Bob’s Burgers Has Quietly—and Perhaps Unintentionally—Honored Nebulous Neurodiversity for Years

Healthy portrayals of neurodiversity follow a handy, gut-generated “You’ll know it when you feel it” metric. Bob’s Burgers, the animated sitcom with 14 seasons and a (very good) movie to its name, satisfies this metric without ever explicitly confirming an intent to represent. So yes, it’s still a theory. But it’s one that’s comforting and affirming people who may have fallen through the cracks.
Traditionally, neurodiversity has functioned as an umbrella term for autism spectrum disorders, but recent definitions recognize ADHD, ADD, bipolar, dyslexia, and dyspraxia. For me, an autistic man from quasi-rural Oklahoma who never quite clicked with his peers, Bob’s Burgers is atomically validating. It presents a proudly madcap microcosm of all that’s messy and beautiful about the day-to-day business of being a person, filtered through lenses that catch what others might miss or discard.
This isn’t a new insight. Bob’s Burgers has long resonated with many in the neurodiverse community, and for good reason. A cursory Google search is more than enough. Quora threads committed to the “Is Tina Belcher autistic?” debate. Spin-off questions about Gene’s possible ADHD. Spiraling tangents about Teddy’s aversion to touch. Heated insistence that Tina and Gene are merely odd, awkward teenagers and any/all speculation about their neurodivergence is pointless and reductive.
The Belcher family—composed of well-meaning parents Bob and Linda and wildly different siblings Tina, Gene, and Louise—makes no bones about being different. For that reason (and so many more), the Loren Bouchard-created sitcom has become a beacon for the disenfranchised.
I could make a case for around half of the main cast, but the neurodiversity connection is strongest when examining Tina and Gene, the older two Belcher kids. Gene’s ADHD is never “officially” a thing, but at this juncture there’s so much evidence supporting his neurodivergence that I’m convinced he’s not just on the sensory spectrum. He’s screwed into it like a lightbulb. As far as I’m concerned, Tina is, too. The oldest Belcher child also challenges autistic convention by being female, which wasn’t a significant part of the conversation until fairly recently.
The Season 3 episode “Tinasaurus Wrecks” spotlights Tina’s rigidity in ways I continue to find validating. She thoroughly bungles her first time behind the wheel, crashing Bob’s car, unwittingly facilitating insurance fraud, and completely melting down when asked to lie.
I see so much of myself and my struggles in Tina and Gene. Like both of them, I had friends but I wasn’t popular and I clashed with my peers constantly. A psychologist diagnosed me with autism and ADHD when I was seven, but my folks didn’t tell me until I was 13. They didn’t tell me because they didn’t want me to feel any more isolated, any more othered than I already did. But I came to them. I picked up on subtleties, noticed behaviors and thought patterns my classmates didn’t seem to possess.