List of recurring human characters from Futurama

El directorio enciclopédico desde la Wikipedia.

This is a list of characters appearing in Futurama.

Contents

[edit] Main characters

[edit] Philip J. Fry

Main article: Philip J. Fry

[edit] Turanga Leela

Main article: Turanga Leela

[edit] Bender

Main article: Bender (Futurama)

[edit] Hubert J. Farnsworth

Main article: Hubert J. Farnsworth

[edit] Doctor Zoidberg

Main article: Doctor Zoidberg

[edit] Hermes Conrad

Main article: Hermes Conrad

[edit] Amy Wong

Main article: Amy Wong

[edit] Secondary characters

[edit] Calculon

Calculon, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, is an acting robot who mostly acts in melodramatic roles. His most famous role is in the long-running robot soap opera All My Circuits, in which he plays the lead character named after himself. He is from the 21st century, having been created as a standard industrial robot called Calculon 1.0. He changes his appearances and name every few decades to hide his true age. It is revealed in Bender Should Not Be Allowed on TV that in his career acting for All My Circuits, he only had to do one take for each scene. He comments that only amateurs do two takes.

[edit] Cubert Farnsworth

Main article: Cubert Farnsworth

Cubert Farnsworth is Professor Hubert Farnsworth's son or rather, his clone made to run Planet Express and complete all the inventions Hubert Farnsworth ever dreamed of making after he dies. He is first introduced in the episode, A Clone of My Own where the Planet Express crew end up having to go and save Hubert after being taken by a group of robots that take him to a planet full of old people attached to machines that simulate an old persons home.

Hubert J. Farnsworth created Cubert Farnsworth with the intention that he would continue his work after discovering that his life was wasted with nothing but failed or worthless inventions. Hubert is delighted until he discovers that Cuberts intentions are not as he planned. Cubert wants to do something 'better' with his life and doesn't accept the responsibillity Hubert gives to him. He believes most things that happen to be "Impossible" contrary to the Professors believe that nothing is impossible. Cubert ends up hitting his head and then starts to think like the professor and saves the Planet Express Crew from death. He then re-appears many times back with the mind state that he had before he hit his head.

[edit] Dr. Ogden Wernstrom

Dr. Ogden Wernstrom, voiced by David Herman, is rival of his former college professor, Professor Farnsworth, in the field of science. He resents an "A-" grade given for sloppy penmanship by Farnsworth in 2900, and works for one hundred years in order to obtain revenge. He often competes against Farnsworth in various competitions, such as the Annual Inventors' Symposium. It is revealed that at one point that he had a relationship with Mom in Bender's Game.

[edit] Kif Kroker

Main article: Kif Kroker

[edit] Lrrr

Lrrr, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, is ruler of the planet Omicron Persei 8. He has an extreme hatred for other beings, often threatening to destroy Earth and its inhabitants. He and his wife, Ndnd, voiced by Tress MacNeille, go through periodic love-hate cycles. Lrrr and his inner circle are devout fans of 20th and 21st century Earth television which, due to the distance of their planet from Earth, they can watch "live", though Lrrr has a violent hatred of animated shows. Lrrr also has a soft spot for animals, which he tries to hide with his threatening persona. However, Ndnd states that the reason she fell in love with him was because of his sensitive, poetic side.

[edit] Mom

Main article: Mom (Futurama)

[edit] Nibbler

Main article: Nibbler (Futurama)

[edit] Richard Nixon

See also: Richard Nixon

Richard Nixon, voiced by Billy West, is kept alive as a head in a jar like many other celebrities. He originally resides in the Hall of Presidents in the head museum, but he eventually leaves and becomes the President of Earth, winning by a single vote.[1] Nixon's administration is marked by a violent and aggressive foreign policy, frequently entering into wars which have little or no purpose. Nixon's head is sometimes accompanied by the headless body of Spiro T. Agnew, Nixon's first historical Vice President.

