I do not own 'Family Guy' or anything related.
While Paul was writing the new book, Stewie came in with the pages so far done.
"No, no, no! This won't do, Paul. You can't just have Snuggly Jeff magically brought back to life by a child's wish. It's insulting to the reader!"
"What do you mean?"
"Well, it's just bad story telling. Let's see ... How can I explain this to you? Did you ever see the movie Big Hero 6?"
"Yeah."
"So, like, Baymax and Hiro go into the other dimension to rescue Callaghan's daughter, but Baymax's thrusters get damaged, so the only way to save Hiro and the girl is to propel them out using his detachable rocket fist, leaving himself stranded. So, now everyone's like: "Oh, no! Baymax is trapped in the other dimension forever!", but then months later Hiro discovers in Baymax's hand is suddenly his chip, and he's like: "Hey, it just so happened, Baymax was able to take out his own brain and put it in his fist without me seeing this!" And we're supposed to believe no one noticed that? Well, I stood up in the theatre and I said: "No! You can't rebuild Baymax because he didn't put his chip in his cockadoodie rocket fist!"
Stewie throws the papers in the trash bin.
"Start over!"
Any moments you can name where a situation is resolved by a convenient turn of events that completely comes out of nowhere? Disney is guilty of a couple.
