The Boys' decline from a revolutionary satire to a predictable drama occurred because the show attempted to simultaneously humanize its monsters (Homelander) and maintain satirical distance, creating an irreconcilable conflict that led to character flanderization, predictable political commentary, and a finale that prioritized spectacle over substance.
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What Went Wrong With The Boys?Añadido:
So The Boys just ended. The series finale dropped 3 days ago. Elon Musk went on X and called it pathetic. Eric Kripke, the creator, responded by saying, "Quote, I'll never get a better review." And I'm sitting here thinking, "Neither of these guys is actually answering the question." So we've got two positions in the room. Musk hating it for completely the wrong reasons, Kripke treating a billionaire's tantrum as artistic vindication, and neither of them is asking the thing that actually matters. Was the show good? Was the finale good? And how did we get here?
Because the frustrating thing isn't that The Boys ended badly. The frustrating thing is that it's one of the best things on television, and it didn't have to go this way. Season 1 of The Boys came out in 2019. It did something genuinely new, because superhero fatigue was already a conversation by then.
Marvel was everywhere, DC was trying to catch up, and the genre had developed this very specific language. Origin story, sacrifice, final battle, emotional payoff. We all knew how it worked. What The Boys did was ask a different question entirely. Not what if superheroes existed, loads of shows had done that, but what if they were owned?
What if Vought International ran them the way a talent agency runs a pop star?
What if Homelander's threat wasn't that he might turn evil, but that he was always evil, and the machinery around him was specifically designed to make sure nobody could say so. That's where the horror came from in season 1. Not the violence, not the spectacle, from the fact that the most powerful being on Earth was accountable to nobody, and the people tasked with stopping him, Butcher and The Boys, were themselves broken by grief and rage, and had almost nothing in their corner except each other and sheer bloody-mindedness. Homelander in season 1 scared me. Not because of what he did, because of what he was capable of, and nobody, not the government, not the media, not Vought, not The Boys, could do a single thing about it. That helplessness is what good satire does.
It recreates the feeling. Here's the problem, and it's not specific to The Boys. I actually made a video about this exact mechanism a week ago, but The Boys is the clearest example I can point to.
Satire requires distance. You need to stay back from your targets. The moment you start to understand them, the moment you explain why they are the way they are, you've lost the weapon. Because satire doesn't have empathy for its subjects. Drama does. The Boys had to give Homelander a backstory. He was raised in a lab. He was a weapon before a person, and I get it. That's emotionally compelling. That's rich dramatic territory. But the second you understand why the monster is the monster, you humanized him. And a humanized Homelander is not the terrifying corporate asset from season 1. He's a tragic figure, and tragedy demands sympathy. Simultaneously, they had to give the boys characters you actually cared about. You had to invest in Butcher's arc, in Hughie's arc, in MM's family, in the female's history.
All of this is good drama. All of this is also the death of satire. It's always Sunny in Philadelphia figured out how to avoid this. 20 years plus running, still biting. The gang don't grow, they don't learn, they're never redeemed. The show is structurally designed to punish them every single time. Because the moment the characters become people you should love, the satire is over. The boys chose to become a drama, which is a legitimate choice. The problem is that it never fully committed. It kept the satirical posture, the loud political targets, the cultural commentary, while pulling the punches that real satire requires. It wanted to be sharp and emotionally resonant at the same time, and those two things kept working against each other.
But I don't want to make this entirely about theory. There are specific things that happened. Season 3 98% on Rotten Tomatoes, critics loved it. But something shifted in the fan experience.
The satire got louder, the targets got more obvious. Herogasm was a spectacle, but it was a spectacle designed to shock rather than to say something. And every character started to become a slightly more extreme version of themselves. MM became the moral compass. A-Train got a redemption arc. The Deep became comic relief. And Homelander started giving speeches. That's Flanderization, not character development. Flanderization accelerated from there. Season 4 dropped to 54% on Rotten Tomatoes, which compared to 98 is not a stumble, it's a collapse. And the criticism wasn't wrong. By season 4, the show had become so preoccupied with its political targets, and by 2024 those targets were so obvious, they practically had names, that the writing stopped surprising anyone. You could see every satirical punch coming from three episodes away.
And then season 5, the final season.
Eight episodes to close a story seven years in the making. And episode 4, King of Hell, is the worst single episode the show has ever produced. Genuinely bad television. An hour that exists to move pieces around the board without any of the craft that made moving pieces around the board interesting in the first place. Kripke's response to the filler complaints was to tell fans that they were watching the wrong show. And I've said this before, that's not a defense, that's a deflection. If your audience is calling episodes filler in the last season, you don't get to say they're wrong. You have to ask whether the pacing is actually earning the story.
So, here's where I land. The Boys will be remembered as a show that had one genuinely great season. And the evidence is right there. Season one is still excellent. I loved it. It did something the genre had never done and it did it with real confidence. But, it made a decision early in season two that quietly set everything in motion. It decided it wanted to be a drama and once you decide that, this is political machinery starts to break down because you can't humanize your monsters and keep laughing at them at the same time.
The finale got 57 million viewers globally, the biggest audience the show has ever had and it is not a good finale. Those two things are both true simultaneously. It found more people than it's ever found right at the moment when they had the least say. And the Kripke-Musk exchange is the perfect ending to all of it. Kripke frames Musk's angst vindication. But, the question Musk was accidentally raising, even if he was raising it all for the wrong reasons, was whether the show was actually good. And Kripke's response doesn't touch that. Because the right people hate it is not the same thing as it's good. The Boys said something genuinely important in 2019 and then it spent five years trying to make sure everyone knew it had said it. That's the difference. The Boys became the very thing it was supposed to be mocking. Not Vought, not Homelander, something more specific than that. It became a show so convinced own importance that it stopped asking whether the episodes were actually working. Let me know in the comments, do you think season one was as good as I'm saying or is this nostalgia talking? And subscribe if you're not already. There's a lot more of this kind of thing coming.
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