Bendin' in the Wind

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Futurama episode
"Bendin' in the Wind"
Episode no. 45
Prod. code 3ACV13
Airdate April 22, 2001
Where Flag of United States United States
Writer(s) Eric Horsted
Director Ron Hughart
Opening subtitle FEDERAL LAW PROHIBITS CHANGING THE CHANNEL
Opening cartoon unknown
Guest star(s) Beck
Season 3
January 2001 – December 2002
  1. Amazon Women in the Mood
  2. Parasites Lost
  3. A Tale of Two Santas
  4. The Luck of the Fryrish
  5. The Birdbot of Ice-Catraz
  6. Bendless Love
  7. The Day the Earth Stood Stupid
  8. That's Lobstertainment!
  9. The Cyber House Rules
  10. Where the Buggalo Roam
  11. Insane in the Mainframe
  12. The Route of All Evil
  13. Bendin' in the Wind
  14. Time Keeps on Slippin'
  15. I Dated a Robot
  16. A Leela of Her Own
  17. A Pharaoh to Remember
  18. Anthology of Interest II
  19. Roswell That Ends Well
  20. Godfellas
  21. Future Stock
  22. The 30% Iron Chef
List of all Futurama episodes...

Bendin' in the Wind is the 13th episode in season 3 of Futurama. It originally aired April 22, 2001. The title comes from the Bob Dylan song Blowin' in the Wind.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Fry gets a free Volkswagen microbus, excavated from the ruins of Old New York. He pushes it back to the Planet Express office, and has to fuel it with whale oil, which replaced gasoline. Bender lifts the barrel of whale oil to the can opener, and is caught by the opener's magnet and horribly damaged.

Cedars-Sinewave Robot Hospital
Enlarge
Cedars-Sinewave Robot Hospital

At the Cedars-Sinewave Robot Hospital (a play off of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), the doctor informs Bender that he will never move again. Bender falls into a state of depression, which is not helped by Patchcord Adams, but when he finds out that Beck's disembodied head is occupying the bed next to him, his spirits are lifted. Beck loans Bender a set of neck-mounted robotic mini-arms. Using the arms to scrape across his mangled body, Bender earns the position of Beck's washboard player.

Bender goes on tour with Beck, and Fry, Leela, Amy, and Dr. Zoidberg pile into Fry's van to follow them. While on tour, Bender is insulted by the treatment of other broken robots. As the tour continues, Bender writes a song about broken robots. Together with Beck, he decides to put on a benefit concert in San Francisco, to help all the broken robots.

Fry and the crew catch up with Bender, who is relaxing in a San Francisco hotel. To everyone's shock, they discover that Bender has miraculously been fixed. To keep his music career, Bender decides to fake still being broken. The concert goes on as planned, but when the time comes to perform Bender's song, he can not restrain himself, and dances around the stage. Bender, having been found out, runs off with the oversized benefit check in Fry's Volkswagen.

Bender, being pursued by an irate Beck, drives the microbus into San Francisco Bay. Beck catches Bender, and recovers the check, but he does forgive him since Bender has done so much for broken robots. The crew floats back to New New York in the microbus.

[edit] Quotes

  • Bender: That is so wrong. You can't just melt down broken robots! Not right when they're kissing my ass!
  • Beck: You know, when I'm upset, I write a song about it. Like when I wrote Devil's Haircut, I was feeling really... What's that song about?
    Bender: Yeah! I could write a song - with real words, not phony ones like "Odelay."
    Beck: Odelay is a word, just look it up in the Becktionary.
  • Beck: That was the best forty minute washboard solo I've ever heard. And the parts when I was awake, blew my mind.
  • Bender: Hand me the Becktionary. (Bender is handed Becktionary) No! No, the rhyming Becktionary.
  • Hermes: Kudos Bender, you got mangled, and now you're a singer! Both our dreams came true!
  • Beck: (after finishing playing Sexx Laws) That song doesn't usually last three hours, but we got into a serious thing. And then I forgot how it ended.
  • Bender: Fry crack corn and I don't care, Leela crack corn I still don't care, Bender crack corn and he is great, Take that, you stupid corn.
  • Zoidberg: It's toe-tappingly tragic!
  • Fry: You look sad, you want me to send Pachcord Atoms back in?

Bender: Wahhh, huaaaa

  • Bender: For the love of God, somebody kick his ass.(Pachcord Atoms ass).
  • Bender: (as the mini-van is falling) I'll save me!

[edit] Lyrics to "My Broken Friend" (as performed)

Bender: People say my broken friend is useless.

But I say his mind is free.
There's lots of things my mangled robot friend could be.

