Season 7 Big Mouth May 2026

In this episode, Jessi (Jessi Klein) discovers her estranged grandmother is dying in a hospice in Queens. What follows is a half-hour that channels the spirit of The Farewell and Tick, Tick… Boom! The show’s animation style shifts to a watercolor dreamscape as Jessi confronts mortality without the buffer of a joke. The Shame Wizard (also Kroll) shows up not as a tormentor, but as a weary philosopher, admitting that even he is afraid of the void.

By embracing that melancholy, Big Mouth has secured its legacy. It is no longer just the filthiest show on television. It is one of the wisest. season 7 big mouth

But the real scene-stealer is the introduction of , a non-binary Hormone Monster voiced by the brilliant Bowen Yang. Cypress is calm, measured, and equipped with a weighted blanket and essential oil diffuser. In a show defined by screaming and ejaculation, Cypress is a revolutionary figure—representing a generation of teens who approach their anxiety with therapy-speak and breathwork. Yang’s deadpan delivery of lines like, “Let’s process that shame spiral before we decide to graffiti the principal’s Tesla,” is comedic gold. The Episode That Breaks the Mold: “The Light” Every Big Mouth season has one episode that transcends the raunch to deliver genuine pathos. Season 6 had the brilliant depression musical “Asexual Healing.” Season 7 has “The Light.” In this episode, Jessi (Jessi Klein) discovers her

By [Staff Writer]

(Streaming now on Netflix)

Gone is the safety of the Bridgeton Middle School locker room. In its place is the "Social Lyceum," a bizarre, Gilded Age-inspired private school where the rich kids are already doing coke and the guidance counselor is a 400-year-old demon. The move forces Big Mouth to ask a question it has deftly avoided for years: What happens when your support system collapses? The Shame Wizard (also Kroll) shows up not

It’s a bold, tear-jerking pivot that proves Big Mouth is no longer just a cartoon about boners. It’s a cartoon about the fear of losing everyone you love, dressed in a trench coat. Season 7 is not perfect. The New York setting leads to some predictable “small town kid gets lost in the subway” gags, and the subplot involving Jay’s (Jason Mantzoukas) attempt to become a child street magician runs out of steam by episode four. Furthermore, longtime fans may miss the claustrophobic intimacy of the suburban basement.