Futurama season 1: Difference between revisions

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{{short description|1st season of Futurama}}
This is a list of episodes of [[Futurama (animated series)|Futurama]] episodes in broadcast order, from broadcast season 1.
{{Use American English|date=October 2020}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2020}}
{{Infobox television season
| season_number = 1
| image = Futurama Volume 1.png
| bgcolour = #000000
| caption = DVD cover for the 2012 re-release of ''Volume One'' featuring [[Philip J. Fry]].
| network = [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]]
| first_aired = {{start date|1999|3|28}}
| last_aired = {{end date|1999|11|14}}
| num_episodes = 13
| episode_list = List of Futurama episodes
}}
The first season of ''[[Futurama]]'' began airing on March 28, 1999 and concluded on November 14, 1999, after 13 episodes.
 
The original 72-episode run of ''Futurama'' was ''produced'' as four seasons; Fox ''broadcast'' the episodes out of the intended order, resulting in five aired seasons.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.scifi.com/sfw/interviews/sfw7897.html |title=David X. Cohen boards the Planet Express to find meaning in Futurama |publisher=Sci Fi Weekly |date=December 17, 2001 |access-date=June 3, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080610080245/http://www.scifi.com/sfw/interviews/sfw7897.html |archive-date=June 10, 2008|url-status=dead}}</ref>
{{spoiler}}
As a consequence, the show's canon is disrupted by the ''broadcast order'', and more, different regions and networks use different ordering for the episodes.
 
The list below features the episodes in original ''production order'', as featured on the DVD box sets.
{{Futurama (TV series - Seasons)}}
 
The entire season is included within the Volume One DVD box set, which was released on March 25, 2003. The last four episodes were pre-empted by sporting events and pushed into the second broadcast season.<ref name="IGN Review">{{cite web |author=Tal Blevins |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2003/03/07/futurama-volume-one |title=Futurama Volume One|date=March 7, 2003|access-date=February 17, 2022|website=[[IGN]]|archive-date=April 18, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100418114156/http://dvd.ign.com/articles/388/388581p1.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
== Space Pilot 3000 ==
* Production Code: 1ACV01
* First Aired: [[1999]]-[[03-28]]
* Written by: [[David X. Cohen]], [[Matt Groening]]
* Directed by: [[Rich Moore]], [[Gregg Vanzo]]
* Opening Subtitle: IN COLOR
 
The full thirteen episodes of the season have been released on a box set called ''Futurama: Volume One'', on [[DVD]] and [[VHS]]. It was released in the United Kingdom, on January 28, 2002, in Australia on November 27, 2002 and in the United States and Canada on March 25, 2003. The season was re-released as ''Futurama: Volume 1'', with entirely different packaging to match the newer season releases on July 17, 2012.<ref name="FutuDVD2012">{{cite web |url=http://noreruns.net/2012/06/08/cool-new-cover-art-on-futurama-vol-1-4-dvd-re-releases/ |title=Cool new cover art on Futurama Vol. 1–4 DVD re-releases |author=Kyle Nolan |date=August 6, 2012 |access-date=June 8, 2012|archive-date=June 23, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120623064537/http://noreruns.net/2012/06/08/cool-new-cover-art-on-futurama-vol-1-4-dvd-re-releases/|url-status=live}}</ref>
=== Celebrity voice credits ===
* [[Dick Clark (entertainer)|Dick Clark]] - himself
* [[Leonard Nimoy]] - himself
 
=== Summary =Production==
[[File:David X. Cohen & Matt Groening by Gage Skidmore.jpg|thumb|left|[[David X. Cohen]] and [[Matt Groening]] at the ''Futurama'' panel of [[San Diego Comic-Con International|Comic-Con]] 2009.]]
Six seconds into the year [[2000]], [[New York, New York|New York]] [[pizza delivery]] boy [[Philip J. Fry]] delivers a pizza to a prank I.C. Wiener and is accidentally cryogenically frozen.
Matt Groening initially conceived of ''Futurama'' in the mid-1990s. In 1996, he enlisted [[David X. Cohen]], then a ''Simpsons'' writer and producer, to assist in developing the series;<ref name=Cohen>{{cite video |people=Cohen, David S |date=2007 |title=DVD commentary for the episode "Bart the Mother". The Simpsons The Complete Tenth Season |medium=DVD |publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> the two then spent time researching science fiction books, television shows, and films of the past. By the time they pitched the series to Fox in April 1998, Groening and Cohen had composed many characters and story lines. During that first meeting, Fox ordered thirteen episodes. Shortly after, however, Groening and Fox executives argued over whether the network would have any creative input into the show.<ref name="Needham">{{cite news |first=Alex |last=Needham |url=http://www.frcr.com/library/the_face1.html |title=Nice Planet...We'll Take It! |date=October 1999 |access-date=June 3, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000824051707/http://www.frcr.com/library/the_face1.html |archive-date=August 24, 2000}}</ref> With ''The Simpsons'' the network has no input.<ref name="Snierson">{{cite magazine |first=Dan |last=Snierson |url=http://www.frcr.com/library/ew_online1.html |title=Space Case |magazine=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |date=March 26, 1999 |access-date=June 3, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000824042829/http://www.frcr.com/library/ew_online1.html |archive-date=August 24, 2000}}</ref> Groening explains, "When they tried to give me notes on ''Futurama'', I just said: 'No, we're going to do this just the way we did ''Simpsons''.' And they said, 'Well, we don't do business that way anymore.' And I said, 'Oh, well, that's the only way I do business.'"<ref name="Mr. Showbiz">{{cite web |url=http://www.frcr.com/library/mrshowbiz1.html |title=Groening Bites the Hand that Feeds |publisher=Mr. Showbiz |date=April 8, 1999 |access-date=June 3, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000824051817/http://www.frcr.com/library/mrshowbiz1.html |archive-date=August 24, 2000}}</ref> After negotiations, he received the same independence with ''Futurama''. The name "Futurama" comes from a pavilion at the [[1939 New York World's Fair]]. Designed by [[Norman Bel Geddes]], the [[Futurama (New York World's Fair)|Futurama pavilion]] depicted how he imagined the world would look in 1959.<ref name="Strange Sounds">{{cite book |last=Taylor |first=Timothy Dean |title=Strange Sounds: Music, Technology & Culture |url=https://archive.org/details/strangesoundsmus00tayl|url-access=registration |publisher=[[Routledge]] |___location=Abingdon-on-Thames, England |date=2001 |isbn=0-415-93684-5 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/strangesoundsmus00tayl/page/104 104–105]}}</ref>
He is defrosted in New New York City one thousand years later, on [[December 31]], [[2999]].
After defrosting, he is brought to fate assignment officer 1BDI [[Turanga Leela]].
 
