| | This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (September 2007) | | | This article does not cite any references or sources. (October 2006) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. | This is a list of fictional places featured in the television series Futurama. Image File history File links Emblem-important. ...
Image File history File links Question_book-3. ...
This article is about the television series. ...
√2 News
-
- First featured in "A Big Piece of Garbage".
√2 News is the main dissemination outlet for all things newsworthy. News monster Morbo and Linda ("human female") anchor the news. Morbo's race apparently wants to conquer and enslave humanity. Although this is not a traditional "place," it is noteworthy enough to be mentioned here. A Big Piece of Garbage is episode 8 in season 1 of Futurama. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: // Kif Kroker Kif Kroker (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) - Alien assistant to Captain Zapp Brannigan and first officer of the Democratic Order of Planets (DOOP) starship Nimbus. ...
Futurama has a large number of recurring characters which help add comic energy to the series. ...
711 - First featured in "Fry and the Slurm Factory".
Inspired by the present-day 7-Eleven chain of convenience stores, it is a store that Fry and Bender usually go to shop for food or drinks, basically the Kwik-E-Mart of New New York. Featured in many episodes, including "Fry and the Slurm Factory" and "War is the H-Word". The name is meant to be read as 7 to the power of 11 (1,977,326,743), instead of the traditional 7-11. According to their logo, they are "open 28 hours" a day, a reference to the 28-hour day concept in time management. Fry and the Slurm Factory is the thirteenth episode and season finale of season one of Futurama. ...
For other uses, see 7-Eleven (disambiguation). ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
An exterior of a fictitious typical Kwik-E-Mart store. ...
Fry and the Slurm Factory is the thirteenth episode and season finale of season one of Futurama. ...
War is the H-Word is episode seventeen in season two of Futurama. ...
âExponentâ redirects here. ...
The 28-hour day is a concept of time management which is used by a limited number of students and other people with jobs that allow very flexible work hours. ...
Academy of Inventors Hall - First featured in "A Big Piece of Garbage".
As the name suggests, is where inventors unveil their inventions to the universe. The Professor is about to introduce his Death Clock, but is reminded that he introduced it the previous year. He then invents the Smell-o-scope (which he discovers that he had built last year), which is given the grade of A-minus-minus (the worst grade imaginable) by Professor Ogden Wernstrom, who had previously introduced the "Reverse Scuba Suit," which won that year's challenge. A Big Piece of Garbage is episode 8 in season 1 of Futurama. ...
Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth is a fictional character appearing in the animated television series Futurama, voiced by Billy West. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: // Kif Kroker Kif Kroker (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) - Alien assistant to Captain Zapp Brannigan and first officer of the Democratic Order of Planets (DOOP) starship Nimbus. ...
The Accusing Parlor - First featured in "The 30% Iron Chef".
A room at Planet Express where crimes are solved and revealed in dramatic fashion like Sherlock Holmes. âThe 30% Iron Chefâ is the 22nd episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
A portrait of Sherlock Holmes by Sidney Paget from the Strand Magazine, 1891 Sherlock Holmes is a fictional detective of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who first appeared in publication in 1887. ...
Alien Overlord & Taylor - First featured in "A Fishful of Dollars".
This store contains departments such as a cosmetics, robot accessories, and men's and women's apparel. This is a reference to New York department store Lord and Taylor. A Fishful of Dollars is episode six in the first season of Futurama. ...
May Department Stores was founded in 1877 by David May in Leadville, Colorado. ...
Ancestor & Sons Ad Agency - First featured in "A Leela of Her Own".
When Leela is playing for the NNY Mets, she receives two endorsement deals through her agent, Bender, and shoots two commercials at Ancestor & Sons. One for "Bean-Bay Beans," slogan They're the Beaniest! for $100 and "Bean-Bay Frijoles" for 1001 pesos. For the frijoles, they make her wear a bean suit. A Leela Of Her Own is the sixteenth episode in the third season of the animated series Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Angry Dome - First featured in "Kif Gets Knocked Up a Notch".
A place in the Planet Express building where someone can release their anger. It was briefly seen in Kif Gets Knocked Up A Notch, when Professor Farnsworth went into it after Amy asks if she can visit Kif. This place is never seen again. Kif Gets Knocked Up A Notch is the first episode in season four of Futurama. ...
Kif Gets Knocked Up A Notch is the first episode in season four of Futurama. ...
Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth is a fictional character appearing in the animated television series Futurama, voiced by Billy West. ...
anti-Chrysler - First featured in "The Honking".
The location of Project Satan, the assembling of the most evil car from the pieces of the most evil cars in history. Bender tries to kill Fry, his best friend, as the Werecar. The Honking is episode eighteen in season two of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Apollo 11 Landing Site - First featured in "The Series Has Landed".
The place of the first Apollo moon landing. Leela exclaims that it's "been lost for centuries!" when Fry says that he wants to go see it. It is eventually used as a place to escape the -173 degree temperatures (Fahrenheit or Celsius? First one, then the other...). The Series Has Landed, alternatively titled Episode Two: The Series Has Landed, is the second episode of the first season of Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Applied Cryogenics - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
Applied Cryogenics is the Cryonics lab where Fry is frozen in the year 2000. The building has had no power failures since 1997. It is located in New New York, and somehow it survived the two alien destructions of New York City when Fry was frozen. In the future, Leela works there before she quits and goes to work at Planet Express. Later, Fry and Bender would gain temporary employment there. Its slogan in 2000 is "You Can Solve All Your Problems by Freezing Them." In "The Cryonic Woman," the slogan is "It Seems to Work OK." Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
Not to be confused with cryogenics. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
New New York is the name of two futuristic cities modelled on New York City: For the city in Futurama, see List of Futurama places#New New York For the city on New Earth in Doctor Who, see New Earth and Gridlock. For the city located in New America on...
New York, New York and NYC redirect here. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
The subject of this article may not satisfy the notability guideline for Television episodes. ...
The Beast with Two Bucks Sex Shop - First featured in "Spanish Fry".
This dirty hole, located in the Galactic Bazaar, is run by a giant chameleon and caters to the seedier sexual desires, and the sale of aphrodisiacs, of the universe. It traffics in "human horn," the aphrodisiac created from human noses (and possibly human genitalia). Lrrr was spotted purchasing human horn and identified by security camera footage. The name is a parody of the saying "the beast with two backs". This saying was also parodied in the name of the second Futurama movie, The Beast with a Billion Backs. Spanish Fry is the seventeenth episode of Season four of Futurama. ...
For other uses, see Chameleon (disambiguation). ...
Lust is any intense desire or craving for self gratification. ...
For other uses, see Universe (disambiguation). ...
This article is about agents which increase sexual desire. ...
A sex organ, or primary sexual characteristic, narrowly defined, is any of those parts of the body (which are not always bodily organs according to the strict definition) which are involved in sexual reproduction and constitute the reproductive system in an complex organism; namely: Male: penis (notably the glans penis...
LRRR can refer to: Lrrr, a recurring minor character in the television show series Futurama Lunar laser ranging experiment Category: ...
Bender's Body - First featured in "Godfellas".
After being bombarded by an asteroid field, people emerge from one of the asteroids that stuck to Bender's stomach. Small "poor and simple folk," calling themselves the Shrimpkins, worship him as the Great Metal Lord. The One Commandment: God Needs Booze. Overall, his chest suffers from pollution, crime, a great flood, a great fire, a horrible windstorm, and eventually, a nuclear war. Godfellas is the twentieth episode of the third season of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender's Family Castle - First featured in "The Honking".
