======================================================================== ============= THE FUTURAMA CHRONICLES ==== EPISODE CAPSULE ============= ======================================================================== Official Title: Mars University Episode Number: 1ACV11 (#11) First Airdate : Sunday, October 3rd, 1999 (8:30 PM) Written by : J. Stewart Burns Directed by : Bret Haaland ======================================================================== = Additional tidbits = Opening theme promotion : Transmitido en Martian en SAP Opening theme cartoon : "Pig in a Polka" {jk} 03-Oct-99 Nielsen ranking: 6.7 million viewers (#54 for the week) MPAA rating : TV-PG Length minus commercials : [21:20] ======================================================================== = Foxworld Synopsis = When Fry returns to college to prove he can be just as good of a dropout as he was in the Twentieth Century, Professor Farnsworth surprises him with a dorm roommate, a super-intelligent monkey. Meanwhile Bender, a legend of the robot fraternity Epsilon Rho Rho -- "ERR" -- leads a revenge of the robot nerds. ======================================================================== = Minutiae = - Fry eats what looks like an amoeba and drinks from a Slurm can. Bender drinks a bottle of LoBrau beer. - Fry went directly for Leela's protection after the box started yelping and moving. {trl} - You can see one of Mars' moons in the establishing shot. (Either Phobos or Deimos.) - Outside the frat house is a broken-down hovercar. - Inside: A ratty old couch and armchair, dartboard, guitar, fem-bot poster, "ERR" crest, LoBrau Beer ad, unfumigated moosehead, discarded magazines, pizza boxes & beer, MARS U flag. - As Bender is being flattered by his ERR buddies, Leela is returning from up a staircase. What was she doing up there? - In 20th-Century Coney Island, two of the prizes at a game booth are a Bart Simpson and Homer Simpson doll. - Did anybody notice Fry's killer short-long back at Coney Island? Then again, only I would find that funny ... =) {bt} [Did anybody think it looked like Archie Andrews' haircut, circa 1975? {jb}] - Robot House's midnight panty-raid takes place under the moonlight of another aspherical Martian moon. - As Bender and his buddies scan the womens' dorm, if you look closely, you can see one of the ladies drop her towel to the floor. She's facing the other way, though, and the 'camera' quickly deletes her from its field of vision. - Financial Aid Dorm Gag 1: Wooden sign with the name falls off and scares away a goat. - Tell me what's wrong with this line: "Pretty nice for a single. Two desks, two chairs, a couple of beds ... " - The contents of Guenter's suitcase are toiletries, a brush and an old-fashioned hairdryer. - When Professor Farnsworth explains the inner workings of Guenter's hat, Fry scratches his head like a monkey. - A character looking a little like Professor Frink (of The Simpsons) is biking past one of the college buildings. {jk} (This same biker appears when Farnsworth mentions Utah.) - Look at Dean Vernon's model shipis a 30th Century spacecraft with 16th Century sails! - It's funny that Guenter happened to ask Fry at the dining hall if he likes bananas. Guess what was on Fry's plate at the time! - At Parents' Weekend, Fry stuffs a bowlful of pigs-in-a-blanket in his mouth at once. - Financial Aid Dorm Gag 2: A brown piece of paper with the name falls off. - Financial Aid Dorm Gag 3: The name is written in chalk above the door. The goat is eating the paper sign. - A seagull flies below our heroes as they await Guenter's rescue from the waterfall. - Was Matt Groening standing in the crowd at the boat race? Coulda' sworn I saw his face for a split second ... {fp} ======================================================================== = Parallels to Science Fiction = ~ "Mars Attacks" (1997 Tim Burton movie) - The Martian depicted in the statue on MU's campus resembles the Martian creatures from this movie, and sports similar weaponry. ~ "The Martian Chronicles" (Ray Bradbury novel) - This was a science fiction novel from the early 50's that tells the tale of man conquering and inhabiting Mars. The idea of the planet being terra-formed with lush jungles was explored here, and it probably wasn't intentional, but the line "Not even if you were the last man on Mars!" parallels part of the novel. (I won't give the whole thing away ... I'd like a few people to read it.) It's also worth mentioning that one of the Martian colonies in the book is named "New New