
Yo yo yo, what up, dawg? This week, we gettin' up in this crib with Thug Notes, by Sparky Sweets, PhD.
A collaboration between comedian Greg Edwards (playing Dr Sweets), Napkin Note Productions (Jared Bauer and Jacob Salamon) and researcher Joseph Salvaggio, Thug Notes is a weekly Web Video series. Each five-minute episode is devoted to a brief summary and analysis of a particular work of Western literature as explained by a Soul Brotha and punctuated by deliberately unpolished illustrations. The result is half irreverent, half educational, and completely hilarious.
- Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
- Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
- All Quiet on the Western Front
- American Psycho
- At the Mountains of Madness
- Animal Farm
- Beloved
- Beowulf
- Brave New World
- The Brothers Karamazov
- The Cask of Amontillado
- Catch-22
- The Catcher in the Rye
- The Cat in the Hat
- A Christmas Carol
- A Clockwork Orange
- The Color Purple
- The Count of Monte Cristo
- Crime and Punishment
- The Crucible
- Dante's Inferno
- Death of a Salesman
- Doctor Faustus
- Don Quixote
- Dracula
- Dune
- Emma
- Ender's Game
- The Epic of Gilgamesh
- Ethan Frome
- Fahrenheit 451
- The Fall of the House of Usher
- Fifty Shades of Grey
- Fight Club
- The Fountainhead
- Frankenstein
- A Game of Thrones
- The Giver
- The Glass Menagerie
- The Goldfinch
- Gone Girl
- Go Set a Watchman
- The Grapes of Wrath
- Great Expectations
- The Great Gatsby
- Grendel
- Hamlet
- The Handmaid's Tale
- Heart of Darkness
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- The Hobbit
- Horton Hears a Who!
- The Hunger Games
- Invisible Man
- It
- Jane Eyre
- Julius Caesar
- King Lear
- Les Misérables
- Life of Pi
- The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
- Lolita
- Lord of the Flies
- The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
- Macbeth
- The Merchant of Venice
- The Metamorphosis
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Moby-Dick
- Nineteen Eighty-Four
- No Country for Old Men
- Notes from Underground
- The Odyssey
- Oedipus the King
- Of Mice and Men
- The Old Man and the Sea
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
- One Hundred Years of Solitude
- Othello
- The Outsiders
- The Picture of Dorian Gray
- A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
- Pride and Prejudice
- A Raisin in the Sun
- The Raven
- Ready Player One
- Romeo and Juliet
- The Scarlet Letter
- A Separate Peace
- Siddhartha
- Slaughterhouse-Five
- The Sound and the Fury
- The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
- The Stranger
- The Sun Also Rises
- A Tale of Two Cities
- The Tell-Tale Heart
- Things Fall Apart
- To Kill a Mockingbird
- The Trial
- V for Vendetta
- Watchmen
- Where the Red Fern Grows
- Where the Wild Things Are
- A Wrinkle in Time
- Wuthering Heights
Thug Notes is available for viewing on its official site
or on its Youtube channel
.
This series contains examples of:
- April Fools' Day: On April 1st 2014, the channel posted an episode covering Stephenie Meyer's Twilight. It turned out to actually be analyzing Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
- Big "WHAT?!": His reaction to the huge Continuity Snarl at the end of The Epic of Gilgamesh.
- Catchphrase:
- "Nah, blood!"
- "Damn!"
- "Cold-blooded!"
- "Peep this motif, son."
- "He/she dead."
- "Street justice!"
- "Peace!"
- "[Character] chucks deuces outta there."
- Dramatic Irony: Oedipus the King begins with Sparky wishing us a happy Valentine's Day and that today we're going to look for some motherf(bleep)in' truth, completely unaware of the big twist.Sparky: His mama! Ughhhhhhh! An' his kids are his brothers and sisters! Aw man, that's nasty, man! Disgustin'!
- Eye Pop: The preferred method of showing surprise in the illustrations.
- Eye Take: Commonly seen in the episodes, especially when the work being analysed moves into disturbing territory, and occasionally caught on the video thumbnails.
- I'm Not a Doctor of Philosophy, but I Play One on YouTube: While the character of Sparky Sweets has a PhD in Classics, this doesn't carry over to the actual crew. Joseph does have a master's in the subject, though.

- Jive Turkey: The entire premise of this series is the analysis of (predominantly) famous works of Western literature in a style that's far, far from normal academic discourse.
- Done deliberately, as the original intent was to Lampshade how literary analysis doesn't have to use high academia to be valid discourse.
- "Not Making This Up" Disclaimer: Sweets often cites specific pages where something he seemingly exaggerates turns out to be an actual thing in the text, such as the descriptions of Nurse Ratchet's breasts in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
- Public Domain Soundtrack: The first few episodes aside, most episodes open with Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 3, except the Halloween episode (Frankenstein), which opens with Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D Minor.
- Pun: "So Don Quixote gets up on his horse, and Sancho gets up on his ass."
- Running Gag: Sweets saying "Damn" whenever a depressing plot point is described.
- Sophisticated as Hell: In general, the idea of delivering literary analysis in slang, and this juxtaposition is most pronounced when Sweets quotes from either the original text or other sources - and by necessity, jumps back and forth between slang and regular English.
- Soul Brotha: Sparky is a stereotypical one - if the Jive Turkey didn't clue you off, the do-rags and gold chains probably should.
- Sound-Effect Bleep: The bleep sees limited use, usually for "F***" and "S***" - lesser words like "bitches" and "ass" are routinely left uncensored. When the N word is suitable for its historic content (To Kill a Mockingbird), it would be left alone.
- Stylistic Suck: Most of the characters in the videos, are portrayed as stick-figures with the faces of public domain photos or photos from movies, copypasted onto them.
- Subverted by the provided analysis, which is always well-researched and quite on-point.
