Watching: An audacious animated experiment
From the creators of “Adventure Time,” “Steven Universe” and more
Watching
December 15, 2025

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‘The Elephant’ enters the room

In an animated still, a pink blob dances with two punks.
“Adult Swim’s the Elephant” premieres on Friday. Adult Swim

By Jen Chaney

Dear Watchers,

This hasn’t been a great year for anyone hoping to tell original stories in Hollywood. Widespread job cuts, the looming threat of artificial intelligence and the consolidating effect of corporate mega-mergers collectively threaten to make it even tougher to get risky new projects off the ground.

That’s why it is heartening to watch “Adult Swim’s the Elephant,” a 23-minute animated special, and “Behind the Elephant,” a documentary about the making of that special that is almost as long as the special itself. They should be watched as a double feature in order to fully understand the audacity behind this existentially curious, trippy piece of work. (“The Elephant” debuts on Friday at 11 p.m., on Adult Swim, and then it and the documentary arrive the following day on HBO Max.)

The teams behind “The Elephant” have not only done something daring; they also did so via what sounds like the worst possible way to make an episode of television. As Vishnu Athreya, an executive producer, explains in “Behind the Elephant,” the concept came from Exquisite Corpse. In that parlor game, players create a story or picture together by contributing different portions without looking at one another’s work.

The same principles were applied to “The Elephant.” Producers hired three teams of animators to each handle separately a different act of the program. The teams were led by Pendleton Ward (the creator of the acclaimed Cartoon Network series “Adventure Time”); Rebecca Sugar (“Steven Universe”) and her husband, Ian Jones-Quartey (“OK K.O.! Let’s Be Heroes”); and Patrick McHale (“Over the Garden Wall”).

The result is a single TV episode that was clearly built by committee but still feels unified. The sections have contrasting animation styles and tonal choices, but they all focus on a character attempting to navigate a new world. Ward’s chapter is surreal and peppered with bright colors, not unlike “Adventure Time.” The Sugar/Jones-Quartey section is free-associative and steeped in an ’80s punk aesthetic. McHale’s is unexpectedly poignant, with a moody spirit and angular illustrations that evoke anime. The end of that portion, the third and final act, takes place during the holidays, which makes “The Elephant” feel almost like a Christmas special.

What holds the whole enterprise together is a curiosity about humanity and an understanding of how it feels to navigate a society that often seems broken and disjointed. That it is being put into the world by Adult Swim and HBO Max, Warner Bros. subsidiaries that could soon belong to Netflix or Paramount, is a detail both bitter and sweet.

Also this week

Two men sit in the desert with a robot behind them.
Johnny Pemberton, left, and Aaron Moten in the new season of “Fallout.” Lorenzo Sisti/Prime Video
  • “My Next Guest Needs No Introduction,” David Letterman’s intermittent interview series, returns for a three-episode sixth season on Tuesday, on Netflix.
  • The second season of “Fallout,” based on the postapocalyptic video game of the same name, debuts on Tuesday at 9 p.m., on Amazon Prime Video.
  • “What’s in the Box?,” a new game show hosted by Neil Patrick Harris that does indeed require contestants to guess what is inside various boxes, debuts on Wednesday, on Netflix.
  • Couldn’t experience the “iHeartRadio Jingle Ball 2025” live? Watch it in edited form on Wednesday at 8 p.m., on ABC, and beginning the next day on Hulu.

ROB REINER (1947-2025)

A portrait photographer of Rob Reiner, sitting with his arms on his knees.

Rob Reiner, Actor Who Went on to Direct Classic Films, Dies at 78

After finding fame in “All in the Family,” he directed winning films like “This Is Spinal Tap,” “When Harry Met Sally … ” and “The Princess Bride” and got involved in liberal politics.

By Julia Jacobs and Clay Risen

An older man sits at a kitchen table arguing with a younger man with long hair in a mustache over breakfast.

An Appraisal

As Archie Bunker’s Foil, Rob Reiner Brought Politics Home

Reiner’s “All in the Family” role didn’t just capture the arguments of its time. It gave us a preview of our own.

By James Poniewozik

Rob Reiner opening his black jacket to show a Spinal Tap T-shirt he is wearing in front of a “Spinal Tap” backdrop.

‘Brilliant and Kind’: Hollywood Pays Tribute to Rob Reiner

Stars of Mr. Reiner’s movies, as well as celebrities who simply admired his work, have posted heartfelt tributes to the director on social media.

By Alex Marshall

Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner, looking to the side of the camera, stands in front of a backdrop with the words “human rights campaign” on it.

Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner: A Love Story That Changed Movie History

Mr. Reiner’s falling for his wife of 36 years inspired the director to rework the ending of “When Harry Met Sally …” The couple would collaborate on movies and political causes.

By Maya Salam and Alex Marshall

EXTRA-CREDIT READING

On a candy-colored set, a woman in colorful clothing dangles a microphone over an object. She looks worried.

On Comedy

What We’d Lose if We Didn’t Have the HBO Comedy Special

The potential Warner Bros. Discovery sale might jeopardize a lively outlet for artier stand-up shows like those of Sarah Sherman and Adam Pally.

By Jason Zinoman

Ask Arts

What Can I Watch With My Kids?

A reader with a 9- and 11-year-old wants to branch out from “Traitors” and “The Amazing Race” when the family is together in front of the TV.

By Jeremy Egner

A man in a dark suit sits smoking at a bar, looking pensive.

Critic’s Notebook

What Streaming TV Could Learn from ‘Mad Men’

The classic show arrived on HBO Max with an embarrassing remastering error. But the show’s creative mastery remains undeniable.

By James Poniewozik

A young woman wearing a skirt and a white T-shirt stands in a field shooting an automatic weapon. A few women in black dresses and white head scarves are in the background.

The Breakout Stars of 2025

Across the arts, these 10 performers took a leap of faith this year and stuck the landing in a big way.

By Maya Salam

A collage of images includes photos, from top, of Renate Reinsve in “Sentimental Value”; Joshua Henry in “Ragtime”; “You Are What You Do” by Daniel Arnold; a Tyler, the Creator figurine; Amy Madigan in “Weapons”; and Jacqueline Novak and Kate Berlant with microphones.

41 Things That Stuck With Us in 2025

Aunt Gladys. Tyler, the Creator. That sex scene in “The Naked Gun.” These are the things Culture staffers couldn’t stop thinking about this year.

By The New York Times

A man in a brown bomber jacket and black aviator sunglasses sits in the drivers seat of a parked yellow taxi cab, with one hand on the wheel and his elbow resting out the window.

Stream These 10 Movies and TV Shows Before They Leave Netflix in January

A ton of titles are expiring soon for U.S. subscribers. Catch them while you can, including a Scorsese classic and one of TV’s most influential series.

By Jason Bailey

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