The PJs
The PJs is an American adult-oriented stop-motion animated sitcom created by Eddie Murphy, Larry Wilmore, and Steve Tompkins, centering on the daily lives and conflicts among residents of the fictional Hilton Lucille Apartment Complex, a dilapidated public housing project.[1] The series features Murphy voicing Thurgood Stubbs, the lazy and irritable building superintendent, alongside his wife Muriel (voiced by Loretta Devine) and a cast of quirky tenants including elderly Mrs. Avery (Ja'net DuBois) and aspiring rapper Juicy Hudson (Michele Morgan).[1][2] Airing initially on Fox for its first two seasons from January 1999 to 2000 before moving to The WB for a third and final season in 2000–2001, the show produced 43 episodes noted for their satirical take on urban poverty, welfare dependency, and community dysfunction.[2] Production involved labor-intensive stop-motion techniques at Will Vinton Studios, employing one of the largest animation teams for a television series at the time, with each episode requiring over two months to complete due to the meticulous clay and foam puppet manipulation.[3] The series garnered critical acclaim for technical achievements, winning three Primetime Emmy Awards—including two for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance and one for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation—as well as an Annie Award for animation production.[4] However, it faced significant backlash from figures like Spike Lee and the NAACP, who condemned its portrayal of black characters in projects as reinforcing harmful stereotypes of laziness, crime, and family breakdown, though creators defended it as unflinching comedy drawn from real inner-city observations.[5][6] Despite the controversy, the show's unapologetic humor and innovative format marked it as a rare attempt at adult-oriented stop-motion depicting low-income black life without softening its edges.[5]Overview
Synopsis
The PJs is a stop-motion animated sitcom chronicling the daily escapades and interpersonal dynamics among residents of the fictional Hilton Lucille Little public housing projects in an urban setting.[7] The narrative revolves around Thurgood Stubbs, the building's harried superintendent and janitor voiced by series co-creator Eddie Murphy, who manages maintenance issues, tenant complaints, and his own dysfunctional family life alongside a colorful ensemble of neighbors.[7] Episodes typically feature satirical vignettes addressing everyday absurdities, community rivalries, and survival tactics in low-income housing, such as dealing with pests, bureaucratic hurdles, and personal ambitions clashing with limited resources.[8] The series emphasizes the resilience and humor in inner-city project life, portraying characters grappling with poverty, relationships, and minor triumphs without idealized resolutions, often drawing from exaggerated stereotypes for comedic effect.[9] Thurgood's wife Muriel, son Calvin, and recurring figures like the gossipy Mrs. Avery and handyman Jimmy contribute to storylines involving schemes gone awry, neighborhood events, and interactions with authority figures, reflecting a raw, unfiltered view of communal existence in subsidized urban dwellings.[10]Creators and Concept Origins
The PJs was created by Eddie Murphy in collaboration with writers Larry Wilmore and Steve Tompkins, who served as co-creators and executive producers.[9] Murphy, known for live-action films such as Beverly Hills Cop (1984) and The Nutty Professor (1996), conceived the series as his return to television production following the short-lived sitcom The Royal Family in 1991.[11] He also voiced the central character, Thurgood Stubbs, the superintendent of a rundown housing project, infusing the role with his signature irreverent humor.[11] Wilmore and Tompkins, both alumni of the sketch comedy series In Living Color, contributed to scripting and shaping the episodic structure around ensemble interactions.[9] The concept stemmed directly from Murphy's observations of characters in his childhood neighborhood in Roosevelt, New York, translating real-life archetypes from urban low-income communities into animated form.[11] This grounded approach emphasized unfiltered depictions of daily struggles, relationships, and humor in a public housing setting, avoiding didactic messaging in favor of character-driven satire.[9] Production involved partnerships with Imagine Entertainment—led by Ron Howard and Brian Grazer—and Will Vinton Studios, which pioneered "Foamation," a foam-based stop-motion technique to evoke a gritty, tactile aesthetic mimicking real-life project environments.[9] Each episode's budget approximated $1 million, reflecting the labor-intensive animation process.[11] Fox greenlit 13 episodes for the debut season, with the pilot airing as a sneak preview on January 10, 1999, before securing a regular Tuesday slot at 8:30 p.m.[11] Murphy's hands-off promotion—prioritizing film commitments—highlighted his focus on the creative inception over publicity, though the network touted the show as originating "from the mind and mouth of Eddie Murphy."[11]Production
