Some things make no sense. For instance? KING OF THE HILL on HULU or Donald Chump back in the White House.

Both are flaming out. Valentina Kraljik (FICTION HORIZON) reported:
According
to Parrot Analytics’ Streaming Economics data, King of the Hill has
brought in nearly $100 million in streaming revenue since the first
quarter of 2020.
That puts it on the same level
as “American Dad!,” which is still producing new episodes, and far
ahead of Mike Judge’s earlier hit, “Beavis and Butt-Head,” which has
earned just over $50 million for Paramount+ since 2020, including its
reboot.
For Hulu, these
numbers show why it made sense to revive “King of the Hill.” Bringing
Arlen, Texas, into the modern world is a smart move for a platform
looking for proven shows that keep viewers coming back. “Fans have been
waiting for years for new episodes, and that creates a huge initial
spike in interest,” industry analysts say.
But they didn't bring back KING OF THE HILL.
Brittany
Murphy is dead as is Tom Petty. Singer-songwriter Petty had played
Lucky, husband to Luanne. Luanne, a character with the show from the
first season back in 1997 was very important to the show. She was
Peggy's niece but she was more than that, she was the show's voice of
hope. Brittany Murphy played her and when the talk of a KING OF THE
HILL revival first started, many wondered how they could do the show
without Brittany Murphy.
Spoiler: They can't.
The revival already suffers bad word of mouth over the animation.
That's
not a minor thing for an animated show. And Mike Judd whining that
they aren't able to do the art the way they once were? Really doesn't
cut it.
But nothing about the show cuts it.
Supposedly,
it's the return of the Hill family. They've tried to make Bobby look a
little cuter but you've got Peggy talking and forcing you to wonder
what's wrong with Kathy Najimy's voice? Is she trying to make Peggy sound older? Hank? Did he come back with the revival?
Yes, there's a character named Hank Hill but he makes no sense.
In
the first scene, he's now the angry grandpa trying to navigate a world
with Uber. But far worse than the world having past Hank by is this
character voiced by Mike Judge that seems nothing at all like Hank. We
cringed over Hank having to defend himself for watching CNN -- didn't
really seem like an issue that should matter to his friends Boomhauer
and Bill. It might matter to Dale Gribble, it might not. But Bill and
Boomhauer?
What would
matter to them -- and should have matted to Hank -- was leaving the
United States. Forget the US, in what world does Hank leave Texas?
Mike
Judge thinks it's a great move (plot device) but heavy pot smokers
often think something's far out when it's really nothing.
Hank
Hill would not move to Saudi Arabia. Hank Hill would not live there
for years, finally return to the US and think about returning to Saudi
Arabia.
Judge likes to insist that many people leave Texas for Saudi Arabia.
We're sure a few do each year. We're also sure that they aren't the super-patriots Hank is.
Judge thinks it's a great move (plot device) because it's let's you see Arlen, Texas through the eyes of the returning Hank.
He really is that stupid.
And we blame Austin.
Austin,
Texas has many things going for it. The creative community really
isn't one of those things. Remember ROOSTER TEETH? That Austin based
'content creator' burned through millions for 20 years before finally
shutting down in 2023. It was so great, so wonderful, so this and so
that.
At least if you were White. And straight. And male.
They
created a lot of crap and a few tolerable programs as well. However,
the content-creators never seemed to be living in the same time as the
rest of us and they weren't interested in the voices of anyone who
wasn't a straight, White male. For the 21st century, that was
embarrassing.
KING OF THE
HILL returns with a similar problem. All these years later, they
finally find a Black character who can appear on more than one episode.
Black people might make up over 15% of the population of Garland, Texas
(one of three cities that Judge has cited for the fictional town of
Arlin, Texas); however, they just didn't exist during the 13 seasons
KING OF THE HILL originally aired.
Women -- of any race -- barely existed.
Having
lost one of the major character -- LuAnn -- and her having been a her,
you might think that they worked hard to create a new female character.
You would be wrong.
A
long with the new Black male character (who lived in Hank and Peggy's
house while they were in Saudi Arabia), you've also got Bobby's boss and
Bobby's boss' son. And you've got Bobby's co-worker.
But
no real effort has been made to create a replacement for LuAnn. In the
fall of 2023, Johnny Hardwick passed away. He had voiced Dale
Gribble. Dale's one of the worst characters on the show -- we'll get to
why in a second -- but they hired a replacement (Toby Huss) so that the
character could continue.