==Reception==
Permanently assigned the career of delivery boy, Fry flees the cryogenics facility into the city, with Leela in pursuit. While trying to track down his multiply-great-nephew, [[Professor Hubert Farnsworth]], Fry befriends a suicidal robot named [[Bender Bending Rodriguez|Bender]], meets the disembodied head of [[Leonard Nimoy]], and discovers the ruins of old New York.
The first season of ''Futurama'' received positive reviews from critics. Patrick Lee of ''[[Science Fiction Weekly]]'' commented, based on a viewing of "Space Pilot 3000" alone, that ''Futurama'' was not as funny as ''[[The Simpsons]]'', particularly as "the satire is leavened with treacly sentimental bits about free will and loneliness". The episode was rated as an "A- pick" and found to "warrant further viewing" despite these concerns.<ref name="SciFiWeekly">{{cite web |first=Patrick |last=Lee |url=http://www.scifi.com/sfw/issue101/screen.html |title=Futurama: The future's not what it used to be |website=[[Sci Fi Weekly]] |publisher=[[NBCUniversal]] |___location=New York City |date=March 22, 1999 |access-date=June 25, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070612205432/http://www.scifi.com/sfw/issue101/screen.html |archive-date=June 12, 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Rob Owen of the ''[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]'' noted that although the series' premiere contained the same skewed humor as ''The Simpsons'', it was not as smart and funny, and he attributed this to the large amount of exposition and character introduction required of a television series pilot, noting that the show was "off to a good start."<ref name="post">{{cite news |first=Rob |last=Owen |url= https://old.post-gazette.com/tv/19990326rob4.asp |title=Simpsons meet the Jetsons; 'The Devil's Arithmetic' |newspaper=[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]] |publisher=[[Block Communications]] |___location=Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |date=March 26, 1999 |access-date=February 17, 2022|archive-date=October 15, 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071015201738/http://post-gazette.com/tv/19990326rob4.asp|url-status=live}}</ref> Andrew Billen of ''[[New Statesman]]'' found the premise of "Space Pilot 3000" to be unoriginal, but remained somewhat enthusiastic about the future of the series. While he praised the humorous details of the episode, such as the background scenes while Fry was frozen, he also criticized the show's dependence on in-jokes such as Groening's head being present in the head museum.<ref name="NewStateman">{{cite magazine |first=Andrew |last=Billen |url=http://www.newstatesman.com/199909270044 |title=Laughing matters |date=September 27, 1999 |access-date=June 13, 2008 |magazine=[[New Statesman]]| archive-date=May 17, 2008| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080517014120/http://www.newstatesman.com/199909270044| url-status=live}}</ref> The episode was ranked in 2006 by [[IGN]] as number 14 in their list of the top 25 ''Futurama'' episodes.<ref name="IGN">{{cite web |url=http://tv.ign.com/articles/716/716663p3.html |title=Top 25 Futurama Episodes |website=[[IGN]] |access-date=November 4, 2006 |archive-date=March 2, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120302015540/http://tv.ign.com/articles/716/716663p3.html |url-status=live}}</ref> In the 2013/2019 reranking, the episode dropped to number 17.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Nicholson |first1=Max |title=The 25 Best Futurama Episodes |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/03/28/top-25-futurama-episodes |website=IGN |access-date=February 17, 2022 |date=March 28, 2019}}</ref> Tal Blevins of IGN had positive review on the season and said "You really can't go wrong wherever you look in Futurama Volume One, and there are no stinkers in this collection."<ref name="IGN Review"/> The season tied for 89th in the seasonal ratings tied with [[Profiler (TV series)|Profiler]] with an average viewership of 8.9 million viewers.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20091029011819/http://geocities.com/Hollywood/4616/ew0604.html Final ratings for the 1998–1999 TV season<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
 
The series' premiere "Space Pilot 3000" garnered "unprecedented strong numbers" with a [[Nielsen rating]] of 11.2/17 in homes and 9.6/23 in adults 18–49.<ref name="Variety">{{cite magazine |first=Tom |last=Bierbaum |url= https://variety.com/1999/tv/news/fox-sees-futurama-and-it-works-1117492811/ |title=Fox sees 'Futurama' and it works |magazine=Variety |date=March 30, 1999 |access-date=February 17, 2022|archive-date=October 15, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071015201346/http://variety.com/article/VR1117492811.html?categoryid=14&cs=1 |url-status=live}}</ref> The ''Futurama'' premiere was watched by more people than either its lead-in show (''The Simpsons'') or the show following it (''[[The X-Files]]''), and it was the number one show among men aged 18–49 and teenagers for the week.<ref name="WPost">{{cite news |first=Lisa |last=de Moraes |url=https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/access/40180027.html?dids=40180027:40180027&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=MAR+31%2C+1999&author=Lisa+de+Moraes&pub=The+Washington+Post&desc=%60Futurama'+Draws+Them+In&pqatl=google |title='Futurama' Draws Them In |newspaper=[[The Washington Post]] |date=March 31, 1999 |access-date=June 15, 2008|archive-date=October 1, 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071001060950/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/access/40180027.html?dids=40180027:40180027&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=MAR+31,+1999&author=Lisa+de+Moraes&pub=The+Washington+Post&desc=%60Futurama'+Draws+Them+In&pqatl=google|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="AWN">{{cite web |url= https://www.awn.com/news/futurama-has-popular-premiere |title="Futurama" has popular premiere |publisher=[[Animation World Network]] |date=April 4, 1999 |access-date=February 17, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060513025822/http://news.awn.com/index.php?ltype=search |archive-date=May 13, 2006}}</ref>
Leela abandons her job in the cryogenics facility, and joins Fry and Bender as a job deserter. The three find Professor Hubert Farnsworth, and he hires them as the new space ship crew for his package delivery service.
 