Billy West has commented that he is not impersonating Richard Nixon for the role; he's impersonating Anthony Hopkins in the movie Nixon (with "a little bit of werewolf"). Matt Groening also frequently expresses his pleasure that he can continue to poke fun at Nixon thirty or forty years after he was in office.[citation needed] Nixon's head was included in TV Squad's list of the five best television appearances by Presidents in animated or puppet form. The character was considered to be particularly interesting because he could be "pure evil" but also command respect and also because "Nixon's head trapped in glass is just really funny."[2]

[edit] Turanga Morris and Munda

Turanga Morris, voiced by David Herman, and Turanga Munda, voiced by Tress MacNeille, are Leela's father and mother. They are sewer mutants who love Leela deeply and give her a normal human life by giving her to an orphanage by passing her off as an alien. They participate in her life as much as possible from the sewers until Leela finally learns the truth and attempts to form a real relationship. They both have one eye, Morris has a vertically oriented mouth and the ability to shed his skin, and Munda has a lion tail, ungulate legs, and octopus tentacles in place of arms. Their original appearance in I Second That Emotion shows them as plain cyclopes like Leela. The plot of Leela's Homeworld required the addition of extra mutations to fit with the idea of that Leela is able to live a normal life, while they cannot.[3][4]

[edit] Zapp Brannigan

Main article: Zapp Brannigan


Zapp Brannigan is a senior member of the military of the Democratic Order of Planets (D.O.O.P.) although his title varies. He is generally big headed, stupid, and lusts after Leela. Zapp tries to uphold Brannigan's Law but usually fails. Brannigan's law states that one cannot interfere with an undeveloped planet.

He is introduced when he meets Leela and ends up causing her to agree to sex out of pity which he tries to shout out as much as possible. He has a very bad idea of how to treat women and is bad in bed. He calls it "sexlexia". Brannigan is then included a lot in later episodes and usually causes some sort of trouble due to his unprofessionalism and ignorance. He likes to discuss his velour outfit. He has problems pronouncing complex words such as champagne.

[edit] Minor characters

[edit] Al Gore

See also: Al Gore

Al Gore, voiced by himself, appears as a head in a jar during most of his appearances and also appears with his body during scenes involving Fry's time period. He is First Emperor of the Moon and has "ridden the mighty moon worm".[5] He sports an almost excessively elaborate jar; the base is colored silver-white, and possesses several hologram projectors, two small rockets for mobility, a pair of lasers, and is backed with the top of a cape. He plays a role in Futurama: Bender's Big Score,[6] where he appears in multiple scenes that take place in the past and during the space battle in the future.

The real-life Gore has said that Futurama is his favorite show. His daughter, Kristin Gore Cusack, was a writer for the show in its later seasons.[7][5] Gore has also voiced the cartoon version of himself in the promotional video, entitled A Terrifying Message from Al Gore for An Inconvenient Truth along with John DiMaggio, the voice of Bender, and Billy West, the narrator.[8]

[edit] Boxy

Boxy is a crude robot only able to communicate by beeping. He is frequently seen in the company of Calculon, and played the role of Calculon's half-brother in the All My Circuits soap opera where his objections sound like he's backing up.[9] Boxy is also John DiMaggio's favorite robot character.[citation needed]

[edit] Brain Slugs

Although a very minor character the Brain slug can be seen on numerous episodes normally attached to Hermes. For a short time Fry had one attached but according to the professor it "starved to death".

[edit] Brainspawn

The Brainspawn are a race of flying telepathic brains that wish to collect all of the data in the universe and kill all other intelligent beings. They are able to use "stupefaction fields" to render all intelligent beings on a planet too stupid to resist them. This allows them to collect all knowledge on the planet and destroy it. Their main enemies are the Nibblonians, who send Nibbler on a mission to find Fry, the only being resistant to the Brainspawn. Fry lacks Delta Brainwave, so he is able to repel the Brainspawn when they attack Earth. Fry later manages to send the Brainspawn and their space station, the Infosphere, into another dimension with a bomb given to him by the Nibblonians. The Brainspawn were inspired by the movie Fiend Without a Face, which features invisible, flying, tentacled brains that kill by sucking out the victim's own brains.[citation needed]

[edit] Cookieville Minimum Security Orphanarium residents

The Cookieville Minimum Security Orphanarium houses a large number of orphans, including Leela during her childhood. The orphans often suffer harsh conditions and various disappointing set backs. It is run by Mr. Vogel, voiced by David Herman, who takes care of the orphans and keeps all records. Three orphans, Albert, Nina, and Sally, are featured most often. Albert and Nina are voiced by Kath Soucie and Sally is voiced by Nicole St. John. Sally has a third ear on her forehead which she is teased about by the other orphans. She also claims to have a tail.

