Religion, humor, and popular culture meet in David Feltmate's Drawn to the Gods, a book that takes in several relevant perspectives in view of contemporary American religiosity. Feltmate's object of analysis-the satirical, animated, well-known TV shows The Simpsons, South Park, and Family Guy-are unavoidable to anyone browsing different channels in the sphere of Western media. Feltmate offers a wideranging scholarly approach to these animated sitcoms through mainly qualitative analyses. His primary sources are extensive, drawing on almost 1,000 episodes from the 2014 and 2015 seasons that contain references to religion(s). In fact, many episodes were classified specifically by Feltmate as "religion episodes." The result of this undertaking is a multilayered, learned, and nuanced analysis in which the author's findings are discussed in the light of earlier, generally scholarly, comments and insights, American religion in statistical and usually contemporary historical perspective, and also theological study. Across several chapters (e.g., "Sacred Centers," "The Difference Race Makes," "American Christianity Part 1: Backward Neighbors" and "American Christianity Part 2: American Christianities as Dangerous Threats," "Stigma, Stupidity, and Exclusion") the author discusses different facets of religious and spiritual seeking, the rejection of institutional religion, race and culture, the emerging American religious landscape, missionary activities, money, sexual ethics, and the supposed dangers of religious political activities.