NOTE:This is a sandbox of cleanupstuff I will add on the Terrible TV Shows & Episodes Wiki (that's if Qualtitipedia doesn't shut down due to this RFC still going on https://qualitipedia.miraheze.org/wiki/Requests_for_Comment/Closing_Qualitipedia, the Reception wikis likely getting recreated if they close, and I possibly return to Miraheze) once my block expires there so I can improve my edits for many at good and Encyclopedia SpongeBobia once I create an account there on my sixteen birthday due to Fandom disabling my account next year. So please do not delete this as this is a sandbox and not an actual article, especially since I have been working on The Loud House part for a very long time now.

The Loud House (seasons 1-3) change

Lincoln Loud (The Loud House, seasons 4-present) change

Template:CharacterInfobox

Lincoln Loud is the main protagonist of the Nickelodeon series ', its upcoming live-action counterpart, and its, and a supporting character in its spin-off '. He is an 11 year old (later 12 year old as of "Present Danger") boy who lives in a house with his ten sisters and two parents. With the help of his friends, he finds new ways to survive in such a large family every day.

While he was a mainly well-written character in Seasons 1-3, unfortunately he got flanderized and derailed in Season 4, but became a bit more likable in Season 5.

"Dang It!" Qualities change

  1. He has now received major flanderization. He went from a kindhearted child who cares for his friends and family, to a bigger and more selfish jerk than he already was. While he has been jerky sometimes in the earlier seasons, it wasn't his defining trait. But in these seasons, this takes it up to eleven, almost as much as to how jerky some of his sisters were. Sound familiar?
  2. His plans for the most part aren't as impressive or fun as they were in the earlier seasons. They're mainly now more jerkish, stupid, and gullible.
  3. Like SquarePants in from, he has been reduced to a full on huge clumsy butt-monkey, and whilst he had torture moments in the first 3 seasons, in the later he has become a full on punching bag to everyone around him, especially Chandler, turning his fine clumsy character into, well, a horribly written butt-monkey.
  4. His clumsiness has also been taken a higher level:
    • In "", he and the Loud siblings acted like insecure idiots throughout the whole episode. He also thought of hiding Flip in the attic to avoid letting his parents know.
    • In "", Lincoln serves chicken nuggets for funeral food leftovers, which is considered to be one of the stupidest things to come from him.
  5. In "" (the episode that started his flanderization), he and planned on staging a crime for them to save, which is not heroic at all for a superhero themed episode and commit an act of selfishness by catnapping the Kitty to get the role, which is considered animal cruelty.
  6. In the episode "", he and his friends make such a big deal ofni and her friends hanging out at Gus' Games and Grub and then he and his friends try to get Leni to leave Gus' Games and Grub. In fact, during the final round of their challenge, all of them start fighting and destroying all the arcade games which cause everyone else to run away from Gus' Games and Grub and they even injure the owner of the arcade, and somehow they are allowed back in the arcade when they are supposed to be banned from the arcade since they've done much worse in the arcade and they even injured the poor owner. You think he would have learned his lesson from Season 1's "Space Invader", right? Not helping by the fact that Gus getting hurt would later be brought back in "Runaway McBride", as if the writers did not learn their lesson from the fans.
  7. He has jumped quicker to conclusions:
    • In "", he worries that his then-teacher at the time has bad things to say about him, so he tries to delay his parent-teacher conference, but it turns out she had no bad things about Lincoln, meaning that he overreacted over nothing and his actions got him a week of detention and also a week of being grounded from his parents when this could've been avoided if he hadn't jumped the gun.
    • In "Family Bonding", he thinks his new neighbors are evil spies just because he saw them moving stuff around their house late at night, and somehow ended up being right about them in the end, which was really nonsensical and absurd.
    • In "Don't Escar-Go" (the first episode in Season 6 in terms of airing order), he alongside with his friends, try and sabotage Clyde's dinner in order not going to France to do cooking classes.
    • In "", he and the rest of his siblings break their parents' wedding vase that was a gift, and at Rita and Lynn Sr.'s wedding, they act stupid and they don't get rid of the vase, where they then wreck the wedding by telling the people there what to do, and not focusing on their plan instead. In addition, as a result of this, he gets captured by Mr. Gurdle and Mrs. Gurlde respectively, where he fades away (which happens to all of the Loud siblings in this episode), all because of a broken vase, of which Lynn points that out. In the end, Lisa fixes everything before the kids disappear forever and Lincoln comes back.
    • In "" (the season 6A finale in terms of airing order), he and the rest of the siblings go to Fairway University to sabotage Lori's college life.? In addition, he and his siblings make Lori fail one of her college tests, and get no consequences at the end, making them karma houdinis. Lori does forgive them, however, similar to "Cheaper by the Dozen" and "Don't You Fore-get About Me".
  8. In the infamous 2021 live-action movie, A Loud House Christmas as well as the rerun special, A Loud House Christmas Holiday Party, he is at his absolute worst as he, along with Clyde, sabotages his sisters and parents' plans to have the perfect Christmas ever and the rest of the Louds' plans of going to Miami and the Royal Woods' Christmas Tree Light Ceremony. He was also played by Wolfgang Schaffer, a terrible, annoying, and bland actor. Thankfully, he gets a partial punishment in the end, by doing community service for the rest of his Christmas break.
    • There are some better, funny, and solid actors that should have played him. The best offenders include Jack Dylan Grazer, Tom Holland, and his animation actors.
  9. The episode "" very surprisingly proves he cannot take criticism, as he tells the rest of the family to just "ignore critics", though this technically contracts earlier episodes as they showed that he had thick skin and could accept criticism.
  10. His friendships are not written well at times, for example, the episode "All the Rage" has him and his friends taking advantage of Clyde's anger issues by figuring out what ticks him off to win dodgeball from the 8th grade bullies at the middle school. Why would Lincoln take advantage his best friend who's been there for him?
  11. Despite being the main character, in the fourth season, he almost rarely receives any focus at all.
  12. While it is nice to see him getting more focus on the show's fifth season onward, however, he has been getting so many episodes (especially in the sixth season, most notably in Season 6A) to the point where his parents, sisters, and other supporting characters have not been getting episodes focused on them unlike in previous seasons. Most of the episodes that directly focus on Lincoln in Seasons 5-present are about him and his friends or hanging out and doing something separately with Clyde. In fact, this is also a similar case with Clyde, Liam, Rusty, Zach, and to a lesser extent,, Lynn,, and.
    • Sometimes he is shoehorned in an episode and/or is only used as filler, like "Deep Cuts", "Don't You Fore-Get About Me", "Ghosted!", "Blinded by Science", "Diamonds Are for Never", "Dad Reputation", "Fam Scam", "A Bug's Strife", etc.
    • However, this is obviously excusable since he's the main protagonist of the series.

Good Qualities change

  1. His voice is still mostly nice, thanks to his voice actors doing a nice job.
  2. Despite his jerkiness, he still loves his family and friends. In addition, he sometimes has his original personality.
    • To be fair, his selfishness is admit tingly justified since he is very young and has to deal with his annoying sisters.
  3. He still has his fair share of good and is still well-written in a sizable amount of episodes such as:
    • In the season 4 premiere "Friended! with the Casagrandes", his video chat with Ronnie Anne Santiago was nice and exciting to watch.
  4. In the following seasons, his relationship with his sisters is still now positive, especially with Lori, Leni, and Luna who now really love him, (for example in "Season's Cheatings", "Lori Days", etc).
  5. The Loud House wouldn't be the same without him, since he is the main protagonist of the show and franchise and is the focus on many episodes.
  6. He still has a some impressive and fun plans, leading to a huge amount of funny moments in the series.

Trivia change

  • As of season 5, he now attends Royal Woods Middle School and has special talents of his magic shows and the Action News, and would eventually turn 12 years old in the season 6 premiere "Present Danger".
    • In that same episode, according to Gus, he also shares his same birthday on the day as the Fox Quintupplets' birthday.
  • As mentioned above in BQ#12, he has more focus in seasons 5-present and The Loud House Movie.
  • He is similar to SpongeBob from ' who are funny, clumsy, annoying, mischievous, geniuses, creating plans, nerdy, have buck teeth and freckles.
  • Some people have believed that Lincoln is unlucky, although he is not unlucky because he's just a butt-monkey which the writers made a copy from SpongeBob SquarePants and Gumball Watterson. Lincoln and SpongeBob were both clumsy characters. He has been mistaken for an unlucky character because of the episode "" in which he is not bad luck in the series.

Videos change

Comments change

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Category:Nickelodeon characters Category:Mean-spirited Category:Punching bags Category:Jerks Category:Idiotic characters Category:Bad characters from good media Category:Average characters Category:The Loud House characters Category:Protagonists Category:Flanderized Category:Annoying characters Category:Redeemed jerks Category:Hilarious characters Category:Males Category:American characters Category:Egotistic characters Category:Cartoon characters Category:Humans Category:Butt-monkeys Category:Siblings Category:Self-aware Category:Characters Category:Aware of how bad they are Category:Characters with good voice acting Category:Children Category:Lucky characters Category:Destructive characters Category:Reckless characters Category:Bad versions of good characters Category:Titular characters Category:Characters who can't take criticism Category:Accident-prone characters

Heavy Meddle (The Loud House) change

Template:EpisodeInfobox

"Heavy Meddle" is the first half of the second episode in the first season of '.

Eye Can't (The Loud House) change

  1. Continuity error/plot hole (possible): The plot of this episode starts because Lisa's vision was going bad but the season 2 episode "Making The Grade" revealed that Lisa underwent laser eye surgery in order to improve her vision. In that case, why didn't she choose to undergo this kind of surgery again instead of trying to weasel her way out of the eye doctor? However, while you may assume that LASIK eye surgery has worn off since that episode, however, according to this article, laser eye surgery never wears off.[1]
    • However, because since the aforementioned eye surgery was done by her and not a professional, it is possible that she had a flaw of some sort when she was doing the procedure.
    • It is also implied in ', as in one of the scenes, she tries to high-five Lola with no glasses, however, ends up hitting her instead.
    • It is also implied another time in "The Loudly Bones", because it seems like she does have trouble without her glasses.

Sources change

The Loud House (seasons 4-present) change

NOTE:This is a sandbox of a massive edit on ' once my block expires on the Terrible TV Shows & Episodes Wiki.

|Caption=

Lesson learned, if a original reaches a fraction of the same or similar heights of seasons 6-8 of ', it has to either get screwed over, and move over to Nicktoons, or jumped the shark, hit seasonal rot, and have its goodwill ruined. With the case of this show, it did the latter in these seasons... becoming the Nickelodeon version of modern Guy.

|Running Time = 11 Minutes
22 minutes (special episodes only)
45 minutes ("Schooled!" only)
|Release Date = May 27, 2019 - present (seasons 4-present) The Loud House is an American animated television series created by Chris Savino. It premiered on Nickelodeon on May 2, 2016, and is still airing new episodes to this day. Since March 11, 2022, the show is currently in its sixth season., the same can't be said for the fourth and fifth seasons. The fifth season is known to be the season where the show officially jumped the shark. Depending on your view, season 6 can be seen as a massive improvement over the last two seasons.

Plot change

Lincoln Loud is also the only boy and the middle child in a family of eleven children residing in the fictional town of Royal Woods, Michigan. He has ten sisters with distinctive personalities consisting of bossy eldest child Lori, ditzy fashionista Leni, musician Luna, comedian Luan, athletic Lynn Jr., gloomy poetic goth Lucy, polar opposite twins Lana and Lola, child genius Lisa, and baby Lily. Lincoln occasionally breaks the fourth wall to explain to the viewers the chaotic conditions and sibling relationships of the household, and continually devises plans to make his life in the Loud House better.

To avoid problems and to be loved by his sisters, Lincoln continually devises plans to make his life in the Loud House better, without his parents finding out.

In the fifth season, the Loud siblings also aged up a year with Lori going to Fairway University, Lincoln going to middle school, and Lily going to preschool.

