The team spends the entire episode complaining that kids these days don’t enjoy a real childhood, even as it becomes increasingly clear that these changes in Risk E are probably for the best. Dee can understand that Frank’s childhood game here (in which he is encouraged to sexually abuse the waitresses) is bad, but he doesn’t quite grasp the concept that the mascots from his own childhood are mainly based on racist cartoons. It wasn’t ideal either. As always, the team comes within inches of reaching self-awareness, but is quickly pulled back into the comfort of rosy memories of the past.
In many ways, the entire episode feels like a nostalgia call, and how do people fool themselves with the idea that everything was so much better. go inside comment section You’ll see a lot of Generation Xs yearning for any ad or news broadcast from the ’80s and a time when everything was simpler and purer. But was the world really simpler and purer back then, or did they feel that way because they were kids back then? For the “Always Sunny” gang, the answer is definitely the latter, and it’s not the first time they’ve made this mistake…