Anthology of Interest II

It is the second segmented episode. The What-If Machine tells what would happen if Bender were a human, what would happen if the world was more like a video game and what would happen if Leela found her true home.

Act I: "I, Meatbag"
Bender asks the What-If Machine what it would be like if he were a human. When the machine is started up, it tells a story of how Professor Farnsworth transforms Bender into a human using "reverse fossilization". Bender uses his new body to over-indulge on junk food, beer, sex with beautiful women, and cigars, much to the dismay of the Professor, who wants to keep Bender in top shape and present him to the Nobel Prize ceremony a week later. Bender spends the entire week on a massive binge. He is discovered shortly before the ceremony, weighing about 1000 lb, with liver failure, and chloresterol at 40 lb. The committee threatens to kick the Professor out of the Academy of Science, but Bender urges the committee to keep an open mind and try his hedonistic lifestyle. They accept his request and hold a wild 12-hour-long party, realizing that they prefer Bender's way of life. They attempt to award him a Nobel Prize, but then discover that Bender has been dead since shortly after the party started and that his cry of "Whoo!" is actually air escaping from the folds of fat on his body.

Act II: "Raiders of the Lost Arcade"
The next question the machine is asked is Fry's "What would life be like if it were more like a videogame?" The story begins in outer-space in the form of the game Asteroids. The green ship (Planet Express Ship) shoots and dodges asteroids before safely returning back to Earth. Richard Nixon's head is signing a peace accord with the ambassador Kong of the planet Nintendu 64. But, things go wrong with the peace agreement when (Donkey) Kong throws a barrel at Richard Nixon's head and abandons the peace signing, much to the distress of the Italian Ambassador. The story then cuts to Milatari HQ, with a green tank from the game Battlezone passing by. Fry, Leela, Bender and Zoidberg rendezvous with General Colin Pac-Man. Gen. Pac-Man leads them through a Pac-Man-like maze, where Zoidberg accidentally eats Fry, who, luckily had an extra life. They exit through a Mario warp pipe outside Planet Express headquarters. They find out there is another force threatening Earth. Lrrr, of the planet Nintendu 64 has decided to invade Earth with his "3 different kinds of ships." Fry grabs his all-Rush mix-tape and his bottle of Shasta and starts to battle the Space Invaders. During the battle, General Pac-Man is fatally wounded, which he reveals is the day before his retirement and his wife Ms. Pac-Man cries over his death while being consoled by Amy. Fry eventually loses after realizing he could never get the last ship, his brother always did. After Fry enters 'ASS' as the initials for high score, the last Space Invader ship lands on Earth and announce "." Their demand is simple: quarters, a million allowances' worth of quarters. The Planet Express crew refuse to accept their offer, but reach a compromise by allowing the space invaders to toss their laundry in with the Planet Express crew's.

Act III: "Wizzin'"
It's Leela's turn to ask a question; she asks what it would be like if she found her true home. But she accidentally gets knocked out by the What If Machine's gambling machine arm. Leela wakes up to find herself and Nibbler caught in a tornado in the Planet Express Ship, which crash lands in Oz. After realizing she crushed the Man-Witch of the West (Scruffy), the deceased witch's boots appear on Leela's feet. Leela is confronted by a group of various Futurama characters wearing Lollipop Guild costumes who accuse her of stealing the boots. She asks who they are and gets a song about them resembling, 'but legally distinct from the Lollipop Guild,' which is cut short by Nibbler, who eats Glurmo. The Cute Witch of the North (Amy) appears, and informs Leela that the only way for her to get home is to see the Professor in the Emerald Laboratory on Martin Luther King Boulevard. As Leela travels down a yellow brick road, she meets the Scarecrow (Fry) and the Tin-Man (Bender), who travel with Leela to find the Professor. Fry needs to see him about a brain and Bender needs a heart (so he can "pump a lot of blood out of [his] basement"). Zoidberg appears in a taxi to represent the Cowardly Lion although he refers to himself as "the other guy. Courage. Not enough of it". Overlooking this is the Wicked Witch of the West (Mom) who decides to send her flying monkeys (Walt, Larry and Igner) to capture Fry, Leela and Bender. Zoidberg is left behind and ends up taking a taxi. The trio finds themselves in Mom's lair, where Zoidberg enters after leaving his taxi. Leela demands to know why they were brought to her, which Mom answers--Mom never had a daughter. Leela thinks momentarily and agrees to become Mom's daughter, due to the fact that she'd love to be evil. But, as Bender gets a celebratory drink out of his chest, the liquid spills over Mom and she starts to melt. Bender drinks her puddle because there was 'no point in letting her go to waste.' The group then take a taxi to the Emerald Laboratory to see the Professor. Hermes tells them that no one sees the professor and will not open the door to his chamber, but Leela pokes him in the eye and they barge in. The Professor gives Zoidberg a gun, because 'who needs courage when you have a gun?'. Bender takes the gun and tells the Professor to give him all his money. The Professor pours a bag of cash on the table and tells him that it's 5000 professor land fun bucks. The Professor says that Leela must get home by clicking her boots together three times, but she instead wishes to be the new Wicked Witch. Her first act as a witch is to transform Fry, Bender, and the Professor into frogs. A flume of water lands on her from above, which Zoidberg reveals was from a problem with the upstairs toilet. Leela melts into a puddle, then wakes up as Fry dumps another bucket of water on her face. She looks around and exclaims that she was 'having the most wonderful dream, except you were there and you were there and you were there...'

