>>5698627Orange’s indecisiveness actually prompted me to ask a girl out back in my second year of high school for the school 2010 homecoming. I felt like if he wouldn’t ask out Passion, it’s because he wanted me to be brave for the both of us. Of course she said no, but I feel like it was better than not trying ever. Orange is an example of people who never take a shot when the moment is right. You’ll never know when you’ll get one. Grapefruit also taught me to stop acting on my insecurities and trying so hard, since it never got him anywhere. Orange also had his moment of comeuppance, where his annoying nature was matched and then surpassed by another orange. Being on the receiving end really shook his perspective even after the other orange got knifed and juiced. But even then, he refused to grow and adapt his mindset, continuing to be either abusive or simply a big nuisance towards others, so much so that Passion calls him out like one or two episodes later (turning to him saying: “All you do is make weird noises and call [Grapefruit] fat. How shallow are you?”). So really, in the end, a lot of the characters serve as templates for who you, the viewer, should avoid becoming yourself. In a kitchen of carnage and mayhem, the veil of morality is often questioned by few, but is left open for the public outside this otherwise small world to interpret themselves