

The Simpsons comes to mind. There’s usually a plot, but it’s not too complicated and each episode is self contained for the most part. Seinfeld is similar with possibly less plot (it is a show about nothing after all).
And yet she didn’t ask him about his highschool mascot.
Star Tropics for the NES.
Hey, someone I haven’t spoken to in years is messaging me…oh
I learned about 9/11 because it happened when I was in high school.
I’m going through a divorce right now. For the most part the friends and people I’ve told have largely been supportive of me. I think it helped that I had friends that were my own and not shared with my ex-wife. The shared friends we had together have mostly supported her, but they were her friends before we had met. One of the things I have done since splitting is getting more involved with my hobby that is improv theater. Finding a hobby where you are around others can help with building a group of friends who know you not through your ex or past relationship. It would make it more likely that they would support you and not her.
I’m surprised no one has mentioned Rocko’s Modern Life yet
2 + 2 = 4
2 x 2 = 4
3 + 3 = 6
Therefore 3 x 3 = 6
The Simpsons
I hated Donald Trump long before he became president.
Which was the style at the time.
I’m surprised nobody’s mentioned The Critic yet. It was a good show that was screwed over by two networks. Another one is Dilbert, which was based on the comic strip. I think Scott Adams was less involved with it than the strip which made it better (plus he wasn’t as insane back then).
The adult party cartoon might be obscure enough to make the list.
it’s not.
A buddy of mine owned a video game store that I worked at for a bit. The pay was crappy and the hours were unstable and random, but I do miss working there.
I’m not a nerd. Nerds are smart.
Oh crap, I should’ve thought of a cool quote before pressing the but