Crimes of the Hot

"Crimes of the Hot" is the sixty-second episode of Futurama, the eighth of the fourth production season and the first of the fifth broadcast season. It aired 10 November, 2002 on FOX. It guest stars Al Gore as himself in a head jar. When the Earth is jeopardized by global warming, the crew attends a conference in Kyoto hosted by Al Gore's head, and when the Earth's increased temperature is linked to emissions from robots, Richard Nixon's head attempts to rid the planet of them - including Bender.

Act I: "This could mean the end of the Banana Daiquiri as we know it!...Also life."
The city of New New York is haunted by a heat wave, and the Planet Express crew intend to go swimming in an outdoor pool. Unfortunately Nibbler drinks the water all in one go and then burps out a cloud of chlorine, nearly poisoning everyone but Bender, who is merely seriously corroded. The Professor shows them a movie, "Global Warming, or None Like it Hot!", in which the phenomenon of global warming is explained in a strange 1950s style, and the solution to counter it - dropping a giant ice cube into the ocean every now and then. It now seems that the time has come for this measure, as Richard Nixon's head calls for the crew to fly to Halley's Comet to obtain the necessary ice. As they arrive there, however, they learn that the ice resources of the comet are depleted, leaving Earth with a serious problem.

Act II: "WINDMILLS DO NOT WORK THAT WAY!"
Earth is now experiencing the effects of intense global warming. The polar icecaps melt, causing floods, and the intense heat is making African turtles migrate to Holland. Bender travels there to help and bring back with him a turtle that has fallen on its back, out of sympathy - because they share the same weakness: Bender cannot get up either when he lies on his back. This fact is immediately tested to the extreme by the crew and proves to be true. Meanwhile, a Civil Defense Van comes and announces a scientific conference called to Kyoto to solve the problem of global warming by the combined brainpower of Earth's scientific community. The Professor seems very reluctant to go, but does so eventually. Al Gore's head calls for the saving of Earth and offers a bag of Moon sapphires as reward. The first contestant is Dr. Ogden Wernstrom who presents his solution for the problem - a giant space-borne parabolic mirror that reflects 40% of all sunlight and thus cools off Earth. However, the mirror is struck by a passing meteorite which causes it to turn and reflect the sun light onto Kyoto, frying part of the conference center away - obviously this is not the optimal solution. The next speaker, though reluctantly, is Professor Farnsworth, who admits that he caused the current global warming problem by creating the alcohol-powered Sport-Utility Robot, the ancestor of all modern robots that cause pollution by burning alcohol and building up greenhouse gases. As a solution, Wernstrom now calls for the destruction of all robots, to the dismay of Bender.

Act III: "Tonight: Great Robot Party, Tomorrow: Great Scrap-Metal Giveaway"
Richard Nixon's head is throwing a party for all robots on Earth on the Galápagos Islands, and Bender is attending to it, although he knows it is a trap. All robots on the planet are congregating on the remote island, to be killed by Wernstrom's giant mirror that has been modified to fire a gigantic electromagnetic pulse on the Galápagos Islands. As Bender is telling his favourite turtle of Nixon's plan, the other robots learn of it and a panic ensues. At this moment, the Planet Express Ship with Leela, Fry and the Professor on board arrives, for the Professor has thought of a solution: all robots must turn their exhaust vents upwards and fire one great blast of exhaust straight up, to move Earth further away from the sun. Every robot must join in, or else it will not work. Every robot obeys, except Bender who has fallen on his back in a scuffle with Preacherbot and can't get up. The huge blast does not have the desired effect at first, and Wernstrom is zeroing his mirror in on Galapágos. Bender then watches his favourite turtle, which lay on its back as well, rock itself upright and copies its maneuver. Then he too joins in in the exhaust blast, and with his help, the blast is strong enough to move the planet. This throws Wernstrom's mirror off target, and the EMP blast misses Earth. For saving Earth and foiling his plan, Richard Nixon's head presents Professor Farnsworth with the Earth's new highest honour - the Polluting Medal of Pollution. Now that the problem is solved, there is only one thing still to think of - how to name the additional week in the now longer Earth year. It is declared "Robot Party Week" by the President.