[edit] Dwight Conrad

Dwight Conrad, voiced by Bumper Robinson and Phil LaMarr, is the son of Hermes Conrad and LaBarbara Conrad. He is the close friend of Cubert Farnsworth, and takes after his father in the ways of accounting and bureaucracy.

[edit] Father Changstein-El-Gamal

Father Changstein-El-Gamal, voiced by David Herman, is a priest in the First Amalgamated Church, a mixture of many 20th century religions. He wears a bindi on his forehead (Hinduism), wears a mitre and clerical collar (Catholicism) with a yin-yang symbol on the peak (Taoism), payot (Judaism), an orange wrap (Buddhism) with a shoulder scarf adorned with stars and moons (spiritism). He serves over weddings and funerals and counsels others.

[edit] Elzar

Elzar, voiced by John DiMaggio, is a famous four-armed Neptunian chef with his own New New York restaurant, "Elzar's Fine Cuisine", and television show. Elzar is crass and unpleasant, and has a very high opinion of himself. He never passes up an opportunity to milk money from his customers and fans. He has also been known to steal from his own cash register on occasion. Elzar's favorite cooking implement is his Spice Weasel, a mustelid-like creature which propels a cloud of spices from its snout upon having its body squeezed. Elzar often uses the phrases "knock it up a notch" and "Bam!" Elzar is a parody of the celebrity chef Emeril Lagasse, while his physique is a nod to the four-armed television chef Gormaanda of The Star Wars Holiday Special.[citation needed] The phrase "knock it up a notch," is a parody of Emeril's catchphrase "kick it up a notch"; Emeril is also famous for yelling "Bam" when adding spice to his dishes.[citation needed]

[edit] Flexo

Flexo, voiced by John DiMaggio, is a bending robot who looks and sounds exactly like Bender with the exception of having a small triangular metal goatee, a reference to the Star Trek mirror universe.[citation needed] Flexo first meets and befriends Bender in "Lesser of Two Evils". Fry believes Flexo to be an "evil twin" of Bender, though it turns out that Flexo attempts to stop Bender from stealing the crown from the Miss Universe pageant. Flexo is mistaken for Bender and he is arrested. Critics have claimed Flexo's appearance in this episode one of the "Great Moments" in Futurama.[10] He returns in "Bendless Love" in which Bender briefly dates Flexo's ex-wife, Anglelyne, and impersonates Flexo. Flexo is targeted by the Robot Mafia because of this and he eventually reunites with Anglelyne.

[edit] Hattie McDoogal

Hattie McDoogal, voiced by Tress MacNeille, is an old woman who lives alone with her cats and often uses nonsense words and phrases, such as "kerjigger". She briefly serves as the landlord of Fry and Bender, and she is a shareholder of Planet Express, allowing her the decisive vote for its CEO. She has been married twice, surviving both of them, and often dates. She once hired Kif Kroker as a male escort in a scene parodying Midnight Cowboy.

[edit] Hedonismbot

Hedonismbot, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, is a golden robot built that displays the typical characteristics of hedonism and decadence, such as constantly eating from a bowl of grapes on his stomach. He was built with tax-payers' dollars and features round pupils instead of the square pupils of other robot characters (except in, oddly, the Beast with a Billion Backs[citation needed], though it is to be noted that he has "part of a human" built into him which he uses for recreation). He has a servant robot named Djambi and he has stated that "I too have known unconventional love." He enjoys having a bath of chocolate, having his nipples rubbed with industrial sandpaper and seeing how long he can remain entertained during an opera. [11]

[edit] Horrible Gelatinous Blob

Horrible Gelatinous Blob, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, is a three-eyed, green, translucent, ill-tempered alien. He contemptuously refers to humanoids as "solids" and ridicules their one-way digestive system. He has a son named Brett Blob, who regularly bullies Cubert and Dwight.

