. In this episode, Sonic meets an [[StalkerWithoutACrush obsessive fan]] who [[Literature/{{Misery}} "accidentally" injures him and his friends for the purpose of keeping them around]]. [[SarcasmMode Wonderful]], especially when he tries to get Sonic to act out fan-fiction and it's implied that [[NoodleIncident this fan has written]] [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids some works that aren't kid-friendly]]. It doesn't help that the fan is an obvious {{Expy}} of [[Webcomic/{{Sonichu}} Chris Chan]], down to him complaining about Sonic's arms (although WordOfGod [[BlatantLies denies this]]. [[SureLetsGoWithThat Okay]]). The team has enough of his neurotic behavior and they attempt to [[CringeComedy take him down while wearing body casts]] until they [[EpicFail realize they were never injured in the first place]]. Sonic resolves this by [[BoundAndGagged wrapping him up in sports tape]] [[DesignatedHero and leaving him there]]. The [[AnAesop Aesop]]: Keep a healthy relationship with your fans which Sonic [[AesopAmnesia immediately ignores]] when he screams and runs from a girl asking for his autograph. Episodes like these were done with much more sincerity in ''WesternAnimation/BobsBurgers'' and ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic''. In both cases, they taught that you shouldn't let the worst of a fan base keep you from something you like while praising the reasonable qualities of good fans. According to ''Sonic Boom'', a bad experience with even one of your fans gives you the right to treat the rest of them like shit even if they've done nothing to deserve it.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: I actually kinda like this episode, and happen to really like the show in general, but I can sympathize with a good portion of what Tropers/{{KoopaKid17}} said, especially when it comes to the ending. I understand completely the issues of this episode; not everyone is going to think the same way. But to me at least, the rest of the episode would have been perfectly fine if not for Sonic running in fear from a normal fan. Just take that out, and you have a truly great episode; heck, edit it so that Sonic hangs out with the fan (albeit still slightly traumatized from Mark) and you have a perfect representation of the moral they wanted to go with. I get that WesternAnimation/SonicBoom is a comedy, but not everything has to be PlayedForLaughs; it's okay to be serious about a moral while still keeping the rest of the episode fairly comedic. Heck, there's a later episode, "Knuck Knuck! Who's Here?" which does just that and it turned out to be one of my favorite episodes of the show because of it. But for what it's worth, [[DamnedByFaintPraise at least "The Biggest Fan" didn't take]] [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo the "Let's Get Serious" approach]]. All this episode was was an otherwise fun episode that was hindered by a sloppy ending.
* Tropers/AsForMyHandle: While ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse'' isn't a bad show, it does have a bunch of issues. What stuck out the most was this moment in the episode "Heavy Meddle". The sisters are willing to defend Lincoln from his bully... [[DoubleStandardAbuseFemaleOnMale until they learn that the bully is a girl]]. Then they {{squee}} because [[SarcasmMode obviously the only reason a girl bullies a guy]] [[LovingBully is because she likes him]]. It actually went in a good direction when Lincoln goes to kiss her, only to get socked, because then it would not only give AnAesop on bullying, but also maybe a lesson on meddling and assuming. But of course, the girl does turn out to be a LovingBully, and then they become and OfficialCouple. How touching. As a victim of bullying, you can probably see how this rubbed me the wrong way.
** Tropers/{{PRStorm}}: "Brawl in The Family" is the worst for me. The message the episode is basically going for, is that "You shouldn't try to get involved in other peoples' fights, or you'll only make things worse". Not to mention the 'sister fight protocol' goes against everything "Space Invader" stands for. Fuck this episode.
* Tropers/{{ilovededede}}: Since "Brawl in the Family" is taken I'll go with "Come Sale Away", because not only is nearly everyone flanderized into idiots for the sake of the cliche sibling competition plot with no comedy to make it worth it but has a victory dance gag that makes me wanna punch a hole through my computer. And this isn't even a one-time joke, it's a RunningGag, and the episode ends with a long, cringey, and painful sequence of this running gag. Just... screw this episode.
** Tropers/{{fairygirl567}}: I freaking hate "Come Sale Away"! Not the ending, not the beginning, ALL. OF. IT. I don't hate a lot of episodes in tv shows, it'll take a lot to make me hate an episode, but this one actually did it! The beginning is boring because their having a garage sell and seeing who the winner will be so they can do a dumb victory dance, we have one joke where Leni actually tries to sell their garage because no one in the family thought to tell the dumb sister what a garage sell actually is. Anyways, Lincoln wants to win, but after realizing he's losing, he starts selling everything in the living room and after Lori calls him out on this, he plays it off like he's doing nothing wrong and so, instead of telling on him for you know, selling everything that's not supposed to be sold! They actually start doing the same thing so they can win a competition! And yeah I know it's a competiton, but that doesn't make it better! Then they think they sold Lilly's blanket, search all over town, and all get tricked by this old man into giving him all their garage money, respectively (except Leni who's dumber then a sack of rocks and comes back with a napkin) and it turns out the mother had the blanket all along and just washed it. Then she discovers her kids sold everything in the living room and grounds them. Yeah, she only grounds them! I'm sorry, but a thing like this warrants a full scale hunt to get all their stuff back! They managed to sell their freaking couch and lost all their money! And then the ending... good night the ending. These episodes usually have lessons in it. I assumed this one would be, 'Don't let competiton cloud your judgement." Which it should have been. Nope! The episode ends with Lincoln doing his dumbass victory dance along with the entire family... FOR NOTHING! They didn't accomplish a damn thing! Just to recount: They lost all their stuff, lost all their money, and look like idiots, what the flying freak do they have to dance about? They learned nothing! The butt dancing is just so cringe-fest too and looks weird because the viewer knows they didn't gain anything. I cannot watch this episode with how terrible it is, espeically that god awful ending. I don't even think No Such Luck ended that badly, oh yeah I went there! At least a conflict was resolved, in this they still don't get their stuff back. I actually was expecting a two part episode, but nope it just ended there. Seriously this episode can bite me.
* Tropers/TommyTiger: I like the ''WesternAnimation/TheMrMenShow'' (it's not as good as the original series, but still watchable), but Mr. Stubborn's plot of the episode "Caves" had one ugly moment: Miss Naughty encounters the Fangosaurus, and it starts torturing her. [[{{Jerkass}} Mr. Stubborn]] does not believe her at all, and when they go away, Miss Naughty is too scared to even speak. In most episodes of this show, when Miss Naughty gets bad luck, it's [[LaserGuidedKarma because she did something to deserve it]]. Here, the worst thing she did was play some non-malicious pranks on the others... and yet she reaches a state of insanity [[FridgeHorror she would never snap out of]] without StatusQuoIsGod. Mr. Stubborn would count as UnintentionallyUnsympathetic but I don't think we were meant to root for him. What I ''do'' know however, is that he counts as a KarmaHoudini. It's just a [[DudeNotFunny really mean-spirited]] KickTheDog moment towards [[UnintentionallySympathetic a character who didn't deserve it this time]]. And at the ending, we get the Fangosaurus still torturing Miss Naughty. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking You know the worst part?]] This plot was adapted for a book (specifically, "Mr. Stubborn says there are no Monsters in this Book"), and the book version of it is better than the original.
* Tropers/{{Pgj1997}}: Probably the most infamous episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThomasTheTankEngine'' is "[[Recap/ThomasTheTankEngineS15E17WonkyWhistle Wonky Whistle]]", and I couldn't agree more. Most Thomas fans already know the plethora of problems with this episode, but for the sake of everyone else, I'll go over them anyway. So the plot of the episode is that Thomas is getting his whistle fixed when Sir Topham Hatt asks him to pick up and deliver animals to the "country show", and advertise it on the way. Thomas (who's supposed to be a role model for children by the way) rushes off excitedly before the repairmen finish fixing his whistle. Okay, two problems right off the bat. First off, [[Recap/ThomasTheTankEngineS1E5ThomasTrain Thomas already learned the importance of patience way back in season one]], so Thomas shouldn't have to learn this moral again. Really, you can replace Thomas with any other engine, and this wouldn't be a problem. Secondly, the writers fail to stay accurate to how a steam engine actually works. A whistle doesn't just magically become a slide whistle when it breaks like it does in the episode. If you want to know what an ''actual'' broken whistle sounds like, watch the episode "[[Recap/ThomasTheTankEngineS1E20WhistlesAndSneezes Whistles & Sneezes]]", it's much more accurate. Continuing on with the story, Thomas collects the animals, but rushes off before the farmworkers fully close the door on the car. He's blissfully unaware about the constant banging the door is making right behind him as he travels. On his way to the country show, Thomas stops to advertise it, blowing his whistle afterwards. This causes one of the animals to escape from the car, and we reach the exact same problem. He's blissfully unaware that there's something wrong with his whistle that he's heard like a million times before hand, and that the animals are escaping right behind him. Yes, they try to tell him but, get this, he mistakes it for them saying hello... [[WhatAnIdiot as he's leaving]]. Thomas does not get punished for doing any of this one bit. He's even called a "really useful engine" by the end of it. Why? The only thing we get is him realizing his mistake, and recapping what we already know. [[SpaceWhaleAesop Yes kids, you can be as ignorant as all hell, but as long as you admit that you were, you won't suffer any consequences]]. Now, I can't talk about Wonky Whistle without talking about what's arguably the biggest problem with this episode: the constant rhyming and alliteration. Of course, this is a Miller-era episode, so that sort of thing is expected, but it's really apparent here, and it gets really grating. I've counted. There's a total of 54 rhymes and alliterations in this episode. 54. Imagine hearing that for 8 minutes straight. That's this episode. So even if you try to look past the story problems, you're still annoyed by the dialogue. So there's nothing salvageable. It's not hard to see why people hate this episode so much. It's annoying, frustrating, and makes a character incomprehensibly stupid for the sake of the plot. Thankfully, the person who wrote this episode, Neil Ben, [[NoHitWonder never wrote another Thomas episode ever again]], and praise the lord for that.
* [=SenorCornholio=]: I happen to like all the VidegGame/SonicTheHedgehog cartoons; yes, even WesternAnimation/SonicUnderground and WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog. The latter in particular may have been pretty flawed, but it had a campy charm to it, some legitimately funny jokes, and has had some great episodes in my opinion, such as "Tails' New Home", "Grounder the Genius", "Tails in Charge", the entire Chaos Emerald 4-parter, and my personal favorite from this show: "Mass Transit Trouble" just to name a few. "Baby-Sitter Jitters" however, is not one of those episodes. Sonic and Tails have to babysit three baby beavers, and of course HilarityEnsues. For one, I'm not exactly a fan of the BadlyBatteredBabySitter trope to begin with; it was bad when WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry did it, and it's bad here. Seeing our heroes in this situation is kind of a disservice; they're clearly trying their hardest, but the babies don't make it easy for them. In fact, you can see that sometimes the babies outright intentionally make their job more difficult. And their [[MostAnnoyingSound crying]]...sweet Mobius, their crying! These creatures are literally the spawn of [[VideoGame/SonicUnleashed Dark Gaia]]! I normally like kids, but these little cretins deserve to be ranked below even the worst of [[TheScrappy scrappies]] in terms of hated Sonic characters! To Hell with WesternAnimation/MegaBabies; this is what'll scare your kids into never having unprotected sex for life! Then Robotnik and his bumbling minions kidnap them (I think it was for blackmail or something, it's been a while sorry) and have just as much trouble with the kids to the point of the villains pretty much [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere throwing in the towel]] to escape the little beasts. Finally, when the parents get back home, they outright admit that they had to get away from the babies; even they didn't want anything to do with them! And the episode ends with Sonic and Tails getting more jobs with them later. I mainly decided to put this on here because of the "one per work" thing, and because it is, to me at least, the worst episode of a Sonic cartoon ever made. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking Oh, and the production order for this episode was right off the heels of the Chaos Emerald arc.]]
* TVLegend: ''{{WesternAnimation/Pingu}}'' is one of those shows which I have a love/hate relationship with. Some of the episodes I like include the one with the Organ Grinder, the one where they go to the funfair, the one where Pingu and Robby play hide and go seek and the one where Pingu introduces Robby to his school. Episodes I don't like include the one where Pingu breaks a vase, the one where Pinga keeps crying because her Dad accidentally drove over her Teddy Bear and the one where Pingu tries to get revenge on one of his friends. But, in my opinion, the absolute worst episode of ''Pingu'' is the one called "Pingu Quarrels with his Mother". The premise for this one is that Pingu needs to bring in the firewood, but he wants to go and play with Pingo. His mother, however, won't let him go and play and orders him to chop more firewood. I'm sorry, but isn't Pingu a child? You're basically asking a child to wield a hazardously sharp object to do something which an adult should do. However, the worst part of this episode has to be when Pingu gets frustrated and throws the wood everywhere, hurting his foot. Does his mother care? No! Look, your son hurt his foot! Tend to him! See if he's OK! After that, Pingu randomly decides to kick a table for no good reason. This last action prompts his mother to slap Pingu across the face. Only when Pingu runs crying into his room does his mother realise her mistake. Yes, you should feel guilty. No, scratch that, you should feel beyond guilty. I'm not entirely sure that you realise what you just did. I understand that the point of this episode is to show what a quarrel between a mother and son could look like, but even if you wanted her to act out of character, there's a limit and it's a few miles before this. Not even an admittedly heartwarming ending could save this episode from being the worst episode of ''Pingu'', in my opinion. You know what the sad part is? There's actually a WebAnimation/YouTubePoop of this episode which is much better than this episode! (The YTP in question: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtnBjfK98CI&t=8s)
* Tropers/TommyTiger: I normally like WesternAnimation/PinkPantherAndPals, except for a select few episodes. Other times, I might like an episode but hate one part of it. Such is the case of "Pink, Pink, Pink, Pink". It was a really funny episode, but I hate the [[DownerEnding ending]]. While not enough to ruin the epsiode for me, it's the worst part in the episode. After the Pink Panther gets decloned, Big Nose follows him, and what happens next? Does he make amends with Pinky? Does he help him destroy the machine? No, he clones himself and the clones all chase Pinky. [[FridgeHorror It is very possible]] they wanted to ''kill'' him! First of all, the ending is a very good example of TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot. The endings I listed before would have made the episode more enjoyable, but no! We get this ending. Second, Big Nose can be a JerkWithAHeartOfGold if he wants too, even having a lot of EnemyMine moments with Pinky, and this ending makes these moments somewhat uncomfortable. Third, Big Nose [[KarmaHoudini gets of scot-free]]. Fourth, [[DudeNotFunny the series treats this ending as funny]]. Yes, it's always hilarious whenever [[NiceGuy Pinky]] is chased to be possibly ''killed''. I'm a very tolerant animation fan (I've even managed to read a comic version of [[WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants One Coarse Meal]] and stomach it). This and my other Western Animation-related DMOS', however, are too bad to even tolerate. It was an otherwise fun episode that was almost ruined by a sloppy ending.
* squadallahthistle: For me, just the entire latter half of Season 2 of WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil was enough to turn me off of the show. Now, I'm OK with a show veering into dramatic territory every once in a while, ''Gravity Falls'' did it well (except for "Dipper and Mabel VS the Future"), but the way ''Star VS the Forces Of Evil'' did it just seemed uncomfortable to me. First, Marco and Jackie got together. Then, Starco, which I used to ship HARD, became possible pedophilia after Marco spent 16 years trapped in another dimension. They tried to justify it by saying he doesn't remember much, but it still doesn't feel right. Then, the world just seems to keep beating down on Star, culminating in her [[spoiler:having to leave Earth]]. I'm sorry, didn't this show used to be a comedy? The comedic elements that made me love the show in the first place seem to be overshadowed so much by the drama (and creepiness) of the latter half of Season 2 that I don't even care about when the next episodes will come out. Everyone else on this site sees it as improvement, but I see it as jumping the shark. I'm not the only one who thinks this either, many of my friends on YouTube feel the same way.
* Loekman3: While I enjoyed episode XCVII from ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'' aka the ContinuityCavalcade episode where every character that I loved made a reappearance and the [[spoiler:return of Scaramouce]], one scene that I could not enjoy is [[spoiler:Demongo's sudden reappearance]]. Considering that previously he is unambigously and straight up killed on-screen by Aku for failing him, there is absolutely no reason he should even appear but then this episode he suddenly appears and disappears as quickly, making it a BigLippedAlligatorMoment. How? Why? When? There is absolutely no explanation for his sudden reappearance aside from being an EnsembleDarkhorse but just because he is popular doesn't mean he deserves to come back, especially when there is absolutely no indication that he even survived the ordeal in the first place.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: For me personally, episode XCIX was this. No, it's not the fact that Jashi became canon; I have several reasons why the pairing wouldn't normally work, but I can see why people would ship it and I could honestly forgive the end result if it wasn't all packaged into one episode. All the stuff that could explicitly be seen as ShipTease material was thrust in at once, and the whole thing just felt like it was [[StrangledByTheRedString forcing them together]]. If they wanted this pairing to work, [[MayDecemberRomance age gap be damned]], then I feel they should have spread the teasing across more than one episode. But nope: obvious hints at the beginning of the episode, thrust into a life-or-death situation in the middle, and then at the end they exhaustively look at one another after their near-death experience, then finally...[[BigDamnKiss they suddenly kiss]]. No prompting, no major buildup, just locked lips without a cause. Again, I see why others like this couple, but if they want me to find it believable, they shouldn't have rushed it like they did. It just puts a huge blemish on what was otherwise a fantastic show. On the plus side however, the fan drama that arose from the event was pretty epic; props to Genndy for that at least.
** Tropers/{{Peridonyx}}: Episode C, specifically [[spoiler:The Guardian being KilledOffscreen and his portal being destroyed after all -- thus wasting an EnsembleDarkhorse and reducing all of that ChosenOne hype to a disappointing AntiClimax and RedHerring]].
** Tropers//{{ScotieRw}} I have an issue or two with the final episode, most of them forgivable, except for one. Ashi's cessation of existence. Why did she not vanish when Aku died, but instead last long enough to plan a wedding and gather people from all over the world to attend? It feels like they creators wanted to play with our emotions by tricking us into thinking we'd get a happy ending, only to be like "Lol I lied." or something. Very dickish.
* [=SampaCM=]: I'll start by telling I didn't have a good experience with the animated adaptations of my favorite video games, ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda'', ''WesternAnimation/MegaMan'' and [[WesternAnimation/TheSuperMarioBrosSuperShow The]] [[WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfSuperMarioBros3 Mario]] [[WesternAnimation/SuperMarioWorld trilogy]] kept me from trying the actual games for years, because I was afraid of what I was going to find (For instance, I avoided playing ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaI'' because I was concerned about meeting the cocky, goggles-wearing Simon Belmont from ''WesternAnimation/CaptainNTheGameMaster''). However, there is one moment in particular that made angry like anything else: The episode "A Little Learning", from ''Super Mario World''. In this episode, Iggy and Lemmy Koopa (I refuse to call them their cartoon names) are attending school, run by Princess Toadstool, along with Yoshi and (*sigh*) [[TheScrappy Oogtar]]. As expected, there are fights between the two pairs, with princess even blaming Oogtar for a fight that was clearly started by the Koopa siblings (She's technically correct, as Oogtar got them into trouble to begin with). But the very worst moment comes at the end: at the science fair, Iggy and Lemmy built a volcano, which uses ''real lava!''. At first it seems they know what they're doing, but goes out of control due to Bowser's meddling, so the school gets destroyed, and Iggy, Lemmy and Bowser are thrown down a warp pipe back to the Neon Castle. Now that episode made me angry for various reasons: Iggy and Lemmy really wanted to go to school, but Oogtar, who was being more of a {{Jerkass}} than usual, got them into trouble with the princess, which is the reason why they decided to start a fight, and showing them off in the science fair, and in the end they were expelled for an accident that was Bowser's fault, essentially ruining the chance of a HeelFaceTurn by the siblings.
** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes about. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. And here's where my moment starts: just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything from inside his bubble. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, [[IdiotHero Link]] decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!
* Tropers/{{Statzkeen}}: ''Disney/{{Moana}}'' had the best music of any Disney movie since Lion King, and then nearly ruined it with that awful pop cover version of "How Far I'll Go" in the credits.