Bender's family castle is located in a Transylvania-like part of the world. It is left to him by his Uncle Vladimir, on the condition that he stay at least one night in it. The castle proves to be haunted by the ghosts of old robots. The number "0101100101" (357) is written on the wall in blood, only to be reversed as "1010011010" (666) in the mirror, frightening Bender. It is here, in the adjacent moors, that Bender is given the curse of the Werecar. The Honking is episode eighteen in season two of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
This article is about the region in Romania. ...
Bender's Tomb - First featured in "A Pharaoh to Remember".
Self-appointed Pharaoh Bender demands a monument "one billion cubits tall" (which is approximately 284,091 miles). It features eyes that shoot long flames out of and says in Bender's voice "Remember me!" However, he's unhappy with the finished product, saying it was too big and wondering if they'll really remember him or just the monument. After this remark, Bender's death is faked and is promptly thrown into the tomb, along with Fry and Leela. The tomb has slot machines and a distillery. Nobody can get in or out, but there are apparently many holes for thousands of snakes to enter and exit. The trio escape by detonating the giant barrel flammable liquor in the still, which destroys the entire monument. A Pharaoh to Remember is episode seventeen of Futuramas third season. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Big Apple Bank - First featured in "A Fishful of Dollars".
This bank was Fry's bank back in the 20th century, where he had an account with a balance of $0.93 when he was frozen. By the 31st century, Fry's balance has grown to $4.3 billion due to compound interest. Therefore, the interest rate over that period is about 2.25%. Although the option and machine is still available, the bank no longer uses PINs, but rather retina scans, fingerprints, colonic maps, and the bank-by-brain option. The bank was also the victim of three consecutive successive robberies by crazed robot Roberto; one of the robberies happens off-screen. It also appears very briefly in the title sequence. A Fishful of Dollars is episode six in the first season of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Compound interest refers to the fact that whenever interest is calculated, it is based not only on the original principal, but also on any unpaid interest that has been added to the principal. ...
PINs are most often used for ATMs but are increasingly used at the Point of sale, especially for debit cards. ...
Human eye cross-sectional view. ...
A macro shot of a palm and the base of several fingers; as seen here, debris can gather between the ridges. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Large intestine. ...
Big Ball of Garbage - First featured in "A Big Piece of Garbage".
A Big Piece of Garbage is a massive ball of all of the garbage created by mankind circa 2000. It is by far the smelliest object in the universe. When the landfills and New Jersey were full, the garbage was put on the largest of all barges, which sailed all around the world for fifty years. After it returned, not being taken in by any other country, New York used its Mafia connections in 2032 to obtain a rocket and blast the ball into space, thus solving the problem forever. Scientists thought that the ball would return to Earth, but the theory was dismissed, being "depressive." It returned 1,000 years later to Earth with enough force to reduce the city to "a stinking crater." Fry, Leela, and Bender were sent to destroy the ball by planting a bomb on one of the fault lines, but failed. Locations on the ball include a bunch of coffee grinds, America Online Floppy discs, and a pile of Bart Simpson dolls. The garbage ball is eventually knocked off course by another ball of garbage, which flew out of the solar system after knocking the first ball of garbage into the sun. A Big Piece of Garbage is episode 8 in season 1 of Futurama. ...
A Big Piece of Garbage is episode 8 in season 1 of Futurama. ...
This article is about the criminal society. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
For the comic book series of the same name, see Bart Simpson comics. ...
Blernsball Hall of Fame - First featured in "A Leela of Her Own.
Featuring the Worst Player in Blernsball History exhibit, the real live Hank Aaron the 24th is on display, along with the original Hank Aaron. With a batting average of .000, Hank Aaron the 24th is the worst player of all time. However, after Leela's horrible pitching season, she becomes, officially, the Worst Player in History. A Leela Of Her Own is the sixteenth episode in the third season of the animated series Futurama. ...
A typical blernsball scorecard Blernsball is a game from the Futurama fictional universe. ...
Henry Louis Hank Aaron (born February 5, 1934 in Mobile, Alabama), nicknamed Hammer, Hammerin Hankâ, or Bad Henryâ, is a retired American baseball player whose Major League Baseball (MLB) career spanned the 1950s through the 1970s. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bum Base Alpha - First featured in "The 30% Iron Chef".
The biggest hobo station in the quadrant, home to the greatest cook in the universe — Master Spargel. After being shunned by his friends, it is here that Bender learns the secret ingredient — the Essence of Pure Flavor; which the Professor determines is nothing but ordinary water, laced with nothing more than a few spoonfuls of LSD. âThe 30% Iron Chefâ is the 22nd episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth is a fictional character appearing in the animated television series Futurama, voiced by Billy West. ...
Cedars-Sinewave Hospital - First featured in "Bendin' in the Wind".
A large hospital in New New York, Bender is taken here after being mauled by a magnetic can opener. The name is a parody of Cedars-Sinai Hospital. Bendin in the Wind is the thirteenth episode in season three of Futurama. ...
For the town in the Republic of Ireland, see Hospital, County Limerick. ...
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center is a world famous hospital located in Los Angeles. ...
Central Bureaucracy - First featured in "How Hermes Requisitioned His Groove Back".
After increasing the efficiency at a forced-labor camp by 4%, Hermes Conrad sorted the Central Bureaucracy master "In" pile in 3 min. 56 sec., locating and retrieving Bender's personality program. He was demoted one degree for having finished with four seconds to spare. âHow Hermes Requisitioned His Groove Backâ is episode eleven in season two of Futurama. ...
Hermes Conrad is a character in the Futurama animated series. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Central Park Zoo -
- First featured in "Love and Rocket".
Now with more goats! The zoo features howler mummies and tapirs, among other creatures. Bender went on a date to the zoo with Planet Express Ship during their brief romance. â¹ The template below (Unreferenced episode) is being considered for deletion. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
The Planet Express Ship is a fictional spaceship in the animated series Futurama. ...
CitiHall - First featured in "A Big Piece of Garbage".
New New York's City Hall, home to the offices of Mayor C. Randall Poopenmayer. The building is usually featured in episodes where the city is in danger. The name is a parody of the actual New York company Citibank. A Big Piece of Garbage is episode 8 in season 1 of Futurama. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: Spoiler warning: // In the episode A Big Piece of Garbage, Ron Popeil, his severed head floating in a large jar, mentions several of his inventions including the (fictional) technology to keep human heads alive in jars, implicitly arresting the aging process. ...
Citibank is a major international bank, founded in 1812 as the City Bank of New York. ...
Cookieville Minimum Security Orphanarium - First featured in "The Cyber House Rules".
Cookieville Minimum Security Orphanarium, later the Bender B. Rodríguez Orphanarium due to a donation from Bender, is the orphanage at which Leela grew up. The orphanage is headed by Mr. Vogel and has three recurring orphans, Albert, Nina, and Sally. It is known to take numerous "doorbell babies" which is how Leela is accepted in the orphanage. Cookieville has very little or no funding, so it is rundown. Leela is named "Orphan of the Year" in "Leela's Homeworld". The Cyber House Rules is the ninth episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Bender, full name Bender Bending RodrÃguez or designated Bending Unit 22, is a fictional robot character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Futurama has a large number of recurring characters which help add comic energy to the series. ...
Futurama has a large number of recurring characters which help add comic energy to the series. ...
Leelas Homeworld is the second episode of Futuramas fourth season. ...
