bagge_the_bradleys

The me that is fifteen years younger is so thrilled right now. Fox has ordered a pilot for a potential animated series based on The Bradleys, which were some of the characters created by cartoonist Peter Bagge in the comics Neat StuffHate and later The Bradleys. Hate was centered around the drunken, socially fumbling antics of misanthrope Buddy Bradley, who has been Bagge’s signature character for years.

If you’d told me during the series’ heyday that it might have an animated series on a major network, I would have laughed. Just like I’m laughing (gleefully) now.

According to long-time Bagge publisher Fantagraphics (by way of MTV) the prime-time series would take place before the events of Hate. We’d see teenage Buddy Bradley living at home. I haven’t read the series The Bradleys but knowing Hate and Neat Stuff I’d expect arguments, drinking, sullen depression, angst-ridden rage and a savvy, grousing awareness of music and books.

While Bagge’s writing could be jagged and misanthropic, his art always had a fluid, crazy sense of motion that would be amazing to see animated. His characters could be fairly realistic in one panel then exaggerated with long, rubbery limbs in the next. He captured both the electricity of the early ’90s and the sense that it was being co-opted even as that energy flourished. No one satirized the burgeoning indie scene in music and comics better than he did. What would he produce now, many years later, as things have changed so much? I’m curious.

(I don’t mean to make it sound as if Bagge is no longer active; he’s still producing comics, including some work for Marvel and DC over the past few years.)

This wouldn’t be Bagge’s first foray into animation. His characters were animated by others for a Mad TV promo a couple years back. Years ago he designed characters for a series of animated commercials (for Round Table Pizza, no less, see tiny versions here) and also did a web series called The Murray Wilson Show, based on the life of the father of the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson. The first episode of that is below.

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  • greggorybasore
    I was aware of the Hate comics stuff as part of the indy comics scene back in the 90's but didn't get around to reading any of it until a couple of years ago when I started checking out the tpb's from my local library (I love the Eugene public library). They really did live up to my expectations.

    While I won't hold my breath on this pilot coming to light or an animated series hitting the air waves anytime soon (after all it's been like 3 or 4 years since FOX announced plans for an animated series based off the web comic You Damn Kid and I'm still waiting for word on that) I think it'd be really cool if this did go down.
  • JavaJunkie
    Bagge's Girly Girl comic was in development at Klasky-Csopu back in the mid-90's, as well.
  • Gary G
    This isn't his first time doing this with Buddy Bradley and Co. Bagge worked for over a year on a pilot for MTV, back when this material was only slightly dated. Now, the references to the Grunge scene, to the Pacific Northwest before the tech boom, and the time before women had the vote will all seem too dated to consider. Way to go Fox.

    On the other hand, Bagge calls himself a Libertarian, but these days he sounds more like a neocon, so Fox is probably thrilled to finally have one of the right wing create a cartoon for them.

    Fun Fact: Matt Groening has always said that the Simpsons were in part inspired by Bagge's Bradleys. That was almost a quarter century ago. The timing is less than perfect.
  • Ccfan101
    The Bradleys is timeless with better characters than the Simpsons. Hate is the comic set in Seattle 90s. Nothing is dated about the Bradleys.
  • Blake Shafer
    I'm only 18 so I don't remember this from when it originally came out but I read the Hate graphic novels because they were available at my public library. I thought they were very good and I hope that the show turns out well and does well. This seems like it could be the next Mission Hill but hopefully more successful.
  • Zombie'sRottenBallsack
    i got into comics thanks to mission hill, the creators mentioned Hate as a major influence for the show. i seriously hope this show has better luck
  • greggorybasore
    Funny you should say that because when I first saw an ad for Mission Hill when it was on the WB my first thought was "Hey that Pete Bagge guy just got a cartoon series, that's so cool" then I eventually realized that it had nothing to do with the creator of Hate.

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