User blog comment:Reddude/Total Drama Disappointments Nominations Blog/@comment-4618045-20140104164537

TDI: Overall, the season was too predictable. Even from the first episode, I felt a clear division between post-merge contestants and pre-merge.

LeShawna's elimination was completely unfair and plot conveinent.

Owen's ending is practically insulting.

TDDDDDI was a pointless episode. The ending suggests that TDA would only happen because fourteen people "tied" and the briefcase was destroyed. However Chris told everyone that their contracts had a fine print requiring them to compete again. Because of that, the whole challenge could have been averted and they could have had all 22 return for Action. Instead, the writers probably made this episode as an excuse to allow all the screenhogs and only a few extras could return due to some bizarre coincidence. Meanwhile, the rest of the screen-depraved people like Ezekiel, Noah, and Cody were forced to sit off to the side and insult their large fanbases.

TDA: The first seven episodes are a bore.

The season left out some movie genres that would have made great challenges. (Zombie, Action Adventure, Romance, Historical Fiction)

The death of GwenxTrent (plus Trent's creepy behavior)

"The Chefshank Redemption". What was Justin going to do about it? Gwen's on the other team, so he can't vote her off. Plus, if the Gaffers continued to win, the Grips would be a minority come the merge. But this isn't the only time this would happen.

TDWT: Ezekiel's early elimination...again.

Him turning into Gollum.

"I See London". When Ezekiel was promised a spot back on and was turned down in favor of Duncan (a man who was in the Final Four once and the winner in another) just breaks my heart. Then Noah got voted out and the love "triangle" commenced.

The ending. They choose now of all times to establish that Heather has been defeated by Alejandro. I feel like it was phoned in the last two episodes instead of building it up over the course of the season. In fact, Heather was in the background most of the time. When she was on screen, it was mostly about Alejandro's skills, not her inferiority to him. She doesn't look threatened until the end. Plus, do I really need to go further than what the last two minutes provide.

No hour-long special.

TDROTI: The theme. Just an excuse to continually stretch out the audience's willing suspension of disbelief and to push the envelope on challenges with unbelievable outcomes.

Scott's execution of the eliminations of B and Dawn they're idiotic in practie and Scott should have been caught red-handed. But since there's no such thing as a villain that doesn't make the merge, we have to go with it.

Scott had no leverage when he "blackmailed" Mike. Mike was better off with Zoey knowing about his Dissociative Identity Disorder. It would give a proper justification for his personality breaks. That way, he seems less like a weirdo who chooses to break character and more like someone who wants to try to control himself for her sake. Also, he could be forgiven for his affair with Anne Maria (which was mainly perpetrated by Vito). Otherwise, she's left to assume that he purposely acted as another person so that he could have multiple girlfriends. The whole thing was an idiot plot

TDAS: Read my review: http://totaldrama.wikia.com/wiki/User_blog:Gumball2/Gumball2%27s_Review_of_Total_Drama_All-Stars