=== QuotesEpisodes ===
{{See also|List of Futurama episodes}}<!-- do not add sorting here, this season has all episode in the same order-->
:Fry: My God, it's the future! My parents, my coworkers, my girlfriend... I'll never see any of them again! (pause) Yahoo!
<onlyinclude>{{Episode table
|background=#000000
|overall = 5
|season = 5
|title = 20
|director = 17
|writer = 19
|airdate = 11
|prodcode = 6
|viewers = 9
|country = U.S.
|episodes =
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 1
| EpisodeNumber2 = 1
| Title = [[Space Pilot 3000]]
| DirectedBy = [[Rich Moore]] & [[Gregg Vanzo]]
| WrittenBy = [[David X. Cohen]] & [[Matt Groening]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|3|28}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV01
| Viewers = 19.04<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41319150/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (March 22–28, 1999)|date=March 31, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = Pizza delivery boy [[Philip J. Fry]] accidentally stumbles into a cryogenic freezer on December 31, 1999, and awakens one thousand years in the future on New Year's Eve, 2999. He meets a one-eyed career counselor named [[Leela (Futurama)|Leela]], who tries to assign him an eternal career as a delivery boy. Fry dislikes the idea and escapes into the city where he meets [[Bender Bending Rodríguez|Bender]], an alcoholic robot who has also abandoned his job, and the two become friends. Fry soon becomes depressed that he can never return to his old life and surrenders to Leela, but she realizes that she also hates her job and quits. Now fugitives, the three visit Fry's descendant, [[Hubert J. Farnsworth|Professor Farnsworth]], who helps them escape from the police on his intergalactic spaceship as the world celebrates the year 3000. Farnsworth hires the three to become his crew for his intergalactic delivery service, Planet Express, with Fry becoming a delivery boy.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 2
| EpisodeNumber2 = 2
| Title = [[The Series Has Landed]]
| DirectedBy = [[Peter Avanzino]]
| WrittenBy = [[Ken Keeler]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|4|4}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV02
| Viewers = 14.23<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41299838/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (March 29-April 4, 1999)|date=April 7, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = The new Planet Express crew receive their first mission: a delivery to an amusement park on the Moon. Fry is enthusiastic about the idea of going to the Moon, but is disappointed that people only go there for the amusement park and wants to see the "real Moon". He hijacks one of the rides with Leela, but gets them both stranded on the Moon's surface. Low on oxygen, they take refuge in a hydroponic farm, but Bender, who was kicked out of the amusement park, makes advances on one of the farmer's robot daughters, forcing the three to flee from the angry farmer. Fry and Leela find and take shelter in the [[Apollo 11]] lander until all three are rescued by Planet Express intern [[Amy Wong]].
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 3
| EpisodeNumber2 = 3
| Title = [[I, Roommate]]
| DirectedBy = [[Bret Haaland]]
| WrittenBy = [[Eric Horsted]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|4|6}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV03
| Viewers = 8.89<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41308705/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (April 5–11, 1999)|date=April 14, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = Fry lives in the Planet Express building until he is kicked out for his messiness. He initially moves in with Bender, but his new apartment is little more than a cramped closet, so they both move into a more spacious and furnished apartment. During the housewarming party, it is discovered that Bender's antenna interferes with the entire building's satellite TV reception, and Bender is evicted while Fry stays with little regard for his friend's troubles. Depressed, Bender goes on a self-destructive sobriety binge until he cuts off his antenna in the hopes of moving back with Fry. Realizing that Bender's antenna is vital to his self-esteem, Fry helps Bender reattach it and moves back into Bender's old apartment. It is then revealed that Bender's apartment has a "closet" that is the size of a complete living suite with more than enough room for Fry, so Fry decides to move there instead.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 4
| EpisodeNumber2 = 4
| Title = [[Love's Labours Lost in Space]]
| DirectedBy = [[Brian Sheesley]]
| WrittenBy = [[Brian Kelley (writer)|Brian Kelley]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|4|13}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV04
| Viewers = 10.14<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41320437/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (April 12–18, 1999)|date=April 21, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = The Planet Express crew goes on a mission to rescue animals on Vergon 6, a planet on the verge of collapse. On the way, they meet [[Zapp Brannigan]], who Leela is initially flattered to meet until he imprisons them. That night, Zapp tries to seduce Leela, succeeding in getting her to sympathize with his loneliness as a captain, and she has [[sexual intercourse|sex]] with him out of pity. The next day, Zapp decides to release the crew and allows them to travel to Vergon 6. While collecting the animals, Leela discovers another creature not on their list and decides to save it as well, naming it [[Nibbler (Futurama)|Nibbler]], who subsequently devours all the other animals they saved. The planet begins to collapse and the crew find their ship is out of fuel. Leela refuses to accept Zapp's help when he tells them Nibbler must remain behind, and the crew resign to their fate until Nibbler excretes a pellet of dark matter, which gives them enough fuel to escape before the planet implodes.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 5
| EpisodeNumber2 = 5
| Title = [[Fear of a Bot Planet]]
| DirectedBy = Peter Avanzino & Carlos Baeza
| WrittenBy = Evan Gore & Heather Lombard
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|4|20}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV05
| Viewers = 9.69<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41320804/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (April 19–25, 1999)|date=April 28, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = The Planet Express crew deliver a package to Chapek 9, a planet inhabited entirely by human-hating robots who kill humans on sight. Bender is sent to deliver the package alone, but is captured upon discovery that he works for humans, so Fry and Leela disguise themselves as robots and infiltrate the robot society. When they find Bender, they discover that Bender has made himself an idol among the other robots out of frustration of feeling unappreciated by his crew. Fry and Leela are captured, but Bender refuses to kill his friends. They soon learn that the planet's government is merely using humans as a scapegoat to distract the population from a valuable lug nut shortage. The three escape the planet and Bender, remembering he forgot to deliver the package, drops it onto the robots chasing them, revealing a shower of lug nuts and causing the robots to renounce their human-hating ways.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 6
| EpisodeNumber2 = 6
| Title = [[A Fishful of Dollars]]
| DirectedBy = [[Ron Hughart]] & Gregg Vanzo
| WrittenBy = [[Patric Verrone|Patric M. Verrone]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|4|27}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV06
| Viewers = 9.70<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41320129/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (April 26-May 2, 1999)|date=May 5, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = Fry checks his bank account for the first time in a thousand years and discovers that he has become a multi-billionaire thanks to compound interest. He goes on a massive spending spree and buys various 20th century artifacts, including the last unopened can of [[anchovy|anchovies]], which have gone extinct. [[Mom (Futurama)|Mom]], a famous industrialist and oil tycoon, feels threatened that the anchovies' oil could be used to put her out of business, so she sends her sons to steal Fry's ATM and PIN. Fry's bank account is emptied and his 20th century artifacts are repossessed except for the anchovies, which Mom hopes Fry will sell to her. However, she stops interfering once she learns that Fry intends to serve the anchovies on a pizza to share with his friends, who end up hating it.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 7
| EpisodeNumber2 = 7
| Title = [[My Three Suns]]
| DirectedBy = [[Jeffrey Lynch]] & [[Kevin O'Brien (director)|Kevin O'Brien]]
| WrittenBy = [[J. Stewart Burns]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|5|4}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV07
| Viewers = 8.24<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41313596/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (May 3–9, 1999)|date=May 12, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = The crew are sent to make a delivery on the planet of Trisol, but Fry is stricken by extreme thirst after traveling on foot under the planet's three blazing suns and, upon arrival at the planetary palace, drinks what appears to be a bottle of water. It turns out that the "water" is in fact the emperor of the planet's liquid-based inhabitants, and Fry is declared the planet's new emperor. Before Fry's coronation, Leela tries to warn him that each of the planet's emperors have been killed and succeeded on a weekly basis, but Fry refuses to listen and Leela vows to never help him again. When the sun sets after Fry's coronation, the Trisolians begin to glow, including the previous emperor, who is still alive in Fry's stomach and orders him to be cut open and drained. Leela ultimately decides to help save Fry from being killed by beating him up, causing Fry to weep in pain and gradually cry out the emperor.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 8
| EpisodeNumber2 = 8
| Title = [[A Big Piece of Garbage]]
| DirectedBy = [[Susie Dietter|Susan Dietter]]
| WrittenBy = [[Lewis Morton]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|5|11}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV08
| Viewers = 8.45<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41314884/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (May 10–16, 1999)|date=May 19, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = After forgetting to bring an invention to an academic symposium and being humiliated by his arch-nemesis, Ogden Wernstrom, Professor Farnsworth discovers another invention he attempted to substitute, the "Smell-O-Scope", and uses it to discover than an enormous ball of garbage that was launched into space in the year 2000 is now on a collision course back to Earth. The Planet Express crew are sent to destroy it in space with explosives, but Professor Farnsworth blunders the installation of the bomb's timer and the plan fails. In desperation, Farnsworth proposes they deflect the ball into the Sun by launching another ball of garbage into it. Fry teaches the city how to make garbage, since everyone forgot how to do so over the centuries. The plan succeeds while the new ball flies out into the [[Solar System]], and Farnsworth regains his honor.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 9
| EpisodeNumber2 = 9
| Title = [[Hell Is Other Robots]]
| DirectedBy = Rich Moore
| WrittenBy = [[Eric Kaplan]]
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|5|18}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV09
| Viewers = 7.39<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41321453/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (May 17–23, 1999)|date=May 26, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = Bender becomes addicted to electricity and ends up wrecking the Planet Express ship while steering it into an electrical storm in space, nearly killing everyone. After being confronted about his addiction, Bender realizes he has a problem and finds religion at the Temple of Robotology. He begins repenting for his evil ways, but annoys and disturbs his fellow crew members in doing so. Deciding they want the old Bender back, Fry and Leela persuade him to revert to his former self. As punishment for turning his back on his faith, Bender is sent to Robot Hell, but Fry and Leela find and save him from eternal damnation at the hands of the Robot Devil.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 10
| EpisodeNumber2 = 10
| Title = [[A Flight to Remember]]
| DirectedBy = Peter Avanzino
| WrittenBy = Eric Horsted
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|9|26}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV10
| Viewers = 11.54<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41321901/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (Sept. 20-26, 1999)|date=September 29, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = The Planet Express crew take a luxury cruise on the largest space ship ever built: the ''[[RMS Titanic|Titanic]]''. On board, Bender meets the lovely robot Countess de la Roca. At first, he is only attracted to her for her wealth and pretends to be rich himself, but the two genuinely fall in love even after Bender's secret is exposed. Meanwhile, to avoid the advances of the ''Titanic''{{'}}s captain, Zapp, Leela pretends to be engaged to Fry. However, Amy passes herself off as Fry's girlfriend to her parents to keep them from meddling with her love life, which makes Leela jealous. Before the fake relationships are exposed, the ''Titanic'' becomes entangled in a swarm of comets as a result of Zapp changing course and is piloted into a black hole. The Planet Express crew are safely evacuated on the ship's escape pods, with the Countess sacrificing herself to save Bender's life.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 11
| EpisodeNumber2 = 11
| Title = [[Mars University]]
| DirectedBy = Bret Haaland
| WrittenBy = J. Stewart Burns
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|10|3}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV11
| Viewers = 10.79<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41309444/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (Sept. 27-Oct. 3, 1999)|date=October 6, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = Fry attends Mars University with the intention of dropping out of college and becomes the roommate of Guenter, a monkey who is made intelligent by an electronium hat provided by the Professor. Fry becomes bitter rivals with Guenter and humiliates him during the parents' reception party by releasing his unintelligent, feral parents, which makes Guenter unhappy about his current lifestyle. Guenter gradually becomes stressed to the point of taking off his hat and fleeing into the Martian jungle. Fry, Leela, and Farnsworth find him and try to make him choose between an intelligent life and the life of a normal monkey, but the three are swept into a river by Bender during a raft regatta. Guenter falls off a cliff after saving the three from falling over a waterfall using the intelligence provided by his hat. The hat breaks his fall and begins working at half its usual capacity, and Guenter becomes content with his now average intelligence.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 12
| EpisodeNumber2 = 12
| Title = [[When Aliens Attack]]
| DirectedBy = Brian Sheesley
| WrittenBy = Ken Keeler
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|11|7}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV12
| Viewers = 12.25<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41313745/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 1-7, 1999)|date=November 10, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = Earth is invaded by aliens from Omicron Persei 8, who seemingly demand the planet hand over its president. It turns out, however, that the one they are referring to is the main character of a 20th century TV show, ''Single Female Lawyer'', the final episode of which was disrupted before it was concluded when Fry accidentally spilled beer on a control panel from the station it was broadcast from back in 1999. The Omicronians threaten Earth to broadcast the episode or be destroyed, but because no copy of the episode exists anymore, the Planet Express crew are forced to reenact it. The resulting product is crude, but with Fry's guidance, the Omicronians are satisfied with the ending and leave the partially destroyed Earth.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
{{Episode list/sublist|Futurama season 1
| EpisodeNumber = 13
| EpisodeNumber2 = 13
| Title = [[Fry and the Slurm Factory]]
| DirectedBy = Ron Hughart
| WrittenBy = Lewis Morton
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1999|11|14}}
| ProdCode = 1ACV13
| Viewers = 12.86<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times/41320730/|title=National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 8-14, 1999)|date=November 17, 1999|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=March 11, 2022|via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}{{free access}}</ref>
| ShortSummary = Fry wins a contest that allows him and the Planet Express crew to tour the factory where his favorite soft drink, Slurm, is made. During the tour, Fry, Leela, and Bender stumble into the factory's underbelly where they discover that the drink is actually the secretion of a giant worm, the Slurm Queen, as part of a money-making plot. The Queen discovers the three and, fearing her company will be ruined if the scandal is exposed, attempts to silence them, but they escape. However, Fry cannot bring himself to ruin his favorite drink, so the Planet Express crew decide to keep the plot a secret.
| LineColor = 000000
}}
}}</onlyinclude>
 