York." ======================================================================== = Other References = ~ "Archie" (cartoon) - Early-90s Fry's hair looks like 1970s Archie Andrews'. {jb} + "Animal House" (movie) [And I thought "Titanic" was overdoing it!] - Mars University Motto "Knowledge Bring Fear," from Faber College's "Knowledge Is Good." {ak} - Similar Statues, though Faber's was not on a horse. {ak} - Similar music at beginning. {ak} - The house is nearly identical, with the junked car, old metal drums, patio furniture, spool table, broken roof and hanging crest. {ak} - Fatbot is a direct take-off of Flounder. He wears the same beany as Flounder did in the beginning of Animal House. He uses the quotes "Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy!" and "This is gonna be great!" in the same voice. In the end scene, his freeze frame is identical with Flounder's. {ak} - The continuous track of "Louie, Louie," and the panty raid. {rc2} - Similar music during the night time scene. Bender shuffles his feet like Bluto. {ak} - John Belushi's character puts a ladder up to the window to peek in on the coeds clad only in their panties (and bras when it ran on TV). {bb} - The ladder stunt is done in Animal House, but is knocked over by, uh, a different kind of extention. {ak} - Snooty House is like the rival frat in Animal House, what with the snootyness and the pipe-smoking. Though that might also be a reference to P.C.U. {ak} - One of the frat guys name is named Meiderneyer, which is similar to Neidermeyer. {hl} - Dean Vernon is a takeoff Dean Wormer,who's first name is Vernon, and was played by John Vernon. He gives a similar list of Frat offenses. In Animal House, Wormer puts Delta on double secret probation. {ak} - Bender acts like John Belushi, crushing a beer keg on his head. {hl} - Song "Shout!" plays at the end. {hl} - The ending with a parade is from Animal House, as is the cake- shaped float, and the freeze-frame and captions saying what happened to the characters in the future. {ak} ~ "Big Guy and Rusty" (cartoon) - This Fox Kids Saturday Morning cartoon features a talking monkey (voiced by Kathy Kinney of "The Drew Carey Show") that looks and sounds much like Guenter. {jb} ~ "The Breakfast Club" (movie) - When Dean VERNON appeared, I was thinkin really hard of "The Breakfast Club" (1985). In this movie the teacher who had to overwatch the five students in detention was named Richard VERNON, one of the students (the "criminal") was named John BENDER and when Vernon had a fight with Bender he talked about fire alarms John started ... {mb} ~ "Dilbert" (comic strip) - Like Fry, Dilbert must deal with a super-smart monkey called Zimbu at his office. Zimbu, like Guenter, appears to be smarter and more competent than Dilbert. {sam} + "Good Will Hunting" (movie) - I belive that the scene where Guenter gets the girl's number, holds it up against the window of the cafe and shouts "How do you like them bananas" is a parody, tibute or what ever to the film. {jr4} - Matt Damon get's the girl's phone number and holds it up to window and says "Do you like apples? I got her number, how do you like them apples!" {jl4} ~ "The Paper Chase" (70's movie/TV show) - The professor who teaches the 20th-Century history class is drawn, and voiced like, John Houseman. {dbc} ~ "Race for your life, Charlie Brown" (Peanuts movie) {jph} - Charlie Brown and the gang rafted down the river in competition with a team that cheated at every move. {jb} In the end, Woodstock won. {rm2} ~ "School of Hard Knockers" (movie) - Dean Vernon sounded exactly like Dean Bitterman! {mm} + "Up the Creek" (movie) - Another forgettable 1980s frat movie in which the climactic event is a raft race in which every house cheats like mad. {dbc} ======================================================================== = Freeze Frame Fanaticism = >> Signs / Locations - MARS UNIVERSITY Knowledge Brings Fear - SOCRATES - VOS SAVANT - COGNITRON {da} (See "Final Thoughts / Comments.") - WONG library - FICTION NON-FICTION Disc One Disc Two - Notice of Failure to Graduate [ferris wheel] CICC - STUDENT REGISTRATION [A-L] [M-Y] [Z] - SNOOTY HOUSE - 20th CENTURY HISTORY TEST TODAY - MENTHOLYPTUS HALL - PARENTS RECEPTION - BIG FRATERNITY RAFT REGATTA >> At the carnival {jb} - The Ferris wheel has a very hard-to-read title, and this is my best guess: - MICKEY CASY HIWHEEL - SNAKE BOY - CONEY ISLAND COMMUNIITY COLLEGE - YOU MUST BE --O THIS TALL TO \| ENROLL | | >> Fry's classmates - ?HESS PEREIRA MANDEL KIDD - ?YTERSKI FRY GUENTER WONG - ?ATRIZIO GUTRICH DEMPSEY MINGO >> Chrissy's textbook & phone number - ENGLISH 101 - Chrissy 789-3629 (The people on had something else to say about this ... see "Final Thoughts / Comments.") >> Farnsworth's lesson (again, very hard to read) {jb} TODAY'S LESSON: Wd or "WITTEN'S DOG" -------------- C \_ ................... P - /_/\ Wd Q . NEUTRON ENHANCED . \ \ \________/| . STEAMING HOT . \ /\ |-- . DARK MATTER . | ___\/__| -- ................... / / / | |\ \ -- |_|_| |_||_| - V C e^2+p -> (?) + v __ __ (Omega)y= (?) | / re \ < (Omega)2 Wd >^2 | "Superdupersquirmetric [+] | | -- | + ------------------ | Steaks Theory" |_\93er/ (z+1)^y __| >> The test {jb} Almost all of it is illegible, but there is one thing that can be seen on the last part of question 2: OJ Simpson steal? >> Snooty House's boat - S.S. Von Snoot ======================================================================== = Goofs = - Why would someone need to go to college if they already had permanent career chips installed? {zb} - Why did Fry already have some books with him when he came across Coney Island College? If he was a student at another school at the time, he'd have either dropped out or graduated from that one, which makes no sense. (This is assuming Fry would have no other reason to carry books with him -- which he wouldn't unless he was holding them for his girlfriend or something.) - Fry shouldn't be able to enroll if, by 31st-Century academic standards, he hasn't acheived a high-school diploma. - When Bender and the other ERRers got on the ladder, they were not on the top when it started going up, but they were at the top when it stopped. {ddg} [With a panty-raid ladder in the 30th century, only the rungs move. {jlm}] - Guenter's note paper disappears from his desk as he explains the television. - According to the Instructor's seating chart, there is someone sitting to Fry's right, but there isn't. (And there can't be, with only twelve people in the class and Amy not being the furthest seat to the left.) - The word is "dodectuple," not "dodecatuple." (That would be like saying "pentatuple" instead of "quintuple.") {ddg} - Although Guenter says that monkeys can't cry, one can distinctly see a tear in his eyes around the beginning of his lamentations to Fry and Leela. {sam} - How could Guenter have handed in a paper smeared with feces? We saw him at all the final moments before he ran away. - Robot House's boat magically reinflates itself. - While Bender water-skis behind his team's boat, in the close-up of Gearshift in the back of the boat, his rope disappears. ======================================================================== = Extended Goofs / Technical Nitpicks = >> There Will Come Complaints Jerry Cornelius: Well ... I was a little disappointed. Mars doesn't have has much gravitational pull as the Earth here and I didn't see anyone walking around with a lighter, bouncier step. Ruined everything for me. [Sarcasm -ed] Brent Allison: Perhaps, in the process of the terra-formation of Mars, an electomagnetic field was added to the planetary core. In the process, Mars Customs demands that all visitors, residents and illegal humans wear magnetic strips on the soles of their shoes. It's the only way I can think of to explain the tacky theme park on the moon as well. Dave Antonoff: Density? Aha! That's why they weren't bouncing around on Mars. Its density was increased so the gravitational pull would match that of Earth! ... so what's sarcasm? Mike Zaite: I'd say they inject Dark Matter into the core of the planet to increase it's gravitational field as part of its terra-forming. The moon probably just used Artificial Gravity. ======================================================================== = Reviews = Jason Barrera: This might actually be the tamest episode to date, garnering only a TV-PG (The Simpsons even gets a TV-PG-D usually). Nevertheless, it was great, if not the greatest. Fry and Guenter were hilarious in their petty rivalry, as was Farnsworth's general senility. The only thing it lacked was the irony present in a lot of the best episodes of "The Simpsons" -- the nerds of Robot House ask Bender to teach them how to be cool without a trace of irony in that cliched message. The new musical score that Christopher Tyng seems to have adopted worked well for a change of pace. (A-) Haynes Lee: This had two subplots in it and Guenter was a bit weak. It should have been more of the Robot Frat. (B-) Patrick McGovern: _That sucked_. Every single Futurama was gold up until this tragedy. Fry's plot sucked, the characterization was way off, but that was nothing compared to the "Animal