User blog:AnimationFan15/Self Aware Writer Theory

I made this status update on my DA back in August. It's a theory I thought up of, explaining why I think Eric Acosta, one of the writers for Season 2, was the most self aware writer on the show (like how he's aware of how the fandom treats the show).

Full Text
My full theory on why Eric Acosta was the most self-aware writer on The Loud House, and all the episodes he wrote have proof.

1. "Party Down" - He probably knew that Lori didn't have that much of a following on the veins of Leni or Luna, so he made this episode to show that Lori can be just as enjoyable as those two. As a result, more people started to like Lori, and has become quite possibly the most fleshed out character in the show, like Lincoln.

2. "Back Out There" - The episode teased us by making it look like Lincoln really misses Ronnie Anne, and in the end, Ronnie Anne pulls off a prank that pretty much tells us that she and Lincoln are only friends, and not in love with each other.

3. "ARGGH! You for Real?" - The message of this episode was that you shouldn't believe in everything you see on TV. He probably noticed how some people weren't happy that certain episodes (or maybe the whole show) didn't go the way they wanted it to go, so he made this episode to lash out at the viewers who put WAY too much expectations in the show just to tell them that not everything will live up to their expectations.

4. "Future Tense" - There was a scene in this episode where Lincoln believed that he was the favorite child in the family, and a heavenly light shined down on him. The scene was to poke fun at the Lincoln worshipers, because literally a second later, Lincoln is shown to be getting the same amount of treatment like his sisters by forcing him to do a "well-rounded" activity, instead of not getting to do anything.

5. "No Spoilers" - He probably saw that Leni has a HUGE following, as a majority of the fans have her as their #1 character. In response, he made this episode just appease those fans (and this pretty much describes why I don't like fan service, because it just makes the staff look like they care more about what the fans want instead of doing what they want to do. I'm looking at you, MLP fandom).

6. "Not a Loud" - The biggest piece of evidence to my theory is that he knew that the fandom had this theory that Lincoln was adopted, so he made this episode to debunk that theory once and for all. I'm also led to believe that he made Lincoln's real birth story as outlandish as possible to jab at us fans for believing in such a ludicrous theory.

That's my whole theory.