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The Time Futurama Broke Itself

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  • Опубликовано: 18 авг 2024

Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @Nerdstalgic
    @Nerdstalgic  4 года назад +924

    Futurama is my favorite show. What’s yours?
    Link to the brand new Patreon: www.patreon.com/nerdstalgicyt
    ALSO: You could argue that BBS creates an alternate universe/timeline in which a different seymour is saved of his fate. That’s fair! I still feel a bit cheated by BBS but that is a good counter point. However, this is a video that uses Futurama as a conduit for an altogether different discussion about media. So maybe I can dive into time travel in media in a different vid!

    • @gavinsfriend3901
      @gavinsfriend3901 4 года назад +6

      None

    • @Cinko420
      @Cinko420 4 года назад +6

      Nerdstalgic
      Doesn't exist because there is none.

    • @ColdSummerProductions
      @ColdSummerProductions 4 года назад +2

      Why are you asking for garbage

    • @finlaybrookes6668
      @finlaybrookes6668 4 года назад +14

      I personally enjoyed the recently airing "the good place"
      I don't think it was nearly as good as Futurama, but it's better than some of the other stuff on at the moment

    • @nightshrine4257
      @nightshrine4257 4 года назад +2

      Oh come on u changed the comment
      Theres no good sitcoms today

  • @aliadrift
    @aliadrift 3 года назад +2222

    The other episode that made me cry as much as "Jurassic Bark" was the one where Fry thought his brother took his name and became successful while pretending to be him but found out it was his nephew, who his brother named after him because he loved and missed him so much. I'm tearing up just typing this.

    • @rakkatytam
      @rakkatytam 3 года назад +151

      Don't forgot Fry's mother's dream

    • @kingbotthethird
      @kingbotthethird 3 года назад +69

      Oh ya it’s called the luck of the fryrish

    • @Ryan6586
      @Ryan6586 3 года назад +25

      Ya thats prob my favorite. That and the one with the Star Trek cast.
      Welshy RIP never forget 🙏

    • @Nukepositive
      @Nukepositive 3 года назад +14

      The time machine one is the one that got me

    • @KombatGod
      @KombatGod 3 года назад +7

      ...and they retconned that as well in the Bender special.

  • @the6ig6adwolf
    @the6ig6adwolf 4 года назад +6028

    Never forget that Fry is his own grandfather, he did the nasty in the pasty.

    • @IanTheMotorsportsMan_YT
      @IanTheMotorsportsMan_YT 4 года назад +57

      69th like. How ironic lol

    • @homealonetoo4570
      @homealonetoo4570 4 года назад +202

      @@IanTheMotorsportsMan_YT "The use of words expressing something other than their literal intention. THAT, IS, Irony!"

    • @selenarutherford7077
      @selenarutherford7077 4 года назад +6

      gary!!

    • @crimsonvampyre602
      @crimsonvampyre602 4 года назад +3

      Which was a DS9 reference

    • @bernard7057
      @bernard7057 4 года назад +15

      @@homealonetoo4570 that's sarcasm, a type of irony. What he said is also a type of irony and now that I think about idk if your original comment was made ironically in and of itself😂😂.

  • @EvanYoungMusic
    @EvanYoungMusic 4 года назад +1309

    When fry has a dream about his mom, but then at the end, his mom was having a dream about Fry, that DESTROYED ME. I cried for quite a bit... Futurama is probably the best show ever made.

    • @princessthyemis
      @princessthyemis 3 года назад +25

      i cried so hard at that part, too! This show made me more sad than I thought it would...

    • @ooliekitty
      @ooliekitty 3 года назад +7

      YES! omg I got so sad during that episode, and I don’t usually cry while watching these types of things, I just keep them repressed most of the time. But that’s one of the episodes that broke me.

    • @MamaMOB
      @MamaMOB 3 года назад +31

      I loved how the show showed how Fry’s family truly loved him even if they weren’t good with showing it.

    • @TEAMGETHELP
      @TEAMGETHELP 3 года назад +1

      Wtf

    • @battingthreadbeats4624
      @battingthreadbeats4624 3 года назад

      A1 comment I forgot about that, straight guy wrenching.

  • @Me-wx1mt
    @Me-wx1mt Год назад +116

    I always interpreted it as an alternate timeline being made
    Seymor waiting for fry didn't NOT happen anymore, it's just that in Lars' timeline, Seymore got to be with Fry.

    • @TheColdOne
      @TheColdOne Год назад +11

      This exactly. Not sure else how to interpret what happened since it's kind of a given with how it's presented.

    • @ignorant1126
      @ignorant1126 Год назад +7

      Me too.
      Lars lost Leela but he had Seymour. While he was in the 2000s, he continued to think of her but decided she was happy without him
      Fry lost Seymour but he had Leela. While he was in the 3000s, he considered cloning him but decided he was happy without him
      Imo this isn't a retcon, it enhances the original episode more than it ruins it

  • @ravensfootball52
    @ravensfootball52 4 года назад +3193

    I always remember two episodes. The dog episode and the brother episode. They hit hard
    I made this comment almost a year ago and I love that it still gets replies! Glad the futurama fandom is still alive! You guys are awesome

    • @mr.whatareyadoin889
      @mr.whatareyadoin889 4 года назад +145

      I actually like Luck of the Fryrish better

    • @cheesegod6598
      @cheesegod6598 4 года назад +164

      Did you ever watch the episode “Game of Tones”? It’s like those two, but with Fry’s mom instead

    • @mr.whatareyadoin889
      @mr.whatareyadoin889 4 года назад +42

      @@cheesegod6598 I liked that episode too, but it felt a little fake to me. Like it kinda feels like it's trying to be what the other 2 episodes are but in the new reboot. Like when they rebooted it they said "WE HAVE TO HAVE A SAD EPISODE LIKE THE ORIGINAL"

    • @cliveallen3818
      @cliveallen3818 4 года назад +43

      Mr.Whatareyadoin luck of the frying is my favourite. The zoom out while ‘don’t you forget about me’ is beautiful

    • @ghostgtasa
      @ghostgtasa 4 года назад +59

      _Don't you, forget about me_

  • @Cuculutu
    @Cuculutu 4 года назад +2670

    Bender's Big Score doesn't really retcon Jurassik Bark, the time travel in the movie is explicitly stated to be free of paradoxes meaning that it does and doesn't change past at the same time but never really explains how it works. As I see it it generates branching pasts that all share the same future, kind of like an alternative timeline that slowly fuses with the original one. So Jurassik Bark happened and didn't happen at the same time.

    • @kevinandrews9302
      @kevinandrews9302 4 года назад +385

      ah yes Schrodingers dog, but when you open the box, the dog is always burnt to a crisp

    • @donnygv27
      @donnygv27 4 года назад +267

      @@kevinandrews9302 to a crisp you say? And the wife? To a crisp you say?

    • @TheDarkPacific
      @TheDarkPacific 4 года назад +13

      @@donnygv27 💀💀💀💀

    • @ThrottleKitty
      @ThrottleKitty 4 года назад +132

      Yeah, if you pay really close attention to how that particular time travel works, it's like "fake" time travel almost, it sort of erases your tracks it seems? So fry did spend that time with his dog, but then THAT timeline "Un-happened" when THAT fry (Lars) died. It sort of "merged" those into Fry's normal timeline, which is why he gets mistaken for Lars (at least once?) and some of Lela's feelings for Lars seem to transfer to Fry.
      I'm clearly over thinking this, but I think that's about how it works.

    • @kazimir8086
      @kazimir8086 4 года назад +62

      Oh right, I remember. The professor stated that basically nothing of this is canon

  • @henrikharbin5521
    @henrikharbin5521 Год назад +47

    I didn't see this retcon as a bad thing. I think it was a way to make both characters happy and show that there are second chances in life, given the right opportunities.

    • @D_YellowMadness
      @D_YellowMadness Год назад +1

      @@robertastevenson I wouldn't mind that, considering it's supposed to be tragic, if Fry's choice weren't so illogical & out of character to begin with. The flawed logic of it makes it feel like forced sadness for the sake of having an impactful ending. And it is impactful but it's not satisfying & doesn't really serve much of a purpose since it doesn't make sense, doesn't teach us anything about Fry, & doesn't come up again until some random post-cancellation moments.

  • @Stale_Buns
    @Stale_Buns 3 года назад +131

    Fry is simply such a well written and interesting character, all 4 of the episodes that centered around his family members or Seymour were all perfect episodes

    • @blokvader8283
      @blokvader8283 2 года назад +4

      Luck of The Fryish, Jurassic Bark, Game of Tones, and the cold virus one?

    • @TerribleTake
      @TerribleTake Год назад +4

      @@blokvader8283 cold warriors

    • @thejustinsteffan
      @thejustinsteffan Год назад

      This channel certainly can not relate.

  • @gormster
    @gormster 4 года назад +366

    Consider this: you've written a Futurama story for a feature-length installment, in which Fry goes back to January 1, 2000 to live out the rest of his life as if he had never travelled to the future. You're writing the scene where he returns to the pizza place having completed the delivery, just after midnight. This requires an establishing shot outside the restaurant. Do you include Seymour, or not?
    Keep in mind that this is the series return after a long hiatus, and your audience is going to consist largely of existing fans of the show, all of whom have probably seen its most lauded episode. Just about everyone watching this scene will be expecting to see Seymour outside the pizza place, and will consider his absence to be, at the very least, odd. Some might infer this as an actual plot detail: if the dog isn't there, it's not really January 1, 2000, this isn't really Panucci's Pizza; something is up.
    I would say that to *not* include Seymour in this shot would be a retcon, in the truest sense of the word: you are establishing that this story and Jurassic Bark do not exist in the same canon; a break in continuity. If Bender's Big Score is a retcon for Jurassic Bark, then it's a retcon for literally every episode in the series.

    • @memnarch129
      @memnarch129 3 года назад +39

      Also as others have semi pointed out the original Montage in Jurrasic Bark can still happen. Seymour still is outside Panuccis for the next 12 years, he still stands there, waiting for Fry to come back from a delivery or come home. You can view the original Montage as a interpretation of what happened in those 12 years. With Big Score actually answering what happened.
      AND to a certain extent Big Score validates Frys decission in Jurassic Bark. Seymour did learn more songs and lead a happy life after Fry was frozen, with the Alternate Fry.

    • @michaelrandall4862
      @michaelrandall4862 3 года назад +2

      It's like Russian Dolls, where one big one has a slight smaller inside and on and on until the smallestis invisible. Only this is with boxes and its plays not only vertical but side to side above below forward backward and combos of all.

