In attempt to find a non-violent alternative for reducing Hell's overpopulation, the daughter of Lucifer opens a rehabilitation hotel that offers a group of misfit demons a chance at redemption.
This tv show contains 69 potentially triggering events.
Vox and Valentino are frequently seen watching the main cast using Voxtech cameras, unbeknownst to the other characters. It isn’t very scary or creepy, but it does happen
When Angeldust is singing Poison, there’s a part were he’s being sexually assaulted/abused by a pack of werewolves and it can be really disturping to watch.
I’m not sure how to answer this one but there is a scene in episode 6 where Sir Pentious agrees to have sex with everyone at a bar, and gets dragged off into a room by some guy, and it is kind of played for laughs
There is a town in Hell known as "Cannibal Town," which is pretty much exactly what it sounds like. It's played for laughs, and actual cannibalism is only shown on camera briefly and not terribly graphically.
The show is about dead people, either living their afterlives as demons in Hell or angels in Heaven, & the demons in Hell trying to escape being killed a second death by Heaven during the annual exterminations; there's a lot of death in this show.
Alastor, the human-deer character, is shown eating the rotting corpse of a regular deer.
There are also multiple references to eating people in episode 7.
Technically no, but the hotel gets destroyed in a battle, with scenes of rubble all around & debree falling, which may feel too similar to the events of 9/11 for some viewers.
When background characters see the overlord Zestial, some are so terrified of him that they immediately kill themselves. It’s a very short snippet and easy to skip during the episode
The character Mimzy comes across to many audience members as an antisemitic stereotype; she's depicted as a rude, greedy, plus-sized humanoid woman with a hooked nose in her debut episode.
Angel Dust’s entire character is about being sexually objectified and he is in literally every episode of the show. Given, majority of the time he is objectifying himself, it can still be distressing especially when you get more context around his character