Rebirth

"Rebirth" is the eighty-ninth episode of Futurama, the first of the sixth production season, the seventh broadcast season and the second run of Futurama. It aired 24 June, 2010 on Comedy Central. After the crash of the Planet Express ship, Fry awakes to find himself and the Professor the only ones left. But luckily, the Professor has a way to give rebirth to the remainder of the crew.

Act I
The Hypnotoad appears on screen, and Bender's voice announces that people will forget the series was ever cancelled "by idiots" and later revived "by bigger idiots." The scene changes to Fry walking into Professor Farnsworth's laboratory, asking why his hair is frizzy and why he is covered in burns. The Professor explains that when the crew entered a wormhole at the end of Into the Wild Green Yonder, they emerged near Earth through the "Panama Wormhole", Earth's main channel for shipping. Zapp Brannigan, aboard the Nimbus flagship, damages the Planet Express Ship, causing it to crash in a large explosion with the Nimbus outside of the Planet Express headquarters. Professor Farnsworth survives due to his full body "safety sphere device".

Act II
The Professor manages to successfully revive everyone killed in the crash using Stem Cells and a "birthing machine", except Leela, who enters an irreversible coma. Bender also experiences difficulty during the rebirth; the Professor fits one of his doomsday devices to power him. The device generates excess power, and Bender is forced to continue partying endlessly or else he will explode.

Act III
Fry, in his despair over Leela, makes a robot version of her at the Build-A-Bot Workshop. The Professor is able to generate Leela's personality and memories for the robot, however the robot Leela is horrified to learn of the human Leela's predicament. Leela is unable to be woken by the Professor, and as per her final wishes, is taken to a planet to be eaten by a Cyclops-devouring monster known as the Cyclophage. At the service, Bender's obnoxious partying wakes Leela, who is shocked to see Fry kissing Robot Leela.

Act IV
The Cyclophage approaches, and the crew escapes in the ship. As the ship takes off, the Cyclophage attaches itself to the underside of the ship.

Back on Earth, Fry begins to question that either Leela loves him. Leela hears him telling himself that he only loved Robot Leela because she was so much like the real Leela. Also he says that he thought Leela loved him, but was wrong as usual. Leela appears to him and convinces him otherwise. Robot Leela sees this, and a fight breaks out between the two Leelas. Fry is handed a gun by Amy and told to shoot one, but accidentally shoots himself, only to expose that he too is a robot. The Professor then proceeds to explain the situation. Fry, in his attempts to shield Leela to protect her, is almost completely obliterated by the explosion. The Professor attempts to revive Fry in the birth machine, but this does not have any discernible effect. Leela, in her despair over Fry's death, makes a robot version of him and generates his personality for the robot. However, a malfunction causes Leela to be fatally electrocuted, and the robot Fry to be severely burned and lose his memory. Human Fry suddenly emerges from the birthing machine, having finally absorbed the stem cells. Robot Fry and Robot Leela declare their love for each other, and leave together, leaving the human Fry and Leela to each other.

Bender decides he is fed up with constant partying and begins to vibrate with the excess energy. The Cyclophage suddenly emerges, and attempts to eat Leela. Bender's severe vibrations cause one of his eyes to fall out, and the Cyclophage swallows him, believing Bender to be a cyclops. The device explodes, killing the creature. Bender emerges intact and the Professor declares that Bender expended his excess energy, making it unnecessary for him to keep partying. The crew leave in order to celebrate, and Zapp Brannigan emerges from the birthing machine.

Production
As the first episode of a new run, the production first and foremost focused on continuing from Into the Wild Green Yonder's cliffhanger ending. David X. Cohen explained in an early interview, before the confirmation was even near, that he did consider what to do with the position they ended in, almost daily, which Matt Groening called "painted [themselves] slightly into a corner". While disagreeing on the ease, they were both in agreement that it could and should be resolved in respect with the film.

At the San Diego Comic-Con 2009, Matt Groening and David X. Cohen were asked once again about the issue. Matt Groening wanted to ignore it entirely by then, while Cohen stated that they would address it, but only for a single episode.

The first table read for this episode began on 7 August, 2009, according to Maurice LaMarche and Katey Sagal, the following week, Maurice LaMarche revealed that the recording session was under way. And as of 20 August, 2009, the recording sessions for this episode have ended, and moved on to the table readings of the next episode.

In a 28 August interview, David X. Cohen revealed that the first episode was tentatively named "Rebirth", and in an October interview, he confirmed it was the title they were using.