    • @brianandrais1415
      @brianandrais1415 3 года назад +11

      This could just be a technicism but Jurassic Bark would not happen if Fry wasn't at panucci in bender's big score. The dog in the 9:17 of the video its the same you can see in the museum in year 3000, the abandoned and dead Seymour would not be petrified without Bender

    • @lucaselvis01
      @lucaselvis01 3 года назад +1

      Wow

    • @leeman27534
      @leeman27534 3 года назад +1

      @@brianandrais1415 that's only if you're assuming when seymour lays down at the end of the episode he's dying - which again isn't necessarily what's happening as that very episode it talks about how he got petrified

  • @SkyLinMegas
    @SkyLinMegas 4 года назад +993

    i still tear up when i see seymour.
    even more sadder when i learned it mirrored a true story about a dog in japan called hachikō

    • @aletha07
      @aletha07 4 года назад +18

      Also similar to greyfriars bobby in edinburgh

    • @andresfurious8302
      @andresfurious8302 4 года назад +2

      Yeah I saw the movie it was sad

    • @Jakewake52
      @Jakewake52 4 года назад +22

      Well if it’s any consolation there’s also the theory that hachikō waited where they did to be fed by the nearby butchers and such which is mirrored in Seymour being fed pizza.
      Obviously is sadder and more touching to just think about it missing it’s master but I can gleam a bit of joy thinking about it that way as the people feeding it in turn also become their masters

    • @timmcc6899
      @timmcc6899 4 года назад +7

      There's a similar story here in Australia.
      Look for the movie Red Dog, the difference being that Red Dog didn't wait for his owner, he went looking for him, with reports of Red Dog being spotted up and down the west coast of Australia, even as far as Japan, before finally returning home to die.

    • @digipack
      @digipack 4 года назад +1

      @@timmcc6899 the real similar Australian story is that of the Dog on the Tuckerbox :)

  • @denvera1g1
    @denvera1g1 3 года назад +1421

    Bruh a weight was collectively lifted off of people once they 'found out' that semour lived a happy life with fry. Yes it was fan service. Did it make me feel better? Yes.
    Does Jurassic Bark still make me cry? Yes.

    • @SiriusMined
      @SiriusMined 3 года назад +26

      amen

    • @niklasdavind4722
      @niklasdavind4722 3 года назад +16

      so true

    • @timberwolfbrother
      @timberwolfbrother 3 года назад +93

      Hell yeah, it was so emotionally rewarding to see Seymour get to live a happy life with Fry.
      And it wasn't really a retcon, either. It was a part of established Futurama lore that time could be changed. See: "Scooty Puff Jr. sucks!"

    • @nates9536
      @nates9536 3 года назад +18

      The point being made is that you're supposed to cry. Television so rarely captures true genuine emotion and sadness.
      The episode is great BECAUSE it hits deep. It's a wound that is SUPPOSED to bleed. Bandaging it, scars the truth of the original impact.

    • @timberwolfbrother
      @timberwolfbrother 3 года назад +58

      @@nates9536 Ah yes, just like bandaging a real wound scars the fact you were injured at some point? Scars form from healing.
      Wounds aren't meant to last. Life leaves scars, and even if you learn from them, or learn more about them, it doesn't change that feeling. You'll always remember skinning your knee or accidentally nicking yourself with a knife. Giving Seymour a happy life doesn't remove the pain of that first time watching his fate before Fry time traveled.
      Instead, now when you watch it again, you remember that initial pain, and then you remember that Fry was there with him until the end.
      If you think that Seymour being lonely for the rest of his very loyal life somehow improves it, you might want to consider why you want to only hurt.
      Even Fry wanted to believe that Seymour lived a happy life without him, and then Fry was the one who gave him a happy life.

  • @markchd
    @markchd 3 года назад +88

    We got to sit with the ending for years, feeling all of it. A redemption arc, much later, was cathartic in a way that real life rarely is. Your take on this is good and fair, but I don't think you'll find that it's common.
    The writers did a good job of showing the fans that they cared. That's an artistic decision, and we can comfortably disagree about whether it was a good one. I need a few of these.

    • @nixonagnewreviews7206
      @nixonagnewreviews7206 2 года назад +2

      I find the finale has a troubling lack of Dickie Nixon, ARRROOOOOO!

    • @trapchurches555
      @trapchurches555 2 года назад +6

      Also I just assumed it was a different timeline

  • @thealienarms
    @thealienarms 4 года назад +436

    Futurama is such a comfortable show. I feel at home and peaceful when I hear the theme song

    • @ckirkpatrick100
      @ckirkpatrick100 4 года назад +25

      I’m not joking when I say I’ve watched the entire series like 12 times.

    • @IDomtar
      @IDomtar 4 года назад +16

      I've had to watch the show 20 plus times. Had a hard time falling asleep when I was younger. Fell asleep watching Futurama every night for like 5 years

    • @adeadphish7931
      @adeadphish7931 4 года назад +5

      Same. If I need a show for background noise, 9/10 times I default to Futurama and even when I am not binging it, it is a regular program in the evenings on the SyFy Channel in my house

    • @TeeRichards
      @TeeRichards 4 года назад +4

      one of my favorites, i am rewatching again for the 15th time on hulu

    • @IAMTHESTARMAN
      @IAMTHESTARMAN 4 года назад +1

      IDomtar PSN Dude. Me too! Same peace. Felt like home.

  • @antitheist3206
    @antitheist3206 4 года назад +1643

    Bender: You know, I was God once.
    God: Yes, I saw. You were doing well until everyone died.
    Bender: It was awful.

    • @MrStrangeSensation
      @MrStrangeSensation 4 года назад +54

      One of my favorite episodes 😊 I just laughed out loud right now, remembering when god chucks Bender back to earth and his ass burns up on reentry 😆 HOT HOT HOT

    • @bansheemania1692
      @bansheemania1692 4 года назад +9

      My #1. Was just on yesterday.

    • @m1l3s27
      @m1l3s27 4 года назад +3

      @@bansheemania1692 what episode is that?

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive 4 года назад +7

      @@m1l3s27 Godfellas, S3E20

    • @gravy7861_
      @gravy7861_ 4 года назад +8

      I forgot how much I loved this show

  • @AlexKing-vg7vr
    @AlexKing-vg7vr 4 года назад +277

    The saddest thing about the Seymour episode is that it's based off a real life story. There was a dog called hachiko who waited 9 years at a train station for his dead owner to return from work

    • @supermonkey321
      @supermonkey321 3 года назад +35

      Yup. They made a movie based on it too, which I refuse to see because I would be reduced to a blubbering mess for two hours. Anything involving dogs really gets me. I still cry every time I see this episode of Futurama.

    • @erincurrie1560
      @erincurrie1560 3 года назад +7

      @@supermonkey321 I havent even seen the movie, just hearing that comment made me almost cry

    • @MegaLickitung
      @MegaLickitung 3 года назад +16

      I always thought it was a reference to Greyfriar's Bobby, the dog that waited by their owner's grave for the rest of their life.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 3 года назад +21

      The hard part is that while thats the famous story this happens alot. There was a dog in Ireland who did the same thing, another dog somewhere in asia who spent every day by its owners gravestone, another dog who waited for its owner at the spot he died in a road side accident, and I read a story of a dog who spent every day sitting next to its owners truck because they used to ride together all the time.
      We moved my grandparents into the house next to my families business so we could take care of them as they got older and my dog visited alot, there's a little alleyway maybe 60 feet or 20 meters from my business to a gate that leads to their yard. Grandma died almost 3 years ago and my grandpa died a year ago. I take my dog with me to work sometimes and i have to make sure that gate is closed (which it almost always is) because she'll run over to the gate and try to get into their yard. She'll sniff all around the yard and run to their door wanting to be let in, one time even forcing her way through the new tenants door when he heard the noise and opened the door. She ran into the living room where my grandparents spent most of their day, looking for them.
      Dogs are loyal until their death, not just ours.

    • @mr.doctorcaptain1124
      @mr.doctorcaptain1124 3 года назад +2

      @variablestar never gonna happen. I cried just seeing the scene from this youtube video where we see Seymour sitting in front of the pizza place. I cant handle jurrasic bark. I've seen it once, and I'll never watch it a second time. The idea of watching an entire movie about that?!?!

  • @Verlisify
    @Verlisify 3 года назад +548

    "It removed the impact of the original story"
    GOOD. It undid my heart withering and dying

    • @trevorweisberg8470
      @trevorweisberg8470 3 года назад +22

      Agreed, that episode crushed me, especially after reading about Hachiko.

    • @deborahhanna9126
      @deborahhanna9126 3 года назад +20

      Didn't undo the emotional impact at all. Who in reality would not go back to save their loved one? Fry had a change of heart in a looooong worked for maturity. Good for him.

    • @trevorweisberg8470
      @trevorweisberg8470 3 года назад +5

      @@deborahhanna9126 Fry didn't go back for Seymore though, he went back in time after assuming Leela's not into him anymore (which we learn later wasn't technically true). Him showing up the next day to greet Seymore was a bonus outcome to getting on with his life again after his adventure in the future.

    • @deborahhanna9126
      @deborahhanna9126 3 года назад +7

      Well let me rephrase: who, given the opportunity would not then save their loved one, even supposing that it had not been their primary objective? Fry had a change of heart once he saw Seymour still waiting there.

    • @LegendStormcrow
      @LegendStormcrow 3 года назад +1

      @@trevorweisberg8470 I named a dog after Hachi. He isn't the only dog to have done that either?

  • @HaplessOne
    @HaplessOne 4 года назад +944

    I love futurama. Every couple of years I watch it again.

    • @commandohazelnuts
      @commandohazelnuts 4 года назад +54

      I'm a futurama sleeper. I don't really "watch" the show anymore, but it's on to provide background noise and keep my mind entertained whilst I try to sleep.

    • @jkaygoulet
      @jkaygoulet 4 года назад +22

      @@commandohazelnuts it's your "comfort show" ...a show you like & have seen enough to be comfortable sleeping to.

    • @cobalt9000
      @cobalt9000 4 года назад

      James Thompson same

    • @jaleria489
      @jaleria489 4 года назад +1

      Where do you watch it at

    • @brookemaurice1715
      @brookemaurice1715 4 года назад +3

      Every couple of months* lol

  • @Gen_Kael
    @Gen_Kael 4 года назад +605

    "It's so cold out, my CPU is operating at peak efficiency" -Bender
    Maybe i was really high but that was hilarious

    • @johnladuke6475
      @johnladuke6475 4 года назад +19

      Two things can be real.

    • @seth64_
      @seth64_ 4 года назад +7

      nah that shit was hilarious

    • @MrGiggles623
      @MrGiggles623 4 года назад +1

      Damn it. 3 weeks to late lol

    • @evanhayes5891
      @evanhayes5891 4 года назад +5

      Don't remember the line at all, but I love that when bender does NOT drink, that's when he acts drunk.