Development and Pre-Production
The PJs was conceived by comedian Eddie Murphy as an animated sitcom drawing from characters and experiences in his childhood neighborhood in Brooklyn's Bushwick Houses public housing project.[11] Murphy collaborated with writers Larry Wilmore and Steve Tompkins, both alumni of the sketch comedy series In Living Color, to develop the series' scripts and character dynamics focused on everyday life in an urban low-income housing complex.[9] Production partnerships formed between The Murphy Company, Imagine Television—led by Ron Howard, Brian Grazer, and Tony Krantz—and Will Vinton Studios, which handled the animation.[11] Touchstone Television co-produced the series under Disney's involvement for its first two seasons.[12] The choice of stop-motion animation, specifically Will Vinton's proprietary "foamation" technique—involving foam bodies, hard plastic faces, and interchangeable mouth inserts for dialogue—was selected to give the characters a tactile, exaggerated dimensionality reminiscent of earlier puppetoon styles while allowing for expressive urban realism in sets featuring details like graffiti and discarded bottles.[9][11] Pre-production advanced in 1998, with Will Vinton Studios initiating work on the labor-intensive stop-motion process, where each episode required meticulous frame-by-frame puppet manipulation.[13] Fox Broadcasting Company greenlit a 13-episode first season, budgeting approximately $1 million per installment due to the animation's complexity, and unveiled the project to television critics that year ahead of its January 1999 premiere.[11] Murphy served as executive producer and provided the voice for lead character Thurgood Stubbs, though he limited his promotional involvement to focus on creative oversight.[11]Animation and Technical Aspects
The PJs utilized stop-motion animation through a proprietary technique termed "foamation," developed by Will Vinton Studios, which involved foam latex-skinned puppets over ball-and-socket armatures to achieve fluid, dimensional movement.[14] [15] Foam latex construction allowed for lightweight characters—approximately 10 inches tall—with hard plastic hollow heads and replacement mouths, enabling detailed facial expressions while minimizing repair time during animation compared to traditional clay materials.[14] Around 135 such armatures were fabricated for the series' characters, facilitating sophisticated posing and durability under repeated handling.[14] Production at Will Vinton Studios employed a crew of nearly 100, including 20 animators divided into teams of five per episode to foster focused execution across four concurrent episodes.[14] Each 22-minute episode required about 28 weeks total, with 12 weeks dedicated to the animation phase, during which roughly two minutes of footage were captured weekly per episode through incremental puppet adjustments captured frame-by-frame.[14] Digital tools supplemented the analog process, handling cityscape backgrounds, special effects, and post-production removal of wires or rigs, while physical challenges like gravity-induced toppling were addressed via metal-footed bases and magnets for stability.[14] The visual style emphasized textured realism, with foam-bodied figures seamlessly integrated into proportionally scaled environments featuring authentic details such as graffiti and broken bottles to evoke the dilapidated housing project setting.[9] [16] Supervised by Mark Gustafson, a veteran of the studio, the technique maintained high craftsmanship despite the rigors of weekly television output, producing a distinctive, three-dimensional aesthetic that distinguished the series from contemporaneous cel or digital cartoons.[9] Technical specifications included a 1.33:1 aspect ratio, color filming, and Dolby sound mix for its 30-minute episodes.[17]Voice Casting and Performances