[edit] Hyperchicken

The Hyperchicken, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, is a large blue/green rooster-like attorney with southern mannerisms and a pince-nez perched on his beak. He is a terrible lawyer, and routinely loses cases for the main characters. The hyperchicken is a parody of incompetent attorneys from movies such as My Cousin Vinny.[citation needed]

[edit] Hypnotoad

The Hypnotoad is a large toad with oscillating, multicolored eyes which emit a loud, ominous buzzing noise. It has the power to hypnotize almost any living thing at will, even mass numbers of creatures. It has its own television show, Everybody Loves Hypnotoad, in which it hypnotizes the audience. The film Futurama: Bender's Big Score includes a full 22-minute episode on the DVD.[12][13][14] The episode mainly features the Hypnotoad staring into the camera, occasionally intercut with a laugh track or shots of the exterior of various locations to indicate a scene change. The finale of the show consists of a voiceover telling the audience that they will wake up remembering nothing and feeling refreshed, and the credits are all attributed to Hypnotoad. The loud noise made by the toad is a stock sound dubbed "Angry Machine," which was originally used by the editors to remind themselves to replace it with a more appropriate sound effect.[citation needed]

[edit] LaBarbara Conrad

LaBarbara Conrad, voiced by Dawnn Lewis, is the wife of Hermes Conrad and mother of Dwight Conrad. She is the ex-wife of Barbados Slim, the rival of Hermes, who she refers to as "a human Adonis." Hermes is insecure when Barbados is around, and LaBarbara leaves Hermes temporarily in Bender's Big Score to be with Barbados Slim after Hermes loses his body.

[edit] Leo and Inez Wong

Leo Wong, voiced by Billy West, and Inez Wong, voiced by Lauren Tom, are the very wealthy parents of Amy Wong. They are human Martians of Chinese descent who own the entire western hemisphere of Mars (which they claim is the best one) and the Wong buggalo ranch. They often pester Amy about their lack of grandchildren and meddle in her love life, trying to find a man to father their grandchild. When Amy and Kif Kroker begin dating, they decide Kif is not man enough for her. They do seem happy, however, when he and Amy have children.

[edit] Linda

Linda, voiced by Tress MacNeille, is the co-anchor of √2 News with Morbo. She is blissfully unaware of or indifferent to his hatred for humanity, often giggling absentmindedly when he calls for the death of humans. Linda was inspired by Mary Hart of Entertainment Tonight, even hosting a television series with Morbo called Entertainment and Earth Invasion Tonite.[citation needed]

[edit] Malfunctioning Eddy

Malfunctioning Eddy is a robot that runs a hovercar dealership. It turned out that his prices were so low that he really was insane. He had an exploding problem associated with surprise in Insane in the Mainframe. His character refers to the real life Crazy Eddie, whose prices were also insane and who was convicted of fraud. He was voiced by David Herman.

[edit] Michelle

Michelle, voiced by Kath Soucie and Sarah Silverman, is Fry's on and off girlfriend from the 20th century. She dumps Fry shortly before he is frozen New Year's Eve for a man named Constantine (called Charles in The Cryonic Woman, who she later marries). They split up eventually, and she decides to freeze herself. She wakes up in 3002, where she starts her relationship with Fry again. It doesn't work out for them, and she later is shown in a limo with the unfrozen Pauly Shore.

[edit] Morbo

Morbo, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, is the lovable human-hating anchor for √2 News, Entertainment and Alien Invasion Tonight, Good Morning Earth, and other shows on the √2 Television Network. Morbo has an extreme hatred for humans, expressing his contempt during live news broadcasts and frequently comments on his species' extremely violent invasion plans. He appears to be using his job as a news reporter to gather information about the human race for the invasion still yet to come. His co-host, Linda seems either blissfully ignorant or entirely dismissive of Morbo's hatred and usually responds with an empty-headed laugh to Morbo's contempt.

Morbo's character design is based on the aliens from the 1957 science fiction movie Invasion of the Saucer Men.[citation needed] Maurice LaMarche often points out in DVD commentary that two of the characters he voices, Morbo and Lrrr, "sound nothing alike", as a running gag.[citation needed] LaMarche asserts that Morbo, being a newscaster, has better diction.[citation needed] The pitch of Morbo's voice was digitally altered lower than LaMarche's original recordings, and that in subsequent episodes, LaMarche simply read the voice lower to match the—as David X. Cohen referred to it—"sub-human level" of the altered tone.[citation needed]

[edit] Nibblonians

The Nibblonians are an ancient race that came into existence 17 years before the moment of the Big Bang. They have extremely long life spans, eat animals whole to fill their stomachs, which are thousands of times larger than themselves, and excrete extremely dense and potent dark matter. Despite their nature, other beings find their small stature to be extremely adorable. Their arch-enemy is the Brainspawn. They believe Fry is the only hope of the universe in that he can stop the Brainspawn due to his lack of the Delta brainwave. The three main Nibblonians in the series are Nibbler, Ken, voiced by Billy West, and Fiona, voiced by Tress MacNeille.