D.U.I. Friday's - First featured in "Anthology of Interest II".
A play on the popular T.G.I. Friday's restaurant chain. Following Bender's conversion to human form, he ends up at this downtown pub at closing time and immediately runs next door to Dinkin Donuts. Anthology of Interest II is the eighteenth episode of the third season of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Dinkin Donuts - First featured in "Anthology of Interest II".
An combination of Dunkin' Donuts and David Dinkins, was the first African-American mayor of New York City. Appears during the first segment, "I, Meatbag." The company is never mentioned again. Since it was seen in a "What If?" scenario, the firm might not actually exist. Anthology of Interest II is the eighteenth episode of the third season of Futurama. ...
David Norman Dinkins (born July 10, 1927 in Trenton, New Jersey) was the Mayor of New York City from 1990 through 1993, being the first and to date only African American to hold that office. ...
Languages Predominantly American English Religions Protestantism (chiefly Baptist and Methodist); Roman Catholicism; Islam Related ethnic groups Sub-Saharan Africans and other African groups, some with Native American groups. ...
New York, New York and NYC redirect here. ...
Duraflame National Forest - First featured in "Spanish Fry".
Home of Bigfoot, an endangered, recently discovered species. While on a camping trip with the Planet Express crew, Fry wanders off in the middle of the night, trying to find Bigfoot when he was roused from sleep by Bender making "Bigfoot" noises. While away from the party, he is abducted by [aliens]. Upon returning to camp the next morning, he discovers that his nose has been poached for use as "human horn", supposedly a potent alien aphrodisiac. The news is broken to him gently by Doctor Zoidberg. Spanish Fry is the seventeenth episode of Season four of Futurama. ...
It has been suggested that Evidence regarding Bigfoot be merged into this article or section. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Look up Alien in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
This article is about agents which increase sexual desire. ...
Doctor John D. Zoidberg is a fictional lobster-like alien from the planet Decapod 10 in the television series Futurama. ...
Ed's Hiking Supplies and Spelukateria - First featured in "Godfellas".
A location where people can outfit themselves to go out on expeditions. Fully outfitted pack mules and sherpas are readily available. Fry and Leela go there to prepare to go to the Himalayas to use the world's most powerful radio-telescope to search for Bender. Godfellas is the twentieth episode of the third season of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Elzar's Fine Cuisine - First featured in "Hell Is Other Robots".
Featured in many of the Futurama episodes, the famous four-armed chef Elzar is the owner and operator. It caters to the upscale customer. Unfortunately, it tends to have a problem with roaches and other pests. Hell Is Other Robots is the ninth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
This article is about the television series. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: // Kif Kroker Kif Kroker (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) - Alien assistant to Captain Zapp Brannigan and first officer of the Democratic Order of Planets (DOOP) starship Nimbus. ...
Family Bros. Pizza - First featured in "A Leela of Her Own".
Cygnoids from the planet Cygnus V set up a pizza parlor across the street from Planet Express, next to a strip club whose wall had just collapsed. They had little knowledge of human culture or physiology, bending the chairs up at the knees. Coming to Earth to start a new life, they are portraied as "typically Italian immigrants." Fry, Leela, and Bender are their first customers. Eventually they would go on to sell their franchise after exposing Leela as the blernsball "one-eyed bean machine." They sold their business selling pizza with beans as toppings, along with other bean-like things. A Leela Of Her Own is the sixteenth episode in the third season of the animated series Futurama. ...
A male and female Cygnoid A Cygnoid is an extraterrestrial creature occasionally featured on the animated series Futurama, first appearing in the episode A Leela of Her Own. They closely resemble cockroaches (right down to their diet), and have disinct Italian-American accents. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
A typical blernsball scorecard Blernsball is a game from the Futurama fictional universe. ...
Famous Original Ray's Superior Court - First featured in "A Tale of Two Santas".
Most court cases in the show are conducted here, with Judge Whitey as the judge. Cases have included the trial and sentencing of Bender as Santa Claus, the committal of Bender and Fry to a mental institution, and granting of Fry and Leela's divorce. The name is a reference to Ray's Pizza pizzerias in New York City. A Tale of Two Santas is the third episode in season 3 of Futurama. ...
The first Rays Pizza at 27 Prince Street on the northern edge of Little Italy, Manhattan Famous Rays of Greenwich Village at 11th Street and Sixth Avenue Famous Original Rays Pizza with the established 1964 sign and classic decor popular many of the restaurants. ...
Pepperoni is one of the most popular toppings on American pizzas. ...
Fenway Park - First featured in "A Leela of Her Own".
"Home of the Green Monster," the green monster is actually the baseball organ player. The site of Leela's last blernsball game, she is encouraged by her manager to "Get in there and pitch like you've never pitched like you before!" A Leela Of Her Own is the sixteenth episode in the third season of the animated series Futurama. ...
This article is about the left-field wall at Fenway Park. ...
Wally the Green Monster Wally the Green Monster is the official mascot for the Boston Red Sox Major League Baseball team. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
A typical blernsball scorecard Blernsball is a game from the Futurama fictional universe. ...
Flesh-o-Poid - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
While never actually seen, this establishment is advertised at the beginning of every Futurama episode. One would assume that it is some kind of 31st century public brothel or dating service establishment. Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
This article is about the television series. ...
Food-O-Mat - First featured in "I, Roommate".
Food in this restaurant revolve around the dining area on a conveyor belt. Whenever a customer wants one of the meals, they just reach out and grab it. This is in reference to Japanese revolving sushi bars that already exist. It was here that Bender first offered Fry a place to live after he was evicted from the Planet Express building. The name is a play on Horn & Hardart's Automat, once popular in New York and other cities, where food was obtained from windowed compartments after placing coins in a slot. I, Roommate is the third episode of season one of Futurama. ...
Horn & Hardart is a company that came to prominence as the proprietors of the first automat in New York City. ...
A modern Dutch automat An automat is a form of restaurant where simple foods and drink are served by coin-operated and bill-operated vending machines. ...
Galactic Bazaar - First featured in "Spanish Fry".
An intergalactic swap meet where just about any contraband can be found. Home of The Beast With Two Bucks Sex Shop. Spanish Fry is the seventeenth episode of Season four of Futurama. ...
Swap Meet is a song by the grunge band, Nirvana. ...
Contraband consists of items of which possession may be illegal, depending on the variety and the country or the age or sex of the possessor. ...
This is a list of fictional places featured in the television series Futurama. ...
Giorgio Amonster - First featured in "Future Stock".
One can get fine suits, especially '80s style suits made here. Fry and that guy get their suits from this store after the takeover of Planet Express. Future Stock is the 21st episode in the third season of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
Head Museum - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
A museum that features heads of famous people and celebrities such as porn stars, movie stars, TV stars, B-movie stars, presidents, criminals, supermodels and artists. Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
The Hall of Criminals, a subset of the Head Museum, where Fry and Bender go to escape from Leela and the police in an attempt to keep Fry from being assigned the job, "Delivery Boy." This is a list of places featured in the fictional televison series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
The Hip Joint - First featured in "Love's Labours Lost in Space".
The Hip Joint is a dance club located in New New York on the top of a very tall Stratosphere-like structure. The club's decor consists of retro neon rings, which the clubbers also decorate themselves with. A sign over the entrance to the club states that there is a "ten drink minimum". Amy has taken Leela there in order to meet guys; and Bender took Angelyne there under the disguise of Flexo. Loves Labours Lost in Space is the fourth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
New New York is the name of two futuristic cities modelled on New York City: For the city in Futurama, see List of Futurama places#New New York For the city on New Earth in Doctor Who, see New Earth and Gridlock. For the city located in New America on...