Beck: Kick it!
Bender: Well he could make a good hat rack,
Beck: He only has to stand there.
Bender: Or a cheap doorstop,
Beck: He doesn't need to move.
Bender: Or a great big giant thermos with a twist off top,
Beck: That would be good for soup.
Bender: He could be a storage closet for outdated pants.
Beck: I like 'em tight.
Bender: My broken friend could do it all,
Beck & Bender: Just give him a chance!
Bender: That robot has a tragic secret

That I'd like to share.

Beck: For real?
Bender: My broken friend is closer to me than an ass to a chair.
Beck: Mmmm.
Bender: That robot's name I never told you...
Beck: What's that?
Bender... you could not foresee.
Beck: C'mon, give it up.
Bender: I say it loud and sing it proud,
Beck & Bender: His name is you and me!
Bender: Don't melt me down into a crowbar,
Beck: It suffers alone,
Bender: Just 'cause I can't move my arms and legs.
Beck: Hey!
Bender: Or toss me into a trash can,
Beck: Bender, what are you doin'?
Bender: Just 'cause I can't cook you ham and eggs.
Beck: What are you doin'?
Bender Don't crush me into an anchor,
Beck: Yo, what's the dilly-o?
Bender: Just 'cause I can't jump and dance and sing

I'm telling you, my broken friend...
Put your hands in the air like you just don't care!
I'm telling you my broken friend
Can do most anything!
Yeah!

Beck CUT IT!

(crowds boos)

(spoken) Bender: Curse my natural showmanship!

[edit] Trivia

  • The song "My Broken Friend", performed by Beck and Bender, was written by Christopher Tyng, Eric Horsted and Ken Keeler.
  • The two other songs played during the episode are "Where It's At" from the album Odelay and "Sexx Laws" from Midnite Vultures.
  • While playing "Where It's At", Bender sings a mock-up of the line "I got two turntables and a microphone" by singing "Got a washboard stomach and a microphone." Also, instead of singing "That was a good drum break", Beck sings the line "That was a washboard break".
  • In the shot of the United States map it is shown that some states have been renamed in the future including "Nukevada", "East West Virginia" and "WyΩing". Ohio is called eHIO. California is split into "HighCal" and "LoCal" and the state of Pennsylvania has become the "Penn Republic" and "Sylvania" - a parody of Czechoslovakia splitting into the Czech Republic, and Slovakia. One state (contiguous with present-day Utah) is named, in the alien language, "Human Farm". Conflicting issues involve the fact that despite this episode, Washington D.C. is referred to as such, rather than Washington A.C. and "New New Jersey" is often referred to as just "New Jersey". Additionally, in the episode The 30% Iron Chef, Bender references Eugene, "Oregon", differing from "XORegon", also Idaho is shown as "UserID:aho. Presumably these state parodies were only thought up for this episode as they are not used at any other point in the series.
  • A one point you get a glimpse of the score of Bender's song. If you look close you see that it's actually the theme from Beethoven's 5th symphony.
  • After everyone's shirts are tiedyed because Zoidberg's shell was thrown in the wash, he threatens that if he were ever turned on he would crush his friends, followed by him howling and clacking his claws. Despite not wearing his shell, his claws still made the clacking sound.
  • According to the sign at the city limits of the hick town, the Mayor is "Big Crazy Lester."


Enlarge

[edit] References

  • The title is a play on the Bob Dylan song Blowin' in the Wind. The Simpsons (another Matt Groening / David Cohen production) has also parodied this title with the episode D'oh-in In the Wind, where Homer becomes a hippy much like the Futurama crew.
  • The chase scene at the end is inspired by the movie Bullitt, and the part of the chase in Chinatown could refer to a scene in the video for Beck's "Devil's haircut". The green Volkswagen Beetle that is seen throughout the chase is a reference to the green Volkswagen Beetle seen throughout the chase scene in Bullitt.
  • When the Bus is dug up Bender asks if it is one of "Those Led Zeppelins I've heard so much about." Leela later asks if it is a Jefferson Starship. A reference to the two popular bands Led Zeppelin and Jefferson Starship.
  • Cylon and Garfunkle is a reference to the Cylons of Battlestar Galactica and 1960's folk duo Simon and Garfunkel.
  • The concert Bend-Aid is a reference to the famine relief effort Band Aid
  • Bender lands at "Fisherman's Worf", renamed after the Star Trek: The Next Generation character Worf. This is similar to the parody of a prison on "Commander Riker's Island" in the Season 2 Episode "Brannigan Begin Again", which is a parody of both the prison, Riker's Island, in New York, and the First Officer, Commander Riker in Star Trek: The Next Generation. Along with the brief appearance of Jonathan Frakes, who played Riker, in "Where No Fan Has Gone Before" these are the only references to Star Trek: The Next Generation, as the show mainly focusses on the original series.

[edit] External links


Preceded by:
" The Route of All Evil "
Futurama episodes Followed by:
" Time Keeps on Slippin' "