Why It Shows Our Hate Now change

  1. The main problem with these seasons is that they lack the same charm as the first two seasons and to a lesser extent, the third season. This is because the show's creator, Chris Savino, was no longer in charge due to being fired from Nickelodeon for sexual harassment allegations in 2017 when the third season was still in production. While Nickelodeon has every right to fire him for his actions, it still doesn't change the fact that the series went downhill during Season 3. it still doesn't change the fact that the series went downhill during season 3. Plus, Jessica Borutski of Bunnicula fame became showrunner in season 5, replacing Kyle Marshall, originally director for season 4, and she is also known for contributing to some of the the more infamous works in cartoon history, such as the Stimpy Show infamous adult animated reboot called Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Cartoon", the ' spin-off called ThunderCats Roar, Bunnicula, and more, among others, along with Pat Pakula, who also had a lousy track record with directing episodes of The Chicken Squad, a mostly poorly-received Disney Junior show, and as a storyboard artist on ', a mostly universally panned animated feature. Understandably and unformantely, Borutski and Pakula contributed to the series going in the wrong direction.
    • It doesn't help with the fact that both the fifth and sixth season (especially the second half of the fifth season, despite being better than the first half and the sixth season being an improvement over the last two seasons, depending on your view) sped up the decline in quality since it shows off some of the worst episodes of the whole show and even the flanderization of certain characters, like Leni Loud, have gotten cranked up to 11.
    • To make matters worse, as if The Fairly OddParents: Fairly Odder wasn't enough, they announced plans for a live-action TV show, making this show age rather poorly.
    • Though this can be seen as karma for Chris Savino because of the fact that he ruined seasons 5 and 6 of '.
    • Out of these seasons so far, season 5 is considered the worst of the bunch by many people, because of how it showed so much flanderization, and that it also made the show almost completely "jump the shark" with its premiere "Schooled!", where Lincoln is forced to go to a middle school in Canada due to how how he had way too much unnecessary amounts of torture.
  2. Similar to ', Guy, the final two seasons of ', ', the third season of, ', the Dhar Mann videos, and the multiple atrocious clones of the Dhar Mann videos, the writing has become mostly pretty poor as the show often recycles and rehashes episodes from the previous seasons, many times even from other TV shows and movies, and barely from books, despite most of the rehashes being good or decent. Many of the writers also don't seem to show any respect for the show’s fans, proven by how they have disrespected their audience's intelligence several times, despite the fact that these seasons are generally considered better than the final two seasons of The Fairly OddParents. While this could be due to the writers running out of ideas, it can become way too repetitive at times. Even more baffling is that unlike most other cartoons that experience seasonal rot, The Loud House (including The Fairly OddParents as said earlier) wasn't even five years old by the time its fourth season premiered, proving how limited storytelling ideas have become with this series. Here is a complete list of the rehashed and/or recycled episode plots:
    1. The season 4 premiere, "Friended with the Casagrandes", while good, is a rehash of season 3's "White Hare" and "Be Stella My Heart". Lincoln and his friend gang are replaced by Ronnie Anne, where the Casagrandes family, Sid Chang (who makes her first appearance in this episode as a minor recurring character in the show and later became a main character in the, Mr. Scully (who makes his debut in this episode and later became a reccuring character in the spin-off series]] and Royal Woods Elementary School is replaced with the Casagrandes Apartment.
    2. "Power Play with the Casagrandes", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "The Green House". Lincoln and his family (except for Lori) are also indeed really truly replaced by Ronnie Anne and her family, and this time it is Sergio who caused the energy to go down. The Loud House is also replaced by the Casagrandes Apartment.
    3. "Room for Improvement with the Casagrandes", while good, is a rehash of season 3's "Pipe Dreams". Rita, Lynn Sr. and the Loud family are replaced by Ronnie Anne, Sid and the Casagrandes Apartment residents. In addition, The Loud House is replaced by the Casagrandes apartment.
    4. "No Show with the Casagrandes", while it can be decent, is a rehash of season 1's "Sound of Silence". Lincoln and his family are replaced by Ronnie Anne and her family and the Casagrandes appearatment. In addition, the Noise-B-Gone 2000 is replaced by a fictional TV show called Adios Ana, Adios.
    5. "Lucha Fever with the Casagrandes", while it can be okay, is a rehash of season 1's "One Flu over the Loud House" and "Tough Hooky" from the Loud House graphic novel Family Tree, as both episodes involve sickness and "Tough Hooky" also revolves around Ronnie Anne faking sick in order to get out of doing something. Lincoln, his family, and Clyde are replaced with Ronnie Anne, her family, and Sid, and the Loud House is replaced with the Casagrandes Apartment.
    6. "A Mutt Above", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "Toads and Tiaras", as both episodes also do have someone also indeed trying to make someone very unsophisticated into a more proper person. Lincoln is replaced by Lana. Lana is also replaced by Charles. Lana is also the trainer instead of the trainee. Coincidentally, both episodes also star Lana in them.
    7. "Last Loud on Earth", while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of season 1's "The Price of Admission", season 2's "Mall of Duty", and season 4's "Washed Up", as both the first latter episode has Lincoln watching a scary movie despite the fact that his parents told him not too, and both the second and third latter episodes have Lincoln using Colonel Austin's methods of suriving a Zombie apoclypse that are similar to Lincoln's attempts of using his Rip Hardcore methods in the second and third latter episodes. This episode, however, has a more scary theme than "The Price of Admission", and Harold and Howard are added in. The Royal Woods Movie Theater is replaced with the Royal Woods Mall. Not to speak of, it's the sixth Lincoln centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    8. "Stall Monitor", while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of season 1's "Raw Deal", season 3's "White Hare", and season 3's "Predict Ability, as both "Raw Deal" have Lincoln going paranoid over nothing, and all of these episodes have Lincoln going paranoid. Grand Venture State Park is replaced with Royal Woods Elementary School, and additionally, Lincoln's friends are added in. And that episode can not be much better either. Not to speak of, it's the seventh Lincoln centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    9. "A Pimple Plan", while good, is very similar to ' season's 8 "Barnacle Face", the The Loud House comic "Hiccup Hijinks" from Live Life Loud!, and The Loud House season 3's "Stage Plight". Both "Barnacle Face" and "A Pimple Plan" involve someone trying to get something similar. Both "Stage Plight" and "A Pimple Plan" involve Luan being insecure about her love relationship with Benny, with those being shyness and pimple, where she does try to get closer to him, but keeps on stalling him due to her security. In the end, Benny also does tell her she didn't need to be afraid of anything. Both "Hiccup Hijinks" and "A Pimple Plan" involve someone trying to get rid of something. Royal Woods High School (though it is mentioned) is replaced with the Loud House and Tall Timbers Park. Also, in both episodes, Mr. Coconuts and Mrs. Appleblossom are briefly living puppets. Additionally, Luan's siblings are added, and there is no Theatre Club (Amy, Leo, Lyberti, Paravana, Rex, Ruby, Shannon, Spencer, Teen Girl, Unnamed Punk Girl, Jackie, and Errol) nor Mrs. Bernardo. Coincidentally, both episodes premiered in 2016, where "Stage Plight" aired in the USA eight months before "A Pimple Plan" on March 30, 2019.
    10. "Kings of the Con" is a reversal of season 2's "Pulp Friction". In "Pulp Friction", the Loud sisters also go out of their way to help Lincoln and Clyde with their comic book competition and, after Lincoln performs an act of kindness (combining their comic with one made by their principal, allowing him to share the credit), the boys win the competition. In this episode, the Loud sisters also only agree to go to the convention for the sake of winning a cameo in the Ace Savvy movie, and after Lincoln and Clyde commit an act of selfishness (kidnapping the Kitty and staging a rescue), they are disqualified and are ultimately featured in the movie as the Kitty's pooper-scoopers. Not to speak of, it's the eighth Lincoln centered episode in season 4 and the fourth Clyde centered episode, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    11. "Good Sports", while good and argumently the best episode of season 4 and this era, is a rehash of season 1's "Changing the Baby", as both episodes involve someone trying to hang out with their siblings but they are rejected and they eventually do find a companion that has similar interests to the main character. Lincoln, and his siblings (with the exceptions of Leni, Luna, and Lola) are replaced with Lynn, Lily is replaced with Mr. Grouse, and Clyde is not added in. Also, Mr. Grouse's house is added in.
    12. "Exchange of Heart", while good, is a rehash of the season 2's finale "Snow Way Down" and season 3's "The Spies Who Loved Me", as both episodes involve the main character (Clyde and Ronnie Anne respectively) wanting and trying to prove to their overprotective parents (Howard, Harold, Rosa, and Hector respectively) that they can take care of themselves. Lincoln is replaced with Clyde, and the McBride Holiday Home is replaced with the McBride house. Not to speak of, it's the fifth Clyde centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    13. "Community Disservice", while good, is a rehash of season 2's "Friend or Faux?", as both episodes involve a younger Loud sibling using a new Royal Woods Elementary School friend for their own wanting benefits, but later find out and realize how selfish it was of them to do those things. Lisa is replaced by Lola, and Ms. Shrinivas' classroom is replaced with Miss Allegra's classroom. Coincidentally, both episodes were written by Karla Sakas Shropshire.
    14. "Deep Cuts", while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of season 1's "Chore and Peace" and season 3's "Friendzy", as both "Chore and Peace" involve the Loud siblings protest and "Friendzy" involves the Loud siblings getting territorial and do fight against each other while getting help from their friends, but eventually cause damages. Lincoln is replaced by Luna, there is no Trashy, Clyde, nor Lincoln's friend gang, and the Royal Woods High School students are added in. The Loud House is also replaced by Royal Woods High School. And that episode can be not much better.
    15. "Game Off", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "Hand-Me-Downer" and season 3's "Tea Tale Heart", as both episodes have the main character (Lincoln and Lola) touching one of the characters stuff without their permission and they accidentally destroy them, and eventually try to get it back to normal. Lincoln is replaced by Lana and Lincoln's pink girly bike is also replaced with Total Trash Takedown. Not to speak of, it's the ninth Lincoln centered episode in Season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    16. "Write and Wrong", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "Picture Perfect" and season 2's "Future Tense", as both episodes involve the main character having the Loud siblings being changed into more proper/good characters. Both "Future Tense" involve Rita changing the Loud kids into more proper/nice characters. Lincoln is replaced by Rita.
    17. "Purrfect Gig", while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of season 1's "Two Boys and a Baby" and season 3's "Breaking Dad", as both episodes have one of the Loud siblings taking on some sitting task, and in "Two Boys and a Baby", they eventually find it's harder than they did expect where they do call their friend for help. Lincoln is replaced by Luna, and Clyde is replaced by Sam. The Loud House is replaced with the McBride house, and Howard, Harold, Cleopatra, Nepurrtiti, and Simon (who makes his debut in this episode as a one-time character) are added in. Not to speak of, it's the sixth Clyde centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    18. "Sister Act" (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons), while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of Lottle and Lisa, The Parent Trap film series, its TV shows, and its plays, as both media involve twin sisters switching their identities so they can fool their mom and dad. Lisa and Luise are replaced with Lana and Lola, Lisa and Luise's parents are replaced with Lynn Sr. and Rita, and all of the The Parent Trap characters are replaced with The Loud House characters.
    19. "Don't You Fore-get About Me" (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons) is a rehash of the ' season 2's "Arthur's Faraway Friend", as both episodes involve something similar. Arthur is replaced with Lori, where all of the Arthur characters are replaced with The Loud House. Arthur's House and the Baxter Residence are replaced with the titular Loud House place and Fairway University.
    20. "A Star Is Scorned", while good, is a rehash of season 4's "Kings of the Con", as both episodes involve someone losing the spotlight to sisters and they try to sabotage the second main character's plans. Lincoln is replaced by Lola, there is no Clyde nor the Judges, and Lincoln's sisters are replaced with Lily. The Royal Woods Convention is replaced with the Royal Woods Mall. Coincidentally, both episodes are in Season 4, and "Kings of the Con" premiered eight months before "A Star Is Scorned" on October 14, 2019. Not to speak of, it's the fourth Lori centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    21. "Senior Moment", while it can be decent, is a rehash of season 1's "Kick the Bucket List", as both episodes involve someone trying to also do all of the crazy activities from their list, but they realize that they are more focused on finishing the list than actually having fun. Lincoln is replaced by Lori. The Loud House and all of the places where Lincoln and Clyde go to in the second aforementioned episode are the McBride House, Dairyland Amoosement Park, the pet store, Tall Timbers Park, Gus's Games and Grub, and the Bus are replaced with the Royal Woods Movie Theater, Royal Woods High School, Tad's Lake House, and Hole In One-derland. Not to speak of, it's the fifth Lori centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    22. "A Dark and Story Night", while good, is a rehash of "Ghost of the Town" from the graphic comic novel After Dark, as both of the media involve one of the siblings telling stories. Lucy is replaced by Lincoln and there is no Clyde. Not to speak of, it's the thirteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    23. "Sand Hassles", while it can be decent, is a rehash of season 1's "In Tents Debate" and season 2's "No Such Luck", as both episodes involve the main character going to the beach (though in "No Such Luck", Lincoln and his family go to a beach which is supposedly Aloha Beach in the end). Lincoln is replaced by Lucy, there is no Lynn, and there is no supposed "bad luck". Lucy's friends (minus Betrand as he is now on the cruise with a lot of people and with his father) are added in. The Loud House is also replaced with Royal Woods Elementary School, where Lynn's place where she plays baseball is replaced by Lake St. Byron. That episode can also be not much better either.
    24. "How Double Dare You!", while good, is a rehash of season 2's "Legends" and the Sanjay and Craig season 1 episode "Trouble Dare", as both episodes involve someone competing on Double Dare to win a prize. Sanjay and Craig are replaced by Lincoln and his siblings, where Lisa is added in. The Sanjay and Craig characters who are in the episode are replaced by The Loud House characters. The Patels' house, and Sanjay's ant farm are also replaced by the Loud House. Not to speak of, it's the fourteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    25. "Snoop's On", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "Ties That Bind", as both episodes involve the Loud kids having false information about a Loud sibling. Lola is replaced by Luna, and Sam is added in. In addition, Royal Woods High School is added in too. Not to speak of, it's the fourteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time. Not to speak of, it's the fifteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    26. "Friends in Dry Places" is a rehash of season 3's "Middle Men", as both episodes involve Lincoln listening to Lynn's advice about Royal Woods Middle School, but he eventually gets in trouble for following her advices. Royal Woods Middle School (though it is mentioned multiple times in the episode) is replaced with Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore. Not to speak of, it's the sixteenth and final Lincoln centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    27. The season 4 finale, "Coupe Dreams", while it can be good, is a rehash of ' season 1's "Walk Don't Run", as both episodes involve someone taking care of too many characters, and eventually learn being overworked. Ronnie Anne is replaced with Lori, Sid is replaced with Leni. Great Lakes City is replaced with Royal Woods, where the titular Casagrandes Apartment, its places, the Great Lakes City Park are replaced with the titular Loud House. Not to speak of, it's the sixth and final Lori centered episode in season 4, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    28. The season 5 premiere "Schooled!" is a rehash of the SquarePants episode "Hall Monitor", season 1's "Get the Message", and The Fairly OddParents season 10 episode "Chloe Rules!", as both episodes involve someone being the hall montior (though in "Get the Message", there is a subplot of Lana and Lola being the Hall Monitor. SpongeBob is replaced by Lincoln, and all of the SpongeBob SquarePants characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. Lana and Lola are replaced by Lynn, whom is the hall monitor here. Mrs. Puff's Boating School and the Bikini Bottom streets are also replaced with the Loud House, Royal Woods Middle School, Fairway University, Baby Bunker Preschool, Canada, and Mapleton Middle School. That episode is also not much better.
    29. "", while decent, is a rehash of season 1's "No Guts, No Glori", but this time it replaces Lori with Leni, and Lily goes along with the parents too. It's also a rehash of season 4's "Leader of the Rack" as both episodes focus on Leni trying to be a cool leader and facing chaos until Fiona and Miguel help her. Also, in both episodes, Leni is a passenger of Vanzilla, with the driver comforting her.
    30. "Family Bonding", (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons), while it can be decent, steals the plot from the 1989 black comedy film titled The 'Burbs, but this time the Miller family aren't killers and instead they are spies. Ray Peterson is replaced with Lincoln and Art is replaced with Clyde, all of The 'Burbs characters are replaced with The Loud House characters, Ray's House is also replaced with the Loud House and the Klopeks Family House is replaced with the Miller Family House. It is also a rehash combination of the James Bond franchise and Nickelodeon's other series ' and The Loud House season 2's "Future Tense", and this episode marks the first appearance of the fictional David Steele franchise, and parody of the James Bond franchise.
    31. "Strife of the Party" (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons) is similar to the episode "Buffer Bother" from the famous children's TV television show ' from its sixth season, as it even takes the same type of "You can't always get what you want". moral. Bill and Ben are replaced with Lana and Lola. All of the Thomas and Friends characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. The Sodor Slate Quarry is replaced by the titular Loud House and Tall Timbers Park. Not to speak of, it's the fourth Lynn Sr. and the fourth Rita centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. That episode is also not much better either.
    32. "Band Together", while it can be good, is a rehash of season 1's "House Music", as in both episodes Luna initially enjoys playing with her bands, but she later abandons them for sake of her career and going despite her claims of working together. In the end, Luna returns and apologizes. Luna's family (minus Lynn Sr.) is replaced with the Moon Goats and Chunk, where the titular Loud House is replaced with the Burnt Bean.
    33. "Saved by the Spell" is a rehash of season 4's "Don't You Fore-get About Me", as both episodes involve someone/someones trying to sabotage someone's from succeeding their dream, due to the fact that they want them to keep the friend close to Royal Woods. Leni is replaced with Stella (this is Stella's only episode focusing on her to date), Lori (due to her also really indeed truely attending college now), and Lincoln's friends (minus Ronnie Anne) are added in. Fairway University is replaced with Royal Woods Middle School. Not to mention, it's the eighth Lincoln centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. This episode is also not much better either.
    34. "Season's Cheatings", while it can be good, is a rehash combination of season 1's "The Sweet Spot" and season 2's "Mall of Duty", as "The Sweet Spot" involves Lincoln trying to get the book and using a seating chart to rig stuff like him trying to get the sweet spot on the car trip. "Season's Cheatings" has Lincoln trying to get the Rip Hardcore backpack, much like "Mall of Duty" also has trying to get an autograph signed by Rip Hardcore's of his copy of the book at the Royal Woods Mall. In this one, however, Lincoln doesn't get the book unlike the third aforementioned episode, and this episode also has a Christmas theme. Not to speak of, it's the seventh Lincoln centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    35. "A Flipmas Carol" (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons), while it can be good, is an obvious parody of A Christmas Carol as well as its title being an obvious pun too as well, as both Flip, Lisa, Lincoln, Clyde, Lucy, Lynn, and the Loud siblings take on the roles of the different characters. All of the A Christmas Carol characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. Not to speak of, it's the eighth Lincoln centered episode in season 5 and the fourth Lynn centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    36. "No Bus No Fuss" is a rehash of Season 1's "Heavy Meddle" all because the main premise of the episode is that Lincoln gets bullied (though not by Ronnie Anne Santiago and instead by 3 eight-graders). Additionally, Lincoln's friend group (minus Ronnie Anne), the Royal Woods Middle School Bus, and Royal Woods Middle School are added in. Not to speak of, it's the tenth Lincoln centered episode and the fourth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive for bring the tenth Lincoln centered episode and repetitive this show was at the time for being the fourth Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier in this sentence (depending on your view). That episode is also not much better either.
