The Boondocks/YMMV

"Well go ahead, SHOOT HIM!"
 * Acceptable Targets: African American culture. Anything from excessive use of the N-Word, to Tyler Perry movies, to even Bill Cosby.
 * Awesome Music: The Hip Hop Docktrine Mixtapes. All of them.
 * The Ace: Ebony Brown. Beautiful, smart, has her own money, athletic, kind... Riley AND Ruckus couldn't find genuine fault with her.
 * And the Fandom Rejoiced: When John Witherspoon, Granddad's VA, confirmed that Aaron McGruder had begun production on season 4 despite earlier statements that season 3 would be the last one. Cue millions of people doing this.
 * Anvilicious: The comic strip was a vehicle for the political views of McGruder.
 * The show has distinct political overtones as well, but is more subtle about them... usually.
 * Base Breaker:
 * Uncle Ruckus. He's viewed as either the most awesome character in the series or an Overly Long Gag that has over stayed his welcome. "The Color Ruckus" has partially redeemed him in the eyes of the latter.
 * Same goes double for Colonel H. Stinkmeaner.
 * Broken Base: The fans of the strip and the fans of the show. Mainly because the show is accused of getting the wrong kind of laughs.
 * Complaining About Shows You Don't Watch: The usual opinion on the series amongst people unfamiliar with it is that it's an incredibly racist show that insults white people. If anything, it insults what can be thought of as "black" culture, and usually portrays white people as naive, happy, nonthreatening folk who are simply oblivious to what's happening around them.
 * Complete Monster:
 * Lamilton, the bastard child of Fat Albert and Michael Myers. He could probably be considered an extremely rare parody of this trope. And based on a real kid to boot.
 * Ed Wuncler Sr. is pretty close to becoming a Complete Monster. He had his grandson and his friend set up bombs in a building to kill one man. Then, plans a mass-merchandising campaign to build up said man as a hero, which would have the convenient side-effect of making him even richer, despite being rich enough to have protection from the President of the United States himself. Plus, when his Grandson is dragged out of the house at gunpoint, screaming for his grandpa to help him, what's Wuncler's reponse?

"Werner Herzog: I can't help but notice you're like a less attractive, less wealthy, less powerful version of him."
 * The Booty Warrior is a vicious, completely unapologetic serial rapist. It took superb writing and voice-acting to also make him utterly hilarious.
 * He's not a character. He's an actual convicted serial rapist.
 * The Hateocracy, considering they were gonna kill an old man and his grandchildren, at first the Freemans thought it was for revenge for killing Stinkmeaner but in actuality it was just because they could.
 * Crazy Awesome: Riley's art teacher, a soft-spoken blond man with an afro, who quietly encourages Riley to tag houses. Also, he doesn't really like the police very much.
 * Also Bushido Brown.
 * Crosses the Line Twice:
 * Uncle Ruckus does this every time he talks about black people.
 * As an African American white supremacist with a severe case of Gonk, his very existence crosses the line about 3 times. Speaking crosses it a 4th time.
 * A Pimp Named Slickback does this every time he talks, period.
 * Dude, Not Funny: There are those even among the show's fandom who consider the Martin Luther King episode to have overstepped the boundaries of good taste.
 * Ear Worm:
 * "Booty butt, booty butt, booty butt CHEEKS!"
 * Don't forget "I got that thuggin' love."
 * Homies ova hoes! Homies ova hoes! Do da homie! Do da homie!
 * Don't trust them new niggas over there...
 * And most recently, "Dick Riding Obama," by Will.i.am feat. Thugnificent.
 * I am the stone that the builder refused...
 * The music during the credits.
 * Imma stomp 'em in da nuts, Imma stomp 'em in da nuts.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse:
 * Caesar in the comic strip. Sadly, he's been omitted from the cartoon in favor of Uncle Ruckus.
 * A Pimp Named Slickback and Stinkmeaner in the cartoon.
 * Tom Dubois
 * Fan Disservice: Multiple penis shots of Granddad.
 * You mention Granddad and not the health inspector?
 * Foe Yay: Huey and Ming in "The Red Ball".
 * Growing the Beard: The show doesn't really come into its own until season two, at which point the art and animation quality receive a considerable boost, the political themes become slightly less Anvilicious, and the idiosyncrasies of the characters and oddball supporting cast members come into the limelight.
 * Hilarious in Hindsight: Tom Dubois is not supposed to be Barack Obama. Yes, he is a successful, light-skinned black, highly liberal attorney with a bit of a nerdy/loserly side, and looks an awful lot like Obama. But the character was developed a long time before Obama became a national figure. McGruder apparently noticed this and took full advantage of it.

"Thugnificent: Y'all send me stupid fuckin' messages online, but won't pay for my damn song? I hate y'all niggas, man. Hey, hey, Thugnificent, is it "Booty butt cheeks" or "Move them butt cheeks"? Nigga, who gives a fuck, it's a song about butt cheeks!"
 * In "Wingmen" Granddad is revealed to have been a Tuskegee Airman and his best friend was a cocky and reckless pilot nickamed Moe "Guns", Aaron Mcgruder would later go on to write the screenplay for the Tuskegee Airmen biopic Red Tails, which also featured a cocky and reckless pilot as one of the characters(another was nicknamed "Ray Gun").
 * Ho Yay:
 * Uncle Ruckus and Jimmy Rebel.
 * Hell, look at how hurt Grandad acts when Ruckus starts hanging out with Jimmy Rebel. They bicker like an old married couple as it is.
 * Ed Wuncler III and Gin Rummy.
 * Idiot Plot: Purposely done in the "nigga moment" trilogy, though the plot was based on the characters being ignorant rather than just stupid.
 * Jerkass Woobie: Uncle Ruckus in "The Color Ruckus".
 * Gangstalicious in "The Story Of Gangstalicious, Part 2"
 * Large Ham:
 * Stinkmeaner, NYUKKA!
 * A Pimp Named Slickback. Y'all better make that G4 work and stop playin'.
 * Magnificent Bastard: Ed Wuncler Sr., that despicable genius.
 * Misaimed Fandom: The show as a whole can be considered this. A lot of people are unaware that The Boondocks is a satire.
 * There are actually people that view Uncle Ruckus as being totally in the right.
 * Don't even get started on the Youtube comments of the episode featuring Jimmy Rebel.
 * More aparent when you look at Riley's fanbase. Most of his fans don't realize that he is a parody of them - a wannabe hip-hop star.
 * Moe: Jazmine.
 * This video probably provides one of the best examples at about 1:20.
 * Mondegreen: Lampshaded in "Bitches To Rags".