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** Tropers/{{fairygirl567}}: I freaking hate "Come Sale Away", not the ending, not the beginning, ALL. OF. IT. I don't hate a lot of episodes in tv shows, it'll take a lot to make me hate an episode, but this one actually did it! The beginning is boring because their having a garage sell and seeing who the winner will be so they can do a dumb victory dance, we have one joke where Leni actually tries to sell their garage because no one in the family thought to tell the dumb sister what a garage sell actually is. Anyways, Lincoln wants to win, but after realizing he's losing, he starts selling everything in the living room and after Lori calls him out on this, he plays it off like he's doing nothing wrong and so, instead of telling on him for you know, selling everything that's not supposed to be sold! They actually start doing the same thing so they can win a competition! And yeah I know it's a competiton, but that doesn't make it better! Then they think they sold Lilly's blanket, search all over town, and all get tricked by this old man into giving him all their garage money, respectively (except Leni who's dumber then a sack of rocks and comes back with a napkin) and it turns out the mother had the blanket all along and just washed it. Then she discovers her kids sold everything in the living room and grounds them. She only grounds them! I'm sorry, but a thing like this warrants a full scale hunt to get all their stuff back! They managed to sell their freaking couch! And then the ending... good night the ending. These episodes usually have lessons in it. I assumed this one would be, 'Don't let competiton cloud your judgement." Which it did. Nope! The episode ends with Lincoln doing his dumbass victory dance along with the entire family, FOR NOTHING! They didn't accomplish a damn thing! Just to recount: They lost all their stuff, lost all their money, and look like idiots, what the flying freak do they have to dance about? They learned nothing! And the butt dancing just looks weird because the viewer knows they didn't gain anything. I cannot watch this episodewith how terrible it is, espeically that god awful ending. I don't even think No Such Luck ended that badly, oh yeah I went there. At least a conflict was resolved, in this they still don't get their stuff back. I actually was expecting a two part episode, but bope it just ended there. Seriously this episode can bite me.



