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The New Norm

American adult animated sitcom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The New Norm is an American adult animated sitcom created by Akiva and Sophia Prell, and developed by José Behar. Developed and marketed as "The First Animated Sit-Com [sic] on X", the series premiered with a three-minute pilot on June 25, 2024. JP Sears stars as the titular Norm, alongside a voice cast also including Dave Rubin and Larry Elder.[1][2][3]

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This show is described as All in the Family meets South Park.[citation needed]

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Synopsis

The series chronicles the life of Norm (JP Sears), a conservative man whose life is turned upside down when Chaz (Dave Rubin), a non-binary influencer, is sent to live with his family in an attempt to "re-educate" Norm.

Cast and characters

Much of the series' voice cast is uncredited.

Main

  • JP Sears as Norm, a right-wing trophy shop worker who is opposed to the increasingly "woke" nature of America
  • Dave Rubin as Chaz, a non-binary influencer who moves in with Norm and his family as a form of parole to re-educate him
  • Larry Elder as Charlie, Norm's like-minded best friend and boss
  • Chloe, Norm's left-wing daughter who immediately develops an infatuation for Chaz, uncredited
  • Janice, Norm's pacifistic wife who attempts to keep peace during family arguments, uncredited
  • OMNI, an AI robot in Norm's tracking anklet programmed to call out any of Norm's statements it judges to be offensive, uncredited

Guests

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Episodes

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Reception

Writing for UnHerd, Gareth Roberts praised the "well designed" characters and "decent voice performances", but otherwise criticised the show, saying "it is not just terrible but flesh-creepingly awful. The jokes, such as they are, all crash like bags of tools being dropped down a lift shaft". He would also go on to criticize the "cringe-inducing" homage to X (Twitter) owner Elon Musk, and described the show as "like a progressive's idea of what conservative humour might be".[4]

Jacob Weindling of Splinter called it "bigoted babybrained bullshit" and "a perfect window into the low-grade conservative comedian mind".[5]

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References

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