The video was fine until it started fellating McGruder's writing process—portraying it as some carefully crafted, deliberate effort to avoid making Black people the butt of the joke, or as if the show was above parodying popular media. This framing doesn’t really hold up, especially considering Season 3 was filled with exactly that kind of content, including a blatant 24 parody and dated memes like "don't tase me bro".
The way people remember The Boondocks in retrospect often doesn’t match reality. That idealized vision mostly applies to Season 1. Seasons 2, 3, and 4 all share a similar tone and structure. Personally, I love Season 2, but it clearly leaned into a South Park -style format—targeting specific people or events each week without always offering a clear stance on the issues. It also started to lose its grounding, with episodes focusing more on absurd scenarios than on Huey's perspective. Over time, Granddad became the central figure, shifting the show’s focus even further from its original point of view.
It's also important to remember that The Boondocks was always a compromise. McGruder himself acknowledged that changes from the comic strip were ultimately for the better. So it’s not surprising that the show leaned heavily into overt satire. Given that, Season 4's direction wasn’t unexpected. From the reboot footage that has been shown, it looked like it would’ve continued in the same vein—with Uncle Ruckus serving as a Trump allegory. Considering how uncontroversial and safe modern satire has become, it likely would have disappointed fans in the same way current South Park often does.
If there’s a real reason The Boondocks couldn’t be made today, it’s not because of its content—it’s because satire itself has lost its edge for modern audiences. Most adult animated shows today lack the boldness to take a stance, and that reflects a wider apathy in the creative process. The willingness to make a meaningful statement just isn’t there anymore.