The thing I can't wrap my head around:
Eastern animation has been on this whole targeting adults thing for years. It has actually flooded its own market so much that has become reliant on its own audience's familiarity with tropes and conventions. Therefore, not only are the shows in Japanese, they also require such a sophisticated level of being genre savvy that it is nearly impossible to jump in even at the beginning of a series.
Western animation, at least in the mainstream, was largely considered to be for children for a long time. In order to appeal to adult audiences, they differentiated themselves by being unique and having a distinct hook for adults, from the Simpsons (sitcom satire), King of the Hill (subculture satire), Adventure Time (absurdism), MLP (cleverness), Avatar (character development), South Park (irreverence), Archer (dark deadpan)...
Western animation accomplishes more in animation and roughly as much in storytelling, and they don't even have a set of guidelines for a language of inside jokes and conventions to rely on.
Maybe Western animation isn't as respected as anime is in Japan, but I think we're close. I definitely wouldn't use the term ghetto, even as a hyperbole.
Eastern animation has been on this whole targeting adults thing for years. It has actually flooded its own market so much that has become reliant on its own audience's familiarity with tropes and conventions. Therefore, not only are the shows in Japanese, they also require such a sophisticated level of being genre savvy that it is nearly impossible to jump in even at the beginning of a series.
Western animation, at least in the mainstream, was largely considered to be for children for a long time. In order to appeal to adult audiences, they differentiated themselves by being unique and having a distinct hook for adults, from the Simpsons (sitcom satire), King of the Hill (subculture satire), Adventure Time (absurdism), MLP (cleverness), Avatar (character development), South Park (irreverence), Archer (dark deadpan)...
Western animation accomplishes more in animation and roughly as much in storytelling, and they don't even have a set of guidelines for a language of inside jokes and conventions to rely on.
Maybe Western animation isn't as respected as anime is in Japan, but I think we're close. I definitely wouldn't use the term ghetto, even as a hyperbole.