** Tropers/{{ilovededede}}: Since "Brawl in the Family" is taken I'll go with "Come Sale Away", because not only is nearly everyone flanderized into idiots for the sake of the cliche sibling competition plot with no comedy to make it worth it but has a victory dance gag that makes me wanna punch a hole through my computer. And this isn't even a one-time joke, it's a RunningGag, and the episode ends with a long, cringey, and painful sequence of this running gag. Just... screw this episode.

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** * Tropers/{{ilovededede}}: Since "Brawl in the Family" is taken I'll go with "Come Sale Away", because not only is nearly everyone flanderized into idiots for the sake of the cliche sibling competition plot with no comedy to make it worth it but has a victory dance gag that makes me wanna punch a hole through my computer. And this isn't even a one-time joke, it's a RunningGag, and the episode ends with a long, cringey, and painful sequence of this running gag. Just... screw this episode.episode.
** Tropers/{{fairygirl567}}: I freaking hate "Come Sale Away"! Not the ending, not the beginning, ALL. OF. IT. I don't hate a lot of episodes in tv shows, it'll take a lot to make me hate an episode, but this one actually did it! The beginning is boring because their having a garage sell and seeing who the winner will be so they can do a dumb victory dance, we have one joke where Leni actually tries to sell their garage because no one in the family thought to tell the dumb sister what a garage sell actually is. Anyways, Lincoln wants to win, but after realizing he's losing, he starts selling everything in the living room and after Lori calls him out on this, he plays it off like he's doing nothing wrong and so, instead of telling on him for you know, selling everything that's not supposed to be sold! They actually start doing the same thing so they can win a competition! And yeah I know it's a competiton, but that doesn't make it better! Then they think they sold Lilly's blanket, search all over town, and all get tricked by this old man into giving him all their garage money, respectively (except Leni who's dumber then a sack of rocks and comes back with a napkin) and it turns out the mother had the blanket all along and just washed it. Then she discovers her kids sold everything in the living room and grounds them. Yeah, she only grounds them! I'm sorry, but a thing like this warrants a full scale hunt to get all their stuff back! They managed to sell their freaking couch and lost all their money! And then the ending... good night the ending. These episodes usually have lessons in it. I assumed this one would be, 'Don't let competiton cloud your judgement." Which it should have been. Nope! The episode ends with Lincoln doing his dumbass victory dance along with the entire family... FOR NOTHING! They didn't accomplish a damn thing! Just to recount: They lost all their stuff, lost all their money, and look like idiots, what the flying freak do they have to dance about? They learned nothing! The butt dancing is just so cringe-fest too and looks weird because the viewer knows they didn't gain anything. I cannot watch this episode with how terrible it is, espeically that god awful ending. I don't even think No Such Luck ended that badly, oh yeah I went there! At least a conflict was resolved, in this they still don't get their stuff back. I actually was expecting a two part episode, but nope it just ended there. Seriously this episode can bite me.
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** Tropers/{{fairygirl567}}: I freaking hate "Come Sale Away", not the ending, not the beginning, ALL. OF. IT. I don't hate a lot of episodes in tv shows, it'll take a lot to make me hate an episode, but this one actually did it! The beginning is boring because their having a garage sell and seeing who the winner will be so they can do a dumb victory dance, we have one joke where Leni actually tries to sell their garage because no one in the family thought to tell the dumb sister what a garage sell actually is. Anyways, Lincoln wants to win, but after realizing he's losing, he starts selling everything in the living room and after Lori calls him out on this, he plays it off like he's doing nothing wrong and so, instead of telling on him for you know, selling everything that's not supposed to be sold! They actually start doing the same thing so they can win a competition! And yeah I know it's a competiton, but that doesn't make it better! Then they think they sold Lilly's blanket, search all over town, and all get tricked by this old man into giving him all their garage money, respectively (except Leni who's dumber then a sack of rocks and comes back with a napkin) and it turns out the mother had the blanket all along and just washed it. Then she discovers her kids sold everything in the living room and grounds them. She only grounds them! I'm sorry, but a thing like this warrants a full scale hunt to get all their stuff back! They managed to sell their freaking couch! And then the ending... good night the ending. These episodes usually have lessons in it. I assumed this one would be, 'Don't let competiton cloud your judgement." Which it did. Nope! The episode ends with Lincoln doing his dumbass victory dance along with the entire family, FOR NOTHING! They didn't accomplish a damn thing! Just to recount: They lost all their stuff, lost all their money, and look like idiots, what the flying freak do they have to dance about? They learned nothing! And the butt dancing just looks weird because the viewer knows they didn't gain anything. I cannot watch this episodewith how terrible it is, espeically that god awful ending. I don't even think No Such Luck ended that badly, oh yeah I went there. At least a conflict was resolved, in this they still don't get their stuff back. I actually was expecting a two part episode, but bope it just ended there. Seriously this episode can bite me.
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* Tropers/CJCroen1393: In TheMovie, it was ten times worse when they have a debate about dinosaurs. First things first, Cindy's report is about how female dinosaurs are stronger than male dinosaurs. Ok so far, there is evidence of this being true[[note]]It's hypothesized by some paleontologists, and indeed there are animals closely related to dinosaurs, like crocodiles and birds, that have that exact sexual dimorphism, so it's not unlikely[[/note]]. Then, she claims that the dinosaur skeleton she constructed is a Plesiosaurus. Barring the fact that Plesiosauruses aren't even dinosaurs to begin with, the... thing she constructed looks nothing like a Plesiosaurus. A Plesiosaurus is well known to have a barrel shaped body, flippers, a long neck, a small head, and are purely aquatic sea creatures (or, in layman's terms, say the word "Plesiosaurus" and try not to picture the LochNessMonster--hint hint, it's impossible). This skeleton is more or less a Velociraptor with a Parasaurolophus crest. Jimmy responds by pointing out that the model is inaccurate...by telling the class that the crest belongs to a Megalosaurus. No such crest even remotely exists on Megalosaurus.

