Do the writers sometimes legitimately forget that the show is set underwater?

Do the writers sometimes legitimately forget that the show is set underwater?

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youtube.com/watch?v=3FB0aeb-TPs
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brine_lake
twitter.com/SFWRedditGifs

Goo Lagoon has water in water and it's been featured in over 20-40 episodes since Season 1.

It's not legitimate amnesia of the writers, it's how the cartoon was set up in the first place.

>being this ignorant of the show

>implying they weren't intentionally doing that as a running gag

The underwater setting has never been anything more than convenience for setting up jokes, such as Spongebob drinking a glass of invisible water before running up to the island, or Patrick commenting how a fire can exist underwater. You'd be deluded to think it was anything more than a running gag.

That's not water they're swimming in at Goo Lagoon.

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>He doesn't know about underwater lakes
google before you post, you shitwheel.

youtube.com/watch?v=3FB0aeb-TPs

What happens if you go in one of them? Do you double swim?

Of course, it's perfectly acceptable that these animals wear clothes, speak English, etc.

They're actually really dangerous.

The density of that liquid is so thick that you physically cannot swim in it, so you end up just falling further and further. It's basically underwater quicksand

I know about underwater brine ponds, but the show still refers to it was water.

And it's not just limited to water within water, but explosions, electronics, etc.

Theres going to be a '86666666' in this thread.

Explosion and electronics both work underwater in certain circumstances..

Even if they didn't the writers haven't legitimately forgot, they poke fun at the idea of underwater shit by naming cars boatmobiles and stuff.

That aint water thats just sea muck

Protip: it's not called "Goo Lagoon" for shits and giggles.

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thats pretty terrifying desu

Thats the joke fuckface

You don't fall into high density liquids, you float up in them silly billy. It's like the dead sea or whatever.

>underwater quicksand

Me niggar

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Yeah, nah, that's not how buoyancy works

>en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brine_lake
>Because of the density of brine, swimmers are more buoyant in brine than in fresh or ordinary salt water

The man who made this show is a marine biologist.

He was very much aware, he just didn't care because he was also smart enough to know that comedy is more important then scientific accuracy.

They're full of hydrogen sulphide, that's what makes these lakes so dangerous.

That lake is called the Cenote Angelita and its in Mexico.

They don't care, water underwater made for some good jokes

QUADDDSSS

>double swim
kek