Aaron McGruder net worth is $10 Million. Also know about Aaron McGruder bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …
Aaron McGruder Wiki Biography
Aaron McGruder is an American writer and cartoonist best known for writing and drawing The Boondocks, a Universal Press Syndicate comic strip about two young African-American brothers, Huey and his younger brother and wannabe gangsta Riley, from inner-city Chicago now living… IMDB Wikipedia $10 million 1974 A right to be hostile Aaron McGruder Aaron Mcgruder Net Worth African American Authors Birth of a nation Brotha A-dub Cartoonist Chicago College Park Film Score Composer Illinois May 29 NAACP Image Award – Chairman’s Award NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Public speaker Screenwriter Television Producer Tha A-double United States United States of America University of Maryland Voice Actor Writer
Aaron McGruder Quick Info
Full Name
Aaron McGruder
Net Worth
$10 Million
Date Of Birth
May 29, 1974
Place Of Birth
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Profession
Writer, Cartoonist, Television producer, Screenwriter, Voice Actor, Public speaker, Film Score Composer
NAACP Image Award – Chairman’s Award, NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series
Nominations
NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work, Nonfiction, NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Writing in a Motion Picture
Movies
Red Tails
TV Shows
The Boondocks, Black Jesus
Aaron McGruder Quotes
BET may be the worst thing to happen to black people since Jimmie Walker. I’m a big fan of hip-hop culture, but BET is only exploiting the culture and making the race look idiotic. It’s all bitches and hoes and grandiose jewelry and fancy cars.
I use it. A lot of young black people use it, and a lot of old black people use it. At a certain point it starts to feel fake if you’re not using it. The question is when are we going to stop talking about people using the N-word?
I went to Havana, and I was like ‘Wow! There’s culture everywhere! I don’t think the American government has a lot of respect for culture. That was the one thing did notice when I went to Cuba was that artists are paid to be artists, poets are paid to be poets, and musicians are paid to be musicians by The government. The government – and I’m not saying the Cuban government’s perfect – but the government does place a value on culture. Much more so than here, where culture is just a matter of commerce. — Describing his 2002 trip to Cuba with Congresswoman Barbara Lee
“We did our best to do a Fox show, but frankly, I don’t think the difficulties we had at Fox would be exclusive to Fox. I just think that broadcast television in general is a very restrictive place. It’s tough to be funny because there’s so many eyeballs and there’s so much money at stake that I think everything is just kind of over-thought. And it’s tough to be daring and do something different, either with regards to content or structure.” – Describing the failed attempt of making his series The Boondocks (2005) for the FOX network in 2003. The series was later picked up by, and premiered on, the Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim” programming block.
“I’m ready to fight outside work. If someone wants to come up and start a political conversation with me, it can quickly turn into an argument. People don’t understand; a lotta this shit is not funny to me.” –On his reputation for making out-spoken comments at public appearances.
“It would be innacurate to say that Huey’s opinions are my own. I think there’s a broad opinion being put through the strip with a combination of all the characters’ voices.” – on whether or not Huey Freeman, the strip’s main character, is a mouthpiece for McGruder himself.
“No one feuds with me. I’m nobody. Nobody cares about what I say. People don’t even read the strip.” – response to word that he’s making enemies.
Aaron McGruder Important Facts
Resides in Los Angeles where he still serves as writer and artist on “The Boondocks.” Executive-producing and writing the animated version of the strip. The programme debuted on the Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim” line-up in Autumn 2005 to rave reviews. [December 2005]
Resides in Los Angeles where he still serves as writer and artist on “The Boondocks.” Executive-producing the animated version of the strip with Reginald Hudlin. The programme is set to debut on the Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim” line-up Autumn 2005. [January 2005]
Resides in Los Angeles where he still serves as writer and artist on “The Boondocks.” Currently planning the strips animated debut with producer Reginald Hudlin. [August 2003]
Announced on 28 Feb. 2006 that he would be taking a six-month sabbatical from the strip starting on 20 March, just as the animated series had been renewed for a second season. He released a statement to newspapers saying “Every well needs occasional refreshing and I hope that this fall you will agree that time away from the demands of the deadlines has served the strip, your readers, and me.”
Met film-maker Reginald Hudlin in 1998 when McGruder signed his cartooning contract with Universal Press Syndicate–McGruder and Hudlin were represented by the same legal firm. Hudlin was instrumental in getting the show The Boondocks (2005) made without creative compromise and was an executive producer on the series. Their professional partnership ended in July of 2005 when Hudlin was named President of Entertainment for the Black Entertainment Television (BET) cable network, the channel which is often lampooned in the “Boondocks” comic strip and t.v. series.
McGruder created “The Boondocks” comic strip job in college at the University of Maryland. The school’s paper, The DiamondBack, needed a new lead comic strip, after it’s previous occupant, a strip by Frank Cho, ended when Cho graduated. McGruder got the job from the paper’s lead editor, Jayson Blair. Cho would later go on to fame as the creator of his own comic strip and book series, “Liberty Meadows” (he has been publicly critical of McGruder and “The Boondocks”). Jayson Blair later rose to infamy when he became a reporter for The New York Times and was caught plagiarizing stories.