==Home releases==
== The Series Has Landed ==
[[File:Futurama1dvd.jpg|thumb|upright=0.77|right|The original 2002 ''Volume One'' DVD cover.]]
* Production Code: 1ACV02
{|class="wikitable" style="width:55em;"
* First Aired: [[1999]]-[[04-04]]
|+''Futurama: Volume One''
* Written by: [[Ken Keeler]]
!style="background-color:#c9e7e9;" scope="col" colspan="3" width="50%"|Set details
* Directed by: [[Peter Avanzino]]
!style="background-color:#c9e7e9;" scope="col" width="50%"|Special features
* Opening Subtitle: IN HYPNO-VISION
|-
|valign="top" colspan="3" scope="row"|
* 13 episodes
* 3-disc set (DVD)
* [[Aspect ratio (image)|1.33:1 aspect ratio]]
* Languages:
** English ([[Dolby Surround]])
* Subtitles:
** English SDH
** French
** Spanish
|valign="top" rowspan="4" scope="row"|
* Optional commentaries for all 13 episodes
* Script for "Space Pilot 3000" with notes by [[David X. Cohen]]
* Animatic for "[[Space Pilot 3000]]"
* Storyboard
* Deleted scenes
* Season One featurette
* Image gallery
* Hidden movie poster [[easter eggs]]
|-
!style="background-color:#c9e7e9;" scope="col" colspan="3"|Release dates
|-
!scope="col"|[[DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 1]]
!scope="col"|[[DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 2]]
!scope="col"|[[DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 4]]
|-
|scope="row" align="center"|March 25, 2003
|scope="row" align="center"|January 28, 2002
|scope="row" align="center"|November 27, 2002
|}
 
