2 REIR,EII2II:IOII,33EACON www.thebehrendbeacon.com CAMPUS CULTURE r f 7 r ;Jr .V • t : • / , • IMMO 1011* - • / • TELEVISION "OH YEAH!" OH NO, FAMILY GUY "Don't you ever compare me to Family Guy, you hear me, Kyle? Compare me to Family Guy again, and, so help me, I will kill you where you stand! Do you have any idea what it's like? Everywhere I go: `Hey Cartman you must like Family Guy, right?' `Hey your sense of humor reminds me of Family Guy, Cartman!' I am nothing like Family Guy! When I make jokes, they are inherent to a story! Deep situational and emotional jokes based on what is relevant and has a point, not just one random inter changeable joke after another!" South Park hit the nail on the head with that quote. Never has there been a show as undeservingly popular and brainless. Family Guy is a series whose basic idea is a complete carbon copy of The Simp sons (drunkard father, a gambling but voice-of-reason wife, a daughter who is a social outcast, a stupid son, and a dog with human qualities). The only difference is that instead of a baby that never talks, this one never shuts up. The stories, while mostly being plot rip offs of much higher quality shows, just feature the same kind of joke but with a different pop culture reference each time. "Remember the time..." insert Chuck Norris, George Bush, Kool-Aid Man, etc. These references hide the fact that none of the episodes have a good story. The bad writing of the shows can easily be hidden and disguised with unrelated references and parodies, which take no talent to write and fool the casual viewer into thinking they are watching a television show. Numerous talented artists working today have spoken out against Family Guy, 2 4 NO ‘i&V a• 4 e e r Creative Corrimons: pHeLe Even after being cancelled in 2001, Family Guy gained a cult like following strong enough to raise it from the dead. Valentine's Day. Yes, it's that beloved time of year again. The time when pink and red hearts pop up everywhere you turn, Hallmark displays new and improved love-themed cards and girls be come either excitedly happy or very angry at hearing any talk of love. Oh, the power that this day has over humanity. No longer is Valentine's Day just about showing love and affection, but it has become a tormenting hassle for most of the population. "I don't care for Valentine's Day too much because it's too overly dra matic," says division of undergraduate studies freshman Ny-ke Stewart. "If you don't have a valentine, people are like, 'What am I gonna do?' People expect to be with a guy or a girl." For those who are single, this day conjures up feelings and memories that some may wish to forget. People in relationships might enjoy the whole "lovey-dovey" aspects of this day, but those single girls and guys who have been through heartbreak know that they cannot escape any reminders a week or even a month leading up to Feb. 14. It does not really matter if you are in a relationship because everyone has had bad experiences with love, and Valentine's Day does nothing to help. Valentine's Day is a holiday like many others, full of so many sweets and sweet moments, yet so taunting in the worst way. American Greetings has a Twitter account specifically for Valentine's Day and even has a count down on their website to the second. While Va lentine's . Day does not have to be about having an intimate connection with someone, society leads us to believe this: you either have someone, or you don't. If you don't, then that's too bad. Ben and Jerry's will benefit off of your lone liness. So will Redbox. Everyone wants someone to share Valentine's Day with. Anyone who disagrees with this statement ei ther does not realize it or just refuses to admit it. People in rela tion DAN KINEM senior reporter SHANNON EHRIN asst. culture editor trying to make people realize the show is completely overrated, generic trash. Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly has frequently panned the show, grading with a "D" and naming it the worst show of the 1999-2000 television season. John Kricfalusi, creator of Ren & Stimpy said, "If you're a kid wanting to be a car toonist today, and you're looking at Family Guy, you don't have to aim very high. You can draw Family Guy when you're ten years old. You don't have to get any better than that to become a professional car toonist. The standards are extremely low." Matt Stone and Trey Parker, the creators of South Park, compare the show's repu tation among other animated shows to the way serious musicians feel about Justin Timberlake. The main problem is not only do many people think this show is hilarious, but people are constantly quoting the show and running off at the mouth about how it is "The best show on TV!," not realizing that they themselves could write the show. It is as basic as a show gets and takes lit tle-to-no talent to write and produce. Shows like The Simpsons and South Park, which have talented writers working on them actually have morals and points to their shows. At least 85 percent of the jokes further the plots, unlike the closer to five percent on Family Guy. South Park is a relevant social satire and The Simpsons shows the importance of family. The episodes make