Difference between revisions of "Cold Warriors"
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* [[Philip J. Fry|Fry]] calling [[Josh Gedgie]] ''LL Fool J'' is a reference to American rapper and actor {{w|LL Cool J}}, while Gedgie calling Fry ''Grandmaster Phlegm'' is a reference to another rapper, {{w|Grandmaster Flash}}. | * [[Philip J. Fry|Fry]] calling [[Josh Gedgie]] ''LL Fool J'' is a reference to American rapper and actor {{w|LL Cool J}}, while Gedgie calling Fry ''Grandmaster Phlegm'' is a reference to another rapper, {{w|Grandmaster Flash}}. | ||
* One of the images Wernstrom shows Nixon's head and Zapp is a {{w|Verizon}} coverage map. | * One of the images Wernstrom shows Nixon's head and Zapp is a {{w|Verizon}} coverage map. | ||
* The | * The concept of [[Manhattan]] being cut from the planet's surface and taken into space is reminiscent of the novel ''Manhattan Transfer'' by John E. Stith. | ||
* One of the science experiments presented for the space launch involves {{w|Tang (drink)|Tang}}. Tang became popular in the [[United States]] due to it's association with [[NASA]] and the manned spaceflight programs of the [[1950s]] and [[1960s]]. | * One of the science experiments presented for the space launch involves {{w|Tang (drink)|Tang}}. Tang became popular in the [[United States]] due to it's association with [[NASA]] and the manned spaceflight programs of the [[1950s]] and [[1960s]]. | ||
* [[Turanga Leela|Leela]] remembers that all ancient satellites were swept up as space junk in [[2113]] while {{w|Facebook}}ing. Furthermore, the [[List of title captions|title caption]] mentions {{w|Twitter}}. | * [[Turanga Leela|Leela]] remembers that all ancient satellites were swept up as space junk in [[2113]] while {{w|Facebook}}ing. Furthermore, the [[List of title captions|title caption]] mentions {{w|Twitter}}. |
Revision as of 20:17, 1 September 2011
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Season 6 episode Broadcast season 8 episode | |||||
Cold Warriors | |||||
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No. | 112 | ||||
Production number | 6ACV24 | ||||
Written by | Dan Vebber | ||||
Directed by | Crystal Chesney-Thompson | ||||
Title caption | WE'RE FOLLOWING YOU, BUT NOT ON TWITTER | ||||
First air date | 25 August, 2011 | ||||
Broadcast number | S08E11 | ||||
Title reference | The common cold and the cold warriors | ||||
Special guest(s) | Buzz Aldrin Tom Kenny | ||||
Additional | |||||
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Season 6 | |||||
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"Cold Warriors" is the one-hundred-and-twelfth episode of Futurama, the twenty-fourth of the sixth production season and the eleventh of the eighth broadcast season. It aired 25 August, 2011 on Comedy Central. Fry's sneezing reintroduces the common cold to the world of the future, with devastating consequences.
Plot
Production
During June 2011, Countdown to Futurama released two items of promotional material for the episode: concept art of Fry's guinea pig on 5 June and part of the storyboard showing Leela engaged in a broom fight on 6 June.
Two promotional pictures for the episode were released by Comedy Central Press.[1]
On 24 August, Comedy Central released a video clip featuring the Planet Express crew being put under quarantine.[2]
Image gallery
Reception
"Cold Warriors" was well-received by fans, and many considered it to be one of the better episodes of broadcast season 8.[3] However, it did not do so well on IGN, where it scored only 6.5/10.[4] "Cold Warriors" got a 0.7 rating from adults 18-49 and was viewed by 1.524 million, up about 142,000 views from the previous episode.[5]
Additional Info
Trivia
- This episode's storyline is similar to that of the comic book "The Cure for the Common Clod". Writer Eric Rogers has commented on this via Twitter, writing that "[t]hey are different stories".[6]
- This is one of four episodes of broadcast season 8 to be broadcast in production order. The other three are "Fry Am the Egg Man", "Overclockwise" and "Reincarnation".
- If one was to consider each of the movies as one episode rather than four, then "Cold Warriors" could technically be considered the 100th episode, rather than "The Mutants Are Revolting".