{|class="wikitable" style="width:60em;"
The title is a reference to [[Apollo 11]] astronaut [[Neil Armstrong]]'s transmission to [[NASA]] Mission Control that "the Eagle has landed".
|+''Futurama: Volume 1''
!style="background-color:#000000;" scope="col" colspan="3" width="50%"|{{white|Set details}}
!style="background-color:#000000;" scope="col" width="50%"|{{white|Special features}}
|-
|valign="top" colspan="3" scope="row"|
* 13 episodes
* 3-disc set (DVD)
* [[Aspect ratio (image)|1.33:1 aspect ratio]]
* Languages:
** English ([[Dolby Surround]])
* Subtitles:
** English SDH
** French
** Spanish
|valign="top" rowspan="4" scope="row"|
Features different packaging to previous release of season, to match newer season releases.
* Optional commentaries for all 13 episodes
* Script for "Space Pilot 3000" with notes by [[David X. Cohen]]
* Animatic for "[[Space Pilot 3000]]"
* Storyboard
* Deleted scenes
* Season One featurette
* Image gallery
* Hidden movie poster [[easter eggs]]
|-
!style="background-color:#000000;" scope="col" colspan="3"|{{white|Release dates}}
|-
!scope="col"|[[DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 1]]
!scope="col"|[[DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 2]]
!scope="col"|[[DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 4]]
|-
|scope="row" align="center"|July 17, 2012<ref name="FutuDVD2012"/>
|scope="row" {{n/a|TBA}}
|scope="row" align="center"|March 13, 2013<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sanity.com.au/products/2220532/Futurama_S1 |title=Futurama; S1 |publisher=[[Sanity (music store)|Sanity]] |access-date=August 19, 2013|archive-date=January 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140116124440/http://www.sanity.com.au/products/2220532/Futurama_S1|url-status=live}}</ref>
|}
 
=== Summary =References==
{{reflist}}
 
==External links==
Settling into their new jobs, Fry, Leela, and Bender are introduced to the other Planet Express employees: Company physician [[Dr. Zoidberg]], intern [[Amy Wong]], and bureaucrat [[Hermes Conrad]].
*{{IMDb episodes|0149460}}
 
