The plots and humor of
Drawn Together are adult-oriented and heavily loaded with
shock comedy. The humor is largely raunchy, morbid and satirical in nature, its primary focus being the mockery of stereotypes and the casual exploration of taboo subject matter, such as
profanity,
masturbation,
paraphilia,
kink,
homosexuality or
gay marriage,
abortion,
rape,
incest,
pedophilia,
bestiality,
menstruation,
spousal abuse,
racism,
homophobia,
xenophobia,
antisemitism,
necrophilia,
terrorism,
graphic violence and death. Episodes such as "
Gay Bash" or "
A Very Special Drawn Together Afterschool Special", for example, feature the exploration of homosexuality as a central theme. Nearly all episodes feature at least one death, and several episodes feature characters going on
killing sprees or perpetrating or becoming victims of mass murder, though the main characters subsequently returned alive and uninjured. The series breaks the
fourth wall regularly; on one occasion, it mocks
Adam Carolla, the voice of Spanky Ham. Despite the series' overt and underlined sexuality, the characters' innocent and sensual sides are often the main driving force of the plot (alongside comedic
non-sequitur moments intended to parody standard plot lines). This adds
romantic comedy,
melodrama,
action film,
war film,
court drama and other genres to the pool of spoofing material. Sincere feelings the characters are forced to experience (and comic disregard thereof) seem to add integrity to the plot and imbue every episode with a genuine moral message, made more efficient by constant spoofing of moral message clichés like "character X has learned a valuable lesson". Comedy Central's original
tagline for the series was "Find out what happens when cartoon characters stop being polite... and start making out in hot tubs", referring to Clara and Foxxy's kiss in
the pilot episode. The line is a parody of
The Real World's tagline, "Find out what happens when people stop being polite... and start getting real." The aforementioned hot tub kiss is considered one of the show's defining images; Comedy Central based nearly all of its first-season promotional material for
Drawn Together on it. In
The Drawn Together Movie: The Movie!, a billboard featuring the hot tub kiss is a major plot point in the film and is the main reason why the Network Head is hunting the housemates down in order to kill them in the film, due to the billboard being the cause of his wife and daughter's death. The extensive use of stereotypes is another controversial aspect of the series, though the intent is actually to make fun of
bigotry. As
Jess Harnell states in the DVD commentary for "Hot Tub", "Most of the racism on the show is coming from people who are so obviously stupid about it; it really isn't that threatening". (
Jewish people are mocked, including creators and principal cast member Tara Strong.) Other content known to be featured on some episodes are occurrences of
natural disasters, depictions of
dictators and
sexual fetishes. looking back is a
running gag in
Drawn Together. The fragment is originally from the 1925 film
The Lost World.
Drawn Together is heavy with popular culture references. Animation is a major source of material; as mentioned above, many characters from comics and animated cartoons make
cameo appearances and often are the subjects of
parody. Numerous live-action films, TV shows and video games are referenced as well.
Reality shows are another prime inspiration, not surprising given that
Drawn Together is presented as a reality show that takes place in a cartoon world. Although many of the first-season plots made extensive use of the reality show scenario, this aspect of the show has largely been de-emphasized in later episodes. The spoofing of film and television clichés is another common theme in the series; many
Drawn Together stories are parodies of overused plots from film and television. One notable factor of the series are
musical numbers. Some are parodies of real songs (i.e. in "Hot Tub", the song "Black Chick's Tongue" is a parody of "
A Whole New World" from
Aladdin; in the episode "Super Nanny", the song at the DMV is a riff on "Who's That Guy?" from
Grease 2; in "Freaks & Greeks", the song at the end is a take on "
Summer Nights" from
Grease; and "You'll Really Love Being Abandoned Here" in "Alzheimer's That Ends Well" is a reference to "I Think I'm Gonna Like It Here" from
Annie). Other songs are those written by the show's creators/writers, like "The Bully Song" from "Requiem for a Reality Show" and "La-La-La-La-Labia" in "Clara's Dirty Little Secret"). Only two episodes ("Lost in Parking Space, Part One" and "Nipple Ring-Ring Goes to Foster Care") do not feature a musical performance. In terms of
continuity, events in different episodes contradict each other, as there is a loose sense of
canon. One such example is in "The Other Cousin" and "N.R.A.y RAY", in which Toot is pictured with a penis, something that is not consistent with other episodes. Another is Foxxy's various and contradictory stories about her son Timmy (one involves selling him on the black market, another involves her accidentally shooting him after believing him to be rabid, when he was really just brushing his teeth). Plots and gags are often used that do not make any type of internal sense, but are used as one-off jokes, as when Foxxy, who is in her twenties, is said to have a teenage grandson. Some episodes begin with a fake recap of events supposed to have happened in a (non-existent) previous episode. According to executive producer Bill Freiberger, "Very little on
Drawn Together can be considered canon. If you try to find continuity on this show you'll drive yourself nuts. The only thing that's consistent is we try to make the show as funny as possible. And we'd never let a little thing like continuity get in the way of that." Occasionally, episodes of
Drawn Together are shown with less editing for content during
Secret Stash, a Comedy Central program aired on weekends at 1am that showcases films (i.e.
Not Another Teen Movie), comedy specials (
Comedy Central Roast), and animated programs (this and
South Park) with uncensored language. Though
Secret Stash programs typically have the nudity still censored,
Drawn Together is an exception to this. Some nudity not seen in the original broadcast is shown in the
Secret Stash version, while the nudity in other scenes is censored with a caption reading "DVD only"; this is done as a way of promoting the show's DVD releases. ==Voice cast==