    37. "Resident Upheaval", while it can be good, is identical to season 2's "Intern for the Worse", as both episodes involve Lincoln and Clyde competing and fighting each other only to learn that they were manipulated by someone else. Flip is replaced by Scoots, where Myrtle and Nana Gayle (she makes her first appearance in this episode after so many mentions) are added in. Flip's Food and Fuel is replaced with Sunset Canyon Retirement Home. Not to speak of, it's the eleventh Lincoln centered episode in season 5 and the fourth Clyde centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    38. "Silence of the Luans" (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons), while it can be good, is a rehash combination of the book The Silence of the Lambs, the James Bond franchise, the ' film adaptation of the book. Lincoln tries to figure out who the April Fools Day prankster is while getting Luan to help him find it. Clarice Sterling is replaced with Lincoln and Hannibal Lector is replaced with Luan, where all of the The Silence of the Lambs characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane is also replaced with the titular Loud House place. Not to speak of, it's the twelfth Lincoln centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    39. "Undercover Mom" (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons), while it can be good, is a rehash combination of the movie ' and its spin-off television show Fast Times, ', ', Fanfarn der Liebe and Never Been Kissed. The first and second one involves someone writing a book about going undercover at a high school and Mrs. Doubtfire having someone disguising the main protagonist as someone. Never Been Kissed has someone writing an article about going undercover at a high school, so of the "writing" types are almost the same. Cameron is replaced with Rita, Ridgemont High School is replaced with Royal Woods High School, where the Royal Woods Gazette from "Write and Wrong" is added in, and all of those characters from those movies are replaced with The Loud House characters. Not to speak of, it's the seventh Rita centered episode and the sixth Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    40. "School of Shock" is a rehash of season 1's "Making The Grade", as both episodes involve Lisa acting out-of-character as a know-it-all at the elementary school. Lincoln is replaced with Lisa, and there is no Clyde, Liam, Rusty, Zach, and Mrs. Johnson. Mrs. Shrinivas' classroom and Mrs. Johnson's classroom are also replaced with Miss Allegra's classroom. Coincidentally, both episodes were storyboarded by Darin McGowan, where this is the last episode he boarded before he left Nickelodeon, though he worked on the then-upcoming '. It's also the only episode in season 5 boarded by him. Not to speak of, it's the sixth Lisa centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. That episode is also not much better either.
    41. "Electshunned" is a rehash of season 3's "Shop Girl", as both episodes involve Leni trying and wanting to be aggressive/mean to win her fight, where she eventually chooses to be nice rather than being aggressive/mean. Mayor Davis, the Royal Woods Town Hall, Vic (who makes his first appearance in this episode, is the main antagonist of the episode, and later became a minor recurring character in the show), Lola, Rita, Lynn Sr., Royal Woods High School are added in. Lori is absent in this episode because of attending college now. Not to speak of, it can be seen as the fourth Leni centered episode in season 5 if counting "Undercover Mom" as one, the eighth Rita centered episode in season 5, and the seventh Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show could be at the time, and that episode premiered two months after this episode on March 26, 2021.
    42. "Zach Attack", (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons) while good, is slightly similar to the 1988 sci-fi movie ', and the What's with Andy? season 1 episode "It Came from East Gackle", as the idea that Scoots says about the aliens posing as people is identical to the plot of They Live, as both media involve an alien posing as humans. It Came from East Gackle" also has Andy/Zach convincing everyone that aliens are real. Nada is replaced with Zach, and Zach's friend gang (except for Ronnie Anne), Mr. Gurdle and Mrs. Gurdle are added in as well. Zach's House, where it makes it's first appearance in the episode, is also added in. Not to speak of, it's the fifth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how repetitive this show was at the time for being the fifth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5 (depending on your view).
    43. "Flying Solo" is a rehash combination of season 4's "Kings of the Con" and season 4's "A Star Is Scorned", as both episodes involve someone failing to get the spotlight to a sister/friend who did outperformed them by pure accident, where they do become envious and trying to sabotage them so they can get their spotlight back. Eventually, the main character tells them where the second main character is upset, and try to fix things. Lincoln is replaced with Clyde, where Clyde's friend gang is added in too, Paula, Byron, Mr. Budden, and Leon Cavaratti are added in. The Royal Woods Convention Center is also replaced with Royal Woods Middle School. Not to speak of, it's the thirteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 5, the fifth Clyde centered episode in season 5, and the sixth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the sixth Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view). Coincidentally, both "Kings of the Con" and "A Star Is Scorned" are in season 4. That episode is also not much better either.
    44. "Hurl, Interrupted", while good, is a rehash of the SpongeBob SquarePants season 6 episode "Roller Cowards", as both episodes involve someone being scared of telling their friend/friends their secret at a theme park before going on a roller coaster. SpongeBob is replaced with Lynn, where Lynn's friends are added in, and all of the SpongeBob SquarePants characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. Glove World is replaced with Dairyland Amoosement Park. Not to speak of, it's the fourth Lynn centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time.
    45. The season 5A finale "Diamonds Are for Never", while it can be decent, is a rehash of season 1's "It's a Loud, Loud, Loud, Loud, House", as both episodes involve someone fighting over something. Lincoln is replaced with Lola, and money is replaced with a diamond. Lori is not there because of college and Mr. Grouse is added in. Mr. Grouse's house is added in. Not to speak of, it's the seventh Lisa centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time. And that episode can not be much better either.
    46. "Rumor Has It", while good, is a rehash of the Arthur books Arthur's Teacher Trouble and Arthur and the True Francine. It's also a rehash of the Arthur season 1 episode "Arthur and the Real Mr. Ratburn", as both episodes involve someone hearing rumors about their main teacher and believing it is true. Arthur and his friend gang are replaced with Lincoln and his friend gang, where Mr. Ratburn is replaced with Mr. Bolhofner, and Lakewood Elementary School is replaced with Royal Woods Middle School. The Woods and Mr. Bolhofner's cabin are also added in. Not to speak of, it's the fourteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 5 and the seventh Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the seventh Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    47. "Training Day", while good, is a rehash combination of ' season 1's "Toads and Tiaras", and season 4's "A Mutt Above", as both "Toads and Tiaras" and "A Mutt Above" involve someone training someone. "A Mutt Above" also has Lana training an animal and being the trainee. Lincoln is replaced with Lana, where Lincoln's friends, the Rabbit of Caerbannog is replaced with Jazzy, and Snazzy are added in. There is no Royal Woods Pagent. Coincidentally, both episodes indeed star Lana in them. Not to speak of, it's the eighth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the eighth Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    48. "Friday Night Fights", while good, is a rehash of season 5's "Cow Pie Kid", as both episodes involve one of Lynn's sports teams losing through the sports season until she gets some outside help from someone. Lynn and Liam are replaced with Lisa, Maddie, Touchdown Bot (who makes his first appearance in this episode) is added in. The Royal Woods Roosters and the place they do baseball in are replaced with Royal Woods Roosters and the place that they play in from "The Loudest Yard". Coincidentally, both episodes are in season 5, where that episode aired four months before on January 22, 2021. Not to speak of, it's the sixth Lynn and the seventh Lisa centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time.
    49. "Grub Snub" is a rehash combination of season 1's "Space Invader" and season 3's "Friendzy", as both episodes involve one of Lincoln's older sisters hogging a personal place of his, where he tries to get one of his older sisters out of his area. Lynn is replaced with Leni, where Lincoln's friends, Leni's friends, and Gus (who later became a recurring character in the show) are added in. The titular Loud House is replaced with Gus's Games and Grub. Only in this one, Lincoln's friends attempt to get another friend group out of public space. Unfortunately it gets bad to the point where the owner got injured and the place got destroyed. Not to speak of, it's the fifteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 5, the eighth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, the (fifth Leni centered episode if counting "Undercover Mom" as one) fourth Leni centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the eighth Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    50. "She's All Bat", while good, is a rehash combination of season 4's "A Grave Mistake", "Kings of the Con", "A Star Is Scorned", season 5's "Flying Solo", and The Casagrandes season 2's "Karate Choppers". "A Grave Mistake" has Lucy saying to one of her younger siblings to join the Mortician's Club for her own help, where she originally gets benefits because of that, eventually, however, she causes troubles that do make all the members of the Mortician's Club turn against Lucy for her being selfish. "Kings of the Con" has a Loud sibling asks other siblings for assist, but they eventually don't win the spotlight, and try to sabotage as a result. Lola also does play a major role in both episodes. "A Star Is Scorned", "Flying Solo", and "Karate Choppers" also have someone not getting the spotlight. Eventually, the main character also tells them where the second main character is upset, and try to fix things. Lincoln is replaced with Lucy, and Lola and Lisa (voice cameos only) are added in. Coincidentally, both "Flying Solo" and "She's All Bat" are in season 5, where the former episode premiered three months before on February 8, 2021, and "Karate Choppers" coincidentally premiered two months before on March 20, 2021.
    51. "Much Ado About Noshing", while it can be decent, is a rehash of season 2's "No Laughing Matter" and The Casagrandes season 2's "Achy Breaky Art", as both episodes involve a character, who seemingly cannot accept criticism and being sensitive to it. Lori is also not in this episode due to attending Fairway University now and Lynn Sr., Principal Huggins, Mr. Grouse, Mrs. Bernardo, her horse, Kotaro, and Flip are added in. The Chortle Portal is replaced with Lynn's Table. Not to speak of, it's the sixteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. That episode can also be not much better either.
    52. "Camped!", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "In Tents Debate" and season 1's "Roughin' It", as both episodes involve Lincoln camping. "In Tents Debate" also has Lincoln and his family camping at a camp. Scratchy Bottom Campgrounds is replaced with Camp Mastodon. Leonard Loud Gramps (more commonly named to as Gramps, who makes his first appearance in this episode after appearing in flashbacks in "Vantastic Voyage" and "Home of the Fave, who later became a recurring character in the show) being and Flip are added in. Not to speak of, it's the eighteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    53. "Dream a Lily Dream", while good, is a rehash of the 2010 science fiction action thriller film ', as both media involves a group of people going into a person's dream to have an effect on the character, where Lisa does warn they can get trapped into limbo if something goes wrong. Not to speak of, it's the eighth Lisa centered episode in season 5, the fourth Lily centered episode in season 5, and the fourth Flip centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    54. "How the Best Was Won" is a rehash combination of season 2's "Out of the Picture", season 3's "Friendzy", season 4's "Deep Cuts", season 5's "Grub Snub", and The Casagrandes season 2's "Battle of the Grandpas", and The Casagrandes season 2's "Throwing Pains", as both "Out of the Picture" and "How the Best Was Won" does involve Lincoln and Clyde doing their best effort because they want to get in the school yearbook, however, they face bad things in the process of getting into the yearbook (as mentioned earlier). Both "Friendzy", "Deep Cuts", and "How the Best Was Won" have a group of someone's friends do crippling each other, because of their own beliefs. Grub Snub", "Battle of the Grandpas" and "Throwing Pains" have a group of characters or a person (except for "Battle of the Grandpas" doesn't have a group of people and the stuff that's mentioned below) wanting the same stuff, of which they eventually contend each other as they want it. The battle, however, eventually becomes intensely heated, and where it becomes wild, someone says for them to cease because of doing it, of which they do figure out that the battle was pointless. There is no Lola and Coach Pacowski, where Royal Woods Elementary School is replaced with Royal Woods Middle School, as Lincoln and his friends attend middle school as of the season 5 premiere "Schooled!". Not to speak of, it's the ninteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 5, the sixth Clyde centered episode in season 5, and the eleventh Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the eleventh Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view). That episode is also not much better either.
    55. "Animal House", while decent, is a rehash combination of the Listen Out Loud "Pet Adoption Day with Lana Loud", The Casagrandes season 1's "Walk Don't Run", and "Coupe Dreams", as both "Pet Adoption Day with Lana Loud" and "Animal House" involve Lana at the Royal Woods Animal Shelter, of which she struggles to find owners for the pets. The Casagrandes episode "Walk Don't Run" and "Animal House" involve someone taking care of too many pets, and eventually learn being overworked. Both "Coupe Dreams" and "Animal House" involve one of the Loud sisters taking more work than she can handle. Not to speak of, it's the twelfth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, the tenth Rita centered episode in season 5, and the eleventh and final Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 5 implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the twelfth Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    56. "Lori Days", while good, is a rehash of season 3's "Missed Connection", as both episodes involve Lori becoming scared of her relationships/relationship with someone/someones, because of them now living in different places as of the season 5 premiere "Schooled!", however, it does indeed eventually turns out to be only a misunderstanding and Lori was worried for nothing. Bobby is replaced with Lori, there is no Ronnie Anne, Maria Santiago, and the rest of the Casagrandes family, and the rest of the Loud siblings are added in. The Casagrandes Apartment and the Mercado are replaced with Fairway University and Tall Timbers Park. Not to speak of, it's the ''fourth Lori centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    57. "Fam Scam", while it can be good, is a rehash of season 4's "Write and Wrong" and The Casagrandes season 1's "Mexican Makeover", as both episodes involve someone acting to be better than they actually are, for the sake of having a beneficial company. Rita is replaced with Lola, there is no Lori because of her attending college now, Jessie is not there, and there is no Rita and Lynn Sr. (though they are mentioned). Cricket Van Doren (who makes her first appearance in this episode), Howard, and Harold are added in. The McBride House and the Royal Woods Mall are added in. Eventually, the "Liar reveal" cliche is used, where the character is sad, apologize, and get their trust back, and everything is happy. Not to speak of, it's the fourth and final Lola centered episode in season 5 and the seventh Clyde centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    58. "Farm to Unstable", while good, is a rehash of season 3's "What Wood Lincoln Do?", as both episodes involve Lincoln doing hard work but don't know how to do it, and eventually find shortcuts to work faster so they can do their tasks and be done, but eventually mess up and make it up by working harder. Mrs. Johnson is replaced with Liam's Mee-Maw, where Lincoln's friends, Flip, Mr. Grouse, Cheryl, Meryl, Scoots, and Tyler are added in. There is also no Rita. Royal Woods Elementary School is replaced with Liam's Farm, where the Super Mart and Flip's Food and Fuel are added in. Not to speak of, it's the twentieth Lincoln centered episode in season 5 and the thirteenth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the thirteenth Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    59. "Diss the Cook", while good, is a rehash of ' season 1 episode "Teacher's Pet", as both episodes involve someone having a grudge against someone, trying to stop it, and having them becoming friends again. Penny is replaced with Lincoln and Ms. Dinkins is replaced with Chef Pat, where Lincoln's friends, Lynn, Lori, Leni (in pictures and mentioned only), Luna (in pictures and mentioned only), Luan (in pictures and mentioned only), Lynn, Suga Mama is replaced with Rita, and Pop-Pop are added in. Willie T. Ribbs Middle School is replaced with Royal Woods Middle School, The Proud House is replaced with the titular Loud House, and the private preschool is replaced with Fairway University. Not to speak of, it's the twenty-first Lincoln centered episode in season 5, the fourteenth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, the fifth and final Lori centered episode in season 5, the (sixth Leni centered episode if counting "Undercover Mom" as one) fifth Leni centered episode in season 5, the fifth and final Luna centered episode in season 5 if counting "Undercover Mom" as one, the fourth and final Luna centered episode if counting "Undercover Mom" as one, the seventh and final Lynn episode, and the ninth Rita centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the fourteenth Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    60. "For Sale by Loner", while good, is a rehash combination of season 2's "Garage Banned" and season 3's "The Mad Scientist", as both episodes involve someone being sick and tired of the Loud family's antics, and they move out, however, they eventually miss them. Lori is replaced with Mr. Grouse and Mr. Bolhofner is added in. Chateau Royal Condos from "A Flipmas Carol" (coincidentally both episodes are in season 5, where "A Flipmas Carol" premiered in the United States of America on December 5, 2020 at 5:00 PM and 8:00 PM respectively), Sunset Canyon Retirement Home), Mr. Bolhofner's different cabin in the woods and Mr. Grouse's then-cabin in the woods are added in. Not to speak of, it's the twenty-second Lincoln centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    61. "Fright Bite", while it can be good or decent, is a rehash combination of The Burbs, season 1's "The Waiting Game", season 2's "ARGGH! You for Real?, season 4's "Kings of the Con", The Casagrandes season 2's "Dynamic Do Over", and season 5's "Family Bonding", as both The 'Burbs, "Family Bonding", and "Fright Bite" involve the main characters thinking someone is extraordinary because to their suspicious appearance, however, unlike that former episode the difference between the two episodes is that is in "Family Bonding" their suspicions were proved correct, and in "Fright Bite", they were proved wrong. "The Waiting Game" and "Fright Bite" involve the main characters trying to impress someone for their own wanting benefits. However, they are ignored by that character. Both "ARGGH! You for Real?" and "Fright Bite" have the main characters thinking and believing that undead creatures are real, however, they eventually do indeed find out that it is fake. Coincidentally, both episodes and shows have the same female director. Both "Kings of the Con" and "Fright Bite" involve the main characters trying to impress an annoyed person so they can get rewarded only, but they are to ignored, however, unlike the former episode, there is also a difference; in the end, the main characters get rewarded instead of punished. Ray Peterson is replaced with Lucy, there is no Art, the Klopeks Family are replaced with Sir Spooky (who makes his first appearance in this episode), where all of The 'Burbs characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. Ray's House is replaced with the Royal Woods Cementary, a massive mansion where the fictional season finale of the fictional The Vampires of Melancholia show, the Royal Woods Mall, and Tall Timbers Park. Coincidentally, both "Family Bonding" and "Fright Bite" are in season 5, where the former episode premiered eight months before "Fright Bite" on September 18, 2020. That episode can also not be much better either.
    62. "The Loudly Bones", while it can be decent, is a rehash of the comic "Find of the Century" from the graphic novel The Struggle is Real, as they both involve one of the younger Loud sisters believing what they found a dinosaur bone. Lana is replaced with Lisa, where the rest of the Loud family, and Dr. Alvarez (who makes her first appearance in this episode) is added in. The Royal Woods Museum is added in. Not to speak of, it's the ninth Lisa centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    63. "Runaway McBride", while good, is a rehash combination of Arthur season 2's "Arthur's Faraway Friend", The Loud House "Don't You Fore-get About Me", and season 5's "Saved by the Spell", as both episodes do really indeed involve something similar. Arthur is replaced with Harold, the rest of Clyde's friend gang, Gus, and Flip are added in, where all of the Arthur characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. Arthur's House and the Baxter Residence are replaced with the McBride house, Gus's Games and Grub, and Flip's Food and Fuel. Coincidentally, both "Saved by the Spell" and "Runaway McBride" are in season 5, where the former episode premiered fourteen months prior to "Runaway McBride" on January 22, 2021 at 4:00 PM and 7:00 PM. Not to speak of, it's the twenty-second Lincoln centered episode in season 5, the fifteenth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, the ninth and final Clyde centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the fifth and final Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    64. The season 5 finale "High Crimes" in that is the last season 5 episode to air, while alright, is a rehash combination of the James Bond franchise, as both media involve spies. James Bond is replaced with Lincoln, Felix Leither is replaced with Clyde, Ernst Stavro Blofeld is replaced with Vic, and Nana Gayle, Myrtle, Gus, Flip, Tyler, Scoots, Pop-Pop, Bernie, and Seymour are added in. Sunset Canyon, Gus's Games and Grub, Tall Timbers Park, and Flip's Food and Fuel are added in. Not to speak of, it's the twenty-third Lincoln centered episode in season 5 and the eighth and final Clyde centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    65. The first episode to premiere in 2022, "Appetite for Destruction" is a rehash of season 5's "Training Day", as both episodes involve a little and (subjectly) cute character becoming angry, where they do cause massive destruction. Jazzy is replaced with Lily, there are no Lincoln's friends, there is no El Diablo, Walt, Bitey, Izzy, Hops, and Cliff. Scoots and Mrs. Shuttleworth are added in. Baby Bunker Preschool and Lynn's Table are also added in. Coincidentally, both episodes are in season 5, where the latter episodes premiered eight months before the former episode on May 14, 2021. Not to speak of, it's the (seventh Leni centered episode if counting "Undercover Mom" as one) sixth and final Leni centered episode in season 5, the fourth and final Lily centered episode in season 5, the tenth and final Rita centered episode in season 5, and the eleventh and final Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    66. The season 5 finale in production order, "Frame on You", while it can be decent, is a rehash of season 3's "Crimes of Fashion", as both episodes involve Lincoln and one of his friends trying to clear the name of a framed character, of where they got wrongly punished. Leni is replaced with Rusty, where the rest of Lincoln's friends are added in, Girl Jordan, Principal Ramirez, Meryl, Chandler, and Mr. Bolhofner are added in, there is no Mrs. Carmichael and Carmichael's son. Royal Woods Mall and Reininger's. Not to speak of, it's the twenty-fifth and final Lincoln centered episode and the sixteenth and final Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 5, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time for being the sixteenth and final Lincoln and the gang centered episode as mentioned earlier (depending on your view).