    • @davehenry8749
      @davehenry8749 4 года назад +13

      @@evanhayes5891 I think it was when he found out he was defective and fell into a depression, and then Fry says some thing a long the lines of , "Bender have you been up all night not drinking? You drank too much or not enough, I forgot how it works with you. Either way, you haven't drank the exact right amount". Give or take.

  • @designconker4796
    @designconker4796 3 года назад +48

    How I know Futurama is a masterpiece. The moment it showed Seymore sitting their I teared up. That story still kills me with on a few simple pictures

  • @ramirezthesilvite
    @ramirezthesilvite 3 года назад +42

    I don't think it removes the impact at all. I've seen the entire series front to back several times over and Jurassic Bark STILL hits me like a truck. Just seeing those clips in your video, I had to pause to compose myself. Knowing about Bender's Big Score doesn't change that at all, I think.

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae 3 года назад +3

      BBS creating a separate timeline explains it all away tho and keeps the original Jurassic Bark impact just as strong too.

  • @dustyfan22
    @dustyfan22 4 года назад +165

    Even knowing that overall Seymour lives a happy full life alongside Fry, it doesn't diminish the amount of emotional power Jurassic Bark carried. My girlfriend and I have re-watched Futurama easily 6 times, but Jurassic Bark always hits hard, thats good writing, even when you know it ends well, for the time being in hurts.

    • @smileychess
      @smileychess 3 года назад +3

      It’s the one episode I always skip. Too hard to watch.

    • @benjamingardner3314
      @benjamingardner3314 3 года назад +2

      @@smileychess I really don't remember most of the episode. I have the bones, but every joke is blurred out because of that final scene and my refusal to watch it again. I was 17, it's been nearly 20 years.

    • @smileychess
      @smileychess 3 года назад

      @@benjamingardner3314 I was 14 when it was first aired.

  • @merethvalera839
    @merethvalera839 4 года назад +364

    In such a show, where science is so powerful, and time barely matters, there's a lot of that happens. A lot of timelines change, a lot of things happen constantly and in the end it's one giant time loop. Futurama is good enough in the whole that, I feel fine letting one retcon weaken the impact of a powerful scene, to give an old dog a happy life he deserves.

    • @peglor
      @peglor 4 года назад +19

      In many ways that episode's impact was mostly because they didn't generally engage in Disney levels of crass emotional manipulation. Usually when they get serious they make their point and then diffuse the issue with another punchline. That episode stood out to me because it was so completely out of character with every other one.

    • @JanStrojil
      @JanStrojil 4 года назад +30

      I love Bender’s Big Score, I think it is the best piece of time travel writing ever. And the emotional impact is right there with Jurassic Bark,. It never occurred to me that the “retcon” scene should steal away from the original emotion.

    • @homealonetoo4570
      @homealonetoo4570 4 года назад +43

      Matt Groening apologized for the episode repeatedly after it aired in response to the hordes of fans angry a comedy show made them cry. It was definitely a little fanservicey.
      Even still, sending Fry back to the past was inevitable. So much of his character was the man of two worlds.
      So if Fry was going to end up in the past, there's no way he wouldn't try to reconnect.
      I think of it as more of a win for the character than a retcon.

    • @Nerdstalgic
      @Nerdstalgic  4 года назад +34

      I like this point of view!

    • @Bootleg_Jones
      @Bootleg_Jones 4 года назад +6

      You also have to keep in mind that there are some interpretations if time travel where this wouldn't constitute a retcon. Much as people theorize that there may be many versions of the future, all of which are equally "real", once time travel becomes a possibility you can think of the past in the same way.

  • @Andoryuuu
    @Andoryuuu 4 года назад +151

    One minor issue I have with this is: For a HUGE chunk of the time Fry is in the 21st century, he's either looking after Narwhals, or he's out on a boat, if I'm not mistaken he spends 5 years on that boat, so for at LEAST 5 years, Seymour is just sitting there, sad, and lonely, waiting for Fry to come back from returning Leelu to the ocean.
    So if your biggest issue is with the fact the dog isn't left sad and alone, you can guarantee a big portion of his time is spent sad, and alone.
    The movie takes nothing away from the original episode, Fry/Lars' life isn't too different, and Seymour is left alone for a large chunk of the time that Fry/Lars lives in the present day, the movie handles the whole situation with the way Futurama does things best, time travel, time paradoxes and brilliant writing.
    They weren't trying to remove the initial meaning of Jurassic Bark, they were just trying to extend on it, and use a previously established canon to extend on it and expand the idea that Fry's life was bound to be the same, and so was Seymour's.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 4 года назад +4

      Can the same be said of Luck of the Fryrish, though? It was pretty clear in that one that Fry's disappearance was a huge motivator for his brother, and led to his nephew's being who he became, right down to his brother's naming him after "someone who I will miss every day". It can't be denied to me that changing that line from someone thinking his brother, whom he's always seemingly taken for granted, has suddenly died before he knew how much he meant to him, to someone who's a bit disappointed his brother's ended up buggering off and ditching his entire life for a whale kind of kills it.
      To me, all the little nods to the episodes regarding Fry's past kind of hurt because the filmmakers clearly remembered those moments, yet didn't care that they were built on the assumption that everyone from the 21st century never saw Fry again after he froze, and that saying they did again kind of kills the spirit of them.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 4 года назад +9

      Not to mention, even Jurassic Bark kind of gets ruined thematically by Bender's Big Score; the punch from the end of Jurassic Bark came from the irony that Fry believed he was doing Seymour a favour by letting sleeping dogs lie, and not trying to force him back into a relationship that he'd forgotten. That's what made it sting so hard to find out that actually, all Seymour would've ever wanted was to see his one friend he'd never forgotten again. In Bender's Big Score, Fry seemingly completely consciously ditches Seymour for a whale hunt, so there was no well-meaning, self-denying cause behind all that fruitless waiting (if you can even call it that, seeing as, Fry does come back for Seymour and greet him before he dies according to Bender's Big Score).

    • @JooshyJuice
      @JooshyJuice 3 года назад

      THIS

  • @Liam-ug9en
    @Liam-ug9en 3 года назад +8

    I think that this retcon actually makes the story better. It shows that Fry made the right decision and that Seymour did in fact live a somewhat full life after the original Fry left. It means that Fry chose not to revive him in an act of maturity that was eventually the right thing to do. It also makes the story less sad while still keeping Seymour's love for Fry intact.

  • @neptune7315
    @neptune7315 4 года назад +2223

    Idk about the whole "dog getting a happy ending ruins that episode" take. Fry's emotional growth is still there.

    • @ayaavalon6213
      @ayaavalon6213 4 года назад +78

      i agree with you.

    • @erinbutler2892
      @erinbutler2892 4 года назад +260

      It's an important distinction: they are not the same Fry.

    • @Jtt7987
      @Jtt7987 4 года назад +290

      @@erinbutler2892 exactly. This is a huge fact that is left out of the video. The fry in Jurassic bark never got those years with his dog. That was "Lars" who through different experiences was pretty much a different person than the fry we know. Which was also kind of the point of that whole thing.

    • @juankescobar866
      @juankescobar866 4 года назад +68

      Fuckin writers can give Seymour a hapoy ending because ItS NoT EdGy EnOUgH

    • @summer-joy2873
      @summer-joy2873 4 года назад +66

      Yeah we the audience still experienced it and they did it within the confines of the shows logic. I thought it was sweet lol

  • @JM1428
    @JM1428 4 года назад +96

    Jurassic Bark still emotionally hurts me to this day, so the fact they remembered about Seymour in Benders Big Score not only brought a smile to my face when I first saw it but also shows how much attention to detail they were willing to give Fry going back and living his life in 21st century since Seymour is only ever really seen or referenced in that 1 episode before this

    • @iamchavier
      @iamchavier 3 года назад

      I had a big score wow I’m bender baby wooo

  • @FerdinandCesarano
    @FerdinandCesarano Год назад +51

    7:04 - "[The retcon] removes the impact, the emotional substance, from the original 'Jurassic Bark' entirely."
    NO, IT DOESN'T.
    The emotional impact of the original episode is fully intact.

    • @mr.google1437
      @mr.google1437 Год назад +7

      Exactly, we the audience know what originally happened and how it hit us that Fry didn't know the truth but the altered-ish timeline (how was Seymour fossilized in the first, pre Larz, timeline?) gives us the happy ending we wanted to see and that the characters deserved. Just because things are different now doesn't invalidate what happened back then.
      Edit: If they wanted to remove the emotional substance from the original Jurassic Bark they could've just put in a scene after the sad fast-forward of Seymour's life with Fry changing his mind and going ahead with the cloning.

  • @spiritretro3571
    @spiritretro3571 3 года назад +29

    heres the problem with the "benders big score" example, its not a true retcon, its not entirely replacing the events, nor does it invalidate jurrasic bark, it exapnds upon it, an alternate fry stays behind and lvies with seamore yada yada yada, but the oriignal fry NEVER experiences this jurrasic bark is still in place for him, plus when the timecode is discovered in benders big score it creates a multiverse point in the show where the timeline is changed MULTIPLE times, every time bedner goes back in time to steal something, at least 2 times with fry up until "benders big score" every previous example of time travel was predetermined to happen, which all changes with this episode.
    all the events of jurrasic bark still happens and is both intact and canon as part of fry's and seamores timeline as unlike predertined events timeline changign events still occur AFTER the originals did, like stacking stickert son top of eachother, tl:dr seamore has 2 quantum save files, "jurrasic bark" and "benders big score" if he was cloned during JB he would retain memories of the original file, and then cloned again after BBS he would have memories of that timeline and both seamores are true

    • @UserUser-lh7hs
      @UserUser-lh7hs 3 года назад +3

      I don't even watch this show and I don't know why I'm here, but based on what I've heard from this video I entirely agree. I think this video was a miss. Ironically it's missing the same point it's preaching about not trying to relive the past, absolutely nothing diminishes the impact of that episode. Not only is it not a direct retcon, but even if it was that episode still exists on it's own. It reminds me of when people argue about sequels "ruining" movies..when they don't effect them at all.

  • @LT1
    @LT1 4 года назад +1676

    "It removes the impact"
    It doesn't change the effect the episode had when you first watched it though. Also is a retcon involving time travel the same as a regular retcon? I feel like it kinda gets a pass.