Why
is Dale so awful? A storyline that's not really cute and should have
been wrapped up long ago. Dale is married to Nancy (Ashley Gardner) who
has a child Joseph (voiced by an Anglo White actor until the revival
and now the character's voiced by Tai Leclaire who actually is Native
American). Why does that matter? Dale is not the boy's father, Native
American John Redcorn is the child's father and for 13 seasons, the joke
has been that Dale doesn't know.
How is that funny?
Dale still doesn't know in the revival (season 14) and, worse, neither does Joseph.
Jonathan
Joss took over the role in season two when the original voice actor
Victor Aaron passed away. Problem is, Joss was murdered back in June.
So the voice actors for John Redcorn and Dale Gribble are dead. Dale's
recast for the revival. As is Joseph.
But this storyline should have been cleared up long, long ago.
When you watch, you mainly grasp that Judge doesn't know how to be a show runner -- not a good one.
Here's
one example. Unlike in the original show, Bobby no longer lives at
home with his parents. He has an apartment with Joseph. The show did
not need to be more spread out. And are we all forgetting season three
of HAPPY DAYS? Episode one? "Fonzie Moves In"? The whole point was to
get Fonzie closer to the Cunninghams and make the action tighter so
Fonzie moves in with the Cunninghams. It probably would have been
smarter to have moved Bobby back in with the Hills. It would have made
the show move smother and work better.
KING
OF THE HILL didn't do send up and spoofs the way Seth MacFarlane's
programs so often do. They generally had a main story and supporting
story. And they followed them through in the manner that THE SIMPSONS
and BOB'S BUGERS do. Unlike those shows -- or AMERICAN DAD -- KING OF
THE HILL did not produce many classic episodes. There's "A Beer Can
Named Desire" and that may be it. The writing was never bad but it was
never focused. With Bobby living in an apartment, the show becomes even
more scatter shot.
Back
to HAPPY DAYS, season five, episode three was entitled "Hollywood: Part
3." But it's remembered as the episode where water skiing Fonzie jumps
a tiger shark with the phrase "jumping the shark" deriving from that
episode -- it's the moment that's supposed to kick off a decline.
We
bring that up because of Friday when Convicted Felon Donald Chump had
his jump the shark moment in Alaska as he met with War Criminal Vladimir
Putin.
Chump, based on his
statements repeatedly last week, thought he was going to Russia. As
Ruth noted Saturday, "" -- so clearly Chump had many things on his mind
going into that date. Still, give him props for going blonder with his hair color
-- we're guessing it was his equivalent of Marinly Monroe's platinum
blond look for when she sang "Happy Birthday" to President JFK. He
might not have known where the plane was dropping him off but he knew he
wanted to look pretty for his man. Giddy might have been the reason
for Donald repeatedly misspeaking (lying) in the lead-up to the meet-up.
This might also explain how documents got left unattended and forgotten. Naomi LaChance (ROLLING STONE) explained:
Guests
at a hotel in Alaska found eight pages of documents from President
Donald Trump's meetings Friday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in a
printer, NPR reported Saturday.
The
documents show the schedule of the summit with times and locations.
They also show the lunch menu, the lunch seating chart, and the phone
numbers of three of Trump administration staffers. The documents were
found in a printer at Hotel Captain Cook, a four-star hotel in Anchorage
that is near the military base where the summit took place.
According
to Jon Michaels, a professor of law at UCLA who lectures about national
security, a government official leaving the documents laying around is a
massive security breach.
"It strikes me as
further evidence of the sloppiness and the incompetence of the
administration," he told NPR. "You just don't leave things in printers.
It's that simple."
Love was on the brain but there were also egos involved as Daniel Hampton reminds:
A
New York Times reporter flagged what she called one "unusual" element
of a high-stakes meeting between President Donald Trump and Russian
President Vladimir Putin — it was awfully quiet.
Trump
and Putin participated in a bizarre standoff, with each trying to
outwait the other on deplaning in Alaska. As the two walked down the
tarmac and shook hands, Times reporter Katie Rogers, who is traveling
with Trump, flagged a notable facet of their meeting.
It
was like a moment in 1939 on the MGM lot when Laszlo Willinger needed photographs of the three primary stars of THE WOMEN for poster art. Rosalind Russell shows up late to make a big entrance as she apologizes for being late. Though late, she's actually the first to arrive because Joan Crawford and Norma Shearer are both circling around the building in their cars, each refusing to go in before the other. Laszlo has to go outside and flag the cars down to stop the diva behavior.