    67. The season 6 "Present Danger" in production order (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons), while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of the James Bond franchise, as this episode pays as a big homage to the franchise. The original title for this episode is You Only Gift Twice is a reference to the 1967 James Bond movie called '. The scene where Lincoln is in a David Steele costume is similar to the iconic James Bond opening. Lynn Sr.'s preference for his milkshake (which is "shaken, not stirred") is similar to James Bond's preference for his martinis. Lincoln's character as David Steele is a reference to the titular James Bond character himself. Cue Stick's character is a reference to Q, James Bond's weapons expert. Rusty being dressed up as the villain is a reference to the main antagonist of the James Bond franchise named Ernesto Stavro Blofeld, where he is best known for stroking a cat in every of his appearances. Lincoln's friends being dressed up as different David Steele villains are references to these James Bond villains. Golden Toe is a reference to Goldfinger, and he is the main antagonist of the of the same name. Blowfish is a reference to Osato, who is a villain in You Only Live Twice. Patty Whack is a reference to Emilio Largo, who is the main antagonist of '. MALICE (Masterminds Acting Lawlessly In Committing Evil), where it first appeared in "Family Bonding" is a reference to the iconic James Bond fictional organization called SPECTRE (Special Executive for Counterintelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion). The scene in Gus's Games and Grub with Lincoln playing poker alongside Flip, Scoots, and Chandler parodies the iconic poker scene in '.
    68. The season 6 premiere in airing order, "Don't Escar-Go", while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of Arthur season 2's "Arthur's Faraway Friend", The Loud House season 4's "Don't You Fore-get About Me", season 5's "Saved by the Spell", and season 5's "Runaway McBride". Both episodes do indeed involve something similar. Both "Don't You Fore-get About Me", "Saved by the Spell", and "Don't Escar-Go" involve someone trying and wanting to sabotage someone from succeeding their dream, because of the main character wanting them to stay home in Royal Woods. "Runaway McBride" and "Don't Escar-Go" involve a group trying to have Clyde stay in Royal Woods, and both episodes involve all characters playing major roles (Lincoln, Clyde, Liam, Rusty, Zach, Stella, Harold, and Howard). Arthur is replaced with Lincoln, where Buster is replaced with Clyde, Lincoln's friends (minus Ronnie Anne), Seymour, Nana Gayle, Dean Dupont (who makes her first appearance in this episode), Lynn Sr., Kotaro, Chef Pat, Waffles (who makes her first appearance in this episode), Harold, and Howard are added in. Arthur's House and the Baxter Residence are replaced with the McBride house, where Royal Woods Middle School, Sunset Canyon Retirement Home, Lynn's Table, Royal Woods Middle School, and the culinary school that Clyde wanted to attend in Paris, France (which makes it's first appearance in this episode) are added in. Coincidentally, both "Saved by the Spell" and "Runaway McBride" are in season 5. Coincidentally, both "Runaway McBride" and "Don't Escar-Go" premiered in 2022 and in the same month (March), where the second latter episode premiered seven days before in the United States of America on a Friday at 5:30 PM and 8:30 PM respectively. That episode can also not be much better either.
    69. "Double Trouble", while it can be decent, is a rehash combination of season 4's "Kings of the Con", season 4's "A Star Is Scorned", season 5's "Flying Solo", The Casagrandes "Karate Choppers" from, and season 5's "She's All Bat", as both "Kings of the Con" and "Double Trouble" involve two people trying to sabotage two other main characters so they can win a contest. "A Star Is Scorned", "Flying Solo", "Karate Choppers", and "She's All Bat" involve someone trying to sabotage someone for their own benefits. Lincoln is replaced with Lola, Clyde is replaced with Lana, there are no Judges, Cheryl, Meryl, Auntie Pam, Flip, Mr. Grouse, Liam, his two then-baby goats from "Stall Monitor", Scoots, Mopes (who makes her first appearance in this episode), and Principal Huggins are added in. The Royal Woods Convention is replaced with Auntie Pam's Parlor, where Chateau Royal Condos and Royal Woods Elementary School are added in. Coincidentally, both "Kings of the Con" and "A Star Is Scorned" are in season 4, "Flying Solo" and "She's All Bat" are also in season 5 and premiered in the United States of America in the same year, and "Karate Choppers" premiered in the same year as well. That episode can also not be much better either.
    70. "Flip This Flip", while good, is a rehash of season 2's "Back in Black", as both episodes involve someone trying to go on a date with their love. Lucy is replaced with Lincoln, there is no Lori (due to her indeed attending college), Luna, Luan, Lynn, Lucy, and Lily. Flip and Nacho are added in, where Rocky Spokes is replaced with Tammy Gobbleworth, who makes her physical first appearance in this episode. Flip's Food and Fuel, Lynn's Table, and the Royal Woods Opera are added in.
    71. "Haunted House Call" (despite not stealing any elements from the previous seasons), while good, is a rehash combination of the Ghostbusters franchise and the Mario spin-off series called ', as both media involve getting rid of ghosts. However, this episode's concept of ghosts is role reversed almost all of the time, as the Mortician's Club almost always get rid of the ghosts instead of sucking them up with vacuum cleaners. Peter is replaced with Lucy, the rest of the Ghostbusters team are replaced with the Mortician's Club, Mr. Grouse, Lady Emmeline (who makes her first appearance in this episode), Spirit Boris (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Mr. Spokes, the ghost that is destroying his Duds for Dudes store from "Back Out There", Liam, Dolly (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Cheryl, Meryl, the ghost that also does keep on changing Cheryl and Meryl's favorite show called Southern Housewives to Hisper Island, Buzz (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Scoots, Tyler, Lynn Sr., and Flip are added in, where all of the Ghostbusters characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. The Firehouse, Hook & Ladder Company 8 is replaced with the Royal Woods Cementary, where Mr. Grouse's house, Duds for Dudes, Liam's Farm, Chateau Royal Condos, Sunset Canyon Retirement Home, Lynn's Table, Flip's Food and Fuel, and the Royal Woods Convention Center are added in.
    72. "Save Royal Woods!", while it can be good, is a rehash combination of the ' movie called ', ' movie called ', the SpongeBob SquarePants season 8 episode called "SpongeBob's Last Stand", Ice Age: Collision Course, and The Loud House Movie, as both media involve someone saving a town. Arnold is replaced with Lincoln, Alphonse Perrier du von Scheck is replaced with Joyce Crandall (who makes her first appearance in this episode as the main antagonist of this episode), Future Tech Industries is replaced with an unnamed organization that tries to flood people's towns to make rooms for Great Lakes (which makes it's first appearance in this episode), where Maggie's mom, Pop-Pop, Bernie, Katherine Mulligan, Mrs. Gurdle, Mr. Gurdle, Zach, Mayor Davis, her mom, Cheryl, Flip, Lynn Sr., Rita, Luan, Leni, the Burpin' Burger mascot (on the logo only), Lisa, Lucy, Lynn, Stella, Luna, Lola, Lana, Mr. Grouse, Mrs. Johnson, Hops, Clyde, Mrs. Bernardo, Judy Zhau, Unnamed woman, Cookie QT, Unnamed boy, Nana Gayle, Seymour, Rusty, Lily, Harold, Howard, Liam's Mee-Maw, Todd, Meryl, Margo, Maddie, Persephone, Boris, Haiku, one of Liam's goats from "Stall Monitor" and "Double Trouble" (coincidentally, both "Double Trouble" and "Save Royal Woods!" premiered in the United States of America four months before "Save Royal Woods!" on March 11, 2022 at 5:00 PM and 8:00 PM), Sam, Nacho, Meli, Darcy, the horse that Lynn Sr. is riding (which makes its first appearance in this episode), Ace Savvy (mentioned and shown through Lincoln's Ace Savvy comics that he still has), Squirrel, Scoots, Fiona, Miguel, Virginia, Cleopatra, Nepurrtiti, Morpheus, Mr. Coconuts, Benny, Gus, Chef Pat, Geo, Cliff, Lori, the bulldozing men who were going to destroy Royal Woods but decided not to do it anymore and fired Joyce (who make their first appearances in this episode as one-time characters), and Katherine Mulligan's reporter are added in. Sunset Arms is replaced with Royal Woods, where Royal Woods High School, Joyce's mom's house, Burpin' Burger, Royal Woods Middle School, Flip's Food and Fuel, Market, many unnamed background places, the Royal Woods Dam, the titular Loud House place, Lynn's exercise place, Mr. Grouse's house, the cornfield where Zach, Mrs. Gurdle, and Mr. Gurdle look at for aliens in UFOs at night, the Royal Woods Mall, the Royal Woods Spa, Tall Timbers Park, the McBride house, the Royal Woods Cementary, the Chortle Portal from "No Laughing Matter", the Royal Woods Bowling Alley, Auntie Pam's Parlor, Gus's Games and Grub, and Fairway University are added in. Not to speak of, it's the fourth Lincoln centered episode and the fourth Lisa centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive the show was at the time. That episode can also not be much better either.
    73. "The Taunting Hour", while it can be decent, is a rehash of season 3's "House of Lies", as both episodes involve the Loud family being unable to take ugly and bad truths/accepting criticism, of which they eventually blame the Loud kid saying it out. Lisa is replaced with Lisa, where Scoots, Lincoln, Mr. Grouse, the Judge who criticizes Lola for her pageant ribbon dancing, Chandler, the Judge, Sully, Judy, Mazzy, Sam, the Burnt Bean manager, Kotaro, Mr. Grouse, Mr. Coconuts, Todd, the scientists who criticize Todd, Cheryl, Chunk, Rachel, Dirk, Amaila from "Broadcast Blues", Rusty, Zach, Stella, and Liam are added in, and there is no Lori due to her also really indeed truly really attending college now. Not to mention, it's the sixth Lincoln centered episode in season 6, the fifth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 6, and the fourth Lisa centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time for being the fifth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 6 as mentioned earlier (depending on your view). That episode can also not be much better either.
    74. "A Bug's Strife", while good, is a rehash combination of old classic cartoons like the om nd franchise and the Herman and Katnip franchise, season 1's "Two Boys and a Baby", season 1's "Raw Deal", season 1's "One Flu over the Loud House, season 2's "No Such Luck, season 3's "Ruthless People", season 4's "Lucha Fever with the Casagrandes", season 4's "Purrfect Gig", The Casagrandes season 1's "Cursed!", and the end of the second half of season 5's "Diamonds Are for Never". Both old cartoons like the Tom and Jerry franchise, the Herman and Katnip franchise, and "A Bug's Strife" involve classic torture slapstick humor. Both "Two Boys and a Baby" and "A Bug's Strife", as both episodes involve one of the Loud family members succeeding in not going to Aunt Ruth's house because they hate it, face their own personal but comical and funny trouble, where they eventually hilariously go to Aunt Ruth's house at the end. Both "Raw Deal", "No Such Luck", "Cursed!", and "A Bug's Strife" involve something similar, where both the latter episode and the fourth aforementioned episode have one of the Louds lying so they can have free time for own self getting locked out of the house, except there is no supposed "bad luck". Both "Ruthless People" and "A Bug's Strife" involve something similar happening to the titular Loud House place. Both "Lucha Fever with the Casagrandes" and "A Bug's Strife" involve someone faking sick to watch TV at their own home while the other characters are not at home. Both "Purrfect Gig" and "A Bug's Strife" involve a character at home. Both the ending of the real second half of "Diamonds Are for Never" and "A Bug's Strife" involve someone destroying the titular Loud House in search of something/someone. Lincoln is replaced with Lily, Lori's not in this episode (due to due to her also really indeed truly really really attending college now), there is no Clyde, Charles, Cliff, Geo, Walt, Aunt Ruth, the Grasshopper (which makes his first appearance in this episode and is the former antagonist of this episode), and Mr. Grouse is added in. Aunt Ruth's house and Mr. Grouse's house are added in. Coincidentally, both "Two Boys and a Baby", "Rawl Deal", "One Flu over the Loud House" are in season 1. Coincidentally, both "Lucha Fever with the Casagrandes" and "Purrfect Gig" are in season 4.
    75. "All the Rage" is a rehash combination of season 5's "Grub Snub", and The Casagrandes season 2's "Battle of the Grandpas", and The Casagrandes season 2's "Throwing Pains", as both episodes involve someone competing. There is no Gus, where Mr. Bolhofner, Girl Jordan, Mollie, Amaila, Girl Jordan, the Desert Storm host, Zamir (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Meryl, Taylor from "No Bus No Fuss" and "Rumor Has It" (coincidentally, both episodes are in season 5) are added in. Gus's Games and Grub and the Royal Woods Middle School gym room are added. Coincidentally, both "Grub Snub" and "How the Best Was Won" are in season 5. Both "Throwing Pains" and "All the Rage" involve a group of friends competing against someone in a gym. Coincidentally, both "Battle of the Grandpas" and "Throwing Pains" are in season 2 of The Casagrandes. Not to speak of, it's the seventh Lincoln centered episode and the sixth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time for being the sixth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 6 as mentioned earlier (depending on your view). That episode is also not much better either.
    76. "Eye Can't", while it can be decent, possibly condiracts season 2's "Making the Grade", as both episodes involve Lisa doing something similar to this episode, although in the latter episode, it is a minor thing instead of a major thing. In that case, why didn't she also choose to undergo this kind of surgery again instead of trying to weasel her way out to Dr. Tran's eye doctor place (where she and her aforementioned eye doctor place) the Royal Woods Mall? However, while you also may assume that LASIK eye surgery has worn off since that episode, however, according to this article, laser eye surgery never wears off.[2] Lincoln is also replaced with Lisa, there is no Lincoln's friend gang, Mrs. Johnson, Andrew, Mollie, Girl Jordan, Artie, Joy and Papa Wheelie, Lori (due to her indeed truely attending college), Luna, Luan, Lynn, Lucy, Lana, Lola, Lily, Mrs. Shrinvas (who makes her debut in this episode and later becomes a very minor recurring character in the show), Dr. Tran, Flip, and a bear (which makes his first appearance in this episode). There is also no Royal Woods Elementary School, Mrs. Johnson's classroom and Mrs. Shrinvas' classroom, where the Royal Woods Mall, Dr. Tran's office, Reininger's, and a cave (which makes it's first appearance in this episode as a one-time location) are added in. However, because since the aforementioned eye surgery was also done by her and not a professional, it is possible that she had a flaw of some sort when she was doing the procedure. It is also indeed implied in The Loud House Movie, as in one of the scenes, she tries to high-five Lola with no glasses, however, ends up hitting her instead. It is also indeed implied another time in "The Loudly Bones", 'because it seems like she does have trouble without her glasses. Not to speak of, it's the fifth Lisa centered episode in season 6, the fourth Todd centered episode in season 6, and the fourth Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. That episode can also not be much better either.
    77. "Dine and Bash" is a rehash combination of season 1's "Get the Message", season 1's "No Guts, No Glori, season 2's "No Laughing Matter", season 5's "Schooled!", The Casagrandes season 2's "Achy Breaky Art", The Casagrandes season 2's "Chancla Force", and season 5's "Much Ado About Noshing". Both "Get the Message" and "Dine and Bash" involve Lincoln and someone/someones trying to delete and get rid of something negative, however, they eventually do fail, where it turns out that they didn't need to do anything as they heard it already. Both "No Guts, No Glori" and "Dine and Bash" involving Rita and Lynn Sr. leaving, thus leaving the kids to take care of the place themselves, eventually, however, they do something wrong and try to fix their messes, and "Chancla Force" involves something similar. Both "No Laughing Matter", "Achy Breaky Art", "Dine and Bash" involving someone trying to conceal a negative review from someone/someones and fail. The reviews in the episodes "Achy Breaky Art" and "Dine and Bash" are made by fictional famous critics, which are Artemio and Guy Grazer from "Present Tense". Hilariously and funnily, like Bobby trying to destroy every newspaper in Great Lakes City, Lynn proposes an idea of destroying every character's TVs in Royal Woods, where "Much Ado About Noshing" involves something similar. Todd, Guy Grazer, the person who he yells at from "Present Tense", Kotaro, the Unnamed family, Grant, Meryl, Cheryl, Mr. Grouse, and Scoots, where Kitchen Ambush from "Present Tense" (a parody of the famous cooking show called Hell's Kitchen) are added in. Royal Woods High School, Lynn's Table, and Fairway University are added in. Coincidentally, both "Get the Message" and "No Guts, No Glori" are in season 1. Coincidentally, both "Achy Breaky Art" and "Chancla Force" are in season 2 of The Casagrandes. Coincidentally, both "Schooled!" and "Much Ado About Noshing" are in season 5. Not to speak of, it's the eighth Lincoln centered episode in season 6, the sixth Lisa centered episode in season 6, the fifth Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, and the fifth Todd centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. That episode is also not much better either.
    78. "Sofa, So Good" is a rehash combination of season 1's "Come Sale Away", season 4's "Any Given Sundae", and season 4's "House Flip". Both "Come Sale Away" and "Any Given Sundae" involve the Loud kids losing the furniture, however, unlike the former episode, of which they did purposely sold the titular Loud House's furniture and getting rid of almost everything in the place, they accidentally lost it here and do not get rid of anything else in the house. Both "Any Given Sundae" and "Sofa, So Good" involve Rita and Lynn Sr. getting the Loud siblings a big reward for behaving well. However, unlike that former episode, where their misbehaviors are unnoticed by the parents, their misbehaviors get discovered, however, the Loud kids are still rewarded regardless. Both "House Flip" involve the Loud siblings causing damage by accident, where they try to fix it without Rita and Lynn Sr.'s knowledge out of fear losing something. However, while the Loud siblings still get punished at the end (in spite of being a light punishment), in "House Flip", they are fully rewarded in this episode, and in the end, the Loud siblings funnily get a new couch which looks exactly like the old couch. There is no Lori due to her really indeed also really truely indeed attending college now, where Todd, Mr. Grouse, Dom (who is actually Flip and makes his first appearance in this episode) Mr. Bolhofner, Meryl, Cheryl, El Diablo, the Auctioneer (which makes his first appearance in this episode), Nacho, Scoots, and Tyler are added in. The Royal Woods Dumpster from "The Crying Dame", Flip's Food and Fuel, Coach Pacowski's houseboat (map only), Mr. Bolhofner's other cabin from "For Sale by Loner", Sunset Canyon Retirement Home (map only), Royal Woods Auction House, and Chateau Royal Condos are added in. Not to speak of, it's the ninth Lincoln centered episode in season 6, the seventh Lisa centered episode in season 6, the seventh Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, the fourth Rita centered episode in season 6, the sixth Todd centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. That episode is also not much better either.
    79. "The Last Laugh", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "Funny Business", as both episodes involve Luan having one of her younger siblings assist her in her Luan Out Loud show. Lincoln is replaced with Luan, where Mr. Coconuts, Lola, Todd, Lisa, Renee, Dr. Ted (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Mr. Sprinkles, Seymour, Katherine Mulligan, Lynn Sr., Lily, Mr. Reinforced Titanium Arms, Rodger, and the Teen Girl are added in. Tall Timbers Park, Dr. Ted's woodshop (which makes its first appearance in this episode), Sunset Canyon Retirement Home, an Unnamed house (which makes its first appearance in this episode), the News 3 place, and the Chortle Portal are added in. Not to speak of, it's the ninth Lisa centered episode in season 6, the eighth Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, and the eighth Todd centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    80. "Driver's Dread", while good, is a rehash of season 1's "Driving Miss Hazy", as both episodes involve Leni trying to get her driver's license. However, unlike that latter episode, she succeeds in getting her driver's license, even though it was implied that she got it in the episode because of the episode airing out-of-order. Speaking of "Driving Miss Hazy", a flashback is shown, where Lori shows the last time that she tried to get her driver's license where she crashes Vanzilla into a swimming pool, believing it to be the carpool lane. Lincoln is replaced with Leni, there is no Police Officer, Luna, Luan, Lynn, Lucy, Lana, Lola, where Mr. Grouse, Tanya, Rusty, Mr. Bolhofner, the Burpin' Burger mascot (logo and the top of the Burpin' Burger sign), Grant, Todd, Lily, Lisa, the DMV Examiner (where she makes her first appearance in this episode), and the Unnamed Brunette Woman are added in. Mr. Grouse's house, Fairway University, Royal Woods Middle School, Royal Woods Elementary School, Burpin' Burger, the DMV Examiner place from "Driving Miss Hazy", Mr. Bolhofner's Driving School (which makes its first appearance in this episode through a billboard only as a one-time location), the Outlet Mall (which makes its first appearance in this episode are added in. Not to speak of, it's the eleventh Lincoln centered episode in season 6, the tenth Lisa centered episode in season 6, the ninth Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, the fifth Rita centered episode in season 6, and the ninth Todd centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    81. "Sleepstakes", while it can be good, is a rehash combination of season 1's "Overnight Success", season 2's "Fool's Paradise", and season 3's "Tripped!". Both "Overnight Success" and "Fool's Paradise" involve Lana having sleepovers. Lincoln is replaced with Lana, there is no Lori (due to her also really indeed truly indeed indeed truly attending college now), and Clyde, where Kayla (who makes her first appearance in this episode), Kristen (who makes her first appearance in this episode), Ashley (who makes her first appearance in this episode), the Female Mail Carrier (who makes her first appearance in this episode), David Steele (costumed by Lincoln only), Mr. Grouse, Scoots, Kayla's dog (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Rita, Lynn Sr., El Diablo, Hops, and Fangs are added in. Mr. Grouse's house, Sunset Canyon Retirement Home, and Kayla's home (which makes its first appearance in this episode) are added in. Not to speak of, it's the thirteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 6, the eleventh Lisa centered episode in season 6, the tenth Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, and the sixth Rita centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time. That episode can also not be much better either.