points and go beyond random gag humor. To reiterate the genius of the South Park quote above, the episode "Cartoon Wars" satirizes Family Guy's writing staff by showing manatees in tank verbs, nouns and pop culture references by putting them together to make jokes in each episode. As ridiculous as it may sound, it feels like that could easily be the case, and if you can't realize that then you are pretty Nearly every plot on Family Guy has al ready been done years before. The fact that the show came back on the air is one of the biggest television tragedies to date. The only thing that can be said to people who actually think Family Guy is a good show is, "good for you, keep frying your brain with this mindless drivel. It sepa rates the people who find humor in ran domized poorly written gags and people l who enjoy a show that has quality and is equally as good as it is funny." It cannot be said enough, 'please do not support this show. /The more it is on, the dumber its audience becomes. , , ` ~ , ri ' Behrend students have ( .il co IV', Eli t • ' 1 ' . **mixed feelings ships have that extra pressure to make this day "right," when usually all of the planning goes awry and nothing turns out the way it was supposed to be anyway. "People who don't have someone say it's a waste of money," says Kevin Jackson, a senior majoring in psychology. "For those who are in a relationship, it's a day to be extra romantic." Valentine's Day was originally not a day of love. Although the holiday dates back to 500 AD, gifts were not given until as recently as the middle ages. Granted, that is a long time ago, but Valentine's Day has evolved im mensely since then. At that time there were no Kay Jewelers or Hallmarks. Life was much, much simpler and all the fuss of Valentine's Day' did not exist...entirely. People did take the time to give small tokens to show their affection, but this did not include lavish diamonds or intri cate. bouquets of red roses. These were heartfelt gi ft s. Even the words "I love you" do not have the same impact as they used to, because they are thrown around so much. Saying those words, at one time, was better than anything money could buy. Flowers are lovely and smell wonderful, but they die. Chocolate is delicious, but the taste does not last. Jewelry either tarnishes, is lost or broken. "It's a commercial holiday. Another way for big companies to make money," says Willester House, a freshman major ing in Electrical Engineering Technology According to American Greetings, "the average con sumer [spends] nearly $l2O on the holiday." That's an astounding number considering how much debt people seem to be in these days. The overall figures are staggering, and this will be another huge year with an es timated $l4 billion expected to be spent on gifts. Valentine's Day is technically a holiday, but really "Valentine's Day is just another day," Stewart says Hopeless romantic movie goers can't be pleased BRIE SPISHOCK skfwriter What ever happened to the romantic film? The inspired plots of classic literature have all been drawn out in film, from the simple love story "Romeo and Juliet," to hip, modern versions of the same tale. These modern "Romeo + Juliet" stories that demean the true love story do so by pre senting viewers with Leonardo DiCaprio and his crew decked out in tacky Hawaiian shirts, wielding handguns. True heroes of romance like emotionally distraught Heath cliff of Wuthering Heights have been replaced by the creepy vampire Edward Cullen in 71vi light, who after 107 years. of life still has no depth to his character. Using the perfect cheek bones of Rob Pattinson, 71vi light has made nearly every girl in America want to be the emotionless, dependent rag that is Bella Swan. After a slow progression of settling for less and less in ro mantic film heroes, girls nowa days go goo-goo for practically every "sensitive" male charac ter in any movie and expect every guy they meet at Wal mart to be "the one." The demise of the romance film is not solely the fault of the overdramatic and spiritless "chick flick." There is another culprit for the end of chivalric romance in: film. The male gender (like Leo DiCaprio's character in Ti tanic), after years of settling for death in the cold Atlantic waters because their size six girlfriend refuses to move over three inches and let him on the door, have created their own crude form of entertainment mocking the traditional love story This is called the "romantic ulture comedy." Take something as awkward in itself as love and add outrageous scenarios like catching your sensitive organs in zippers on prom night or using your girlfriend's favorite luffa as a plunger after an un expected bowel eruption, and who is not going to get uncom fortable on a first date? Although the romantic com edy usually ends happily, is the crude mental abuse the audi ence is put through to get there worth it? A suggestion for any of the men out there: take your Valentine's Day pickup lines from Clark Gable or perhaps Humphrey Bogart and leave the vulgar Adam Sandler quotes for some other day. And ladies, read Breaking Dawn before committing your heart and first born • child to Rob Pattinson as Edward Cullen. FILM =IIIMZI