    • @dreamcanvas5321
      @dreamcanvas5321 4 года назад +140

      My thoughts exactly too. And there was a huge cost that Fry couldn't go back from. That version of Fry "lost" Leela twice, first when he chose to go back in time partially in response to her getting married, and a second time when, as Lars; he learned the "time clones" were doomed to be killed.
      In fact, if you think about it, the episode is still very much in line with that message of loss. Even with something as all-powerful as time travel, there's always something of yourself you leave behind as from your perspective, time persists in moving forward. Even if you were an immortal with a time machine, your loved ones aren't, and you can only spend so much time with them...perhaps in cruel irony even less if you were to try to spend as much as possible to the point they get overwhelmed with you.

    • @dursly
      @dursly 4 года назад +47

      i was thinking, i dont remember the film now, i havent watched futurama in too long..... but is it a retcon even? or does it have to take place in different lines of causality in the story because he's going back to change things etc

    • @theplaybunnyarcade3375
      @theplaybunnyarcade3375 4 года назад +25

      By definition, no retcon can effect the original feelings you had, the problem is it recontextualizes those feelings and effects your emotional attachment to the series moving forward

    • @phantaphil
      @phantaphil 4 года назад +8

      But great moments often become great memories. And now this memory is disturbed, at least becomes confusing und loses the initial impact.

    • @machoromantic
      @machoromantic 4 года назад +19

      I think it gets a pass since the goal of Bender’s big score wasn’t to retcon Seymour, that was only a happy side effect of the story they were telling

  • @FantasmaNaranja
    @FantasmaNaranja 4 года назад +352

    dont worry, if we're going with timeline rules then there's a version of seymour that suffered terrible loneliness for 12 years you heartless monster

    • @jaimis5377
      @jaimis5377 4 года назад +46

      thanks, i was worried the dog didnt have to suffer. i am very relieved.

    • @aurahoneydew9607
      @aurahoneydew9607 4 года назад +4

      Nope the paradox fixing nature erased that since it's more likely that it keeps the outcome as close as was intended the first time not really caring what happened in between. Seymour still ended up petrified in the exact same shape. Changing nothing in the grander scheme. Seymour gets to have a happy life and he has to deal with it.

    • @paulh2981
      @paulh2981 4 года назад +7

      He wasn't lonely. He was heartbroken, but never gave up hope.

    • @FantasmaNaranja
      @FantasmaNaranja 4 года назад +1

      @@aurahoneydew9607 i mean the paradox fixing thing just kills paradox clones, it's never really stated that it reverts changes through all timelines or if timelines even exist in this universe

    • @NoESanity
      @NoESanity 4 года назад

      @@aurahoneydew9607 nope, futurama established that it works with multiple time lines that have combined nexus points.

  • @willscruton2631
    @willscruton2631 3 года назад +40

    This isn't even a retcon, fry lives in the past in an alternate timeline, jurassic bark still happened just to the fry that stayed the future, the original fry

  • @DAmore117
    @DAmore117 3 года назад +7

    The producers spoke on that, there are 2 timelines, happening in tandem. One where Fry was not his on GF and Seymour waited the whole time, and then the one where Fry became his own GF, and would become Lars. So they really did know what they were doing because time travel is an inexplicable process with profound effects on existence. That being said, that episode gets me every time and is one of the most tragically beautiful things I have ever seen.

  • @roonkolos
    @roonkolos 4 года назад +349

    While the episode with Fry meeting him mom in her dreams for me was even harder to watch that Jurassic Bark, the reason the latter still hits me and so many others so hard is in its simplicity
    Any that has ever had a pet. dog, cat, hamster, whatever. We all know how hard it is to not only lose a pet but to let go. I had a shih tzu named shaggy. He was and still is my little buddy. He lived to be 14 years old and I was there in his final moments. I refused to have him go alone. The last thing he heard me say was how I love him. It's been over a year and still hurts to know hes gone. thats a kind of feeling many can understand with Fry. Losing that animal companion. Wanting one more day with them. Just one more. For me, I would love to have one last day with my buddy. But I know he lived a damn good life
    Losing a pet is always hard. But I cant imagine my dog waiting for me to come back, leaving the world still waiting. that for me is why that episode hurt. It connects on such a personal level for so many

    • @quinnmarchese6313
      @quinnmarchese6313 4 года назад +24

      there were three episodes of futurama that stand above most other shows and films in terms of emotional writing. The aforementioned Jurassic Bark and Game of Tones being two of them, but an overlooked one is the luckly clover episode where we learn about Yancy naming his child after Philip and imparting all of Phil's favorite things onto him, from a fascination with outer space, to the minutia of the lucky clover.

    • @georgemichaels3rdnut
      @georgemichaels3rdnut 4 года назад +1

      I cried multiple times to this show I loved it but hated it

    • @giacoco2726
      @giacoco2726 4 года назад

      Ep?

    • @superjonh1000
      @superjonh1000 4 года назад +4

      Lethal Inspection is also a very emotional episode. It's very underrated.

    • @tredaman4382
      @tredaman4382 4 года назад

      My dog hasn’t died

  • @SpiderJAAM
    @SpiderJAAM 4 года назад +181

    "Bridge to Terabithia" was the first time I cried for any piece of fictional media, but "Jurassic Bark" was the 1st time I legit cried over a TV Show.
    Futurama is in my top 5, one of the best shows ever created.

    • @Mrfuzzypants26
      @Mrfuzzypants26 4 года назад +1

      What's ya other 4 homedog?

    • @fabuloushatlady7812
      @fabuloushatlady7812 4 года назад +2

      I never cry at literature anymore. I’m a big reader, and I read a lot of really dark books. The kind where you get attached he’d to child characters, throughout a book or two and then they get murdered.... yet I don’t cry, I get really upset and saddened, and sometimes I have to put the book down for a day or two to process it. Even when I read a novella where this little girl from the main series (who is mute) has a large bounty on her head yada yada yada. And this guy the main character is really poor, and he finds the girl after she gets in a car crash. He’s gets her and is going to turn her in, but on the way they form a kind of father to daughter connection, even though she never speaks. Eventually he changes his mind and devotes the rest of the novella to getting her to her uncles house because her parents are a holes that kicked her out and called her a freak. Where he is shot in the head and killed. And that’s how the novella ends. Yet I didn’t cry. I think I’ve become desensitized to that.
      And then I reread Bridge to Terabithia. And damn that book made me cry. A lot.

    • @SouthernGothicYT
      @SouthernGothicYT 4 года назад +2

      Bridge to Terebithia was based on a true story. If I'm correct I believe the author's son had a friend who was struck by lightning and died

    • @peglor
      @peglor 4 года назад +1

      @Content Corrector Have a read of Odd Thomas by Dean Koontz for another book that hits hard. The movie is pretty decent too.

    • @toddstone230
      @toddstone230 4 года назад +1

      Anything Videogame related that almost made ya cry? Final Fantasy Crisis Core's ending pulled my heartstrings

  • @davidquinlan9545
    @davidquinlan9545 Год назад +6

    BUT, Seymour would have never been fossilized without time traveling Bender blasting the pizzeria. There would have never been the episode of Jurassic Bark, which had the biggest plot hole: how would a dog become fossilized just laying outside a pizzeria?

  • @JoshuaParnell
    @JoshuaParnell 4 года назад +35

    Don't forget that in Bender's Big Score, the Time Code was a paradox-correcting method of time travel (though one could argue that ALL methods of time travel are paradox-correcting in the Futurama universe, such as Fry becoming his own grandfather, but there are semantics to look at in that aspect). The end of Jurassic Bark didn't show that Fry had never came back, only that Seymore was always waiting for Fry to come back over the span of 12 years. He could very well have seen Fry that very morning and was just anxious to have him return. This is left up to the interpretation of the viewer, and ultimately only adds to the story's depth and growth, because while time in the Futurama universe is circular, for the viewer it is a straight line. Fry didn't even know what actually happened to Seymore at the end of Jurassic Bark, because he hadn't lived through that period of time yet, even though it was in the past.
    For me, personally, I was GLAD in BBS to see Fry's return, because that meant that the 12 years of waiting wasn't an indefinite, hope-against-all-hope scenario for Seymore. It was just the story of a faithful dog awaiting his friend's return each day.
    This isn't a retcon, because a retcon means your perspective about the past was changed due to new or missing information. Rather, in a story segment, this is still a straight line. If you go by that, this is just further story building.
    Assuming time in the show moves roughly equivalent to the year it was aired, this is the events that take place:
    1999 Fry (age 25) befriends Seymore → 1999 Fry (age 25) gets frozen → 1999 Fry (age 32) returns to NYC → 2012 Seymore is rapid-fossilized during Bender's assassination attempt against Fry (age 49) → 3000 Fry (age 25) arrives in NNYC → 3002 Seymore's remains discovered (Fry is aged 27) → 3005 Fry returns as Lars (age 49) → 3007 Time code is discovered → 3007 Lars (age 51) dies
    Fry started out as 25 years old in 1999. By the time he went back to 1999, he was 7 years older. 12 more years passed after that before he went back to the future.
    So while time may be circular, the show's growth is still linear.
    The only mistake the writer's made was that at 1:01 AM, Fry returns to Panucci's Pizza and clearly pets Seymore who is outside. This begs the question of why Seymore was looking for Fry on the afternoon of January 1st, 2000, where Seymore leads a food-poisoned Fry family to Applied Cryogenics, and why Fry was not at his parents' for New Year's Brunch of bologna sandwiches, as he obviously enjoyed reconnecting with his family.
    So how do you align this? Easy: space-time is circular and malleable, we already know that Fry, Bender, and Professor Farnsworth is already living in the 3rd known universe, and there can be micro-differences between universes. It's entirely possible that in one iteration, pre-Farnesworth's Forward-Only Time Machine, the scammers did not get Farnesworth's personal information and did not initiate a hostile takeover of Earth, so Fry never went back to 2000 and Seymore was never reunited with him.
    The odds of that actually happening are astronomically high; almost as high as life being able to exist at all.

  • @kalinadesseaux8011
    @kalinadesseaux8011 4 года назад +70

    I understand why people are upset on the retcon of this episode. It is by far one of my favorites too.
    But I don't look at benders bigs score as a undermining. Or a redfining, retelling.
    For me both Jurassic Bark and benders big score had something to say, with great impact. But for different reasons.
    No, I look at it as a futurama character might, as a separate reality. As a reality that redeems the heartache of that episode. A reality where Fry and semore do actually get be together. While the intial original reality of Jurassic Bark also remains intact, and just as true. Universe A doesn't undermine universe 1, instead it presents a different course of events that allows us to experience a new version of the story, and because we know the old version, we understand the impact and importance of this new one.
    Of course there's tons of things out there where this would be impossible to accept, but because of the nature of futurama itself, I find it easy to see and appreciate both stories, to their fullest.
    And that is how to experience this amazing show.