House" parody. Why, Matt, why?! All it amounted to was a bunch of boring, lame, immature jokes with coincidence wrapped around it. After a good opener, it looks like Futurama has finally hit a bump. I don't think it will be commonplace, but it still sucked. (D) Yours Truly: I agree this may have been one of the corniest Futurama episodes to date, but let's not go nuts ... it still did a great job at tying some standard story with some heavy science fiction ideas. Bender's plot was funny, but I wish he'd have some more interaction with the crew itself this season. Guenter's story was an interesting idea, but was full of holes and pathos that didn't quite make sense, and became preachy near the end. All the elements of a fine episode were there, but the final product was quirky and didn't really work well. (C+) Average Grade: [27/4=6.75] (C+) ======================================================================== = Final Thoughts / Comments = >> Trivial Title Sequence Minutiae Jason Barrera: The opening music seemed to be gleaned from a different portion from the same piece of music by Christopher Tyng, and then spliced down to fit into the opening sequence. >> No transmitido en HTML en SAP According to Brian Tivol, the abbreviation 'SAP' stands for: Second Audio Programming. It strikes me as being very useless, but apparently, when they were revamping the broadcast signal to include something like stereo sound, they wound up with extra room for this feature. Newer TVs have the option to listen to the SAP track instead of the normal sound track. Many syndicated TV shows let you switch to hear the show in Spanish -- but that's not what the "S" in "SAP" stands for. Many PBS shows use the SAP to have a narrator describe the scene for any blind audience members. A vast majority of the shows don't use it at all, and leave the SAP as a copy of the normal soundtrack. Anyone actually check to see what the SAP for that episode actually was? Nicolás Di Candia: SAP is very useful in non-English speaking countries, where the shows are (usually) broadcast in the local language, and the SAP hosts the original versions. In the case of Futurama (and also The Simpsons) it's the only way to watch the show without the _awful_ Spanish dubbing. There's an episode of Friends that parodies the dubbed versions / SAP. It's "The One With Two Parts," from the first season, and its tag features the characters speaking dubbed Spanish. It was also parodied in "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me." BTW, Martian in Spanish is "marciano." >> Knowledge brings fear ... especially in the form of lengthy capsules Adam King: Mars University's motto "Knowledge Bring Fear" is from Faber College's [of "Animal House"] "Knowledge Is Good." The Mars University motto brings to mind the entrance to a WWII German concentration camp (Dachau) that's been depicted in old art and photography. The sign over the entrance gate was written in a similar style and spelled the German phrase "Arbeit Macht Frei," which means "Work Brings Freedom." You can read more about it here: . >> You mean you've never been? Rick Carlson: The line about the 20th Century having no clue that Mars had a University is an inside joke to the internet community at large. Mars University has it's own internet address domain reserved. Click on the following link to get the full story: I've been on the 'net for years, being a Unix programmer for almost 17 years now. I was expecting a reference, and I was not disappointed. One of the sources is: "Details about Internet addresses: subnets and broadcasting" Copyright (C) 1987, Charles L. Hedrick. Anyone may reproduce this document, in whole or in part, provided that: (1) any copy or republication of the entire document must show Rutgers University as the source, and must include this notice; and (2) any other use of this material must reference this manual and Rutgers University, and the fact that the material is copyright by Charles Hedrick and is used by permission. Because 0 and 255 are used for unknown and broadcast addresses, normal hosts should never be given addresses containing 0 or 255. Addresses should never begin with 0, 127, or any number above 223. Addresses violating these rules are sometimes referred to as "Martians", because of rumors that the Central University of Mars is using network 225. >> The boorish manners of an Earthling Steven Aaron Monroe: Mars University was founded in 2636, exactly 1000 years after Harvard University was founded (1636), further suggesting a similarity between the two universities (i.e., both are very old and very prestigious schools, and were both founded (presumably) in a colony early after its permanent settlement). >> SOCRATES - VON SAVANT - COGNITRON Jonathan S. Haas: Presumably everyone knows who Socrates was. "Vos Savant" is a reference to Marilyn Vos Savant, the world's alleged (and self-described) smartest human. She writes a column for some publication or other, and has made several errors in it. Those errors have been pounced on by people annoyed at the smarminess inherent in calling yourself the world's smartest human. "Cognitron", I'm guessing, refers to a robot or other thinking machine that lived sometime between 2000 and 2999. Matt O'Connell: I remember seeing this video tape in computer-science class in high school a few years back ... they had this computer that, instead of doing the 1's and 0's thing, worked via the recognition of patterns ... the government wanted to use it for finding snipers in crowds or some such. I believe it was called a cognitron ... >> "Heavy Metal" char at Mars U. ... sort of Michael Morbius: At the end of the "Z" line at the registrar's office, there's a guy with a purple head, a white shirt, an orange down vest and brown boots who reminded me of Harold Ramis's character in "Heavy Metal" (the alien that did huge lines of "nyborg" and then said he knew how to drive stoned). >> Mathematics of Quantum Neutrino Fields for Dummies Steven Aaron Monroe: The professor mentions the "mathematics of quantum neutrino fields." Although he made it up, it seems (to me, at least) to be a possible subject which studies how neutrinos are released from particles. It doesn't sound very interesting, though. Professor Farnsworth mentioned the "taste" of an electron. Although it would be easy to dismiss this as a ridiculous joke, we should remember that physicists have applied some interesting qualities and names to quarks, the subatomic particles that create hadrons (i.e., protons, neutrons, mesons, etc.), including "flavor," "color," "charmed quarks," "strange quarks," etc. It is possible that "taste" could be some new aspect of subatomic particles that we have not yet discovered. (NOTE: in this case, "taste" is not meant in the normal sense) I'd like to make a comment: any scientific inconsistencies that can be found in "Futurama" may be rationalized and explained by two ideas: 1. Most of the scientific explanations come from Farnsworth. Any mistakes can be blamed on his senility. 2. Matt Groening has artistic license and can bend the laws of physics, chemistry, biology and reality in general to make a point (or a joke). >> To ERR is robot Haynes Lee: The Greek capital "rho" (equivalent to "R") actually looks like the letter "P" in our Roman alphabet. The frat letters should be "EPP," but this is less funny. Daniel B. Case: I also like that Robot House's letters —- Epsilon Rho Rho -— spell out "ERR," as in "error." Brian Tivol: As long as we've had the "What does a capital rho really look like?" discussion elsewhere in the group, I don't mind saying that the sixth "digit" [of Chrissy's phone number] is a lowercase lambda. [Fen Phen recognizes it as "the Greek letter used in Half- Life."] Although people may say the number looks like none of the 10 digits we're used to, and therefore must be something more obscure, like a lambada, I still maintain that it's a hastily drawn "2." Who has the nerve to actually ask a producer? >> Do you think you could be a little _less_ evil than that? Ceci M.: In "Mars University," I think you see another side of Professor Farnsworth. It seems like he's not the "absent-minded professor" type anymore -- especially with the way he treated Guenter during the show. He seemed more like a villain. What does everyone else think about this change? Jason Barrera: Farnsworth has always been sort of a stereotype of the "mad scientist"-types in sci-fi cinema. He's always been something of a sadist, especially with sending OFC on some dangerous mission every week. Baron Calamity: From the first episode we knew that [he] has a habit of going through crew members. We are talking about a society that doesn't value life much. So he is probably as good natured as anyone can be. He at least he gave them a _job_. Mike Zaite: Am I the only one who thought Leela and Fry seemed badly portrayed in this episode? Was it written by a new writer or something? [No, it wasn't. -ed] They sort of seemed to be there just to take up space and to bounce a few jokes off of. Anyone's thought's on this? Jason Barrera: I thought so too -- this episode had a lot less substance