The principal voice role of Thurgood Stubbs, the superintendent of the Hilton Lucille Little projects, was performed by Eddie Murphy across all episodes, though uncredited in some instances due to production overlaps with his film commitments.[18] Murphy's portrayal emphasized the character's lazy, scheming demeanor through exaggerated inflections and rapid-fire delivery, aligning with his established stand-up style from specials like Delirious (1983).[19] Loretta Devine voiced Muriel Stubbs, Thurgood's sharp-tongued wife, bringing a grounded, no-nonsense tone that contrasted Murphy's antics and drew on her theater background in productions like Dreamgirls.[18] Supporting voices included Ja'Net DuBois as the gossipy Mrs. Avery, leveraging her experience from Good Times (1974–1979), and Michele Morgan as the flirtatious Juicy Hudson, contributing to the ensemble's dynamic interplay.[20] Additional recurring performers such as Jenifer Lewis (as Bebe Ho), Kevin Michael Richardson (various roles), and James Black (as Tarnell Stubbs) enhanced the show's urban authenticity with improvisational flair during recording sessions, as noted by producers emphasizing ad-libbed dialogue for realism.[21] [22] The casting prioritized actors with roots in Black comedy circuits, including alumni from In Living Color and Def Comedy Jam, to capture dialectal nuances of low-income housing communities without caricature, though this approach sparked debate.[9] Critical reception highlighted the voice work's strength in delivering satirical edge, with reviewers commending the ensemble's chemistry for elevating the stop-motion format's limitations through vocal expressiveness and timing.[23] For instance, Murphy and Devine's banter was described as "perfect" in user assessments, providing memorable comic relief amid the series' gritty themes.[23] Despite external criticisms from figures like Spike Lee labeling the depictions "demeaning," several voice actors, including Black performers in lead roles, publicly defended the portrayals as reflective and empowering rather than derogatory.[24] This resilience in performances contributed to Emmy wins for Outstanding Children's Animated Program in 2001 and 2002, underscoring the cast's technical proficiency in syncing with the claymation puppets.[9]Characters and Setting
Main Characters
Thurgood Orenthal Stubbs, voiced by Eddie Murphy, serves as the protagonist and chief superintendent of the Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs housing project. He is depicted as a loud, lazy, and often irritable figure who prioritizes lounging on the couch over maintenance duties, yet remains likeable amid the project's chaos.[10][25][20] Muriel Stubbs, Thurgood's wife voiced by Loretta Devine, acts as the more responsible counterpart in their household, frequently managing family matters and tempering her husband's antics.[10][25] Florence "Mrs." Avery, voiced by Ja'Net DuBois, is a nosy and opinionated elderly tenant who often meddles in neighbors' affairs and complains to Thurgood about project conditions.[18] Elister "Smokey" McDaniel, a recurring resident voiced by Shawn Michael Howard, is portrayed as a homeless recovering addict who surprisingly offers the sharpest insights among the ensemble despite his circumstances.[10] Other key figures include Emilio Sanchez, the handyman voiced by Pepe Serna, and 'Juicy' Hudson, a flirtatious tenant voiced by Michele Morgan, who contribute to the satirical portrayal of project life.[18]Supporting Characters and Ensemble
Mrs. Florence Avery, voiced by Ja'net DuBois across all 43 episodes from 1999 to 2001, portrays the feisty elderly widow and longtime resident who frequently clashes with superintendent Thurgood Stubbs over building issues while offering unsolicited advice to other tenants.[20][26]'Juicy' Hudson, brought to life by Michele Morgan, depicts a young single mother and gossipy neighbor entangled in various romantic pursuits and neighborhood drama, contributing to the ensemble's comedic interpersonal dynamics.[20][27]
The Ho family represents Asian-American tenants in the projects: Bebe Ho, voiced by Jenifer Lewis, is the outspoken and domineering matriarch often involved in community disputes, while her teenage son Jimmy Ho, performed by Michael Paul Chan, is a socially awkward aspiring inventor whose gadgets frequently backfire.[27][22]
Emilio Sanchez, the Cuban handyman voiced by Pepe Serna, assists Thurgood with repairs and maintenance, embodying the underpaid labor force sustaining the dilapidated building.[28][20]
Elister 'Smokey' McDaniel, voiced by Shawn Michael Howard until his death in 2001 after which the role was recast, serves as a homeless squatter and unlikely confidant to Thurgood, characterized by his street wisdom amid struggles with addiction recovery.[18][22]
