Look, I'll be direct: Angry Boys is a relic of a comedy era we've thankfully moved past. Chris Lilley's yellowface performance alone disqualifies this from any recommendation list, and that's before we get to the homophobic jokes, crude stereotypes, and general punching-down humor.
The show's defenders might argue it's 'satire' or 'social commentary,' but when your Japanese mother character is played by a white Australian in offensive makeup spouting stereotypes, that's not commentary—that's just racism with a mockumentary camera.
The ratings split is telling: critics gave it 54% (lukewarm at best), while audiences rated it 89%. That gap usually means 'some people found it funny but it's probably problematic,' and yep, that tracks. The show hasn't aged well because it wasn't great to begin with.
For parents: this is a hard pass for anyone under 18, and honestly, most adults would be better served watching literally anything else. If your teen discovers it and wants to watch, that's a perfect opportunity for a conversation about how comedy evolves and why representation matters—but you don't need to actually sit through it to have that talk.
Screenwise verdict: Skip it. There are thousands of better ways to spend your viewing time.




