X

Join or Sign In

Sign in to customize your TV listings

Continue with Facebook Continue with email

By joining TV Guide, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy.

The Boys Showrunner Eric Kripke Says the 'Craziest' Homelander Line in Season 5 'Already Happened' in Reality

The upcoming final season's most far-fetched storylines 'have come to pass in a way that's really, really f---ing troubling'

portrait-cropped.jpg
Kat Moon
Chace Crawford, Antony Starr, Nathan Mitchell, The Boys

Chace Crawford, Antony Starr, Nathan Mitchell, The Boys

Prime Video

Across its four seasons so far, The Boys has never shied away from commentating on American politics — but this wasn't showrunner Eric Kripke's intention from the start. When he and executive producers Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg pitched the series in 2016, they primarily wanted to make a realistic version of a superhero show. "Trump was the, 'He's not really getting the nomination, is he?' guy," Kripke told The Hollywood Reporter in 2024. But when Trump was elected, the show became something else. "Suddenly, we were telling a story about the intersection of celebrity and authoritarianism and how social media and entertainment are used to sell fascism," he said.

As The Boys readies for its fifth and final season — which premieres April 8 — it continues to be ahead of the curve. "I'm totally bummed out to say that we wrote [Season 5] before the [2024 presidential] election," Kripke told TV Guide in March. "This sounds super naive now, but I swear the plan was, let's write a 1984 version of what creeping authoritarianism looks like in America, and maybe everyone will be like, 'Whew! We really dodged a bullet' — but instead we got hit with the bullet."

It's no secret by now that the show's primary antagonist, Homelander (Antony Starr), bears a striking resemblance to Trump. In the Season 5 trailer, there's even a close-up of the character smiling as he sits in the chair of the Oval Office. 

"A lot of things that [were] far-fetched for us, [that] we were like, 'That's crazy,' have come to pass in a way that's really, really f---ing troubling," he said. "I won't give it away, but there's a line in Episode 7 that Homelander says that was the craziest line we could think of, and it's already happened."

Fans are already speculating on what his line could be. "We always say in the writers room, 'Bad for the world, good for the show,'" Kripke continued. "I really wish it was the opposite."

ALSO READ: The Boys Season 5: Cast, premiere date, trailer, and everything else to know

The Boys Season 5 premieres April 8 on Prime Video.

Loading. Please wait...