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* Tropers/CJCroen1393: In TheMovie, it was ten times worse when they have a debate about dinosaurs. First things first, Cindy's report is about how female dinosaurs are stronger than male dinosaurs. Ok so far, there is evidence of this being true[[note]]It's hypothesized by some paleontologists, and indeed there are animals closely related to dinosaurs, like crocodiles and birds, that have that exact sexual dimorphism, so it's not unlikely[[/note]]. Then, she claims that the dinosaur skeleton she constructed is a Plesiosaurus. Barring the fact that Plesiosauruses aren't even dinosaurs to begin with, the... thing she constructed looks nothing like a Plesiosaurus. A Plesiosaurus is well known to have a barrel shaped body, flippers, a long neck, a small head, and are purely aquatic sea creatures (or, in layman's terms, say the word "Plesiosaurus" and try not to picture the LochNessMonster--hint hint, it's impossible). This skeleton is more or less a Velociraptor with a Parasaurolophus crest. Jimmy responds by pointing out that the model is inaccurate... by telling the class that the crest belongs to a Megalosaurus. No such crest even remotely exists on Megalosaurus.



* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: For me, it's the Christmas episode. Jimmy acts like a {{Jerkass}} to Carl by trying to force his disbelief of Santa onto him, since Carl actually believes in Santa. Cindy and Libby call Jimmy on this and attempt to prove Santa real as reporters. Eventually, it turns out Santa is real and Jimmy ends up screwing up and incapacitating him, which threatens Christmas. When Cindy and Libby threaten to expose this back home, which would be perfect karma for the way Jimmy's been acting all this time, he uses an invention to physically launch them out of the North Pole! And the kicker comes at the end, after Jimmy, as usual, cleans up the mess he created to start with, Santa is able to make his deliveries....and he brings Cindy and Libby coal for trying to humiliate Jimmy! What!? Cindy and Libby, whose only crimes were actually giving a damn about Carl's feelings and doing their reporter duty to expose what Jimmy did and give him some well-deserved humbling, are punished by Santa while Jimmy is rewarded!? This pushed Jimmy into nigh MarySue territory for me, and really made me empathize with Cindy. It's no wonder Jimmy pisses her off.

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* Tropers/{{Manwiththeplan}}: For me, it's the Christmas episode. Jimmy acts like a {{Jerkass}} to Carl by trying to force his disbelief of Santa onto him, since Carl actually believes in Santa. Cindy and Libby call Jimmy on this and attempt to prove Santa real as reporters. Eventually, it turns out Santa is real and Jimmy ends up screwing up and incapacitating him, which threatens Christmas. When Cindy and Libby threaten to expose this back home, which would be perfect karma for the way Jimmy's been acting all this time, he uses an invention to physically launch them out of the North Pole! And the kicker comes at the end, after Jimmy, as usual, cleans up the mess he created to start with, Santa is able to make his deliveries....deliveries... and he brings Cindy and Libby coal for trying to humiliate Jimmy! What!? Cindy and Libby, whose only crimes were actually giving a damn about Carl's feelings and doing their reporter duty to expose what Jimmy did and give him some well-deserved humbling, are punished by Santa while Jimmy is rewarded!? This pushed Jimmy into nigh MarySue territory for me, and really made me empathize with Cindy. It's no wonder Jimmy pisses her off.



"Gentlemen...'''BEHOLD!''' I have created a list of ''every moment'' when [[WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce this show]]... HAS FAILED! ''AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA!''"

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"Gentlemen... '''BEHOLD!''' I have created a list of ''every moment'' when [[WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce this show]]... HAS FAILED! ''AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA!''"



WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog is often one of those shows most people think of when they bring up Creator/CartoonNetwork's golden years, but even it tends to have a stinker now and again. We're all glad Courage is so...well, [[MeaningfulName courageous]]; he has to be if he can stand being associated with [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck these moments]].

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WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog is often one of those shows most people think of when they bring up Creator/CartoonNetwork's golden years, but even it tends to have a stinker now and again. We're all glad Courage is so... well, [[MeaningfulName courageous]]; he has to be if he can stand being associated with [[DarthWiki/DethroningMomentOfSuck these moments]].



* fluffything: For me, it was the episode "Dexter and Computress Get Mandark" that was "created" (IE: He provided the audio track) by a six year-old kid. No, saying "But he's just a child" doesn't excuse how utterly terrible it is. There have been children who have created far better works of entertainment than this. Long story short, the episode is about nothing but utter randomness...and not in a good way. Dexter and some robot (named Computress) cause Mandark's head to shrink and then accidentally cause it to grow until it explodes and tiny Mandark heads fall from the sky. Oh, and there's an OverlyLongGag involving Dexter calling Computress "stupid". It's like a poorly written TrollFic than anything else. About the only good thing about it is the ArtShift from the show's normal style to a more "crayon drawing" look, which I felt fit the whole "a kid made it" theme. Too bad the rest of the episode was horrible.

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* fluffything: For me, it was the episode "Dexter and Computress Get Mandark" that was "created" (IE: He provided the audio track) by a six year-old kid. No, saying "But he's just a child" doesn't excuse how utterly terrible it is. There have been children who have created far better works of entertainment than this. Long story short, the episode is about nothing but utter randomness... and not in a good way. Dexter and some robot (named Computress) cause Mandark's head to shrink and then accidentally cause it to grow until it explodes and tiny Mandark heads fall from the sky. Oh, and there's an OverlyLongGag involving Dexter calling Computress "stupid". It's like a poorly written TrollFic than anything else. About the only good thing about it is the ArtShift from the show's normal style to a more "crayon drawing" look, which I felt fit the whole "a kid made it" theme. Too bad the rest of the episode was horrible.



* {{Disney23}}: Mine has to be "Dexter Detention". Talk about your CruelTwistEnding. It has Dexter and some other students in detention and the situation is treated like a prison story. They dig an escape tunnel under the floorboard and Dexter comes out on the other side...at the state prison. The episode ends with Dexter in the striped outfit breaking rocks at gunpoint. The End. Dude, the hell?

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* {{Disney23}}: Mine has to be "Dexter Detention". Talk about your CruelTwistEnding. It has Dexter and some other students in detention and the situation is treated like a prison story. They dig an escape tunnel under the floorboard and Dexter comes out on the other side... at the state prison. The episode ends with Dexter in the striped outfit breaking rocks at gunpoint. The End. Dude, the hell?



** [=SenorCornholio=]: After some careful thinking, I decided to finally contribute a moment here, and that's how little Kristoph contributes in the final third of the movie. I personally liked Kristoph as a character; he was an {{Adorkable}} ManChild [[FriendToAllLivingThings with a]] [[LoyalAnimalCompanion dopey reindeer]]. It actually made him a bit unique from most Disney guys, and it made him a bit relatable especially since [[AllAnimalsAreDogs said reindeer reminded me of the first dog I ever owned]]. So we see Kristoph and Sven running across bad weather and melting ice to get to Anna, who's currently in some massive danger, trying to reach her before something happens to her...[[spoiler:and then Anna gets frozen anyway]]. And Kristoph ends up being unable to contribute jack all. It's [[spoiler:Elsa]] who [[spoiler:restores her with true love]]. I get that [[spoiler:"sibling love"]] is also a form of [[spoiler:true love]], but poor Kristoph's only contributions to the whole movie were helping Anna get to Elsa and then back to Arendelle. The guy doesn't get near as much love as [[GenkiGirl Anna]], [[DefrostingIceQueen Elsa]], [[spoiler:[[MagnificentBastard Hans]]]], or even [[PluckyComicRelief Olaf]], and the fact he contributes so damn little in the grand scheme of things may have something to do with that. It's dumb, is what I'm trying to say.

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** [=SenorCornholio=]: After some careful thinking, I decided to finally contribute a moment here, and that's how little Kristoph contributes in the final third of the movie. I personally liked Kristoph as a character; he was an {{Adorkable}} ManChild [[FriendToAllLivingThings with a]] [[LoyalAnimalCompanion dopey reindeer]]. It actually made him a bit unique from most Disney guys, and it made him a bit relatable especially since [[AllAnimalsAreDogs said reindeer reminded me of the first dog I ever owned]]. So we see Kristoph and Sven running across bad weather and melting ice to get to Anna, who's currently in some massive danger, trying to reach her before something happens to her... [[spoiler:and then Anna gets frozen anyway]]. And Kristoph ends up being unable to contribute jack all. It's [[spoiler:Elsa]] who [[spoiler:restores her with true love]]. I get that [[spoiler:"sibling love"]] is also a form of [[spoiler:true love]], but poor Kristoph's only contributions to the whole movie were helping Anna get to Elsa and then back to Arendelle. The guy doesn't get near as much love as [[GenkiGirl Anna]], [[DefrostingIceQueen Elsa]], [[spoiler:[[MagnificentBastard Hans]]]], or even [[PluckyComicRelief Olaf]], and the fact he contributes so damn little in the grand scheme of things may have something to do with that. It's dumb, is what I'm trying to say.



* Tropers/{{MsCC93}}: My moment would be the episode "Girl Trouble" when KarmaHoudini {{Jerkass}} Helga constantly harasses Arnold. When Arnold gets fed up with Helga and throws paint at her, Mr. Simmons punished Arnold, but only stood there and did nothing when Helga harassed him. Total CharacterDerailment for Mr. Simmons! And does Helga get her comeuppance? No...it's no wonder I can't stand this episode!

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* Tropers/{{MsCC93}}: My moment would be the episode "Girl Trouble" when KarmaHoudini {{Jerkass}} Helga constantly harasses Arnold. When Arnold gets fed up with Helga and throws paint at her, Mr. Simmons punished Arnold, but only stood there and did nothing when Helga harassed him. Total CharacterDerailment for Mr. Simmons! And does Helga get her comeuppance? No... it's no wonder I can't stand this episode!



