Neutopia

The crew members encounter a bizarre alien with the power to change their sexual characteristics.

Act I: "Who ever heard of a plane with a woman President?"
After a series of poor business decisions, a cash-strapped Planet Express is unable to pay the mortgage on its headquarters, and faces foreclosure; however, if the company is able to pay off the mortgage, it will be able to keep the building and remain in business. The crew begins brainstorming some money-making ideas, and Leela suggests converting Planet Express into a commercial airline, as they already have a ship, and teleportation technology will not be invented for another 15 years (according to the account of a time traveler). This idea is shot down by the male crew members, who instead propose making a Planet Express-themed pin-up calendar, as all Planet Express employees have a clause in their contracts which specifically states that "all female employees must pose nude if requested".

Leela and Amy grudgingly agree to participate, along with LaBarbara, who is hired to the company in order to more fully flesh out the calendar; however, this still only makes three women, dooming the project to failure. The Professor announces his new idea to found a private airline, ignoring Leela's protests that she came up with the idea first. The Planet Express ship is converted into a space-capable airplane, and the female crew members are initially relieved that they will no longer have to pose in humiliating outfits, only to learn that, instead, they will be forced to wear similarly skimpy stewardesses' uniforms. Hermes and Fry are made captains (or "presidents") of the ship, although Leela is the only qualified pilot onboard. On its maiden voyage, after the ship is two days overdue to land at its destination of Acapulsar, Leela enters the cockpit to find that Hermes and Fry are asleep at the controls, and the ship has run out of fuel.

Act II: "Test number one: Who can drink the most sulfur?"
The ship crashes on a barren, rocky planet with rivers of mercury. The passengers and crew&mdash;16 in total, eight women and eight men&mdash;begin bickering among themselves over who should take command and what their next course of action should be. The group is approached by a rock alien who asks to speak with their leader, triggering another argument. The alien is fascinated by the group's division along gender lines (revealing that its species has only one gender, referred to as "nuchacho"), and administers a series of tests to determine which gender is superior, although the results are inconclusive. To settle the matter, the alien reveals that tomorrow morning, the planet they are on will reach perihelion with its sun, and the resulting increase in temperature will kill anyone left exposed on the surface. However, there is an icy mountain several miles away, containing a "Cave of Harmony" that will provide shelter. The first group to reach it, men or women, will survive.

The contest does not go well for either group; the men continually travel in circles, while the women chase after a mirage of a department-store clearance sale. The planet is already beginning to warm up, making the journey more difficult. Leela remembers that one of their group, Amana, is a refrigeration robot, and it would be possible to combine her freon with a gas compressor from Bender's ass in order to build a cooler, making it easier to travel. LaBarbara steals the part from Bender while he sleeps, but, on her way back to the female camp, she runs into Hermes who, having had the same idea, stole Amana's freon coil. The two accuse each other of being underhanded before making passionate love upon a rocky plateau.

The next morning, Hermes and LaBarbara oversleep, and by the time they wake up, the sun has already risen. The heat causes the mercury rivers to boil and overflow, trapping the men and suffocating the women. Just as they are about to die, the rock alien teleports them all to the Cave of Harmony, where it explains that the true purpose of the test was to get the two groups to cooperate in order to reach safety, but they were unable to work together, making the alien "lose a bet" with the Borax Kid. Blaming the groups' failure upon their gender differences, the alien resolves the situation by using its powers to strip them of their genitals and secondary sexual characteristics, making them all of neuter gender.

Act III: "My girls are back!"
The Earthicans initially find their newfound androgyny to be beneficial; the lack of sexual tension between them allows them to get along much better, and the work to repair the crashed ship proceeds smoothly. However, Hermes and LaBarbara find that they miss the feeling of physical intimacy, and confront the rock alien, demanding to have their genders returned. The alien agrees, but performs the process haphazardly; all those in the group who were once men are now women, and the women are now men. The alien admits its honest mistake, but as it prepares to correct the error it is shot and vaporized by Zapp Brannigan, who was responding to a distress call from the crashed ship. As a result, everyone is stuck living with his or her new gender.

Upon returning to Earth, Fry and the other "men" adapt to their new lifestyle without much difficulty, but the "women" find the change to be more difficult. To make matters worse, Planet Express still faces foreclosure. Amy suggests resuming work on the pin-up calendar; since Fry, Bender, Hermes, Zoidberg, the Professor, and Scruffy are all women now (and must, according to their contracts, pose naked upon request), there is enough material to produce a full calendar. The calendar sells well enough to pay off Planet Express' mortgage, saving the company. Just then, a meteor crashes into the company hangar, and from it emerges another, well-dressed rock alien who identifies itself as the Borax Kid. It explains that since the other rock alien died before restoring the crew's proper genders, it is its responsibility to do so; it summons the gender-swapped passengers from the plane, returns everyone's sex to normal, and promptly departs. Satisfied with this outcome, Leela says, "That's that"... only for Scruffy, still a woman, to emerge from the bathroom and ask, "What'd I miss?"