The Stratosphere Las Vegas is a hotel and casino located on the Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada, owned by American Casino & Entertainment Properties which is a wholly owned subsidiary of American Real Estate Partners. ...
Retro is a term used to describe the culture of the past. ...
For other uses, see Neon (disambiguation). ...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Historic 20th Century Apartments - First featured in "A Fishful of Dollars".
Fry buys a historic apartment in this apartment building with his newfound fortune. The apartments themselves are full of 20th century products that have become defunct by the 31st century such as telephones with cords, 20th century televisions, and hardwood floors. In the same episode, Fry eventually has to leave his apartment when Mom's sons steal his fortune and his checks bounce. A sign on the building says that each apartment comes with original asbestos. A Fishful of Dollars is episode six in the first season of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry Philip J. Fry (born 1974), better known simply as Fry, is the central character of the television series Futurama. ...
Mom in her first appearance, wearing her fatsuit and kindly public persona Mom is a fictional character and recurring antagonist on the animated series Futurama, voiced by Tress MacNeille. ...
For other uses, see Asbestos (disambiguation). ...
HoloShed - First featured in "Kif Gets Knocked Up a Notch".
The holodeck of the Nimbus; where Kif illustrated what life could be like if he and Amy were together — only 40 million lines of BASIC! It's perfectly safe, except when it malfunction and the characters try to kill people, but that almost never happens. The last time that happened, twenty-five star general Zapp Brannigan got slapped with three paternity suits. Kif Gets Knocked Up A Notch is the first episode in season four of Futurama. ...
A holodeck on the Enterprise-D; the arch and exit are prominent. ...
Nimbus may mean: Halo, light or mist around an object Nimbus program, spacecraft used for weather research Nimbus cloud Nimbus (motorcycle) Nimbus Records is a classical music record company Nimbus, fictional broomsticks from the Harry Potter series Nimbus Land, a fictional location in the Super Mario RPG video game The...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
Hovercar-negie Hall - First featured in "The Devil's Hands are Idle Playthings".
The hall is where Fry gave a holophonor concert after acquiring the Robot Devil's hands and becoming a masterful musician. The Devilâs Hands are Idle Playthings is the eighteenth and final episode in season four of the TV series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Robotology is a fictional religion in the animated TV series Futurama. ...
The Implant Hut - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
Advertised on a floating billboard right before a commercial for Bachelor Chow. Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
Intergalactic Stock Exchange - First featured in "Futurestock".
A giant two-ringed space station orbiting earth, right out of 2001: A Space Odyssey, serves as the galactic stock exchange. This is where Planet Express was almost sold to Mom. Future Stock is the 21st episode of Futuramas third season. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
Kif's Cabin - First featured in "Loves Labors Lost in Space".
Directly below Zapp Brannigan's love nest, Kif Kroker's small cabin is, in episodes after "A Flight to Remember", covered in pictures of his beloved Amy Wong. Unfortunately for Kif, Brannigan comments about Kif's toilet being his "home away from home", but points out that it is only set on "stun," not "kill." Loves Labours Lost in Space is the fourth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
Lieutenant Kif L. Kroker is a fictional character in the animated television show Futurama. ...
The subject of this article may not satisfy the notability guideline for Television episodes. ...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Kif's Sacred Ancestral Birthing Grounds - First featured in "Kif Gets Knocked Up a Notch".
Located on Kif Kroker's home planet of Amphibios 9, Kif's Ancestral Birthing Grounds are the birthplace of his entire clan. Zapp Brannigan points out that is smells like a jock-strap. Kif Gets Knocked Up A Notch is the first episode in season four of Futurama. ...
Lieutenant Kif L. Kroker is a fictional character in the animated television show Futurama. ...
Amphibios 9 and a moon Amphibios 9 is a fictional planet depicted in Futurama, the American animated sitcom created by Matt Groening. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
Kitchen Colesseum - First featured in "The 30% Iron Chef".
The location of the Iron Cook competition. Bender faced off against Elzar for the title, and walked away with the win after using the theme ingredient, Soylent Green, in every course. You can buy a commemorative turkey baster on the premises. âThe 30% Iron Chefâ is the 22nd episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: // Kif Kroker Kif Kroker (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) - Alien assistant to Captain Zapp Brannigan and first officer of the Democratic Order of Planets (DOOP) starship Nimbus. ...
Lake Mutagenic -
- First featured in "Leela's Homeworld".
A radioactive lake in the sewers that instantly mutates the DNA of any non-mutant who touches it. Fry, Bender, and Leela are almost lowered into it, but are rescued by mysterious strangers. Leela herself is finally befuddled when she dives into the lake and doesn't mutate. Leelas Homeworld is the second episode of Futuramas fourth season. ...
The structure of part of a DNA double helix Deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA, is a nucleic acid molecule that contains the genetic instructions used in the development and functioning of all known living organisms. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Le Spa - First featured in "A Fishful of Dollars".
A Spa that Fry, Leela and Bender go to. A Fishful of Dollars is episode six in the first season of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Liberty Meadows Slave Quarters - First featured in "A Pharaoh to Remember".
Where the slaves of Osiris IV live when they're not busy slaving away making monuments to the many pharaohs that come and go. A Pharaoh to Remember is episode seventeen of Futuramas third season. ...
For other uses, see Osiris (disambiguation). ...
Little Neptune Market - First featured in "My Three Suns".
In a parody of Little Italy, this little shop in Little Neptune sells everything that you could want in the way of food, except for human (What, you want human?). My Three Suns is episode 7 in season 1 of Futurama. ...
Lost City of Atlanta - First featured in "The Deep South".
Located on the ocean floor, the city of Atlanta originally became a floating city but sank due to overdevelopment. After its most prominent residents left: Hank Aaron, Ted Turner, Jeff Foxworthy, the guy who invented Coca-Cola, the magician, Jane Fonda, etc., the remainder quickly evolved into mermaids, claiming this happened due to the caffeine in Coca-Cola, but might also be due to other additional factors, such as radiation. In the episode "The Deep South", the characters ask Fry how Atlanta was an American city in the 20th century; however, he believes that it was just an airport and that they had a place where you could buy nuts. This refers to the fact that although many people travel to Atlanta, almost all of them are just making a flight connection to another city. One of the mermaids mention the historical monuments including Turner Field and the Coca-Cola Bottling Plant, and the airport. The Braves still exist, but they are now a "third-rate symphony" according to Dr. Zoidberg, though there appears to be a Lost City of Atlanta Braves blernsball team. Hank Aaron XXIV, the worst blernsball player of all time until Leela, wore a Braves uniform with a trident replacing the tomahawk. This poses a continuity issue as Prof. Farnsworth insinuates in "The Deep South" that they had discovered the city, although it is possible that, like Area 51, people know of the city but they don't all know where it is, they could be saying they have found it, but not the first people to do so. The Deep South is episode twelve in season two of Futurama. ...
Atlanta redirects here. ...
Henry Louis Hank Aaron (born February 5, 1934 in Mobile, Alabama), nicknamed Hammer, Hammerin Hankâ, or Bad Henryâ, is a retired American baseball player whose Major League Baseball (MLB) career spanned the 1950s through the 1970s. ...
For other persons named Ted Turner, see Ted Turner (disambiguation). ...
Comedian Jeff Foxworthy accepts a new jacket from 3rd Infantry Division Commander Army Maj. ...