    82. "Cat-astrophe", while good, is a rehash of season 2's "No Spoilers", as both episodes involving someone planning a party for someone. Lincoln is replaced with Clyde, there is no Leni, Cliff, Lori due to her truly indeed attending college now, Lincoln (this is the seventh episode segment where he is absent from both segments following "Power Play with the Casagrandes"/"Room for Improvement with the Casagrandes"/"Roll Model with the Casagrandes"/"No Show with the Casagrandes"/"Face the Music with the Casagrandes"/"Pranks for the Memories with the Casagrandes"/"Store Wars with the Casagrandes"/"Lucha Fever with the Casagrandes"/"Good Sports"/"Geriantics"/"A Star Is Scorned"/"Senior Moment", coincidentally both "Roll Model with the Casagrandes"/"No Show with the Casagrandes"/"Face the Music with the Casagrandes"/"Pranks for the Memories with the Casagrandes"/"Store Wars with the Casagrandes"/"Lucha Fever with the Casagrandes"/"Good Sports"/"Geriantics" and "A Star Is Scorned"/"Senior Moment" are in season 4) Lynn, Luna, Lana, Lisa, Lucy, Luan, Lynn Sr., Flip, Mr. Grouse, Dr. Feinstein, where cats (where they make their first appearances in this episode), Harold, Howard, Cleopatra, Nepurrtiti, Howard, Harold, Mrs. Bernardo, Nana Gayle, Ridge from "Strife of the Party" (coincidentally, both episodes are special birthday episodes), the Hazletucky Party Man (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Meryl, Cheryl, the parent where Harold tries to take a "Happy Birthday!" tiara from a little girl (who makes his first appearance in this episode), a little girl, Tyler, Seymour, Bernie, and Pop-Pop are added in. The McBride's house, Sunset Canyon Retirement Home, and the Larry Barry Bakery are added in. Not to speak of, its the seventh Rita centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetive this show was at the time.
    83. "Prize Fighter" is a rehash combination of season 2's "Friend or Faux?" and season 4's "Community Disservice. Both "Community Disservice" and "Prize Fighter" have Lola deciding to do public service activities so she can get a pageant award, but she eventually doesn't do them/doing bad deeds when she's entitled for it. Eventually, she says that she doesn't deserve the pageant award at all, due to her bad behaviors. When she leaves the pageant award behind, without regretting not getting the pageant award at all in the slightest, she decides to do public service activities and unexpectedly wins an award token for herself. There is no Lincoln, Lori (due to her goodly indeed attending college now), Leni, Luna, Luan, Lynn, Lucy, Lana, Lisa, Lily, Meli, where Meryl, Cheryl, Mr. Grouse, Dana Dufresne, Howard, Jackie from "Gown and Out", a second pageant girl (who makes her first appearance in this episode), Mr. Sprinkles, Cricket from "Fam Scam", Flip, Scoots, Pop-Pop, Bernie, and Seymour are added in. Not to speak of, it's the fourth Lola centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    84. "Time Trap!" is a rehash combination of the ' franchise, The Fairly OddParents episode "Father Time!" from season 1, The Fairly OddParents episode "It's a Wishful Life", and the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Back to the Past" from season 7. Both the first Back to the Future movie and "Time Trap!" also involve someone(s) changing their Mom and Dad's past, where they have to fix their actions or unfortunately, they will disappear forever. Coincidentally, one of Lincoln's lines that he says to Lisa, "You built a time machine out of Vanzilla". is a reference to one of Marty McFly's lines that he says to Doc, "Doc, are you telling me that you built a time machine out of a DeLorean?". Both Back to the Future Part II, Back to the Future Part III, and "Time Trap!" involve similar time-traveling as well. Both "Father Time!" and "Time Trap!" involve someone destroying their parents' trophied possessions, where they figure out the first and only way to fix that big problem is going back in time to stop them from getting that gift. Both "It's a Wishful Life!" and "Time Trap! involve something similar. Both "Back to the Past" and "Time Trap!" involve similar time-traveling as well. Marty is replaced with Lisa, where Luna, Leni, Lola, Luan, Lana, Lily, Lori, Lynn, Doc is replaced with Lincoln, Ace Savvy (Lincoln dresses up as him), Lorraine Baines-McFly is replaced with Rita, El Diablo, Geo, George McFly is replaced with Lynn Sr., Todd, Chunk, Ruth, Flip, Philip (who makes his first appearance in this episode as an alternate version of Flip who works at Phillip's Greens and Greens got inspired to sale healthy food, Mr. Grouse, Chandler, Alternate Universe Chandler, Clyde, Alternate Universe Clyde, Liam, Alternate Universe Liam, Zach, Alternate Universe Zach, Stella, and Alternate Universe Stella are added in. Doc Brown's house, the McFly Residence, and all of the Back to the Future places are replaced with the titular Loud House, Fairway University (likeness only), the place where Lynn Sr. and Rita got married (which makes it's first appearance in this episode as a one-time location), the past Loud Philip's Greens and Greens, and the Gurdle house from "Zach Attack" are added in. Not to speak of, it's the fourteenth Lincoln centered episode, the ninth Lincoln and the gang centered episode, twelfth Lisa centered episode, the the eleventh Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, the eighth Rita centered episode in season 6, and the tenth Todd centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time for being the ninth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 6 (depending on your view). That episode is also not much better either.
    85. "Puns and Buns", while good, is a rehash of season 4's "Can't Hardly Wait", as both episodes involve a Loud sibling gets a job at a restaurant, starts working there as a result, where it's because of the fact that they want to spend time with someone that they want to be with, however, unfortunately, they don't do tasks the right where they also do indeed get bounced around to different jobs (waiter/kitchen worker/valet/manager/food worker/Burpin' Burger sign spinner where she dresses up Tippy the Cow from Dairyland because of her dressing up as him before in "Stressed for the Part") the same restaurant. However, due to that, one of the characters want the Loud sibling to get fired from the restaurant, only for that character to change their mind by wanting the Loud sibling to have a different job at the restaurant. However, unlike "Can't Hardly Wait", Lori wants to quit her job working at Lynn's Table, Andre (who makes his first appearance in this episode) wants Luan to get fired from her job at the Burpin' Burger because of her inappropriate behavior. Lori is replaced with Benny, there is no Lisa, Kotaro, Biker (who makes his first appearance in this episode), T-Bone, Biker Woman, Principal Huggins, Cheryl, Scoots, Rita, Grant, a Background woman, the man who Leni thinks is Lynn Sr. from "Job Insecurity", and Flip, where Andre, Otis (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Renee's mother, Tippy, a younger recolored version of Unnamed Teammate #3, Mr. Coconuts, Mr. Grouse, and background characters are added in. There is no the titular Loud House place, Fairway University, and Lynn's Table, where Lynn's Table is replaced with the Burpin' Burger, and Dairyland (on a picture on Benny's phone only that has Luan dressed up in her Tippy costume from the aforementioned "Stressed for the Part" episode as she surprises Benny at his job there selling popcorn on the weekends are added in. Not to speak of, it's the fourth and final Luan centered episode and the twelfth Lynn Sr. centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    86. The season 6a finale in terms of airing order "Crashed Course" is a rehash combination of season 4's "Kings of the Con", season 4's "A Star Is Scorned", season 5's "Flying Solo", The Casagrandes "Karate Choppers" from season 2, season 5's "She's All Bat", and season 6's "Double Trouble", as all episodes involve something similar. Both "Don't You Fore-get About Me" and "Crashed Course" involve someone try to sabotage Lori's Fairway University carrer, where in this episode, all of the Loud kids try to sabotage her career instead of Leni only. Leni is replaced with Lincoln, there is no Lynn Sr., Rita, Mr. Coconuts, Ronnie Anne (though she is mentioned as this episode reveals that she has sent pranks in packaging boxes to Lincoln numerous times in the past, such as soiled diapers that are most likely Carlitos' dirty diapers for his birthday with him and Leni gagging over it, eggs for Christmas as he doesn't like, and Sergio with a camera, so she could have a picture of him getting attacked by the parrot, as this is Sergio's first appearance in the show since season 5's "Schooled!" and his first appearance outside of his feathers shown since "Don't You Fore-get About Me", where these are most likely callbacks to "Back Out There", Carlos, Raj, the birds from the aformentioned "Don't You Fore-get About Me", where Nacho (on a picture on a computer simulation only), Scoots (on a picture on a computer simulation only), David Steele (costumed by Lincoln only), Duncan, Marisna from "Lori Days", Cheryl (wig only that Lincoln has in his box of diguises that also previously appear in "Cover Girls" and "Season's Cheatings"), Principal Ramirez (wig only that Lincoln also has in his box of diguises that also previously appear in "Cover Girls" and "Season's Cheatings"), Liam's Mee-Maw (wig only that Lincoln does indeed have in his box of diguises that also previously appear in "Cover Girls" and "Season's Cheatings"), an alligator (which makes his first appearance in this episode), where Flip's Fool and Fuel (on a picture on a computer simulation only) and Sunset Canyon Retirement Home (on a picture on a computer simulation only) are added in. Coincidentally, both "KIngs of the Con", "Don't You Fore-get About Me", "A Star Is Scorned" are in season 4, where the second latter episode aired seven months after "Kings of the Con" on May 13, 2020 at 9:00 AM and 12:00 PM, and the third latter episode aired eight months after "Kings of the Con" at 9:00 PM and 12:00 PM. Coincidentally, both "Karate Cho
    87. The season 6b premiere "Lights, Camera, Nuclear Reaction" in terms of production order, while good, is a rehash combination of the James Bond franchise and '. Both Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 involve Todd/Chip Micro using holograms of himself to confuse Lincoln with a remote as it is in the same manner of this movie. David Steele is replaced with Lincoln, where Clyde, Todd, Chip Micro (who makes his first appearances as the main antagonist of this episode in Lincoln and Clyde's home-made unofficial David Steele movie, Mr. Reinforced Titanium Alloy Arms, Flip, Lisa, Nacho, Flip's yellow inflatable, Leni (shown in flashbacks only), Luna (shown in flashbacks only), Lori (shown in flashbacks only), Lana (shown in flashbacks only), Lily (shown in flashbacks only), Lucy (shown in flashbacks only), Lynn (shown in flashbacks only), Lola, Mr. Sprinkles, Eunice are added in, where all of the James Bond characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. The David Steele city, the mountains (which make their first appearance in this episode as one-time place), Chip Micro's base (which makes it's first appearance in this episode as a one-time place), the titular Loud House place, Flip's Food and Fuel, Tall Timbers Park, Royal Woods Middle School, Todd/Chip Micro's warehouse base, a dancing place where Todd performs on a flashback via his screen on his monitor, and the Dance hall from "Racing Hearts" (through flashbacks only) are added in. Not to speak of, it's the sixteenth Lincoln centered episode in season 6, the fourteenth Lisa centered episode in season 6, the fourth Clyde centered episode in season 6, and the eleventh Todd centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time.
    88. The season 6b premiere "Food Courting", while good, is a rehash combination of the James Bond franchise, the 1989 teen romantic comedy film called Say Anything..., and The Casagrandes season 3's "Squawk in the Name of Love". Both Say Anything... and "Food Courting" involve a scene where someone (Lloyd/Gavin) trying to carol their love interest (Diane/Leni) in the aforementioned movie, where it's identical to the scene in the movie where Lloyd tries to carol Diane in this movie, where this scene in numerous other media ever since that movie's release. Lloyd is replaced with Gavin (who makes his first appearance in this episode after being Leni's fourth love interest after Chaz, the Cowlick boy from "Undercover Mom", and Scott from The Loud House Movie), Diane is replaced with Miguel and Leni, where all of Say Anything... characters are replaced with The Loud House characters. Diane's house is replaced with the titular Loud House. In the plot, Lloyd is replaced with Miguel, where Leni, Tanya, Felix (who makes his first appearance in this episode as Miguel's second crush in the end), Gavin, (who makes his first appearance in this episode as Miguel has a crush on him which reveals that he is gay, eventually Leni's fourth crush in the end), Scoots, Tippy, Charles, and Lynn are added in. Both "Squawk in the Name of Love" and "Food Courting" involve someone taking a friend's advice to get their love interest to love them. Lloyd's house is replaced with the Royal Woods Mall, Reininger's, the tunnel from "Mall of Duty" and "Eye Can't" (coincidentally both "Eye Can't" and "Food Courting" premiered in the United States of America three months before "Eye Can't", where that aforementioned first episode premiered on April 8, 2022 at 4:00 PM and 7:00 PM respectively), Spaghetti on a Stick, Dairyland, Seas o' Cheese, and the titular Loud House are added in.
    89. "Save the Last Pants", while good, is a rehash combination of season 1's "Come Sale Away" and season 6's "Sofa, So Good", as both episodes involve a group of characters selling an important object and try real hard to get it back under a time limit, however, unlike the former episode, of which they also did purposely sold the titular Loud House's furniture and getting rid of almost everything in the place, they accidentally lost it here and do not get rid of anything else in the place. There is no Lincoln's blue teddy bear (which makes his first appearance in this episode), Lori (due to her also really indeed truely also attending college now), Lisa, Lynn, Leni, Lana, Lola, Luan, Lucy, Luna, Rita, Lynn Sr., Mrs. Johnson, T-Bone (who makes his first appearance in this episode and becomes a very minor recurring character in the show), El Diablo, one of Lana's unnamed snakes (which makes his first appearance in this episode), Flip (however, he is mentioned in "Save the Last Pants"), where Rusty, Liam, Zach, Stella, Mr. Grouse, Morpheus (this being the second episode where he is shown without the rest of the Mortician's Club and what he does alongside when he is not with Haiku, Boris, Dante, and Persephone), his crow (this being the second episode where he is shown without the rest of the Mortician's Club and what he does alongside when he is not with Haiku, Boris, Dante, and Persephone), Scoots, Tyler, Bernie, Seymour, Ken Mu, a Waiter (who makes his first appearance in this episode), Unnamed woman, Unnamed man, Meryl, Cheryl, and Mick Swagger are added in. There is no the titular Loud House and Flip's Food and Fuel, where Royal Woods Middle School, Duds for Dudes, Gus's Games and Grub, the place where Rodney goes to in Hazletucky (which makes its first appearance in this episode), Sunset Canyon Retirement Home, the Burnt Bean, Banger's and Mosh, Giovanni Changs Italian Chinese Bistro, and the Karokie-Dokie from "Roadie to Nowhere" are added in. Not to speak of it's the seventeenth Lincoln centered episode in season 6 and the tenth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 6, implying how nearly repetitive this show was at the time for being the tenth Lincoln and the gang centered episode in season 6 (depending on your view). Coincidentally, both "Sofa, So Good" and "Save the Last Pants" are in season 6, where the former episode premiered three months before on April 15, 2022 at 5:00 PM and 7:00 PM, and "Save the Last Pants" premiered three months after the former episode on July 15, 2022.
    90. "A Stella Performance"
    91. "Hiccups and Downs", while good, is a rehash combination of
    92. "The Loathe Boat", while good, is a rehash combination of Arthur season 2's "Arthur's Faraway Friend", The Loud House season 4's "Kings of the Con", season 4's "Don't You Fore-get About Me", season 4's "A Star Is Scorned", season 5's "Flying Solo", The Casagrandes "Karate Choppers", season 5's "She's All Bat", season 5's "Runaway McBride", season 6's "Don't Escar-Go", and season 6's "Double Trouble". Both episodes do also indeed involve something similar. Both episodes do indeed involve something similar. Both "Don't You Fore-get About Me", "Saved by the Spell", and "Don't Escar-Go" also involve ssomething similar, because of the main character wanting them to stay home in Royal Woods. "Runaway McBride" and "Don't Escar-Go" involve a group trying to have someone stay in Royal Woods. Arthur is replaced with Lucy, where Buster is replaced with Haiku, where a Pelican, Morpheus, Dante, Persephone, Boris, Betrand, Kim (who makes her first appearance in this episode as Betrand's mom), Brad (who makes his first appearance in this episode as Betrand's dad), Bernie, and Tina are added in. The Royal Woods Cementary, Lake Eddy from "Washed Up", and Kim's and Brad's cruise (which was first mentioned in "A Grave Mistake" and makes its first appearance in this episode) are added in. Coincidentally, both "Kings of the Con", "Don't You Fore-get About Me", and "A Star Is Scorned" are in season 4,
    93. "Cheer Pressure", while good,
  3. Many of the characters have been flanderized and lack the original charm for the most part they once had:
    1. has gone from being a kind-hearted "man with the plan" and a very likable character who is respectful to his friends and family into a huge and a who the world often beats down on. While this was always a problem, it has increased since season 4. Worst of all, Lincoln going through unnecessary torment is always used for the sake of laughs and something like that can make you feel like the writers just wanted to express all their unjustified hatred towards him. He also became even more selfish as he started doing more things for the benefit of himself such as in "Kings of the Con", although he did become a bit more likable in season 5, and depending on your view, he has redeemed himself since season 6.?
    2. starting in season 5, become the deuteragonist (depending on your opinion) of the show (due to Lori moving out to attend Fairway University) and the new oldest sibling in the house which went from being an airheaded and naïve yet compassionate, fun-loving, and still clumsy teenage girl to a total idiot who behaves as if she's lost almost all signs of intelligence, so much so it makes Harry Dunne and Lloyd Christmas from the ' series look like a pair of Albert Einsteins in comparison. She has, however, depending on your view, became a bit more likable in season 6 and since that same season's episode called "Driver's Dread", she finally got her driver's license and able to drive Vanzilla completely after she passed her driving test, though it was possibly spoiled a week before it premiered in the USA in "Bummer Camp", thanks to those episodes airing in the USA out-of-order.?
    3. Rusty has been slightly flanderized since season 5 into a stupid and selfish boy, who only cares about helping others for his benefit at times. Explains include "Saved by the Spell", "Zach Attack", "How the Best Was Won", "Don't Escar-Go", "All the Rage", "Time Trap!", etc.
    4. has reverted into, and has completely become an unlikable jerk in some episodes in season 5 and onwards, especially in "Schooled!", where she abused the post of the monitor in the hall such as stuffing Lincoln into a locker just because he was running. This makes her a hypocrite, as in the episode "Middle Men", she was worried about Lincoln and Clyde if they were to get bullied on their first day of middle school. But here, she does the exact thing she was against with Lincoln for no apparent reason other than she is the hall monitor.
    5. Lucy Loud, despite still being likable, has been slightly flanderized to became more selfish to get what she wanted in seasons 4 and 5:
      1. In "A Grave Mistake", she kind of manipulated Lincoln to joining her club so that she could become the leader of her club.
      2. In "She's All Bat" where she wanted to get rid of Lola just because Lola was stealing her attention. She went as far as forging a document which could've gotten her in big trouble by the school or even suspended by Principal Huggins.
    6. Lincoln's friend group, most notably Clyde and Rusty (as mentioned above), have become much more selfish than that of previous seasons. Half of the time when they are in an episode that takes place in the middle school, they usually tend to sacrifice each others aspirations or talents for their benefits, whether it be all of them (like in "Saved by the Spell") or one of them (such as the aforementioned Clyde in "Flying Solo"). Their actions during these seasons are nearly comparable to what Lincoln was like in most of his episodes in season 4. Starting in season 5, they are no longer classmates with Lincoln because Principal Ramirez does not work out for Lincoln to assigned to Mrs. Salter's class with them and there's no room left.
    7. went from being a "strict, but fair" retired military man, who does not have a family to a pigsty, a very dimwitted buffoon, and a very mean, sneaky, rude, and crafty madman who hates children and takes his anger out on Lincoln just for sick kicks until he has a change of heart in the near end of "Rumor Has It". On top of that, he's not working real hard, as a teacher, due to his near utter stupidity. He has became a bit more likable in season 6, because he isn't as mean-spirited and sadistic in seasons 6-present.
    8. is a bully and went from "manipulative asshat" (at worst) to "inconsiderate, apathetic bully" and become villainous jerk. What makes it worse is that he became friends with Lincoln in "Jeers for Fears". Starting in season 5, he becomes the main antagonist of the series. He is also plotting and scheming to make Lincoln's life miserable.
    9. Not even Lily was safe from flanderization in one episode. In Appetite for Destruction, she became a psychopathic toddler who takes her bad behavior to the worst insane type of extreme, that includes taping her teacher to a wall, beating up another preschool kid for no reason, and throwing a chair at one of her parents.
  4. A number of bad-to-mediocre episodes in these seasons (see the "Notable Bad Episodes So Far" from these seasons section).
  5. Like the Gene Deitch era of Tom and Jerry, some of the episodes are a huge waste of potential since, even though they do utilize a bunch of good ideas, whether it be a middle school setting (in various episodes, despite being a bit odd for this show), a Canadian setting (in "Schooled!"), the college setting (in some episodes like "Schooled!") and even the preschool setting (in some episodes like "Appetite for Destruction"), for heaps of comedic gags while at the same time to show the viewers what is it like to be in these real life settings in a positive way, but unfortunately, those ideas are ruined by many stale or unfunny jokes that rely more on stereotypes and the negative tone, while the rest of the episodes rely more on the torture elements on various episodes like on Lincoln and even Rita and Lynn Sr.
