Thread:FirstDrellSpectre/@comment-31647719-20191011012829/@comment-31647719-20191016213538

"No, because of many episodes. Lincoln felt overshadowed by his sisters in Making the Case, so he made a video humiliating them to get a trophy for sake of not feeling inferior."

Something he felt bad about, and made a video humilliating himself just to make his sisters happy again.

"In Come Sale Away he wanted to win against them, so he started playing dirty."

Which the Loud sisters followed suit, and none of them were portrayed as in the right, with all factions getting in trouble for it.

"In Out on the Limo he acted like a snob just to feel better than them."

Which he was influenced by Lord Tetherby, not something he felt himself. And he made up for it by giving his sisters the limo privileges.

"In Ties that bind he wanted to be only child."

I... can't argue with that...

"In Funny Business he stole Luan's spotlight."

He let fame get to his head. So what? It's not like he intended to steal the spotlight in the first place. He was helping Luan with her business.

And all of the examples that you listed (except Come Sale Away and maybe Ties That Bind) he learned from those mistakes and wanted to compensate his sisters for it.

"I don't want Lincoln to be perfect, but likable. Lincoln's flaws were flanderized in some episodes. In the Loudest Yard and What Wood Lincoln do he was uncharacteristically lazy."

If I may give Lincoln the benfit of the doubt, it was established in those episodes that he was not good at those things. His talent is comic books, Kings of the Con didn't bring up the fact that he created the Full House Gang.

"In Jeers for Fears he was exaggerated to a complete coward."

While I agree to some extent, keep in mind that in The Price of Admission it's established that Lincoln isn't a fan of horror and can get easily scared.

"He was too selfish in Linc or Swim, Sweet Spot, In Tents Debate, Ties that bind, Green house, Out on the limo, Mall of Duty, Tricked!"

Linc or Swim: His sisters hogged his personal property (yes, that pool was his to begin with).

In Tents Debate: And the sisters weren't somehow? Keep in mind, Lincoln wasn't right in making them his servants, but they tried to sabotage each other by putting Lincoln through hell, and got rewarded for it. So I don't see hoe Lincoln was the most selfish there.

Mall of Duty: He wanted an autographed book, and he sold it out just so he could save his sisters. Is that selfish?

Tricked: He tried to get the candy back from Hank and Hawk (and got beaten up for it) and made a plan to teach them a lesson.

"He was uncharacteristically stupid in making the case, Sound of Silence, Brawl, kick the bucket list, Pasture Bedtime, a Grave Mistake, Kings of Con."

In A Grave Mistake, he realized the mistake Lucy made before she did, but still was willing to help her because she's his little sister. And if you bring up the fried chicken thing, may I remind you that Lucy tried to send off the chicken with a catapult? Lincoln wasn't exactly smart, but Lucy wasn't any smarter either.

"I noticed that in LH the main characters are jerks too often and suffer more than they deserve too often. Ruthless People is one of the worst examples."

You give this show little credit than it deserves. The Loud House isn't about jerks suffering too often. It's about how people can make mistakes, but they always find a way to get back up, owning up to their mistakes, and compensating for them. There are actually occasions where Lincoln wins. Pulp Friction is a great example.

Like a song says: "I get knocked down, but I get up again. You're never gonna take me down."