Bender Bending Rodríguez
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Futurama character | |
Bender Bending Rodríguez | |
Age | 6 year-old body 1057 year-old head |
---|---|
Gender | Male (Manbot) |
Species | Robot |
Planet | Earth |
Job | Cook for the Planet Express Delivery Company. |
Relatives | Builder: Mom's Friendly Robot Company Mother: Robot Arm Father: Unknown (killed by electric can opener) Aunt: Rita (a screw) Uncle: Vladimir (Deceased) Cousin: Tandy "Evil" Twin: Flexo |
First Appearance | Space Pilot 3000 |
First Line | "Bite my shiny metal ass." |
Voiced by | John DiMaggio |
Bender Bending Rodríguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. He is voiced by actor John DiMaggio.
On the show, Bender was assembled c. 2998 in Tijuana, Mexico. He is one of the most offensive characters in the series, due to his amorality and its subsequent breaches of any legal or moral norms of modern society. In the series, Bender plays the role of a comic anti-hero, and is described by Leela as an "alcoholic, whore-mongering, chain-smoking gambler." He curses, fights, argues, smokes cigars, drinks and constantly demands attention and praise from other primary as well as secondary characters. A kleptomaniac, Bender steals other characters' wallets, watches and other valuables at every opportunity. He is also apparently a supporter of using corporal punishment on children. It has also shown that he has zero respect for the dead (or anyone else, for that matter, with the possible but unlikely exception of Philip J. Fry). It is often stated that he has no emotions, referring instead to his dependence on his, "superior robo-logic", though this is quite clearly not true.
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[edit] Character history
Bender was built at the Mom's Friendly Robot Company plant in "America's heartland", Tijuana, Mexico, circa AD 2998. He is a Bending-Unit 22, serial number 2716057, chassis number 1729. As his name indicates, he was created for the task of bending metal girders. In fact, without his personality (which can be downloaded out of his actual body onto a disk), his responses and actions are limited to saying "I am Bender. Please insert girder." On December 31, 2999, Bender was waiting in line to use one of New New York City's public suicide booths, having lost the will to live after learning that the girders he bent were used to, ironically make those very booths. There, he met Philip J. Fry, a pizza delivery boy from the 20th century who'd just been revived from cryogenic stasis earlier that day. Fry believed the booth was a phone booth, completely oblivious to the fact that no one was exiting the booth or the large advertisement on its side. After a somewhat rocky introduction, Bender gets impatient and pushes Fry into the booth along with himself, hoping to cheat the machine into killing them simultaneously. He even uses a quarter tied to a string to get out of paying the 25-cent charge. Fry's interference foils Bender's attempt to kill himself and, having nothing better to do, Bender decides to go drinking with Fry. After Leela is convinced by Fry to quit her own job, during which an electrical surge alters Bender's programming, thus allowing him to bend deconstructively, the three end up being hired at Planet Express, an intergalactic package delivery business. Despite what would seem like enough reason to live, Bender does in fact try to kill himself again in a fit of boredom. In an ironic turn of events, this attempt occurs at a Past-O-Rama exhibit, where he mistakes a regular phone booth for a suicide booth.
Though Bender is initially paid to do absolutely nothing, aside from being present at deliveries, he becomes the ship's cook when confronted about it by Hermes Conrad. This is clearly a horrible mistake, as it is frequently mentioned, as well as shown during his cooking sessions, that Bender's food is usually inedible (with the exception of the well-baked cake in "I Second That Emotion"), and would likely be fatal if consumed. He does although cook something edible in The 30% Iron Chef, having been trained by the great Helmut Spargle who presents him with 'The Essence of Pure Flavor' (ordinary tap water laced with a few spoonfuls of LSD).
Bender shares an apartment with his human friend Fry, who said he always wanted a robot for a best friend when he was growing up in the 20th century. Bender, in turn, remarks that he "always wanted a pet." It is stated in "The Sting" that Fry makes "waffles the way Bender likes them."