Dr. John Stith Pemberton (July 8, 1831 - August 16, 1888) was an American druggist who invented Coca-Cola. ...
Jane Fonda (born December 21, 1937) is a two-time Academy Award-winning American actress, writer, political activist, former fashion model, and fitness guru. ...
For other uses, see Mermaid (disambiguation). ...
Caffeine is a xanthine alkaloid compound that acts as a stimulant in humans. ...
The wave shape (known as the dynamic ribbon device) present on all Coca-Cola cans throughout the world derives from the contour of the original Coca-Cola bottles. ...
The Deep South is episode twelve in season two of Futurama. ...
(19th century - 20th century - 21st century - more centuries) Decades: 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s As a means of recording the passage of time, the 20th century was that century which lasted from 1901–2000 in the sense of the Gregorian calendar (1900–1999...
View from the outfield Turner Field is a baseball stadium in Atlanta, Georgia. ...
World of Coca-Cola rotating logo in front of the main building in downtown Atlanta (the other side says Coke). The World of Coca-Cola is a permanent exhibition featuring the history of Coca-Cola and its well-known advertising. ...
Doctor John Zoidberg is a lobster-like alien, Decapodian, in the television series Futurama. ...
Major league affiliations National League (1876âpresent) East Division (1994âpresent) Current uniform Retired Numbers 3, 21, 35, 41, 42, 44 Name Atlanta Braves (1966âpresent) Milwaukee Braves (1953-1965) Boston Braves (1941-1952) Boston Bees (1936-1940) Boston Braves (1912-1935) Boston Rustlers (1911) Boston Doves (1907-1910) Boston...
A typical blernsball scorecard Blernsball is a game from the Futurama fictional universe. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Tomahawk may refer to: Tomahawk (axe), a type of axe made and used by Native Americans Tomahawk (band), an alternative metal band fronted by Mike Patton Tomahawk (geometric shape), a geometric shape that can be used to trisect angles Tomahawk (software components), a set of JSF components (software) Tomahawk haircut...
This article is about the U.S. Air Force installation in Nevada. ...
Luna Park - First feature in "The Series Has Landed".
Located on the near side of the moon, this huge amusement park is described as "The Happiest Place Orbiting Earth". The Series Has Landed, alternatively titled Episode Two: The Series Has Landed, is the second episode of the first season of Futurama. ...
This article is about Earths moon. ...
For other uses, see Disneyland (disambiguation). ...
- Luna Park was the name of an early amusement park in Coney Island, as well as a park in Seattle, Washington around the same period of time. The Luna Park in West Seattle was likely the proper reference given the history of the series creator, Matt Groening. Two other theme parks currently bear the name: one in Sydney, Australia, and the other in Melbourne, Australia. Luna Park, Buenos Aires is also an arena in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
- The first land in the park is "Moon Street U.S.A."; Disneyland's first land is "Main Street U.S.A."
- The park's mascot is Crater Face; Disneyland's mascot is Mickey Mouse.
- One building is marked only by a 33 1/2, much like Disneyland's legendary Club 33, except the building is marked with a 33.
- The attraction Whalers on the Moon closely resembles Disneyland's Pirates of the Caribbean and It's a Small World.
- The Goofy Gopher Revue attraction closely mirrors Disneyland's Country Bear Jamboree and is sponsored by fictional Moonsanto, whereas real Monsanto sponsored Disneyland attractions.
- The park's rides were designed by "Fungineers," a parody of Imagineers.
Luna Park was an amusement park at Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York City from 1903 to 1944. ...
For other uses, see Coney Island (disambiguation). ...
City nickname Emerald City City bird Great Blue Heron City flower Dahlia City mottos The City of Flowers The City of Goodwill City song Seattle, the Peerless City Mayor Greg Nickels County King County Area - Total - Land - Water - % water 369. ...
For the capital city of the United States, see Washington, D.C.. For other uses, see Washington (disambiguation). ...
Matthew Abram Groening is an American cartoonist (Life in Hell) and the Emmy Award-winning creator of the animated series, The Simpsons and Futurama. ...
For other places with the same name, see Luna Park (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the metropolitan area in Australia. ...
Melbournes Luna Park, St Kilda Luna Park is an amusement park located on the foreshore of Port Phillip Bay in St Kilda, Victoria, Australia. ...
This article is about the Australian city; the name may also refer to City of Melbourne or Melbourne city centre. ...
Luna Park is an arena located on the corner of Corrientes and Leandro N. Alem Avenues, in east Buenos Aires city, near to Puerto Madero. ...
For other uses, see Arena (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see Buenos Aires (disambiguation). ...
Mickey Mouse is an Academy Award-winning comic animal cartoon character who has become an icon for The Walt Disney Company. ...
Club 33 is a private club located in the heart of the New Orleans Square section of Disneyland. ...
This article is about the franchise. ...
Its a Small World is a popular attraction at several Walt Disney theme parks including: Disneyland (in California), the Magic Kingdom (in Florida), Tokyo Disneyland, and Disneyland Paris. ...
The Country Bear Jamboree is an attraction at Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Florida and at the Tokyo Disneyland theme park at Tokyo Disney Resort in Chiba, Japan, as well as a former attraction at Disneyland in Anaheim, California. ...
The Monsanto Company (NYSE: MON) is a multinational agricultural biotechnology corporation. ...
Walt Disney Imagineering was formed by entertainment mogul Walt Disney on December 16, 1952 as WED Enterprises (WED: Walter Elias Disney) to develop plans for a theme park and to manage Disneys personal assets. ...
Madison Cube Garden - First featured in "Fear of a Bot Planet".
The new version of Madison Square Garden features a cubed building standing on one corner. The building houses many different sports, such as blernsball, basketball, Ultimate Robot Fighting, the 3004 Olympics and Big Ape Fights. It also functions as an arena for gigs, such as the Beastie Boys' Intergalactic tour in 3000. Inside the arena, it features a frieze similar to one at Yankee Stadium in present-day New York. Fear of a Bot Planet is the fifth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
Madison Square Garden, often abbreviated as MSG, known colloquially simply as The Garden, has been the name of four arenas in New York City, United States. ...
A typical blernsball scorecard Blernsball is a game from the Futurama fictional universe. ...
This article is about the sport. ...
Ultimate Fighting Championship is a U.S.-based mixed martial arts organization. ...
The five Olympic rings were designed in 1913, adopted in 1914 and debuted at the Games at Antwerp, 1920. ...
The Beastie Boys are a hip hop musical group from New York City consisting of Michael Mike D Diamond, Adam MCA Yauch, Adam Ad-Rock Horovitz. ...
Hello Nasty is an album by the Beastie Boys. ...
Frieze of the Tower of the Winds. ...
This is about the stadium the New York Yankees currently play in. ...
Maple Craters "A residential asteroid community" where Dwight Conrad and Cubert Farnsworth established their first paper route. The people live on the craters. There are large worms similar to the one seen in Return of the Jedi living in some of the asteroids. Futuramas recurring characters: // Kif Kroker Kif Kroker (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) - Alien assistant to Captain Zapp Brannigan and first officer of the Democratic Order of Planets (DOOP) starship Nimbus. ...
Cubert Farnsworth is Professor Hubert Farnsworths clone from the fictional animated television series Futurama. ...
Movie poster Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi, is a science fiction film that debuted in 1983, and re-released with changes in 1997 and 2004. ...
Mars University - First featured in "Mars University".
