Chris Complete Season 1-4: Everybody Hates

Stay broke, stay funny, and stay away from Caruso.

It’s not a cliffhanger. It’s a graduation. And in hindsight, it’s a perfect ending. Everybody Hates Chris complete season 1-4

If you haven’t binged the entire series yet—or if you’re debating a rewatch—here is why Everybody Hates Chris (Complete Seasons 1-4) is essential viewing. Stay broke, stay funny, and stay away from Caruso

It’s smart, it’s warm, and it’s one of the few sitcoms that can make you laugh at a scene where Chris gets his sneakers stolen and then cry five minutes later when Julius explains why he works so hard. And in hindsight, it’s a perfect ending

The fourth season ramps up the stakes. Chris starts high school, Drew’s basketball career takes off, and Rochelle finally gets a stable job. The final episode— "Everybody Hates the G.E.D." —ends on a beautiful, poignant note. Chris realizes that his parents’ constant nagging wasn’t cruelty; it was love. Adult Chris Rock’s final voiceover reminds us that his family was broke, loud, and dysfunctional, but they never let him quit.

The show follows Chris (played perfectly by Tyler James Williams), a good-natured, scrawny teenager who is "bused" from his predominantly Black neighborhood in Bedford-Stuyvesant to a predominantly white middle school in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn. The famous tagline— "Inspired by the childhood of comedian Chris Rock, narrated by an adult Chris Rock" —sets the tone immediately.

In the pantheon of great sitcoms, few have managed to balance bleak reality with gut-busting humor quite like Everybody Hates Chris . Loosely based on the teenage years of comedian Chris Rock, the show ran for four brilliant seasons from 2005 to 2009. While it was tragically cut short (Rock has since admitted he wanted two more seasons), the complete 88-episode run of Seasons 1-4 stands as a flawless time capsule of 1980s Brooklyn, family struggle, and adolescent survival.