Anthology of Interest I

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Season 2 episode
Anthology of Interest I
Fry-Hole.jpg
No.29
Production number2ACV16
Written by[[Terror at 500 Feet:
Eric Rogers
Dial L for Leela:
Ken Keeler
The Un-Freeze of a Lifetime:
David X. Cohen]][[Category:Episodes written by Terror at 500 Feet:
Eric Rogers
Dial L for Leela:
Ken Keeler
The Un-Freeze of a Lifetime:
David X. Cohen|Anthology of Interest I]]
Directed by[[Chris Loudon
Rich Moore]][[Category:Episodes directed by Chris Loudon
Rich Moore|Anthology of Interest I]]
Title captionPainstakingly drawn before a live audience
First air date21 May, 2000
Broadcast numberS02E20
Opening cartoon"Bosko Shipwrecked"
Special guest(s)Al Gore
Stephen Hawking
Nichelle Nichols
Gary Gygax
Additional
Commentary
(Transcript)
Transcript

Pictures

Season 2
  1. I Second that Emotion
  2. Brannigan, Begin Again
  3. A Head in the Polls
  4. Xmas Story
  5. Why Must I Be a Crustacean in Love?
  6. The Lesser of Two Evils
  7. Put Your Head on My Shoulders
  8. Raging Bender
  9. A Bicyclops Built for Two
  10. A Clone of My Own
  11. How Hermes Requisitioned His Groove Back
  12. The Deep South
  13. Bender Gets Made
  14. Mother's Day
  15. The Problem with Popplers
  16. Anthology of Interest I
  17. War Is the H-Word
  18. The Honking
  19. The Cryonic Woman
← Season 1Season 3 →

"Anthology of Interest I" is the twenty-ninth episode of Futurama, the sixteenth of the second production season and the twentieth and the last of the second broadcast season. It aired 21 May, 2000 on FOX. It guest stars Al Gore, Stephen Hawking, Nichelle Nichols and Gary Gygax as themselves. The What-If Machine tells three stories, one in which Bender becomes a 150 feet tall robot, another with Leela being slightly more impulsive and finally what would have happened if Fry never came to the future. And that's what things would have been like if Farnsworth had invented the Fing-Longer.

The Story

Act I: Terror at 500 Feet

Giant Bender and Zoidberg

The Professor demonstrates his latest invention, the Fing-Longer by turning on the What-If Machine. Bender wants to aks it a question. What if he was 500 feet tall?

Hundreds of bending units complete work on Bender, who blasts of and heads to Earth. Fry is lonely and has no friends. Bender lands near Fry and they become friends. While catching a frisbee, Bender kills the heads of Hanson and thousands of their fans so the DOOP retaliate. They shoot Fry with electricity when he tries to negotiate so Bender goes on a rampage and destroys builings of New New York. The Professor enlarges Zoidberg so that he can fight Bender. However Zoidberg also destroys New New York and gets in a fight with Bender. Bender attempts to boil Zoidberg but Zoidberg cuts his feet off and he is impaled on the Empire State Building, slowly killing him. Fry admonishes everyone for the tragedy of Bender, who laments that he was unable to fulfill his dream of killing all humans before dying.

Act II: Dial L for Leela

Leela, sleeping with Fry

Leela gets to aks a question. After being teased about being unimpulsive, she asks the what if machine: what if she was more impulsive? Leela buys some boots with "a crazy green stripe". The Professor makes Leela his sole heir because she's "so un-impulsive". She kills the Professor by kicking him into his pit of man eating anteaters to get the cash. Zoidberg begins investigating. Hermes finds the video will which shows Leela killing the Professor, so she kills him too by chopping him up and putting him in the garbage disposal. Bender catches her disposing of the body, so he tries to extort her. She kills Bender using a microwave and it's radioactivity, and she turns Bender into a go-kart. Amy insults her by saying that the go-cart is sexier than her, then dies by being stuffed inside a grandfather clock.

The remaining staff gather in the Accusing Parlour. Cubert, Scruffy and Nibbler meet their demise as they are about to reveal the killer, all on the same sword. Zoidberg finally works it out, only because he gets a letter from Bender he wrote before he dies, but Fry leaves before he can say and Leela kills Zoidberg. Later, Fry works it out. ("Hey Leela, whatcha eating?" Leela: "Lobster.") Leela stops him from talking by having sex with him, which he likes.

Act III: The Un-Freeze of a Lifetime

Fry gets to aks a question. Fry's request for a repeat of Bender's question is denied, so he asks: what if he never came to the future?

