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Tuned In: 'Boondocks' to jump into Adult Swim
Monday, July 18, 2005

Sony Pictures Television
Riley Freeman moves from the funny papers to television when "The Boondocks" premieres this fall on Cartoon Network.
Click photo for larger image.

GO BEHIND THE SCENES: L.A. Confidential: 2005 Summer Press Tour Journal

If you've been offended by the comic strip "The Boondocks" in this and other newspapers, prepare to have the same reaction when a 30-minute animated series based on the strip premieres in Cartoon Network's Adult Swim block at 11 p.m. Oct. 2.

The strip's writer, Aaron McGruder, is executive producer of the 15-episode first season of the animated "Boondocks." Like the strip, the series follows the daily life of Robert "Granddad" Freeman (voice of John Witherspoon), who lives in the boondocks with his grandkids, 10-year-old Huey and 8-year-old Riley (both voiced by Regina King), who move in with him after living in Chicago's South Side.

Huey is a left-wing revolutionary who's determined to dislike suburbia. Riley is a proud product of modern rap culture.

In the first episode, "The Trial of R. Kelly," Granddad plays chess, and he and his opponent discuss the trials of famous black men in a scene charged with humor and racial politics.

"What did O.J. Simpson say to Kobe once his case was over? Don't let this whole trial thing turn you off to white women."

Because of the production time necessary for animated shows -- McGruder has already been working on the series for 10 months -- it can't be as topical as the comic. Instead, he said, it will be story-driven in a way the comic can't be.

Now 31, McGruder got his first syndication contract for the strip at 23, fresh out of the University of Maryland. He said he originally conceived of "Boondocks" as a TV show, but at the time figured it might be easier to get a comic in newspapers than a show on TV.

But newspapers have been a challenge, too, sometimes pulling the strip if editors deem the topics or language offensive.

McGruder said he has never read fan mail or hate mail, but he's aware that some African-American leaders, including Jesse Jackson, have called his syndicate to complain about the comic. He said Jackson was upset when McGruder took him and other black leaders to task when they made a fuss about a Rosa Parks joke in the movie "Barbershop."

"I didn't call him back," McGruder said. "What are we going to talk about? 'OK, you're mad about the strip, you're gonna try to explain to me why 'Barbershop' is the end of the world. I don't really agree.' It's part of the feedback you don't want because it makes it hard to do the job. Jesse could call me and give a brilliant explanation of why what I did was terribly wrong, but it was still funny, and that's my job."

That said, McGruder acknowledged that he has softened in recent years since having more involvement in Hollywood and a greater opportunity to meet the people he criticizes in the comic, which has often skewered TV shows, movies and celebrities.

"I do think about it now when I sit down to write about people, and if I think I am I gonna see them, it's not worth it," he said. "Yeah, I can't help but soften, but I don't need to be hard my whole life. But I think more of it was just trying to do something else creatively. 'OK, I get it, that movie was bad.' I did it and didn't have the burning need to do it week-in and week-out. [Now it's] only when people really deserve it."

Originally made as a six-minute pilot for Fox, the TV version of "The Boondocks" migrated to Adult Swim after Fox passed on it, which was fine by McGruder. He said Fox didn't have a problem with the language or dialogue as much as the storytelling structure, which he described at Fox as "rigid."

"Adult Swim is much more open to telling bigger stories that aren't constrained to the living room," he said. "We got notes from Fox about showing the characters in the living room, the kitchen, the neighbor's house, their living room, their kitchen. 'We have to see that or we don't know where they live or where they eat.' "

Among TV shows, McGruder said, "The Boondocks" series probably bears the closest comedic sensibility to Comedy Central's "Chappelle's Show." He said he and Dave Chappelle are friends of about the same age and have similar cultural influences. He's also a fan of Adult Swim's "Harvey Birdman, Attorney-at-Law" and both the British and American versions of "The Office."

Like "Chappelle's Show," the TV version of "Boondocks" includes use of the N-word.

"I think it makes the show sincere," he said. "At a certain point, sometimes we use bad language, and the N-word is used so commonly now, not only by myself but people I know, that I feel it's fake to write around it and not use it."

'Entourage' renewed

HBO announced late Friday that its comedy series "Entourage," the best original program on the network these days, has been renewed for a third season.

But fans of the canceled "Carnivale" should find a new way to spend their time. It won't be back, despite their efforts.

"Never have we gotten besieged the way we have been besieged by "Carnivale" fans for deciding to not go on with the third season of that show," said HBO chairman and CEO Chris Albrecht. "Literally, 50,000 e-mails over a weekend, and I don't mean the first weekend. It is so over the top, not just in terms of the number, but in terms of things that they say and threaten."

Albrecht said if the series hadn't cost about $4 million per episode, it would have returned.

"If 'Carnivale' was a $2 million-an-hour show, we'd keep going with it," he said. "It's not a big show for foreign [distribution] ... You just have to say, 'Can I take this money and allocate it in other ways to appeal to that same audience?' Although after reading the e-mails, I'm not sure."

He also said in the original concept for the second-season finale, Brother Justin (Clancy Brown) was more definitively dead, giving the show a greater sense of closure than it ultimately had.

Albrecht sounded somewhat regretful about his decision, and perhaps one of the factors that went into making it.

"This is an example of why you shouldn't listen to critics," he said. "Everybody [pooped] all over that show."

Channel surfing

In 2006 Showtime will blow the dust off and restore the Liza Minnelli concert special "Liza With a 'Z,' " which aired only once on NBC in 1972. ... Beginning this week, the elimination episode of "Rock Star: INXS" moves to 9 p.m. Wednesdays, bumping "The King of Queens" to 9:30. ... GSN, formerly Game Show Network, premieres "Ballbreakers," described as "pool on steroids," tonight at 10. ... Showtime has not yet decided whether it will renew the heavily promoted but little-watched comedy series "Fat Actress." ... After the success of "Into the West," TNT is planning another limited series for next summer. "Nightmares & Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King" will tell eight stories adapted from a 1993 King anthology.

First published on July 18, 2005 at 12:00 am
Post-Gazette TV editor Rob Owen is attending the Television Critics Association summer press tour. You can reach him at 412-263-2582 or rowen@post-gazette.com.