At Planet Express, an intergalactic delivery service, Fry works alongside Leela (Katey Sagal), a tough, one-eyed babe, and best friend Bender (John DiMaggio), a robot whose grip on morality and manners is tenuous.
The 13-episode run kicks off on a funky note with the episode titled, “Neutopia.’’ The Planet Express crew crashes on a planet inhabited by a being who, unfamiliar with the concept of gender, decides to experiment on our heroes and heroines.
Pitch-perfect satire ensues, with both sexes taking it on the chin. At one point, the women risk a fiery death to check out an apparent clearance sale.
“I can’t believe that sale was just a mirage. Now we’re goin’ die without so much as a factory-second clutch purse to show for it,’’ moans LaBarbara Conrad (Dawnn Lewis).
The men, also trying to save themselves but hopelessly lost, encounter a friendly native.
“Hi, there, you fellas need some directions?’’ he asks. Their response: a stubborn chorus of “No!’’ and “Don’t worry about it.’’
In the June 30 “Benderama’’ episode, the robot with the cigar habit and no discernible work ethic learns how to replicate himself, creating an army of Benders that scale smaller and smaller but cause big trouble.
“People always say `More Bender!’ Well, believe me …’’ said series creator Matt Groening, chuckles overtaking his words as he contemplates the havoc wrought by multiple Benders.
“What I love about Bender is he can do all this obnoxious stuff that we couldn’t get away with if he were a human character,’’ he said. “He’s a robot, not a role model.’’
In another episode, Bender dies — “There’s a science-fiction explanation for this,’’ Groening offers — and his ghost haunts the Planet Express offices.
Groening’s affection for the miscreant is clear, although he acknowledges that as a child he was alternately obsessed with and terrified by his collection of classic robots.