Has a long rivalry with fellow comic-strip artist Bil Keane, creator of “Family Circus”. When McGruder attended the Reuben Awards (the cartoonist industry’s highest honour) in 2000, “The Boondocks” (which remains only one of a handful of strips featuring minority characters) was nominated for “Best New Strip”, which it did not win. At one point Keane took to the stage to introduce an award and joked “There’s a lot of diversity in comics these days. They don’t have to be funny, they just have to be diverse.”
A lifelong fan of the Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope (1977) films, his favourite character is Yoda whose quotes often find their ways into his works. Whats more, he named his production company “Rebel Base”.
Is a friend of US Congresswoman Barbara Lee, one of the few politicians to be openly critical and objectionable of the Bush administration. In 2002, Lee invited McGruder with her on a trip to Havana, Cuba, where the two met with President Fidel Castro.
His art is anime-inspired, and he’s occasionally cited the genre in his strip.
Known for being as outspoken in public as his characters. Appeared at the 138th anniversary for renowned left-wing magazine “The Nation” in December 2003. A year earlier, the magazine honoured the strip and its creator with a cover article, “Huey Freeman: American Hero” featuring the young character on the cover. At the 2003 gala, McGruder got into several shouting matches with guests, criticizing the mostly-Democrat crowd for their less-than-aggressive reactions to George W. Bush’s policies.
Won the “Chairman’s Award” at the 2002 NAACP Image Awards. Backstage he conversed with National Security Advisor, Condoleezza Rice, just as the George W. Bush administration had invaded Afghanistan. Although the exact nature of their conversation is unknown, McGruder (who is often critical of the Bush and his cabinet) reportedly referred to Rice as a “murderer” for taking part in the administration’s “war on terrorism”. McGruder himself says that Rice jokingly requested to be drawn into the strip. She was: in October 2003 the characters of the strip humourously attempted find Rice a boyfriend because “if she had someone she loved, she wouldn’t be so hell-bent on destroying the world”.
Usually a newspaper comic strip is completed and sent to papers roughly a month before its intended run-date. However, to keep the topics of his strip current, he uses a lead time of no more than only two weeks. In 2000, under pressure to meet in looming deadlines, he was hospitalized for exhaustion. He still holds the two-week deadline, but has hired artists Jennifer Seng and Carl Jones to assist with the artwork (not unlike the artistic staff of “For Better of For Worse” artist Lynn Johnston and “Garfield” creator Jim Davis).
Among his most out-spoken critics are: Black conservative radio talk-host Larry Elder, who said that a cry-baby award should be created for Black celebs called “The McGruder” (“The Boondocks” responded with its characters holding “The Most-Embarrassing Black People” Awards a.k.a “The Larry Elder”); Robert L. Johnson, founder of the B.E.T-Black Entertainment Television network (known for its racy music videos, the characters of the strip refer to the network as “Black Exploitation Television” or “Butts Every Time”); and conservative Black columnist Ward Connerly (who the character Huey once said should be beaten with a spiked bat).
When his comic strip, “The Boondocks”, debuted in newspapers 19 April 1999, it had the single largest debut for a new strip with a record 160 papers printing it, with a count of 200 by year’s end. To date (2004), the strip is carried in 300+ papers in the United States alone.
The strip is so often pulled for controversial material that he sometimes puts in fake “substitute” comics in order to satirise the controversy itself. After ‘Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace’ (1999) premiered, he ran a strip called “Wacky Fun with Jar-Jar Binks”. After having his strip pulled from several papers due to opinions post-9/11 he ran a strip called “The Adventures of Flagee and Ribbon.”
Notable fans of the strip include Spike Lee, ‘Julian Bond’ (II), ‘Chris Rock’, Samuel L. Jackson and Michael Moore. Moore wrote the introduction to the “Boondocks” collection “A Right to be Hostile”.
Aaron McGruder Filmography
Title
Year
Status
Character
Role
The Adventures of Hooligan Squad in World War III
2016
TV Movie post-production
Writer
Black Jesus
TV Series created by – 21 episodes, 2014 – 2015 written by – 20 episodes, 2014 – 2015 teleplay by – 1 episode, 2015
Writer
Red Tails
2012
screenplay
Writer
The Boondocks
TV Series creator – 45 episodes, 2005 – 2010 written by – 27 episodes, 2006 – 2010 writer – 19 episodes, 2005 – 2010
Writer
The Super Rumble Mixshow
2008
TV Series writer
Writer
The Adventures of Hooligan Squad in World War III
2016
TV Movie executive producer post-production
Producer
Black Jesus
2014
TV Series executive producer – 10 episodes
Producer
The Boondocks
2005-2010
TV Series executive producer – 46 episodes
Producer
The Super Rumble Mixshow
2008
TV Series executive producer – 2008
Producer
The Boondocks
2005-2008
TV Series composer – 18 episodes
Music Department
The Boondocks
2005-2007
TV Series
Young Granddad
Actor
The Boondocks
2008
TV Series writer – 1 episode
Soundtrack
The Adventures of Hooligan Squad in World War III
2016
TV Movie post-production
Director
GGN: Snoop Dogg’s Double G News Network
2013
TV Series
Himself
Self
Behind the Boondocks: The Making of an American Classic
2008
Video documentary short
Himself
Self
Trouble in Woodcrest?
2008
Video documentary short
Himself
Self
Ego Trip’s Race-O-Rama
2005
TV Series documentary
Himself
Self
Real Time with Bill Maher
2003-2004
TV Series
Himself
Self
TV’s Illest Minority Moments Presented by Ego Trip