Yeah, it's what happens, hehPossibly, it's a fair comment that could be perhaps viewed from different angle also.(Friends presents a slightly different case in which there are story arches, but the focus is on the immediate, the present, and on mostly on stand-alone episodes with situational comedy.)They don't? Marge not talking to Homer till he fixes it, Peter in family guy (that's the dad, yeah?) getting the cold shoulder from his family till he *realises* he's done wrong then rectifies it so can be accepted again by his wifeThe characters do stupid things, but they do not really suffer or feel the consequences for their actions, because by the end of the episode, everything returns to its original state.It's not swept under the rug, it's resolved, re the periodic elements of the cartoon, which I described, so we're not disagreeing, or are weThis implies a far more fluid ethical system in which everything is quickly swept under the rug.Sure, that's because the American Fi-gamma morals win out, the person doesn't realise their wrong at first, but then they do, and it's all corrected, the system is upheld.The characters themselves also do not generally think that they are guilty in their actions or transgressed some unwritten moral boundary, but they only care until they personally feel the fall out.Sure they try, but most often, almost always happens, is it fails. These characters are forced by their spouses, the moral code, to revert back to the correct way of doing it or they'll be permanently shunned. It's in a way, "forced" morals, which ties in with aggressor Fi quite well.The moral enforcement is also questionable, because the main characters (e.g. Homer, Peter, Fry) frequently get around their moral problem or solve it through equally questionable (and unconventional) ethical means.
I'm concerned about the two of us speaking past each other, perhaps we've observed different things with the workings of Gamma SF in relationships.
Oh, who's Fry? (i'm not an avid fan of these cartoons, but I've seen quite a several times when channel hopping).
I'll grant that Friends could be more involved due to story line continuations, but i'm curious, what makes you say it's Beta? I see you write where the characters fall, what do you mean by this?
Oh, Southpark goes against the grain of the aboves, perhaps that's more Beta?