Additional ensemble figures include Tarnell, Thurgood's laid-back friend voiced by James Black, and Garcelle 'Haiti Lady' DuPris, a superstitious voodoo practitioner, rounding out the diverse, dysfunctional community that drives the series' satirical take on public housing life.[19][26]
The Hilton Lucille Little Projects
The Hilton-Jacobs Projects, a fictional public housing complex, forms the central backdrop for the series, representing a dilapidated high-rise building in an unnamed urban American city populated by low-income residents facing everyday challenges.[10] The setting draws from real-world inner-city housing developments, portraying a community rife with maintenance issues such as leaky pipes, electrical failures, and structural decay, which frequently catalyze plotlines involving superintendent Thurgood Stubbs' reluctant interventions.[16] [10] Named as a homage to actor Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, the projects house an ensemble of eccentric tenants whose interactions underscore themes of urban survival, family dynamics, and bureaucratic inefficiency in public housing management.[29] Episodes often depict the building's communal spaces—like stairwells, laundry rooms, and the superintendent's office—as hubs for conflict and camaraderie, with Stubbs navigating demands from residents amid limited resources from housing authorities.[10] The complex's rundown aesthetic, achieved through stop-motion animation, emphasizes gritty realism over idealization, avoiding sanitized portrayals common in contemporary media treatments of similar environments.[16] Key visual and narrative elements include overflowing trash chutes, graffiti-covered walls, and overcrowded apartments, reflecting the socioeconomic pressures of project life without endorsing external policy narratives.[10] Recurring motifs involve tenant rivalries, such as disputes over shared facilities or petty crimes, which Stubbs attempts to resolve through unorthodox, often self-serving methods, highlighting causal links between poor upkeep and resident behaviors.[16] The projects' isolation from broader city infrastructure underscores a self-contained microcosm, where internal governance by figures like Stubbs mirrors real public housing dynamics observed in 1990s urban studies, though the series prioritizes satire over advocacy.[10]Broadcast and Distribution
Original Airing and Network Shifts
The PJs premiered on the Fox Broadcasting Company on January 10, 1999, airing its first season primarily on Sunday evenings following NFL playoff coverage before shifting to a regular Tuesday night slot.[30][27] The series continued on Fox for its second season, concluding its run on the network on September 5, 2000, after producing 24 episodes across the initial two seasons.[31][27] Fox canceled the show after two seasons, citing the high production costs associated with its stop-motion animation technique, which required extensive manual labor per frame compared to traditional 2D or CGI methods.[32] The Warner Bros. Television Network (The WB) subsequently acquired the series in October 2000, airing the third and final season from October 14, 2000, to May 20, 2001, for a total of 19 additional episodes.[27][31] This move allowed the program to complete its run, though viewership remained modest, with the WB slot failing to significantly boost its audience amid competition from established animated comedies.[10] The network shift preserved the show's continuity but highlighted the challenges of sustaining niche adult-oriented animation on broadcast television during the late 1990s and early 2000s.[33]Syndication, Streaming, and Availability
Following its original broadcast run concluding on May 20, 2001, The PJs saw limited traditional syndication. The series briefly aired on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim block in the early 2000s before being removed from the lineup.[34] As of October 2025, official streaming availability includes Hulu, where all three seasons are accessible via subscription.[2] The show is also available ad-supported on Tubi, offering free access to select episodes from seasons 1 through 3.[35] Additional platforms carrying the series include fuboTV for live and on-demand viewing.[36] No broad over-the-air syndication persists in major U.S. markets, reflecting the show's niche adult animation status and production costs that deterred widespread reruns post-WB.[34] Physical media releases, such as DVD sets from Shout! Factory in 2007–2008 covering partial seasons, provide an alternative for ownership, though completeness varies.[10]Home Media and Merchandise
