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Well, well, well. Just when we thought the internet had moved on from wigs and melodrama, the recent lawsuit against Tyler Perry has brought back a golden gem from TV history. Yes, that infamous episode of The Boondocks. The one Mr. Perry likely wishes was buried deeper than Madea’s purse.
Season 3’s “Pause” didn’t just hint at Tyler Perry. It went full-on parody with the character Winston Jerome, a playwright and filmmaker who just happens to don a wig, play an angry grandma, and run a cult-like Christian theater camp. Sound familiar? Yeah, we thought so.

Winston Jerome is Tyler Perry. Ma Dukes is Madea. Subtle? Not even a little.
“Pause” pulled no punches. It took all of Perry’s greatest hits, exaggerated churchy drama, melodramatic love triangles, and that ever-present cross-dressing shtick, and flipped it into biting satire. Not surprisingly, Perry was allegedly not amused. While he never filed a lawsuit (because the First Amendment exists), rumors swirled that he rang up the execs at Turner Broadcasting and delivered an old-fashioned holy ghost threat: pull the episode or I walk.
And guess what? The episode aired once. Then it vanished like a wig snatched mid-sermon.
Carl Jones, one of The Boondocks producers, confirmed that Perry was furious. That’s polite industry-speak for he probably threw a script across the room. Fans still believe Perry flexed his influence hard enough to get the show canceled, or at least thrown into timeout.
Spoiler alert: he didn’t sue. But let’s be honest, he probably wanted to.
Despite whispers of lawsuits and divine vengeance, Perry didn’t take the show to court. Parody is legal, even if it bruises your ego harder than a bad box office weekend. And let’s be real. The Boondocks never claimed to be subtle. This was the same show that gave us…
The Trial of R. Kelly. Because Sometimes the Satire Writes Itself

Back in 2005, The Boondocks took on another “beloved” celebrity in “The Trial of Robert Kelly,” an episode where the R&B crooner goes on trial for, let’s just say it, underage peeing issues. Yep, that happened. And in classic Boondocks style, the audience in the episode breaks into song and dance when Kelly is found not guilty. Because nothing says justice like a remix of denial.
Huey Freeman, the resident revolutionary, wasn’t having it. He delivered a mic-drop monologue calling out the public’s blind loyalty to problematic celebrities. And honestly, it hit harder than any Perry monologue about forgiveness and casserole.
They even had a deleted scene with Rosa Parks protesting R. Kelly, but it got cut after her passing. Because satire still has a heart. Sometimes.
Enter Gangstalicious. Closeted Rap Icon or a Diddy Disguised in Denim?

And let’s not forget The Boondocks’ favorite glittery gangsta, Gangstalicious. Riley Freeman’s idol and a poster boy for toxic masculinity in hip-hop. While the show never confirmed it, fans have long speculated that Gangstalicious was a tongue-in-cheek jab at a certain Bad Boy mogul. No names, but let’s just say his initials are S.C. and he loves a shiny suit.
Gangstalicious is tough, buff, and perpetually terrified of anyone finding out he’s gay. His story is a brilliant critique of the homophobia that runs deep in the music industry. And let’s be honest, it aged better than most rap beefs.
The Boondocks Knew All Along
Whether it was exposing the weirdly dramatic depths of Tyler Perry’s creative empire, calling out the blind fanbase of R. Kelly, or poking holes in the macho image of rappers, The Boondocks held a mirror up to Black pop culture and asked, you sure you want to see this?
So now, as lawsuits bring Tyler Perry’s name back into the headlines, the internet dusts off “Pause” like it’s a sacred scroll. And somewhere, Winston Jerome is yelling, cut the cameras, deadass, while Madea loads up her purse with subpoenas.