Despite his vices and macho posturing, Bender has several tender traits, such as his semi-secret aspirations to be a famous cook and/or folk singer. If magnets are placed close to his head, they interfere with his inhibition unit, which causes him to act out his desire to be a folk singer by performing folk staples. He sometimes improvises variations on the songs' lyrics, such as "I'll be blasting all the humans in the world" in "She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain" or "Froggy went a-courtin' and Bender is great, uh-huh!." Bender has a soft spot for turtles. As he described it, they both have hard outer shells but lead rich inner lives. Also like a turtle, Bender has great difficulty getting back on his feet after he has been knocked onto his back. After a short stint as a penguin, he became their ruler and encouraged them to attack humans, only to be attacked himself after removing the tuxedo he had used to imitate them. He has also shown affection toward orphans, adopting twelve at one point and re-donating them after learning they were costing him money. Bender desperately wants to be a part of the Harlem Globetrotters, but was turned down.
Bender has periodically stated a desire to kill all humans, and has made several remarks (asleep or otherwise) indicating a repressed bloodlust. It should be noted that in the episode "The Sting", in which Fry is thought to be dead, Bender reveals that every time he stated that he wished to kill all humans, he would then whisper "except one," the one being Fry. This may not be canon, as this scene is part of a realistic dream Leela had while she was in a coma. Bender's bloodlust is likely a reference to the many movies set in the future in which robots turn against their creators. He, and by extension most of his kind, are clearly not bound by Isaac Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics. At one point, on a planet controlled by human hating robots, he became a celebrity after claiming to have killed "a million-billion" humans. In "The Farnsworth Parabox", Bender claims to have once "pounded a guy into the ground like a stake with a shovel". In the episode "I, Roommate" (playing on Asimov's classic book of short stories I, Robot), Bender contradicts his misanthropic personality with a positive description of "human stuff" ("He laughs, he learns, he loves"), to which Fry responds, "Boring." At the time, Bender had been describing a human on the robot show "All My Circuits", so he may have simply been describing the character, not his species.
Ultimately, it can be said that Bender's sense of morality or conscience is highly situational, based on his mood at the time and/or the comedic needs of the script. At times, he seems to respond with sympathy or guilt toward human suffering, at other times he is perfectly happy to join Robot Santa in killing much of the population of New New York City.
Notable events in Bender's life include his 'birth' (which he remembers, it being only 4 years previous at the time), his previously mentioned hiring at Planet Express, and a brief stint as pharaoh of the planet Osiris IV ("A Pharaoh to Remember"). Bender has met an intergalactic super intelligence which may or may not have been God ("Godfellas"), who seemingly encouraged Bender's gentler traits through inaction. He also cheated his way to five gold medals in the Earth Olympics ("Bend Her"). He won a war medal as a hero of Earth ("War is the H-Word"). During his brief stint as a superhero ("Less Than Hero"), he went by the name Superking (which may be an allusion to the cigarette brand of the same name). He also joined a religious group for robots, Robotology, but quickly abandoned it when he succumbed to the temptations of sinful desires. Because of his sins and his joining of Robotology, he was sent to Robot Hell, but was rescued by Leela and Fry shortly thereafter. His catch phrase is "Bite my shiny metal ass"
[edit] Hardware
There is very little consistency in Bender's hardware from episode to episode, and his internal workings vary as required for the story or for comic effect.
Bender's serial number is 2716057, which is expressible as the sum of two cube numbers ((952)³ + (-951)³). He shares this trait with another Bending Unit he meets called Flexo, whose serial number is 3370318 ((119)³ + (119)³). (This is one of several joke references to obscure mathematical facts; see Hardy-Ramanujan number.)
Bender's CPU is a MOS Technology 6502 ("Fry and the Slurm Factory"), an extremely primitive choice for such a sophisticated piece of technology, especially in AD 2998. Of course, in AD 3000, the 6502's clock speed could likely be manufactured to meet any need.