Founded in 2636, Mars University is the college Amy Wong attends and Professor Farnsworth teaches. The school is first mentioned in The Series Has Landed, where it is revealed that the campus has at least one sorority named Kappa Kappa Wong. The campus also has at least three fraternities named Kappa Kappa Wong, Snooty House and Epsilon Rho Rho, A.K.A. Robot House, of which the latter parodies cliché television series about university life between school houses. Bender attends Robot House for a few weeks in Mars University with three other nerd-like robots. The university receives a great deal of its money from the Wong family. Staff include Dean Vernon, Dean Epsilon, Dean Streptococcus, Dr. Odgen Wernstrom and Coach Smalley. The campus library contains two CD-ROMs: Fiction and Non-Fiction. The university's motto is "Knowledge Brings Fear." The university was the turning point for terraforming the planet, with Farnsworth stating that the planet was once a wasteland similar to Utah, but plantlife was created, and large jungles flourish. The university's colors are orange and green and its halls were the location of Farnsworth's sesquicentennial celebrations in 3001. Mars University is episode eleven of season one of Futurama. ...
Adjectives: Martian Atmosphere Surface pressure: 0. ...
For the community in Florida, see University, Florida. ...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Professor Hubert Farnsworth Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth is the extremely elderly proprietor of the Planet Express delivery service in the animated television series Futurama. ...
The Series Has Landed, alternatively titled Episode Two: The Series Has Landed, is the second episode of the first season of Futurama. ...
While the term fraternity can be used to describe any number of social organizations, including the Lions Club and the Shriners, fraternities and sororities are most commonly known as social organizations of higher education students in the United States and Canada but there are fraternities in the whole world (for...
While the term fraternity can be used to describe any number of social organizations, including the Lions Club and the Shriners, fraternities and sororities are most commonly known as social organizations of higher education students in the United States and Canada but there are fraternities in the whole world (for...
Mars University is episode eleven of season one of Futurama. ...
Artists conception of a terraformed Mars in four stages of development. ...
This article is about the U.S. state. ...
Milkwaukee -
- First featured in "Love and Rocket".
The "Birthplace of Beer Goggles" and most romantic city on Earth. The home of Romanticorp. â¹ The template below (Unreferenced episode) is being considered for deletion. ...
Mom's Friendly Robot Company - First featured in "A Fishful of Dollars".
Mom's Friendly Robot Company is a subdivision of MomCorp and Carricon, Industries Enterprises, the flagship product of which is Mom's Old Fashioned Robot Oil, a cornerstone of the MomCorp empire. The company headquarters is located in New New York, but it operates factories all over the world (such as in Tijuana where Bender was built). The company also has a spaceship shaped like Mom's head which is capable of at least orbital space travel. The company is listed on the Intergalactic Stock Exchange. A Fishful of Dollars is episode six in the first season of Futurama. ...
Mom in her first appearance, wearing her fatsuit and kindly public persona Mom is a fictional character and recurring antagonist on the animated series Futurama, voiced by Tress MacNeille. ...
Mom in her first appearance, wearing her fatsuit and kindly public persona Mom is a fictional character and recurring antagonist on the animated series Futurama, voiced by Tress MacNeille. ...
Tijuana (Spanish [], English usually []), is the largest city in the Mexican state of Baja California and the seat of the municipality of Tijuana. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Monument Beach - First featured in "When Aliens Attack".
In the 2600s, a super-villain governor of New New York stole many of the monuments of the world, including the Sphinx of Giza, the White House, the Big Ben tower, ana a few Moai, Mount Rushmore, where he had his head carved alongside the presidents, the Leaning Tower of Pisa and Randy's Donuts, and placed them on an artificial beach in Iowa. The monuments were destroyed in an alien attack on Labor Day 3000. When Aliens Attack is episode twelve in season one of Futurama. ...
The Great Sphinx at Giza, Egypt The Great Sphinx of Giza is a large half-human, half-lion Sphinx statue in Egypt, on the Giza Plateau at the west bank of the Nile River, near modern-day Cairo. ...
For other uses, see White House (disambiguation). ...
Big Ben redirects here. ...
Ahu Tongariki, restored in the 1990s Moai are monolithic stone figures on Rapa Nui / Easter Island, Chile. ...
For the 1960s rock band, see Mount Rushmore (band). ...
The Leaning Tower of Pisa (Italian: ) or simply The Tower of Pisa (La Torre di Pisa) is the campanile, or freestanding bell tower, of the cathedral of the Italian city of Pisa. ...
Randys Donuts is a landmark building in Inglewood, California near Los Angeles International Airport that dates back to a period during the mid-20th Century that saw a proliferation of kitschy buildings throughout Southern California that were made in the shape of the products they sold. ...
Official language(s) English Capital Des Moines Largest city Des Moines Largest metro area Des Moines metropolitan area Area Ranked 26th - Total 56,272 sq mi (145,743 km²) - Width 310 miles (500 km) - Length 199 miles (320 km) - % water 0. ...
This article is about the holiday in the United States. ...
NNY Mets Locker Room - First featured in "A Leela of Her Own".
After one of the games, Leela is sitting despondent in the NNY Mets locker room when her agent, Bender, walks in and accidentally unplugs the "black bar generator" covering up players' private parts. One man looks around and announces, "I win!" A Leela Of Her Own is the sixteenth episode in the third season of the animated series Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
New New York - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
A look at New New York City from Applied Cryogenics in Space Pilot 3000. The futuristic architectural style is displayed, as well as the hovercar traffic patterns. New New York[1] is the new version of New York City in the future. After the two alien invasions which occurred during Fry's cryonic freeze, the remainder of the human race began to rebuild. Sometime in that rebuilding age, the prominent characters of Futurama came to the city and reside there permanently. New New York rests on the decaying ruins of Old New York, which can be accessed by going down into the sewers of New New York. Although New New York is an entirely new city, it still does have versions of many of Old New York's famous monuments, like the Statue of Liberty, Empire State Building, Brooklyn Bridge. Others have been recreated and modified, such as the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, with skybridges connecting each tower, and the Madison Square Garden which has been rebuilt into "Madison Cube Garden". Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
Description Futurama character Philip J. Fry getting his first glimpse of New New York on December 31, 2999. ...
Description Futurama character Philip J. Fry getting his first glimpse of New New York on December 31, 2999. ...
New York, New York and NYC redirect here. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
For other monuments to freedom, see Monument of Liberty. ...
The Empire State Building is a 102-story Art Deco skyscraper in New York City, New York at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and West 34th Street. ...
For other uses, see Brooklyn Bridge (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see World Trade Center (disambiguation). ...
Madison Square Garden, often abbreviated as MSG, known colloquially simply as The Garden, has been the name of four arenas in New York City, United States. ...
Nimbus - First featured in "Love's Labours Lost in Space".
The D.O.O.P. mothership Nimbus is commanded by the incompetent and self-absorbed Captain Zapp Brannigan. It is the setting for a number of Futurama storylines. Loves Labours Lost in Space is the fourth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
The Democratic Order Of Planets (D.O.O.P.) logo, a rotational ambigram. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
This article is about the television series. ...
O'Zorgnax's Pub - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
Formerly O'Grady's Pub', is located near Panucci's Pizza in New New York. In 1999, it is an Irish pub and is first seen as Fry rides past it on his bike en route to the cryogenics lab. In the future, it is named O'Zorgnax's Pub, most likely because the original business was bought by aliens who changed the name. Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
New New York is the name of two futuristic cities modelled on New York City: For the city in Futurama, see List of Futurama places#New New York For the city on New Earth in Doctor Who, see New Earth and Gridlock. For the city located in New America on...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Orbiting Meadows National Cemetery - First featured in "The Luck of the Fryrish".
