User blog:Loudfan21000/Ronnie Anne's Character so far



Well guys, it's been a month since City Slickers aired, the first season three Ronnie Anne episode. But this is not about City Slickers, which I like, this is on Ronnie in general. Also with the news that there is going to be a spin-off on the extended family and six-part on her and her family in season four, I think  it's about time I talk about her.

At first before City Slickers and Relative Choas, I just saw her as a one-diemensional bully, Karma Houdini and pretty much a copy and paste of Helga. Or better yet, I thought they were trying to turn her into a Helga. Mainly because she never receives any consequences for ever picking on Lincoln, and that still bothers me. At least with Helga, even she had limitations, no matter how far she went bullying Arnold and she had legit reason. Ronnie Anne does not and just do it to get her kicks, so clearly no motivation.

Heavy Meddle, which many can agree was definitely not the best way to introduce her, since it borrows an decades old cliche that does not translate well in this series,

Then there was the episode Save the Date, which pretty mixed among people, some like it, others hate it. The good is that she is actually on screen and her and Lincoln do have a interaction together, making her not seen like a mean person. Now I do not dislike the episode for the same reasons as everyone, such Clyde, Bobby Lori, Lincoln's 'so called' friends, behavior throughout the episode. My issue is with the hypocrisy in general. Because it is saying that it's cool of Ronnie Anne picking on Lincoln on a daily basis, but Lincoln is in the wrong for being fed-up with her stupid antics. Not once does Lori ever hear him out or mention Ronnie Anne's past actions. The episode goes a long way to make him look like the antagonist and Ronnie Anne the victim, which I really did not feel for her. And the morel is so forced and in your face that it is not perfected correctly.

Dance, Dance Resolution, even if her role was not anything major, but at the same time, it did give us more on her character on how much of a tomboy she is. At the very least, it did not make either side in the wrong, just the fact that Lincoln didn't give her the time of day and was a misunderstanding. Yet they do come to an understanding in the end.

April Fools Rule, for how many times Ronnie Anne has pranked Lincoln also show how restrain and merciful she can be.

Then there was Shell Shock, another episode that gives her a role and is written by the same writer. For the most part, it does give us more insight to Ronnie Anne's character, outside from her bully shell. And her home life and school life differ from each other just shows she has insecurities. But why oh why did Karla have to antagonize Lincoln again? I mean for the most part for all the times, Ronnie Anne has bullied Lincoln, you can't blame him for not trusting her. Again, not once of her past actions is mention, another fail on Karla's part. Still, I'd rewatch it more then Save the Date.

The Casagrande family was a nice welcome addition to the Loud House in Relative Choas, there it explored Ronnie Anne big family all with colorful personalities to really defind them.Lincoln being from a big family himself is welcomed to the family and likes them. At first it seems like a normal visit, but then it becomes their new home. And it's a really sweet scene in the end where they hug and Lincoln then passes off the breaking the Fourth Wall ability to Ronnie Anne, something we will no doubt see in the new series.

Back Out There, not much to say about it, while Ronnie Anne was mentein a lot, she didn't have role in the episode until the very end. And even so it was still a classic misunderstanding plot that did not lead anywhere. And even the ending was kind of disappointing for another pie in the face gag, only to have Lincoln miss her in a weird ironic way.

Finally City Slickers, now when the promo was first aired, lots of people were outraged and already was turned off by what the episode was going to be, and yeah so was I. But I tried not to judge something by its trailer, since trailers have proven to be wrong before. And let me tell you, even I was fearing for the worst, because I thought this episode was going to be another 'make Lincoln the bad guy story.' Thankfully it isn't, for the most part, the plot is a lie on her changing. It would have made more sense if they said she had a secret. When it's revealed in the end what was going on with Ronnie Anne, Lincoln calls her out on it, at first she's like Eh, but when Lincoln leaves her, it makes it clear that she does not want to lose his friendship and pretty much states that she is in the wrong and not Lincoln. Still aside from the pantsing of Lincoln, there was not public pantsing as the first part stated. This whole double standards thing is really wereing itself thin, saying that Ronnie can do whatever she wants at the cost of Lincoln's misery. I know if Lincoln did that to Ronnie Anne, it would make him a pervert, but doesn't that already make Ronnie Anne a pervert for pantsing Lincoln? This episode was long awaited and our good friend Kevin gave Ronnie Anne some justice. Not bad for his first season three and Ronnie Anne episode in general.

Now just so you know, I don't hate Ronnie Anne. But because of the fact that she never receives consequences for her bullying of Lincoln, it keeps me from shipping them together and only see them as simple friends and makes me see her as a Karma Houdini. With the series Los-Casagrande being in the works, Still for all her faults Ronnie Anne is tough, no nonsense, tomboyish and sometimes a little mean and stubborn, but at the same time, she has a cool side to her. I am hoping for the best of exspanding Ronnie Anne's character to more then a Helga knockoff, now that she does not have Lincoln to pick on anymore. Hoprefully, no more of these foolish pranks, and have Lincoln or anybody hestiate not to call her out on her actions once in a while. We can only see what the future will hold for her.

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