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“She did literally nothing wrong except be born, try to win first prize at the science fair, and eat some pasta after!! All she wanted was a strand of Luke’s hair, and to skedaddle on out of there. Luke was the one that then sought her out and asked to be a part of her life. He was also the one that hid her existence from Lorelai, and the one that decided Lorelai wasn’t allowed to have any interactions with her…that is, until he needed her to come save April’s birthday party…and then tried to gaslight her into thinking she was in the wrong/to blame, when Anna found out and got mad.”

—kbozymow7

Ben Chang from “Community”

“He just wanted friends that would accept his batshit crazy self and when the Greendale Seven, all of whom are batshit crazy in their own ways, denied him… His worst tendencies were brought up to the surface and amped to over 9000 in retribution. He gets a bad rap.”

—jayjjimenez

Jules Vaughn from “Euphoria”

“Yeah she may have screwed up and she may have cheated on Rue and had a bad storyline in Season 2, but at least she wasn’t some sadistic psychopath who tormented her friends and family due to a fragile ego like Cassie did. The worst part is they paint Cassie as some innocent tragic heroine who never did anything wrong and call out Jules for the same mistakes.”

—Karen Filippelli from “The Office”

“At the end of the day, we all hated her because she wasn’t Pam, but if you take that piece out of it, she was a great character. I’m on my millionth rewatch and am really appreciating her character. She was a hardworking woman who went after what she wanted while trying to deal with the fact that her boyfriend was in love with someone else. LOVE that they gave her a happy ending with her Regional Manager job, husband, and baby. She deserved it.”

Roland Schitt from “Schitt’s Creek”

“Everybody I know who watches Schitt’s Creek hates Roland, which is absurd. Chris Elliot is objectively hilarious as Roland Schitt.”
—doofenshmirtzevilinc

“I like Roland! At least he is who he is and unapologetically so!”
—analeehope

Mona Wu from “Legends of Tomorrow”

“She was too young to really fit in with this group of 30-somethings, so she ended up coming across as childish and annoying sometimes. I’ve said a few times that if she was introduced when Astra, Spooner, and Behrad came along, the younger generation, she’d have been great. I don’t dislike her; I just don’t think they knew what to do with her. She wasn’t bad; she was a victim of shitty writing.”

—garebehr

Imogen Heaney from “Heartstopper”

“She had a crush on a guy who wasn’t into her, and people took that as her trying to ruin Nick and Charlie’s relationship even though she didn’t even know about it. Her character development in Season 2 made her even better, in my opinion.”

—jorjasee13

Lori Grimes from “The Walking Dead”

“I didn’t hate Lori because of the Rick/Shane thing, she was just irritating. I will say, though, I don’t understand why they acted like she was a bad mother. Anytime something happened to Carl, it was Rick’s fault, yet she apologizes several times in Season 3 for ‘not being the best mom.’ I thought she was a pretty good mom, especially in those circumstances!”

—thegreatcatsby33

Luther Hargreeves from “The Umbrella Academy”

“The series is still ongoing, I know. But people were so bizarrely hateful of him after the first season when he was literally just did what he thought was right and what the plot was setting him up to do the whole time. Also he’s a total dorky sweetheart, how anyone thought he was a callous asshole is beyond me.”

—deebee2118

Theon Greyjoy from “Game of Thrones”

“Theon Greyjoy has always been my favorite character. I never understood why everyone disliked him. I was so proud of him with his character arc, but omg that poor man did NOT deserve the torture Ramsey did to him. Those scenes were really hard to watch, and I’ll be honest I skipped through most of them because they made me so anxious.”
—global_havoc18

“I think the reason people get angrier at Theon Greyjoy is because we trusted him first. When a character you know is a terrible or morally questionable person does terrible things, you expect it. But a character who is the closest and most trusted friend of a protagonist betraying him? It hurts more, and thus is harder to forgive.”
—Spn42

Vanessa Abrams from “Gossip Girl”

“As someone who consumed the books before the show came out, Vanessa was a main character. But they made her into a recurring one for the show and never really gave her any storylines of her own. She sort of just felt forced into other people’s storylines, which made her less of her own character. And then they wrote her out. There’s also something to be said about the inherent anti-Blackness of the choice to make her biracial (Black/white) and just do NOTHING with it. The Gossip Girl writers had no idea what to do with any character who wasn’t white, cisgender, and heterosexual. And while I love the show for what it was, the mistreatment of Vanessa Abrams will always be a stain upon the show for me.”