  • @IAmNumber4000
    @IAmNumber4000 4 года назад +229

    It might have been retconned but I still can’t watch The Dog Episode. That thing is still weaponized emotion.

    • @Shot4ShotPhoto
      @Shot4ShotPhoto 4 года назад +14

      Agreed. When I hear “for a thousand years....I wiiiiiiilllll wait for you” my eyes get this weird saltwater leak.

    • @iamthebestoneever
      @iamthebestoneever 4 года назад +8

      The one time that a video game brought a tear to my eye was when Fallout: New Vegas had an easter egg where you can find a petrified dog named Seymour in the Old World Blues DLC.

    • @mute8s
      @mute8s 4 года назад +3

      @@iamthebestoneever Really??? Well that seems like a good enough reason to dig out that game and replay it... 😊

    • @jonathanclark9584
      @jonathanclark9584 3 года назад +1

      You ever fall asleep to Futurama and wake up at 1am and that song is playing? Fuck.

  • @Mikeplaysdbd
    @Mikeplaysdbd 4 года назад +24

    The only episode it made me sad was when frys brother named his son after him.

  • @Rahl692
    @Rahl692 3 года назад +4

    I like your interpretation, I however love the whole Seymour story; Jurassic Bark gave us a peek into the life of Seymour without Fry (our story's one at least) while Bender's Big Score fills in the blanks. For me it told the rest of the story without changing what we saw, but bringing it into new light. Seymour did wait for the duplicate Fry often; that fry worked at that sea-world like place, and went on an excursion to the north for years. Also we knew Seymour didn't die in his sleep as the end of Jurassic Bark made it seem, because of the flash fossilization the professor talked about. like I said your view is thought provoking, keep it up.

  • @WDCallahan
    @WDCallahan 4 года назад +507

    I have to disagree. I was very happy to get Seymour's retcon. But even then, it was too little, too late. I still can't bring myself to re-watch Fry's Dog.
    It didn't undo it enough.

    • @Nerdstalgic
      @Nerdstalgic  4 года назад +115

      I not only understand this opinion, but used to agree with it myself. It wasn’t until the last couples viewings that my opinion shifted. I lost my childhood dog a few years ago, and I think having to accept that, changed my appreciation for Jurassic Bark.
      I DEFINITELY understand where you’re coming from though.

    • @SonofTiamat
      @SonofTiamat 4 года назад +7

      @@parkivich Me too. I got a dog from a pet shelter last year, and it hurts even more to think about now

    • @xMaverickFPS
      @xMaverickFPS 4 года назад +8

      @@Nerdstalgic i lost my childhood pupper of 14 years 3 years ago. that's always rough. i still think about her sometimes and it makes me smile :)

    • @NicoUnken
      @NicoUnken 4 года назад +26

      I think that it was fine with me because I lived with that sad ending for years until the special came out. It wasn't like they retconned it two episodes later, they did it five years later in a tv special that gave us a lot of time travel tomfoolery. The retcon didn't feel like an intentional goal they achieved, rather it was a side effect of a fun plot they wanted to write independent of the dog.
      I don't really care that they removed the emotional kick to it, because I lived with that emotional kick years later. It also didn't feel cheap or manipulative, just an additional detail that happened to occur.

    • @MycoCane
      @MycoCane 4 года назад +14

      Same, hard disagree. Both the episodes still tell the stories and have the messages they were intended to have--one doesn't cancel out the other. And whether Seymour was miserable for the rest of his life or not makes absolutely no difference to the conclusion Fry comes to at the end of Jurassic Bark. He doesn't even know at that point.

  • @codyh9175
    @codyh9175 4 года назад +80

    I love that Futurama is so rewatchable

    • @YarroBello
      @YarroBello 4 года назад +9

      Only show I can rewatch and never get tired off. It’s timeless

    • @codyh9175
      @codyh9175 4 года назад +1

      @@YarroBello true that

    • @lucapeyrefitte6899
      @lucapeyrefitte6899 4 года назад +4

      Sauce Boss Forward and backwards

    • @FranciscoJG
      @FranciscoJG 4 года назад

      @@YarroBello you mean until we reach the year of 3000 :P

    • @unsubscribeloser
      @unsubscribeloser 4 года назад

      I have it on an endless loop on the tv in the workshop while I work 😍

  • @LittleMsShine
    @LittleMsShine 3 года назад +7

    I’m ok with them Retconning the dog episode. It’s too sad. I started tearing up just being reminded of it 😢

  • @adam88-
    @adam88- 4 года назад +2

    The episode where he wants to get revenge on his brother for ‘stealing his identity’ is a beautiful episode and it’s an episode that made me realise that cartoons are not just a fun, thing for kids to enjoy but often carry an important and emotional message

  • @ricklawrence7215
    @ricklawrence7215 4 года назад +319

    "It lessens the impact of Jurassic Park" No, it does not. That one still gets me everytime

    • @JAMAX90
      @JAMAX90 3 года назад +31

      Agreed. I think the episode with Seymour hit alot of people, which is an amazing quality. The retcon used in futurama didn't change what Seymour went through. It created an alternate past. Running alongside the "real" past. One where Fry never came to the future, which would have meant the series didn't exist.
      This isn't rewriting, its adding to the world and story of futurama.

    • @DrZachyB
      @DrZachyB 3 года назад +3

      Agreed. I’m 33 and not really a crier but I was telling my gf about this episode a few weeks back on walk and started bawling half way through

    • @redmuskratt
      @redmuskratt 3 года назад +3

      Jurassic Bark is possibly the saddest episode of all time. The only bad thing about dogs is that we out live them.

    • @Shalalacls
      @Shalalacls 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, and also that experience is still very much true for Our Fry. He never sees Seymour again except in the episode where they explore his memory of 1999. So he still went through that process and he doesn't get that resolution. It's just less cruel to the dog, and after all the tears I cried for Jurassic Bark, I can get behind that

    • @genathing903
      @genathing903 3 года назад +1

      I totally agree. Seymour lives both lives. This is not a retcon really. Both things happen. Both are true.

  • @grantnixon2935
    @grantnixon2935 4 года назад +120

    I remember the theme song for Seymour
    waiting for Fry hitting hard, and for a kid watching the end of that episode it sat with me forever.

    • @BootlegAdult
      @BootlegAdult 4 года назад +17

      I saw that episode around 8 years old and bawled my eyes out. Even seeing the visual of Seymour sitting in front of that shop alone is enough to start the water works.

    • @the-inatorinator
      @the-inatorinator 4 года назад +4

      I genuinely can't hear that song anymore without my gut doing flips. I'll be in a Walmart casually minding my own business and then BAM

    • @baldrickthedungspreader3107
      @baldrickthedungspreader3107 4 года назад +2

      There’s this episode and luck of the fryish

    • @grantnixon2935
      @grantnixon2935 4 года назад +7

      Being from the UK, there's a story called "Greyfriers Bobby" where an old man in Scotland dies suddenly leaving behind his dog. But his dog sat next to his grave for years waiting. That could of been a recreation of that story.

    • @origamipostit
      @origamipostit 4 года назад +6

      @@grantnixon2935 Same with Hatchi in Japan

  • @Igotnumnuts
    @Igotnumnuts 3 года назад +5

    I'm tearing at the thought of jurassic bark, that episode hits harder then any other show has ever managed to me

  • @Piper_____
    @Piper_____ 3 года назад +2

    While I agree on an academic level, I loved when bender’s big score showed Seymour having a happy future, just because I was so happy to see Seymour happy. The way I see it, Seymour did wait for Fry. And then, the universe was finally kind to him, and he didn’t have to wait for him anymore. Seymour was such a good dog.
    But, yes. Objectively speaking, you’re right. Seeing Seymour happy just gives me the warm fuzzies

  • @odintillgren3212
    @odintillgren3212 4 года назад +33

    Fry going back in time and trying to pick up his old life where he left off was necessary to the plot of the movie. If they hadn't acknowledged the dog it would have suggested he actively abandoned him which doesn't fit the character. Yeah it did retcon the story a bit, but it didn't go out of its way to soften the episode's impact, it just happened organically

  • @kaylarain1962
    @kaylarain1962 4 года назад +53

    This is why i love your videos. it’s a video about futurama that slowly progresses into being about something else entirely. My favorite vid of yours.

  • @devinjones1527
    @devinjones1527 3 года назад +2

    As someone who has rewatched this series probably a dozen times at minimum, it does NOT lessen the impact of Jurassic bark at all. I still tear up. And I know full well that in one timeline he got to live a happy life with Fry, but especially considering the intelligence and education of the actual creators of the show, multiverse or alternate timeline creation via time travel is just sort of implied if you know anything about the irl theory. I kind of just always interpreted bender's big score that way especially considering that because of the ending, we see hundreds of benders existing at the same time in the basement, indicating multiple timelines. If he stole an artifact from one timeline, there would be a timeline where that same artifact wouldn't have been stolen, but another had been, etc. There can be two of an organism which exist at once, but the universe will remove the duplicate from the same timeline. If "lars" had stayed in the past, he probably would have just survived since there wasnt another fry in his timeline anymore. That's all probably bullshit but it wasnt a stretch to get there on my first viewing so I kinda just didnt bother thinking about it too much more. Plus, after that punch in the stomach that is the end of Jurassic bark it is kind of nice to know that he at least did get some happiness. And they even fixed the plothole about him being "fast fossilized" because the way they show him laying down and passing away isnt consistent with the way he is found in the year 3000-whatevs which exists within the same episode and actually DID bother me on my first watch, and there isnt anything in that episode to indicate HOW he was fast fossilized. That doesnt just happen, so they kinda left a huge hole in the plot for the sake of the emotional payoff, likely for time reasons. If there was an episode that deserves to be ripped apart for silly plot conveniences, it's the damn yeti episode. Where the gland DOESNT work for no reason other than the double yeti joke, which granted, is funny, but zoidbergs redemption arc is undermined by it, and then the rube goldberg machine just falls on him and hes suddenly cured. Maybe they were implying that "the beast within him was killed" like in some of the werewolf lores but they dont explain it at all, they just go yayyyyy and the credits roll. So yeah complain about that one.

  • @Boatanga
    @Boatanga 3 года назад +2

    I still cry every time I watch the episode I started tearing up when you mentioned it I don’t think the impact will ever be lessened

  • @LordHollow
    @LordHollow 4 года назад +235

    You make it sound like it was retconned the following season. Jurassic Bark aired November 17, 2002. Bender's Big Score on November 27, 2007. Giving Seymour a happy ending five years later doesn't diminish the impact of the Bark. If anything, we can watch that episode without the emotional weight attached to it.

