The Official Futurama Griefing Thread - Revived for Hulu because Matt Groening needs to milk his cartoons to death

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Kulee Baba

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Fry, Leela and Bender are set for more 31st century adventures. After months of negotiations, Hulu has finalized deals for 20 new episodes of Matt Groening and David X. Cohen’s cult animated sci-fi comedy Futurama to premiere in 2023 on the streamer. In addition to Groening and Cohen, set to come back is the majority of the series’ voice cast, including Billy West, Katey Sagal, Tress MacNeille, Maurice LaMarche, Lauren Tom, Phil LaMarr and David Herman.

Missing from the list is one of the three lead voice actors, John DiMaggio, who voices foul-mouthed robot Bender among half a dozen characters. The role is currently being recast ahead of the first table read on Monday. The decision was made after DiMaggio’s negotiations with Futurama studio 20th Television Animation came to a standstill though there is a desire on both sides to have him rejoin the cast and reprise his role.

I hear DiMaggio, who has traveled the world promoting the character and the series over the years, was approached, along with the rest of the cast. According to sources, the offer to DiMaggio was in line with that for fellow leads West (Fry) and Sagal (Leela) who, after a back-and-forth, agreed to a deal while DiMaggio felt the proposal was not competitive based on the success and name recognition of the original series.

For Futurama, whose 20 new episodes are expected to run in two batches, this marks the third revival. It is also the third beloved Fox animated series to find a new life, following Family Guy, which was revived by the network after strong DVD sales, and American Dad!, which has become a staple on TBS.

First airing on Fox from 1999-2003 before the network famously pulled the plug midway through production on Season 4, Futurama was brought back in 2007 with four direct-to-DVD movies that subsequently aired as 30-minute episodes on Comedy Central. Based on their success, similarly to Family Guy‘s resurrection, Comedy Central ordered new seasons of the series which made a return to television in June 2010 before being canceled again three years later. (Both Family Guy and Futurama also were helped by renewed interest in the shows through their run on Adult Swim.)

“I’m thrilled to have another chance to think about the future… or really anything other than the present,” said Cohen.

Added Groening, “It’s a true honor to announce the triumphant return of Futurama one more time before we get canceled abruptly again.”

Futurama‘s existing seasons are available to stream on Hulu, which has been building up its original and acquired adult animation content roster.

“When presented with the opportunity to bring fans and viewers new episodes of Futurama, we couldn’t wait to dive in. This iconic series helped blaze the trail for the success of adult animation since its initial launch and we look forward to Matt & David continuing to pave the way and further establishing Hulu as the premiere destination for fans of the genre,” said Craig Erwich, President, Hulu Originals and ABC Entertainment.

Over the course of its run, Futurama earned six Emmy Awards–including two Outstanding Animated Program, seven Annie Awards, two Environmental Media Awards and two WGA Awards. Over its seven seasons spanning two decades, 140 original episodes were produced, with the then-final episode airing on September 4, 2013.

“What I love about animation is that it’s possible for a successful show to take a pause and then resume years later, even on a different platform, and pick up right where it left off. Futurama is one of those shows. The excitement from Hulu about returning Matt and David’s genius creation for all-new episodes has been off the charts. I’m thrilled that this incredible team will get to tell more stories, and that our Planet Express crew will have more adventures together. It’s a win for the fans who have loved the show since the beginning, and for the ones who will now discover it for the very first time,” commented Marci Proietto, Head of 20th Television Animation.

Futurama focuses on the life of Philip Fry (Billy West), a 25-year-old pizza delivery boy who accidentally freezes himself on December 31, 1999 and wakes up 1,000 years later with a fresh start at life and a “diverse” new group of friends including Leela (Katey Sagal), a tough but lovely one-eyed ship captain, and Bender, a robot who possesses human characteristics and flaws.

