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Phineas and Ferb
TV Series

Phineas and Ferb

2007Animation, Short, Action • 5 Seasons

Woke Score
1.2
out of 10

Series Overview

Phineas Flynn (Vincent Martella) and Ferb Fletcher's (Thomas Brodie-Sangster's) backyard is the neighborhood hotspot for all of their cool inventions. Meanwhile, their elder sister Candace (Ashley Tisdale) is obsessed with busting her brothers for all the inventions to her mom once and for all. Simultaneously, their secret-agent pet, Perry the Platypus (Dee Bradley Baker) fouls the "evil" schemes and plans of Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz (Dan Povenmire).

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Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

1.2/10

No overview available.

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Season 2

1/10

No overview available.

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Season 3

1.2/10

No overview available.

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Season 4

1.4/10

No overview available.

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Season 5

1/10

Follow the inventive stepbrothers as they tackle another 104 days of summer. Candace is more determined than ever to finally bust her little brothers while their pet platypus, Perry, continues to lead a double life as the suave Agent P — whose sole mission is to thwart Dr. Doofenshmirtz from taking over the Tristate area.

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Overall Series Review

Phineas and Ferb stands as a consistent example of merit-based storytelling, prioritizing the ingenuity, creativity, and optimism of its protagonists throughout its entire run. The narrative centers on two brothers whose engineering skills and vision define their experiences, moving away from identity-based characterizations. By focusing on universal themes like friendship, the bonds of brotherhood, and the productive use of summer vacation, the series maintains a focus on individual talent and positive action. The Flynn-Fletcher household serves as a model of a stable, supportive blended family, reinforcing a vision of suburban life built on cooperation and mutual respect. Across all seasons, the show maintains a clear, unchanging identity. It avoids contemporary socio-political messaging, opting instead for a colorblind approach where characters are valued for their specific skills and personality traits rather than their backgrounds. Gender dynamics remain complementary, with both male and female characters demonstrating competence and agency without reliance on modern social tropes or demeaning archetypes. The series presents a wholesome environment where traditional values and objective morality govern the interactions between the cast, ensuring that the focus stays strictly on the constructive nature of the protagonists' projects. The series proves that children’s media can be engaging and diverse without resorting to ideological lecturing or social engineering. Even as the show incorporates ambitious crossovers or new challenges, it refuses to engage in the deconstruction of its characters or the values it champions. By remaining committed to the simple joy of imagination and the celebration of effort, Phineas and Ferb serves as a rare, sustained example of traditional storytelling that prioritizes character-driven narratives over external political trends. It remains a cohesive, optimistic, and reliable series from start to finish.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics1/10

Oikophobia1/10

Feminism1.8/10

LGBTQ+1/10

Anti-Theism1.4/10

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