  6. The Loud House, despite having stereotypes itself, had a unique charm that didn't come off as disrespectful and insulting. But since season 5, it's done in even more one-dimensional and exaggerated ways and the portrayals of them can come off as stupid, cringeworthy, or downright disrespectful, and not only that, it can make the show look racist in terms of stereotyping cultures.
    • The worst offender is "Schooled!", where Canada is depicted as being a horrible country to live, in that is obsessed with ice hockey, log cabins, and is snowy with lots of mooses, all of which any Canadian would point out are no more commonplace than in the United States of America. These jokes are not done in a charming way unlike Park, and instead come off as just annoying where they try to shove in a Canadian joke every 2 seconds. There is even one part where a character tells Lincoln to say he's allergic to Canada, which is just an un-self-aware xenophobic line.
    • And to make matters worse, Kyle Marshall is Canadian himself much to the irony of the show. Wouldn't he know how to tell some good Canada jokes?
    • In addition, they also made international characters who are not one-dimensional such as Ronnie Anne, Bobby, Maria, and the rest of the Casagrandes family, and have gotten their own spin-off series.
  7. Many of the newer episodes are very predictable, with morals that are (despite being good for the most part) so basic, half-baked, forced down the viewers' throat, and far-fetched it's not even funny, and some of the episodes don't need any morals, to begin with. Even when it's not them, it's usually how almost every episode plays its plotline, except it switches its formula around now and again.
    • Here is how this predictable kind of plot goes. Something is the main concept or plot point for the story on what happens today, the character gets a stupid idea or two that they have in mind, the character goes off to stick to their plan, all goes fine until bad things happen, sometimes they notice or don't notice and don't care, all things breaks loose, the character is reprimanded, the character goes "It's all my fault!" and apologizes for the events, they end the episode with either the character setting things right or learning a lesson and all is happy. This was a formula used before in some episodes of the show, and while it was present, it was not used this much. Here, it feels like the writers began to run out of ideas entirely as the way this formula is used makes the episodes more dull and mundane to watch, despite several of the episodes in these seasons being good or decent.
  8. Some of the jokes are not as good as the jokes that played in the first three seasons. Instead, they come off as annoying, stale, unfunny, painful to laugh at, and/or even offensive to some people at times.
  9. Similar to shows like seasons 3-5 of The Ren & Stimpy Show, seasons 4 and 5 of The Powerpuff Girls, seasons 3 and 4 of ', and seasons 6-8 of SpongeBob SquarePants, the animation in these seasons, while now a decent effort and not terrible, is a pretty noticeable big downgrade from the first three seasons. It's especially surprising since the show is still animated by Jam Filled Entertainment. Here are some examples of almost poor animation:
    • The character animations can either look very limited, uncanny or too fluid.
    • The lines of the characters are now thin. While not a bad thing to change the art style a little, this here is not the case as it makes the animation look uncanny in some scenes.
    • The color palette is far too colorful and may give someone a headache.
    • In some scenes, viewers can also notice reused assets.
    • This is due to the show having a new creative director, Jessica Borutski (as mentioned above in WISOH#1), making the animation software transition from Toon Boom Harmony to Adobe Animate.
  10. The plots are a lot more nonsensical and stupid for the most part due to these seasons having a more cartoony feel compared to the previous seasons. The show always had some cartoonish elements in the first three seasons, but they weren't there to advance the plot. "White Hare" from season 3 has the element where Lincoln is a rabbit named Warren and has twenty-five sisters, and the overall execution is done extremely well. The same cannot be said with "Schooled" for several reasons. The same is with The Casagrandes, though thankfully not as much.
    • In addition, seasons 4 and especially 5-onward have been having a lot of overly cartoonish elements in many episodes. This started to surface in season 3, but at least there, the show still had its slice-of-life roots. In the first two seasons, some episodes have cartoonish elements, but they were minor and didn't do anything to the plot. Season 4 had many episodes which have at least one cartoonish moment, and in season 5, such moments have become more commonplace and in more episodes. Some episodes that have them are the Miller family being spies, working for SUSPENSE, and their evil plan in "Family Bonding", ghosts existing in "Ghosted!", Flip's biological oddities in "Blinded by Science", Liam's wounded arm being so visibly deformed and Lucy using her ghost magic to cure Liam's arm in "Cow Pie Kid", Lisa making an invention to bring Dolly the Dinosaur in The Loud House universe in "School of Shock", Jazzy destroying a lot of Royal Woods in "Training Day", Lisa making an invention to go inside and fighting the monsters in Lily's nightmare with Leni, Lynn, Lincoln, Lola, Lily in "Dream a Lily Dream", Vampires existing in "Fright Bite", etc. The Casagrandes also has that too, but to a lesser extent.
  11. Like SpongeBob SquarePants, these seasons' continuity is mediocre at best and horrible at worst such as:
    • In "Schooled!", Lincoln's teacher is different as he was in "Middle Men".
    • In "Save Royal Woods!", Lincoln and Clyde sing that they met at a tree, when Lincoln said on a Loud House Instagram post that he and Clyde met on a Halloween night as little kids when Lynn ran and Clyde bumped into Lincoln.
    • In "Eye Can't", Lisa makes a new pair of eye glasses for her eyes, which contradict "Making the Grade".
  12. Similar to season 3 of Turbo F.A.S.T, these seasons have almost never had any good character development, as someone learn their lesson in the end and apologize, only to nearly revert to their old ways in the next episode, showing that the show does now keep a Status Quo because the Status Quo is God to Nickelodeon or something. However, Lincoln is a little bit more likable in season 5 and some of the other characters have became a bit more likable in season 6 (depending on your view for Leni, Lynn, and Chandler) whilst everyone else has almost either lost their way or almost forgot they even had character development at all.
  13. The show doesn't know how to handle its focus on the characters anymore (as of season 5):
    1. Depending on your view, there have been way too many Lincoln and the gang episodes in seasons 5-present as opposed to there being some in the first four seasons, with exceptions like of "Silence of the Luans", "Much Ado About Noshing", and "Camped!", thus leaving several fans getting sick and tired of them hogging a lot of the episodes over time.
    2. Depending on your view, Lincoln himself has been the focus of way too many episodes, though this is obviously excusable as he didn't have as much focus in season 4 and after all, he's the main protagonist of the show. The most notable Lincoln-centric episodes are: "Schooled!", "Family Bonding", "Kernel of Truth", "Ghosted!", "Blinded by Science", "Season's Cheatings", "A Flipmas Carol", "Saved by the Spell", "No Buss No Fuss", "Resident Upheaval", "Flying Solo", "Rumor Has It", "Grub Snub", "Much Ado About Noshing" Broadcast Blues", "Camped!", "How the Best Was Won", "Farm to Unstable", Diss the Cook", "For Sale by Loner", "Runaway McBride", "High Crimes", "Frame on You", "Present Danger", "Don't Escar-Go", "Save Royal Woods!", "The Taunting Hour", "Musical Chairs", "All the Rage", "Scoop Snoop", "Dine and Bash", "Sofa, So Good", "Driver's Dread" (depending on your view), "Bummer Camp", "Sleepstakes", "Time Trap!, "Crashed Course", "Lights, Camera, Nuclear Reaction, etc. This list also includes some episodes that don't directly focus on him.
      • While it is nice to see Lincoln having more episodes to himself, he has been getting so many episodes even to the point where sisters like Luan, Lucy, and Lily, have had only one episode, sisters not having one more episode, sisters not having more than two episodes, etc. The same is with Clyde.
      • This was also the case with season 1, but at least it was executed better there as the show was formerly more focused on Lincoln's point-of-view when it came to living with ten sisters.
    3. While it is nice to see Lori go to college, however, she has been appearing less frequently even to the point where the sisters and other characters have been appearing more than her and having more major roles. There are also a lot of episodes where the whole Loud family appears without her as a result.
    4. Depending on your view, Lisa and Lynn have gotten too many episodes in season 5. Lisa's ones are: "Schooled!" (depending on your view), "Blinded by Science", "A Flipmas Carol", "School of Shock", "Friday Night Fights", "Much Ado About Noshing" (depending on your view), "Dream a Lily Dream", "The Loudly Bones", "High Crimes" (depending on your view), "Present Danger" (depending on your view)", "Flip This Flip" (depending on your view), "Save Royal Woods!" (depending on your view)", "The Taunting Hour" (depending on your view)", Eye Can't", "Dine and Bash" (depending on your view), "Sofa, So Good" (depending on your view), "The Last Laugh" (depending on your view), "Driver's Dread" (depending on your view), "Sleepstakes" (depending on your view), "Time Trap!", "Robot Reboot" (if considering the short as an episode in the show), "Crashed Course" (depending on your view), "Lights, Camera, Nuclear Reaction", "A Major Hiccup" (depending on your view), "Space Jammed", "The Loud Cloud", and "Small Blunder". Lynn's ones are: "Schooled!", "Family Bonding" (depending on your view), "A Flipmas Carol" (depending on your view), "Cow Pie Kid", "Hurl, Interrupted", "Friday Night Fights" "Diss the Cook", "The Taunting Hour", "Cheer Pressure", "Lynn and Order", and "Snow Escape".
    5. Although Lily has gone to preschool as of "Schooled!", she has yet to have her episode (or one involving her in preschool like making a friend or something else), to the point where all of the sisters and Lincoln himself have had their episodes. This is the same case with the first three seasons, of which whenever there is a Lily-themed episode, it is always someone else that is the main protagonist and not Lily. She only has had one episode solely focusing on her, which is "Any Given Sunday", though she eventually got another preschool episode (at the very end of season 5, despite the fact there were many opportunities beforehand that season the preschool could be showcased) called "Appetite for Destruction". She is also going to get a preschool episode at the very end of season 6, despite the fact there were many opportunities beforehand that season the preschool could be showcased) called "Small Blunder".
    6. Ronnie Anne and her family (alongside Sid Chang and almost all of the secondary Casagrandes characters) have been completely absent since "Washed Up" and in seasons 5-onward without any mentions or cameos (except for Bobby and Sergio who were seen/mentioned in "Schooled!"). It doesn't help that Bobby has appeared in season 5 (he has appeared in "Schooled!", is mentioned in "The Boss Maybe", "Ghosted!", "Camped!" (on Lori's phone) and is mentioned in the then-upcoming "Diss the Cook" on Lori's Fairway University account on her computer, and appears in the upcoming "Crashed Course" alongside a lot of other Great Lakes City residents), and the main and secondary characters of the show have been making a lot of appearances in their spin-off series, though it is obviously admittedly excusable since they are the main characters in the spin-off series. Not to mention, there was a twenty-seven hiatus between "Washed Up" and "Don't You Fore-Get About Me" of Ronnie Anne, Bobby, Carlos, and Sergio's return to the show. They will return to the show for another season after Ronnie Anne's spin-off show The Casagrandes ends.
    7. Some new fan-favorite characters that could potentially be used more are introduced in one episode (i.e. Carol Pingery from "Picture Perfect", Bratty kid from "Cereal Offender", Tabby, Giggles, Polly Pain from "Dance, Dance, Resolution", Unnamed Brunette Haired Woman from "Rawl Deal", Maggie from "Funny Business", Hugh and Mrs. Demartino from "Study Muffin", Rocky Spokes (Rusty's little brother) from "Back in Black", Amy, Morgan, and Diane from "Net Gains", Sasha, Superintendent Chen, and Amir from "The Write Stuff", Midred, Lacey St. Claire from "A Mutt Above", the Female Duck from "Love Birds", Colonel Austin from "Last Loud on Earth", Simon from "Purrfect Gig, Theo from "Singled Out", Emma and Chloe from "Brave the Last Dance", the Miller Family from "Family Bonding", Tabby Gobblesworth from "A Flipmas Carol", Taylor and Pablo from "No Bus No Fuss", Jazzy and Snazzy from "Training Day",), only to make little-to-no appearances again. While this problem was present before the downhill (a lot of the episodes are in the same episodes), they could still bring these characters back to give them more story ideas again.
      • On the subject of "L is for Love", the love interests of the siblings, with the exceptions of Sam and Benny, have been pretty much forgotten by season 4, which is disappointing because there have been a fair several episodes focusing on some of the siblings' events where the interests would have wanted to cheer on or support them. Leni, in particular, was said to be dating her interest in the season 3 episode "", but he isn't seen or mentioned since then, and in seasons 5-present, she gets new crushes, first an unnamed boy with a cowlick in "Undercover Mom", then Scott in ', and Gavin in "Food Courting".
    8. Supporting-to-recurring characters besides Rita and Lynn Sr. and characters outside of the Loud Family besides Clyde get their own episodes like ("A Flipmas Carol"), Stella ("Saved by the Spell"), (Zach ("Zach Attack"), Mr. Grouse ("For Sale by Loner"), Harold ("Runaway McBride"), Leonard ("Bummer Camp"), Benny ("Puns and Buns"), Miguel ("Food Courting"), and Rusty ("Save the Last Pants"), get their episodes. While it is nice to see them get their episodes in seasons 5-onward, it can be insulting and tiresome for some fans since they want to see their favorite characters get one or three episodes.
    9. While it is nice to see Lincoln, his friends, and all of the former elementary school students go to middle school in season 5, however, the elementary school and its staff (most notably Mrs. Johnson, Coach Pacowski, and Principal Huggins) have been appearing less frequently even to the point where the middle school and its staff have been appearing more than the elementary school and its staff and almost none of its non-main staff have been appearing except for Miss Allegra. Not helping by the fact that Cheryl still gets to make a handful of appearances in seasons 5-onward, though it is excusable due to the fact that her sister Meryl was introduced in "Schooled!", and the fact that the writers likely realized that they couldn't have show Cheryl as Principal Huggins' staff frequently anymore due to the then-elementary school students graduating elementary school off-screen and going to middle school in "Schooled!", so they could at least try and put Mrs. Johnson, Coach Pacowski, and Principal Huggins with lines in the non-elementary school episodes. In fact, Mrs. Johnson and Coach Pacowski only have one appearance in season 5 without any lines, in "School of Shock" and "For Sale by Loner" respectively, thus wasting their characters and creating two missed opportunities.
    10. There has been no Ace Savvy-centered episodes after "Kings of the Con" as well as seasons 5-onward, most likely due to the negative reception of "Kings of the Con" and/or the writers favored episodes about Lincoln's other interests like Muscle Fish, magic and magic shows, and David Steele. Not to mention, Ace Savvy and related stuff has rarely been seen and mentioned in seasons 5th-present, where many fans have speculated that Lincoln moved on from Ace Savvy and/or started liking David Steele more.
    11. In season 5, almost all of the main characters got three (except for Luan, if not including "Undercover Mom" as one) centered episodes and two episodes directly focusing on themselves. While almost all of them did get three episodes focusing on themselves (as mentioned above), Lori, Leni, Luan, Lynn, Lana, Lily (as mentioned above), Clyde, Rita, and Lynn Sr. (due to him not getting any episodes focusing on himself from season 3's "Home of the Fave" to season 6's "A Bug's Strife") didn't get more than two episodes focusing on themselves in season 5, with the worst, biggest, and most notable being Luan and Clyde, who the former only got two (three if counting "Undercover Mom" as a Luan-centered episode in season 5) episodes in that season, thus making fans (like users from its Fandom wiki called The Loud House Wiki) really wanting her to get another episode focusing on her and centering around her, especially SnkLuanChalicefan86 (formerly known as Snkcole8630 at the time), who really wanted Luan to get another episode in season 5, got so worried about it, even to the point where she took a break from the wiki from October 2021 when she figured out that the then-unannounced 525B named "Runaway McBride" and later "High Crimes" would focus on Harold and eventually Lincoln instead of Luan as SnkLuanChalicefan86 had wanted it to be a Luan X Benny (LuBenny) really bad.
    12. Depending on your view, Luan has gotten too many episodes in seasons 5-onward. Luan's episodes are: "Stressed for the Part", "The Taunting Hour" (depending on your view), "The Last Laugh", "Catastrophe" (depending on your view), and "Puns and Buns".
    13. Lynn Loud Sr. doesn't have any episodes in seasons 4 and 5. Much like the Lily centered episodes in seasons 1-3, and whenever in seasons 4 and 5 ("Present Tense", "Recipe for Diaster", "Feast or Family", "Schooled!", "The Boss Maybe", "Family Bonding" (depending on your view), "Ghosted!" (depending on your view), "Undercover Mom (depending on your view), "Electshunned" (depending on your view), "Much Ado About Noshing", "Camped!", "Dad Reputation", "Animal House" (depending on your view), and "Appetite for Destruction") there is a Lynn Sr.-centered episode, it does focus on someone else besides him. However, Lynn Sr. would eventually get an episode in season 6 called "A Bug's Strife, thus there a one hundred twelve episodes and a three and a year gap between "Home of the Fave" and "A Bug's Strife" between him getting another episode.
    14. Clyde began making less appearances in season 4, but eventually started to make more appearances and major roles as of season 5.
    15. Similar and like Mr. Turner, Mr. Crocker, and being severely overused as the because of that show's creator Butch Hartman and the writers favoring almost them over most of the secondary characters and a lot of episodes being rehashed so the episodes could shoehorn them in major roles in The Fairly OddParents, these seasons have overused Flip, Scoots, and Mr. Grouse, becoming the, especially in its fifth season onward. Most of the time, one or two of them are put into an episode as a brief gag for laughs as well as being used for multiple different purposes in the show too as well. In the fifth season, their appearances increased, and by the sixth season, they have been appearing in almost every episode, as well as ones not even directly focusing on themselves, where Scoots and Mr. Grouse were promoted from recurring characters to supporting characters. A similar case is with Cheryl and Meryl, though not as much as Flip, Scoots, and Mr. Grouse.?
  14. Similar to many other shows like the ' spin-off called Teen Titans Go!, some episodes have rather misleading titles. On top of that, some titles are lame, especially "No Bus, No Fuss", "Fam Scam", "Frame on You", and "Sofa, So Good". The worst title is "Grub Snub", because not only does it sound stupid, but it references Grubhub, which is yet another attempt to be relevant.
  15. Speaking of jumping the shark, one way the show lost its charm was to stop making it have a slice-of-life feel and more of a slice-of-life/fantasy/comedy genre show in season 5 onwards. This is at its worst in the where it has dragons and magic in it. Even if the slice-of-life feel is present, it no longer stays consistent within the show anymore. Leaving the show to become a neutered and dumbed-down show that lost almost all of its mojos. Plus, the slapstick feel was at least normal in the first 3 seasons, but at this point, it has been amplified to almost no longer seem even a bit funny and fitting for a realistic show. One major example of unrealism are "Family Bonding" and Time Trapǃ, in which both episodes involve spies trying to taking over the world and involving time traveling respectively.
  16. Just like shows like Herman and Katnip, the Gene Deitch era of Tom and Jerry, '', the Larry Doyle era of the oe Tne, seasons 6-8 of SpongeBob SquarePants, Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Cartoon", and the final two seasons of, it relies more on gratuitous over-the-top violence instead of slapstick.
    1. The Loud House Movie, while decent, had a lot of flaws that kept it from being good.
    2. ' was made just to give the franchise the aforementioned live-action series that almost nobody asked for.
  17. Overall, these seasons damaged the reputation of the show, as the show is now seen as an unrelatable Nickelodeon comedy show rather than the beautiful and likable show like it was in the first three and (depending on your view) sixth-onward seasons. This show is an example of some terrible seasonal rot within Nickelodeon's history. Along with that, (depending on your view) almost no improvement have happened ever since "Schooledǃ", and more terrible episodes ha come along, which contributed to the downfall of the now toxic fanbase as well. But still, Nickelodeon uses this as their second cash cow besides SpongeBob SquarePants, as there is currently 6+ seasons, two whole movies, a long special, and the live-action show. And it's safe to be said-it was unlikely the series would recover and it most likely would be as good as it was ever again, not even a reboot from a decade after its cancellation could repair the damage (well at least SpongeBob SquarePants is lucky to recover since Stephen Hillenburg was still involved on the show, even during its seasonal rot in seasons 6-8, that is until he died, leading to the newer seasons still being almost somewhat of a downgrade, though the show still remains good, but sadly Chris Savino isn't around for this show, and SpongeBob fans should be thankful for that). These seasons are like the modern era of Family Guy but for kids or seasons 4-6 of ' in that matter, what makes it worse/more surprising is that the latter had improved in its once it came to Netflix. But for this, as said, it seemed it will never return to the original charm. Plus, most of the problems these seasons have been so bad that some fans (like YouTuber named Yoshi Player as he said in his "Schooled!" review) decided to stop watching the show altogether after "Schooled!" and the viewership has been decreasing a lot, though, it did, however, improve a bit in its second half as of "Rumor Has It", and it's mostly speculated due to major backlash from fans (like users from its infamous hated fanbase, depending on your view), and season 6 is an improvement over seasons 4 and 5 (depending on your view), however. When the show premiered, the first episode received had 2.07 million views upon its broadcast, "Antiqued Off" from season 3 had 1.22 million viewers, and the season 6 episode, "Time Trap" had 310,000 viewers upon premiere, showing how less and less people are willing to watch the show. It even disrespects its audience and the writers also see any form of criticism in the slightest at all as shown with "The Taunting Hour". The ' episode "Boss Life", keep in mind, taught its moral on how to handle criticism why better than how The Loud House would.