Trivia

 * In Professor Farnsworth's flashback, Mom's hair is darker grey than in 2ACV14.
 * Almost every robot on the show has a little cameo appearance on the Galápagos Islands (with the exception of Flexo, the Robot Elders, and Robot Santa Claus).
 * The horned wizard who is interested in the Moon Sapphires (and subsequently, the opening of the Gate of Garash) is based on Tim the Enchanter from .
 * The newsreel in this episode, "Global Warming: or, None Like It Hot!", is featured in Al Gore's documentary, 'An Inconvenient Truth'.
 * The "Curious Pussycat" sign in Kyoto translates to "I love you more than your mother does".
 * Morbo's quote "Windmills do not work that way!" is referenced by the Neopets virtual item "The Way Windmills Work", with the description: Windmills do, in fact, work that way.
 * The scientist with the degree in homeopathic science has his degree from the Evergreen State College, where creator Matt Groening went to college.
 * Physics-minded fans have calculated that the professor's plan of pushing the Earth further from the sun, making the year one week longer, would reduce the amount of solar radiation striking the Earth by about 2.5%. Some experts have suggested that this would be enough to halt global warming in its present state.
 * Wernstrom's space mirror, by blocking 40% of the sun's rays, would cause a catastrophic ice age.

Allusions

 * Bender's uncharacteristic empathy to a turtle is an allusion to the test in .
 * One of the first robots Farnsworth designed at Mom's Friendly Robot Company was based on from.
 * Later in the episode, the professor says "Ooh, the are going to feel this one..."
 * The medal ceremony is very reminiscent of the scene in.
 * The conference at Kyoto is a spoof of the UN climate conference held there.
 * Fry's mention about spilling a cup of McDonald's coffee on his lap to cool himself off is an allusion to the controversial lawsuit case of an elderly woman who accidentally did just that.
 * Curious Pussycat is a parody of.

Goofs
<!--** Actually, the robots wouldnt have pushed the Earth into ANY orbit. Instead they would have doomed the Earth to destuction by moving it. According to Newton's first law of motion a body in motion will STAY in motion unless acted upon by an outside force. Once the robots started the Earth moving it would have kept on moving because there would have been no way to stop it. Eventually the Earth would move far enough away from the sun to freeze solid - unless it slammed into another planet first. Either way, the Earth is doomed.
 * Seen from space, the exhaust blast from the robots is, in some shots, not coming from Galápagos.
 * Somehow it is odd that around the PE building, which is right in downtown New New York at the waterside and therefore close to the ocean, the water has not risen at all with the severe flooding reported on the news.
 * It was referenced in an earlier episode that global warming was canceled out by nuclear winter.
 * It is possible that global warming was canceled, but then returned with the rise of the modern robots.
 * The Mirror is over America and cools them despite the fact that they are in Japan.
 * The robots would not have pushed Earth into a further circular orbit, they would have pushed Earth into an eliptical orbit, cooling AND heating it, depending on the season.
 * No; the Earth is already in an eliptical orbit. Seasons do not occur because of distance from the sun (the Earth is actually farthest away from the sun in July!). The Earth's axis is tilted in relation to its' orbit around the sun, so that the northern hemisphere is exposed to more intense sunlight in summer; less intense in winter, and vice verse for the southern hemisphere. If the Earth's tilt was to be affected by the robots' exhausts, that would change the seasons.
 * Completely false. If this were true, ANY meteoroid collision would destabilize the Earth's orbit. Consider that staying in orbit means remaining in motion and with only one force -- gravity -- acting upon the orbiting object. This means that after the robot push a force -- gravity -- acts upon the earth to keep it in orbit.
 * Actually, whoever posted that is correct. The Earths orbit is maintained by the gravitational pull of the Sun. Because of the Suns strong gravitational pull, a meteroid strike on the Earth would not have sufficiant force to destabilize the orbit. However, the robots thrust maneuver had enough force to actually BREAK the Suns gravitational hold on the Earth and actually pushed the planet AWAY from the Sun. Common sense would tell you that the further away you get from an object with its own gravity field the less that gravity acts upon you. Since the robot thrust created enough kinetic energy to: A. Break the Suns gravitational hold, B. Start the Earth moving away from the Sun and C. KEEP the Earth moving away from the Sun then Newtons first law DOES come into effect. Unless the robots can go to the EXACT position on the opposite side of the Earth and create the same amount of force to counteract the planets kenetic energy - the planet would just keep on going until it froze solid and was destroyed.
 * The robot thrust does not need to apply enough energy to cause the earth to exceed solar escape velocity to change the orbit. Applying kinetic energy to the Earth will raise the amount of gravitational potential energy which corresponds to a larger orbit. Furthermore, Earth's average orbital speed is 29.8 km/s, whereas the Solar Escape Velocity at Earth's orbit is 42 km/s. This means that the kinetic energy of Earth's movement would need to be doubled in order to remove the Earth from the Sun's orbit. Given a perfectly elastic collision, this would require 1/2 * M * (42 ^ 2 - 29.8 ^2) = 437.98 * M = 437.98 * 5.9736e24 = 2.616e27 J, which is equivalent to the energy released by detonating 6.252e17 tons of TNT colliding elastically with the Earth. Now assume that each robot's combustion is about 750 hp = 559.275 kW (1.5 times the output of any current SUV, which robots are marketed as), 2.616e27J would take 4.68e24 robot-seconds (which is the product of x robots burning for y seconds) to achieve. Suppose the robots were to have burned for one minute, then it would have taken 7.8e22 (about 100 billion times the world's current population of humans) robots to propel Earth out of the solar system. It takes significantly less energy, calculated using Kepler's laws, to move the Earth to an orbit that extends the period by 7 days.-->

