Chad character breaks the forth wall to speak with the audience

>Chad character breaks the forth wall to speak with the audience

How come this trope died out?

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Looks pretty gay for a “chad”, I thought it was Kiernan Shipka

That boy is insanely handsome.

Sam Ashe Arnold is insanely handsome.

Outside of Saved By the Bell and Shakespeare I only saw this trope in anti-drug high school plays

Kino
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Fresh Prince has moments when Will looks straight into the camera.

>90s kid's show
>addresses the viewer directly, telling them to stay away from drugs, stay in school, etc
>10s kid's show
>cast too distant and detached to communicate to the audience, the only 'message' is a passive-aggressive quip about 'equality' or 'love' or something vague toward a strawman character, with computerized audience 'clapping' for social proofing

Sam Taylor Buck is insanely handsome.

High Fidelity with John Cusack did it too kinda

that just cause youve been conditioned to no longer see blonde as chad... but its true perfect form chad

>black girl went full schizo
>Screech is a convicted fellon
It seems like every single 80s sitcom gets tainted. The amount of pedoshit happening in the background must've been fucking mad, too.

Come the fuck on, sitcoms in the 80s and 90s had really trash writing and the "morals" or whatever always hamfisted. There's tons of videos online of terrible "serious issue" plotlines in old sitcoms.

Seinfeld is one of the only shows from back then to age well because it stopped trying to make its characters anything but terrible people. Same thing with Frasier, Always Sunny, Curb, Arrested Development, etc

>The Ballad of Buster Scruggs: Buster Scruggs speaks amiably to the audience throughout his chapter while ruthlessly gunning down various challengers.
>Deadpool (2016) doesn't so much break the fourth wall as take a bulldozer to the wall, burn it, and then explode the ashes.
>In The Big Short, Jared Vennett (Ryan Gosling) breaks it frequently to address the audience, sometimes in the middle of a scene. Other characters do this as well, although not quite as much.>In Ferris Bueller's Day Off, at many points (most specifically the beginning and the end) Ferris talks directly to the audience while setting up the stereo and moving model in his bed.

you are talking about girl meets world right?

kid's shows, user. writing needs less subtlety. seinfeld, frasier, etc aren't kids shows.

seinfeld, frasier, etc are stupid shows

My bad, but need a lack of subtlety doesn't excuse the fact that most of the issues were handled pretty poorly anyway. People just don't get how to write for kids a lot of the time, but because kids don't give a fuck what they watch they get away with it. It's always been like that and will remain to be that way in the future

Jackson A Dunn is insanely handsome.

It worked in the 90's, but for modern audiences, the concept of having such a cool and kind guy speak to you as a friend was too unrealistic for to believe. this harshly clashed with audiences' lonely reality, and completely broke their immersion.

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Jumanji, when the kid has to get the axe from the shed.

Bud Bundy looks into the camera when he's sneaky with a girl.

>Chad character is actually an Asian Hapa

It was a different time

Does he have canon The World powers?