Bender's habit of hard drinking is a result of his design; like many robots on Futurama, he uses alcohol as fuel and produces greenhouse gases as a result. Bender seems capable of expelling a much larger amount of greenhouse gases than other robots, as he was capable of emitting a large blue flame visible within the combined emissions of every other robot on the planet. Ironically, Bender only suffers symptoms of intoxication when he stops drinking, becoming disoriented and developing a kind of stubble which is actually "five o'clock rust" around his mouth, as his systems break down. While alcohol is his primary fuel source, he is also capable of processing mineral oil and dark matter. He is also equipped with a nuclear pile, the effectiveness of which is unknown, although it did keep his robot brain operational for over 1000 years when he was buried in "Roswell That Ends Well." Bender is seemingly capable of greater strength than he should be, as seen when he bends an "unbendable" girder (although this is not extremely hard to do as seen in "Bend Her"). He is also water-resistant and can operate in a vacuum. When in the former situation, Bender can open his chest to reveal breathing masks, like in a plane that loses cabin pressure. He also notes that "in the event of an emergency, [his] ass can be used as a floatation device." (This is likely a reference to the same capacity noted by Data in Star Trek: Insurrection: "In the event of a water landing, I have been designed to act as a flotation device").
His "extend-o-matic" limbs are extendable, detachable, and capable of functioning independently of his body. The seam below his right armpit, however, seems to give him trouble, as he is seen welding it or asking someone to weld it at various times throughout the series. In most cases, his eyes are shown to be extending cylinders with rounded ends, but in at least two episodes ("Anthology of Interest I" and "A Flight To Remember"), his eyes fall out and are shown to be spheres (in "A Flight To Remember", they are more like cylinders). Additionally, in the episode "The Farnsworth Parabox", Bender replaces his normal, cylindrical eyes with a set that feature a 90-degree bend, like a periscope. These are then used to check the surroundings from his location in the steam vent, to make sure Leela's not around. This feat, however, is impossible because if two periscopes, that sits next to eachother, would rotate more than 90 degrees clockwise or counter-clockwise, one of them would get jammed on the other.
Bender's chest cavity appears to some as using the fictional idea of hammerspace, as Bender frequently pulls and stores objects within it that are far bigger than the laws of physics would normally allow. This access seems to be situational, as his chest cavity has been filled a number of times. It is large enough to hold a person, which he demonstrates on two occasions, the first being in "The Honking." The interior of Bender's chest cavity is actually seen in Futurama: The Game, wherein there are a variety of cogs, wheels, gyros, and various other mechanical components, some of which are outdated even by today's standards. The interior is indeed shown to be larger than it should be. As with most spin-off material for television shows, the videogame might not be considered canon. In "Insane in the Mainframe", an X-ray like "Gamma Scan" reveals a variety of axles and cogs, as well as a small bat. The bat could apparently survive the deadly radiation. A different scan using "f-rays" shows something similar, but without the bat. In one episode, Bender ferments about 30 bottles worth of malt liquor in his chest cavity, carrying it as though he were pregnant. A frequently used item in his chest is his purple camera. On different occasions, he will say the word "Neat!" and take a picture with the camera. No explanation has been given on why he does this or where he puts the pictures. Bender had a bomb in his chest at one point said to be capable of destroying a planet, placed in him by Zapp Brannigan in "War is the H-Word". Though Professor couldn't remove it, claiming it was "stuck in there with glue or something," Bender apparently detonated it at the end of the episode (despite Zapp's claims, it was apparently a dud).≠
Like his limbs, Bender's head is detachable, and can continue to function when not attached to his body. Like his chest cavity, Bender's head seems capable of various functions depending on the situation. It has been seen functioning as an audio tape recorder, answering machine, CD player, film projector, camera (still and video, both of which can be recorded or transmitted on demand), martini shaker, credit card terminal, and a spray can. The camera aspect of his head is a consistent feature, which he uses in a few episodes. He also has a third camera somewhere on his torso. It's implied to be located on his crotch. In the comics, he claims he can't always get it to work, referencing impotence. On top of his head is an antenna, which is multi-functional and can work as a radio transmitter, a remote control receiver, or a toilet flusher, to name a few. Bender is quite sensitive about it, seemingly equating it with a human penis. In "I, Roommate", Bender responds to Leela's suggestion of removing his antenna with "You're not a robot or a man, so you wouldn't understand." Despite this assertion, he can unscrew it, but this is probably not as bad as cutting it off.