—kyronp

Skyler White from “Breaking Bad”

“Skyler White is one of those characters who annoyed the hell out of you at the time the show was running… but, as you began to absorb the full context and scope of everything that took place in that series, one is able to empathize with her much more.”

—joeschoe33

Mark Brendanawicz from “Parks and Recreation”

“He’s not a favorite as such but Mark gets scapegoated for Season 1’s first step wobbles. Mark wasn’t a bad character but he just wasn’t a good fit for the identity the show fell into and was the butt of the jokes for this. For a show that had the triplet continuity nod with Leslie, forgetting a main character existed is a deliberate omission at points he should have referenced like with Ann’s boyfriend boxes.”

—jbmasta

Elena Gilbert from “The Vampire Diaries”

“I hate post-Season 4 criticism about her being selfish and annoying. While she’s not the funniest or most badass character on the show, she is shown from the beginning that she’s a teenage girl who is incredibly kind, empathetic, resourceful, selfless, and brave despite the trauma she’s endured. She sympathizes with others, even as they are victimizing her, she’s willing to sacrifice herself for others, and shows a lot of intelligence and quick thinking in stressful situations. I am disappointed with her character development after Season 3, but the core of who she is — the person who was was established since the beginning of the show — is worth admiring, in my opinion.”

—thinkaboutitbbbb

Jeremiah Fisher from “The Summer I Turned Pretty”

“Jere isn’t perfect, but people really act like he is the devil (and I don’t wanna hear anything about the books, because right now, we’re talking about the show). I don’t hate Conrad, either, but I just can’t stand the double standard. When Jeremiah does something, people will make it SUCH a big deal, but when Conrad does the EXACT same thing, people will say, ‘Oh, he’s going through a hard time with his mom and everything.’ Um…Jere is his brother so they are going through the SAME THING! 😩”

—lilqueenb19

Emily Waltham from “Friends”

“Emily was actually super nice, caring, and easy-going in all the episodes she was in before the ‘Wrong Name’ episode. Then, they tried to make her ‘bitchy,’ when in reality, she was not being unreasonable at all. She still agreed to face the shame of her family and friends and move to New York with Ross. She only wanted him to stop being friends with the woman whose NAME HE SAID AT THEIR WEDDING. We all would have done the same. But suddenly, all of Ross’s friends turned on Emily when they liked her a lot before. They made her out to be an evil shrew and it was so untrue.”

—mercuryrising

Zari from “Legends of Tomorrow”

“There is so much hate for 2.0, because she’s not the same person as 1.0, and she’s ‘not like the other girls’ People hate her because she’s an influencer and ignore the rest of her story. She’s a smart woman [and] uses those skills to help the Legends all the time. She’s sweet, she’s funny, she’s a good friend, [and she’s] a great big sister. Yes, she had a learning curve, but that’s called character growth.”

—constanvee

Peyton Sawyer from “One Tree Hill”

“I think she is amazing. I loved having a female character like her represented. People always pit her against Brooke and Haley but to me all three girls were amazing and Peyton deserves more love.”

—teiganb

Jennifer Walters aka She-Hulk from “She-Hulk: Attorney at Law”

Marvel / Everett

“People wouldn’t bat an eyelash if the gender roles were reversed and she was never even meant to be a serious character. Her show was made to be a comedy, and Jennifer Walters fits perfectly in it. I truly believe she’s likable, a good superhero, and will interact well with other Avengers if Marvel chooses to do that.”

—thescarletwitchhhh

- A word from our sposor -

19 TV Characters Who Absolutely Do Not Deserve The Hate They Get