![]() ![]() My favorite sitcom, A Different World, attempts to reflect our reality too closely while existing in a fantastically rewarding context. I had to be at least decently familiar, which throws out Super Mario or Star Wars, where my awareness freezes out in the early 1990s. I set out personal reasons for which worlds we explore in Us Living in Fictional Cosmogonies. “Movies don’t create psychos, movies make psychos more creative,” only leaves you with variegated audiences who do not necessarily appreciate implication or the use of, “psycho,” much less the demonization of the mentally ill and so on and so on and so forth. ![]() We all know the unease of having to explain a favored world, a sitcom or movie wherein the characters or the seeming moral causality of the world are disagreeable, contrary at least to our public ethics. We all have our comfort worlds, fictional realms we can revisit, be they from television, prose, comics, on albums or in folktales. We are all familiar with the suspicion we know more about a fictional world than we do our own. ![]() Introduction: The Munsters and the Addams By Travis Hedge Coke on NovemPatricia Highmash ![]()
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