I don't made this image! The user bbbeto have share this in the later hours.
The stories themselves are full of elements that engage the viewers to short, well-paced and a continual glance of how the Ash and Misty bond are staged over their wins and loss and the many experiences and encounters to this seemingly-long quest. Even for a very absurd concept, (Who ever would left a 10-years old boy doing a journey all by himself is like bad parenting to me.) Pokémon is easily one of the most loved and respectful fandoms as of late. The passing of voice-actor James Carter Cathcart (The voice of Rachel, James and even, Meowth!) showing how resilient and grateful the fans were with the people who have make life to these characters even by its very irritating 1999s craze.
The way Ash and Misty are portrayed in the actual show are hit-or-miss, but I claims them at real friends without it fallen to ordinary love or romance. This is one of the too few fictional bonds that makes the test of time, which prove that sincere love happened to the most unpredictable moments of a lifetime. It don't help that Ash Ketchum's original english voice-actress, Veronica Taylor, (Yeah, a women doing up his voice!) have even launch a GoFundMe campaign in order to named a New York City park to the memory of her colleague, friend and Misty's english voice-actrees, Rachael Lillis (She also voiced Team Rocket Jesse, which meant that the original voice-cast was rather small) who had passed away the past year. For many youths today, this is not Tintin, Spirou or the Looney Tunes that won their heart now, it's these!
The Ash-Misty bond for many fans is unlike seen in the TV cartoon. Its also based of life, the many challenges the duo faced in their long journey at Pokémon Trainers, their support and compassion for each other, their relationship stays the more silent as possible, because we know already that such revelation that would be fantastic in the actual TV show may gets losing in the sales of its merchandising. The TV writers did it best to not tell it.
Too much times, when such love revelation is made, this is not entirely the best thing ever came out. Braceface's series finale "Leap of Faith" will be the perfect opportunity for saying a last farewell to the show's crew and ended it on a high note, but unfortunately, it was spoiled by seen Maria Wong been ultimately wasted there (A rare feat for an antagonist character) and that everything else is a collection of old ideas (Sharon says "She's veggie", Brock's awkwardness, etc.) seen better before. No mention that most of the cast were nowhere to be found, where all the actions are screening on an Enviro-Camp. It's hard to watch it without thinking to the two Kamp Kookalah episodes from Season 1.
One that motivated of how Ash Ketchum winning many Tournaments went to the support of his friends, Misty, Brock and others. His sense of destiny and courage even by his somehow pushy tone. The writers pictured him like a real boy of his age, with his ups and downs instead to a generic automated hero. He win. He losing. He learned many things about what the parents-free life have to be about. He make mistakes. This is why even if its design have deteriorated in the later seasons, fans knows that the real Ash Ketchum was seen in the era where Misty came from. Not so at a loving interest, but to make sure that the guy refund her broken bike.
Fans argued for years that Ash and Misty have to be a couple often ignore that shippings don't help the company to pay their bills. This is why in the Pre-Horizons episodes, their reunion was likely as we still are in 2000. Much a way to capture the heart of nostalgic fans than an attempt to doing something new and different with that.
But in the Internet era, we prove that everything is possible if that went on the right directions and that we made sure how those characters have to be portrayed in fanfictions without betrayed them. bbbeto have understood this.

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