Production
On 28 February, 2011, Comedy Central released two promotional pictures for "Neutopia" in celebration of the show's 10 million likes on.

During May 2011, Countdown to Futurama released six items of promotional material for the episode: a video clip featuring the Planet Express crew members with swapped genders on 4 May, concept art of the female Zoidberg on 5 May, a promotional picture featuring Amy, Fry, and Leela sleeping together on 6 May, concept art of the Planet Express ship dressed as an airplane on 7 May, part of the storyboard showing the crew make the photo shoot on 8 May, and concept art of the female Scruffy on 14 May.

On 16 June, another video clip from the episode was released on io9, featuring the Earthicans on the lifeless, mineral world, discussing the concept of gender with the rock alien.

Reception
In its original U.S. broadcast on 23 June, 2011, "Neutopia" scored a 1.1 share among adults 18-49 and 2.5 million viewers, making it the third most viewed episode of the season so far, after "Rebirth" and "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela".

In a preview of "Neutopia" and "Benderama", Katie Schenkel from CliqueClack TV commented that these episodes "weren't her favourite". On "Neutopia", Schenkel felt the episode was too reminiscing of "Amazon Women in the Mood", but not in a good way. Schenkel argues that the usage of stereotypical male jokes towards women (such as "women like shopping") – which is primarily what "Neutopia" is about – is rather tiring and used. But, where "Amazon Women in the Mood" excelled at the usage of these jokes, "Neutopia" falls flat, Schenkel writes, considering many of the jokes seem like they were the ones that didn't make it to the season 3 episode. In fact, the sex-changing plot, Schenkel writes, feels tacked on and ruins the pace of the episode, as it is resolved just as it happens. Further, Schenkel feels the episode is unlike Futurama in that its reflection on gender and sex doesn't feel smart or witty, but rather lazy and unfunny. Blair Marnell nodded Schenkel's sentiment, feeling the episode relied on tired stereotypical jokes, ultimately rating the episode 6.5 out of 10.

In a more positive preview, David Hinckley of The Daily News was more receptive of the episode. He gave it three and a half stars out of five. He stated that the return of the show "doesn't seem to have lost much from either its edge or its attitude." Nicole C from Poptimal was also more positive in her review, but does not go into detail about her opinions.

Trivia

 * The episode is among the few one-word titled media and, due to LaBarbara's line "This is like a neutered utopia - a neutopia", the media featuring its title.
 * When the 'trees' on the mineral planet catch fire, they burn with a blue flame, like copper wire.
 * Even as a female, Scruffy still has a mustache.
 * This episode is the first episode since "Bender Should Not Be Allowed on Television" (which first aired almost eight years prior) to have been aired out of production order.
 * It is the second time Bender changes gender.
 * LaBarbara says "[she's] the only one [of the group] who ever ran a society", although both Fry and Bender  had ruled entire planets before (granted, neither of them did a particularly good job).
 * Fry's hair as a woman is identical to his mother's.

Allusions
The Motley Crue song "Girls Girls Girls" is playing during the part when the male versions of the female characters are taking pornographic pictures of the female versions of the male characters.
 * Amy's delivery suit resembles the power loader from the movie .
 * Plan Am is a reference to, a former airline.
 * A shot of the propeller-driven Plan Am plane flying in space references the exterior shot of the Boeing 707 from the movie .
 * Leela calls Fry and Hermes "Goofus" and "", a reference to Goofus and Gallant from the  magazine.
 * The Plan Am plane is going to Acapulsar, a pun on and the space object.
 * Petunia asks Zoidberg to put on four episodes of , a British television series (or ).
 * When the rock alien forms, it does so in a manner resembling the rock creature from .
 * The design of the rock alien is based upon the Excalbians from the Star Trek episode "The Savage Curtain"; whereas Futurama ' s rock alien was fascinated by the concept of gender, the Excalbians were intrigued by the opposing philosophies of good and evil, and wished to see which was superior. Additionally, whenever the rock alien uses its teleportation powers, the sound heard is the Star Trek transporter effect.
 * The rock alien addresses the Earthicans as "soft ones". This may be a reference to 's , which features a group of aliens called "the soft ones".
 * The rock alien asks for any of the twelve , which is an American soap opera that lasted from 2004-2012.
 * When Hermes asks LaBarbara what she is doing, she responds, "None of your ".
 * Hermes says that LaBarbara is making him "highly Selassie", a reference to n Emperor, who is revered in the Jamaican.
 * LaBarbara calls Hermes a "big ".
 * After Bender is saved alongside the rest of the men, and the melted metal merges together to reform him, he says "I learned that from a movie", obviously referring to .
 * The design of female Scruffy's clothes resemble that of Cora in . The same reference is made in "A Clockwork Origin", in which Amy's clothes are ripped in a similar fashion by the trilobots.
 * LaBarbara tells Hermes that she has "got to get up five times a night to play Xbox". The is a video game console manufactured by.
 * Leela's line "thank God most of our fans are huge perverts" is an obvious reference to the Futurama fan base, and the many nude and semi-nude fan art pictures of the characters posted online.
 * The title "Neutopia" is likely a reference to the "conceptual country" Newtopia, founded by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, or just a combination of "neuter" with "Utopia".
 * The images shown during the closing credits are references to the following:
 * Fry as in 
 * Scruffy as in 
 * Dr. Zoidberg as
 * Hermes as on the cover of her compilation album 
 * Prof. Farnsworth as