The first home media releases for The PJs occurred in 2011 with DVD editions of individual seasons distributed by Shout! Factory. Season 1, comprising 14 episodes, was issued on May 3, 2011, as a two-disc set in full frame format, featuring audio commentary tracks and the series' three Primetime Emmy wins for Outstanding Animated Program.[37] [38] Season 2 followed later that year on a two-disc DVD set, highlighting Eddie Murphy's voice performance as Thurgood Stubbs.[39] Season 3, the final season with 13 episodes, was also released on DVD in 2011 as a two-disc collection.[40] Complete series compilations have since appeared in six-disc DVD box sets sold through specialty retailers, aggregating all 52 episodes from the show's 1999–2001 run, though these are often out-of-print or secondary market offerings rather than official full-series editions from the original distributor.[41] No official Blu-ray Disc versions have been produced, despite occasional unverified listings on resale sites.[42] VHS tapes were likely available during the initial Fox broadcast era, but no comprehensive catalog or confirmed releases beyond promotional or limited editions have been documented in retail records. Merchandise tied to The PJs remained sparse throughout its production and post-run history, reflecting the show's niche adult animation status and brief network tenure. Official items, such as apparel or toys, were not widely produced or marketed by Fox or Eddie Murphy Productions, with no evidence of licensed product lines like action figures or clothing collections during the 1999–2001 airing.[43] Post-cancellation, fan-driven items including t-shirts, posters, and stickers have emerged on platforms like Redbubble and Etsy, but these lack affiliation with the creators or network and primarily cater to nostalgia-driven collectors. The absence of robust merchandising aligns with the series' focus on stop-motion animation for a mature audience, limiting crossover appeal for mass-market consumer goods.Episodes
Season Breakdowns and Key Arcs
Season 1 (1999)The first season of The PJs aired 14 episodes on Fox from January 10, 1999, to December 17, 1999.[31] It introduced the central premise of Thurgood Stubbs' dysfunctional tenure as superintendent of the Hilton Lucille Little housing projects, emphasizing his preference for idleness, television viewing, and hot sauce over maintenance duties. Episodes typically revolved around self-contained conflicts, such as tenant disputes, family tensions, and Thurgood's half-hearted schemes to shirk responsibility, often exacerbated by interactions with wife Muriel or neighbors like the elderly Mrs. Avery.[44] The premiere, "Hangin' with Mr. Super," depicted Thurgood enlisting truant youth Calvin for unpaid labor while idolizing a new tenant, setting the tone for satirical portrayals of urban project life.[31] Subsequent installments included "Bones, Bugs, and Harmony," focusing on pest infestations and forced family bonding, aired January 12, 1999,[44] and "Rich Man, Porn Man," involving a dubious inheritance windfall, aired October 5, 1999.[31] Recurring elements featured Thurgood's laziness clashing with Muriel's practicality and community absurdities, but no serialized plotlines spanned multiple episodes.[9] Season 2 (2000)
Season 2 comprised 13 episodes, initially developed under Fox before shifting to The WB amid network changes, airing from May 30, 2000, onward.[31] The format remained episodic, with Thurgood's antics driving narratives around education, crime, and interpersonal rivalries, such as in "Home School Daze," where he unsuccessfully tries homeschooling the children to avoid school complaints, aired May 30, 2000.[45] Other key stories included "The Postman's Always Shot Twice," involving a mail carrier's mishaps and Thurgood's opportunism, also aired May 30, 2000,[45] and "Smokey the Bear," parodying fire safety amid building hazards.[31] Themes expanded on welfare bureaucracy and tenant welfare, with one episode addressing threats to demolish the projects, highlighting resistance to relocation.[45] Character dynamics persisted, including Thurgood's ongoing friction with Smokey over petty crimes and Muriel's supervisory attempts in select plots, though resolutions stayed confined to single episodes without broader continuity.[9] Season 3 (2000–2001)
