alex wrote:
Not sure why anyone would think that it being comedy precludes there from being autistic characters in a show..
Those certainly sound like autistic characters to me.
Agreed. I get the impression that they slip them in as "diversity bombs." It's not trying to be a "very special episode" and it's not trying to make fun. It's just a fun gag about the miscommunications that can arise in a diverse group. When you think about it, mixing aspergers and NT's is a situation full of opportunities for comedic miscommunication.
In a broader sense, I think I'm seeing more and more spectromish characters slipping into television, and especially kid's TV since as a parent that's almost all I get to see anymore. Some are overt, like on Arthur and Sesame Street. Some are just slipped in silently:
Doctor Who did a little nod to social story cards
Maud Pie screams ASD. Metaphorically, of course, because she has a flat aspect, monotone voice and an all-consuming special interest in geology. No word yet on her sister Marble, as she's too nonverbal to get a reading.
There was another show, but now I've forgotten. Damn. Anyway, this seems like a change.
Growing up I watched way too much TV, yet I can't really remember that many characters that I could relate to for those kinds of characteristics. If there were, they were extreme, like Mr. Spock, and Data, and had clear explanations for why they were different. The nerds on TV were almost always obviously written by non-nerds and only there as comedic vehicles rather than characters.
The optimist in me keeps hoping this trend means that society is waking up to the fact that we exist, and that it's possible for us to be a neighbor or a coworker.