and depth to the characters than last week's. Ceci M.: Maybe the reason why is that it was supposed to introduce another aspect of the year 3000 we haven't seen. In past episodes, life on Mars has been talked about between certain characters. And of course, Mars University has always been evoked from time to time throughout the show. But we haven't seen what these places were like until this week's episode. So, I tend to see it as another way to set up future plotlines to add to the panorama of Futurama's world within the program. So, the main characters might figure into the plot ... but not in the conventional way we're used to seeing them. >> "Can't talk -- thinking about Amy." Don Del Grande: According to the end, Fry dropped out and went back to his job -- but what about Amy? Did she drop out as well? Maybe the university gave her a degree in exchange for yet another Wong contribution? Benjamin Robinson: To borrow the term used be the computer-standards committees, Amy's behavior is not defined. That is, she might have dropped out, she might have graduated magna cum laude, or something else might have happened [*]. Whatever it was, the writers didn't feel it was important or funny enough to show. Personally, I think Amy will be a MU student for some time. She's an engineering intern, after all, and this gives her an excuse to be on the PX crew. It also explains why she might be _absent_ from a mission, like the one to Vergon 6: we can just assume she had a class that day. [*] "Up to and including World War III." >> Last, and probably least ... Adam King: A little aside, if a statue of a person is on a horse with both feet up, he died in a war, if one foot, he died from wounds gotten in a war, and all feet down, he died of something else. Jason Barrera: The Macintosh-ish computer in the robot "panty raid" is outdated even by today's standards. No wonder it keeps crashing. (Naughty, naughty computer!) Mike Zaite: I thought that was wrong. I always thought it was a comedy convention that talking monkeys speak in a British accent. Or is that just for Chimpanzees? Jason Barrera: Both the 10/3/1999 episodes of "The Simpsons" and "Futurama" had instances of characters being subjected to electric shocks. Matt Groening must think they're funny. Joe Klemm: Lite-Brite is a toy created by Hasbro. Kids make pictures and signs by placing colored pegs in a screen. To make the toy even neater, you can plug [it in and] turn on a light that makes the pegs light up. Bender and his buddies sure have their work cut out for them if they expect to take a road trip to Tiajuana from Mars. Don Del Grande: They never show Kappa Kappa Wong sorority. ======================================================================== = Fun Stuff = >> References to Previous Episodes - [1ACV01] Fry reduced to screaming at the push of a button (Probulator cf., Classroom) - [1ACV03] Fry: "Booooring!" cf., Amy: "Booooring!" - [1ACV03] Fry eats an amoeba (?) - [1ACV03] Fry is roommates with a non-human - [1ACV04] Creature with a ferocious appetite (Nibbler cf., Fat-Bot) - [1ACV10] Leo and Inez first appear - [1ACV10] Bender operates underwater >> Fan-made Alternate Titles for this Episode "I, Primate" "Mechanical House" {hl} "The Ape in the Hat" ======================================================================== = Voice Credits = >> Starring Billy West ........................ Farnsworth, Fry, Gearshift, Carny Operator, Instructor, Leo Katey Sagal ................................................... Leela John DiMaggio ................... Bender, Oily, Carny Professor, Chet >> Guest Starring Tress MacNielle ............................. Guenter, Intercom voice Dave Herman ....................... Fat-Bot, Meiderneyer, Dean Vernon Lauren Tom ............................................. Amy, Chrissy ======================================================================== = Contributers = {ak} Adam King {jlm} Jesse Leon McCann {bb} Bronco Bob {jph} John P. Hayes {bt} Baykent Tukeli {jr4} Jonathan Reed {da} David Antonoff {mb} Matt Bard {dbc} Daniel B. Case {mm} Michael Morbius {ddg} Don Del Grande {rc2} Robert Castillo {fp} Fen Phen {rm2} Ryan Mead {hl} Haynes Lee {sam} Steven Aaron Monroe {jb} Jason Barrera {trl} Team Rocket Leela {jk} Joe Klemm {zb} Zapp Brannigan {jl4} Jeff Lester ======================================================================== Futurama and its characters are the ===== First uploaded: 01-Nov-1999 properties 30th Century Fox. Lawyers ===== Revision C : 13-Mar-2000 Bring Fear. By Jordan "MU" Eisenberg. ===== E-mail me: