Little Tom's FishMeth Camp
An adult animated comedy about fish characters gone completely off the rails in rural Alabama.
Welcome to the worst fishing camp in Alabama.
Little Tom's Meth Camp is set in a ramshackle fishing camp in rural Alabama, populated entirely by fish characters who have no interest in being caught. Instead, they scheme, fight, love badly, and make decisions that would concern any marine biologist. Think of it as a trailer park where the trailers are partially submerged and the residents have gills.
The comedy is character-driven ensemble humor rooted in real Southern culture, filtered through the absurdity of an all-fish cast. Sharp dialogue, running gags, escalating chaos. Every character thinks they're the main character. None of them are right.
The camp sits on a murky body of water somewhere between Mobile and Montgomery, where the humidity has humidity and the nearest Walmart is a pilgrimage. It's 8 lots of decrepit trailers, a bait shop that hasn't sold bait since 2003, and a dock that's one storm away from being driftwood. The setting isn't just a backdrop - it's a character. The swamp has moods. The water has opinions. And the catfish next door? Government informants. Allegedly.
Every trailer has a story. Most of them are terrible.
Eight lots. Ten-plus residents. Zero impulse control. Meet the fish of Little Tom's Meth Camp.
Episode Concepts
Five premises. Five disasters. One swamp that never asked for any of this.
Welcome to the Camp
A new fish moves into Lot 2 and gets the "welcome tour" from every resident simultaneously - each one trying to recruit him into their personal drama before the others get to him first. The Landlady's dogs escape. Mr. Big Shot tries to sell him a timeshare. The meth fish warn him about the bass. By sundown, the new guy is already looking for the exit. There isn't one.
The Great Bait Robbery
Someone steals the bait shop's entire inventory overnight. The Landlady launches a camp-wide investigation that turns into a kangaroo court. Every resident accuses everyone else. Madame Fins "divines" the culprit (it's whoever she's currently mad at). The Redneck Twins offer forensic analysis involving beer cans and string. The Rich Couple insists they're above suspicion. The meth fish confess to a completely different crime nobody knew about.
Swamp Prom
The Fabulous Couple decides the camp needs culture and organizes a formal dance at the dock. Attendance is "mandatory" (the Landlady adds it to the lease). Mr. Big Shot shows up in a rented tux he can't afford. Miss Available treats it as a speed-dating event. The Rich Couple brings wine that costs more than the dock. Everything goes wrong when the Redneck Twins spike the punch and the dock starts sinking mid-dance.
Election Day
The Landlady announces she's stepping down as camp manager (she isn't). The residents take this seriously and hold an election. Every candidate's platform is just thinly veiled revenge against another resident. Mr. Big Shot runs on "economic development" (a pyramid scheme). The meth fish form a third party. Voter fraud is committed by everyone. The Landlady reveals she was never leaving and the election meant nothing. Nobody is surprised.
The Inspector Cometh
A county health inspector is coming and the camp has 347 code violations. The Landlady declares a "beautification emergency." Everyone must make their lot presentable in 24 hours. The Rich Couple panics because their "cottage" is technically an illegally modified shed. The Redneck Twins try to hide an alligator. Madame Fins predicts the inspector will be "charmed." The Thug Boyfriend's solution involves bribes. The meth fish build a decoy camp out of cardboard. It almost works.
Where the fishing's bad, the meth is worse, and the characters are unforgettable. A weekly dose of Southern-fried chaos.
Adult animation's biggest gap right now is Southern ensemble comedy. Squidbillies ran for 13 seasons proving the appetite is massive. Little Tom's Meth Camp picks up where they left off, with a deeper cast, darker humor, and the authentic Alabama flavor that only comes from actually knowing these people.
Squidbillies
×
Trailer Park Boys
×
King of the Hill
but they're all fish and nobody is okay
The swamp has stories. The fish have problems. The comedy writes itself.
Welcome to the camp.