    • @nates9536
      @nates9536 4 года назад +18

      But that's exactly the problem. That weight IS good television. It makes you FEEL something. Without that weight, the episode is hollow.

    • @peglor
      @peglor 4 года назад +7

      @@nates9536 When writers resort to showing an animal having a hard time to get an emotional response from their audience then I'd say they've very much taken the easy option.

    • @DracoMagnius
      @DracoMagnius 4 года назад +21

      @@nates9536 In all honesty I was happy with the retcon when I saw Bender's Big Score. I was glad Seymour got to live a happy life with Fry. I didn't think about the loss of emotional impact of the scene where Seymour waits 12 years I just thought "Oh good now Seymour gets to be happy. Fry's still upset about Leelou the Narwhal and also unconsciously Leela, but now Seymour gets to live with his best friend and that makes me happy." See time travel is tricky, in the Jurassic Bark episode Fry has yet to go back so Seymour lives through the 12 years of loneliness until Fry cannonically goes back in time. If your watching the show and then watch Bender's Big Score then Fry changes the timeline making it Seymour's best timeline. The timeline where Fry never showed up still existed, but we moved into the new timeline with Lars/Time Travel Fry. I don't think this robs the emotional impact it's just 2 different timelines that exist in the same media multiverse.

    • @quinnmarchese6313
      @quinnmarchese6313 4 года назад +6

      @@peglor thats not what the writers did though, the writers proved that Fry was wrong to be mature and accept the death of his dog by showing that Seymour didn't do any of what he supposed. Seymour sitting alone at the end would be sad, as most of us really care about animals in connection to humanity, but what actually makes that scene as emotional as it is is the fact that Fry made the mature decision to allow Seymour his rest, after coming to the conclusion that Seymour must've lived a full life without him, when that simply wasnt the case.

    • @kemkopi
      @kemkopi 4 года назад +12

      @@nates9536 the weight doesn't go away after you've watched Bender's Big Score. This channel is trying to be poignant without reason. It's a show were time travel and alternate dimensions exist, just because they change something, doesn't mean the thing 'before' loses meaning.

  • @triplesevensix291
    @triplesevensix291 4 года назад +4

    Seymour was great. And based on a similar true story of a Japanese man whose dog would wait for him everyday after work until one day he never showed up. The dog still waited. A long time. Seymour also looks just like my dog Gary who is no longer with us sadly. Miss that lil guy. Legend!!

  • @bandicootsauce4569
    @bandicootsauce4569 3 года назад +4

    Even at 11 years old, my fellow Boy Scouts and I talked about how the episode 'Jurassic Bark' touched us emotionally... and that was at a time when we all still laughed our asses off at the very thought of a fart joke. We had precious little emotional maturity, if any, and yet, that episode still really spoke to us.

    • @quantumjourney1
      @quantumjourney1 3 года назад

      Just be glad futurama was the only thing to touch you in scouts

    • @bandicootsauce4569
      @bandicootsauce4569 3 года назад +1

      @@quantumjourney1
      Dude, that's not even a little bit funny.

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 4 года назад +132

    What impresses me the most about Futurama is the fact that all of its math and scientific claims are legitimate. Futurama is staffed by a roster of Ivy League graduates with backgrounds in science and math.
    As well as with The Simpsons since the both of them have the same creative teams.

    • @slaughterround643
      @slaughterround643 4 года назад +2

      yesssssssss

    • @quinnmarchese6313
      @quinnmarchese6313 4 года назад +26

      you know its a smart show when one of the writers created and then proofed a mathematical theorem specifically for a joke

    • @blankcat5005
      @blankcat5005 4 года назад

      Hi

    • @warwickclark2143
      @warwickclark2143 4 года назад +6

      It’s almost as if you watched this vid

    • @sugarnads
      @sugarnads 4 года назад +3

      Yeah he mentions it directly in the first 5 minutes

  • @Thoroughly_Wet
    @Thoroughly_Wet 4 года назад +82

    It wasn't retcon! It was left vague on purpose and they left clues! Seymour was flash fossilized in that spot *standing up* but when we see him "die" he was laying down. Plus it doesn't explain how he was fossilized at that spot, seeing as if he died there he would be decayed or have been cleaned up in some way.
    What in fact we were seeing was Seymour waiting for Fry to return from his search for leelu the narwhal. With all the writers being as educated as they are im sure they had the ability to preplan something to be revealed in their big movie.
    What you're doing is basically what literature teachers do with books. "The writer had this guy die because it adds another layer to the protagonists pain"
    The writer: "I couldn't think of what I wanted that guy to do so I killed him off"

    • @OriontheLad
      @OriontheLad 4 года назад

      Almost no literature ascribed to authorial intent. You can read into the literature that having a character die helps another character grow. You can even back it up with text. The teacher didn’t say “the author did this.” For most of history we would have no idea why anything was done. Interpreting literature is about being able to see similarities and parallels across writers and say “get this message seems to be conveyed due to these ideas being presented. I could write a paper on that and let other discuss it.” People who claim that literature teachers claim that something is fact have either ran into bad teachers, or don’t care to engage with a text. I will always remind people Ray Bradbury said that Fahrenheit 451 was not as much about censorship as it was about tv degrading culture. Yet, if that was his intent, it was also a hell of a book about censorship.

    • @johnnydjiurkopff
      @johnnydjiurkopff 4 года назад +1

      @@OriontheLad unfortunately the bad teachers people run into are mostly highschool English teachers who read way too deep into shit. I've been to 6 high schools over my teenage years and in all of them I only found 1 decent teacher that would teach you to look into shit rather than just saying "this means this because of that, and I'm college educated so my interpretation is objectively correct". It's fucked. You know the song "bohemian rhapsody"? I was told it was about Freddy Mercury's guilt over giving someone AIDS. When i brought up he even said the song was nonsense I was told to leave the classroom and got written up for being disruptive to the learning environment. So the next day I took some stink bombs I'd ordered out of a Kennesaw catalogue (stuffs so strong it sticks to clothes for like 3 wash cycles) and stomped a vial in every corner of the room and got my class a free shoot the shit on the blacktop period because the teacher refused to use the classroom for the rest of the day.

  • @koiiblitz
    @koiiblitz 4 года назад +40

    So you're saying the special that literally has time travel from an ass tattoo that came out of nowhere where in binary code retconned a heart wrenching episode?
    I disagree, the nature of the show is to be vague enough for the viewers to make their own interpretation about what happens, it's may of happened in the future or is just an empty hypothesis.
    Like seriously, the Bender tattoo was ripped off a dead clone's ass and then pasted onto Fry's ass and didn't notice for how ever long it was without an explanation for where it came actually from.

    • @trevorsimpson7660
      @trevorsimpson7660 3 года назад +1

      exactly, this is 10 minutes of him talking out his ass about his interpretation. This was a great episode, no idea how it broke the show...

    • @spiritretro3571
      @spiritretro3571 3 года назад +1

      you reminded me of an ecellent point, where DID the code come form? fry got it form his future self, who in turn got it form bender, who got it form frys ass, WHO PUT IT ON FRYS ASS TO BEGIN WITH!!!

    • @selinnazsur2328
      @selinnazsur2328 3 года назад +1

      As it was never explained by the writers, I can say that the tattoo doesn't have an exact point of origin, it's supposed to be part of a causal loop. An object with no real beginning or end, it's the product or a time paradox.

  • @SoaringEmbers
    @SoaringEmbers Год назад

    When the episode with Fry's reward is to be in his mother's dream came out, a really good friend and roommate of mine had lost his mother 2 weeks prior. There were 4 of us university students in an apartment and we did our best to provide him whatever comfort and space he needed. We often would watch TV as a group in the living room. As a massive fan of Futurama I had arranged for us to begin binging the show's newest season. After we had watched this episode we all sat in silence for such a long time. After what felt like forever I looked at him and said "Man I'm so sorry." with watery eyes. He didn't respond but he did pull off a weak smile and it was obvious he was fighting hard not to cry. We didn't watch another episode that night. I think we all parted to reflect a bit and some maybe snuck out to call their own mothers. I can't say for certain but I feel like the episode, in all it's agonizing beauty, was far more helpful than damaging to my friend's grief. There is a sense of incomplete closure in that episode for Fry and his mom. I can't ever watch this episode without remembering that day in that old 4 bedroom apartment and even thinking about the episode makes me quite emotional. Episodes like this one, Jurassic Bark and the one about Fry's brother/nephew are some of the best episodes of any show ever created and it makes Futurama really hard to dethrone as one of my favorite shows of all time.

  • @raw5889
    @raw5889 4 года назад +162

    Don’t think that retcon was a big deal. Technically Semore did suffer in universe it just got changed, but it still happened.

  • @CaptainKay0
    @CaptainKay0 4 года назад +135

    I interpreted what happened in Benders Big Score not so much as “retcon” but as being given a more complete picture of how Seymour went on with his life. In Jurassic Bark it’s IMPLIED that Seymour died sad and alone waiting for Fry, but obviously there were moments of his life in between him waiting that weren't shown to the audience for the sake of time and obviously for the emotional impact they were going for. So Benders Big Score showed us that while he did spend a lot of time waiting outside Panuccis, it was our own assumption (albeit due to the implication) that he was sad and alone the whole rest of his life.
    I for one was extremely relieved when I found out Seymour got to live out his life with his best ol pal. And I’ve always hailed that as one of the best pieces of Futurama writing that they were able to give closure and relief without necessarily changing the story, just showing more of the story.
    I know this comment has gone on long enough and you probably get what I'm trying to say by now, but my point is that it’s like in any movie or show where someone is “killed” but you don’t actually see them die, and then we get emotional about it, but we're relieved later on to learn they’re still alive; not because it was retconned, but because we merely assumed they were really dead in the first place.

    • @seanfields2623
      @seanfields2623 4 года назад +2

      CaptainKyoseff that’s literally a retcon dude.

    • @WaltonGFilm
      @WaltonGFilm 4 года назад +11

      Clever interpretation.
      I like this.
      In this POV I wouldn't label it a retcon.
      A rather advanced and nuanced story stitching technique, but it in no way explicitly nullifies the original data given.
      Well played you, well played.

    • @ForestBoyProductions
      @ForestBoyProductions 4 года назад +4

      Well said and a good theory!

    • @DaveDynamite1
      @DaveDynamite1 4 года назад +8

      Yes exactly! A good example of what you’re talking about is in the movie Spider-Man 3, when Peter Parker is told by the commissioner about who Uncle Ben’s real killer was. During that scene Peter imagines how Uncle Ben’s killer took his life. But by the end of the film we hear the killer’s side of how it actually happened, still leading to the same conclusion of Uncle Ben’s death but with more details of the actual events that took place and lead up to him dying, which in the end gave Peter closure as he understood to accept the past and to learn forgive.