Bender claims to have a total of eight senses, four of which are regular human senses. He also has something called "smission", but lacks the regular sense of taste, much to his own dismay. Aside from his own faculties, Bender has several external devices which he uses in the series. One such device is his "gaydar", which is shown as a black box with a radar array attached. The antenna on the array is pink. Another device are his X-ray glasses, though he admits to stealing these. Bender has a built-in, but unreliable, "Cheating Unit" for predicting the outcome of his own dice rolls. Bender makes mention of a Hilarity Unit (an opening subtitle for one episode of the show claims this unit may be powered by "Microsoft Joke"). One can assume he has other units devoted to displaying certain emotional states. Bender's computational abilities are self-admittedly poor, which he reveals in the episode "The Cyber House Rules". He also seems to have four different buttons for deleting information: one on his shoulder, one on his chest, his antenna, and one where his rear end would be. Bender also has a 'Patriotism Circuit' which compels him, when signaled, to fight and possibly give his life in times of crisis. Zapp Brannigan has a device that can trigger Bender's 'Patriotism Circuit', (as shown in "When Aliens Attack") and uses it to draft him into Earth's defense force. When triggered, Bender's antenna blinks and beeps, and Bender stands to attention and shouts a response phrase such as "It is every robots duty to give his life for the good of humanity!"
According to information from various episodes, Bender is composed of 30% iron ("30% Iron Chef"), 40% zinc ("Fry and the Slurm Factory") , 40% titanium ("A Head in the Polls"), 40% dolomite ("Jurassic Bark") and an unknown quantity of osmium (in alloy with the iron) with a 0.04% nickel impurity ("A Pharaoh to Remember"). No explanation for the total of over 150.04% was offered in the series, though it is pointed out in the DVD commentary. David X. Cohen at one point suggests that the various substances may overlap as compounds. Bender's aforementioned calculation skills, or lack thereof, may also be a factor. In "Raging Bender", he is announced as weighing 525 lb (238 kg), but in "A Flight to Remember" his and his then current girlfriend Countess De La Roca's weight was two metric tons (4409 lb). Unless Countess De La Roca weighed 3884 lb (which she well may have done as she was a class three yacht) Bender can't weigh 525 lb.
Despite his incredible weight, in "300 Big Boys" Fry was easily able to lift him onto a cart, despite Fry's characteristic muscular weakness. Fry and Leela also roll Bender up after he is flattened in a fight and carry him away without any problem. Additionally, Dwight Conrad was able to carry both Bender and the safe he was sleeping in easily.
The series provides contradictory information about Bender's origin. In several episodes, he is portrayed having been assembled in a factory in his current form only a few years prior to the start of the series, as an ordinary machine would be. However, in "Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles" he is shown as going through growth and development like an animal and said to have "robo- or RNA", a DNA equivalent. In the DVD commentaries, David X. Cohen states that the viewer only sees a full-sized Bender emerge from the machine that built him, while what happened inside the machine was not revealed. He also claims to have been assembled in a plant in Mexico, hence his surname of "Rodríguez". The episodes "Raging Bender" and "Bendless Love" confirm this, as his origins are announced as "America's heartland - Tijuana, Mexico." His full name is revealed to be Bender Bending Rodriguez in "The Luck of the Fryrish". This is also confirmed in "The Cyber House Rules" when the "Cookieville Minimum Security Orphanarium" is renamed the "Bender B. Rodríguez Orphanarium" in light of Bender's generous donation of twelve orphans and a government check for $1200 ($100 per orphan donated).
[edit] Software
Bender initially couldn't act against his programming. In the first episode, Bender was deprogrammed after being electrocuted by a hanging light bulb. As mentioned above, when his personality is removed (by downloading) his vocabulary reverts to "I am Bender. Please insert Girder." When he comes in contact with a magnet, it disrupts his inhibition unit and he sings various folk songs, including "She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain." He is unaffected by magnetism in his shoulder/'neck' area, as he is sometimes shown sticking magnets on there.
When Bender is reactivated, he automatically takes on the traits of the first organism he encounters. In "The Birdbot of Ice-Catraz", Bender reboots as a penguin after being mauled by a killer whale. His primary tasks in "Penguin Mode" are to acquire food and frolic. When he reboots back to "Human Mode" after being shot by Leela, his two primary tasks are to bend and "Cheese it!"