Futurama, created by Matt Groening and developed by Groening and David X. Cohen, is produced 20th Television Animation a part of Disney Television Studios, with Rough Draft Studios, Inc. contributing the animation.
Well it's just a hunch but I'm guessing Disenchantment isn't going to be renewed by Netflix. Groening's wholly unremarkable Fantasy Animated Sitcom had a writers pool that consisted largely of Futurama writers. So this announcement lines up with Netflix dropping that mediocre cartoon. In some sense I can empathize with Groening, I'm guessing the guy really likes the people he made Futurama with as he was far more creatively involved with Futurama than he was with The Simpsons. But at the same time why can't a good show just be done with anymore? Futurama was running out of steam by the show's 4th Season. The movies for my tastes were pretty mediocre, it just felt like shitty writing to rely on a shitload of Memberberries to serve as fanservice? "Remember Fry's dog Seymour, the saddest ending for a cartoon sitcom? Well guess what a clone of Fry ended up going back in time so Seymour didn't end up sadly waiting a decade!" And the Comedy Central era? So much of those episodes are so forgettable I can't even recall them. But I do remember that horrible attempt at gross out humor mocking Susan Boyle. I've seen people talk lovingly of "Game of Tones" because it has a sappy scene where Fry gets to see his long deceased Mother again who actually loves him, but really wasn't that just a retread of "Luck of the Fryish?"

Futurama already had a great finale with "The Devil's Hands are Idle Playthings", it had two good endings on top of that with the ending of the last movie along with "Meanwhile" finale. But if there's money to be made on nostalgia we need to keep pumping out revivals, reboots, and remakes. God forbid we let some young people make new original cartoons because they'd probably just suck right?
 
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The first time we got a revival in 2010 I was somewhat less than impressed with the show, and that was back when I was a cuntfaced kid who still occasionally watched cartoons. More recently in the last couple of years I've tried to go back to the early show and found it wasn't quite the comedic genius I thought of it as back then. Given the prevalence of Rick & Morty style shows and humor combined with the fact that the show wasn't always that spectacular I'm fully expecting this new season to be nothing short of positively godawful.
 
Honestly, Fry and Leela as some kind of star-crossed lovers was already creaky and unbelievable by the time the devil's hands are idle playthings rolled around. Their relationship generally ran like:

> Fry does something in an extremely socially inept way in an attempt to come on to Lila, or does something retarded in general

> Leela snorts in disgust

> Soulmates whose grand romance makes Romeo and Juliet look like rutting pigs

It's a situation best summed up, ironically, by this.

 
Who is this we you're talking about? That voice is why I and I'm sure many others stopped watching, he sounds like he's got two cocks lodged directly in his nose.
The people who actually do enjoy the show? It's a pretty big success with a lot of people.

I guess it helped that I watched him play with Chris enough to get used to his voice and appreciate his odd sense of humor.
 
Romeo and Juliet were some dumbass kids caught in the middle of a dumbass turf war that only managed to be aborted with their double suicide.

I know, and I do not give a shit. It's had over four centuries to become a cultural reference for romance, and that's more than enough to use it here as an analogy, or simile, or whatever the hell it is.
 
You mean to tell me Matt Groening has time for a reboot no one asked for when he’s made running the Simpsons into the ground his full time job?
Original run was the best, movies kind of sucked, and I can’t watch the post movie episodes because they’re terrible
 
During its original run, this was one of my favorite things ever. But each subsequent incarnation got a little less interesting. I've had the final season in my Amazon account since it was released I still haven't gotten around to finishing it, in part because I don't like endings, but also because it's just not that interesting.

I guess it's not the ending any more, so I no longer have that excuse.
 
It'll be full of very mild, safe, unfunny and occasionally woke humor. Pretty much like the last reboot. My guess is that we get a thinly disguised Covid Vaccine episode right out of the gate. And we'll see Farnsworth, perplexed that anybody would deny themselves a lifesaving *cough*flu-shot*cough* say "I want to leave the planet". Because it's funny! Remember when he said that?! It's sooo funny! Just like when Bart was the "I didn't do it" kid. Of course THAT irony will be lost on everyone involved.

Hard pass unless someone here tells me otherwise.
 
I wasn't that big on Disenchantment, so I am not looking forward to a Futurama return. The Fox run is probably my favorite Groening show, can't remember anything about the movies, and the Comedy Central run had some good moments despite being mostly uneven. I did think it ended on a good note. Why can't we just let good things rest?

Wait, John DiMaggio isn't even coming back? Definitely missing it now.
 
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