Yesterday, we ran through a brief history of the characters that inhabited The Boondocks comic strips that I loved. That roll call was all prelude to why I don’t love the animated “adaptation” on Adult Swim.
When I first heard of a ‘Docks cartoon, I was elated. If I could never have a Calvin and Hobbes cartoon, I was owed a ‘Docks one, right? Like damn near all my friends, I was glued to the television. The first episode, “The Garden Party,” started off promising with a Huey Freeman voice over: “I’m not a prophet. But sometimes I have prophetic dreams; like then one when I was at a garden party.” Huey walks out on stage at this lily-white garden party, and drops the following jewels, “Jesus was black. Ronald Regan was the devil. And the government is lying about 9/11.” A riot ensues. The white folks can’t handle the truth. Despite my finding the anime/manga style stilted, this scene was rendered well. What a way to launch your first episode.
After the theme, we see Grandpa doing naked Tae-Bo. And then we are tortured by a John Witherspoon gag about there being no more orange juice. Shades of Friday and just as annoying. But it was at 9:33pm on November 6, 2005 that I lost faith in the series.
In the strip, he worked. Most black folks know someone with Ruckus tendencies. But he was effective in the comic strip as a window into a self-hating world-view.
I wanted to love the show. I really did. But the increasing number of “niggers” being hurled, the lightweight misogyny, the homophobia — all things absent in the strip — just became too much. The strip pointed out the racial and cultural flaws of our shared world in a way that was humorous and relatable.
On the flip, the cartoon is inherently conservative. In its mocking of “ratchet” and “gangsta” black cultural performance, it is actually delivering a Cosby-influenced haymaker on behalf of respectability politics. I could care less about airing cultural dirty laundry. As a writer, I believe that nothing is off-limits. You write and comment on what you want. End of story. This isn’t my issue with the Boondocks cartoon. My issue is that a once great unifying artistic platform has devolved into a shitty rap album.
We’ve moved into the “laughing at” and not “laughing with” Chappelle territory. White folks loved them some Uncle Ruckus. Where the strip was all about discovery, the cartoon is world-weary and spiteful. Yes, there were some absolutely brilliant episodes and brilliant bits within episodes. One standout? These thirteen seconds of pure genius comparing American and Chinese capitalism. Also — and despite my distaste for the word — the “Nigga Moment” was hilarious despite it not tracing the true origins of what allowed those moments to come to fruition.
I did not come here to praise The Boondocks; I have come here to mourn it and to hasten its demise.