Re: [scifinoir2] 'Futurama' makes welcome return

2010-06-25 Thread Martin Baxter
Brent, I admit that I was worried going into last night. Gratefully, all my
fears were proven groundless. She'll fly. [?][?]

On Thu, Jun 24, 2010 at 7:36 PM, brent wodehouse 
brent_wodeho...@thefence.us wrote:



 http://jam.canoe.ca/Television/2010/06/24/14496826.html

 'Futurama' makes welcome return

 By Barry Garron, REUTERS

 LOS ANGELES - There's good news in the future, a thousand years in the
 future.

 The resumption of new Futurama episodes on Comedy Central, beginning
 Thursday, once more demonstrates the power of a truly dedicated fan base.
 More importantly, it brings new life to a show that brilliantly mixes
 satire, sex and sentimentality. Based on the first couple of episodes,
 executive producers Matt Groening, David X. Cohen and Ken Keeler waste no
 time picking up from where the series left off.

 Futurama, set in the 31st century, ran on Fox from 1999-2003. Except for
 a couple of months, the show was part of the Sunday animation block. Now,
 just like Family Guy, which also premiered in 1999 on Fox and survived
 cancellation, Futurama is back, the beneficiary of a loyal following and
 impressive DVD sales.

 In a sense, the show was like one of its main characters, Fry (Billy
 West), the pizza-delivery guy who was inadvertently frozen during a
 delivery to a cryogenics lab. Futurama never really died. After Fox
 dropped it, reruns ran on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim. Starting in 2007,
 Futurama made four direct-to-DVD movies, the last of which came out last
 year. As early as 2006, Comedy Central said it planned to revive the
 series, and it began showing reruns in 2008.

 The premiere of the revived Futurama tries mightily, if somewhat
 circuitously, to account for the time between new episodes. Appropriately
 called Rebirth, Professor Hubert Farnsworth explains how the entire
 Planet Express delivery crew nearly was destroyed in a space battle.
 However, by dunking the preserved heads and skeletal remains in a vat of
 stem-cell soup, the unintentionally cynical professor regenerates each
 character, one by one. All except sexy, one-eyed Leela (Katey Sagal), the
 Planet Express ship captain whose ultimate recovery becomes a tale of
 robotics and romance, very much in keeping with the tone of earlier
 episodes.

 For sharper satire (and lots of sexual innuendo), stay tuned for the
 second episode, which will air following the premiere. Part fantasy, part
 allegory, it recounts how the Earth was threatened by a Puritanical
 satellite while Leela and pompous space captain Zapp Brannigan relive the
 moment when Adam and Eve committed their original sin, fig leaves and all.


 No doubt about it, Futurama and its entire splendid voice cast is back,
 sly wit, social satire and all. So, too, are the disembodied heads of
 celebrated figures, starting in the second episode with Richard Nixon. In
 this new season of 12 episodes, the guest list includes Chris Elliot,
 Craig Ferguson, George Takei, Katee Sackhoff as well as executive
 producers Groening and Cohen.

 Following the two-episode premiere, succeeding episodes will air 10 p.m.
 Thursdays.

  




-- 
If all the world's a stage and we are merely players, who the bloody hell
wrote the script? -- Charles E Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik
35C.gif330.gif

[scifinoir2] 'Futurama' makes welcome return

2010-06-24 Thread brent wodehouse
http://jam.canoe.ca/Television/2010/06/24/14496826.html

'Futurama' makes welcome return

By Barry Garron, REUTERS


LOS ANGELES - There's good news in the future, a thousand years in the
future.

The resumption of new Futurama episodes on Comedy Central, beginning
Thursday, once more demonstrates the power of a truly dedicated fan base.
More importantly, it brings new life to a show that brilliantly mixes
satire, sex and sentimentality. Based on the first couple of episodes,
executive producers Matt Groening, David X. Cohen and Ken Keeler waste no
time picking up from where the series left off.

Futurama, set in the 31st century, ran on Fox from 1999-2003. Except for
a couple of months, the show was part of the Sunday animation block. Now,
just like Family Guy, which also premiered in 1999 on Fox and survived
cancellation, Futurama is back, the beneficiary of a loyal following and
impressive DVD sales.

In a sense, the show was like one of its main characters, Fry (Billy
West), the pizza-delivery guy who was inadvertently frozen during a
delivery to a cryogenics lab. Futurama never really died. After Fox
dropped it, reruns ran on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim. Starting in 2007,
Futurama made four direct-to-DVD movies, the last of which came out last
year. As early as 2006, Comedy Central said it planned to revive the
series, and it began showing reruns in 2008.