* [=FromtheWordsofBR=]: "Bag of Money". In this episode, Arnold, Gerald, and Sid find...well, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a bag with $3,937 in it]]. Arnold wants to return it to the police, but Gerald and Sid don't want him to, but once Arnold points out they could get a reward for returning it they agree and let him keep track of the bag. Sid even mentions how "Arnold is the most honest guy around", which bites him in the ass later on. Arnold goes on the city bus with the money and sits next to a pink-haired peg-legged one-eyebrow-donning lady with 4 bags, which are also the color of the bag of money Arnold has. However, the lady accidentally grabs Arnold's bag and he winds up with her bags of bird seeds. Sid and Gerald don't believe Arnold's silly but true story; so much so, Sid eventually convinces everybody that Arnold stole the money and what happened to him is actually an excuse, and the other kids actually believe him! And to rub more salt in the wound, remember that little statement Sid did a little earlier? He sure isn't acting like the poor guy is honest in this section of the episode. And then Sid starts spying on Arnold and says that he used the money to buy random stuff. The kids eventually grab Arnold and tie him up to the tether-ball pole. Then a police car comes and the lady Arnold described earlier comes to return Arnold's bus pass, and then everybody apologizes for hurting Arnold, yet Sid [[KarmaHoudini gets away with what he did]]. Sorry, but no, not even the ending can {{easily forgive|n}} that. Why would they think a kid like Arnold would steal the money? Easily one of the poorest-written episodes of the series.

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* [=FromtheWordsofBR=]: "Bag of Money". In this episode, Arnold, Gerald, and Sid find... well, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a bag with $3,937 in it]]. Arnold wants to return it to the police, but Gerald and Sid don't want him to, but once Arnold points out they could get a reward for returning it they agree and let him keep track of the bag. Sid even mentions how "Arnold is the most honest guy around", which bites him in the ass later on. Arnold goes on the city bus with the money and sits next to a pink-haired peg-legged one-eyebrow-donning lady with 4 bags, which are also the color of the bag of money Arnold has. However, the lady accidentally grabs Arnold's bag and he winds up with her bags of bird seeds. Sid and Gerald don't believe Arnold's silly but true story; so much so, Sid eventually convinces everybody that Arnold stole the money and what happened to him is actually an excuse, and the other kids actually believe him! And to rub more salt in the wound, remember that little statement Sid did a little earlier? He sure isn't acting like the poor guy is honest in this section of the episode. And then Sid starts spying on Arnold and says that he used the money to buy random stuff. The kids eventually grab Arnold and tie him up to the tether-ball pole. Then a police car comes and the lady Arnold described earlier comes to return Arnold's bus pass, and then everybody apologizes for hurting Arnold, yet Sid [[KarmaHoudini gets away with what he did]]. Sorry, but no, not even the ending can {{easily forgive|n}} that. Why would they think a kid like Arnold would steal the money? Easily one of the poorest-written episodes of the series.



* Tropers/CandyCane14: Scrooge wasn't the only character that got messed up in the show. Donald, Jose and Panchito were all out of character as well in the episode, "The Three Caballeros"! Donald would've been happy to meet his two friends, even if he felt bad that no one remembered he's a Caballero. Instead he and the two acted more like enemies then friends! Well..yeah Panchito and Jose played pranks on Donald in 'The Three Caballeros' movie too, but if you pay attention, Donald was [[TooKinkyToTorture still having fun anyway]]...yeah. Plus it contradict those two comics ('The Three Caballeros ride again' and such) where Panchito and Jose looked up to Donald. At least in "Not so Goofy", they were better friends. This episode "The Three Caballeros" however was terrible.

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* Tropers/CandyCane14: Scrooge wasn't the only character that got messed up in the show. Donald, Jose and Panchito were all out of character as well in the episode, "The Three Caballeros"! Donald would've been happy to meet his two friends, even if he felt bad that no one remembered he's a Caballero. Instead he and the two acted more like enemies then friends! Well..yeah Well... yeah, Panchito and Jose played pranks on Donald in 'The Three Caballeros' movie too, but if you pay attention, Donald was [[TooKinkyToTorture still having fun anyway]]...anyway]]... yeah. Plus it contradict those two comics ('The Three Caballeros ride again' and such) where Panchito and Jose looked up to Donald. At least in "Not so Goofy", they were better friends. This episode "The Three Caballeros" however was terrible.



** @/{{Manwiththeplan}}: And Maleficent doesn't even retaliate like you'd expect her to; she just grits her teeth in irritation and forces out something along the lines of "Yes, how...giddy." God damn it, Maleficent, I know Mickey's the host of the club, but the Mistress of Evil shouldn't have to put up with that shit!

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** @/{{Manwiththeplan}}: And Maleficent doesn't even retaliate like you'd expect her to; she just grits her teeth in irritation and forces out something along the lines of "Yes, how... giddy." God damn it, Maleficent, I know Mickey's the host of the club, but the Mistress of Evil shouldn't have to put up with that shit!



* Tropers/{{bobdrantz}}: ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'' (which I normally like) had the "Pokémon Park" (A parody of ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' and ''Franchise/JurassicPark'') skit. For one thing, the jokes made no sense (Pokémon randomly fight and evolve so they go crazy...what?), the characters do not match who they're supposed to parody (Why would Ash be the one in the Ian Malcolm role?), and they're inconsistent with which Pokémon represents which dinosaur (IE: It cannot make up its mind on whether the Pikachu is supposed to be {{Expy}} for the Velociraptors or if the Charmander are). It's like they just spent five seconds on a Wikipedia page on ''Pokémon'', watched only a few minutes of ''Jurassic Park'', and then just hastily threw this poor excuse for a "parody" together.
* fluffything: I can respect parody done well. I can respect parodies of my favorite shows done well. The MAD sketch "Ancient Greek Mythbusters" is not a parody done well by any stretch of the imagination. This feels more like a mean-spirited TakeThat towards an awesome series rather than an AffectionateParody. Oh, let me count the ways this sketch is a DMOS. You've got Grant being chewed-up by a T.Rex as a pointless throwaway gag. You've got Adam and Jamie being incompetent JerkAss morons not having any sense of logic to their "experiments" (InsaneTrollLogic would be considered the words of a genius compared to this). The utterly unfunny joke about Mythbusters only being watchable due to the sheer number of explosions (Because clearly we nerds only want to see explosions in an awesome educational series that debunks urban legends. Really? No.). Also, the pointless ''Film/BackToTheFuture'' reference at the end? Just...ugh....
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: I've seen one that was a personal punch right in the heart. ''"[[WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime The Land After The Land Before Time]]"''. Basically, it's the incredibly stale "Durr hurr, The Land Before Time [[{{Sequelitis}} has too many sequels]] it's funny! Durr hurr" joke that everyone (even sequel haters) is sick of by now. It reveals that the newest sequel involves a "heartwarming reunion". It then shows all five dinosaurs...as fossilized museum exhibits. Way to go ''MAD''. You turned my childhood heroes into corpses. You literally killed my childhood.

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* Tropers/{{bobdrantz}}: ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'' (which I normally like) had the "Pokémon Park" (A parody of ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' and ''Franchise/JurassicPark'') skit. For one thing, the jokes made no sense (Pokémon randomly fight and evolve so they go crazy... what?), the characters do not match who they're supposed to parody (Why would Ash be the one in the Ian Malcolm role?), and they're inconsistent with which Pokémon represents which dinosaur (IE: It cannot make up its mind on whether the Pikachu is supposed to be {{Expy}} for the Velociraptors or if the Charmander are). It's like they just spent five seconds on a Wikipedia page on ''Pokémon'', watched only a few minutes of ''Jurassic Park'', and then just hastily threw this poor excuse for a "parody" together.
* fluffything: I can respect parody done well. I can respect parodies of my favorite shows done well. The MAD sketch "Ancient Greek Mythbusters" is not a parody done well by any stretch of the imagination. This feels more like a mean-spirited TakeThat towards an awesome series rather than an AffectionateParody. Oh, let me count the ways this sketch is a DMOS. You've got Grant being chewed-up by a T.Rex as a pointless throwaway gag. You've got Adam and Jamie being incompetent JerkAss morons not having any sense of logic to their "experiments" (InsaneTrollLogic would be considered the words of a genius compared to this). The utterly unfunny joke about Mythbusters only being watchable due to the sheer number of explosions (Because clearly we nerds only want to see explosions in an awesome educational series that debunks urban legends. Really? No.). Also, the pointless ''Film/BackToTheFuture'' reference at the end? Just...ugh....
ugh...
* Tropers/CJCroen1393: I've seen one that was a personal punch right in the heart. ''"[[WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime The Land After The Land Before Time]]"''. Basically, it's the incredibly stale "Durr hurr, The Land Before Time [[{{Sequelitis}} has too many sequels]] it's funny! Durr hurr" joke that everyone (even sequel haters) is sick of by now. It reveals that the newest sequel involves a "heartwarming reunion". It then shows all five dinosaurs... as fossilized museum exhibits. Way to go ''MAD''. You turned my childhood heroes into corpses. You literally killed my childhood.