Orbiting Meadows is a spaceborne National Cemetery in orbit around Earth. Leading public figures are buried in the World Heroes Section. Among them is Philip J. Fry II, Fry's nephew, along with his ultra-lucky Seven-leaf Clover. The slogan is "You'll never get any closer to heaven." The Luck of the Fryrish is the fourth episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
For other uses, see Clover (disambiguation). ...
Original Cosmic Ray's Pizza - First featured in "A Fishful of Dollars".
Fry treats Leela, Amy, Bender, Professor Farnsworth, Hermes Conrad, and Dr. Zoidberg to lunch here after gaining his fortune but asks them to keep the tab "under $50 million". The name is a pun on Original Famous Ray's Pizza. A robot employee worked here; but when Fry asked for two pizzas, one with everything but anchovies and one with anchovies, his head exploded. A Fishful of Dollars is episode six in the first season of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Professor Hubert Farnsworth Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth is the extremely elderly proprietor of the Planet Express delivery service in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Hermes Conrad is a character in the Futurama animated series. ...
Doctor John Zoidberg is a lobster-like alien, Decapodian, in the television series Futurama. ...
The first Rays Pizza at 27 Prince Street on the northern edge of Little Italy, Manhattan Famous Rays of Greenwich Village at 11th Street and Sixth Avenue Famous Original Rays Pizza with the established 1964 sign and classic decor popular many of the restaurants. ...
Palm d'Orbit - First featured in "Amazon Women in the Mood".
Zapp Brannigan and Kif Kroker take Turanga Leela and Amy Wong on a half date to this swanky restaurant, which Brannigan eventually pilots into a crash-landing on the planet Amazonia. Amazon Women in the Mood is the first episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
Lieutenant Kif L. Kroker is a fictional character in the animated television show Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Crash Landing was a 1975 posthumous release of Jimi Hendrix music. ...
Panucci's Pizza - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
Panucci's Pizza is the pizzeria Fry works at in the 20th century. The pizzeria is owned by Mr. Panucci, who also makes the pizzas and is Fry's boss. According to the episode "Jurassic Bark", sometime in the 2000s (presumably after the death of Mr. Panucci), the pizzeria is closed forever. Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Futurama has a large number of recurring characters which help add comic energy to the series. ...
Jurassic Bark is the seventh episode of season four of Futurama, airing November 17, 2002. ...
Panucci's is stereotypically cast as a New York health-code violating dive that nonetheless manages to remain open. Among its many violations are a dog swimming in the sauce, blowing a nose on the dough, scratching a back with pepperoni, serving pizza with dog hair in it, and according to Fry, spanking delivery boys and killing rats with the peel. A peel is a shovel-like tool used by bakers to slide loaves of bread, pizzas, pastries, and other baked goods into and out of an oven. ...
Pharaoh Hamenthotep's Tomb - First featured in "A Pharaoh to Remember".
After delivery of one large sandstone block, Fry, Leela, and Bender are impressed into slavery to help construct the giant monument. Bender gives the slave drivers tips on how to better slave, much to the chagrin of his fellow slaves. After Pharaoh Hamenthotep is crushed by his own monument's falling nose, he tries to set the slaves free; but Bender misinterprets his final words. It is Hamenthotep's death that causes Bender to pursue a life of pharaohism himself. A Pharaoh to Remember is episode seventeen of Futuramas third season. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Planet Express - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
Planet Express is the business of Professor Hubert Farnsworth (formally, it's a joint stock company, where the shareholders are the employees). Here Leela, Fry, Bender, Dr. Zoidberg, Hermes Conrad, Amy Wong and Scruffy work. The business is a delivery service which caters to the entire universe. It is Leela, Bender, and Fry who actually make the deliveries in the Professor's intergalactic spaceship. The building is red (blue in the parallel universe 1 and green in Anthology of Interest II). Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth (born April 9, 2841) is the extremely elderly proprietor of the Planet Express delivery service in the fictional animated television series Futurama. ...
A joint stock company (JSC) is a type of business partnership in which the capital is formed by the individual contributions of a group of shareholders. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Doctor John Zoidberg is a lobster-like alien, Decapodian, in the television series Futurama. ...
Hermes Conrad is a character in the Futurama animated series. ...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: Spoiler warning: // In the episode A Big Piece of Garbage, Ron Popeil, his severed head floating in a large jar, mentions several of his inventions including the (fictional) technology to keep human heads alive in jars, implicitly arresting the aging process. ...
âThe Farnsworth Paraboxâ is the fifteenth episode of the fourth production season of Futurama. ...
Anthology of Interest II is the eighteenth episode of the third season of Futurama. ...
Planet Express Ship Designed and built by Professor Hubert Farnsworth, it is the means of delivery for Fry, Leela, and Bender. The engines do not move the ship through the universe, but rather, move the universe around the ship. Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth (born April 9, 2841) is the extremely elderly proprietor of the Planet Express delivery service in the fictional animated television series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Robot Arms Apartments - First featured in "I, Roommate".
This apartment building is located in New New York; a red neon sign reading "ROBOT ARMS APTS" is seen on the side of the building. It is the home of Bender and Fry. Most of the apartment rooms are tiny vertical spaces, (2.0 cubic meters - Bender and Fry together take up 1.5) for robots generally like small confinements in which to sleep. But some rooms, including Bender's, come with large living room-sized closets with panoramic views of New New York. It is in Bender's closet that Fry resides. I, Roommate is the third episode of season one of Futurama. ...
New New York is the name of two futuristic cities modelled on New York City: For the city in Futurama, see List of Futurama places#New New York For the city on New Earth in Doctor Who, see New Earth and Gridlock. For the city located in New America on...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Robot Hell -
- First featured in "Hell is Other Robots".
Where robot sinners go. The above-ground entrance is in a fun-park in New Jersey. Each robot is given an "agonizing and ironic" punishment. Bender found himself here after sinning following his baptism to Robotology. Hell Is Other Robots is the ninth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Robotology is a fictional religion in the animated TV series Futurama. ...
Robot Wash - First featured in "My Three Suns".
The Robot Wash is the thirty-first century equivalent of an automatic car wash. Modes include Regular, Deluxe, and Sub-Standard, with optional undercoating. The wash ends with the application of a pine-tree scented air freshener. My Three Suns is episode 7 in season 1 of Futurama. ...
Rocket Skating Rink - Featured in "Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles".
Rockefeller Center for the year 3000. Chaz, the Mayor's Aide, denies children from the Orphanarium a chance to skate while he tries to score with Leela, with disastrous results. The subject of this article may not satisfy the notability guideline for Television episodes. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Romanticorp -
- First featured in "Love and Rocket".
Run by married couple and sickeningly sweet Sheldon and Gwen, Romanticorp produces loveybears by genetically engineering them, then choosing "the cuddliest ones and stuffing them full of fire-retardent fluff." They're on the cutting edge of flirtation technology. Finally, they are the galaxy's largest maker of candy hearts. Fry went on a quest to find the candy heart that summed up his feelings for Leela . â¹ The template below (Unreferenced episode) is being considered for deletion. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Ruins of Old New York - First Featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
The ruins of Old New York lie below the high-rise buildings of New New York. Also referred to as the sewers, the ruins are the home of a mutated human race. Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
New New York is the name of two futuristic cities modelled on New York City: For the city in Futurama, see List of Futurama places#New New York For the city on New Earth in Doctor Who, see New Earth and Gridlock. For the city located in New America on...