- Alternatively, if the movies are canon, but non-episodic, "Cold Warriors" is the 96th episode.
- This is the second episode in a row to feature flashbacks in between the episode, with the previous one being "The Tip of the Zoidberg".
Allusions
- The title of the episode is a reference to the common cold and the cold warriors.
- In the Flashback to 1988, Barack Obama is shown working as a pizza delivery guy.
- Fry calling Josh Gedgie LL Fool J is a reference to American rapper and actor LL Cool J, while Gedgie calling Fry Grandmaster Phlegm is a reference to another rapper, Grandmaster Flash.
- One of the images Wernstrom shows Nixon's head and Zapp is a Verizon coverage map.
- The concept of Manhattan being cut from the planet's surface and taken into space is reminiscent of the novel Manhattan Transfer by John E. Stith.
- One of the science experiments presented for the space launch involves Tang. Tang became popular in the United States due to it's association with NASA and the manned spaceflight programs of the 1950s and 1960s.
- Leela remembers that all ancient satellites were swept up as space junk in 2113 while Facebooking. Furthermore, the title caption mentions Twitter.
Continuity
- This is the first onscreen appearance of Yancy Sr. and Mrs. Fry since Bender's Big Score, and their first speaking roles since "Jurassic Bark".
- In a flashback, Fry is seen carrying his seven-leaf clover from "The Luck of the Fryrish".
- Even though Smitty retired in "Law and Oracle", he somehow returned to the force in this episode.
- In the scene in Panucci's Pizzeria in 1988, Fry can be seen writing left-handed like most other characters in Matt Groening's cartoons.
- Nixon had again a meeting with Zapp in the Secret White House, like in "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela".
- Dr. Wernstrom pronounces his name as "Vernstrom", but he previously pronounced it as "Wernstrom" in "A Big Piece of Garbage" and The Beast with a Billion Backs. Both ways may be correct.
- This episode continues the trend of guinea pig deaths seen in "Anthology of Interest I" and Bender's Big Score and mentioned in "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela".
- The footage of Manhattan being returned to its proper place is similar to the footage of Atlanta being moved in "The Deep South".
Goofs
- According to Wernstrom's diagram's for Nixon, the cold virus has not spread outside of Manhattan. However, both Morbo and Linda of √2 news have the cold, despite the location of their broadcast having been identified as Los Angeles in "A Big Piece of Garbage".
- However, more recent episodes are showing their location in New New York.
- Fry's father's story of when he was shot down over Korea and had to consume his interpreter implies that he fought in the Korean War, but it was established in "Roswell that Ends Well" that he was born in 1948.
- Then again he once claimed that his ancestors fought commies in the revolutionary war so his historical knowledge is iffy at best.
Characters
- Amy
- Bender
- Debut: Buzz Aldrin
- Professor Farnsworth
- Debut: The female CDC scientist
- Yancy Fry, Jr.
- Yancy Fry, Sr.
- Mrs. Fry
- Fry
- Debut: Fry's guinea pig
- Debut: Josh Gedgie
- Hattie
- Hermes
- The Hyper-Chicken
- Kif
- Leela
- Linda
- Debut: The male CDC scientist
- Morbo
- Randy Munchnik
- Richard Nixon's head
- Barack Obama
- Mr. Panucci
- Debut: B.J. Patel
- Debut: Rosemary
- Sal
- Smitty
- URL
- Dr. Ogden Wernstrom
- Zapp
- Zoidberg
References
- ^ Comedy Central Press | Futurama
- ^ Preview - Quarantine
- ^ "Episode Reviews: 6ACV24 - Cold Warrios". Can't Get Enough Futurama. Retrieved on 27 August 2011.
- ^ Canning, Robert (27 August 2011). "Futurama: "Cold Warriors" Review". IGN. Retrieved on 27 August 2011.
- ^ Seidman, Robert (26 August 2011). "Thursday Cable: 'Jersey Shore' Rises; + 'Burn Notice,' 'Suits,' 'Project Runway,' Rise Too". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved on 27 August 2011.
- ^ Twitter: @erog23 (Eric Rogers)