The third and final season aired 13 episodes exclusively on The WB from October 8, 2000, to May 13, 2001.[31] It sustained the anthology structure, centering Thurgood's misadventures in scenarios like automotive mishaps in the opener "Boyz Under the Hood," aired October 8, 2000,[46] and health scares in "Miracle Cleaner on 134th Street," where a spilled hot sauce concoction yields unintended cleaning prowess.[46] Episodes such as "Smoke Gets in Your High-Rise," aired February 4, 2001, satirized smoking regulations and fire risks in the projects.[46] Production delays from stop-motion animation contributed to irregular spacing, but content focused on escalating absurdities, including travel parodies and dance contests involving supporting characters like Bebe and Jimmy.[31] Absent major arcs across the series, the season reinforced consistent motifs of personal vice, community resilience, and institutional neglect, culminating without unresolved threads.[9]
Music
Theme and Incidental Scoring
The theme music for The PJs was composed by George Clinton and Quincy Jones III, with Clinton's funk influences evident in the upbeat, rhythmic track that accompanied the opening credits from the series premiere on January 10, 1999.[18] Clinton, founder of Parliament-Funkadelic, and Jones III, son of producer Quincy Jones, collaborated to create a sound evoking urban energy, aligning with the show's depiction of life in the Hilton Lucille Little housing projects.[18] Their contributions are credited across multiple episodes, including Clinton for two in 2000 and Jones III for one.[47] Incidental scoring for the series was handled by composer Marc Bonilla, who provided the background music underscoring dialogue, action, and transitions in episodes.[18] Bonilla's work incorporated elements of funk, soul, and jazz, reflecting the cultural milieu of the characters and setting without overpowering the voice performances.[18] Additional music credits, such as those by LaRita Norman for select episodes, supplemented the core score to enhance comedic timing and emotional beats.[47] This approach maintained a cohesive auditory style across the 43-episode run from 1999 to 2001, distinct from the separate hip-hop-inspired soundtrack album released by Hollywood Records in March 1999.[48]Soundtrack Album
The PJs: Music from & Inspired by the Hit Television Series is a compilation soundtrack album tied to the animated series, featuring original hip-hop and R&B tracks performed by various artists. Released on March 30, 1999, by Hollywood Records, the album draws thematic inspiration from the show's depiction of life in the Hilton Lucille Little Projects, emphasizing urban experiences through rap verses and beats.[49][50] The 16-track collection includes contributions from established acts such as Snoop Dogg, Timbaland, Jermaine Dupri, and Goodie Mob, alongside emerging talents like Destiny's Child on the track "Get on the Best."[51] Production credits highlight late-1990s hip-hop production styles, with Timbaland handling beats for "Talkin' Trash" and Raphael Saadiq collaborating on "Get Involved" with Q-Tip.[48] The album's content focuses on street-level narratives, aligning with the series' setting without directly sampling show audio or themes.[52]| No. | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | It's Nothing | Jermaine Dupri feat. Da Brat & R.O.C. | 3:39 |
| 2 | Talkin' Trash | Timbaland | 4:35 |
| 3 | Life in the Projects | Snoop Dogg | 4:15 |
| 4 | Hat Low | Goodie Mob | 4:45 |
| 5 | Way 2 Strong | Bizzy Bone feat. Bone Thugs-n-Harmony | 4:40 |
| 6 | Get on the Best | Destiny's Child | 3:32 |
| 7 | Get Involved | Raphael Saadiq feat. Q-Tip | 4:20 |
| 8 | Thug Love | Ol' Dirty Bastard | 3:10 |
| 9 | Pipe Dreams | Marc Dorsey | 4:05 |
| 10 | Right Thang | Tevin Campbell | 4:15 |
| 11 | Smokefest | Smoked Out Productions | 3:50 |
| 12 | Ghetto Lullaby | Jaheim | 4:00 |
| 13 | Ready for War | Skillz | 3:55 |
| 14 | Creator | PJ's All Stars | 4:10 |
| 15 | Special Delivery | G. Dep | 4:25 |
| 16 | Movin' On | Mya | 3:50 |
Reception
Critical Reviews
Critics offered mixed assessments of The PJs, praising its pioneering stop-motion animation while frequently critiquing the humor as crude and reliant on stereotypes. On Rotten Tomatoes, the first season holds a 50% approval rating based on eight reviews, with an average score of 6.5/10.[8] The series' visual style, employing foamation—a clay-like stop-motion technique developed by Will Vinton Studios—drew consistent acclaim for its textured, fluid environments and character designs that effectively scaled human proportions to project settings.[16] A Variety review highlighted the animation's innovation, noting that the characters "blend flawlessly with a proportionately scaled environment, creating a bracingly textured, fluid look that legitimately ups the stop-motion ante," but faulted the pilot script by Don Beck for "punchless" writing marred by "doltish black stereotypes," unmemorable voices, and hyperactive pacing that failed to justify the animated format over live-action.