The Boys’ creator says he’s worried about becoming “the thing we’ve been satirizing for five years” of the same series that is set to get three spinoffs

“I’m really working hard to not sell out.”

The Boys' The Seven, all walking towards the camera, blue and pink smoke behind them. From left to right: The Deep, Queen Maeve, Stormfront, Homelander, Starlight, Black Noir, A-Train. - 1

Image credit:Amazon

Oisin Kuhnke avatar - 2

Eric Kripke, creator of The Boys , is worried about becoming the same as the superhero movies it’s been satirising since it started airing.

The Boys is obviously an incredibly popular show - you don’t make it to five seasons in the age of streaming without bringing in some big numbers. But coming this far along, creator Eric Kripke unsurprisingly has some concerns about whether or not the show has become the very thing it’s trying to mock. Speaking to Collider about expanding the series beyond the original show, considering all those spinoffs, Kripke explained, “We’re gonna look at the chips we have on the table right now. I live in absolute terror of becoming the thing we’ve been satirizing for five years . The thing about The Boys is that it’s punk rock, and it hurts extra hard when punk rockers sell out.

“I’m really working hard to not sell out. We do these shows because we really care about them and we’re passionate about them, and they can tell fresh stories that we can’t tell in The Boys and not just be about rapid expansion but be very careful and mindful about the choices we’re making and being able to defend why we’re making them. I worry about that every single day. I just want people to say, maybe it’s for them and maybe it isn’t for them, but gotta hand it to them, they maintain a consistent level of quality.”

We will be saying goodbye to The Boys eventually, though, as it was confirmed earlier this year that season 5 will be the last , so enjoy it while you can.

The Boys artwork from Season 1 - 3

The Boys

TV show