Continuity

 * April from "Three Hundred Big Boys" appears. This is one of her three cameo appearances, the others being the audience scene in Into the Wild Green Yonder and being part of the jury in "Overclockwise".
 * Dr. Cahill, who handled Hermes' head in Bender's Big Score, makes an appearance.
 * Zoidberg tries a poor comedy routine aboard the Planet Express air plane. His lifelong dream to become a comedy star was the focus of "That's Lobstertainment!".
 * Bender once again makes out with a fembot house appliance (Amana).
 * When Bender switches gender and becomes a fembot, it is in his female persona Coilette from "Bend Her", when he also switched gender.
 * Fry posing semi-nude for the calendar while inside a cryogenics tube is a reference to him being accidentally frozen in the pilot.
 * This is the first time that the similarly-voiced characters of Hattie and Petunia have a conversation. It is determined that Petunia's voice is a lower octave than Hattie's possibly due to smoking. Both are voiced by Tress MacNeille.
 * Towards the end of the episode, when the Borax Kid returns the original genders, Scruffy is absent. He comes back later, still a woman, after the Borax Kid has left. In "Yo Leela Leela" Scruffy briefly appeared as a male.

Goofs

 * When the rock alien tests the Earthicans with questions, it asks about . It would seem, however, that, if it knew that show, it would have a clear understanding of the concept of genders (earlier in the episode, it has never heard the word). Of course, it's possible it was faking that since it really wanted to teach the humans to work together.
 * The rock alien also slips up when he says it has no concept of gender (even being unfamiliar with the word), but in the next breath stating that its species has only one gender - a fact it wouldn't know if he really had no concept of gender.
 * As quickly as it learned about gender, it could have coined the name for its neutral gender.
 * In this episode, Leela states that teleportation technology will not be invented for another 15 years, but in "Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences" the Professor creates a disintegration gun, which is actually a teleportation gun.
 * It's possible that she meant the technology for interplanetary teleportation, since the furthest the Farnsworth Novelty Disintegrator Ray transported anyone was from White Planes to New New York.
 * When Planet Express was Plan Am, the Planet Express Ship had propellers on the engines, which would be useless in the vacuum of space. However, this may be a reference to the movie using the sound effects of a propeller plane for a clearly jet-propelled airplane. The ship is also shown to have its ordinary propulsion after its refit, when it flies up and out the hanger - and onto a conventional 20th century runway strip.
 * When everyone becomes genderless, Amana is coloured blue, but this should only happen when she has turned into a male.
 * Hermes attempts to steal Amana's coil to create a rudimentary air conditioner, but it is reveled in "I Second that Emotion" that Bender can be used as a refrigerator, presumably using a similar coolant.
 * When the characters change genders, everyone's clothes fit perfectly, even though their torsos were different sizes than before.
 * While Hermes and Labarbara are arguing about who should become the leader, Victor's eyes disappear a few times.

Characters

 * Debut: Amana
 * Amy
 * April
 * Bender
 * Debut: The Borax Kid
 * Dr. Cahill
 * Coilette
 * Debut: Falafel cart man
 * Farnsworth
 * Fry
 * Hattie
 * Hermes
 * Inez Wong (deleted scene)
 * LaBarbara
 * Leo Wong (deleted scene)
 * Leela
 * Mrs. Fry (mentioned)
 * Petunia
 * Debut: The big rock alien
 * Sal
 * Scruffy
 * Debut: The small rock alien
 * Debut: That guy from the future (mention)
 * Victor
 * Zapp
 * Zoidberg