{{Futurama}}
On their first mission, a simple delivery to the [[Moon]], Fry undergoes severe culture shock. Rather than being a daring voyage of exploration, lunar travel has become a day trip to an amusement park, and the historical accomplishments of [[Project Apollo]] have been replaced by ridiculous "fungineering" musicals about "whalers on the moon".
{{Futurama episodes|1}}
 
[[Category:Futurama lists]]
Attempting to see the real Moon, Fry and Leela hijack a car from the lunar rover ride, and take it offroad. Meanwhile, Amy loses the keys to the ship, and has to recover them from a video arcade [[crane game]].
[[Category:1999 American animated television seasons]]
 
[[Category:Futurama season 1 episodes| ]]
Running dangerously low on [[oxygen]], Fry and Leela take refuge on a hydroponic farm. After Bender arrives and seduces the farmer's robot daughters, the three end up on the run, trying to out-distance both the farmer's shotgun, and the lunar [[terminator]].
[[Category:Futurama seasons]]
 
Fry and Leela take refuge in the lander, and Amy rescues them, as well as Bender, with her newly-developed crane operation skills.hi
 
=== Quotes ===
:Narrator: Planet Express: our crew is replaceable, your package isn't!
 
:Professor: I paid to have it aired during the Super Bowl.
:Fry: Wow!
:Professor: Not on the same channel, of course.
 
:Bender: Yeah! Well, I'm gonna go build my own theme park. With blackjack and hookers! In fact, forget the park!
:&nbsp;<i>later&hellip;</i>
:Bender: Oh, no room for Bender, huh? Fine, I'll go build my own lunar lander! With blackjack and hookers! In fact, forget the lunar lander and the blackjack! Ah, screw the whole thing!
 
== I, Roommate ==
* Production Code: 1ACV03
* First aired [[1999]]-[[04-06]]
* Written by: [[Eric Horsted]]
* Directed by: [[Bret Haaland]]
* Opening Subtitle: AS SEEN ON TV
 
The title, "I, Roommate", presumably comes from [[Isaac Asimov]]'s novel [[I, Robot]].
 
=== Summary ===
 
Fry has been living in the Planet Express offices since he arrived in the year 3000, and his slovenly habits have had a negative impact on his co-workers. Rather than letting Fry rot on the streets, Bender offers to let Fry move in with him.
 
Several days later, Fry discovers that he can't take living in Bender's 2 cubic meter apartment, and the two begin a search for living space that will satisfy them both. When one of Professor Farnsworth's colleagues dies, Fry and Bender lease his old apartment.
 
After discovering that his antenna interferes with the building's televisions, Bender is forced to relocate back to his old residence. Distraught at the separation from his friend, Bender goes on a self-destructive sobriety binge.
 
Out of concern for Bender, Fry moves back into Bender's old apartment, and discovers that Bender's oversized closet has more than enough room for a human to live comfortably.
 
=== Quotes ===
:Bender: I'm trying to watch my input. I need plenty of wholesome, nutritious alcohol. The chemical energy keeps my fuel cells charged.
:Fry: What are the cigars for?
:Bender: They make me look cool.
 
:Bender: Not enough room!? My place is two cubic meters and we only take up 1.5 cubic meters! We've got room for a whole 'nother two-thirds of a person!
 
== Love's Labors Lost In Space ==
* Production Code: 1ACV04
* First aired: [[1999]]-[[04-13]]
* Written by: [[Brian Kelley]]
* Directed by: [[Brian Sheesley]]
* Opening Subtitle: presented in BC [Brain Control] where available
 
Obviously, the title of the episode is a riff on [[Shakespeare]]'s play [[Love's Labour's Lost]], crossed with ''[[Lost in Space]]''.
 
=== Summary ===
 
After an unsuccessful attempt by Amy to introduce Leela to eligible bachelors at a New New York nightclub, the crew gets sent on a tax-deductible charity mission. The uninhabited planet Vergon 6 has been mined hollow, and is about to collapse. The crew is sent to recover two of each kind of animal native to the planet for breeding purposes.
 
Unfortunately, Vergon 6 has been declared restricted due to its undeveloped status, under Brannigan's Law (a parody of [[Star Trek]]'s [[Prime Directive]]). The Planet Express crew is arrested by legendary space captain Zapp Brannigan, who immediately attempts to seduce Leela.
 
Leela initially rebuffs Brannigan, but eventually succumbs to pity for the desperate fool, a fact that Brannigan brings up in every later appearance in the series.
 
The sexually satisfied Brannigan allows the Planet Express crew to depart for Vergon 6, and the crew proceeds to collect the strange animals. While working on their checklist, they discover a small black and white creature with a third eye on a stalk. Leela decides to rescue it as well, names it Nibbler, and places it in the cargo hold with the other animals. When Fry, Leela, and Bender return with the last animal, they discover that the mystery creature has devoured all the other animals.
 
The planet begins to collapse, and when the crew tries to escape, they discover that the ship is out of fuel. Leela refuses to beg Zapp Brannigan for assistance, and the crew settles in for their inevitable deaths. The ship shifts to one side, and the crew discovers that Nibbler has defecated a small pellet of dark matter, which is the fuel the ship runs on. Bender tosses the ultra-dense pellet into the engine, and the crew returns safely to [[Earth]].
 
=== Quotes ===
:Leela: They say Zapp Brannigan single-handedly saved the Octillion system from a horde of rampaging Killbots!
:Fry: Wow.
:Bender: A grim day for robotkind. Eh, but we can always build more Killbots.
 
:Zapp: "Killbots? A trifle. It was simply a matter of outsmarting them."
:Fry: "Wow, I never would've thought of that."
:Zapp: "You see, killbots have a preset kill limit. Knowing their weakness, I sent wave after wave of my own men at them until they reached their limit and shut down."
 
:Zapp Brannigan: As my protege, you should know that the only way to deal with a female adversary is to seduce her.
:Kif Kroker: [sighs]
:Zapp Brannigan: This time we are sure she's a woman, right?
:Kif Kroker: (exasperated) Yes!
 