Divas.
Between Chump and Putin's sexual tensions, the need to sparkle and, most of all, the
incompetence, it's no wonder that Chump embarrassed himself on the world
stage and accomplished nothing. Andrew O'Hehir (SALON) notes:
Donald
Trump’s supposed strength lies in showmanship and stagecraft, or at
least in shamelessly whoring for attention, which is not exactly the
same thing. The fact that “we” — meaning the entire ecosystem of media
and public opinion, including you and me — keep giving him attention,
like a bunch of aging addicts chasing an unachievable high, says more
about us than about him.
But
while Trump’s second administration is undeniably nastier and more
destructive than his first, it’s not entirely clear who’s driving the
bus to dystopia. Because it ain’t him. Trump has always seemed more like
a sump pump of received wisdom and reprocessed opinions than an actual
human adult, but even by those standards he now appears enormously
diminished. His so-called summit meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska
on Friday was an abject failure (for everyone but Putin), making clear
that the president’s performance skills have degraded nearly as much as
his already-damaged cognitive abilities.
It
seems almost beside the point to report that Trump and Putin failed to
achieve a breakthrough in resolving the Ukraine conflict, and that Trump
appears to have pivoted back to Putin’s view of the war, at least for
the moment, after a brief personal flirtation with the orthodox
pro-Ukraine position of other Western leaders. Did anyone genuinely
expect a different outcome? It’s not entirely a rhetorical question; a
lot of people at least pretended to.
The
endlessly disproven notion that Trump is a master negotiator, uniquely
skilled at making “deals” (whatever that even means), is like a fading
folk belief or sectarian doctrine. For MAGA believers, it’s a received
truth that requires no evidence and can never be contradicted by facts.
For mainstream journalists, it’s an aspect of the Trump legend that must
be treated with reverence, and demands the perpetual suspension of
disbelief. Even after all these years, they remain mystified and
mesmerized by the Trump phenomenon, and follow him around like a flock
of children hoping to learn Harry Houdini’s secrets: Maybe this time,
the magic will be real!
It wasn’t real this
time either, and the consensus view that Trump was thoroughly pantsed by
the Russian leader is correct, or close enough. Putin was welcomed back
to the Western world with a literal red carpet, while giving nothing
away and making no concessions. Amid the baffled and disgruntled
commentary coming in from all directions, I was especially struck by New
York Times fashion reporter Vanessa Friedman, who goes straight to the
heart of the matter in far more economical fashion than most of her
peers. The point of the whole show, she writes, was the photo op
depicting Putin and Trump
in complementary dark
suits — single-breasted, two-button — matching white shirts and
coordinating ties … giving the impression of kindred spirits: just two
statesmen meeting on the semi-neutral ground of an airport tarmac to go
talk cease-fire, their respective planes looming in the background.
Both
men, Friedman continues, understand “the power of the image” and “have
made themselves into caricatures through costume and scenography, the
better to capture the popular imagination.” What she does not say,
perhaps to avoid throwing shade on her colleagues from the supposed
grown-up desks, is that Trump’s image-making fell flat during this
particular spectacle, and the whole world was watching.
Bobby Ghosh (TIME) graded Chump similarly:
The
Alaska meeting, which concluded without the Ukraine ceasefire Trump had
promised, represents the latest chapter in a troubling pattern: the
45th and 47th president’s persistent confusion of stagecraft for
statecraft. Where Reagan walked away from Reykjavik rather than accept a
bad deal, Trump seems perpetually seduced by the optics of the moment,
the handshake photo, the joint press conference that suggests progress
where none exists.
Putin
emerged from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson having achieved precisely
what he came for: legitimacy on American soil, the erosion of Western
unity, and a platform to present his territorial demands as reasonable
“agreements.” Trump, meanwhile, offered the unconvincing assurance that
they had made “many, many points that we agreed on”—diplomatic speak for
admitting you’ve been played.
The
choice of venue itself revealed Trump’s weakness for symbolism over
substance. Alaska, purchased from Russia 158 years ago for $7.2 million,
was supposed to be a clever metaphor for American strength. Instead, it
became the stage for Putin to pitch his own “land deal of the
century”—demanding Ukraine surrender the very territories his forces
have failed to fully capture. The irony was lost on Trump, but certainly
not on Putin, who understands better than most that in diplomacy,
symbols matter only when backed by resolve.
Retired US Army Lt General Mark Hertling graded just as harshly but was a bit more succinct, "This whole thing is despicable."