Subject: This comment made me realize something else about Ash.
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Posted on: 2013-03-31 16:51:00 UTC

It's typical in a kid's show for the protagonist to be able to solve a wide variety of problems, but Ash is pathologically incapable of failing, even when a problem falls completely outside the range of what he could conceivably do. If he encounters a problem that determination, friendship, and deus ex machina can't get him through, the writers try to cover up that there was ever a problem. This is particularly bad since he, due to writing laziness and Aura of Smooth, is able to cure the psychological problems of every single Pokémon he meets without any effort whatsoever, especially fire-types.

The Unova series is really awful about this. One episode is basically "Oh, hey Tepig! You've been abandoned by your Trainer, just like every other fire starter I've ever met, but with the added condition that you've been alone, forced into a life of desperation, and expecting your Trainer to return for what may have been months? Here, come with me, and everything will be all better. You'll literally forget that you ever had any sort of problem three episodes from now!" You know, despite the fact that Charmander/Charizard's character was interesting due to the way it reacted to a very similar problem even seasons after Ash found it, and Charmander wasn't even suffering visible abandonment issues when it had been found. The Tepig was emotionally scarred by its original trainer tying it up and practically starving it to keep it from following him, and Ash just takes Tepig in and it drops any repercussions that it might have due to an objectively horrible past.

That's Ash's main Canon Stu trait for me, aside from the one mentioned before where he wins battles with no effort and horrible strategies. Whenever he's directly involved, logical responses to anything, even responses that could make interesting subplots or provide distinguishing experiences for characters, go out the window.

That, and the fact that he was "the chosen one" for two separate prophecies and one secret organization in three completely unlinked regions, but that's peanuts to the bad psychology and the total affronts to logic he creates.

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