[16] Entertainment Weekly's Ken Tucker assigned a B grade, describing the show as featuring "distinctive animation" distinct from smoother styles like Batman Beyond, and observed that it "can be plenty funny when it isn't crude and offensive—and even when it is."[55] People magazine concurred on the humor's edge, stating the series proved "funny, even when crude and offensive."[56] Other outlets echoed the divide: a Deseret News critique lauded the "foamation" technique's uniqueness but concluded the show "just isn't funny," while a Hartford Courant review appreciated the "earthy humor" as a means for characters to navigate hardship.[57] Animation World Network's Amid Amidi provided a positive outlier, offering a "rave review" that defended the show's bold satire amid controversy, emphasizing its appeal in depicting "black and beautiful" life in housing projects.[58] Later retrospective coverage, such as in a 2020 New York Times article on black animated series, noted the initial criticism The PJs faced for its portrayals, though without endorsing those views.[1] Overall, reviewers valued the technical achievement but often found the comedic execution uneven, with stereotypes and toilet humor alienating some despite Eddie Murphy's vocal contributions.[59]Viewership Metrics
The pilot episode of The PJs, which aired on Fox on January 10, 1999, drew nearly 22 million viewers, marking the second-highest premiere audience for a Fox animated series after The Simpsons.[3] This strong debut placed it at No. 6 in the weekly Nielsen rankings and represented a significant boost for Fox's Sunday animation block. Subsequent episodes maintained solid but declining viewership through the first season. By early 1999, select airings achieved household Nielsen ratings of 6.9 with an 11 share.[60] As of May 1999, the series averaged 9.1 million viewers per episode, outperforming its lead-in King of the Hill by 12% in ratings and exceeding the prior time-slot average by 45%.[61][62] For the 1999–2000 season overall, however, the show's household rating averaged approximately 3.2, reflecting a drop-off that contributed to Fox's decision not to renew it for a full third season on the network.[63] After moving to The WB for its third season starting in September 2000, viewership continued to soften amid the network's smaller audience base and the series' high production costs. Summer 2000 first-run episodes on Fox had already averaged 5.34 million viewers, with 29% of the audience identifying as Black.[3] On The WB, episodes registered household ratings around 3.8, insufficient to offset expenses and leading to cancellation after 13 additional episodes, with two unaired until later syndication.[64] The decline was attributed to factors including scheduling shifts, competition in the animation landscape, and the foamation format's niche appeal despite Eddie Murphy's voice work.[65]Awards and Nominations
The PJs earned recognition for its animation and voice performances, securing three Primetime Emmy Awards out of five nominations between 1999 and 2001.[4] In 1999, Ja'Net DuBois won the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance for her role as Mrs. Avery in the episode "A Kiss De-Mouse Marriage."[66] The series was nominated that year for Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming One Hour or Less) for the episode "He's Gotta Have It."[67] In 2000, it received the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation.[4] The following year, 2001, brought another win for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance.[4] The show also garnered one Annie Award during its run, though specific category details are not widely documented in primary sources.[68] It received additional nominations at the 28th Annie Awards, including for Best Animated Television Production and Production Design in a Television Production.[69]| Year | Award | Category | Result | Recipient/Episode |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Voice-Over Performance | Won | Ja'Net DuBois as Mrs. Avery ("A Kiss De-Mouse Marriage")[66] |
| 1999 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Animated Program (One Hour or Less) | Nominated | "He's Gotta Have It"[67] |
| 2000 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation | Won | The PJs[4] |
| 2001 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Voice-Over Performance | Won | The PJs[4] |