On the Animation SuperCon in Florida on 4 October, David X. Cohen along with the male cast, gave a sneak peak of the first three minutes of the first episode's animatic. The original concept was for the story to take place in a new universe, but Matt Groening wanted to do the rebirth instead.

A full color trailer of this episode first aired during the premiere of  on Comedy Central on 18 March, 2010.

Beginning on 6 May, 2010, Comedy Central's online newsletter, Comedy Central Insider, began releasing various pictures to tease the premiere every weekday until 24 June, 2010.

Reception
"Rebirth" aired 24 June, 2010, 10pm EST on Comedy Central followed by "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela". "Rebirth", according to, was watched by 2.923 million viewers. It received a 1.8/3 household rating and 1.6/5 of adults between 18 and 49.

"Rebirth" received positive to mixed reviews. IGN's Robert Canning rated it 7.5 (good), and noted that "[w]hile the big laughs may be few, "Rebirth" still delivers an interesting story using many of the familiar tropes of this amazingly well rounded sci-fi world". IF Magazine's Carl Cortez graded both episodes together a B+, Firefox News' Ariel Ponywether gave it an A+, Paste Magazine gave it 8.0 (commendable) and UGO's Alex Zalben called it "good".

Overall, reviewers agreed that "Rebirth" had issues with its story with issues noted to its pace and being many things at once, but generally felt it was a decent episode. Though, as IGN's Robert Canning noted, they weren't certain if this was the return to the Futurama they "knew and loved".

Trivia

 * Leela tells Fry that if he had died, she probably would have built a copy of him too; as it turns out in the twist, however, that's exactly what she did.
 * With this episode, Lauren Tom and Phil LaMarr have officially been promoted to regular cast members.

Continuity

 * This is the second episode in which Leela falls into a coma. The first being "The Sting".
 * Once again, we see that Bender can't get up off his back, as was proven in "Crimes of the Hot".

Allusions

 * The Build-A-Bot Workshop is a reference to the Build-A-Bear Workshop.
 * The Professor says Leela "went all Bladerunner" on them.
 * Studio 1²2¹3³ is an allusion to the infamous Studio 54 of New York (1²=1, 2¹=2, 3³=27. 1*2*27=54)
 * At Studio 1²2¹3³, Bender dresses in the same suit that John Travolta wore in Saturday Night Fever.
 * When the robot Fry and robot Leela shed their skins, they talk like terminators.
 * When the cast is rebirthed, they are first introduced by name, with the last characters out announced as "The Rest", a call back to the original theme song of Gilligan's Island where the Professor and Mary Ann are introduced as "The Rest" despite the fact only two characters remained to be named. This is due to their designation as "second-billed co-stars."
 * When Leela is discovered to be in an irreversible coma, Bender sings, "Coma coma coma coma coma chameleon!" This is a parody of the Culture Club song "Karma Chameleon".

Goofs

 * When Robot Leela says she loves Robot Fry, she is wearing a wristlojackimator. Also, the metallic version of Robot Leela suddenly gets a wristlojackimator as well.
 * When Bender first gets out of the Cyclophage, he shortly is seen with two eyes, only for him to have one eye in the next scene.
 * The Professor tells Bender that if he stops partying for a single second, he'll explode. However, the first time he tells Bender this, Bender is standing still for about ten seconds and nothing happens.
 * However the professor might not have been sure how strong, and said "a second" to be sure.
 * The doomsday device the Professor uses to power Bender was also the same as the Spheroboom whom Bender stole from the Professor, and again from - then used against - the Scammer Aliens in Bender's Big Score.
 * Although it was already a mistake that everyone had reverted to their normal outfits at the end of Into the Wild Green Yonder, LaBarbara was still in her Feminista outfit at the end of the film, but in Farnsworth's flashback she reverted back to her normal clothes as well; Zapp is also wearing his normal uniform but he likely took the opportunity to change clothing.
 * The first scene shows the exterior of the Planet Express building, but the giant explosion hole is not there.
 * The closed captioning says that Randy says, "No, spank you" but he's clearly saying "No, thank you".
 * The buttons that activate the safety spheres appear and disappear after one shot.
 * Amy's skeleton have 4 ribs while the others have 5. (Although this could be an intentional thing to show how obsessed Amy is with being hip and that bone mutilation may be a trend in the 31st century.)

Characters

 * Amy
 * Bender
 * Debut: Cyclophage
 * Fry
 * Hermes
 * Hypnotoad
 * Kif
 * LaBarbara Conrad
 * Leela
 * Nibbler
 * Professor Farnsworth
 * Randy
 * Debut: Robot Fry
 * Debut: Robot Leela
 * Scruffy
 * Zapp Brannigan
 * Zoidberg