== Fear of a Bot Planet ==
* Production Code: 1ACV05
* First aired: [[1999]]-[[04-20]]
* Written by: [[Evan Gore]], [[Heather Lombard]]
* Co-directed by: [[Ashley Lenz]], [[Chris Suave]]
* Directed by: [[Peter Avanzino]], [[Carlos Baeze]]
* Opening Subtitle: Featuring GRATIOUS ALIEN NUDITY
 
The title comes from the album ''[[Fear of a Black Planet]]'' by [[Public Enemy]].
 
=== Summary ===
 
While attending a New New York Mets blernsball game, the crew is called back to the office for a delivery mission. The delivery is to Chapek 9, a planet inhabited by human-hating robots, so Bender is assigned the duty of performing the actual delivery.
 
Upon arriving at the planet, a resentful Bender is lowered to the surface using the ship's winch. Fry and Leela receive a rushed message from Bender, who has been captured by the robot seperatists for being a human sympathizer. Fry and Leela disguise themselves as robots, and infiltrate the robot society.
 
After hiding out in a robot movie theater, Fry and Leela blend in with the crowd at the opening ceremonies of the daily human hunt. There they discover Bender is alive and playing the robots' prejudice for his own benefit.
 
Fry and Leela reunite with an isolated Bender during the hunt, but he refuses their rescue. Before Fry and Leela can leave, the other robots arrive and they are placed on trial for being human. After being sentenced to a life of tedious work, they are dropped through a trap door, where they meet the five robot elders. The robot elders command Bender to kill Fry and Leela, but he refuses.
 
The robot elders reveal that humans are just being used as a scapegoat to distract the populace. Fry threatens to breathe fire on the robot elders, throwing them into a state of confusion. The crew escapes, and is pursued by a horde of robots. As the crew escapes on the winch, Bender remembers that he never actually delivered the package. The package falls to the ground, and the robots are showered in much-needed [[Nut (hardware)|lug nuts]].
 
=== Quotes ===
:Fry: I don't get this. Is blernsball exactly the same as baseball?
:Prof. Farnsworth: Baseball? God forbid.
:Leela: Face it Fry, baseball was as boring as mom and apple pie. That's why they jazzed it up.
:Fry: Boring? Baseball wasn't... so they finally jazzed it up.
 
:Bender: Admit it, you all think robots are just machines built by humans to make their lives easier.
:Fry: Well, aren't they?
:Bender: I've never made anyone's life easier, and you know it.
 
== A Fishful of Dollars ==
* Production Code: 1ACV06
* First aired: [[1999]]-[[04-27]]
* Written by: [[Patrick M. Verrone]]
* Directed by: [[Ron Hughart]], [[Gregg Vanzo]]
* Opening Subtitle: LOADING..
 
Presumably the title is a riff on the [[Clint Eastwood]]/[[Sergio Leone]] [[Spaghetti Western]] ''[[A Fistful of Dollars]]''.
 
=== Celebrity voice credit ===
* [[Pamela Anderson]] - herself
 
=== Summary ===
A broke Fry discovers that his old bank account is still active, and has been accruing [[interest]] for the past thousand years, bringing the balance to $4.3 billion. Fry goes on a massive spending spree, buying numerous [[20th century]] artifacts, including the last known tin of now-extinct [[anchovy|anchovies]].
 
Mom, famous industrialist and owner of Mom's Old-Fashioned Robot Oil, wants to secure the anchovies for her own purposes. Anchovy oil could be used to permanently lubricate robots, and therefore represent an enormous threat to Mom's business interests.
 
Mom's sons Walt, Larry, and Ignar conspire with the head of [[Pamela Anderson]] to steal Fry's [[Automatic teller machine|ATM]] card and [[Personal identification number|PIN]], which they use to bankrupt Fry. All of Fry's 20th century artifacts are repossessed, except the anchovies, which Fry had hidden in his sock.
 
After Mom discovers Fry intends to eat the anchovies, she stops interfering. Fry covers a pizza with the anchovies, and shares them with the rest of the Planet Express employees.
 
=== Quotes ===
:Fry: That's awful, it's like brainwashing.
:Leela: Didn't you have ads in the 20th century?
:Fry: Well sure, but not in our dreams, only on TV and radio. And in magazines. And movies. And at ballgames, on buses, and milk cartons and t-shirts and bananas and written on the sky. But not in dreams, no siree!
 
 
 
== My Three Suns ==
* Production Code: 1ACV07
* First aired: [[1999]]-[[05-04]]
* Written by: [[J. Stewart Burns]]
* Directed by: [[Jeffrey Lynch]], [[Kevin O'Brien]]
* Opening Subtitle: PRESENTED IN DOUBLE VISION (WHERE DRUNK)
 
The title is a reference to the [[1960s]] sitcom [[My Three Sons]].
 
=== Summary ===
 
Hermes threatens to fire Bender, since Bender has no official duties at Planet Express. Inspired by the neptunian TV chef Elzar, Bender decides to be the ship's cook. Professor Farnsworth sends the crew off on a delivery to the planet Trisol, and Bender serves the crew a meal of almost pure [[Sodium chloride|salt]].
 
After the ship lands, Fry is assigned the task of making the delivery trek across the desert under the planet's three blazing suns. When he arrives at his destination, the Trisolian palace, he finds it empty. Stricken with thirst, he grabs a bottle of blue liquid that is sitting on the throne and consumes it.
 
Armed guards storm the throne room, revealing that the bottle Fry drank was actually the emperor, in liquid form. Rather than being punished, Fry is declared the new emperor.
 
Fry opens the package (addressed to "Emperor"), revealing a small sign reading "Please don't drink the emperor". The high priest Merg informs Fry that as part of the coronation, Fry will have to recite the royal oath, under penalty of death.
 
During the pre-coronation party, Leela informs Fry that the average reign of a Trisolian emperor is only one week. When Fry refuses to listen to her warning, Leela returns to the ship, vowing not to help Fry again.
 
At the coronation, Fry recites the oath (with help from some notes written on his forearm), and is sworn in as Fry the Solid. As the suns set, the Trisolians begin to glow, including the former emperor Bunt, who demands that Fry be cut open and drained.
 
The crew (minus Leela) takes refuge in the throne room, and try to work out a way to extract the emperor without killing Fry. Bender calls Leela on Fry's behalf, but gets an inconclusive response. After Leela arrives, she begins beating Fry, causing him to cry in pain, extracting the emperor. With the emperor safely outside Fry's body, the crew is allowed to leave.
 