[edit] Reverend Preacherbot

Reverend Preacherbot, voiced by Phil LaMarr, is a preacher at the Temple of Robotology. He presides over weddings and funerals of robots and humans. His speech patterns, accent, and mannerisms are modeled on those of stereotypical African-American Evangelical preachers.[citation needed]

[edit] Roberto

Roberto, voiced by David Herman, is a criminally insane, psychotic robot who appears to be some kind of stab-bot. His insane acts include targeting the same establishment for robbery three times in a row, killing other robots to provide a disguise, and "practicin' my stabbin'."[15] There are conflicting reasons for his insanity. In the climatic scene of Insane in the Mainframe his dialogue suggests that his parents were abusive but in Benders Game he states that his creators were trying to make an insane robot, but "failed" according to him. This violent nature is enhanced by a body that Daxid X. Cohen and Matt Groening say is based on the shape of a tombstone.[citation needed]

[edit] Robot Devil

The Robot Devil, voiced by Dan Castellaneta and Maurice LaMarche, serves as the leader of Robot Hell, which is hidden beneath the "Inferno" ride at the amusement park "Reckless Ted's Funland" in New Jersey. His function is to torment robots who have committed various sins under the practice of Robotology. He first appears in Hell Is Other Robots to kidnap Bender and torment him, but Fry and Leela manage to save Bender. He plays another major role in "The Devil's Hands Are Idle Playthings" in which Fry makes a deal with the Devil to improve his holophonor skills. Fry wins the Robot Devil's hands, though the Robot Devil manages to obtain them after setting up a large chain of events. He appears briefly in The Beast With A Billion Backs offering Bender the Armies of Hell in exchange for his first born son. Bender complies, causing the Robot Devil to comment "That was pretty brutal, even by my standards." The voice acting of the Robot Devil by Dan Castellaneta has been described as a "bravura performance" on his part.[1]

[edit] Robot Mafia

The Robot Mafia is a three-member crime syndicate operating out of "Fronty's Meat Market", who periodically dine at Elzar's, hijack shipments of Zuban cigars, arrange "accidents" for robots who act against them, as well as other unspecified Mafia-related illegal activities. They are made up of The Donbot, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, The leader of the robot mafia; Joey Mousepad, voiced by John DiMaggio, a burly goonbot wearing a computer-mouse necklace; and Clamps, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, a psychotic robot obsessed with using the clamps that act as his hands.

[edit] Robot Santa

Robot Santa, voiced by John Goodman and John DiMaggio, is a robot created to judge beings as naughty or nice and distribute presents or punishments accordingly. Due to a programming error, his standards judge everyone except for Dr. Zoidberg as naughty, which he punishes with death and destruction. This leads him to go on destructive rampages across Earth every Xmas using various Christmas themed weapons such as grenades of Christmas ornaments and T.O.W. missile launcher. He resides in a death fortress on Neptune along with a number of Neptunians that act as labor for the closed down toy factory.[16] In Bender's Big Score, he assisted the Earth's population in reclaiming their planet after it was purchased by the devious scammers, forcing his Neptunian elves to build weapons and participating personally in the ensuing battle. He is part of an alliance called 'The Trinity', a trio of holiday-themed madmen, comprising Santa, Kwanzabot, and the Hanukah Zombie.

The character's design is very similar to that of Satan Claus P10, one of the giant mechanical beasts fought by Mazinger Z (known as Tranzor Z in the US) that appeared in episode 56 of the anime of the same name.

[edit] Sal

Sal, voiced by John DiMaggio is a surly, overweight, blue-collar worker with a thick Bronx accent. His first appearance is as a janitor on the moon in "The Series Has Landed", servicing the machines in the amusement park. He has appeared many times since, always employed in a tedious job which he does not do well. He is also seen to have a painting on his stomach (in The Cryonic Woman) and comments that he is "on loan from the Louvre". His trademark is to add an 's' to many words that don't need it: "Let's gets him outta heres!" David X. Cohen said in a commentary that the writers debate whether Sal frequently changes jobs or if Sal has been cloned many times.

