I would disagree. the (sameish) stop motion gag for instance didn't make fun of stop motion, I think actually made people more aware of how hard it is (you can't just spend a month / weekend & come up with something good: it actually takes a lot of effort + skill).
I think the key difference is that nobody in the audience will think the stop motion short is good, and in the show there are characters who really get into the boardgame.
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you have a point. but to be fair: I've seen plenty of people IRL invested in derivative, barely tested, 8-hour min session, goofy looking, dull, repetitive, 200 dice, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink boardgames. kickstarter would run out of business if this wasn't the case.
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That's a whole other discussion, unfortunately! Very often those games sell purely because people want the miniatures to paint or to use in other games such as D&D. The game doesn't even need to be good.
End of conversation
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