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Uncle Ruckus's name is an amalgam of [[Uncle Tom]] and [[Amos Rucker]], the latter being an African-American [[United Confederate Veterans]] member, who allegedly wanted to stay a [[slavery|slave]] after the [[United States Civil War|Civil War]].
Uncle Ruckus's name is an amalgam of [[Uncle Tom]] and [[Amos Rucker]], the latter being an African-American [[United Confederate Veterans]] member, who allegedly wanted to stay a [[slavery|slave]] after the [[United States Civil War|Civil War]].


With the success of the show and popularity of the character, "Uncle Ruckus" became a term to refer to anyone who suffers [[self-hate]].
With the success of the show and popularity of the character, "Uncle Ruckus" became a term to refer to anyone who suffers [[self-hate]].<ref>http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Uncle%20Ruckus</ref>


== Personality ==
== Personality ==

Revision as of 22:54, 21 January 2011

Uncle Ruckus
The Boondocks character
File:Uncle Ruckus.jpg
First appearance"The Garden Party"
Portrayed byGary Anthony Williams

Uncle Ruckus, also known as Rev. Uncle Ruckus and Rev. Fr. Uncle Ruckus, as well as Uncle Ruku while serving at Robert Freeman's Soul Food restaurant "The Itis" , is a fictional character from the Boondocks comic strip and animated television series The Boondocks. A self-hating black man, he disassociates himself from other African Americans as much as possible, and is outspoken in his support of what Huey calls the "white supremacist power structure." He is voiced by Gary Anthony Williams. [1]

Uncle Ruckus's name is an amalgam of Uncle Tom and Amos Rucker, the latter being an African-American United Confederate Veterans member, who allegedly wanted to stay a slave after the Civil War.

With the success of the show and popularity of the character, "Uncle Ruckus" became a term to refer to anyone who suffers self-hate.[2]

Personality

Uncle Ruckus (no relation to any other character on the show or in the comic strip) is repellent in appearance, behavior, and attitude. He has an intense hatred of anything pertaining to black people, and goes out of his way to free himself from this identity; Ruckus claims God says the path to forgiveness for being black is to rebuke your own race. He has a glass eye from the beatings he received by his father. Ruckus champions the small traces of French, Native American (although it would seem that Ruckus holds hatred toward anybody who isn't white) or Irish ancestry he claims to have (though a DNA test showed he was "102%" African descent "with a counter 2% margin of error"), and wishes that all black people were still enslaved. He prattles white supremacist rhetoric and calls Michael Jackson (who suffered from the pigmentational skin changing disorder vitiligo) a "lucky bastard", as he no longer looked black. Ruckus claims that he himself has "re"-vitiligo, to explain his own skin tone. During the Civil Rights Movement, he protested against Martin Luther King's marches, and would occasionally throw bricks at him, but usually missed. Ruckus served on a jury in 1957 (making him a minimum of 70 circa 2009) in Tennessee that helped convict a blind black man of killing three white girls. In spite of being blind, the African American man supposedly shot the three with a Winchester rifle from about 50 yards away. (Ruckus is the only black person on the otherwise all white jury, in what is a Jim Crow courtroom.) During his first encounter with the Freeman family, Ruckus sings "Don't Trust Them New Niggas Over There," in the pilot episode, though he socializes freely with the Freeman's thereafter.

Ruckus believes firmly in racist assaults, hurling invectives of prejudice and hatred to all things black. On being asked if he supported the use of the word "nigga," Ruckus says: "No I don't think we should use the word, and I'll tell ya why. Because nigga's have gotten used to it. That's why. Hell, they like it now. It's like when you growin' crops and you strip the soil of its nutrients and goodness and then you can't grow nothin'. You gotta rotate your racist slurs. Now I know it's hard 'cause 'nigga' just rolls off the tongue the way sweat rolls off a nigga's forehead. But we can not let that be a crutch. Especially when there are so many fine substitutes: spade, porch monkey, jiggaboo. I say the next time you gonna call a darkie a nigga you call that coon a jungle bunny instead."

Ruckus worships white society and culture, the reason why he lives in Woodcrest. Ruckus claims to like the smell of white people, saying they smell like "lemon juice and Pledge furniture cleaner." Despite Woodcrest's newfound acceptance of different ethnicities, the neighborhood apparently has no quarrel with Uncle Ruckus' racist beliefs. Ruckus can be seen employed in a variety of places performing a number of blue-collar jobs. He at one point joined the police force after turning down a 7-figure settlement after wrongfully being shot at 118 times, claiming that the officers "were simply doing their job." (Even after he becomes an officer they still beat him on the pretext that "He has a gun.") As an officer, he promised to make every black man's life as miserable as he possibly could ("The Block is Hot"). Ruckus became an evangelist after dreaming of going to "White Heaven," preaching that black people must hate their blackness and love the white man to receive entrance into heaven ("The Passion of the Ruckus").

