The gold standard is The Simpsons episode "A Milhouse Divided" (Season 8). When Kirk Van Houten and Luann split up, the show doesn't just use it for a one-off gag. It creates an existential crisis for Milhouse and forces Homer and Marge to confront their own mortality. Kirk’s pathetic "Can I borrow a feeling?" cassette tape is funny, but the loneliness behind it is real.

Similarly, The Loud House —a show about a boy with ten sisters—has navigated crush culture with surprising grace. Lincoln Loud’s fleeting crushes and Clyde McBride’s obsessive love for Lori (a 14-year-old’s hyperbole) reflect the awkward, embarrassing, and hilarious reality of pre-teen romance. The genius of the family cartoon is the "Romantic Reset." In sitcoms, characters often reset to zero after a breakup episode. In family cartoons, the reset is woven into the gag structure.

So the next time you watch Peter Griffin ruin a romantic dinner or Bob Belcher forget his anniversary (again), remember: that clumsy, chaotic, hilarious romance is the heart of the family cartoon. And we wouldn't have it any other way.

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