"Huey: "What the hell is wrong with you people?! Every famous nigga that gets arrested is not Nelson Mandela! Yes, the government conspires to put a lot of innocent black men in jail on fallacious charges, but R. Kelly is NOT one of those men. We all know the nigga can sing, but what happened to standards? What happened to bare minimums? You a fan of R.Kelly? You wanna help R. Kelly? Then get some counselling for R. Kelly! Introduce him to some older women! Hide his camcorder! But don't pretend like the man is a hero! ...and STOP THE DAMN DANCING! ACT LIKE YOU'VE GOT SOME GOD DAMN SENSE, PEOPLE! DAMN! Done playin' around here...
 * Never Live It Down: Grandad will never be allowed to forget about . Averted with the law.
 * Offscreen Moment of Awesome: The implied fight between Huey and Uncle Ruckus at the end of "... Or Die Trying".
 * Painful Rhyme: "DOOM comes like a vacuum! 'Cuz death sucks and smells like a raccoon, or a baboon!"
 * The Red Stapler: You wouldn't believe how many people want full versions of Thugnificent's songs. Yes, even the autotuned ones.
 * Rescued From the Scrappy Heap: Many Uncle Ruckus centered episodes didn't do much to develop his character outside of "comic relief bigot". "The Color Ruckus" changed that.
 * So Cool Its Awesome: Especially if you get all the inside jokes. Also, the fact that the season 3 premiere got over a million viewers.
 * Some Anvils Need to Be Dropped: As that page mentions, the entire series exists largely to drop the anvils on the black community that apathy to your lot in life is a self-fulfilling prophecy and about how society is allegedly structured to disadvantage members of certain groups, usually focusing on the black community, but occasionally others.
 * Martin Luther King's speech.
 * Huey calling out the Common Nonsense Jury in "The Trial of R. Kelly".


 * "The Itis".

Huey: Granddad, look what you did to the community.

Granddad: It's not that bad.

Huey: Not that bad? This place used to sit between a coffee shop and a day spa. Now there is a liquor store and a damn footlocker. This food is destructive.

Granddad: This food is your culture!

Huey: Then the culture is destructive!"


 * Shipping: Many people think that Huey/Jazmine and Riley/Cindy would make great couples.
 * Straw Man Has a Point: Huey.
 * Strawman Political: Let's just say that the show and strip alike are not at their most nuanced when attacking conservatives.
 * Stylistic Suck: Granddad's "diss rap" in "The Story of Thugnificent". We may only hear about 20 seconds of it, but that's still enough to know epically bad it is. Watch it here (at the 1:00 mark).
 * Take That Scrappy: When Ruckus' dad gives him a scathing speech about his origins, his personality, his entire being, some people felt sorry for him, many others cheered.
 * Tear Jerker: Ruckus' origins. Lampshaded by the Freeman family's reactions.
 * This Is Your Premise on Drugs: Huey is Huey Newton on lithium.
 * Too Cool to Live:
 * Too Good to Last: What's alarming was the fact that the ratings were at their peak in the third season, actually going toe-to-toe with Family Guy as Adult Swim's highest rated show.
 * Though according to the news under And the Fandom Rejoiced earlier in this page, this is luckily not the case. And even when it was the case, it was not due to cancellation.
 * Toy Ship: Jazmine/Huey. Subverted in that Huey doesn't know or care. This may be one of the few childish traits that Huey has.
 * In the cartoon, there is much subtler teasing, but the relationship is less childish.
 * Also Riley/Cindy though to a lesser extent than Jazmine/Huey
 * Unfortunate Implications: While much of the show is intended as to disparage modern black culture for its negative attitudes and disinterest in bettering one's condition, the show frequently comes off as disparaging black people - for example, the concept of the "Nigga Moment".
 * Win the Crowd: Win promos for the show first started airing, a lot of people were skeptical that Boondocks would be another in a long line of shows that just take potshots at conservatives. Boondocks ended up being more than that and by time the third season was airing, it was regularly outperforming all the other Adult Swim shows (including Robot Chicken and Family Guy) in the ratings.
 * The Woobie:
 * Jazmine, especially in "The Block is Hot".
 * This runs in the family, as her father Tom also frequently qualifies for this.
 * Huey during the course of "The Passion Of Uncle Ruckus" and "It's a Black President, Huey Freeman".
 * Huey in general counts for this considering the fact that, his grandfather constantly ignores him, his brother is constantly getting into trouble, and he has to deal with the reality that he will probably outlive his grandfather and be responsible for looking out for his younger brother Riley all on his own.
 * Uncle Ruckus after "The Color Ruckus" revealed his horrible childhood.
 * Luna has suffered every type of abuse possible, and just as she makes Heel Face Turn for tormenting the Freemans,