[edit] Scruffy

Scruffy, voiced by David Herman, is the enigmatic Planet Express janitor. He first appears in the episode "A Fishful of Dollars", where he is seen metal sanding Bender's back after Fry takes the crew to Le Spa. The other members of Planet Express are so unfamiliar with him that they often ask who he is, to which he responds: "I'm Scruffy... the janitor". Scruffy is lazy and can usually be found in the basement of the Planet Express building, reading various porn magazines. He doesn't seem to be bothered by anything, when faced with a life threatening situation he unenthusiastically stated "Scruffy's gonna die the way he lived." and turned a page in his porn magazine. Despite this, he holds a major share of Planet Express stocks. He has once been to prison for reasons unknown.

[edit] Sewer mutants

Sewer mutants are humans mutated by years of pollution and radioactive waste poured into the sewers under New New York. They are forbidden by law to travel to the surface without special permission, so they reside in a community made out of objects flushed down toilets. Among the more prominent mutants in the series are Dwayne, Raoul and Vyolet. Dwayne is a mutant with two noses and a large forehead, voiced by David Herman. Raoul, voiced by Maurice LaMarche, is the "Supreme Mutant", the democratically elected leader of the sewer mutants. His most notable mutation is a third arm, which has grown in place of his right ear. Vyolet, voiced by Tress MacNeille, is a chain-smoking mutant with gills and a pig nose.

[edit] Smitty

Smitty, voiced by Billy West is a Policeman partnered with URL in New New York. He is sometimes seen with a lightsaber-like nightstick. The two often use excessive force in non-violent circumstances.

[edit] Tinny Tim

Tinny Tim, voiced by Tress MacNeille, is an ill-fated orphan-bot with a crutch for an arm. He is programmed to beg, sell oil-ade, and write in cute backwards letters on signs. He was used by Bender and the robot mafia. He is based on Tiny Tim from A Christmas Carol.

[edit] URL

URL, voiced by John DiMaggio, is a robot police officer paired with Smitty. The two often use excessive force in peaceful situations, and make use of various features built into URL, such as a siren, megaphone and violations printer. They can also be seen frequently embracing one another. He also appears in the parody of Cops, Cop Department.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Booker, M. Keith. Drawn to Television: Prime-Time Animation from The Flintstones to Family Guy, 115-124. 
  2. ^ Finley, Adam (2006-02-20). "The Five: Presidents' Day Spectacular!". Retrieved on 2008-02-09.
  3. ^ Cohen, David X. (2003). Futurama season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Leela's Homeworld" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  4. ^ Gore, Kristin. (2003). Futurama season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Leela's Homeworld" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  5. ^ a b Associated Press (November 8, 2002). "Al Gore reprises role on 'Futurama' cartoon". Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  6. ^ Zulkey, Jack (June 7, 2007). "Al Gore, The Futurama President". Huffington Post. Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
  7. ^ Associated Press (May 22, 2000). "Veep guest stars in TV cartoon". Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  8. ^ David X. Cohen, Al Gore and Matt Groening. (2007). Futurama:Bender's Big Score DVD commentary for "A Terrifying Message From Al Gore" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  9. ^ "I, Roomate". Eric Horsted (writer). Futurama. Fox Broadcasting Company. 1999-04-06. No. 3, season 1.
  10. ^ Hofstede, David. 5000 Episodes and No Commercials: The Ultimate Guide to TV Shows on DVD. Back Stage Books, 120. 
  11. ^ The Devil's Hands are Idle Playthings
  12. ^ DVD Talk Review: Futurama: Bender's Big Score
  13. ^ CHUD.com - A film site for the brilliant
  14. ^ Futurama DVD news: Press Release for Futurama - Bender's Big Score | TVShowsOnDVD.com
  15. ^ "Insane in the Mainframe". Bill Odenkirk (writer). Futurama. Fox Broadcasting Company. 2001-04-08. No. 43, season 3.
  16. ^ Nettles, John (2005-08-23). "FUTURAMA MONSTER ROBOT MANIAC FUN COLLECTION". Retrieved on 2007-11-30.
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