    • @Anonymous-ng1ze
      @Anonymous-ng1ze 4 года назад +3

      Exactly. I think of it more as an Easter egg-style gift from the writers to the viewers than a bona fide retcon.

  • @NathanrHeld
    @NathanrHeld 2 года назад +3

    In those last few minutes, from two years ago, you managed to articulate my exact issues with what Disney is doing to the Star Wars franchise in present day...and also my worries for the upcoming Futurama revival.

  • @matthewtaber9635
    @matthewtaber9635 3 года назад +2

    If anything, seeing the happy full life of Seymour brings about again what Seymour really missed. It's a subtle showing of the difference in Seymour's life if life had actually been like that. It's the tragic irony of Fry's belief against reality, and this final little scene reiterates the life Seymour actually missed.

  • @mehoymenoy8841
    @mehoymenoy8841 4 года назад +68

    I actually love this retcon. It explains how he got the way we see him in Jurassic Bark and gave the viewer a sense of happiness and relief that the dog wasn’t left outside waiting for 12 years.

  • @young-stove
    @young-stove 4 года назад +56

    I always found that fururama had this unique quality to it where, even though it IS funny, don’t get me wrong, it never really made me laugh very much, but I would still watch it all the time at one point in my life, because it has this sense that it’s just GOOD, and it has other great more specific qualities too of course. I just always felt this, I don’t really know how to put it into words beyond that. It’s just got this underlying thing going on where in spite of never being too hilarious, or anything else, it’s just pure, good thing, that makes you love it for exactly what it is. I don’t know if this makes sense, but I feel like people will get exactly what I mean.

    • @Netherfly
      @Netherfly 4 года назад +10

      Definitely. I never found it very funny, but Futurama was almost always engaging, interesting, and often emotionally resonant. Only other show I can think of that worked on a similar level was Scrubs... another not-great comedy with way more depth than you'd expect.

    • @minaDesuDesu
      @minaDesuDesu 4 года назад

      @@Netherfly and the Brendan Fraser episode in Scrubs was like Jurassic Bark episode in Futurama

    • @enzldavaractl8345
      @enzldavaractl8345 4 года назад +2

      the comedy was always secondary, the core of the show was it's character development and solid plot

    • @the-inatorinator
      @the-inatorinator 4 года назад +1

      I agree, and personally I think some of that comes from the very grounded character interactions. The comedy usually seems much more similar to "that one stupid thing my friend said that one time" than scripted jokes. There's nothing wrong with scripted comedy, don't get me wrong, but there's just a different feel to Futurama that's really great.

    • @quinnmarchese6313
      @quinnmarchese6313 4 года назад

      for me, the laugh out loud moments were mostly, if not entirely from the first season, quotes like "[...] with blackjack and hookers", were great. by the second season, when it wasn't as funny anymore, it still made me actually care about the characters. i wasnt watching it to laugh anymore, i was genuinely hoping to see fry and leela together.

  • @TheSkullFrost
    @TheSkullFrost 4 года назад +1

    It's probably been said before, but what they did with Bender's big score didn't "ruin" anything, I wouldn't even call it a retcon at all. First of, the impact of the actual episode is still there and its effect on Fry's character didn't go away. Second, it's time travel, it didn't erase the original dog and its experience, it created a new timeline, a new dog if you will.

  • @natalierose13
    @natalierose13 Год назад +1

    I can’t STAND to know that Seymour sat and waited for Fry for 12 years. I liked it WAY BETTER thinking that he got to spend that time with “Lars”.

  • @nightshrine4257
    @nightshrine4257 4 года назад +116

    Why watch the Simpsons when u can watch... Watch...
    *This Art*

    • @takahashierik
      @takahashierik 4 года назад +9

      Early Simpsons was great though

    • @seanmurphy4758
      @seanmurphy4758 4 года назад +15

      Or, and hear me out, you can watch and enjoy BOTH shows. Mind blowing I know.

    • @rickalicious1116
      @rickalicious1116 4 года назад +1

      The first eight seasons of The Simpsons were some of the best television I've ever seen, and Futurama is one of the best shows that was perfect from beginning to end. You can enjoy both and appreciate the quality in both of them.

    • @riivulet
      @riivulet 4 года назад +2

      To be fair, the first seasons of The Simpsons were great, they even had the powerful moment in the Homer's Mom episode just like with Jurassic Bark.
      I agree that it can't live up to Futurama though.

    • @htasul
      @htasul 4 года назад +1

      Funnily enough - yep there's absolutely nothing to stop you watching both!

  • @songbird6414
    @songbird6414 4 года назад +544

    I don’t care what anyone else says. This show needs to be put on Netflix.

    • @talulahsafir
      @talulahsafir 4 года назад +60

      It was on it for a while

    • @SylvieONeill
      @SylvieONeill 4 года назад +53

      it's on hulu!

    • @mmartinisgreat
      @mmartinisgreat 4 года назад +7

      Again

    • @sirnavinod
      @sirnavinod 4 года назад +64

      Not going to lie; the day they removed Futurama from Netflix was the day I cancelled Netflix and got Hulu.

    • @simranr7876
      @simranr7876 4 года назад +3

      It’s on prime

  • @brianbru
    @brianbru 3 года назад +1

    Anytime time travel comes into the mixture and a second version of yourself is created it's widely accepted as an alternate timeline. Semour still waited outside Panucci's Pizza for 12 years for OUR Fry.

  • @MarkBerberoglu
    @MarkBerberoglu 3 года назад +15

    What if the creators simply treated the "retcon" of Seymour as a test of the character development, of the viewers themselves?

  • @Asaylum117
    @Asaylum117 4 года назад +183

    I still enjoy Futurama a lot more, then Simpsons and even Family Guy. Sure, Futurama is made by the same people that did the Simpsons, but Futurama has something, that neither The Simpsons or even Faily Guy have. An end.

    • @justapanda637
      @justapanda637 4 года назад +12

      Furturama is more about the characters

    • @mummeedaddee692
      @mummeedaddee692 4 года назад +9

      are you tryna say you like Family Guy more than the Simpsons?

    • @asho345
      @asho345 4 года назад

      Mummee Daddee I sure do.

    • @Asaylum117
      @Asaylum117 4 года назад +7

      @@mummeedaddee692 What, no.

    • @mummeedaddee692
      @mummeedaddee692 4 года назад +6

      @@asho345 you crazy

  • @austinperdue1619
    @austinperdue1619 4 года назад +123

    This show is such a sleeper in today’s culture. It’s a better Rick and morty imo

    • @Cinko420
      @Cinko420 4 года назад +25

      Austin Perdue
      I think both shows are too different to be compared.
      Rick and Morty focuses on alternate dimensions while also being in the present day, while Futurama is in the Future.
      Morty is socially awkward, but intelligent while Fry is dumb but not socially awkward.
      Futurama is cartoony, Rick and Morty is dark
      Rick and Morty is action, Futurama is comedy.
      Both shows do have their moments where they look at the characters, but that's the only aspect I see comparable. There I can say Futurama did it better.
      Edit: Farnsworth and Rick are very similar in terms of their actual characters. I can't really compare with that though.
      -sincerely, a fan of both shows.

    • @michaelcantu6071
      @michaelcantu6071 4 года назад +2

      Futurama and south park are two extremely underrated shows in todays culture.

    • @krispr1me
      @krispr1me 4 года назад +7

      @@Cinko420 To be fair, you have to have a pretty high IQ to understand:
      *"Whimmy whimmy wham wham wozzle!"*
      >
      *"WUB-A-LUBBA DUB DUB!!"*

    • @DoctorMagoo111
      @DoctorMagoo111 4 года назад

      Futurama is brilliant.

    • @wnsctt2
      @wnsctt2 4 года назад +2

      I concer. If I had to pick 1 show over the other it would be futurama

  • @bc8010
    @bc8010 3 года назад +1

    My mom got my dad the complete box set for Christmas in 2014 and I've loved it ever since

  • @SiriusMined
    @SiriusMined 3 года назад

    When I first saw Jurassic Bark, I had just gotten my dog Blitzen (the dog in my avatar). I cried my eyes out.
    She died last March, and that episode still brings me to years. I'd trade anything to have her back.
    The retconning didn't take away the best of that episode.

  • @ramirorybczuk9100
    @ramirorybczuk9100 4 года назад +169

    Abut character developing, Dan Harmon put it in good words:
    "The forest is magical but the people are real

  • @PrincessPeriodFart
    @PrincessPeriodFart 4 года назад +17

    Here's the thing about Jurassic Bark vs. Bender's Big Score. I'm a huge fan of the show, watched it through many times. Any mention of Jurassic Bark immediately hits me with a wash of different emotions. Nostalgia, grief, love and more. I vaguely remember what happens in Benders Big Score at all, just the basic plot points really.
    If the original story is powerful enough, a retcon can never truly alter it.

    • @selenarutherford7077
      @selenarutherford7077 4 года назад +1

      i can't watch jurassic bark without crying , my dog recently passed away and it hits harder than before

    • @Alaryicjude
      @Alaryicjude 4 года назад

      This! Just watching them bring up that episode and explain it with short scenes made me friggin cry so there's NO emotion lost for so many of us and honestly it makes it somewhat easier to think of when I remember that Fry and Seymour were able to be happy in one reality/point in time. It doesn't ruin anything at all for me because it doesn't (seem to attempt to ) overwrite anything to me, it's more like an addendum.

  • @pokemaniacqolem6495
    @pokemaniacqolem6495 3 года назад

    just you describing the plot of the episode made me absolutely bawl my eyes out... incredible how that works...

  • @Otsego
    @Otsego 3 года назад

    What's funnier is that you are missing the rest of the picture. The Lars|Fry character continues that line of thought with his Relationship to Leela. He never makes the same conclusion that Fry prime does and never lets go of Leela. So much so that he ends up Freezing himself again hoping at a chance to be with her (or knowing he will be with her depending on how you view causality in this form of time travel).
    Also I'm not sure how much of that gut punch it removed, that scene still gets me every time.

  • @n3rddegree869
    @n3rddegree869 4 года назад +153

    Funny how you miss that Seymour was a retcon to start with. He was added to Fry's story where he quite clearly did not exist before. Others have stated that this is an alternate timeline created by Fry when he went into the past. This example doesn't really fit a retcon. In fact, Futurama several retcons that it handles quite well, for example having Fry being his own grandpa being an explanation for his missing brain wave. I think when retcons are done simply as a means of explaining things that didn't need explanation is the real issue. Using the Star Wars example, midochlorians aren't a bad retcon. It would make sense for a large counsel of Jedi to have a better scientific understanding of the force. The bad retcon is having Anakin meet Obiwan as a child as that means the episode 4 Obiwan lies to Luke rather egregiously. I think the number of ripples a retcon causes also effects how it is viewed by fans.