* keybladeoverlord: I used to find this show pretty entertaining, but one skit ruined the entire thing for me. Go Dragon Ball Go..... At first it seems like a fairly amusing concept, with Diego from Go Diego Go going on a hunt for the dragon balls with other Dragon Ball characters popping in and occasionally making jabs about both shows. Now I could almost forgive the subpar voice acting in this skit, but the one thing that effectively ruined the skit and the entire show for me was their potshot at Dragon Ball GT. Really? I know a good number of people don't like GT, but there's also plenty who love it (Myself included), but did you really have to make an awful forced joke like that which only about half the audience will find funny and the other half will find annoying? You couldn't make it a joke at the expense of Dragon Ball Evolution which is way worse than what GT could ever be? Some people may think I'm being a GT fanboy complaining about people making fun of something he likes, but my problem is that I've seen people complain about GT so much that I cannot stand to look at people calling it bad without giving good reasoning behind their opinions. In the end, this skit ruined this entire show for me.

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* keybladeoverlord: I used to find this show pretty entertaining, but one skit ruined the entire thing for me. Go Dragon Ball Go.....Go... At first it seems like a fairly amusing concept, with Diego from Go Diego Go going on a hunt for the dragon balls with other Dragon Ball characters popping in and occasionally making jabs about both shows. Now I could almost forgive the subpar voice acting in this skit, but the one thing that effectively ruined the skit and the entire show for me was their potshot at Dragon Ball GT. Really? I know a good number of people don't like GT, but there's also plenty who love it (Myself included), but did you really have to make an awful forced joke like that which only about half the audience will find funny and the other half will find annoying? You couldn't make it a joke at the expense of Dragon Ball Evolution which is way worse than what GT could ever be? Some people may think I'm being a GT fanboy complaining about people making fun of something he likes, but my problem is that I've seen people complain about GT so much that I cannot stand to look at people calling it bad without giving good reasoning behind their opinions. In the end, this skit ruined this entire show for me.



** Powerpuffbats For what it's worth, after that trainwreck, they aired "It's Magic, Charlie Brown" which had Charlie finally kick that ball and having Lucy finally getting hit by Karma. That said, "It's Your First Kiss" is my Dethroning Moment for all of Animation...only Seahorse Seashell Party from Family Guy comes close (I still haven't seen Spongebob's One Coarse Meal yet). What makes this special even worse for me is that I'm a bit of a Charlie Brown/Lucy shipper, and Lucy's actions spit in the faces of Chuck/Lucy shippers...and Chuck/Peppermint Patty shippers too! Seriously, Patty and Linus don't even notice that Lucy is costing them the game! Remember that moment from Family Guy where Peter kicks Lucy (who is my favorite Peanuts character...and this special makes me hate her)? That clip is only tolerable (imo) after viewing this special! And again, how could no one...in the entire stadium notice Lucy pulling that football away?!?!

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** Powerpuffbats For what it's worth, after that trainwreck, they aired "It's Magic, Charlie Brown" which had Charlie finally kick that ball and having Lucy finally getting hit by Karma. That said, "It's Your First Kiss" is my Dethroning Moment for all of Animation... only Seahorse Seashell Party from Family Guy comes close (I still haven't seen Spongebob's One Coarse Meal yet). What makes this special even worse for me is that I'm a bit of a Charlie Brown/Lucy shipper, and Lucy's actions spit in the faces of Chuck/Lucy shippers... and Chuck/Peppermint Patty shippers too! Seriously, Patty and Linus don't even notice that Lucy is costing them the game! Remember that moment from Family Guy where Peter kicks Lucy (who is my favorite Peanuts character...character... and this special makes me hate her)? That clip is only tolerable (imo) after viewing this special! And again, how could no one...one... in the entire stadium notice Lucy pulling that football away?!?!



* {safind} : Whilst I am still getting back into the show (And have enjoyed most of Season 4 thus far), my DMOS would have to be "Bee Story", not the episode's plot though, but the song. "Waggle Dance" is the absolute worst song ever created for the entire show. Whilst some may like it (And those people do not believe in my opinion that the song is crap), there are those that agree with me that the song is awful. The lyrics are awful and the visuals..... Good god, do I even need to say it? They're something only a Pedophile could ever enjoy. Even as I type this, I feel an increasing need for {{Brain Bleach}}. On the plus side though, I've regained my liking of the other songs, but Waggle Dance is just so awful, I would rather swallow cyanide that even look at one second of the song or read through one word of its lyrics.

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* {safind} : Whilst I am still getting back into the show (And have enjoyed most of Season 4 thus far), my DMOS would have to be "Bee Story", not the episode's plot though, but the song. "Waggle Dance" is the absolute worst song ever created for the entire show. Whilst some may like it (And those people do not believe in my opinion that the song is crap), there are those that agree with me that the song is awful. The lyrics are awful and the visuals.....visuals.... Good god, do I even need to say it? They're something only a Pedophile could ever enjoy. Even as I type this, I feel an increasing need for {{Brain Bleach}}. On the plus side though, I've regained my liking of the other songs, but Waggle Dance is just so awful, I would rather swallow cyanide that even look at one second of the song or read through one word of its lyrics.



** Animeking1108: I had a problem with ''Total Rickall,'' particularly how Morty realizes that Rick wasn't a parasite. He figured it out because he had a lot of bad memories with Rick. Now, that's understandable. However, it gets ruined by a montage of of Rick ignoring Morty when he's in life-threatening situations and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking pantsing him in school and pushing him down the stairs]]. What made Rick a likable character was that despite his flaws, he cares about Morty and all of the moments that should be bad memories were usually unintentional on Rick's part.
** {{Tropers/Zuxtron}}: "Rixty Minutes" is one of the best episodes in the show, perfectly combining wacky, random comedy with serious, down-to-earth drama. Sadly, "Interdimensional Cable II" fails to live up to its predecessor. While the idea of having improvised comedy bits interspersed throughout an episode was unique enough to work the first time, using it again for a second episode makes it come off as forced. In the end, it feels like the normally very creative writers of the show had run out of ideas and had to resort to remaking an older episode to pad out the season. Even Justin Roiland himself was unhappy with the result, telling us several weeks in advance to not get our hopes up.

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** * Animeking1108: I had a problem with ''Total Rickall,'' particularly how Morty realizes that Rick wasn't a parasite. He figured it out because he had a lot of bad memories with Rick. Now, that's understandable. However, it gets ruined by a montage of of Rick ignoring Morty when he's in life-threatening situations and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking pantsing him in school and pushing him down the stairs]]. What made Rick a likable character was that despite his flaws, he cares about Morty and all of the moments that should be bad memories were usually unintentional on Rick's part.
** * {{Tropers/Zuxtron}}: "Rixty Minutes" is one of the best episodes in the show, perfectly combining wacky, random comedy with serious, down-to-earth drama. Sadly, "Interdimensional Cable II" fails to live up to its predecessor. While the idea of having improvised comedy bits interspersed throughout an episode was unique enough to work the first time, using it again for a second episode makes it come off as forced. In the end, it feels like the normally very creative writers of the show had run out of ideas and had to resort to remaking an older episode to pad out the season. Even Justin Roiland himself was unhappy with the result, telling us several weeks in advance to not get our hopes up.



* SenorCornholio: "Last One Out of Beach City" was just...bleh, to me. We hardly learned anything new from it; it was nothing more than a filler episode that had no business really even existing. Basically, Pearl wants to join Amethyst and Steven in going to a rock show, and while she's at it she tries to get her "bad girl" on by acting all cool and stuff despite several episodes showing that she's fine with who she normally is. Then she finds someone that just happened to have her hair dyed pink like Rose, with a similar hairstyle to boot, at a point where Pearl's been trying to get over Rose. What really bothers me is when Pearl decides to intentionally run a red stoplight and evade the police, which Pearl does admittedly berate herself for because she essentially ruined the trip by running out of gas during those points...and then Amethyst heaps a bunch of praise on Pearl for all this. And lo and behold, they just so happen to be at the show they were going to! And Rose-haired girl is there! What a twist! I'm sorry, but as a huge Steven Universe fan who likes (even partially) the above and below episodes, this one was almost impossible to salvage. I could tolerate the likes of Lars and Ronaldo, but I couldn't stand this episode; that says a lot. And if Pearl's relationship with Rose-head gets turned into a subplot, those are some episodes I'll watch probably once, then never rewatch again.

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* SenorCornholio: "Last One Out of Beach City" was just... bleh, to me. We hardly learned anything new from it; it was nothing more than a filler episode that had no business really even existing. Basically, Pearl wants to join Amethyst and Steven in going to a rock show, and while she's at it she tries to get her "bad girl" on by acting all cool and stuff despite several episodes showing that she's fine with who she normally is. Then she finds someone that just happened to have her hair dyed pink like Rose, with a similar hairstyle to boot, at a point where Pearl's been trying to get over Rose. What really bothers me is when Pearl decides to intentionally run a red stoplight and evade the police, which Pearl does admittedly berate herself for because she essentially ruined the trip by running out of gas during those points... and then Amethyst heaps a bunch of praise on Pearl for all this. And lo and behold, they just so happen to be at the show they were going to! And Rose-haired girl is there! What a twist! I'm sorry, but as a huge Steven Universe fan who likes (even partially) the above and below episodes, this one was almost impossible to salvage. I could tolerate the likes of Lars and Ronaldo, but I couldn't stand this episode; that says a lot. And if Pearl's relationship with Rose-head gets turned into a subplot, those are some episodes I'll watch probably once, then never rewatch again.



