
Gravity Falls
Just west of weird.
Twin brother and sister Dipper and Mabel Pines are in for an unexpected adventure when they spend the summer helping their great uncle Stan run a tourist trap in the mysterious town of Gravity Falls, Oregon.
Wokeness: 0%
Overall Score: 100%
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User Submitted Reviews
ZP
One of the best animated TV shows of all time.
By far one of the most amazing animated shows, and just in general, ever made. The only minor instances of "wokeness" (more like liberal-leaning, really) would be one or two 'girl-power' episodes, but it's handled in a balanced way, and doesn't detract or distract at all from the rest of the show. The show is perfect and fun for kids or adults of any age. There are also plenty of adult jokes hidden in the show that kids won't get.
Being only two seasons long, the plot and story are excellently delivered and suspenseful, strung out along both seasons. There aren't any filler episodes. Every episode adds something. Character development, an addition to the story or mystery, emotion, etc. Gravity Falls is fun, goofy, weird and creepy, with hidden puzzles, and one of the best villains, if not THE best villain ever on Disney, and one of the best villains in general. And the music is just as good. Think of Owl House but better and no LGBT cr*p. This show is really something special.
If you haven't watched this show, do so. I highly recommended it.
Created: 09-26-2024
M
A show without any of the woke stuff
This show is still remembered 13 years later and it did it without any of the woke stuff.
This is what happens when you Focus on making a really good show without all the sanctimonious preaching.
Learn from this Disney.
Created: 04-05-2025
NotYourNPC
Escaped Its Retard Creator's Agenda
Gravity Falls ain't the woke apocalypse some libtards wish it was, but damn if its creator Alex Hirsch—that sniveling propagandist—didn't try his hardest to turn it into a rainbow-slathered indoctrination camp for kids. On the surface, this 2012-2016 Disney gem is a breath of fresh air in today's preachy cartoon hellscape. The show's got sharp humor, twisty mysteries that actually pay off, and zero of that forced agenda slop that makes modern shows unwatchable. No wonder conservatives dig it—it's family-friendly fun without the lectures.
Now, where this show really shines (and Hirsch gets rightfully roasted) is what it could've been if that soy-raged warrior got his way. This whiny libtard bitched about Disney being too "straight" and censoring his precious LGBTQ+ dreams. He wanted a full-on lesbian granny smooch in "The Love God" episode—just background pandering to rack up that gay ratio and force "representation" down kids throats. Disney axed it, and good riddance; it'd turn a fun love-spell romp into inclusivity slop. Dude also had wet fantasies of queering the kids: bisexual hints for Dipper or fluid vibes for Mabel. Which Disney ofcourse rejected, that led to Hirsch whining about rewriting them to avoid rainbow overload. If this cuck had full reins, Gravity Falls would've been a preachy dumpster fire—exceeding gay ratios, pandering inclusivity, maybe even infinity gender nonsense—ruining a fun mystery show with Tumblr-tier propaganda.
In the end, the show dodged most bullets, making it a solid watch for anti-woke folks who crave clever plots without the rot. Killer voices (Jason Ritter's Dipper nails the nerd angst, Kristen Schaal's Mabel is chaotic joy), and Stan's grizzled wisdom hits home. But Hirsch's baggage taints it—like knowing your burger was almost vegan. Woke Score: 2/10 (subtle stains, but creator's actual intent spikes the threat). Watchability for conservatives: 8/10—binge it, but gag at what almost was. Show that barely escaped the libtard abyss.
Created: 09-15-2025