Fry makes his fateful delivery to I. C. Wiener at Applied Cryogenics. Instead of falling in the freezer, he hits his head. This rips the fabric of space-time, through which we see some of the Planet Express staff. The next day Stephen Hawking drops by Panucci's Pizza. Fry asks him about the hole in nothing, with monsters in it. After work, the Vice Presidential Action Rangers abduct Fry. The rangers inform him that they have to fix the time-space continuum or the universe will be destroyed. Fry tells his story and it is decided that when he hit his head he should have died, the attempt at murder fails to fix it and the hole reappears, they try to make him enter the tube but instead he breaks the glass. The universe collapses on itself and Fry and the Vice Presidential Action Rangers are floating around outside the universe, they start a game of Dungeons and Dragons.

The Professor throws away the What-If Machine because he didn't think the stories were realistic, but declares the Fing-Longer a success.

It is revealed that this whole thing is being watched on the What-If Machine by the Professor, who wanted to know what life would be like if he'd invented the Fing-Longer

Additional Info

Promo pic of this episode
Centrefold - 2001 Calendar
December - 2002 Calendar

Trivia

  • 'Tales of Interest' is an alternate name for this episode.
  • Admiral Crunch has a reappearance in this episode.
  • Gary Gygax's appearance alongside Al Gore is something of an inside joke since Gore's wife, Tipper Gore, hates Dungeons & Dragons and has been publicly critical of it.
  • Al Gore received some criticism for his appearance because parts of the show "conflicted starkly with the anti-violence, anti-smoking and family-values themes of Gore's campaign". Gore's spokesperson responded by stating that most viewers would recognize that the show was meant to be entertaining and that it would be taken in the right spirit.
  • When rebroadcast during the 2000 Presidential Election fiasco, the tagline at the start of the episode said, "Starring a guy who is kind-of, sort-of our next president, maybe!".
  • Nichelle Nichols and Al Gore, both of whom would make later appearances in "Where No Fan Has Gone Before" (4ACV11)
    Episode
    and "Crimes of the Hot" (4ACV08)
    Episode
    respectively
  • Giant Bender's shell seems to be made of bent girders.
  • As mentioned on the DVD commentary, the Anthology of Interest episodes came from a desire to tell stories that couldn't be told in normal continuity, similar to Marvel's What If? comics.
  • When Zoidberg is big, he attacks the Chase Manhattan Bank Building for denying his credit card application and the Apollo Theater for booing him offstage on open mike night. These are both references to "A Clone of My Own" (2ACV10)
    Episode
    when he is up on stage talking about the The Professor and the crowd doesn't like him he says it was the Apollo Theater all over again, and "Bender Gets Made" (2ACV13)
    Episode
    when he says that they denied his application.
  • The first of two Anthologies, the Anthology of Interest episodes (and to a lesser extent the comics) are equivalent to Treehouse of Horror on The Simpsons.
  • This episode is Scruffy's first speaking appearance.
  • Despite his assertions in "Xmas Story" (2ACV04)
    Episode
    that Fry's 20th century sense of modesty is outdated, The Professor still seems to have accumulated tickets for public nudity (although this may be a result of the What-If-Machine's imagination).
  • The Professor calls the final story in this episode absurd, citing "Stephen Hawking in a pizzeria" as especially bad. Interestingly, in an episode of The Simpsons (Don't Fear the Roofer), Stephen Hawking buys a Little Caesars pizzeria.
  • Scruffy reappears, although his moustache is now brown, not white like it was when he appeared in "A Fishful of Dollars" (1ACV06)
    Episode
    .
  • Al Gore is voiced by himself, making it his first appearance in any TV series of any kind. It is also one of the very rare times that a politician appears as himself on a show.
  • When giant Bender rips Shea Stadium from its foundations, a sign indicates that the Mets were the World Series Champions in 1969 and 1986, which means that they won't win between now and the year 3000! This is further stated in the episode "A Leela of Her Own" (3ACV16)
    Episode
    .
  • This episode is one of four featured in the Monster Robot Maniac Fun Collection, reflecting its popularity with both fans and the creators of Futurama.
  • This episode was named #13 on IGN's list of Top 25 Futurama Episodes.

