>>95584944>I can't even tell if you're retarded or this is just bait, but enough people seem to actually believe this so I'll bite to prove a point.You would have to be a complete retard to even consider what I said to be bait. You only prefaced your post with that line to make your post sound weightier than it is, but you didn't say anything with any real weight behind it.
>Nowhere in the show is Rick ever really condemned for his actions and he never faces any real consequencesYou don't even watch the show. Just. Wow. Do you want all the times he's been beaten to the curb in a narrative sense, the times he's been reprimanded for his actions by some kind of governmental authority, the times he's made himself suffer for his shit, or the times people close to him have given him shit for it?
His entire character trope, one used often in other shows as well, is that of someone who is depressed, self-destructive, constantly screwing themselves over for themselves, but who on the outside or viewed from a distances, or in many other ways appears to be very successful and smart. All do to their fear to connect with people emotionally. The entire point of this trope is to show someone with an appearance of success, but their successes are all attempts to fill a void that they don't want to admit are there and don't want to admit what is actually needed to fill that void, because it would require a certain amount of honesty with themselves that their ego among other things do not allow them to do.
Often times this trope is filled by someone rich and successful, either a business man, or in the case of Bojack Horseman for example, and actor. They have friends, money, brains, power, women, suave even at times, things people view as measures of success. But they are miserable and self-destructive, suicidal, and often drunk.