Everybody Still Hates Chris - Season 1 -
The show doesn’t preach. It uses the distance of animation and the hindsight of history to highlight how ridiculous and persistent these injustices are, without ever letting the message overwhelm the jokes. Everybody Still Hates Chris – Season 1 is a triumph of creative risk-taking. It honors the legacy of the original while forging its own identity. It is funnier, faster, and visually more inventive than its predecessor, even if it sacrifices a small measure of the original’s raw heart.
The show also leans into the era’s aesthetic. The clothes are louder, the hair is bigger, and the graffiti on the subway cars moves. The animators play with aspect ratios, color grading, and texture to differentiate between Chris’s grim reality (washed-out browns and grays) and his fantasy sequences (hyper-saturated neon). Everybody Still Hates Chris - Season 1
closes the season on a high note. The dance sequence is animated like a cross between Saturday Night Fever and a horror movie. Chris, determined to ask Tasha (voiced by Keke Palmer), must first survive a montage of Greg’s terrible dance lessons. The final scene, where Chris is left standing alone as the disco ball lights swirl around him, is both hilarious and heartbreaking—the perfect distillation of the show’s tone. What the Animation Adds (and What It Loses) The shift to animation is largely a victory. It solves the original show’s biggest limitation: budget. In 2005, a scene of Chris imagining himself as a Jedi was a quick, low-fi gag. In 2024, that same joke becomes a fully animated Star Wars homage with lightsabers, TIE fighters, and a Darth Vader voiced by Laurence Fishburne (a hilarious guest spot). The show doesn’t preach
Tim Johnson Jr. as Chris is the revelation. He doesn’t try to imitate Tyler James Williams’s specific cadence. Instead, he captures the essence : the exhaustion, the quiet intelligence, the desperation for a single win. His Chris is slightly more cynical, which works for an animated context where characters can get away with darker, quicker asides. It honors the legacy of the original while