Hyper-Chicken

The Hyper-Chicken, a simple Alien from a backwoods asteroid, is the most frequently seen lawyer in Futurama. He is a father and has often defended and accused members of Planet Express crew. Despite being incompetent, he often manages to win his cases and if he doesn't, he usually tells his clients to plead insanity. He seems to be a successful lawyer and handles large cases such as the destruction of DOOP's headquarters.

Defended

 * Bender of spilling dark matter on Pluto.
 * Bender and Fry of robbing a bank (New New York v. Fry and Bender).
 * Farnsworth and Cubert of violating Bender's contract of ownership.

Accused

 * Zapp Brannigan of blowing up DOOP headquarters (DOOP v. Zapp).
 * Santa (really Bender) of crimes against humanity (New New York v. Santa Bender).
 * Dr. John Zoidberg of eating the Earth flag (Earth v. Zoidberg).

Production
The Hyper-Chicken is modelled on Academy Award-nominated portrayal of lawyer Paul Biegler in . Trying a murder case in a small town, Biegler wins over the sceptical jury by repeatedly comparing himself, "a simple country lawyer", to the high-powered prosecutor, Claude Dancer (George C. Scott). The "simple country lawyer" became a model for many following portrayals, notably the entire show .

It should be noted that another lawyer on the show, Old Man Waterfall, also is modelled on James Stewart.

Trivia

 * In a deleted scene, Amy once admitted to sleeping with Bender's lawyer. The scene may have been deleted because they remembered that this is his lawyer.


 * The Hyper-Chicken advertises on buses, the ads simply read "ACCIDENTES! (800)λλλ-λλλλ".
 * In a deleted scene on Into the Wild Green Yonder, Zapp Brannigan calls him 'Matcluck'.
 * He crashed his hover car in "Proposition Infinity" when he misread Bender's graffiti, his feathers were seen flying from the wreckage. Presumably he was merely badly injured, as he reappears in a crowd scene in "The Mutants Are Revolting".
 * The Hyper-Chicken has two things in common with  character : they are both human-sized roosters with southern accents.
 * The commentary for "Overclockwise" reveals that whenever the staff think they've run out of chicken puns to use for the Hyper-Chicken, the writers manage to come up with more.

Appearances

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