Riley Wuz Here

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The Boondocks episode
"Riley Wuz Here"
Episode no.: 12
Prod. code: 113
Airdate: February 19, 2006
Writer(s): Aaron McGruder
Director: Kalvin Lee
Guest star(s): Corey Burton
Rob Paulsen

The Boondocks Season 1
November 5, 2005 - March 19, 2006
List of The Boondocks episodes

Episodes:

  1. The Garden Party
  2. The Trial of R. Kelly
  3. Guess Hoe's Coming to Dinner
  4. Granddad's Fight
  5. A Date With The Health Inspector
  6. The Story of Gangstalicious
  7. A Huey Freeman Christmas
  8. The Real
  9. The Return of the King
  10. The Itis
  11. Let's Nab Oprah
  12. Riley Wuz Here
  13. Wingmen
  14. The Block Is Hot
  15. The Passion of the Ruckus

"Riley Wuz Here" is the 12th episode in the animated series The Boondocks. It originally aired on February 19, 2006.

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Riley opens the episode by tagging on the side of a neighbor's house. As he paints, an art critic starts to comment on his work and offer him advice, prompting Riley to re-do the tag on a different side of the house with better legibility and color work. Riley is quite pleased with himself, but the neighbor does not think so highly of the work.

As punishment, Granddad forces Riley to take art lessons, reasoning that if Riley learns to draw on paper then he won't go marking up people's houses with spray-paint. The art teacher turns out to be none other than the art critic from the night before. The art teacher denies responsibility for creating the impression of owning the house being tagged, uses what is called "reverse psychology", and has a mild manner, phrasing and speaking his words just so, and among other things, saying that he "doesn't like violent things", preferring "to take people by surprise". The teacher is an obvious reference to Bob Ross, the painter, in the pictures he produces for himself, his hairstyle as well as the way he speaks to Riley.

Meanwhile, Huey is conducting an experiment to see what would happen to a person who watches nothing but "black television" for 14 days. This is a reference to the documentary Super Size Me, in which the filmmaker ate nothing but McDonald's food for 30 days to see if there was a health risk associated with it. Huey performed a similar social experiment in The Boondocks comic strip from May 6, 2005 to May 14, 2005. As the experiment progresses Huey becomes progressively stupider and lazier, reveling in the very sterotypical behavior which he despises and McGruder satirizes.

As Riley becomes more determined and sincere, the art teacher thinks "it's time to move to a bigger canvas", sometimes "liking to paint murals" thinking that "they're fun". This ends up as nighttime paint-raids. Riley paints a still-life, and pictures of "someone that we love! Maybe, someone who is not with us anymore", that is, a "fallen solider". Everyone is moved by the works, but refuses to believe that Riley produced them. In a touching moment for the comedic series, the mural at the end of the episode is painted on the side of Granddad's house, a picture of him and his now-dead wife at their wedding when they were younger. After Granddad sheds a tear he thanks Riley, takes a quick picture of the mural on his digital camera, and then forces Riley to paint over the side of the house.

[edit] Trivia

  • The ending sequence of this episode contained a nearly full version of the song "Today" by Tom Scott, from the 1967 album "The Honeysuckle Breeze." A saxophone sequence and several of the backing vocals have been sampled for hip-hop songs, including "They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.)" by Pete Rock and CL Smooth, released in 1992.
  • Riley signs one of his murals "R. Escobar", a reference to Pablo Escobar, the Colombian drug lord. In the comic strip, Riley adopts "Riley Esco" as an alias, and insists that his teacher refer to him by this name only.
  • Riley makes two Scarface references in this episode. The first is his line "Say hello to the bad guy" when he is being questioned by the police. This is a reference to Tony Montana's "Say goodnight to the bad guy" speech. The second comes when the art teacher asks him what he wants to paint for his next mural. Riley says he wanted to paint something like the final scene in Scarface, when Tony Montana is having a final shootout with the Colombian drug lords... "with bitches."
  • There is a reference to Adult Swim, when Grandad is whupping Riley offscreen, he says that Riley watches too much television, and says "You ain't gonna be watchin' no more o' that Adult Swim!"
  • The Detour on Teletoon's website lists this as two different episodes by the names of The Bob Ross Episode and it's original title, The Joy of Graffiti.
  • In his speech, Uncle Ruckus mentions "that genius that drew that strip with the talkin' penguin...Master Penguin Drawer," referring to Bloom County by Berkeley Breathed.
  • When Riley draws the "fallen soldier," he draws rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard, who died in 2004.