Uncle Ruckus has long idolized Jimmy Rebel, a popular racist country singer based on the infamous Johnny Reb, a.k.a. Pee Wee Trahan. So much did Jimmy Rebel's music influence him that he eventually sends off recordings of his own racist tunes to the man, and is faced with a dilemma when Jimmy shows up on his doorstep. Uncle Ruckus' legendary status as a black-hating racist thus runs up against the slight problem of his negritude.
Season 3 Episode 4 of The Boondocks resulted in a 0.00 rating in the 18-49 demographic.
s03e01 - It's a Black President, Huey Freeman
s03e02 - Bitches to Rags
s03e03 - The Red Ball
s03e04 - The Story of Jimmy Rebel
s03e05 - Stinkmeaner 3: The Hateocracy
s03e06 - Smokin With Cigarettes
s03e07 - The Fund-Raiser
s03e08 - Pause
s03e09 - A Date With the Booty Warrior
s03e10 - The Story of Lando Freeman
s03e11 - The Lovely Ebony Brown
s03e12 - Mr. Medicinal
s03e13 - The Fried Chicken Flu
s03e14 - The Color Ruckus
s03e15 - It's Goin Down
When Robert 'Grandad' Freeman becomes the legal guardian of his rambunctious grandkids, he moves the family from the south side of Chicago to the quiet and safety of The Boondocks - aka suburban Woodcrest - in hopes he can ignore the kids alltogether and enjoy the fourth quarter of his life in peace.
But neither Huey, a ten-year-old Leftist revolutionary, nor his eight-year old misfit brother Riley are thrilled about the new environment. Although the boys torture each other and provoke the neighborhood, they are still no match for Grandad, who is eccentric even by 'crazy-ass-old-black-man' standards.