Redeeming Qualities change

  1. There are still several good, memorable, and decent episodes from these seasons such as:
    • "Friended! with the Casagrandes" (which started these seasons and Isabella Alvarez voice as Ronnie Anne on a high note)
    • "Power Play with the Casagrandes" (a good way to start the episodes where Lincoln is also absent from both segments)
    • "Room for Improvement with the Casagrandes" (a good way to also start the episodes where Lincoln is indeed absent from both segments)
    • "Store Wars with the Casagrandes"
    • Face the Music with the Casagrandes (depending on your view)
    • "Store Wars with the Casagrandes" (which ended Roxana Ortega voice role as Carlitos on a high note in The Loud House)
    • "Lucha Fever with the Casagrandes" (depending on your view, which ended the Casagrandes miniseries on a okay note)
    • "Washed Up" (a good way to start the non-Casagrandes story arc in season 4)
    • "Recipe for Disaster"
    • "Any Given Sundae"
    • "A Mutt Above"
    • "Love Birds" (a good way to end Miguel Puga's role as storyboard supervisor on The Loud House Diem Doan boarded role)
    • "Leader of the Rack"
    • "Tails of Woe"
    • "Last Loud on Earth" (depending on your view)
    • "A Pimple Plan" (a good way to end the first half of season 4 in production order)
    • "Good Sports" (a good way to start the second half of season 4, arguably the best episode from season 4 and these seasons, and Michael Rubiner's credit is now executive producer)
    • "Geriantics" (a good way to end Fred Willard's role as Pop-Pop and the episodes in 2019 and the 2010s decade)
    • "Exchange of Heart" (a good way to start the episodes in 2020 and the 2020s decade)
    • "Community Disservice" (a good way to start Jordan Rosato's first and only episode role as director)
    • "Game Off"
    • "Write and Wrong"
    • "Singled Out"
    • "Brave the Last Dance"
    • "A Star is Scorned" (a good way to indeed start the episodes where Lincoln is really absent from both segments outside of the Casagrandes story-arc episodes)
    • "Senior Moment" (depending on your view, a decent way to end the episodes about Lori being in Royal Woods High School as well as also really indeed being a senior there)
    • "A Dark and Story Night" (a good way to end Sammie Crowley's role as writer before she left Nickelodeon to really work on)
    • "How Double Dare You!"
    • "Snoop's On" (a good way to end Karla Sakas Shropshire's role as writer)
    • "" (despite being a rehash as mentioned above)
    • "Kernel of Truth" (a good way to start off the Action News Team episodes and the only episode where James Arnold Taylor voices Chef Pat)
    • "Blinded by Science" (depending on your view)
    • "Band Together (depending on your view, a good way to end Sarah Johnson's role as boarder before she left Nickelodeon)
    • "Cow Pie Kid" (a good way to start the episodes in 2021 and Jared Morgan's role as director)
    • "Season's Cheatings" (depending on your view, a good way to end Ari Castleton's role as sole director)
    • "A Flipmas Carol" (depending on your view, a good way to end the episodes in 2021)
    • "Silence of the Luans" (depending on your view, a decent way to end Jared Morgan's role as writer)
    • "Undercover Mom"
    • "Zach Attack" (a good way to end off Karmen Sunčana Lovrić's in the Croatian dub of The Loud House, even with this episode only airing once in Croatia)
    • "Hurl, Interrupted"
    • "Rumor Has It" (a good way to start the second half of season 5, Stella's new voice actor role as Stella in the Croatian dub, and a good way to end off Owen Rivera-Babbey voice role as Rusty)
    • "Training Day" (a good way to start off the title also appears on the right side of the title card and the stuff is on the left)
    • "Director's Rut"
    • "Friday Night Fights"
    • "She's All Bat"
    • "Camped!" (a good way to start Gramps' physical debut)
    • "Dad Reputation (a good way to start The Chang from Anti-Social" now being named the Doo-Dads with also inviting Harold and Rodney in)
    • "Dream a Lily Dream"
    • "Animal House"
    • "Lori Days"
    • "In the Mick of Time" (depending on your view, a good way to end Alec Swicwimmer's role as a writer and the episodes released before The Loud House Movie)
    • "Fam Scam" (depending on your view)
    • "Farm to Unstable"
    • "Diss the Cook" (a good way to end the episodes released before The Loud House Movie)
    • "Runaway McBride"
    • "High Crimes" (depending on your view, an alright way to end season 5 in terms of airing order)
    • "Present Danger" (depending on your view, a decent way to start season 6 and Lincoln now being twelve in terms of production order)
    • "Stressed for the Part"
    • "Flip This Flip"
    • "Haunted House Call"
    • "Save Royal Woods!" (depending on your view)
    • "A Bug's Strife"
    • "Scoop Snoop"
    • "The Last Laugh"
    • "Driver's Dread"
    • "Bummper Camp" (depending on your view)
    • "Sleepstakes" (depending on your view)
    • "Catastrophe"
    • "Puns and Buns" (a good way to end season 6A in terms of production order)
    • "Lights, Camera, Nuclear Reaction" (a good way to start season 6B in terms of production order)
    • "Food Courting" (a good way to start season 6b in terms of airing order)
    • "Save the Last Pants"
    • "A Stella Performance"
    • "Hiccups and Downs"
    • "The Loathe Boat"
    • "Cheer Pressure"
    • "Stroke of Luck"
    • "Space Jammed"
    • "Crown and Out"
  2. Most of the characters are still likable like:
    1. Lincoln (a bit as of season 5 and fully as of season 6 depending on your view, but it's not enough to fully go back to his original personality as mentioned above)
    2. Lori
    3. Leni (before season 5 and a bit as of season 6 depending on your view as mentioned above)
    4. Luna
    5. Luan
    6. Lynn (a bit as of season 3)
    7. Lucy (despite her flanderization in seasons 4-present as mentioned above)
    8. Lana
    9. Lola
    10. Lisa
    11. Lily
    12. Clyde (despite his slight flanderization by season 5 as mentioned above)
    13. Rita
    14. Lynn Sr.
    15. Liam
    16. Rusty
    17. Zach
    18. Stella
    19. Flip
    20. Scoots
    21. Mr. Grouse
    22. Pop-Pop
    23. Myrtle
    24. Bernie
    25. Seymour
    26. Bobby
    27. Maria
    28. Rosa
    29. Hector
    30. Frida
    31. Carlos
    32. Carlota
    33. CJ
    34. Carl
    35. Carlitos
    36. Sid Chang
    37. Mrs. Johnson (despite barely appearing in the show as of season 5)
    38. Coach Pacowski (despite also barely appearing in the show as of season 5)
    39. Principal Huggins (despite not appearing a lot in the show as of season 5)
    40. Cheryl
    41. Meryl
    42. Tyler
    43. Howard
    44. Harold
    45. Fiona
    46. Miguel
    47. Sam
    48. Sully
    49. Mazzy
    50. Chunk
    51. Benny
    52. Mrs. Bernardo
    53. Margo
    54. Paula
    55. Maddie
    56. Kotaro
    57. Grant
    58. Rodney
    59. Hakiu
    60. Charles
    61. Cliff
    62. Geo
    63. Walt
    64. Cleopawtra
    65. Nepurrtiti
    66. Nacho
    67. Mayor Davis
    68. Vic
    69. Mr. Bolhofner (a bit as of season 6 as mentioned above)
    70. Mrs. Salter
    71. Coach Keck
    72. Chef Pat
    73. Principal Ramirez
    74. Mick Swagger
    75. Bun-Bun
    76. Principal Rivers
    77. Katherine Mulligan
    78. Patchy Drizzle
  3. The fourth season is currently the least bad, as it still has some of the charms of the first three seasons and most of the characters (aside from Lincoln) aren't as flanderized, though that isn't saying much due to the aforementioned flaws.
    • Speaking of which, Lynn Loud Jr. massively improved in season 4 as well as the Netflix-exclusive movie, but turned unlikable again in most episodes of season 5, until season 6 (depending on your view).
    • In addition, the season was okay for its first few episodes, especially The Casagrandes miniseries. It wasn't until "A Grave Mistake" that the seasonal rot became noticeable.
  4. Depending on your point of view, season 5 had a unique and clever idea of the characters aging up one year despite the poor execution. Typically in cartoons, characters would never age up, regardless of how long it's been running.
  5. The animation, while restricted, is still decently well done, thanks to being produced by the same company who was also known for producing shows such as the final Big World! Big Adventures! seasons of Thomas and Friends: Jam Filled Entertainment.
    • In addition, it was also a good idea to have the characters move up a grade as opposed to cartoons where when they move up a grade, they would rarely age up a year.
  6. The title cards in season 5 have a new design with the three lower boxes being themed around the episode, which makes them more unique from each other.
  7. After "Silence of the Luans", Lily has finally stopped her dirty diaper running gag, as she finally got potty-trained. She is also now in preschool. She also speaks full sentences and also wears clothes now.
  8. While some of the jokes have become stale, most of the jokes are still good.
  9. Depending on your view, the show has slightly improved itself later on in the second half of the fifth season, giving the sisters more episodes to themselves and somewhat better writing. It could be likely due to major backlash from fans (like users from The Loud House Wiki).
    • Depending on your view, the sixth season can also be seen as an improvement over the last two seasons.
  10. Lincoln Loud has been getting more focus in seasons 5-onward as he didn't have a lot of focus in season 4.
  11. The voice acting is still amazing as usual, despite some of the voices still being hammy and high-pitched.
  12. Ronnie Anne along with the Santiago family, the Changs, and almost all of the secondary Casagrandes characters will come back to the show in season 6, once her spin-off show called The Casagrandes ends.
  13. Clyde also stopped his crush on Lori as of season 4.
    • Lynn has also stopped doing her superstitions as of season 5, but still wears her dirty socks around the house, most likely due to the fact that she already has been doing it when she started wearing them like that.
  14. There are still a handful of heartwarming moments in these seasons, much like the first three seasons.

Notable bad episodes from these seasons change

    • "Roll Model with the Casagrandes" (depending on your view, which started Diem Doan's role storyboarding by herself and Arturo Santiago's physical debut and speaking on an average note)
    • "No Show with the Casagrandes (depending on your view, which ended Hector's age from his "The Loud House" to "Roll Model with the Casagrandes" age on an average note)
    • "Pranks for the Memories with the Casagrandes" (depending on your view, which ended Eric Nam's voice role as Yoon Kwan on an average note)
    • "Present Tense" (depending on your view)
    • "Can't Hardly Wait" (depending on your view, which started Jessica Borutski's career on an average note)

Comments change

<comments />

I wonder if the page will be moved from The Loud House (season 4-present) to The Loud House (seasons 4 and 5). Hopefully it does. Similar thing with Lincoln and Leni's respective pages on the Loathsome Characters Wiki. MarioBobFan (talk) 01:31, 19 August 2022 (UTC)

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The Play's the Thing (SpongeBob SquarePants) change

TBA.

The Fair Bears (The Fairly OddParents) change

TBA.


Plot change

Bad Qualities change

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Good Qualities change

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Reception change

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Trivia change

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Videos change

No Bus No Fuss (The Loud House) change

Template:EpisodeInfobox

File:457C5D2D-94E1-4212-8F60-02394914E80E.png
On Nickelodeon Southeast Asia airings, Harold is edited out of the scene where he wraps the car.

"No Bus No Fuss" is the 13th episode (14th in production order) of the fifth season of '.

Plot change

Lincoln and his friends try to find another way to get to school after a run-in with the 8th grade bullies on the bus.

Why It's An Absolute Fuss change

  1. This is yet another dull and forced episode with Lincoln and his friends and Lincoln overall.
  2. The bus bullies (names: Anderson, Pablo, and Taylor) are extremely generic and have no personality other than "generic bully". They do nothing more like they're like to sit in the back, but gets aggressive when someone sits on their own chairs.
  3. The plot feels more like a bully story than a Loud House episode.
  4. The Loud sisters barely get any screen time, getting only two scenes. Not helping is that Lynn Loud Jr.'s only purpose in this episode is for filler only.
  5. Wasted potential: Like many other episodes of this show, this one wasted the school bus setting, which is supposed to show what is it like to be in a school bus in real life while at the same time have funny moments in it, but this one is ruined by a lot of stale or unfunny jokes that are dragged on for far too long while the rest of the episode just focuses on the torture scenario of Lincoln.
  6. Most of the jokes in this episode are really bad:
    • The instances where words ending in "ay" get replaced with "yay", like "Fri-yay" or "O-yay", which sounds very cringeworthy and is yet another example of Nickelodeon trying to be "hip and cool". Not helping is that this joke dragged on for too long like any seasons 8-present of Family Guy jokes.
    • Liam's pig Virginia barfing on Clyde, which is both disgusting and really unfunny. This one also lasted for too long.
  7. Flip launches the gang out of a plane, which is really dangerous. What makes matters worse is that this very scene threw away any chance to make Flip change to a better person in the preceding episode, "A Flipmas Carol".
  8. While Lincoln's other friends' parents were shown in the episode, Stella's parents (Judy Zhou and Ken Zhou, whom the first character made her first and only appearance in "Stall Monitor" and Ken is mentioned in that episode) were nowhere to be seen in this episode, but are thankfully mentioned.
  9. The episode is shockingly super repetitive, with a long montage of getting to school.
  10. The ending, while good, is very rushed, and the kids face literally no challenge getting the bullies to stop.
  11. Clyde's dads have been into overprotective nervous wrecks, even covering the car in bubble wrap.
  12. The title of the episode is stupid. Seriously, "No Bus No Fuss"?
  13. Although Lynn's appearance is minor, she once again proves to be a bad sister, by stealing Lincoln's breakfast burrito and eating it for no reason.

Redeeming Qualities change

  1. It was kind of cool to see the friends' different cars.
  2. It was amazing that the students on the school bus stood up to the bullies.
  3. There was a really funny inside joke involving Lincoln noticing he only has four fingers when counting how many cars there are to ride on.
  4. Thankfully, unlike the season premiere "Schooled!", Lynn isn't put on bus monitor duty just to abuse her position the same way she abused her hall monitor position.

Reception change

No Bus No Fuss was mainly hated by fans of the show, critics, and audiences, currently holding a rating of 4.3/10 on IMDb.

Trivia change

  • This episode marks the first title card music usage of Pop Punk in season 5, and it's first usage as title card music since "Feast or Family".
  • This is the last episode to be boarded by Ari Castleton before he left to work on.

The Fairly OddParents (seasons 1-8) change

Template:MPTelevisionInfoboxThe Fairly OddParents is an American animated television series created by Butch Hartman for Nickelodeon. Set in the fictional town of Dimmsdale, California, the series follows the adventures of Timmy Turner, a 10-year old boy who is neglected by his parents and abused by his teenage babysitter named Vicky. He is granted two fairy godparents named Cosmo and Wanda, who grant his every wish to make his miserable life less trashy. However, these wishes usually backfire and cause a series of problems that Timmy must fix.

