I dodged a bullet since I had only seen his worst Spongebob episodes or episodes with Patrick in them, since I agreed on the fact that the new seasons were awful and Patrick really had gone from being a likable goofball to a sort of mean-spirited asshole, but I never watched anything else from him and I didn't even know who he was until this and the Angry Critics thread. He never gave enough for me to go off of and his actual angry tone to the point of acting like Spongebob, Patrick, or the writers were sociopathic or hateful sadistic people made me think he hated the new seasons a little too much...
Also, scrapping a lot of a project you really love is necessary for anything. I've been struggling with a sci-fi I've been hoping to write for years, and I've had to remove characters, settings, scenes, plot points, and even full-on drafts when I realized it wasn't cutting it. Oh yeah, it hurt like hell, I felt like I had failed and I clung so badly to some characters or scenes like they meant everything to me. But you can't go with "it's my dream" as an excuse to do fuck-all with progress or improvement. Especially in something as grandiose as wanting a cartoon series airing that started out with poorly written drafts on a site like Deviantart. No, I'm not saying that spitefully, there is a lot of work that needs to be done, on all accounts. I am saying that as a potential viewer of this supposed cartoon, not to be an ass on the internet for the sake of being a 'troll', as Enter would love for anyone to believe.
I'm saying this with understanding that, no matter how much something means to you, sometimes it causes obstacles for us to reach the final goal, and we may have to remove those little imperfections to get closer to the final product. Not in a lazy, rushed way, because that disrespects your viewers and yourself, but in a way to hold onto that little gem of yours and keep polishing it, brightening it, finding new interesting little details in it to share with the world. If you really love what you want to do, you need to face all the emotions that come with it. I am not expecting my story to be a bestseller or capture the hearts and minds of millions (if it even ever gets published), nor am I just writing it for myself to see my little project grow and finally be shared with the world to show my efforts in creating new ideas and themes and characters for others to hopefully enjoy... if this is something you truly enjoy - truly, truly enjoy - not for profit nor for fame, nor for any egotistical, arrogant beliefs that "I think it's good so everyone should see that it is", and you are willing to move mountains and cross seas of endless work and editing, work and editing, work and editing, over and over, you have made your chances of making your gem successful and bright and colorful enough for others to enjoy as well.
Dear god that got too poetic. I just mean I feel for anyone working with Mr. Enter to at least try and help him, and themselves, to put time and effort into this if they really want to share a one-of-a-kind cartoon for everyone to enjoy, not because their pride got so inflated that there's no room to breathe and all we're left with is a husk of another wasted potential. If you're going to try to get everyone excited and ready for something like this, you need the evidence and the attitude to prove it, otherwise you end up with lots of regret, embarrassment, and laughs. It happens to Hollywood sequels, instant DVD movies, and tons of other cartoons or shows Enter has reviewed, himself.