The premiere of the revived Futurama tries mightily, if somewhat
circuitously, to account for the time between new episodes. Appropriately
called Rebirth, Professor Hubert Farnsworth explains how the entire
Planet Express delivery crew nearly was destroyed in a space battle.
However, by dunking the preserved heads and skeletal remains in a vat of
stem-cell soup, the unintentionally cynical professor regenerates each
character, one by one. All except sexy, one-eyed Leela (Katey Sagal), the
Planet Express ship captain whose ultimate recovery becomes a tale of
robotics and romance, very much in keeping with the tone of earlier
episodes.

For sharper satire (and lots of sexual innuendo), stay tuned for the
second episode, which will air following the premiere. Part fantasy, part
allegory, it recounts how the Earth was threatened by a Puritanical
satellite while Leela and pompous space captain Zapp Brannigan relive the
moment when Adam and Eve committed their original sin, fig leaves and all.


No doubt about it, Futurama and its entire splendid voice cast is back,
sly wit, social satire and all. So, too, are the disembodied heads of
celebrated figures, starting in the second episode with Richard Nixon. In
this new season of 12 episodes, the guest list includes Chris Elliot,
Craig Ferguson, George Takei, Katee Sackhoff as well as executive
producers Groening and Cohen.

Following the two-episode premiere, succeeding episodes will air 10 p.m.
Thursdays.



Re: [scifinoir2] 'Futurama' makes welcome return

2010-06-24 Thread Mr. Worf
Thanks for the update!

On Thu, Jun 24, 2010 at 4:36 PM, brent wodehouse 
brent_wodeho...@thefence.us wrote:

 http://jam.canoe.ca/Television/2010/06/24/14496826.html

 'Futurama' makes welcome return

 By Barry Garron, REUTERS


 LOS ANGELES - There's good news in the future, a thousand years in the
 future.

 The resumption of new Futurama episodes on Comedy Central, beginning
 Thursday, once more demonstrates the power of a truly dedicated fan base.
 More importantly, it brings new life to a show that brilliantly mixes
 satire, sex and sentimentality. Based on the first couple of episodes,
 executive producers Matt Groening, David X. Cohen and Ken Keeler waste no
 time picking up from where the series left off.

 Futurama, set in the 31st century, ran on Fox from 1999-2003. Except for
 a couple of months, the show was part of the Sunday animation block. Now,
 just like Family Guy, which also premiered in 1999 on Fox and survived
 cancellation, Futurama is back, the beneficiary of a loyal following and
 impressive DVD sales.

 In a sense, the show was like one of its main characters, Fry (Billy
 West), the pizza-delivery guy who was inadvertently frozen during a
 delivery to a cryogenics lab. Futurama never really died. After Fox
 dropped it, reruns ran on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim. Starting in 2007,
 Futurama made four direct-to-DVD movies, the last of which came out last
 year. As early as 2006, Comedy Central said it planned to revive the
 series, and it began showing reruns in 2008.

 The premiere of the revived Futurama tries mightily, if somewhat
 circuitously, to account for the time between new episodes. Appropriately
 called Rebirth, Professor Hubert Farnsworth explains how the entire
 Planet Express delivery crew nearly was destroyed in a space battle.
 However, by dunking the preserved heads and skeletal remains in a vat of
 stem-cell soup, the unintentionally cynical professor regenerates each
 character, one by one. All except sexy, one-eyed Leela (Katey Sagal), the
 Planet Express ship captain whose ultimate recovery becomes a tale of
 robotics and romance, very much in keeping with the tone of earlier
 episodes.

 For sharper satire (and lots of sexual innuendo), stay tuned for the
 second episode, which will air following the premiere. Part fantasy, part
 allegory, it recounts how the Earth was threatened by a Puritanical
 satellite while Leela and pompous space captain Zapp Brannigan relive the
 moment when Adam and Eve committed their original sin, fig leaves and all.


 No doubt about it, Futurama and its entire splendid voice cast is back,
 sly wit, social satire and all. So, too, are the disembodied heads of
 celebrated figures, starting in the second episode with Richard Nixon. In
 this new season of 12 episodes, the guest list includes Chris Elliot,
 Craig Ferguson, George Takei, Katee Sackhoff as well as executive
 producers Groening and Cohen.

 Following the two-episode premiere, succeeding episodes will air 10 p.m.
 Thursdays.



 

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