User blog comment:Sockstar1/Creddie fans prepare yourselves for iSeddie/@comment-1874176-20110605190314/@comment-2011415-20110605222700

@Creddie 4 real (German talking here - sorry for mistakes) Hm, I had never seriously thought that, but people apparently did miss the message of iStart A Fanwar. Talking in general now! It's not supposed to be harsh, really that's not my intention, it's just supposed to be a little...hm...food for thought? :)

Heck, don't get me wrong, I don't want to support Dan in what @Sockstar1 said or even defend him - I even wrote a blog about that once - but, as lame as it might sound, things are really getting out of control!

Now you might say I write that because I like Seddie more. But, no, if the Seddie fans had to "prepare" for "iCreddie" now, I'd definitely answer the question "Would you switch to Creddie?" with a "yes!".

Why? Simple.

You're probably getting sick of that argument, but after all it's true, so I'm gonna write it nonetheless: It's Dan's show. And if he considers something to be best, then it's the way it is. But even if I don't agree with him, I would never stop watching the show. Not (just) because of the whole "show is mainly about comedy" thing, but rather because I don't want to ask myself those questions:

Did I really get so much caught up in something fictional (!) that I let myself being intolerant towards other people's opinions - something I never wanted to be?

Did I just really stop doing something I love because I didn't get what I want?

Did I myself just make my life "miserable" because I let myself being influenced by something like that?

One simple choice I gotta make: Do I seriously want to get all "frustrated" and make myself "unhappy" just because I don't agree with someone's opinion?

Or is it maaaybe a better way to get down of my throne of wounded pride or disappointment and maybe at least try to put myself in Dan's position, at least try to be happy for the people who found themselves lucky to have the self opinion as Dan, and at least try to see and understand what he thinks - that it maybe indeed could have been a "good decision"?

That's the reason why I'd never stop watching iCarly: Not mainly because of the show itself, but rather for myself. Yes, in some way, I want to be proud of myself when I look in the mirror or when I look at my old self in 20 years. I'm a human being, I'm able to be reasonable. And thanks to the common sense every human being has in him, I should also be able to be tolerant, to accept difference in opinion, to be that fair to try being glad for somebody else's "win" and, especially in this case, to distinguish between reality and the fictional world in times where the border between those two gets more and more blurred.