[edit] Appearances outside of Futurama
- Bender has made cameo appearances in several episodes of Matt Groening's other show, The Simpsons. In "Future-Drama", Bart and Homer go through a portal/tunnel on a hovercraft. At the other side, Bender is seen in between Bart and Homer, saying "All right! You guys are my new best friends". Homer says "You wish, loser!" and throws him out of the car, where he breaks apart (a joke on the fact that Futurama had been cancelled at the time).
- Bender also makes a cameo entrance in "Bart vs. Lisa vs. The Third Grade". Due to a lack of sleep brought on by watching too much TV, Bart begins to hallucinate in class. The characters from various shows Bart had been watching (such as Bender, a bulimic NBC News anchor, Pikachu, and an anthropomorphic clock) greet Bart and throw him on their shoulders while singing the Jewish folk song Hava Nagila.
- Bender appears with Al Gore in A Terrifying Message from Al Gore, promoting (or in Bender's case, disparaging) An Inconvenient Truth.
- In The Simpsons episode "My Big Fat Geek Wedding", Milhouse has a Bender doll.
- In The Simpsons episode "Missionary: Impossible", Bender appears on the fundraising panel as a phone operator.
[edit] Love life
Bender's tenderness is also shown through his romantic relationships.
In the episode "Bend Her", after winning five gold olympic medals disguised as a fembot, Bender has to undertake a robot sex change to physically become a fully-fledged fembot so as to pass the mandatory gender testing. During his time as a fembot, Bender attracts the amorous attentions of Calculon and they eventually become engaged. In order to avoid the marriage and return to his life as a manbot, Bender fakes his own death at the altar. Bender's love for Calculon lives on, however, as shown when he sheds a tear after watching a movie tribute dedicated to their relationship.
In the episode "Bendless Love", Bender falls in love with a female robot named Angleyne. Their relationship crumbles, however, when Bender disguises himself as Angleyne's ex-lover (and his own identical twin), Flexo, in order to entrap her; this backfires when Angleyne realizes Bender has shown her she is still devoted to Flexo.
In "A Flight to Remember", Bender fell in love with the (now presumably deceased) Countess De La Roca. He saved the Countess from a fire in her room but she later sacrificed herself for Bender's life by falling into the black hole the ship Titanic was heading towards. All Bender has left of her was her diamond brooch, which he discovers to be imitation and therefore worthless. He is seen casually tossing it in a garbage can immediately upon his return to Earth.
Bender fell in love with penguins after (temporary) resetting to Penguin mode in "The Birdbot of Ice-Catraz".
In "Amazon Women in the Mood", Bender fell in love with the fembot inside the Femputer ruling the Amazonians. As a result of his dalliance with the fembot, Bender received several ingots of gold by 'commanding' the Amazonians to do so.
Bender was shown to be in love with Lucy Liu's head in "I Dated a Robot".
At one point Bender fell in love with the Planet Express Ship in "Love and Rocket". The fact that traces of the Ship's programming remained in Bender might explain why he is slightly more feminine in later episodes. This is speculated in the audio commentary for that episode.
In "The Cryonic Woman", Bender notes "That probulator sure knows how to please a man!", as he exits said probulator room.
[edit] Trivia
- Bender is Flexo's evil twin, which was revealed in the first episode ("Lesser of Two Evils"). Flexo has a goatee, which is a reference to the goateed Mirror Universe Spock from the "Mirror, Mirror" episode of Star Trek: The Original Series. A similar storyline was used in a Halloween episode of The Simpsons ("Treehouse of Horror VII") and also a South Park halloween special ("Spookyfish").
- Bender's apartment number is 00100100, which when translated into ASCII, is the $ symbol.
- Although Bender is five years old at the end of the fourth season, if one takes into account the episode "Roswell That Ends Well", his head could be considered 1060 years old. In that episode, Bender's head was dropped from the Planet Express ship just outside Roswell Air Force Base in the year 1947, where it stayed buried in the sand until the crew dug his head up 1056 years later in the year 3002. This is widely seen as a reference to the "Time's Arrow" episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, in which Data's head is left in the past in a similar way. This can also be seen as a reference to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, in which the manically-depressed robot Marvin the Paranoid Android is left on a planet for billions of years before finally being rediscovered by his friends, and professes to be several times older than the universe itself by the time he finally gets deactivated.
