Every once in a while you can spot twenty- or thirtysomethings argue on forums, blogs or
facebooks whether or not the cartoons were far better "
back when we were kids". Perhaps they turned the TV on by accident, out of curiosity, by or because they have kids of their own now, but they seem largely to agree that cartoons are now far worse than they were. Present day cartoons ought to lack important qualities of storytelling, graphics and benevolence, while violence, shallowness and simplistic graphics took over.
The opposition might make an argument that most of what we experienced as kids didn't come trough the tubes but rather happened in our heads. Children have a tremendous power of imagination and most of the cartoon happens there. No matter what we would have watched, we would be equally romantic about it today.
But still; the change is visible no matter how you value it. I for one don't even try to join either of camps but rather embrace both arguments and find a personal balance between them. It is also true that creators have to make shortcuts while budgets go down, production time becomes shorter and demands even greater. What we see might be actually a result of the
tragedy of the commons. I am sure many networks would gladly have well written stories, superb animations and music done by world class composers merged into their cartoons, but frankly they cannot afford it for their daily program.

So I was so much more surprised when I came across this little series by Nickelodeon called
Avatar: The Last Airbender. This series has everything a goood cartoon needs; a good story, a very complex set of characters which are by no means shallow or simple, nice graphics, humor and most of all, what I call the
right set of values just underneath the surface. There are no absolutely good or bad characters; they all make their decisions, sometimes good, sometimes bad, but they always face the consequences of their actions and pay the price or collect the awards. Even the good old benevolent cartoons like
The Smurfs or
Tom and Jerry (which are often praised as examples of the good old times) fail at that. Gargamel is simply evil and that's just that.
It made me think which are the lessons that a good program should promote. I am sure you have your own set (which I would be more than happy to discuss below), but "
Work hard for the things/people you love," or "
People do stuff for a reason, those who appear mean are most likely hurt and fragile," or even "
If you made a mistake, face the consequences" might be among them. Of course; good graphics and overall quality serve well to develop a refined
taste of every individual.
I am happy to admit that Avatar-Airbender series embodies all these qualities and many others. Even though it was intended for a younger population, it will get you hooked no matter how old or young you are. I cannot recommend it more. You have three seasons of fun, each better than the last, and everything ends in an epic series finale. The story is concluded in the best possible way (I think writers did better "finale job" here than with
Battlestar Galactica, although BSG had its story more complex).