Tom, Sarah and Usher

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The Boondocks episode
“Tom, Sarah and Usher”

Tom and Sarah at their anniversary dinner.
Original airdate October 15, 2007
Season no. 2
Episode no. 17
Production no. 202
Director Seung Eun Kim
Writer(s) Aaron McGruder
Rodney Barnes
Guest star(s) Katt Williams
The Boondocks - Season 2
October 8, 2007 – ?
  1. ...Or Die Trying
  2. Tom, Sarah and Usher
  3. Thank You for Not Snitching
  4. Stinkmeaner Strikes Back
  5. The Story of Thugnificent
  6. Attack of the Killer Kung-Fu Wolf Bitch
  7. Shinin'
  8. Ballin'
  9. Invasion of the Katrinians
  10. Home Alone
  11. The S-Word
  12. The Story of Catcher Freeman
  13. The Story of Gangstalicious Part 2
  14. The Hunger Strike
  15. The Uncle Ruckus Reality Show
Canada-only
Season 1

"Tom, Sarah and Usher" is the second episode of the second season of the Adult Swim animated television series The Boondocks and the seventeenth episode overall. It originally aired on October 15, 2007.

[edit] Plot

Tom Dubois and his wife Sarah are celebrating their anniversary at a restaurant. Tom, enjoying himself, seems oblivious to his wife's relative disinterest. Sarah perks up quickly when pop singer Usher enters the restaurant. Tom, thinking her enthusiasm is for him, sings "Sara Smile" to Sarah, embarrassing her. Afterwards, Usher (voiced by Affion Crockett) comes over and sings to her the same song, and he and Sarah hit it off, taking many pictures together and having a good time, leaving Tom to mull over his dinner alone.

On the drive home, Tom confronts Sarah about her flirty behavior, likening her girlish behavior to that of their daughter Jazmine (who is also an Usher fan). Sarah, enraged, demands that he stop the car. She walks home.

The next day, Tom is visiting the Freemans, explaining to Granddad, Riley, and Huey about all that had happened the night prior. Riley and Granddad encourage him to go lay down the law and assert his role as man of the house, which he attempts to do. Naturally, this goes horribly wrong and he returns to the Freeman house sobbing with bags in both hands. He is reluctantly taken in by the Freemans. While alone in the spare bedroom, Tom proceeds to sing "Burn," by Usher, daydreaming that he is making a music video while doing so (to the chagrin of Riley and Granddad, who both tell him to "shut the fuck up").

When Robert decides that Tom needs to go, Riley offers a suggestion: hire A Pimp Named Slickback (from "Guess Hoe's Coming to Dinner") to give Tom a crash course on assertiveness towards women, explaining that Tom was suffering from "chronic bitch dependency". Robert uses Tom's credit card to pay the pimp a $2,500 honorarium for this course.

While discussing his and Sarah's relationship with A Pimp Named Slickback, a montage simultaneously shows Tom's devotion and love to Sarah and her distance and detachment from him. Indeed, a scene even shows him rolling from her in bed, obviously spent from sex, while she is reading a book as if she didn't even realize he was there.

A Pimp Named Slickback's assertiveness training
A Pimp Named Slickback's assertiveness training

A Pimp Named Slickback takes Tom to his palatial home and tries to teach Tom that he can extort respect from women by hitting them and tells Tom to refer to his wife as a "bitch". He pits Tom against "Sweetest Taboo" (voiced by Miss Kittie) one of his prostitutes, who begins to treat Tom very disrespectfully. When Tom refuses to hit her, she promptly begins to savagely beat him up. The lesson is interrupted when "Quiet Storm," a prostitute who works A Pimp Named Slickback's extensive surveillance network, reveals that Usher and Sarah have agreed via her MySpace, which Tom did not know she had, to meet that very afternoon. Finally showing a little spine, Tom angrily demands that A Pimp Named Slickback take him there immediately.

Arriving at the scene (The Woodcrest Chateau Hotel), Tom sees Sarah, Usher, and two of Usher's burly bodyguards. Boldly walking up to them, he grabs Sarah by the arm and demands that she leave with him. When she refuses, he draws back his hand, clenches his fist as though about to strike her, but instead he smacks Usher and tells him that he cannot steal his wife from him. Usher looks at him, flabbergasted. Jazmine, who Tom did not realize was there, begins bawling that her father has brutally attacked her idol without provocation. Sarah then explains that the reason she was meeting with Usher was not for some tryst, but so that their daughter could meet her favorite singer. Tom has a moment to realize his horrible error before Usher and his two bodyguards set on him and begin to beat him viciously while Sarah tells them to stop, but ignores her.

Jazmine, still in tears, cries apologies to Usher (apparently not caring that her father is being pummeled), while A Pimp Named Slickback prudently exits the premises quietly. While getting pummeled, Tom cries and Usher says to Tom while assaulting him to "shut the fuck up".

[edit] Cultural references

  • Quiet Storm complains about having an iMac G4 and A Pimp named Slickback tells her about all the time she wants an iMac when a new one comes out
  • Sweetest Taboo is named after a song by Sade.
  • Quiet Storm, the surveillance prostitute, is named after the song of the same name by Smokey Robinson.
  • This episode prominently features many popular songs:
    • While Tom reminisces about his life with Sarah, "Blue Eyes" by Elton John is playing.
    • While Huey tries to console and cheer up Tom, the music heard playing in the background is similar to the instrumental version of "Hollywood Divorce" by OutKast.
    • The song that Tom sings to Sarah in the restaurant and is later sung by Usher is "Sara Smile" by Hall & Oates.
    • When Tom is staying over at Grandad's house and is talking to himself in the mirror he begins singing along with the song "Burn" by Usher as it play in the background.
    • When Tom goes to confront Sarah & Usher, the instrumental of "I Got Love" by Nate Dogg is played in the background.
  • When Sarah tells Tom to stop the car and he responds, "Now, now, we won't have any of that", it's referencing a joke in Eddie Murphy's stand-up special Delirious about men leaving their significant others on the side of the road.
  • After demanding to her to come to him, Sarah jokingly calls Tom, Dolemite.


Preceded by
...Or Die Trying
The Boondocks episodes Followed by
Thank You for Not Snitching