The Professor is heartbroken to discover she has awoken, having entered the room with a pair of tongs and a box with "Leela's Organs" written on the side. Hermes informs the Professor there's always next year to try.

Reception
This episode was named #12 on 's list of top 25 Futurama episodes.

Trivia

 * The title of the first segment, "I, Meatbag" is a spoof of Asimov's book, "I, Robot," but also referring to the fact that Bender (and presumably more robots) refer to humans as meatbags.
 * The song that Bender becomes infatuated with as a human is "Conga" by Gloria Estefan.
 * The third simulation would have created a strange continuity error, as Leela is the only one who didn't see it, so the others would know she was a mutant. It's likely that they turned the machine off, rather than watch the video with Leela unconscious.
 * D.U.I. Friday's is a reference to the restaurant chain T.G.I. Friday's.
 * Bender's human alter-ego looks faintly like a 31st century version of . Bender is overweight and is wearing a white shirt and blue trousers, although he has a lot more hair and less face stubble.
 * The title of the segment Raiders of the Lost Arcade is a reference to the 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark.
 * Milatari HQ is a reference to the video game company.
 * When the Nintendians are exiting their ship, one of them says the infamous gaming phrase "", from the Sega Mega Drive game Zero Wing.
 * Donkey Kong's third appearance, the first non-cameo.
 * The music playing during the Space Invaders sequence is "Tom Sawyer" by Rush (Fry previously mentions an all-Rush mixtape as part of his gaming ritual).
 * Some of the Nintendians that come out of the ship include: a robot from the game Berzerk, a fried egg from Burgertime, Q*bert, and an evil brain-bot (possibly from Robotron 2084).
 * The title of the segment "Wizzin'" is from the musical The Wiz (based on The Wizard of Oz).
 * In Oz, the peacock's tail feathers form the NBC logo.
 * When Leela says, "Oh, for the love of Benji," this is a reference to and the film
 * In each segment, the character who asked the question dies. Fry was eaten by Zoidberg, but had an extra life, Bender's heart stopped after a week long binge, and Leela melted after being hit by water.
 * This is the first time the Bender-Amy relationship is explored, albeit in a non-canon setting.
 * In the first segment, Bender's penis is shown to grow in a surprising visual manner. The scene isn't usually shown on television but is featured in the Futurama Season 3 DVD.
 * Leela faints before the what-if machine shows the answer to her question. Had it been answered, it would've revealed her true origin as a mutant.

Allusions
The second story pays homage to many video games including in alphabetic order:
 * (the Egg character leaving the Space Invaders ship)
 * ("you need the blue key")
 * (seen in the background in the "War Room" at Milatari HQ)
 * (seen in the background before the "War Room" at Milatari HQ)
 * (in animatic only)
 * ("the door at Milatari HQ")
 * and
 * (All your base)
 * ("the door at Milatari HQ")
 * and
 * (All your base)
 * and
 * (All your base)
 * (All your base)
 * (All your base)
 * (All your base)
 * (All your base)

Characters

 * Amy
 * Bender
 * Cubert
 * Donkey Kong
 * Dwight
 * Professor Farnsworth
 * Fry
 * Small Glurmo
 * A Grunka Lunka
 * Hermes
 * Debut: Katrina
 * Leela
 * Lrrr
 * Mom
 * Ndnd
 * Debut: Q*bert
 * Richard Nixon's head
 * Debut: General Colin Pac-Man
 * Debut: Mario
 * One of Santa Claus' aides
 * Scruffy
 * Tinny Tim
 * Walt, Larry and Igner
 * Dr. Ogden Wernstrom
 * Debut: Xanthor
 * Zoidberg

Miscellaneous

 * "I am Lrrr"

Episode Credits

 * Writers
 * Lewis Morton (I, Meatbag)
 * David X. Cohen (Raiders of the Lost Arcade)
 * Jason Corbett (Wizzin')
 * Scott Kirby (Wizzin')
 * Director
 * Bret Haaland
 * Voice Actors
 * Billy West
 * Katey Sagal
 * John DiMaggio
 * Tress MacNeille
 * Maurice LaMarche
 * Phil LaMarr
 * David Herman
 * Lauren Tom
 * Frank Welker
 * Kath Soucie
 * DVD Commentary
 * Matt Groening
 * David X. Cohen
 * Rich Moore
 * Lewis Morton
 * Bret Haaland
 * Maurice LaMarche
 * John DiMaggio
 * Billy West