Strip Law (2026) is an adult animated comedy series set in the chaotic legal world of Las Vegas, where the courtroom is as outrageous as the casinos. The show centers on Lincoln Gumb, an uptight, conservative lawyer who struggles to win cases in Sin City until he partners with Sheila Flambé, a flamboyant magician and hedonist, who brings pizzazz to their absurd legal battles. The series, created by Cullen Crawford, is rated TV-MA (or R by MPA standards, depending on the source) and is explicitly designed for mature audiences, not children or younger teens. It features an impressive voice cast including Adam Scott and Janelle James, and explores themes of moral ambiguity, satire of the legal system, and adult workplace humor. All ten episodes of the first season premiered on Netflix on February 20, 2026. The series is characterized by its fast pace, crude humor, and focus on wild situations, blending courtroom drama with over-the-top comedy and a Las Vegas sensibility.
The series includes explicit LGBTQ+ representation, with a male strip club featuring gay and bisexual individuals, and a pride flag visible in the background. The dialogue also indicates an explicit acknowledgment of sexuality as a spectrum.
In Season 1, Episode 1, "Finally, a Show About Lawyers," Lincoln Gumb visits a male strip club where an announcer declares, "Ladies, gay and bi dudes and everyone else—sexuality is a spectrum." A pride flag is prominently displayed in the club's background. The animation also focuses on the partially clothed genitals of the male dancers during their performances.
The show contains moderate to high levels of animated violence, including graphic depictions of characters exploding into bursts of blood and references to severe injury and death, often played for dark comedy.
The violence in 'Strip Law' includes scenes where characters are depicted exploding into bursts of blood. Additionally, there is a casual mention of Lincoln's mother being decapitated after being hit by a truck. A shooting range is depicted where patrons can target live cattle, and a man attempts suicide, with the gun being wrestled from his hands.
Sexual content is a significant concern, rated as 'High' due to frequent sexual references, innuendo, partial nudity (animated), and scenes set in sexually explicit environments like strip clubs. The show explicitly discusses themes of sexual exploitation and adult relationships.
The series includes repeated scenes set inside strip clubs, featuring partial female nudity (topless animated dancing, sometimes pixelated) and sexually suggestive performances. Dialogue frequently references sex work, exploitation, adult relationships, and contains sexual jokes and innuendo. For example, Sheila Flambé asks Lincoln to help her "expunge [her] lewdness charge," and a character's bare rear is exposed during implied off-screen oral sex.
The show features frequent and strong profanity, consistent with its adult animated comedy genre and TV-MA rating.
Strong language is common throughout the series, including uses of 'a--', 'b--ch', 'h--', 'd--n', 'd--k', and 'p--s'. God's name is used in vain twice. The overall cadence of the show is described as characters disgorging "profane inanities."
Substance use, particularly alcohol and drugs, is explicitly depicted and referenced throughout the series, often tied to the Las Vegas setting and played for comedy.
Characters are shown casually drinking alcohol, and Lincoln Gumb becomes inebriated. He also ingests pills, won from a slot machine, which cause him to hallucinate. A bar called the "I H8 God" bar is visited, and a store advertises itself as a smoke shop. One episode features a town becoming perpetually drunk due to poisoned drinking water from bar run-off.
Disrespect and rebellion are central comedic elements, with characters frequently displaying snarky attitudes, talking back to authority, and acting defiantly within the absurd legal system of Las Vegas.
Lincoln Gumb, despite being an uptight lawyer, is forced to adapt to the chaotic and irreverent nature of Las Vegas legal proceedings, which involves challenging traditional legal decorum. The show's creator states it aims to satirize Vegas's reputation as "the one place where you can do whatever." The dialogue contains "profane inanities" and a general tone of hyper-confidence and snark that dismisses conventional rules.
The series explicitly includes anti-Christian themes, featuring mockery of Christian beliefs, sacrilegious references, and characters actively trying to dissuade others from Christianity.
An entire episode is noted for "tossing out religious quips at Christianity's expense." Characters on Lincoln's team actively try to convince someone named Dilterton "to walk away from Christianity, enticing him with girls, drugs and more." Other examples include a bar named "I H8 God" and a Catholic man calling Lincoln an "atheist devil worshipper." An episode also parodies the 'boy who saw Heaven' story, including a live-action trailer for a faith-based film featuring an "atheistic Lincoln" snorting cocaine.
While not central to the plot as genuine occult practices, the show includes characters associated with magic and features some demonic and supernatural references, primarily for comedic effect within its Las Vegas setting.
Lincoln Gumb teams up with Sheila Flambé, a local magician, to add pizzazz to his legal cases. The show also includes a building with a demonic mascot that yells, "It's h— o'clock, and I'm Satan," and references to 'life forces'.
The show includes intense situations, dark humor, and disturbing imagery, though primarily within the context of adult animated comedy. This includes life-threatening scenarios and psychological themes.
Content includes a man attempting suicide (though the gun is wrestled away). There are discussions of Lincoln's 'desperate mommy issues' and themes of spiritual doubt. The series is described as a "joyous chaotic distraction from our grim reality," suggesting an underlying intensity.
Not Recommended for ages under 17 (Adults Only). The show carries a TV-MA rating from Netflix, and some outlets even assign it an R-rating, indicating strong content unsuitable for minors. It explicitly features adult animation, mature themes, strong language, sexual content, and substance use, making it inappropriate for children and most teens.
The show is an adult animated comedy leveraging the surreal and chaotic nature of Las Vegas for its humor. It is designed for mature audiences and consistently employs adult themes, language, and situations. Parents should be aware that the animation style, similar to other adult cartoons, does not diminish the intensity of the mature content.
These concerns are a starting point — what many Christian parents care about. Want to screen for other themes? Define your own concerns.
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