Difference between revisions of "Proposition Infinity"
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*It is said that marriage between horses and ghosts is legal. But, according to [[The Honking]], the last ghost is dead for over 200 years. | *It is said that marriage between horses and ghosts is legal. But, according to [[The Honking]], the last ghost is dead for over 200 years. | ||
**This can be answered due to the fact it speaks about human ghost, it could be another specie's ghosts. | **This can be answered due to the fact it speaks about human ghost, it could be another specie's ghosts. | ||
*Most of the crew's opinions on robosexuality is different from previous episodes, such as [[I Dated | *Most of the crew's opinions on robosexuality is different from previous episodes, such as [[I Dated a Robot]]. | ||
== Characters == | == Characters == |
Revision as of 17:22, 10 July 2010
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Season 6 episode Broadcast season 7 episode | |||||
Proposition Infinity | |||||
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No. | 92 | ||||
Production number | 6ACV04 | ||||
Written by | Michael Rowe | ||||
Directed by | Crystal Chesney-Thompson | ||||
Title caption | Dictated But Not Read | ||||
First air date | 8 July, 2010 | ||||
Broadcast number | S07E04 | ||||
Special guest(s) | George Takei | ||||
Additional | |||||
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Season 6 | |||||
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"Proposition Infinity" is the ninety-second episode of Futurama, the fourth of the sixth production season and the seventh broadcast season. It aired 8 July 2010 on Comedy Central. It guest stars George Takei as himself. After a break-up with Kif, Amy gets together with Bender in a frowned upon robosexual relationship.
The Story
Act I
New New York's walls have been hit by a mysterious vandal, who is revealed to be Bender. Bender is caught (he was vandalizing the back of URL, a police officer) and swiftly arrested. Bender calls Amy, who has been fighting with Kif all night, to bail him out of jail. Amy agrees, leaving to bail him out of jail. Arriving, Amy enters the police station with Kif, and bails Bender out. While in line to get discharged, Amy is hit on by an inmate, flirting with him. This shocks Kif, as he is a criminal, but irritates Amy. Kif tells her that she is attracted to "bad boys," which he is not. Amy disagrees, but then flirts with another inmate that actually threatens her life. Kif, being annoyed with Amy flirting with other men, tells Amy that they're through.
The break up severely upsets Amy, and to make her feel better, Leela, Fry, and Bender take her to Forbidden Planet Hollywood. Bender makes fun of her all night, telling her to shut up and such. Amy tells him to back off, saying that he should be afraid of what she did to the last person that told her to shut up: sexual intercourse. After this, Amy and Bender discover a mutual attraction for each other and enter into a robosexual relationship, which is taboo in 3010, so they keep quiet about their relationship, even to their friends and co-workers. The co-workers grow suspicious, but think nothing of it.
While at the planet Tornadus, collecting tornado wind for the Professor's entry for the County Fair, the crew is shocked to learn that Bender and Amy are missing. They discover their clothes flying around in the tube with the tornado winds, so the Professor shuts off the machine, and when the winds go away, the crew is shocked to see Bender and Amy making love. Discovering this, Professor immediately disapproves of it. However, the rest of the crew accepts Bender and Amy's relationship, which they thank them for, as she knows she can't tell her family as they'll disapprove. This is exactly what Professor does, he calls Leo and Inez, Amy's parents. Then he calls the Robot Pastor for Bender. While at her parent's Mars ranch, Amy is saved by Fry, who poses as her new beau to get her parents off her back. Amy saves Bender from the camp that the Robot Pastor sent him to. They go back to the Planet Express building, where Bender proposes to Amy.
Act III
However, the Professor reminds them that robosexual marriage is illegal in New New York. To fight against this, Bender and Amy launch a campaign for the legalization of robosexual marriage. They launch Proposition ∞, which, in days before the election, slumps in the polls. Amy loses hope, but Bender says that they'll win due to his debate tonight against Professor Farnsworth. Bender gives a heartfelt speech, which the audience applauds for. The Professor follows with his rebuttal, saying that he was in love with a fellow scientist named Eunice, and, 43 years later, discovers her in bed with a robot. This doesn't impress the audience, which despise the Professor as he hates robosexuals because his girlfriend slept with a robot. However, he admits that she WAS a robot, named Unit, who slept with another robot. Farnsworth's heart was broken, so he took his anger out on other robosexuals. Due to him admitting the truth, the Professor withdraws his argument, fully in support of Prop. ∞. The next day, Prop. Infinity is approved. Amy is ecstatic, saying that she and Bender can have a normal, monogamous marriage now. Upon hearing the word monogamous Bender then leaves Amy for two robot hookers, while Amy goes back to Kif, who became a bad boy for her.
Production
This episode and the second episode of the sixth season will also feature some more coarse language, that would previously not be possible on FOX.[1] Some people wonder if this could hurt Futurama's possible return to FOX.[1] But it's still possible for FOX to show the episodes if they were to censor the coarse language, just like they do with Family Guy and American Dad.
Additional info
Trivia
- Todd said that it was the Canadian Independence Day, which fall the 1st July. That could mean the episode would be aired earlier.
Allusions
- The story and the title of the episode is inspired by California's Proposition 8,[2] which was an amendment to Californian Constitution that banned same-sex marriage.
- The house in the tornado is a reference to a scene from The Wizard of Oz.
- The half-black / half-white "interracial" couple shown in the protest scene is taken from the Star Trek episode "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield".
- The characters mention that robosexual marriage is legal in Space Massachusetts
Goofs
- Bender apparently stole Lassie's head in the Forbidden Planet Hollywood. However it was already said in Jurassic Bark that Lassie was in the Louvre.
- It is said that marriage between horses and ghosts is legal. But, according to The Honking, the last ghost is dead for over 200 years.
- This can be answered due to the fact it speaks about human ghost, it could be another specie's ghosts.
- Most of the crew's opinions on robosexuality is different from previous episodes, such as I Dated a Robot.
Characters
- Amy
- Bender
- Donbot
- Fanny
- Fatbot
- Fry
- Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth
- George Takei's Head
- Hattie McDoogal
- Hedonismbot
- Hermaphrobot
- Hermes
- Horrible Gelatinous Blob
- Humorbot 5.0
- Hyper-Chicken
- Debut: Jim
- Joey Mousepad
- Kif
- Leela
- Reverend Lionel Preacherbot
- Linda
- Michelle
- Morbo
- Pauly Shore
- Roberto
- Smitty
- Debut: Todd
- URL
- Debut:Wine Bucket
- Zoidberg
References
- ^ a b Cite error: Invalid
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- ^ "A parody of Prop 8, with Bender and Amy wanting a robosexual wedding. There is a Prop Infinity attempt to stop them."
Perkis, Ed (25 July 2009). "Comic Con: Futurama Ignores Controversy, Promises To Take On Twitter". Cinema Blend. Retrieved on 26 July 2009.