    • @spiritretro3571
      @spiritretro3571 3 года назад +2

      i'd like to add to anyone who may be tempted ot bash on the midichlorians thing, NO they dotn create the force they channel it, they act like force transformers like at the power plant or in your computer, they icnrease the potency of the conneciton you already have, and enable you to use the force at the correct/appropriate intensity for the task.

    • @MewmewGrrl
      @MewmewGrrl 3 года назад +10

      Obi-Wan lying to Luke actually is quite within his character, it's what he does. He lied to him from the beginning. What's one more lie for the old lie hound?

    • @n3rddegree869
      @n3rddegree869 3 года назад +5

      @@MewmewGrrl Again though the amount of outright lying is mostly created by the prequels. If you watch just the original movies on their own Obi-wan doesn't lie to Luke. Withholds information yes. The closest thing to a lie is about the death of Anakin, but as explained in the movie, that's how he perceived it. Anakin stopped existing as he knew him once he became Vader.

    • @davis4555
      @davis4555 3 года назад +5

      Nope. Midochloriands are the worst retcon of all time. It took the force away from being a spiritual endeavor accomplishable by anyone through training and self discipline (though some are "chosen" by this apparently conscience universal force, and are more inherently talented).
      It turned it into just one more dry, explainable sci-fi feature.
      The beauty of the original trilogy was the dance between science and religion. The mixing of the future and the ancient, the explainable and the mystical, WAS the appeal of Star Wars. To try and "explain" the force in any way is to devalue its role in the story as the yin to the technological yan.
      These types of retcons are a big part of why episodes 1-3 are not highly regarded. They show that the creators didn't even understand what they created.

    • @FandomCanon
      @FandomCanon 3 года назад

      Technically, Anakin was already an accomplished pilot when they met...of podracers.

  • @AGrayPhantom
    @AGrayPhantom 4 года назад +12

    I actually really like this retcon. Fry still has his moment to grieve, meanwhile another Fry from an alternate timeline gets to reconnect with his family and his dog. It's a win/win as far as I'm concerned.

  • @flowerstarstudio1992
    @flowerstarstudio1992 4 года назад +1

    Just going to say, that this show works with multiverses theory. Meaning that both things happen; regardless of time travel been mentioned on the show. Since in the same episode they talk about how you can’t have two of the same person, in the one universe they inhabit.

  • @alexjones7043
    @alexjones7043 3 года назад

    Fuck mate even thinking about this episode makes me cry. There’s something about the loyalty and simplicity of an animals thought process that always breaks me more than any human story. It’s not that I care more about animals than I do humans, it’s the lack of understanding, and therefore the innocence, in animals that is gut wrenching.
    Can’t believe an animated tv show still makes me feel this way over 20 years later. How great are stories !

  • @miked9594
    @miked9594 4 года назад +18

    "I'll never forget him, but he forgot me a long time ago."
    😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

  • @Femaiden
    @Femaiden 4 года назад +133

    you're looking at it like "oh we now know that 5 years from now, it's gonna be all right, so it loses its impact"
    but
    the viewers aren't "supposed" to know that, if they are watching the episodes in order, like they should, then they will see jurassic bark first, feel the impact, then later, they will see bender's big score.

    • @SiriusMined
      @SiriusMined 3 года назад

      exactly!

    • @nerdythespian1212
      @nerdythespian1212 3 года назад

      I guess it only loses the impact of your rewatching then?

    • @marceelino
      @marceelino 3 года назад

      @@nerdythespian1212 nope, it does not.

    • @Shalalacls
      @Shalalacls 3 года назад

      @@nerdythespian1212 I rewatched the whole thing recently, I was told that by the end of the show the dog was fine, still after I watched that episode I was not.

  • @roseheart270
    @roseheart270 3 года назад

    I cried with Jurassic Bark, and I cried with Bender's Big Score, and doesn't take away my appreciation of the first. The second just rewarded me for having a heart.

  • @GizmoFromPizmo
    @GizmoFromPizmo 3 года назад

    You're absolutely correct. David X. Cohen said, in one of the director's commentaries that they deliberately avoided time travel plots because the fans just wind up hating you. This video points out why. I cried when I watched Jurassic Bark the first few times. It's a powerful episode even if they did muck it up with a time travel episode later.

  • @WarriorZ676
    @WarriorZ676 4 года назад +54

    Is it bad I see it on the opposite way? After the ending of Jurassic Bark, the one thing I wanted to do was like, get in the TV and tell him that no, the doggo loved him and waited for him, and he should totally resurrect the dog. Like, that episode made me feel AWFUL.
    Bender Big Score brings a sense of relief on that sense. That Seymour did eventually live a happy life. Maybe it could have been handled better, but it is what it is.

  • @AdamOBrien29
    @AdamOBrien29 4 года назад +58

    That Jurassic Bark epsiode hit soooo hard

    • @theprophet9429
      @theprophet9429 4 года назад +2

      I refuse to watch it again until they write an episode that fixes it.

    • @peglor
      @peglor 4 года назад +3

      @@theprophet9429 They did - that's what this video is about.

    • @SinisterDarko
      @SinisterDarko 4 года назад

      except they stole the idea from Hachi, saddest movie ever

    • @pierreo33
      @pierreo33 4 года назад +1

      @@SinisterDarko Jurassic Bark 2002
      Hachi 2009
      Wanna try again?

  • @Punmaster9001
    @Punmaster9001 2 года назад +1

    I recently started rewatching Futurama, mostly because of all the hulu episodes talk and wanting to remember forgotten storylines. I saw this episode like a day ago and it still held that weight, mostly, knowing that animals will react like Seymour did to Fry disappearing. It's still heartbreaking, even knowing they retconned it so that a version of Fry would still be there for him. And yeah, they did that episode dirty by retconning it, even if in some way they gave Seymour a better outcome than originally planned.

  • @ZalymBiscayn
    @ZalymBiscayn 3 года назад

    Futurama is right up there in the Top 5 for me. But, my personal headcanon ends with the words, "Please don't stop playing, Fry. I want to see how it ends," and a crudely crafted holophoner representation of their future.
    Fry was forced at that moment to be exactly who he is, having been given one glorious moment to truly express the depths of emotion he possessed for Leela (and that we had watched being sculpted and revealed over the show's lifetime) to that point. Then we watched the woman he loves ultimately and finally realizing/accepting/embracing her feelings for Him in return.
    It was a wonderful way to wrap the story while letting the imagination run into the future with the characters. Then the series ended, and as there was no reason to think it would return again the story's emotional grip was cemented for me.
    Everything after that is a great bonus. The show (surprisingly for me 5-years later) was still fun to watch with some entertaining and enjoyable episodes. There was growth to explore for the characters. But for me, Bender's Big Score and everything it after occurs on the screen of my brain's "What If" machine.

  • @homicide234
    @homicide234 4 года назад +23

    Every time I rewatch I skip the dog ep just cuz
    it makes me so sad

    • @Jenny-tm3cm
      @Jenny-tm3cm 3 года назад

      Same even tho my fav episode is Crimes of the Hot

  • @Blackmanbubbs
    @Blackmanbubbs 4 года назад +25

    It's nice to hear that soothing voice breakdown my childhood during this crazy time

  • @booknamebasis
    @booknamebasis 3 года назад

    When I saw Bender's Big Score, I was actually happy about the retcon, because it changed nothing about the Fry we continue with, allowed a Fry we know to have an emotional resolution, and let an innocent dog happy years of life.
    The Fry that keeps going until the end of the series still has the same memories, as we see in Game of Tones, where he takes Seymour with him in his pocket.
    I haven't watched Jurassic Bark in 14 years, and it's going to stay that way, regardless of retcon. It's too damn sad, I just can't.

  • @Wyrdwad
    @Wyrdwad 3 года назад +1

    I'm going to have to put my vote in with the others in the comments who feel that this is an example of a GOOD retcon. The emotional development and weight of Jurassic Bark is in no way removed or lessened by the events of Bender's Big Score -- at the time of Jurassic Bark, the emotional journey Fry underwent was still extremely valid, gut-wrenching, and important to his character.
    This retcon undermined none of that; rather, it existed for the sake of us, the audience, NOT for the sake of Fry as a character. Particularly since that version of Fry doesn't survive the movie, so alpha Fry doesn't ever actually piece together that any of that ever happened. All character growth remains intact, no second-guessing occurs, and we -- as an audience -- are simply left comforted in the knowledge that the Goodest Boy lived a happy life after all. It's basically win-win for all parties.

  • @Richard_Nickerson
    @Richard_Nickerson 4 года назад +9

    That conversation between Bender and God is literally my favorite part of the entire show, no matter how many times I rewatch it.

    • @quinnmarchese6313
      @quinnmarchese6313 4 года назад +1

      "you were doing really well until everyone died" is my favorite quote in reference to God ever, and is also my personal motto when playing like a Sims-type game

  • @shangerdanger
    @shangerdanger 4 года назад +11

    Love this channel and futurama is one of my favorite shows! thanks for doing this

  • @meeeangreen6592
    @meeeangreen6592 4 года назад +1

    I've watched and rewatched Futurama a lot since the beginning, and never thought too much about the time traveler ruining the original Jurassic Bark. The retcon came pretty long after, and in the end it is Futurama, and there really are no rules. Now, as for Jurassic Bark, that was definitely top tier writing, and it seemed to come out of nowhere, but Jurassic Bark was written and released about a year after September 11, 2001. The nation was still mourning, and the gut wrenching emotional twist in the episode was a reality for some, and an anxiety and fear for others to leave a loved one or pet forever with no warning, and what if they just waited out of love, and never moved on? Plus, a tragic story about a boy and his dog story will release the tear gates every time. Futurama had one of the greatest series finales in TV, too!

  • @spurley
    @spurley 4 года назад +1

    The ending of Jurassic Bark shows Seymour looking sad and playing sad music over it. But it doesn't show EVERY single day of those 12 years....just some of them. Fry moves into the upstairs storage room when he goes back to the past, so Seymour would have lived with him there at the pizza shop, as we've seen. The images at the end of Jurassic Bark don't directly SAY "Seymour waited here forever, blah blah blah, super sad" they just heavily imply it. We could have just been seeing moments where he was sad because Fry was out on the boat with the narwhal, or delivering a pizza. And while your point stands, about "once you know that Seymour's life isn't really sad after all, it defeats the purpose of that episode" makes sense, but I doubt it was assumed that people would be rewatching so much anyway. IMO the writing is still continuous to me.