The beginning of this episode is also one of the few moments throughout the series that Uncle Ruckus admits, or even suggests, that he is or might be black. The episodes starts with Ruckus knocking on Robert's front door with the news that he's been diagnosed with cancer. He proceeds to attempt to describe the specific type of cancer he's been diagnosed with (in Latin, which is one made up for the show) but fails to do so stating " ... or some other big word my small negro brain and big lips can't pronounce."

The closest guess one might make to this cancer might be a cavernous angioma, though this is, of course, unconfirmed.

Uncle Ruckus has held a vast variety of jobs over the course of the series (car parking valet, police officer, maitre d', movie theater usher, exorcist, etc.) and has appeared in many of its working establishments. In the banned episode "Uncle Ruckus' Reality Show", he claimed to work 32 jobs over the course of the week and wakes at 4:45 a.m every morning for work. It's also shortly after this hour that Ruckus applies a homemade topical ointment of "bleach and sulfur" in order to treat his self-diagnosed re-vitiligo as he "likes to think it works." He attributes this homemade ointment as preventing him from "getting any darker these past few years." Despite holding a self-proclaimed 32 jobs, Ruckus continues to live a less than modest life, as shown by the dilapidated appearance of his home and truck.

Although nearly 70 years old and obese, Ruckus is an advanced practitioner of martial arts and has shown himself to be Huey's equal on multiple occasions. He has mastery with the nunchakus and is capable of incredible acrobatics along with his martial skills. In the series' second season (first heard in "...Or Die Trying"), a sound-alike variation on the tuba piece "Jabba's Theme" (from Return of the Jedi) is used as a musical theme for Uncle Ruckus, drawing a parallel between the Star Wars character and the similarly repellent Ruckus.

In the episode "The Story of Jimmy Rebel" Uncle Ruckus records racist songs and sends them into his idol, Jimmy Rebel, A racist song writer who lives in Spoke-n-Hope(A racist town). Jimmy Rebel and R.R (Racist Records) loved the songs so much, Jimmy Rebel headed on down to meet Uncle Ruckus. Discovering he is a black man, he puts that a side because spending the last two days with "Toby" (Uncle Ruckus's false identity he made up to talk with Jimmy Rebel) and brings him to Spoke-n-Hope to record songs with him.

So far the only episode where Ruckus does not display any animosity toward blacks is in the episode "The Story of Gangstalicious Part 2". Despite his intense hatred of black people, the episode "Lovely Ebony Brown", shows Ruckus falling in love with the titular character after getting to know her, even going so far as attempting to propose to her in the episode's final minutes.

In the episode "The Color Ruckus" it was revealed that Ruckus's mother told him he was adopted, and had a white heritage. She explains to Ruckus this by inventing the disease re-vitiligo, and telling him that it alone is the reason he is physically indistinguishable from a normal black person. In spite of this, his father harshly claims these explanations were lies meant to protect Ruckus' self-esteem, telling his son that he is "just a black nigga like the rest of us." Ruckus refuses to believe his father's words and his mother continues to lie about his heritage.

In "The Color Ruckus" Ruckus reveals that he has 47 jobs.

Relationships

Robert Freeman

Robert Freeman is the closest thing to a friend that Uncle Ruckus has, though Robert rebukes Ruckus' racist notions. For example, a friendly match of checkers between them ended bitterly after Ruckus made supremacist remarks. Ruckus was supportive of Robert during his training for a rematch with Col. Stinkmeaner and was the only one besides Riley who praised him when he won the fight (killing Stinkmeaner) in "Granddad's Fight". Despite all this, Uncle Ruckus claims their friendship is a pretense ("The Trial of R. Kelly") and that he still sees him as a "nigga." Also, in "The Real", Uncle Ruckus was one of the "homeless people" that Robert was "housing", the other being Jazmine Dubois.

Huey and Riley Freeman

Uncle Ruckus said that he despised Huey ever since he came into the Woodcrest community during the episode "...Or Die Trying." For Huey's part, he seems to ignore Uncle Ruckus' racist rantings, knowing that debating with the man will do little good. However, when Ruckus challenged him to a martial arts showdown (with the nunchaku he forgot in the theater bathroom), Huey faced him in hand-to-hand combat. The victor of these fights is unknown. Both fights appear to be references to Fist of the North Star. He often gets angry at Riley for being a hoodlum, which angers him and usually leads to a fight.

Dubois Family

Ruckus tolerates the Dubois, largely due to Sarah's presence (Sarah is white.) He believes that Tom is lucky to have Sarah, and that she is with him out of pity rather than love. (Even posulating at one point that she taught him how to read) He doesn't think much of Jazmine due to her half-black status, calling her a "mulatto" in a pejorative manner and a "little half and half." In a moment of relative kindness, he refers to her as a "nice little mixed-breed girl." (He does however seem to hold her superior to a black child, stating once that she was supposed to be smarter (specifically he was referring to Riley.) In a rare moment he managed to single-handedly restore her faith in Christmas and in Santa Claus, effectively ending her crying and cheering her up ("A Huey Freeman Christmas").

Footnotes

  1. ^ "The Boondocks: Exclusive Character Profile - Uncle Ruckus". IGN. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
  2. ^ http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Uncle%20Ruckus