
A rap group heads to Atlanta to participate in Atlanta’s revived Freaknik festival.
Does Freaknik: The Musical have end credit scenes?
No!
Freaknik: The Musical does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of Freaknik: The Musical, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Bill Hader
Tad (voice)

Heather Lawless
(voice)

Andy Samberg
Chad (voice)

Snoop Dogg
Gang Member (voice)

Big Boi
Preacher (voice)

Affion Crockett
(voice)

Christopher Reid
(voice)

Charlie Murphy
(voice)

Christopher Martin
(voice)

George Clinton
(voice)

Corey Burton
(voice)

Kel Mitchell
Fruit Bowl Boys Leader (voice)

Rick Ross
Big Uzi (voice)

Lil Jon
Foreboding Old Dude (voice)

Lil Wayne
Trap Jesus (voice)

T-Pain
Freaknik (voice)

Joey Galaxy
Virgil (voice)

Cee Lo Green
Lite Skinn'd (voice)

DJ Drama
Mr. Thanksgiving (voice)

Kelis
(voice)

Mack Maine
(voice)

Sophia Fresh
Leacosia / Toprameneesha / Obamaniqua / Suzie (voice)

Bootsy Collins
(voice)

Liz Benoit
Oprah Winfrey (voice)

Gene Anderson
(voice)

Reginald Boyland
(voice)

Carl Jones
Virgil's Boss (voice)
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Challenge your knowledge of Freaknik: The Musical with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Who conducts the radio interview with Freaknik at the beginning of the film?
Mr. Thanksgiving
DJ Drama
Grandmaster Flash
Kid Cudi
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of Freaknik: The Musical, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
The film opens at a party where two young adults, Christopher Reid and Affion Crockett, boast that this is the best night they’ve ever attended. An unusually elderly vibe arrives when the self-styled elder Lil Jon joins the crowd and spins a vivid history of Freaknik, insisting that Freaknik once hosted the biggest party of all time before the police shut it down in 1998. He hints that Freaknik isn’t just a rumor or a ghost story, but a living legend that could come back.
The party takes a surreal turn as the two hosts try to convince their friends that Freaknik is an urban legend—until Play looks in a mirror and the scene darkens as a swarm of wasps consumes them. From that moment, the elderly guide summons Freaknik, who materializes as the Ghost of Freaknik Past, voiced by T-Pain.
The action pivots to a radio scene where host DJ Drama interviews Freaknik, painting a carnival of possibilities around a vaunted contest. The prize promises “a lifetime supply of money, clothes, and hoes,” a line that is echoed and teased as the legend interacts with the real world. The broadcast sets the stakes high and peppered with humor as the myth collides with ambition.
Cut to the Sweet Tea Mobsters, a crew of aspiring rappers from Sweet Tea, Florida: Joey Galaxy as Virgil, with Cee Lo Green as Light Skin and Rick Ross as Big Uzi, plus their weed-friendly ally Doela Man. They decide to drive to Atlanta to chase their dreams and join the contest, hauling along their outspoken crew. The group’s journey is full of detours, including a stop at a college fraternity party where two booze-fueled members—Bill Hader and Andy Samberg—reappear in zany fashion, adding chaos to the road trip.
A flashy detour leads them to a seductively named quartet of women—Leacosia, Toprameneesha, Obamaniqua, and Suzie—who arrive in a car and beg for attention with song, though Virgil fights the temptation before succumbing to their charms.
Meanwhile, Freaknik’s influence grows as he meets Rev. Sharpton and refuses to bend to the Boule’s demands. The Boule, a secretive council parodying real figures, are depicted as a powerful network that seeks to guide Black culture, wearing “10%” medallions as a wink to the famous essay The Talented Tenth. The parody includes Charlie Murphy as Sharpton and Kel Mitchell as Bill Cosby, with Affion Crockett reprising a role in the satire as a member of the group.
On the road, the Sweet Tea Mobsters face a setback in New Orleans when a menacing gangster (voiced by Snoop Dogg) challenges them and steers them toward his boss, Lil Wayne as Trap Jesus. Rather than ending their hopes, Trap Jesus inspires them and gives Virgil a Lamborghini to keep moving toward Atlanta, reigniting their belief in their destiny.
The crew’s esperance is punctured again when Big Uzi erupts in anger over a jail anecdote, and the team falls apart—until a miraculous lift comes in the form of a ride on a plane courtesy of the “Flying Malcolms.” Their perseverance starts to turn the tide, and the narrative quietly nods to the idea that Freaknik’s magic may hinge on the crowd’s love and belief.
In Atlanta, Freaknik is elected “ghost mayor,” declaring the city as Freak Nation. The event provokes a powerful pushback from Oprah, who dispatches a colossal robotic menace dubbed the Perminator, a monster assembled from a fictionalized Rev. Sharpton’s life. The plan to destroy Freaknik intensifies, and the battle between the luminous crowds and the mechanical threat begins to unfold.
Back at the party, the Fruit Bowl Boys burst into song with “Shank Ya in the Shower,” while the Sweet Tea Mobsters arrive just as the Perminator begins its assault. The crowd’s love feeds Freaknik, allowing him to grow to monstrous size and ultimately overpower the machine through the crowd’s devotion and energy.
When victory seems within reach, Freaknik awards the win to the Sweet Tea Mobsters, who decide to share the moment with a defiant gesture—Virgil tears the prize check in half, promising that Freaknik will return every year and that’s enough. A golden lion-shaped ship then descends, carrying the Boule to their doom, only for a second, uncut version to reveal a dog-shaped Mothership Connection that blasts the Boule away. Three bright aliens—George Clinton, Bootsy Collins, and Gene Anderson—arrive with a promise that Freaknik’s powers of positivity may travel to other galaxies, hinting at a possible return. Freaknik steps aboard with the trio, dancing on the Mothership as it departs Earth, while Mr. Thanksgiving closes the broadcast with a cryptic sign-off. In the post-credits tease, the Sweet Tea Mobsters recap the check being taped back together, leaving a wink that the legend continues.
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