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Beavis and Butt-Head Season 3: Release Date, Cast, Storyline & Updates

Beavis and Butt-Head Season 3: Release Date, Cast, Storyline & Updates

The cultural seismographs of the 90s are once again rattling the foundations of common sense and good taste. Beavis and Butt-Head, the animated anarchists of adolescent idiocy, are unleashed upon a world that has, if anything, become even more deserving of their particular brand of critique. Through a haze of nacho cheese fumes and distorted guitar riffs, they will continue their lifelong mission to score, avoid work, and provide incomprehensible commentary on the universe’s music videos.

This season promises a glorious return to form, with the duo’s unique intellect applied to modern phenomena like crypto-bros, influencer culture, and whatever the hell else they can barely comprehend. The supporting cast of long-suffering authority figures and bewildered citizens returns to be verbally abused, misunderstood, and ultimately defeated by their sheer, unwavering stupidity.

Beavis and Butt-Head Season 3 Actor and character names

– Mike Judge as BEAVIS and BUTT-HEAD

The creator, the voice, the absolute legend, Mike Judge, once again breathes life into the two most profound philosophical minds of our time. Judge doesn’t just voice these characters; he channels them, delivering their signature moronic cackles, moronic observations, and moronic desires with an authenticity that can only come from decades of dedication to the art of the moronic. His performance remains a masterclass in vocal comedy and timing.

Judge’s genius lies in the subtle distinctions he maintains between the two. Beavis’s frantic, high-pitched heh-hehs and obsession with fire are perfectly contrasted with Butt-Head’s deeper, more “authoritative” (and somehow even dumber) musings on scoring and everything being “cool.” Together, they form a perfect symphony of stupidity, a testament to Judge’s unparalleled ability to find humor in the lowest common denominator.

– Piotr Michael as GILMORE, GOD

The immensely talented Piotr Michael returns to embody the duo’s primary nemesis: the eternally exasperated substitute teacher, Mr. Gilmore. Michael’s delivery of Gilmore’s slow-burn rage and utter despair is a thing of beauty, capturing the soul of every adult whose will has been broken by institutionalized incompetence. His cries of “I’ve had it with you two!” are the show’s tragic chorus.

In a stroke of casting genius, Michael also provides the voice of God, a role that undoubtedly involves a similarly divine level of exasperation with His two most puzzling creations. The existential dread in God’s voice as He tries to reason with them will likely be one of the season’s highlights.

– Chris Diamantopoulos as ANGEL, BIKER DUDE

The chameleonic Chris Diamantopoulos (Silicon ValleyMickey Mouse) brings his vocal prowess to two iconic roles. As the Angel, he is the celestial being tasked with guiding our heroes, a role for which no amount of heavenly patience is sufficient. His performance will be a sublime mix of ethereal grace and mounting, otherworldly frustration.

As the Biker Dude, Diamantopoulos shifts gears completely into a low, gravelly register of pure, intimidating awesomeness. He is the physical manifestation of everything Beavis and Butt-Head think is cool, and his mere presence and deep-throated “hey” are enough to reduce them to worshipful silence.

– Tru Valentino as JACKSON, BOB

Tru Valentino steps into the shoes of the fast-food management world. As the beleaguered manager of Burger World, Bob is the man tasked with the Sisyphean nightmare of employing Beavis and Butt-Head. Valentino will perfectly capture the voice of a man whose ambition has been crushed beneath the weight of their profound incompetence and obsession with the fryer.

– Kosha Patel as WOMAN, AUDREY & Suzanne Cryer as AMATRON REP, COUNSELOR

Kosha Patel and Suzanne Cryer represent the diverse voices of female authority figures doomed to interact with the duo. Patel’s characters, whether a random woman on the street or a specific character like Audrey, will face a barrage of misguided attempts to “score.” Cryer, known for her sharp comedic timing (Silicon Valley), is ideal as either a robotic customer service rep or a school counselor whose therapeutic techniques are no match for their neurological void.

– Jayden Libran as CODY, MANAGER & Jim Meskimen as ANESTHESIOLOGIST, ATTRACTIVE PERSON

Jayden Libran likely voices a new, younger character like Cody, perhaps a fellow student even more pathetic than our heroes, or another service industry victim. Jim Meskimen, a master impressionist, is perfectly cast as a professional like an Anesthesiologist who must deal with them in a medical setting, and as the voice of the “Attractive Person” on TV who becomes the object of their incomprehensible desire.

– Mary Birdsong as NEWS REPORTER, BIG LADY

The fantastic Mary Birdsong (Reno 911!) returns to deliver the news of the duo’s latest escapades with the grave seriousness of a nuclear crisis. Her deadpan reporting as a News Reporter on the absurd events they cause is a classic staple of the show. As the “Big Lady,” she embodies the kind of adult female presence that utterly terrifies and confuses Beavis and Butt-Head, making her a formidable force of nature.

They’re here. They’re not clear. Get used to it. The dumbness returns to Comedy Central, September 3, 2025.

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