Naturama (Futurama)

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"Naturama"
Futurama episode

A lobster version of Dr. Zoidberg with a salmon version of Scruffy.
Episode no. Season seven
Episode 127
Directed by Crystal Chesney-Thompson
Written by Eric Rogers
Michael Saikin
Neil Mukhopadhyay
Production code 7ACV13
Original air date August 29, 2012
Opening caption"Tell Your Parents It's Educational"
Season seven episodes
June 20, 2012 
  1. "The Bots and the Bees"
  2. "A Farewell to Arms"
  3. "Decision 3012"
  4. "The Thief of Baghead"
  5. "Zapp Dingbat"
  6. "The Butterjunk Effect"
  7. "The Six Million Dollar Mon"
  8. "Fun on a Bun"
  9. "Free Will Hunting"
  10. "Near-Death Wish"
  11. "Viva Mars Vegas"
  12. "31st Century Fox"
  13. "Naturama"
  14. "Forty Percent Leadbelly"
  15. "2-D Blacktop"
  16. "T.: The Terrestrial"
  17. "Fry and Leela's Big Fling"
  18. "The Inhuman Torch"
  19. "Saturday Morning Fun Pit"
  20. "Calculon 2.0"
  21. "Assie Come Home"
  22. "Leela and the Genestalk"
  23. "Game of Tones"
  24. "Murder on the Planet Express"
  25. "Stench and Stenchibility"
  26. "Meanwhile"
List of all Futurama episodes

"Naturama" is the thirteenth episode of the seventh season of the animated sitcom Futurama. It originally aired on Comedy Central on August 29, 2012.

Plot

The characters are featured in a nature documentary show called "Wild Universe," divided into three segments. They appear as different animals in each segment with voice-over narration.

Part 1: Salmon

The characters are depicted as salmon, with the exception of Zoidberg, who appears as a lobster. Fry and Leela, born in different rivers, meet after swimming out to sea, and Leela rejects Zapp Branigan and promises to mate with Fry when they come of age. However, since they must instinctually return to the rivers where they were hatched in order to mate, they are forced to separate. Before Zapp can fertilize Leela's eggs, he is caught and eaten by Brrr, a grizzly bear version of Lrrr. Fry jumps out of his river and over to Leela's; but is stuck on the land adjacent to it. He too is caught by Brrr, who reluctantly lets him go after the grizzly bear version of Ndnd argues with him over eating too much fish. Fry reaches Leela and fertilizes her eggs, and both die along with all the other salmon.

Part 2: The Pinta Island Tortoise

Professor Farnsworth, as a rare Pinta Island tortoise named Lonesome Hubert, is persuaded by his animal friends to find a mate so his species can continue. The tortoise he is interested in lives on the other side of the island, an 18-month journey. Once Hubert arrives, he mistakenly begins to mate with a large, tortoise-shaped boulder until the real tortoise (resembling Mom) shows up and angrily knocks it down a hill. She has been waiting for Hubert, and the two mate but later part ways after she lays three eggs. Several months later, these hatch into tortoise versions of Walt, Larry and Igner and promptly fall down the hill, where the boulder rolls over and crushes them, leading to the species' extinction.

Part 3: The Elephant Seal

The alpha male of an elephant seal colony (played by Bender) mates freely with dozens of females, while the less virile males are unable to attract mates. Kif gets Amy's attention and begins to mate with her while Bender is distracted, but Bender discovers them and scares Kif away. Kif challenges Bender for dominance, only to be quickly crushed to death when they fight. However, the other lesser males have taken advantage of the fight and mated without Bender's knowledge, leading to the birth of several pups that look just like them.

Epilogue

Following the closing title screen of the documentary and a pitch for Mutual of Omicron ("Have you insured your planet?"), a fleet of spaceships destroys Earth.

Cultural references

  • The episode was dedicated to Lonesome George, the last known Pinta Island tortoise who died on June 24, 2012.
  • Wild Universe is a reference to the long-running nature documentary series Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom;[1] the logo containing Lrrr (of Omicron Persei 8) matches Mutual of Omaha's corporate insignia.

Reception

The A.V. Club gave this episode, in conjunction with the episode "31st Century Fox," a B.[2]

The season finale had 1.365 million viewers and a 0.7 rating in the (18-49) demo.[3]

References

  1. Nick Venable, "Futurama: Volume 7 [DVD Review]," Cinema Blend, December 12, 2012 (access date 26-05-2013).
  2. Handlen, Zack (August 29, 2012). "Futurama: "31st Century Fox/Naturama"". The AV Club. Retrieved August 31, 2012. 
  3. Kondolojy, Amanda. "Wednesday Cable Ratings: 'Here Comes Honey Boo Boo' Wins Night, + FOX RNC Coverage, 'Storage Wars Texas', 'Royal Pains', 'American Hoggers', 'Daily Show' & More". http://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com. Retrieved 30 August 2012. 

External links

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