Quotes

  • Zoidberg: Friends, help! A guinea pig tricked me!
  • Farnsworth: Ohhh! You've killed me! You've killed me!
    Leela: Oh, god. What have I done?
    Farnsworth: I just told you. You've killed me!
  • Hermes: What are you hacking off? Is it my torso? It is! My precious torso!
    Zoidberg: Hermes, quiet! I'm deducing things.
  • Farnsworth: That question was less stupid. Though you asked it in a profoundly stupid way
  • Gary Gygax: Greetings! It's a (rolls dice) pleasure to meet you!
  • Al Gore: If we don't go back there and make the event happen, the entire universe will be destroyed. And as an environmentalist, I'm against that.
  • Al Gore: You fool! You foolish fool!

Continuity

  • The Applied Cryogenics scene is missing a certain shadow that was seen in "Space Pilot 3000" (1ACV01)
    Episode
    .
  • The DOOP attempts to destroy Bender with electricity, this is a known drug for robots as seen in "Hell Is Other Robots" (1ACV09)
    Episode
    .
  • The anteater spitting the glasses back onto the Professor's skull is a reference to the fact we never see his eyes.
  • At first it seems as though Bender is going to ask what it would be like if he were human, but instead he changes it. This foreshadows future events because in the sequel, "Anthology of Interest II" (3ACV18)
    Episode
    , Bender does ask the What If machine what it would be like if he were human.
  • This is the second time that Leela is seen having sex with somebody out of impulse (the 1st time being "Love's Labours Lost in Space" with Zapp Brannigan) and the first time we see her in bed with Fry. Although, since it was during a What-If scenario, it cannot be regarded as canon.

Allusions

  • When Giant Bender first meets Fry, he says that he needs a big cereal. This is a catchphrase from Honeycomb cereal commercials, one of a few references made in the series.
  • The Earth forces that try to stop Bender consist of tanks, foot soldiers and strange double-decker fighter planes, this is a reference to the original King Kong movie.
  • Bender destroying the city and fighting Giant Zoidberg is a reference to Gojira and Kingu Kongu tai Gojira.
  • Mr Panucci says the only 'real' monsters are Son of Kong, Dracula and Blacula
  • When giant Bender flies to Earth the song Iron Man by Black Sabbath is briefly heard.
  • Nichelle Nichols appears as Uhura from Star Trek: The Original Series.
  • Fry asks, "Was Planet Express Built on an Indian Graveyard?", a reference to the horror movie Poltergeist.
  • "Good night, sweet prince" is a direct and well-known quote from the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare; these words are spoken by Horatio as Hamlet dies.
  • There are several references about Dungeons & Dragons made, including rolling dice to decide what to do, and holding a +1 mace.
  • Zoidberg wears the famous hat of the great detective Sherlock Holmes, and "The Accusing Parlor" looks a lot like his home in London from the books.
  • The story of a giant robot coming to earth and making friends with a lonely kid is a parody of the story behind The Iron Giant which was made into an animated film in 1999.
  • One of members of the Vice-Presidential Action Rangers is Deep Blue which was a computer made by IBM that beat world chess champion Gary Kasparov in 1997.
  • The cover of the Monster Manual at the end of the third segment is exactly the same as the original Monster Manual from Advanced Dungeons and Dragons 1st editon from the late 1970s. This particular book was, of course, written by Gygax.

Fast Forward

Goofs

  • Leela and Bender are amongst the rest of the Planet Express Crew when the rip in space-time forms. This shouldn't be, because Fry was responsible for the two joining Planet Express in the first place. There have been some explanations for this:
    • This could just be another inconsistency of the What-If Machine, just like how Nibbler's shadow is missing.
      • Nibblers shadow was possibly missing because he was the reason why Fry fell into the tube.
  • This same mistake was made in the first part of this episode, where Leela works for Planet Express, and Fry isn't assigned a job. This shouldn't be, because Leela would have assigned Fry the job of a Delivery Boy since Bender wasn't there to help Fry escape from her and the police, and because of this, Leela wouldn't have lost her job for making friends with Fry, forcing them to go to Fry's only living relative (Farnsworth), thus making them members of Planet Express, but this may also be an inconsistency of the What-If Machine. Bender would be dead because he would have committed suicide booth.
  • After Fry falls and bumps his head on the freezer door, he gets up and the table he was sat at is now a lot further away from the freezer than it was when he fell and the can isn't in his hand or on the floor.
  • Scruffy's moustache and hat keep changing colors throughout the episode.
  • Al Gore called Nichelle Nichols Commander Uhura, but she only had 1 gold braid which indicates the rank of Lieutenant.
  • When Leela kills Bender, his now detached eyes are shown as spheres. However when his eyes move or fall out in other episodes (such as the pilot) they are shown to be rounded cylinders.

Characters

(In alphabetic order)

Episode Credits