* SenorCornholio: I loved the original Teen Titans and, after re-watching it fairly recently, I can see that it holds up rather well. That's not to say it doesn't have flaws, however, and my least favorite episode of the original show has to be ''Revved Up''. It's not a terrible episode to me, but it's pretty lackluster compared to the rest of the show. The episode's plot involves [[VillainOfTheWeek Ding Dong Daddy]] challenging the Titans to a cross country drag race to recover Robin's stolen case. First off, the Titans could have just stolen the case back from Ding Dong Daddy and ended the episode right there. Robin has good enough reflexes, Beast Boy could turn into an animal to get it back, and Raven has levitation, for starters. Second, we never actually learn what's in the case; there could be plenty of interpretations or theories, but it's never actually revealed, so we don't feel like we learn anything new. Third, though the episode had some funny moments (particularly involving Cyborg and Beast Boy fending off these weird workshop gremlin things), it didn't feel as clever or creative as something like ''Employee of the Month'' or ''Crash''. Fourth, Ding Dong Daddy is pretty bland as far as goofy villains in this show go; at least [[EvilBrit Mad Mod]] and [[MagiciansAreWizards Mumbo]] had more of an air to them. Fifth, there's a minor subplot where some of the villains hear from Gizmo about the whole race and want Robin's stuff to sell on the market...[[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot and hardly any of them get any actual good moments.]] The only villain we get to see have a major role is [[AntiHero Red X]] (and I'll admit [[MomentOfAwesome the bike battle between him and Robin was pretty sweet]]), but that's it. I still love this show to death, but this episode just didn't do it for me.

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* SenorCornholio: I loved the original Teen Titans and, after re-watching it fairly recently, I can see that it holds up rather well. That's not to say it doesn't have flaws, however, and my least favorite episode of the original show has to be ''Revved Up''. It's not a terrible episode to me, but it's pretty lackluster compared to the rest of the show. The episode's plot involves [[VillainOfTheWeek Ding Dong Daddy]] challenging the Titans to a cross country drag race to recover Robin's stolen case. First off, the Titans could have just stolen the case back from Ding Dong Daddy and ended the episode right there. Robin has good enough reflexes, Beast Boy could turn into an animal to get it back, and Raven has levitation, for starters. Second, we never actually learn what's in the case; there could be plenty of interpretations or theories, but it's never actually revealed, so we don't feel like we learn anything new. Third, though the episode had some funny moments (particularly involving Cyborg and Beast Boy fending off these weird workshop gremlin things), it didn't feel as clever or creative as something like ''Employee of the Month'' or ''Crash''. Fourth, Ding Dong Daddy is pretty bland as far as goofy villains in this show go; at least [[EvilBrit Mad Mod]] and [[MagiciansAreWizards Mumbo]] had more of an air to them. Fifth, there's a minor subplot where some of the villains hear from Gizmo about the whole race and want Robin's stuff to sell on the market... [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot and hardly any of them get any actual good moments.]] The only villain we get to see have a major role is [[AntiHero Red X]] (and I'll admit [[MomentOfAwesome the bike battle between him and Robin was pretty sweet]]), but that's it. I still love this show to death, but this episode just didn't do it for me.



* Cranberries: For me the last episode, "Orphan Substitute". Good lord, Tuddrussel was going to deliberately leave Otto behind and just replace him for another kid like you would a tissue! And while Larry obviously didn't want him to be left behind he sure as hell didn't even try to stop Tuddrussel from doing this, he does have the time travel controls, he shouldn’t have to follow Tuddrussel's commands. While it's Otto's fault that he did go off on his own for this situation to happen, it could have been avoided entirely if Tuddrussel hadn't been such an ass and unplugged the game system before Otto could get a high score on it, and Otto had a valid point- "A grown man cheating an eight year old, that's pathetic." Oh and the fact that when they do find Otto, it was purely accidental and while Larry is thrilled to have found him, Tuddrussel is completely embarrassed to see him, and at the end they leave that other orphan they picked up along the way with Sister Thornley. For one that kid doesn't even live in that particular orphanage, second, for all we know that kid didn't even belong in that era, honestly he looked like he could have lived in the 1940's or something close to that, and they probably never even took him back...that's just sad.

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* Cranberries: For me the last episode, "Orphan Substitute". Good lord, Tuddrussel was going to deliberately leave Otto behind and just replace him for another kid like you would a tissue! And while Larry obviously didn't want him to be left behind he sure as hell didn't even try to stop Tuddrussel from doing this, he does have the time travel controls, he shouldn’t have to follow Tuddrussel's commands. While it's Otto's fault that he did go off on his own for this situation to happen, it could have been avoided entirely if Tuddrussel hadn't been such an ass and unplugged the game system before Otto could get a high score on it, and Otto had a valid point- "A grown man cheating an eight year old, that's pathetic." Oh and the fact that when they do find Otto, it was purely accidental and while Larry is thrilled to have found him, Tuddrussel is completely embarrassed to see him, and at the end they leave that other orphan they picked up along the way with Sister Thornley. For one that kid doesn't even live in that particular orphanage, second, for all we know that kid didn't even belong in that era, honestly he looked like he could have lived in the 1940's or something close to that, and they probably never even took him back... that's just sad.



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* Tropers/{{Statzkeen}}: This had the best music of any Disney movie since Lion King, and then nearly ruined it with that awful pop cover version of "How Far I'll Go" in the credits.

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* Tropers/{{Statzkeen}}: This ''Disney/{{Moana}}'' had the best music of any Disney movie since Lion King, and then nearly ruined it with that awful pop cover version of "How Far I'll Go" in the credits.

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one (very short) example doesn't need its own folder. Moving to other.


[[folder: Moana]]
* Tropers/{{Statzkeen}}: This had the best music of any Disney movie since Lion King, and then nearly ruined it with that awful pop cover version of "How Far I'll Go" in the credits.




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* Tropers/{{Statzkeen}}: This had the best music of any Disney movie since Lion King, and then nearly ruined it with that awful pop cover version of "How Far I'll Go" in the credits.
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[[folder: Moana]]
* Tropers/{{Statzkeen}}: This had the best music of any Disney movie since Lion King, and then nearly ruined it with that awful pop cover version of "How Far I'll Go" in the credits.

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There we go. From now on, I'll find more specific in-show things to complain about. You have to admit though, cliffhanger season endings are never fun.


* [=SenorCornholio=]: [[LampshadeHanging I keep showing up a lot here, huh?]] Look, I just wanna say something: WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil is one of my favorite shows of this decade and there's not a single episode I dislike, period; maybe a few instances of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness, but nothing more. It's just that...well, let's just say I agree with [=Calamity2007=] that the otherwise decent "[[Recap/TeenTitansS5E13ThingsChange Things Change]]" should not have been the SeriesFinale of WesternAnimation/TeenTitans, and that applies to the episode "[[Recap/StarVsTheForcesOfEvilS2E41Starcrushed Starcrushed]]" despite only being the season 2 finale. Here's a summary, with massive spoilers because [[GushingAboutShowsYouLike this episode is still utterly amazing on its own]]: [[spoiler:Star and Marco are on the receiving end of the former's crush on the latter being blurted out in front of several Mewmans (on top of Star losing her spell book and Glossaryk), and they just wanna go back to living like they used to with summer vacation about to start, so they both try to make things infinitely less awkward by focusing on just hanging out with the others while they can, with Marco hanging with Jackie and Star going with her friends to a separate party where she can hang loose and talk with Oskar, who Star realizes isn't exactly "perfect".]] Sounds good for an A plot, but the B plot gets hectic: [[spoiler:Queen Moon Butterfly and the Magic High Commission go to where Ludo is located and proceed to take care of his minions; Moon is almost successful in convincing Ludo to pull a HeelFaceTurn, But Ludo is then [[DemonicPossession controlled by the spirit of]] [[KnightOfCerebus Toffee]], who temporarily ''kills'' Moon and manages to effortlessly destroy the Magic High Commission, including the possibly permanent HeroicSacrifice of [[WhiteMage Lekmet]]. Moon fights Toffee, but to no avail, so she grabs what remains of her allies and escapes, with Toffee declaring that he's coming for Star. Moon then goes to Star to tell her what's going on and that they now have to leave Earth, possibly forever. [[TearJerker Star then goes downstairs and tells Marco how she really feels]], leaving the latter speechless and Jackie having a HeroicBSOD; Star leaves, Marco runs after her, and by the time he makes it, Star's room is completely gone, leaving the old room from the first episode. [[DownerEnding Cut to credits.]] Not even the MoodWhiplash ending theme plays this time.]] To put into perspective, this is a ''fantastic'' episode in my eyes, and I was eager to see where it leads...then I found out that this is the season finale and the outcome will happen in a few months. What is it with shows ending a season on these kinds of notes, anyway? It's like the WebVideo/NostalgiaCritic said in his Sonic review: "Leaving us on a cliffhanger doesn't guarantee a sequel, it just pisses us off!" I'm glad this isn't the last episode, because if it was then it'd pretty much suffer the same fate as WesternAnimation/SonicSatAM or the aforementioned WesternAnimation/TeenTitans. Even then, it's kind of a dick move to just have a season end on this kind of note. Now I know how some people felt with [[Recap/AvatarTheLastAirbenderTheCrossroadsOfDestiny Avatar's season 2 finale]].
** squadallahthistle: For me, just the entire latter half of Season 2 was enough to turn me off of the show. Now, I'm OK with a show veering into dramatic territory every once in a while, ''Gravity Falls'' did it well (except for "Dipper and Mabel VS the Future"), but the way ''Star VS the Forces Of Evil'' did it just seemed uncomfortable to me. First, Marco and Jackie got together. Then, Starco, which I used to ship HARD, became possible pedophilia after Marco spent 16 years trapped in another dimension. They tried to justify it by saying he doesn't remember much, but it still doesn't feel right. Then, the world just seems to keep beating down on Star, culminating in her [[spoiler:having to leave Earth]]. I'm sorry, didn't this show used to be a comedy? The comedic elements that made me love the show in the first place seem to be overshadowed so much by the drama (and creepiness) of the latter half of Season 2 that I don't even care about when the next episodes will come out. Everyone else on this site sees it as improvement, but I see it as jumping the shark. I'm not the only one who thinks this either, many of my friends on YouTube feel the same way.

