It didn’t end with a big climax or a villain defeated. It ended with a shrug and a smile. That was the point. Uncle Grandpa concluded in 2017, but its DNA is everywhere. Peter Browngardt is now a major force at Warner Bros. Animation. Kevin Michael Richardson remains one of the most prolific voice actors in the industry. Adam Devine’s star rose significantly post-Pizza Steve, starring in Pitch Perfect and The Righteous Gemstones .
The show is currently available on Hulu and Max (formerly HBO Max), where it has found a second life via streaming. A new generation of kids—and stoned college students—is discovering the series. Forums like Reddit have seen a resurgence in “UG” appreciation threads, with fans analyzing specific episodes frame-by-frame for hidden jokes. To ask whether Uncle Grandpa is a “good” series is to miss the point entirely. It is not a show you judge by traditional metrics of plot coherence or character development. It is a vibe. It is a Dadaist painting for the cartoon medium. Uncle Grandpa Series
Premiering on September 2, 2013, as part of Cartoon Network’s “CN Real” competition era (though ironically being one of the few surreal cartoons to survive it), Uncle Grandpa ran for five seasons and 153 episodes before concluding in 2017. Dismissed by some as “random for the sake of random,” a deeper look reveals a brilliantly structured experiment in absurdist storytelling. This article explores the origins, characters, thematic depth, and lasting legacy of the Uncle Grandpa series. The elevator pitch for Uncle Grandpa is deceptively simple: A magical, shape-shifting, portly old man who is simultaneously everyone’s uncle and everyone’s grandpa travels the universe in a moving house (a converted RV/truck hybrid) to help children with their daily problems. It didn’t end with a big climax or a villain defeated
The show also pioneered the “segment” format later seen in The Amazing World of Gumball . A typical 11-minute episode might contain fake commercials, musical numbers, or abrupt shifts in media. One famous episode, “The Uncle Grandpa Movie,” is an entire fake feature-length film compressed into 11 minutes, complete with a trailer, a “Part 2” that doesn’t exist, and a mid-credits scene. Beneath the absurdity, Uncle Grandpa has a surprisingly coherent philosophy: radical acceptance . Uncle Grandpa concluded in 2017, but its DNA is everywhere
So, the next time you see that floating, potato-headed old man in his rainbow RV, don’t change the channel. Lean into the weird. Because, as Uncle Grandpa would say: “You’re never too old for a little bit of magic—even if that magic is a slice of pizza with a gambling problem.”
Uncle Grandpa succeeded because it knew exactly what it was: a kaleidoscopic celebration of nonsense, a safe space for weird kids to feel seen, and a middle finger to the idea that every cartoon needs to be a serialized epic. It taught a generation that it’s okay to be goofy, to fail spectacularly, and to find joy in the utterly illogical.