- In one episode [citation needed], Bender is shown to have a plug on his rear plate, which he uses to power a television. However in the episode "Obsoletely Fabulous" he does not have means to power a blender to make alcholic beverages even though he should be able to plug the blender into himself to power it.
- Although more aptly named after his primary function his name may also be inspired by the character "John Bender" for the 80's move The Breakfast Club.
[edit] Catchphrases and favorite words
Bender's most memorable catchphrase is "Bite my shiny metal ass!", which was also his first line of dialogue in the show. Some known derivatives include:
- "Bite my glorious golden ass!" (said by a golden Bender from a parallel universe during "The Farnsworth Parabox")
- "Bite my red hot glowing ass!" (said by Bender during "When Aliens Attack" just before he realizes his rear end is on fire)
- "The modern world can bite my splintery wooden ass!" (said by a wooden Bender during "Obsoletely Fabulous")
- "Bite my colossal metal ass!" (said by a giant Bender during "Anthology of Interest I")
- "Lick my frozen metal ass!" (said by Bender during "The Birdbot of Ice-Catraz" and "Xmas Story")
- "Bite my shiny metal-- Oh NOOOOOO!!" (said by Bender when he realised that he had traded his crotch-plate (ass) to the Robot Devil for an air horn in "The Devil's Hands Are Idle Playthings")
- "You can interface with my ass. By biting it!" (said by Bender when asked by Leela to 'interface' with the Femputer in "Amazon Women in the Mood".)
- "1947 can kiss my shiny metal...." (head falls from ship) ("Roswell That Ends Well")
Other catch phrases include:
- "Kill all humans!"
- "Cheese it!"
- "I'm back, baby!"
- "Bender's great!"
- "I'm/we're boned."
- "Neat!" (then takes a picture with a camera)
- "Oh your God!" (instead of Oh my God)
- "He's/You're pending for a bending"
Bender also enjoys referring to himself in the third person (example: "And then Bender ran" from "Leela's Homeworld") and never misses a chance to compliment himself. In times when Bender and his friends are caught in a situation with little chance to extract themselves from, he is often heard to exclaim the words "We're doomed! DOOOOOMED!", usually in an overly exaggerated and melodramatic manner. He even said it in perfect unison with his golden parallel universe self.
[edit] Top 10 most used words
In the episode "War Is the H-Word", Bender's 10 most uttered words are shown on a list. Six of the 10 words are rarely said, it should be noted that in the aforementioned episode each word was said at least once. The words are:
- 10. Chump
- 9. Chumpette
- 8. Yours
- 7. Up
- 6. Pimpmobile
- 5. Bite
- 4. My
- 3. Shiny
- 2. Daffodil
- 1. Ass
Also revealed in that episode, some of the least likely words Bender will say are:
- Please
- Thanks
- Sorry
- Fun-derful
- Non-alcoholic
- Compassion
- Shrimptoast
- Antiquing (which will cause a bomb to explode if uttered.)
[edit] Words used to describe humans
- Meatbag
- Meatball
- Meatloaf
- Skintube
- Porkpie
- Bloodbag
- Pork pouch
- Organ sack
- Fleshwad
- Flesh-pile
- Coffin-stuffer
- Sausage-link
- Meaty-meaty meat lump
- Pets (used in reference to Fry in the episode "I, Roommate")
- Mammals
Futurama | |
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Characters | |
Philip J. Fry • Turanga Leela • Bender • Professor Hubert Farnsworth • Dr. John Zoidberg • Hermes Conrad • Amy Wong Zapp Brannigan • Kif Kroker • Nibbler • Cubert Farnsworth • Calculon • Mom Others: Recurring non-robot characters • Recurring robot characters • Secondary characters |
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Media | |
Episodes • Comic Books • Video Game | |
Futurama Universe | |
Planets: Eternium • Omicron Persei VIII | |
Aliens: Cygnoid • Decapodian • Nibblonian • Neptunian | |
Politics and Religion: Earth Government • Robotology • D.O.O.P. | |
Technology: Gadgets • Suicide booth • Planet Express Ship • Nimbus | |
Other | |
Timeline • Blernsball • All My Circuits • The Scary Door • Slurm • Products • Locations • Animals | |
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