Talk:Seddie/@comment-3247345-20120409050533/@comment-3247345-20120412040410

You're the first person I've seen that is asserting that Sam has a great life. If you think that, fine, but I highly doubt there's a lot of people out there that would want to go through what Sam went through. I don't think that the show was just a measuring stick for Sam's character development. All of the characters have developed to some extent. Even Gibby stopped taking his shirt off. I just think that Carly is largely a static character, while Sam and Freddie are more dynamic. That doesn't mean that Carly hasn't developed at all. It means we've learned more about her as time went on, but she never really changed that much. She isn't a perfect Mary Sue like characters in other TV shows, but she fits the role pretty well. A lot of TV shows have the "perfect" character and the flawed one. The flawed ones tend to develop more, like they have in this case. Not every character perfectly fits into one catagory or another. Carly has her flaws for sure. That little stunt she pulled in iCan't Take It is but the latest confirmation of this. The show isn't all about character development, but that part of it gives me the most enjoyment, especially since Dan is focusing his comedic talents on Victorious. The way Sam has developed since iPilot is probably the most important part of the show for me. That's why I became the hardcore Seddie shipper I am. Maybe you're not missing anything. I just think one would be hard pressed to grasp that aspect of the show without accepting that Carly (for the most part) is a mostly static character that fits the Mary Sue description well, albeit not perfectly, while Sam is the flawed one who develops. Carly may not be one dimensional, but there's just not a lot of mystery and depth that merits exploring like with Sam. I don't know if you ship Seddie or not. If you don't, that might explain why we see this differently. If you do ship Seddie, then I'm at loss as to explaining why you see the show the way you do. But like I said, each to his own.