"The Loud House" Study Muffin/Homespun (TV Episode 2016) Poster

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7/10
A weird episode, and the other a good one.
llanasgab23 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Study Muffin was just...what? I saw the premise, and I expected a funny episode. And I was right. But it also felt cringe-worthy. The fact that many of the sisters (except for Lily) have a crush on Lincoln's tutor felt funny, yet weird. Even the younger ones had the crushes (they're underage, for Pete's sake!). The And the ending was hilarious, yet weird. Seeing Lincoln (and of course many of the classmates) falling in love with a teacher (who is as attractive as the tutor), felt cringe-worthy as well. Overall, I say that Study Muffin is the cringiest episode of the show, and if you cannot handle cringe, just skip this episode on your watchlist. Like really, after that, I nearly died from cringe.

But Homespun was not that. It was actually a great episode, with a decent premise, and a hilarious, yet wholesome storyline. I had a great time watching that episode. Way better than Study Muffin.
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10/10
Lol my favorite loud House episodes
baharalsade14 January 2021
Those are Perfect episodes funny smart not to much drama and good for All ages even adults
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2/10
Study Muffin is the Loud House's poorest episode.
melchiorphilips25 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The Loud House is a show that has been praised for its progressive representation of women, but the episode 'Study Muffin' did not live up to its reputation. The plot is centred around the sisters falling for their new English tutor. The sudden attraction felt forced and unreal. Even though it was played for laughs with the unrequited love, it still sits poorly with me. The sisters are usually depicted as outgoing and outspoken (Loud, if you will), but are suddenly submissive and shy around the tutor, and are depicted as having romantic feelings for him. The episode's plot shows little regard for the reality of manners of age or the fact that the girls may have non-heterosexual sexual identities (later thankfully rectified in 'L is for Love'). Instead worships a uniform heteronormative mentality. The only reason the sisters value the tutor is for his appearance and accent, presenting children with a skewed perception of romance. The episode doesn't try to explore the feelings of the characters or portray them realistically, instead it is a cheap, shallow excuse to present a woman as an agent of sexual desire. It also implies that sexual attraction is universal and occurs at first sight, with little regard for personality.

Some bits were funny though. 2 stars.
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