Juninho & Paulinho
is a completely uncensored, pornographic adult cartoon series set in Neo Cifras — a chaotic, brazil-style favela city where crime, debauchery, poverty and big-city energy collide nonstop. Imagine narrow, colorful alleys packed with run-down houses, radios blasting gangsta rap or rock at full volume, police sirens screaming through the night, and people holding tight to each other while violence, racism, police brutality, and broke life surround them every day.
The show runs on dark, filthy humor mixed with real, raw talk. It’s packed with juvenile, over-the-top swearing, dumb pranks, cartoonish violence, and extremely explicit porn scenes (full-on sex, gooning, weird kinks, group stuff — nothing is held back). At the same time, it dives headfirst into serious topics: deep traumas (childhood abuse, war scars, police killings), toxic relationships, identity struggles (transphobia, racism, prejudice), heavy politics (left vs right, systemic inequality, “fuck the police”), and environmental/class issues — all without ever tipping too far in one direction.
The balance is deliberate and sharp:
It never gets so serious and depressing that it becomes a trauma porn drama.
It never gets so silly and juvenile that it cheapens or invalidates the real pain and social commentary.
The porn is graphic and frequent, but it’s never just mindless smut — it ties into character flaws, relationships, power dynamics, self-hatred, healing, or straight-up comedy.
Juninho
Juninho is straight-up a gooner and nympho who’s always chasing ass – girls, guys, whatever, he’s down for almost anything. This dude is a full-on chronic pervert: if he’s not talking sex, doing sex, or thinking about sex, he’s pissed off or crashing out about something else. He deals with Paulinho’s drama, family bullshit, money problems, and people hating on him all the time. He’s stronger and meaner than most, so when someone pushes his buttons, he’ll beat the shit out of them without blinking. Even with all that mess, he’s still the leader of the group because he’s got that charm and can talk his way into (or out of) anything – the others follow him. He’s also a failed film director making trash movies nobody watches. He’s a guy, but he has a futa body (in this world it’s some birth thing that happens to some dudes, more like a random thing than a disease). He gets a ton of hate and prejudice for it, and he hates himself for it too. But deep down, Juninho has a softer side – he’s actually loyal and caring when his friends are down, even if his help usually ends up messy and chaotic.
Paulinho
Paulinho is a straight ragebaiter – he lives for pushing buttons and saying the dumbest, most offensive shit just to make people mad. He gets off on seeing people lose it, but it always bites him back because someone ends up swinging – usually Juninho, who’s the most short-tempered. Paul hates Juninho’s degenerate side and calls him out when he’s being a public weirdo (which is all the time), but he does it in such a bigoted, obnoxious way that he comes off like a dick even when he’s technically right. He’s pulled some real shitty “pranks” too, like sending Juninho’s porn to his family – he thinks it’s funny, but it just makes everything worse for both of them. He works as a truck driver, driving all over the country to make money. He’s not the smartest guy, but sometimes he drops something insanely real and deep. On the good side, he’s super overprotective of his little cousin Juliet – he’d go to war for her and keeps her safe from the world’s bullshit.
Elmo
Elmo is the innocent one – way too naive and optimistic compared to everyone else, sometimes acting straight-up childish. He’s the main target for Juninho and Paulinho’s bullying, and he has a hard time standing up for himself – he’s kind of a doormat. He’s super Christian and basically the only voice of reason in the show: he tries to get people to act right, warns them when they’re being harmful, and shares the gospel with his friends. Even though most of the crew is Christian or Catholic, they barely act like it – church is just a Sunday thing. Elmo is the only one who actually lives the faith. On the bright side, his endless optimism gives the group a little hope, and he quietly s people when they’re down, showing real tolerance that sometimes rubs off on others.
John
John is that guy who has no clue what he wants out of life – super indecisive, always watching and picking apart other people’s problems instead of figuring out his own. He loves dropping nerdy facts and trivia like he’s a walking Wikipedia. He’s closer to Elmo than Juninho or Paulinho, but his style is different – where Elmo scolds with care and patience, John’s critiques are harsher, more mocking, kinda like Paulinho. He does care, just in his own way. Unlike Elmo, who fights the bad behavior, John enables Juninho and Paulinho’s bullshit even when he knows it’s wrong – he goes along with it to keep the peace and not get left out, while thinking “not my problem.” He’s a chill neutral guy, but he’s definitely an enabler and doesn’t have the strongest personality. On the good side, his nerdy lectures sometimes actually help people think, and he’s there in his quiet, harsh-but-real way when shit gets heavy.
