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This animated series presents a satirical take on the dating dynamics of anthropomorphic pigs and dogs, highlighting exaggerated gender stereotypes. The male characters (pigs) are portrayed as oblivious and chauvinistic, while the female characters (bitches) are depicted as materialistic and opportunistic, creating a sharp and humorous critique of social norms.
SYNOPSIS:
In a world where the guys have snouts, the girls wag their tails, and dating is more brutal than ever, Men Are Pigs delivers an unapologetically raunchy and hilarious look at post-college life, love, and lust through a wildly literal lens: all men are pigs, and all women are bitches. Literally.
Set in Morgan’s Place Apartments, the show follows a group of freshly graduated 20-somethings fumbling their way into adulthood. Between dead-end jobs, poolside day-drinking, and emotionally reckless hookups, this is where dreams go to get ghosted — and where tails tell the truth.
At the heart of the show is Joe, a well-meaning but painfully naive “nice guy” whose heart was destroyed when Bunny, his love of his life, turned heartbreak queen and dumped him. Now, Joe’s re-entering the dating scene with no clue how modern romance works. Armed only with bad advice from his womanizing new roommate, Hugh, and two even worse influences — the clueless buffoon, Double B, and the pessimistic, entitled, Noel — Joe stumbles into the savage world of dating apps, mixed signals, emotional damage, and mating games... all with his curly little tail pointing the wrong way.
With hangouts at The Trough bar and late-night confessions by the pool, Men Are Pigs skewers hookup culture, gender roles, and modern relationships with quick wit, bold animation, and characters that are as flawed as they are fur-covered. It’s not subtle, it’s not safe, and it’s definitely not politically correct — but it’s honest in all the worst ways.
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