Characters

 * Debut: Headless body of Agnew
 * Al Gore's head
 * Amy
 * Bender
 * Debut: Civil Defense Van
 * Debut: Dark Wizard
 * Professor Farnsworth
 * Fry
 * Hermes
 * Joan Rivers' head
 * Kif
 * Leela
 * Linda
 * Mom
 * Morbo
 * Nibbler
 * Richard Nixon's head
 * Randy Munchnik
 * Soupy
 * Wernstrom
 * Zoidberg

Robots
Essentially every robot that's been seen before (except Flexo, the Robot Elders, and Robot Santa Claus) is seen in this episode. Besides Bender, among the Robots seen at the Galapagos Island "party" are:


 * Barrier Bots
 * Billionaire Bot
 * Boxy Robot
 * Calculon
 * Chain Smoker
 * Clearcutter
 * Crushinator
 * Daisy Mae 128k
 * Destructor
 * Fat-bot
 * Fender
 * Flabby
 * Gearshift
 * The Hookerbots
 * Hedonism Bot (debut)
 * The jacking-on robots from "Hell Is Other Robots"
 * Keg Robot (debut)
 * A Killbot
 * Lulubelle 7
 * Malfunctioning Eddie
 * Masked Unit
 * Monique
 * Officer URL
 * Oily
 * The Robot Chef from "A Fishful of Dollars"
 * The Postman-Bot from "A Bicyclops Built for Two"
 * Reverend Lionel Preacherbot
 * Roberto
 * The Robo-Rooter from the ad in "Why Must I Be a Crustacean in Love?"
 * Robot Demons
 * Robot Devil
 * The Robot Dog owned by Robot Santa Claus
 * The Robot Mafia
 * Clamps
 * Donbot
 * Joey Mousepad
 * Sinclair 2K (unofficial debut)
 * Soda Machine Robot
 * Stripperbot
 * A Sunset Squad Robot
 * The Teenage Popcorn-selling Robot from "Raging Bender"
 * Tinny Tim
 * iZac
 * A robot that resembles the accessory from Nintendo Entertainment system.

Episode Credits

 * Writer
 * Aaron Ehasz
 * Director
 * Peter Avanzino
 * Voice Actors
 * Billy West
 * Katey Sagal
 * John DiMaggio
 * Frank Welker
 * Lauren Tom
 * Phil LaMarr
 * DVD Commentary
 * Matt Groening
 * David X. Cohen
 * Rich Moore
 * Ron Weiner
 * Ken Keeler
 * David Goodman
 * Peter Avanzino
 * Billy West
 * Maurice LaMarche
 * Special Guests
 * Al Gore