It was produced by Frederator Studios (2001–2017), Nickelodeon Animation Studio, and Billionfold Inc. (2008–2017). The series originated from ten shorts on Nick's animation showcase, Oh Yeah! Cartoons, that aired from 1998 to 2001. They were later collectively greenlighted as a full series that began on March 30, 2001 and ended on November 25, 2006, totaling five seasons. The series was revived on February 18, 2008 and concluded once again on July 26, 2017. Butch Hartman left Nickelodeon roughly seven months after the series ended. A live-action series, ', was later announced on February 24, 2021 to be in development for Paramount+ and premiered on March 31, 2022.

Why These Seasons Follow Da Rules of Being Magical change

  1. The visuals of the art style and character designs are visually appealing on the eyes, possibly inspired from those of Dexter's Laboratory and Johnny Bravo, given that series creator Butch Hartman used to work on the latter two series before deciding to create this show (albeit, first starting out as a series of shorts on Oh Yeah! Cartoons). Hartman would later go on to use the same visuals of the art style and character designs for his later works, those being Danny Phantom and T.U.F.F. Puppy.
  2. Many memorable characters and villains such as:
    • , the average kid who no one understands.
    • (green/pink), the former being a simple-minded, yet charming and self-aware comic relief and the latter being a responsible, yet intelligent voice-of-reason.
    • (purple), Cosmo and Wanda's son and Timmy's fairy godbrother.
    • , Timmy's oblivious, yet overworked parents.
    • , Timmy's menacing teenage babysitter.
    • , Vicky's little sister who has an amusing crush on Timmy.
    • , Timmy's crazed teacher who wishes to prove to the world that fairies exist.
    • , the strict and intimating authority figure of all the fairies in the universe.
    • and, Timmy's best friends.
    • Trixie Tang, the typical yet charming popular girl who Timmy has an amusing crush on.
    • Veronica, Brad, and Chad, Trixie's best friends, and the other popular kids.
    • Francis, the typical, yet entertaining unpopular school bully.
    • Mark Chang, the prince of Yugopotamia who has an amusing crush on Vicky.
    • Remy Buxaplenty, the envious billionaire child with only one fairy godparent named Juandissimo Magnifico.
    • Crimson Chin and Crash Nebula, who are some of Timmy's favorite superheroes, and many of their respective enemies.
    • Catman, the superhero alter-ego of the late, great real-life Adam West.
    • Anti-Cosmo, Anti-Wanda, and Anti-Poof (actually Foop), the evil fairy counterparts of Cosmo, Wanda, and Poof.
    • Head Pixie (or H.P. for short), the leader of the Pixies, and his assistant, Sanderson.
    • Chip Skylark, a well-known singing sensation of Dimmsdale.
    • Doug Dimmadome, the major business owner in Dimmsdale.
    • Chet Ubetcha, the local news reporter.
    • Dinkleburg, the next-door neighbor of Timmy and his parents who Mr. Turner has hatred of.
  3. Even though Poof was born in season 6, the show was still good until.
  4. Memorable episodes/specials and/or direct-to-TV films, such as:
    • "[[The Big Problem! (The Fairly OddParents}|The Big Problem!]] (the first episode, which started the show and season 1 on a high note)
    • "Power Mad!"
    • "Spaced Out!"
    • "Transparents!"
    • "Chin Up!"
    • "Dog Day Afternoon"
    • "A Wish Too Far!"
    • "Tiny Timmy!"
    • "Father Time!"
    • "Apartnership!"
    • "Dream Goat!"
    • "The Same Game"
    • "Christmas Everyday!" (the first Christmas special, which ended season 1 on a high note)
    • "Information Stupor Highway"
    • "Scary Godparents" (Halloween special, which ended season 2 on a high note)
    • "Abra-Catastrophe!"
    • "The Origins of Denzel Crocker"
    • "Shelf Life"
    • "The Big Superhero Wish!"
    • "Channel Chasers"
    • "School's Out!: The Musical"
    • "Fairy Idol"
    • "Fairly Odd Baby"
    • "The Fairly Oddlympics"
    • "Merry Wishmas" (the second Christmas special)
    • "Wishology!"
    • "Anti-Poof"
    • "When L.O.S.E.R.S. Attack"
  5. It even had a trio of crossover specials with fellow Nicktoon series, The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius.
  6. "Meet the OddParents", the final episode of season 8, was decent and could have been a perfect way to wrap up the series if it had not continued past that.

Bad Qualities change

  1. Upon being revived in 2008, the show in its sixth season with the introduction of Poof. However, the show truly started to decline in quality with its seventh season before it hit new levels of low in its, which lead Nickelodeon into cancelling the series.
    • Season 6 is considered to be a major turning point for the show due to Poof's debut, as many people feel that the show relied too much on "wacky baby shenanigans" since then, given that Poof is just a baby, yet most of the episodes didn't even revolve around Poof to the point of spotlight stealing nor did the overall lore of the show (most notably the dynamic between Timmy, Cosmo, and Wanda) changed that much, and some people considered this season to be the best of the post-classic era seasons, with its quality on the same levels as the classic era. Even so, Season 6 also had a few bad episodes, with the Vicky-focused episodes being the worst offenders.
    • Seasons 7 and 8, while not terrible, are arguably considered to be the weakest of all the good seasons and seen as the beginning of the show's decline, as the episodes here are more of a mixed bag and have problems that would become the norm in Seasons 9 and 10. As an example, almost all of the original writing team have moved on, while Ray DeLaurentis came aboard as producer, story editor, and writer. However, DeLaurentis worked on projects that were to begin with, prior to working on this show starting in Season 7 onward. As a result, most of the secondary characters (yes, even Vicky) gradually became sidelined because the writers, including the show's creator Butch Hartman himself, became more interested in writing episodes focusing on Timmy's Dad, Mr. Crocker, and occasionally Foop instead. Additionally, several continuity errors and inconsistences, mostly regarding Da Rules, started popping up more around this time.
      • Even in the classic era and Season 6, continuity can be inconsistent at times. One particularly baffling example comes from "Fairy Fairy Quite Contrary" (Remy Buxaplenty's debut episode). In the episode, Remy showed concern that Timmy could wish to be richer than him, but the sister episode "Nectar of the Odds" (along with Season 7's "Crocker of Gold") establishes that poofing up money is counterfeiting.
    • To a minor extent, Season 5 is considered by some people to be the weakest season in the classic era, mostly because of the most infamous episode in the series, "". Additionally, some, if not, all of the characters got, though Season 6 outdid most of the flanderization from Season 5.
    • The third and final Jimmy Timmy Power Hour crossover, "The Jerkinators", despite being the original end of the show after Season 5, is arguably considered the weakest of the three crossovers, as it did little to wrap up loose ends, had a very generic plot, and some of the characters (mainly Jimmy and Timmy themselves) were out of character. However, it isn't terrible in the slightest and is rather decent. It's just the weakest.
  2. Even before season 9, there are still a lot of bad and/or mediocre episodes, such as:
    • ""
    • "" (Valentine's Day special)
    • "Just the Two of Us!" (depending on your view)
    • ""
    • "" (the most infamous episode)
    • "Teeth for Two" (depending on your view)
    • ""
    • ""
    • ""
    • "Temporary Fairy"
    • "Stupid Cupid"
    • ""
    • ""
    • ""
    • ""
    • ""
    • ""
    • ""
    • "" (10th anniversary special)
  3. Some characterizations are flawed even before season 9:
    • Cosmo and Mr. Turner, while they have great and funny one-liners here and there, can be flawed at times due to how dumb they can be.
    • Timmy's parents started out as busy and clueless, but later became very neglectful to the point where they act like they see him as a burden, though Mrs. Turner at some points is more tolerable than her husband.
    • , starting in Season 6, was flanderized from a sadistic bully who enjoyed messing with Timmy while keeping him safe and only saw her babysitting job as a means of making money despite her occasional psychotic qualities, into an outright Satan-like psychopath who tries to "destroy" Timmy. Additionally, despite still appearing in the show's intro and outro sequences, her screen time was significantly reduced, to the point that starting in Season 7, her role as the main antagonist of the series was passed onto Mr. Crocker.
    • in Seasons 6 and 7 was flanderized from a nerdy, yet goodhearted girl who had an amusing crush on Timmy and occasionally helped him despite her occasional stalking qualities, into an outright obsessive, lovesick creep who constantly stalks and harasses Timmy. Additionally, after Season 7 ended, she stopped making appearances in the show with the exception of her appearances in the live-action films as well as a few cameos.
      • Vicky and Tootie are also never shown interacting with each other at all whatsoever since Season 6 onward despite the fact that they are sisters.
    • Veronica, the best friend of Trixie Tang, is badly underutilized since she could have served as a potential third love interest for Timmy as an in-between of Trixie and Tootie (lacking the former's narcissism and the latter's obsessiveness) instead of later characters like Missy and, but Hartman and/or the writers seemed to have ignored her as the series went on.
  4. Even though the show has good morals, they are often not well carried out because they'd just rather tell the morals instead of showing them. Likewise, it has had some pretty bad and misleading morals:
    • The moral of the infamous "It's a Wishful Life" states that you shouldn't do things for people to be appreciated, but because it's the right thing to do. This is incredibly wrong because being appreciated means people are graceful for the goods that you do, being appreciated makes you know that you did something good and you should feel proud of yourself for doing something good, and how can you tell if you did something right or good if you aren't appreciated for it?
    • The moral in "Vicky Gets Fired" is an incredibly dangerous and misleading moral that states that if you are being bullied and tortured up to the point of attempted murder, you should keep quiet and not tell anyone, especially authority figures.
  5. It gets pretty mean-spirited, annoying, dumb, cliché, and juvenile at times.
    • The humor, in particular, is predictable and repetitive in practically every episode despite having some great one-liners and fourth wall breaks. It also can sometimes be offensively stereotypical, as it tends to make stereotypical jokes at British people (the antagonist character, Anti-Cosmo, being one example since he speaks in an English accent and wears a monocle) and portrays smart people as insufferable and insensitive.

The Fairly OddParents (seasons 9 and 10) change

Neat Structure/Sandbox change

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Leni Loud (seasons 5-present) change

Template:CharacterInfobox Leni Loud is one of the titular main characters in 1st-4th season and the titular deuteragonist in 5th-present season of the Nickelodeon series '. While she was tolerable for the most part in seasons 1-4, she has received flanderization in, but became a little bit more likable in Season 6 (depending on your view).

Bad Qualities change

  1. Like Loud, she became flanderized. But unlike him, she went from a compassionate teen to an even dumber person. Now granted, Leni was the airhead of the show, but she wasn't that stupid in the earlier seasons, not even to the point of being very dumb to the point it's not even mostly funny anymore. similar?
  2. In "", she acts like she lost all of her IQ, as she doesn't know what to choose for school and confuses Royal Woods High School with Baby Bunker Preschool. This is considered not just the stupidest moment she has done in season 5, but in the entire series. It does not help that this would later be put back in "" as a callback, as if the writers didn't learn their lesson from "Schooled!" and the fans.
  3. She has become even more irresponsible in season 5 as well.
    • She mostly has clumsy/accident-prone moments and is a true butt-monkey in the series due to her ditziness.
  4. In "Electshunned", she tried to run for mayor of Royal Woods despite the fact she's a minor and and not even a politician. Thankfully, she quit in the end and was nice.
    • She is at her absolute worst in the episode "" where she makes such a big deal of Lincoln and his friends hanging out at Gus' Games and Grub and then she tries to get Lincoln to leave Gus' Games and Grub. In fact, during the final round of their challenge, all of them start fighting and destroying all the arcade games which causes everyone else to run away from Gus' Games and Grub. They even injured the owner, Gus Gamesngrub and somehow are allowed back in the arcade instead of being banned.
  5. What makes it worse is that in season 4, she actually started to get a little smarter in that season, which was pretty good. But in season 5, it is almost all thrown away, but got a bit of it back in season 6 (depending on your view).
  6. Her voice in the ' and its rerun special A Loud House Christmas: Holiday Party, Dora Dolphin, sounds nothing like her original actress. In the upcoming live-action series, there is a possibility that she will be replaced, where it was eventually confirmed to be true.
  7. In "", she and the rest of her siblings break their parents' wedding vase that was a gift, and at Rita and Lynn Sr.'s wedding, they act stupid and they don't get rid of the vase, where they then wreck the wedding by telling the people there what to do, and not focusing on their plan instead. In addition, as a result of this, at the Royal Woods Dumpster, she fades away while looking in a mirror at her reflection while thinking it's the mirror all because of a broken vase, of which Lynn also points that out. In the end, also fixes everything before the kids disappear forever and Leni and the rest of the Loud siblings come back.
    1. In "" (the season 6A finale in terms of airing order), she and the rest of the siblings go to Fairway University to sabotage Lori's college life, similar to "Don't You Fore-get About Me". In addition, she and his siblings make Lori fail one of her golf college tests by driving her in Vanzilla alongside and and get no consequences at the end, making them karma houdinis. Lori does forgive them, however, similar to "Cheaper by the Dozen" and "Don't You Fore-get About Me".

Good Qualities change

  1. Also, Liliana Mumy still does a wonderful job voicing her.
  2. She still has her original personality in several episodes, such as in "The Boss Maybe" and the end of "Electshunned".
    • In "Schooled!", she shows Lily her preschool pictures. Later, she is shown boncing at the preschool, telling her parents that she will go to high school after five more bounces.
  3. At least she still cares for her friends and still has nice relationships with his family, especially Lincoln.
  4. Like modern Lincoln Loud, she still has her fair share of funny moments.
  5. She still has a likeness to designing outfits and accessories to go with them, making them look pretty, much like the first four seasons.
  6. She finally got her driver's license and able to drive Vanzilla completely in "Driver's Dread" after she passed her driving test.

Trivia change

  • Starting in season 5, she is now the deuteragonist of the series (replacement for) due to Lori is now moving out from Royal Woods to attend Fairway University with her friends and starts 12th grade.
    • Since in season 6 episode "Driver's Dread", she finally got her driver's license and able to drive Vanzilla completely after she passed her driving test.

Comments change

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Category:Idiotic characters Category:The Loud House characters Category:Flanderized Category:Annoying characters Category:Hilarious characters Category:Cartoon characters Category:Cute characters Category:Average characters Category:Nickelodeon characters Category:Females Category:American characters Category:Humans Category:Characters Category:Siblings Category:Teenagers Category:Redeemed jerks Category:Characters with good voice acting Category:Accident-prone characters Category:Butt-monkeys Category:Bad versions of good characters Category:Titular characters

Return of the L.O.S.E.R.S. (The Fairly OddParents) change

Template:EpisodeInfobox "Return of the L.O.S.E.R.S." is the seventh episode in the tenth season of '.

Plot change

Timmy's enemies learn that he is helpless without his fairies, and try to destroy him while he is weak, while Chloe has to deal with babysitting him.

Why It's One Of The L.O.S.E.R.S. change

  1. The portrayal of Timmy in this episode feels like the writers were treating him like a complete and utter joke. He suddenly got so lazy, he can't walk or even blink without assistance from his fairies, even though he's been able to do that in the previous seasons, and even before he met his fairy godparents.
    • Instead of being funny, this idea comes off as very illogical and unbearably stupid.
  2. Likewise, the League Of Super Evil Revenge Seekers (or L.O.S.E.R.S. for short) have been beyond likability, as they went from actually getting close to killing Timmy to using Looney Tunes-esque tactics with most of its charm sucked out since the team barely even try with disguises and stealth. Heck, they even reveal their evil plans right in front of the protagonists' faces.
  3. Cosmo and Wanda's subplot serves nothing to the episode other than filler and to have them unable to provide backup when the L.O.S.E.R.S. arrive. This time, they leave Timmy so they can buy the new iWand, which is another pathetic attempt at trying to stay relevant by making references to the iPhone.
    • The name of the store they head off to is called the "iWand Store". That name is just stupid, as it would be like calling the Apple Store the "iPhone Store".
  4. In a slap to the face, Dark Laser reveals he has a death laser...right in the climax of the episode.
  5. When the L.O.S.E.R.S thought they had killed Timmy, Dark Laser decides to frame his pet toy dog Flipsie, who is his best friend.
  6. Much like "Let Sleeper Dogs Lie", the entire setup of this episode makes it feel more like an approved trollfic than an actual The Fairly OddParents episode.

Comments change

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Category:Episodes Category:The Fairly OddParents episodes Category:2010s episodes Category:Annoying episodes Category:Bad episodes of good shows


Timmy Turner (Seasons 1-8) change

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Timmy Turner (seasons 9 and 10) change

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Cosmo and Wanda (seasons 1-8) change

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Cosmo and Wanda (seasons 9 and 10) change

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Poof (The Fairly OddParents change

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Mr. and Mrs. Turner (Oh Yeah! Cartoons) change

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Mr. and Mrs. Turner (The Fairly OddParents) change

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Denzel Crocker (The Fairly OddParents, Seasons 1-8) change

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Denzel Crocker (The Fairly OddParents, seasons 9 and 10) change

Should we add these Fairly OddParents characters to the character wikis? change

Should we add more Fairly OddParents characters to the Character wikis? I have more to add. I remember I put in a comment "I am thinking about making a page for Foop on both wikis, called Foop (The Fairly OddParents, Seasons 7 & 8) and one on this called Foop (The Fairly OddParents, Seasons 9 & 10)." and "I remember watching an episode about him a long time ago, but I will use the wiki for research and my memories too.". Neat Structure then said "I think Foop is too divisive to be on either wiki. You should create a discussion first.", and I am. I have loads we could add on the Greatest Characters Wiki:

    • Trixie Tang (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Foop (The Fairly OddParents, Seasons 7 & 8)
    • Dolores-Day Crocker (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Dark Laser (The Fairly OddParents, Seasons 3-9)

Sanjay (The Fairly OddParents)

    • Mark Chang (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Francis (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Flipsie
    • Elmer (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Veronica (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Anti-Cosmo and Anti-Wanda (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Catman (The Fairly OddParents
    • Crimson Chin (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Chip Skylark (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Chet Ubetcha (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Cupid (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Tooth Fairy (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Mama Cosmo (The Fairly OddParents)
    • Flipsie (The Fairly OddParents)

On the Loathsome Characters Wiki:

    • Foop (The Fairly OddParents, Seasons 9 & 10)
    • Dark Laser (The Fairly OddParents, Season 10)

Should SpongeBob's Road to Christmas from SpongeBob SquarePants and all of the other Christmas specials from that series be added on the Best TV Shows Wiki? change

Comments change

<comments/>

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20220524150223/https://memorialeye.com/does-lasik-wear-off/%7Carchivedate=2022-05-24%7Cquote=No, the effects of LASIK do not wear off.
  2. https://memorialeye.com/does-lasik-wear-off/%7Ctitle=Does LASIK wear off?|accessdate=2022-05-23|work=Memorial Eye Institute|language=English|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20220524150223/https://memorialeye.com/does-lasik-wear-off/%7Carchivedate=2022-05-24%7Cquote=No, the effects of LASIK do not wear off.