 
=== Quotes ===
:Prof. Farnsworth: Good news, everyone!
:Bender: Uh oh, I don't like the sound of that.
:Prof. Farnsworth: You'll be making a delivery to the planet Trisol
:Bender: Here it comes.
:Prof. Farnsworth: A mysterious world in the darkest depths of the Forbidden Zone.
:Bender: Thank you, and goodnight.
:Leela: Professor, are we even allowed in the Forbidden Zone?
:Prof. Farnsworth: Why of course! It's just a name, like the Death Zone, or the Zone of no return. All the zones have names like that in the Galaxy of Terror.
:Leela: Uh, Professor...
:Prof. Farnsworth: Off you go!
 
 
 
== A Big Piece of Garbage ==
* Production Code: 1ACV08
* First aired: [[1999]]-[[05-11]]
* Written by: [[Lewis Morton]]
* Directed by: [[Susan Dietter]]
* Opening Subtitle: Mr. Bender's Wardrobe by ROBOTANY 500
* During the closing credits, the song We'll Meet Again plays; an homage to executive producer [[David X. Cohen]]'s favourite film [[Dr. Strangelove]].
 
=== Celebrity voice credit ===
* [[Ron Popeil]] - himself
* [[Nancy Cartwright (actor)|Nancy Cartwright]] - Bart Simpson Dolls (uncredited)
 
=== Summary ===
 
When he presents a poorly-drawn sketch for a smelloscope at the Academy of Science symposium, Professor Farnsworth is publicly humiliated by his long-term rival, Ogden Wernstrom. On returning to the lab, Farnsworth vows to build the smelloscope, but quickly remembers that he already built one.
 
Fry begins pointing the smelloscope around, and discovers the smelliest object in the universe (a stench so foul, it ranks right off the funkometer). After calculating its path, the Professor announces that the object is on a path to collide with New New York in 72 hours. After some research, a video is produced, revealing the object to be a giant ball of garbage launched into space by New York around [[2050]].
 
After warning New New York Mayor Poopenmayer, a plan is hatched to destroy the garbage ball. The Planet Express crew is sent on a suicide mission to plant a bomb on the ball. However, Professor Farnsworth botches the installation of the timer, and the crew is forced to throw the bomb into space to save themselves.
 
Attempting to redeem himself, Farnsworth formulates a second plan to save the city: Launch a second ball of garbage to bounce the first one away. Using Fry's [[20th century]] garbage-making skills, the city of New New York quickly generates a second ball of garbage, which succeeds in saving the city.
 
=== Quotes ===
:Leela: Should we really be celebrating? I mean, what if the second ball of garbage returns to Earth like the first one did?
:Fry: Who cares? That won't be for hundreds of years
:Professor Farnsworth: Exactly. It's none of our concern.
:Fry: That's the 20th century spirit!
 
== Hell Is Other Robots ==
* Production Code: 1ACV09
* First aired: [[1999]]-[[05-18]]
* Written by: [[Eric Kaplan]]
* Directed by: [[Rich Moore]]
* Opening Subtitle: Condemned by the Space Pope
 
The title seems to be a riff on a famous line ("Hell is other people") from [[Jean Paul Sartre]]'s one act play [[No Exit]].
 
=== Celebrity voice credits ===
* [[Beastie Boys|Mike Diamond]] - himself
* [[Beastie Boys|Adam Horovitz]] - himself
* [[Dan Castellanetta]]- Robot Devil (aka Beelzebot)
 
=== Summary ===
 
After a [[Beastie Boys]] concert, Bender attends a post-concert party where he develops an electricity addiction. Realizing he has a problem, Bender joins the Temple of [[Robotology]], on pain of eternal damnation in Robot Hell. After being baptised, the Preacherbot welds the symbol of Robotology to Bender's case.
 
After Bender annoys his coworkers with his new-found religion, Fry and Leela decide to reacquaint him with his old lifestyle. They fake a delivery to [[Atlantic City, New Jersey|Atlantic City]], and tempt Bender with alcohol, prostitutes, and easy targets for theft. Bender succumbs, rips off the Robotology symbol, and tosses it away. The symbol beeps ominously as it sinks into a bowl of dip.
 
Later, Bender is interruped in the process of seducing three female robots by a knock at his hotel room door. When he opens the door, an orange glow spills into the room, and a pitchfork reaches into the room and knocks him out. He awakens to a greeting from the Robot Devil and finds himself in Robot Hell. Fry and Leela discover that Bender is missing, and attempt to track him down using Nibbler's sense of smell.
 
While in Robot Hell, the Robot Devil informs Bender that he agreed to be punished for sinning when he joined Robotology. Following Bender's scent, Fry and Leela arrive at an abandoned New Jersey amusement park, where they find the entrance to Robot Hell.
 
A musical number starts as the Robot Devil begins detailing Bender's punishment. As the song ends, Fry and Leela arrive, and try to bargain for Bender's life. The Robot Devil tells them that the only way to win back Bender's soul is to beat him in playing contest using a solid gold violin ( a reference to the song ''[[The Devil Went Down to Georgia]]''. When Leela's fiddle playing pales to the Robot Devil's performance, she takes the unsportsmanlike action of beating the Robot Devil with the fiddle.
 
As the three flee the Robot Devil's clutches, Bender steals the wings off a flying torture robot, attaches him to his back, and airlifts Fry and Leela to safety.
 
=== Quotes ===
:Fry: Bender's stupid religion is driving me nuts!
:Leela: Amen.
:Professor Farnsworth: If only he had joined a mainstream religion, like [[Oprah Winfrey|Oprahism]], or [[Vodun|Voodoo]].
 
:Leela: Who would have ever thought there was such a place as Robot Hell, and that it would be in New Jersey?
 
==External links ==
* ''[http://www.bcdb.com/cartoons/20th_Century_Fox/Television/Futurama/index.html Futurama]'' at the [[Big Cartoon DataBase]]
 
 
[[Category:Futurama episodes|1]]
 
[[sv:Futurama_-_S%E4song_1]]