Tv Show Theories

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Almost every one knows and watches Tv in the world, but do you ever look deeper into the show, just pause it and think about what just happened? Well he are some conspiracy theories about some tv shows that might interest you! If you guys don't know any of these shows then well idk.

1. The Saved by the Bell Fantasy Theory

You see, Zack, Screech, Lisa, and Mr. Belding began as characters on the Disney Channel show Good Morning, Miss Bliss. On that series, set in a suburban Indiana middle school, Zack is, well, kind of a loser. He can’t get girls, his friends Mikey and Nikki frequently humiliate him, and none of his schemes get past his wise teacher, Miss Bliss. But when the show vanished after 13 episodes and reappeared as Saved by the Bell, Zack was suddenly a mega-popular stud at a California high school, where his every scheme goes off without a hitch, the ladies are his for the asking, and Mikey and Nikki no longer exist. But what looks like a mere “retooling” is, in fact, something more complicated, Trent insists: “It’s nothing more than the escapist fantasy of a disillusioned young man named Zack Morris.” And the best proof is the theme song itself, a description of real-Zack’s terrible life, until he’s “saved by the bell,” and thus, “the song ends with Zack being released from the harsh realities of life by escaping to the one place where everything is all right for him.”

2. The Fresh Prince Is Dead Theory

Will Smith’s beloved six-season sitcom was, in fact, entirely a dramatization of young Will’s afterlife. The story goes that Will was actually killed in (or, in some versions, committed suicide after) that basketball court bum-rush in the theme song — mean streets there in West Philadelphia! At any rate, Aunt Viv and Uncle Phil’s spacious Bel Air mansion was his heaven, and his parents’ occasional visits were merely trips to his grave. It’s a stretch, yes, but there’s one credible element: that the cabbie in the title song was God himself, which is about the only way you could fathom a cab willing to take a fare from Philly to Bel Air.

3. The “Walking Dead Is Toy Story” Theory

This persuasive theory about the many, many, many similarities between AMC’s zombie smash and the Pixar trilogy, from the protagonist sheriff to the macho best friend to their gang of misfits to the second-season characters to the third installment’s “idyllic, gated community” and subsequent escape plot.

4. The Gilligan’s Island Drug Runner Theory

It seemed like every hack comic in the 1980s had a bit about Gilligan’s Island and the incongruity between the contents (voluminous amounts of clothing and supplies) of the S.S. Minnow and its stated mission (“a three-hour tour”). And writer Adam-Troy Castro has more questions about that: “Since the snobbish Howell can presumably afford to buy his own yachts, why would he be interested in a ‘three-hour tour’ aboard a dinky little charter vessel owned by two ex-navy men? And why would he take along a briefcase filled with thousand dollar bills, when one of the perks associated with great wealth is unlimited credit?” Castro’s conclusion? “Howell chartered the Minnow to make a multi-million-dollar drug buy. He’d paid off Gilligan, and the Skipper too. He’d brought along the necessary cash. He even brought along an extensive wardrobe, just in case the coast guard showed up and he had to leave U.S. territory in a hurry.” He also brought along a mysterious “Professor” and his supply of Bunsen burners, and a coked-up Hollywood starlet. But they kept up their “cover stories” for the benefit of the one innocent bystander: Mary Ann, who Castro says was a Fed, keeping tabs on the whole operation.

5. The Simpsons are a family of geniuses

The theory puts forth that Lisa is the only member of the family who accepts her genius, while the others purposely quash their brilliance in order to live happy lives. Marge was once an amazing student, but left her academic pursuits behind to become a homemaker. In regards to Homer, it was revealed that a crayon lodged in his brain was what was suppressing his intelligence, and Homer very literally chooses to be dumb but happy rather than smart and miserable by putting the crayon back in his brain. Finally, in another episode, we see Bart was once a gifted child, but then his grades began to decline. The episode blamed it on a gene that makes the male Simpsons stupid, but Homer’s crayon incident disproves that. Instead, Bart saw how happy his dad was in his life despite his lack of intelligence, and decided to strive for happiness instead of genius. He uses his brains to come up with elaborate pranks instead of schoolwork.

6. Eric is in a coma for half of 'That 70's Show."

 Eric was in a coma for the whole second half of the show. In season 4 episode 15, Eric ventures out into a tornado while everyone else is at Snow Prom to pick up Donna from her radio station. In a subsequent scene, you can hear an announcer on the radio say that the warning has been lifted, and that “a local teen is in critical condition.” If this teen was Eric, none of his friends or family would know until after the storm died down, and that’s when his comatose mind would take over the storytelling in an attempt to imagine his life going on as normal. His mind finally lets go in the end, as he imagines his friends and family living without him, and shows up to say one last goodbye in the finale before finally dying.

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