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* [=SenorCornholio=]: [[LampshadeHanging I keep showing up a lot here, huh?]] Look, I just wanna say something: WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil is one of my favorite shows of this decade and there's not a single episode I dislike, period; maybe a few instances of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness, but nothing more. It's just that...well, let's just say I agree with [=Calamity2007=] that the otherwise decent "[[Recap/TeenTitansS5E13ThingsChange Things Change]]" should not have been the SeriesFinale of WesternAnimation/TeenTitans, and that applies to the episode "[[Recap/StarVsTheForcesOfEvilS2E41Starcrushed Starcrushed]]" despite only being the season 2 finale. Here's a summary, with massive spoilers because [[GushingAboutShowsYouLike this episode is still utterly amazing on its own]]: [[spoiler:Star and Marco are on the receiving end of the former's crush on the latter being blurted out in front of several Mewmans (on top of Star losing her spell book and Glossaryk), and they just wanna go back to living like they used to with summer vacation about to start, so they both try to make things infinitely less awkward by focusing on just hanging out with the others while they can, with Marco hanging with Jackie and Star going with her friends to a separate party where she can hang loose and talk with Oskar, who Star realizes isn't exactly "perfect".]] Sounds good for an A plot, but the B plot gets hectic: [[spoiler:Queen Moon Butterfly and the Magic High Commission go to where Ludo is located and proceed to take care of his minions; Moon is almost successful in convincing Ludo to pull a HeelFaceTurn, But Ludo is then [[DemonicPossession controlled by the spirit of]] [[KnightOfCerebus Toffee]], who temporarily ''kills'' Moon and manages to effortlessly destroy the Magic High Commission, including the possibly permanent HeroicSacrifice of [[WhiteMage Lekmet]]. Moon fights Toffee, but to no avail, so she grabs what remains of her allies and escapes, with Toffee declaring that he's coming for Star. Moon then goes to Star to tell her what's going on and that they now have to leave Earth, possibly forever. [[TearJerker Star then goes downstairs and tells Marco how she really feels]], leaving the latter speechless and Jackie having a HeroicBSOD; Star leaves, Marco runs after her, and by the time he makes it, Star's room is completely gone, leaving the old room from the first episode. [[DownerEnding Cut to credits.]] Not even the MoodWhiplash ending theme plays this time.]] To put into perspective, this is a ''fantastic'' episode in my eyes, and I was eager to see where it leads...then I found out that this is the season finale and the outcome will happen in a few months. What is it with shows ending a season on these kinds of notes, anyway? It's like the WebVideo/NostalgiaCritic said in his Sonic review: "Leaving us on a cliffhanger doesn't guarantee a sequel, it just pisses us off!" I'm glad this isn't the last episode, because if it was then it'd pretty much suffer the same fate as WesternAnimation/SonicSatAM or the aforementioned WesternAnimation/TeenTitans. Even then, it's kind of a dick move to just have a season end on this kind of note. Now I know how some people felt with [[Recap/AvatarTheLastAirbenderTheCrossroadsOfDestiny Avatar's season 2 finale]].
**
squadallahthistle: For me, just the entire latter half of Season 2 of WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil was enough to turn me off of the show. Now, I'm OK with a show veering into dramatic territory every once in a while, ''Gravity Falls'' did it well (except for "Dipper and Mabel VS the Future"), but the way ''Star VS the Forces Of Evil'' did it just seemed uncomfortable to me. First, Marco and Jackie got together. Then, Starco, which I used to ship HARD, became possible pedophilia after Marco spent 16 years trapped in another dimension. They tried to justify it by saying he doesn't remember much, but it still doesn't feel right. Then, the world just seems to keep beating down on Star, culminating in her [[spoiler:having to leave Earth]]. I'm sorry, didn't this show used to be a comedy? The comedic elements that made me love the show in the first place seem to be overshadowed so much by the drama (and creepiness) of the latter half of Season 2 that I don't even care about when the next episodes will come out. Everyone else on this site sees it as improvement, but I see it as jumping the shark. I'm not the only one who thinks this either, many of my friends on YouTube feel the same way.
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* Tropers/{{TommyTiger}}: I have a different DMOS. While I used to like the series, I now hate it (because Mickey was the [[ButtMonkey punchbag]] instead of Donald, who [[KarmaHoudini not only got away with everything, but got rewarded]]). What made me pull a "FaceHeelTurn" against the series? "Al Rojo Vivo", particularly its [[DudeNotFunny offensive ending]]. I'm describing it: Mickey and Minnie are together, and everything looks fine. But what happens next? Mickey gets kissed, and then [[spoiler:Mickey's pants fall, exposing his red shorts and getting the bulls against him to ensure he's not going to have a HappyEnding after all]]. Whoop de friggin doo. This is the worst case of YankTheDogsChain and DiabolusExMachina combined.

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* Tropers/{{TommyTiger}}: I have a different DMOS. While I used to like the series, I now hate it (because Mickey was the [[ButtMonkey punchbag]] instead of Donald, who [[KarmaHoudini not only got away with everything, but got rewarded]]). What made me pull a "FaceHeelTurn" against the series? "Al Rojo Vivo", particularly its [[DudeNotFunny offensive ending]]. I'm describing it: Mickey and Minnie are together, and everything looks fine. But what happens next? Mickey gets kissed, and then [[spoiler:Mickey's pants fall, exposing his red shorts and getting the bulls against him to ensure he's not going to have a HappyEnding after all]]. Whoop de friggin doo. This is the worst case of YankTheDogsChain and DiabolusExMachina combined.combined (edit: I've rewatched the series ever since I wrote this, and I now find it mediocre at worst. I still hate episodes like this, however).
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** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes about. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything from inside his bubble. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, [[IdiotHero Link]] decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!

to:

** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes about. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just And here's where my moment starts: just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything from inside his bubble. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, [[IdiotHero Link]] decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes about. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything with him. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, Link decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!

to:

** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes about. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything with him. from inside his bubble. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, Link [[IdiotHero Link]] decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes out. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], and trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything with him. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, Link decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!

to:

** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes out.about. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], and trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything with him. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, Link decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes out. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called the WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], and trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything with him. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, Link decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible

to:

** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes out. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called the WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], and trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything with him. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, Link decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible
AndThatsTerrible!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None



to:

** [=SenorCornholio=]: Admittedly, these cartoons are sometimes guilty pleasures of mine because of how SoBadItsGood they can get. But even I can admit when a truly bad episode comes out. And I'm listing a moment from WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda on here, mainly because it used to be part of the above show when it was called the WesternAnimation/SuperMarioBrosSuperShow. It had the usual Creator/DiCEntertainment cheese, some interesting scenarios, epic monster designs reminiscent of [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI the first]] [[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink two games]] that were out at that time, and a Zelda that was a genuine ActionGirl compared to the DamselInDistress she was in those games. However, the final broadcast episode of the show, "The Moblins Are Revolting", was just infuriating. The premise, of course, is that [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Ganon's minions revolt against him due to one too many failures]], and trap him in a bubble that can only be burst with the Triforce of Power, and throw him down a BottomlessPit (go ahead, make your [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames CD-i jokes]]). Their attempts to take the Triforce of Wisdom [[EpicFail end as you would expect]], [[UpToEleven without Link or Zelda fighting them]]. Seeing this, the two in question come to the conclusion that Ganon isn't home, and so go to take the Triforce of Power, which is guarded by a sole Dodongo that is soundly defeated. Just as they're about to take it, Ganon arrives after figuring out how to escape the pit, but can't even do anything with him. So instead of ignoring Ganon, or trying to keep him from the Triforce, Link decides to fool around and toss him like a volleyball, ''[[WhatAnIdiot right onto the Triforce of Power]]'', thus freeing Ganon and allowing him to resume his dark designs. Zelda is naturally pissed at him, to which Link tries to remedy the situation with an "[[WellExcuseMePrincess Excuuuuse me, princess]]" and then after Zelda storms off, comments that "at least I still have a job". [[HarsherInHindsight And then the series stopped until Captain N gave it a proper sendoff.]] I normally don't have that much of a problem with Link in this show, but here, I just wanted to slap him. He came across as probably ''less'' competent in that one scene than all of Ganon's minions combined, and didn't even show any remorse for it. If the Triforce of Courage ever got introduced in this show before its untimely discontinuation, it'd take a miracle for me to believe this inept moron deserved it. Heck, CD-i Link, for all his MemeticMutation, actually came off as more of a hero. AndThatsTerrible
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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** Tropers/{{Peridonyx}}: "Strike." Oscar cheats his own daughter and gets away with it, the adults invoke DisproportionateRetribution via ParentalAbandonment against the kids for "going on strike" (i.e., ignoring chores until the kids' allowances are raised), and [[OnlySaneMan Trudy]]... goes along with all this. By the way, the "strike" was on the news, right? So did nobody think to call the cops ("Hello, Officer, I'd like to report some large-scale ParentalNeglect -- and my proof is right there on TV.")?! Ultimately, I've invoked EpilepticTrees about this episode: [[AWizardDidIt Al Roker secretly brainwashed the adults.]]
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* ''DethroningMoment/{{Futurama}}''

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