Mr. Darkness
Mr. Darkness is a straight-up opportunistic scammer who’ll lie and mislead people to get what he wants – usually old folks, pretending to be from the bank to steal their info or money. He’s one of the poorest characters in the show, just like Paulinho, and they share a lot of the same pain from growing up in violent, broke neighborhoods with messed-up family stuff. But their paths split hard: Paulinho chose hard work, while Mr. Darkness went full low-life thug. He hates Juninho’s pervy side and talks mad shit about him with Paulinho or anyone else who’s down to clown on him. But he talks trash about literally everyone behind their backs – classic favela/ghetto energy that’s all about surviving by any means. He acts tough and reckless, preys on people’s trust and innocence, and always plays the victim card (“the system and racism did this to me”) without ever owning his own dirt. His name comes from being so dark-skinned he can blend into shadows – people started calling him Mr. Darkness, and it stuck. Real name is Luís Wesley. On the good side, he’s tight with Paulinho over the racism and favela struggles, and he tries to protect him in his own messed-up, cynical way – sharing street smarts and survival tips even if he’s a scammer himself.
Luísa F Williams
Luísa F Williams is the classic Twitter militant – super loud and obnoxious when debating politics, and she straight-up refuses to listen to the other side because she sees right-wing or conservative people as evil fascists. Sometimes she tries to be mature and hear people out, but she snaps right back to her old ways. She’s always at LGBTQ+ protests, arguing with family, friends, coworkers, and randoms online about politics – it’s her whole thing. She went through hell as a trans woman, especially as a teen when her bigoted, violent dad beat her up, so her extreme activism comes straight from that trauma and the transphobia she still faces. She lives in a neighborhood where being trans is a huge taboo, and most people around her aren’t ive – and when it comes to Juninho’s group, shit gets messy. Juninho talks a lot of transphobic crap and leans conservative, but he’s way less judgmental and they have a sexual thing going. They actually like each other and build some real respect through sex and life stuff. Juninho sees her as a “mommy” fantasy because of her thick hips, thighs, and big boobs; she guides his horny impulses in a healthier way without shaming him or killing his vibe. She’s more sexually mature and handles his over-the-top stuff (like wanting to jerk off to her or hump her leg mid-conversation) way better than most would – she knows when to say no and when to let it slide. They have wholesome moments most of the time, but politics turns it into a fight quick. She hates Paulinho (obvious reasons – he’s a transphobe who makes sure she knows it), and they go at it every time they’re around each other. Paulinho hates her too – thinks she’s sick and degenerate, and he can’t stand her yapping about politics and killing the vibe. On the good side, Luísa is kind and ive to people who are oppressed – she’s always trying to lift up friends who feel beat down, coming from her own pain.
Lemy
Lemy is the old mentor figure for the crew, carrying a brutal past. He was a sergeant in B Company, 4th Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment from 1966 to 1969 in the Vietnam War. He was involved in the My Lai massacre and other war crimes – both witnessing and doing things that left him scarred and trapped in his own guilt forever. The show doesn’t sugarcoat his evil actions but also shows his redemption: he faces what he did was fucked up beyond words, and the consequences hit him in episodes, always burning inside him to be better. Lemy stands for how governments brainwash young people into war and how it destroys their soul and morals – the person chooses to be cruel, but someone else started it. As an old man now, he helps Juninho and the others think about life and their choices – most of the crew goes to him when they need to vent or talk heavy shit. People see him as strong, chill, and kind, not knowing about his inner demons, awful past, and war trauma. He’s different from Juninho, who romanticizes war from movies and history but never lived it – Lemy gives the real, ugly truth. Most of the time he handles Juninho and Paulinho’s chaos with patience and care, always warning them about consequences. He doesn’t snap like Juninho or get super emotional like Elmo, but when he finally loses it, shit gets serious – buckle up.
Lastly, Their Political Views
Right-Wing Leaning Characters
Juninho thinks less government control is the way to go; he hates socialism and all the economic rules it brings, leaning almost ancap.
Elmo wants governments with less red tape, but he thinks rules and institutions like police, government, and military are important – he’s different from Juninho on that.
John believes conservative values should still run institutions and guide people; he can’t stand progressive or socialist movements.
Left-Wing Leaning Characters
Luísa wants institutions to protect and lift up people with fewer rights or stability – more policies for Black communities, LGBTQ+ folks, women, and balancing class struggle; she’s a full Marxist.
Mr. Darkness pushes for government help in slums and poor areas with real respect for the culture and the suffering; he wants justice for the racism he and other Black people face – to him it’s systemic and gets ignored by the system.
Paulinho feels the same as Mr. Darkness but really hammers on police violence and prejudice that hit his neighborhood every day – a messed-up cop culture that uses too much force on vulnerable people; he’s the type to scream “fuck the police” and lose it over stuff like George Floyd.
Lemy thinks the American government is way too capitalistic and hurts itself by obsessing over material stuff and status symbols instead of real needs; he hates over-consumerism and how companies tell you what you “need” to buy – especially the weapons industry that lets governments start wars and kill people overseas.

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Background Pony #119D
I likes the look of this