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The Series Has Landed

 
Wikipedia: The Series Has Landed
Futurama episode
"The Series Has Landed"
Fry, Leela and Bender stuck on the moon.
Fry, Leela and Bender stuck on the moon
Episode no. 2
Prod. code 1ACV02
Airdate April 4, 1999
Writer(s) Ken Keeler
Director Peter Avanzino
Opening subtitle "In Hypno-Vision"
Opening cartoon Porky Pig in Baby Bottleneck
Season 1
March 1999 – June 1999
  1. "Space Pilot 3000"
  2. "The Series Has Landed"
  3. "I, Roommate"
  4. "Love's Labours Lost in Space"
  5. "Fear of a Bot Planet"
  6. "A Fishful of Dollars"
  7. "My Three Suns"
  8. "A Big Piece of Garbage"
  9. "Hell Is Other Robots"
  10. "A Flight to Remember"
  11. "Mars University"
  12. "When Aliens Attack"
  13. "Fry and the Slurm Factory"
List of all Futurama episodes...

"The Series Has Landed," alternatively titled "Episode Two: The Series Has Landed," is the second episode of the first season of Futurama. It originally aired in North America on April 4, 1999. The episode was written by Ken Keeler and directed by Peter Avanzino. In this episode the main characters Doctor John A. Zoidberg, intern Amy Wong, and bureaucrat Hermes Conrad are first introduced, and the crew goes on their first mission. After completing their delivery a series of mishaps occurs which puts Fry and Leela's lives in danger and nearly leaves all of them trapped on the moon.

Contents

Plot

Professor Farnsworth shows the new Planet Express crew (Fry, Leela, and Bender) his latest commercial for his company, he tells them it will air during the Super Bowl--but on a different channel. which features a large, prehistoric bird. Fry asks if the bird is real, but Farnsworth says that it was created with special effects. When Farnsworth goes to the kitchen to make eggs for breakfast, a baby prehistoric bird hatches from its egg and clamps down on Farnsworth's head with his beak.

Settling into their new jobs, Fry, Leela, and Bender are introduced to the other Planet Express employees: Doctor John A. Zoidberg, intern Amy Wong, and bureaucrat Hermes Conrad. It becomes apparent that the ship needs a captain, and Leela is chosen.

On their first mission, a delivery to the Moon, Fry undergoes severe culture shock. No longer a daring voyage of exploration, lunar travel has become a day trip to an amusement park called Luna Park. By the 31st century, the actual details of Project Apollo are lost and have been replaced by musicals about whalers on the moon and goofy gophers. This upsets Fry, who wants to see the real moon.

In spite of Leela's orders to the contrary, Fry hijacks a car from the lunar rover ride and forces it off its track. They fall into a crater, forcing Leela to use up most of their oxygen to save them. Meanwhile, Amy loses the keys to the ship and has to recover them from a video arcade claw game. Bender attempts to help her, but he is caught reaching through the prize slot and thrown out of the park, leaving him stranded on the Moon's surface.

Running low on oxygen, Fry and Leela take refuge on a hydroponic farm. Bender arrives and seduces the farmer's robot daughters and he, Fry, and Leela end up on the run, trying to out-distance both the farmer's shotgun and the lunar terminator. Leela berates Fry for refusing to accept that, apart from the amusement park, the moon is nothing but a wasteland. As night falls on the Moon, Fry and Leela find the Apollo 11 lander and take shelter inside it.

Fry apologizes to Leela for hijacking the car from the ride and explains his childhood dream of being an astronaut. Leela sympathizes, and they watch an Earthrise together. Eventually, Amy manages to rescue all three with her newly-developed crane operation skills, just before the farmer almost kills them.

Cultural references

During the sequence where Bender attempts to retrieve the keys for the Planet Express Ship from the vending machine, an arcade game titled Gender-Neutral Pac-Person can be seen in the background, a reference to the Namco arcade game Pac-Man.[1]

Broadcast and reception

Ken Keeler was nominated for an Annie Award for "Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television Production" in 1999 for this episode.[2] For its original run, the episode had Nielsen ratings of 8.1/14 in homes and 6.8/19 in adults aged 18–49. While this was a decrease from the pilot episode it did still build 5% from its lead in, The Simpsons. This was the second episode to air following The Simpsons and the final scheduled to air on Sunday evenings before the show moved to the Tuesday night lineup, where it was expected to suffer in the ratings.[3] In 2006 IGN ranked the episode as number 19 in their list of the top 25 episodes of Futurama due to its humor and the effective way in which it portrayed Fry's discovery of the changes in the future.[4]

References

  1. ^ Cohen, David X.. (2003). Futurama season 1 DVD commentary for the episode "The Series Has Landed". [DVD]. 20th Century Fox. 
  2. ^ "27th Annual Annie Award Nominees and Winners". International Animated Film Society. 1999. http://www.annieawards.com/27thannieawardwinners.htm. Retrieved 2007-06-28. 
  3. ^ Tom Bierbaum (1999-04-06). "'Futurama' cools, but still holds on to auds". http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117492973.html?categoryid=14&cs=1. Retrieved 2006-06-29. 
  4. ^ ""Top 25 Futurama Episodes"". IGN. 2006-07-07. http://tv.ign.com/articles/716/716663p1.html. Retrieved 2006-06-27. 

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