Difference between revisions of "Law and Oracle"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(That is still TBA. Please do not add it again.) |
(Source: http://tv.msn.com/tv/series-episodes/futurama/?ipp=40) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
|first aired=TBA | |first aired=TBA | ||
|number=6ACV16 | |number=6ACV16 | ||
|broadcast number= | |broadcast number=S08E04 | ||
|title reference = ''{{w|Law & Order}}'', or the phrase "{{w|law and order (politics)|law and order}}" | |title reference = ''{{w|Law & Order}}'', or the phrase "{{w|law and order (politics)|law and order}}" | ||
|prev ep=6ACV15 | |prev ep=6ACV15 | ||
|next ep=6ACV17 | |next ep=6ACV17 | ||
|broad prev=Ghost in the Machines | |||
|broad next=The Silence of the Clamps | |||
|hasstoryboard=yes | |hasstoryboard=yes | ||
}} | }} | ||
Line 54: | Line 56: | ||
|prev ep=6ACV15 | |prev ep=6ACV15 | ||
|next ep=6ACV17 | |next ep=6ACV17 | ||
|broad prev=Ghost in the Machines | |||
|broad next=The Silence of the Clamps | |||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 21:03, 22 May 2011
← Previous | Navigation in production order | Next → |
---|
← Previous | Navigation in broadcast order | Next → |
---|
Season 6 episode Broadcast season 8 episode | |||||
Law and Oracle | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | 104 | ||||
Production number | 6ACV16 | ||||
Written by | Josh Weinstein | ||||
Directed by | N/A | ||||
Title caption | N/A | ||||
First air date | TBA | ||||
Broadcast number | S08E04 | ||||
Title reference | Law & Order, or the phrase "law and order" | ||||
Additional | |||||
| |||||
Season 6 | |||||
|
"Law and Oracle" is the one hundredth and fourth episode of Futurama, the sixteenth of the sixth production season and the ? of the eighth broadcast season.
Story
Fed up with his go-nowhere job, Fry joins the police force.[1]
Production
Comedy Central's Countdown to Futurama began releasing promotional material for the episode in May 2011. It has so far released two items: concept art of the police station's future crimes division on 20 May and part of the storyboard showing Fry be pranked by Ipgee, Terry and Lou on 21 May.
Promotional material
Additional Info
Allusions
- The title is a parody of the long-running NBC legal drama television series Law & Order.
- The concept of trying people for crimes committed in the future was a major plot point of the 2004 film Minority Report.
Continuity
- A reference to "Space Pilot 3000" is shown, with Fry once again delivering a pizza to a prank name at Applied Cryogenics.