Chris has to take part in Mr. Omar's Black Funeral Director's scholarship fund when he tries to raise enough money to go to a Run DMC concert. Meanwhile, Rochelle jumps at the chance to get a break at home when she injures her arm.
Season 3 Episode 16 of Everybody Hates Chris resulted in a 0.00 rating in the 18-49 demographic.
s03e01 - Everybody Hates the Guidance Counselor
s03e02 - Everybody Hates Caruso
s03e03 - Everybody Hates Driving
s03e04 - Everybody Hates Blackie
s03e05 - Everybody Hates the Bachelor Pad
s03e06 - Everybody Hates Bed-Stuy
s03e07 - Everybody Hates Houseguests
s03e08 - Everybody Hates Minimum Wage
s03e09 - Everybody Hates The New Kid
s03e10 - Everybody Hates Kwanzaa
s03e11 - Everybody Hates the Port Authority
s03e12 - Everybody Hates Bad Boys
s03e13 - Everybody Hates the First Kiss
s03e14 - Everybody Hates Easter
s03e15 - Everybody Hates Gretzky
s03e16 - Everybody Hates the BFD
s03e17 - Everybody Hates Ex-Cons
s03e18 - Everybody Hates Earth Day
s03e19 - Everybody Hates Being Cool
s03e20 - Everybody Hates the Ninth-Grade Dance
s03e21 - Everybody Hates Mother's Day
s03e22 - Everybody Hates Graduation
Motivated by his childhood experiences, Emmy Award-winner/actor/comedian Chris Rock, narrates this very hilarious & touching story of a teenager growing up as the oldest of three children in Brooklyn, New York during the early 1980s.
Uprooted to a neighborhood and bused into a primarily white middle school two hours aways by his strict, hard-working parents, Chris struggles to find his place, all while keeping his younger brother & sister in line at home and surmounting the tests of junior high school. This dependable, resilient teen brings a unique, comedic spin to his everyday trials & upsets in UPN's new single-camera comedy, "Everybody Hates Chris".
The year that Chris turned 13 was 1982. Filled with dreams that being a teenager would be really cool, Chris' entry into adolescence is turning out to be less pleasant. Moved from the projects to the tough "Bed-Stuy" neighborhood of Brooklyn, Chris is still stuck in his big brother role. As the family's "emergency adult", he's accountable for taking care of his younger brother Drew, and his younger sister Tonya while his parents are working; Drew, although younger, is taller and more confident than Chris, while Tonya is the baby of the family, who gets all of the attention from his parents.
Chris' rough, cost-conscious father Julius works numerous jobs in order to properly support his family. Meanwhile, his very strict, sassy mother Rochelle, who works part-time in a small real estate office, runs the household on a very tight budget, while demanding the best for her children.
With his mother strong-minded to see him in a good school, Chris reluctantly faces multiple bus transfers each day to attend Corleone Junior High School in the fiercely Italian neighborhood, South Shore. Although being an immediate target for bullies, Chris' innate charm and sharp wit enable him to make new friends at school, such as Greg, another smart, nice kid... who can't fight, by the way.
As Chris Rock pointedly looks back, his younger self is set to find what his family already knows: Chris' sharp, scrappy character is going to take him places. But first, he's going to have to think, talk or run his way through one growing experience after another at both home and school, and on any number of buses along the way.