Slurm Factory -
- First featured in "Fry and the Slurm Factory".
Located on Planet Wormulon, the Slurm Centralized Industrial FabricaitonUnit is where all slurm is created. It has two produciton lines; the fake one, with Grunka-Lunkas, and the real one, with the Queen Slug. The Queen Slug dispenses the flavor and addicitve agent in Slurm. Fry and the Slurm Factory is the thirteenth episode and season finale of season one of Futurama. ...
The animated television series Futurama is set in a time when galactic travel is commonplace, and the series features a wide variety of inhabited worlds. ...
Slurm is a fictional soft drink originating from the animated series Futurama. ...
Slurm Shoppe -
- First featured in "Fry and the Slurm Factory".
Located on Planet Wormulon, the Slurm Shoppe sells soveneirs related to Slurm, Inc. Fry and the Slurm Factory is the thirteenth episode and season finale of season one of Futurama. ...
The animated television series Futurama is set in a time when galactic travel is commonplace, and the series features a wide variety of inhabited worlds. ...
Spa 5 - First featured in "How Hermes Requisitioned His Groove Back".
Spa 5 was supposedly a health spa on the Sauna Planet. It was recommended to Hermes and LaBarbara Conrad by Doctor Zoidberg. When asked about it he replied, "Oh it's wonderful. I don't know anything about it, but they send me a bucket of krill for every patient I send." The slogan for the spa is, "Recommended by Dr. Zoidberg." The spa is actually a forced-labor camp where the "guests" are forced to chip off cave walls and move heavy equipment. Hermes and LeBarbara are able to leave when he tells the managers of the camp how they can improve efficiency. He supposedly improved the camp enough so all of the physical labor is now done by a single Australian man. âHow Hermes Requisitioned His Groove Backâ is episode eleven in season two of Futurama. ...
Spaland ...
Hermes Conrad is a character in the Futurama animated series. ...
Futurama has a large number of recurring characters which help add comic energy to the series. ...
Doctor John D. Zoidberg is a fictional lobster-like alien from the planet Decapod 10 in the television series Futurama. ...
Families Euphausiidae Euphausia Dana, 1852 Meganyctiphanes Holt and W. M. Tattersall, 1905 Nematobrachion Calman, 1905 Nematoscelis G. O. Sars, 1883 Nyctiphanes G. O. Sars, 1883 Pseudeuphausia Hansen, 1910 Stylocheiron G. O. Sars, 1883 Tessarabrachion Hansen, 1911 Thysanoessa Brandt, 1851 Thysanopoda Latreille, 1831 Bentheuphausiidae Bentheuphausia amblyops Krill are shrimp-like marine...
Space Rails - First featured in "The 30% Iron Chef".
The trains of the galaxy. Cars include the Starlight Express and the Wrath-of-Conrail. Just remember than when you jump off at a switching prism, roll when you land, because you're almost going the speed of light. âThe 30% Iron Chefâ is the 22nd episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Sparky's Den - First featured in "Hell is Other Robots".
Located in a bad part of town, it's where robots - such as Bender - go to "Jack On" by plugging in and getting extra jolts of electricity. Sparky's is basically a robot crack house. Hell Is Other Robots is the ninth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Staadgi & Staadgi Auctioneers - First featured in "A Fishful of Dollars".
Fry, Leela, and Bender attend an auction of 20th century items after Fry gains his fortune. Fry buys every item in the auction, including Ted Danson's skeleton, Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots (for Bender) and the last known tin of Angry Norwegian Anchovies. Its name is a reference to advertising firm Saatchi and Saatchi, as well as the word "stodgy" which is a term often used to unflatteringly describe auction-house patrons. A Fishful of Dollars is episode six in the first season of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender (assembled c. ...
Ted Danson (born Edward Bridge Danson III on December 29, 1947) is an American actor most notable for his television work, and specifically, for his role as central character Sam Malone in the sitcom Cheers, and his role as Dr. John Becker on the series Becker. ...
Rockem Sockem Robots Rock Em Sock Em Robots is a two-player game/toy designed by Marvin Glass and Associates and released by Marx toys in 1967. ...
Saatchi & Saatchi is an advertising agency founded by brothers Maurice (now Lord Saatchi) and art collector Charles, most famous for their campaign on behalf of the Conservative Party before the 1979 UK general election and for the adverts for British Airways and other state owned interests privatised by the Conservatives...
Stenchey's - First featured in "Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles".
A brief appearance for an underground sewer "drive-in" for the mutant teenage crowd. The subject of this article may not satisfy the notability guideline for Television episodes. ...
Stop 'n Drop Suicide Booths - First featured in "Space Pilot 3000".
The ubiquitous suicide booths serve the death needs of New New Yorkers. After he escapes from Applied Cryogenics, Fry mistakes one for a telephone booth. He meets Bender trying for a "two-fer"(which he cheats with a quarter on a string). Modes of death are "Quick and Painless" or "Slow and Horrible". Space Pilot 3000 is the pilot episode of Futurama, which originally aired in North America on March 28, 1999. ...
New New York is the name of two futuristic cities modelled on New York City: For the city in Futurama, see List of Futurama places#New New York For the city on New Earth in Doctor Who, see New Earth and Gridlock. For the city located in New America on...
This is a list of places featured in the fictional televison series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Bender Bending RodrÃguez, more commonly known as Bender, is a main character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Taco Bellevue Hospital - First featured in "Bender Gets Made".
In the show's time period, Bellevue Hospital has sold its name and apparently its services to fast food chain Taco Bell. This could be a reference to Demolition Man, in which Taco Bell was the only winner of the "franchise wars". There is a sign outside that says "Normal, Healthy Baby? Super-Size It For 49¢!", in the episode 'The Cyber House Rules'. Also, one of the doctors that work in the hospital is the chihuahua that was featured in Taco Bell ad campaigns from 1997 to 2000. His diagnosis for one patient who questions her condition is "Grande". Bender Gets Made is episode 13 in season 2 of Futurama. ...
Bellevue Hospital is a famous hospital located in New York City, New York, United States. ...
Taco Bell Corp. ...
Demolition Man is an American science fiction-action film released in 1993. ...
The Cyber House Rules is the ninth episode in season three of Futurama. ...
For the band, see 1997 (band). ...
Year 2000 (MM) was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will display full 2000 Gregorian calendar). ...
Titanic - First featured in "A Flight to Remember".
Commanded by Twenty-Five Star General Zapp Brannigan (and later in a field promotion by Lieutenant Kif Kroker), the Titanic is the largest, most luxurious space cruise ship ever built. She was christened with Leonardo DiCaprio's head. It looks like the original Titanic except that it's encased in an airtight bubble and has space-going engines. By the way, in the casino, the house limit is three do-overs. The bar is tended by iZac. The ship has six levels: 1st class, where Professor Farnsworth, Hermes and LaBarbara Conrad, and Doctor Zoidberg stayed; 2nd class, where the quintessential space tourists with screaming children stay; Steerage, with the Irish straight out of the movie Titanic; then comes the Laundry level, the Bowels of the Ship, where men are shoveling coal into the engines; and finally, the Fiesta Deck, where the rest of the Planet Express crew was bunked. The subject of this article may not satisfy the notability guideline for Television episodes. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
Lieutenant Kif L. Kroker is a fictional character in the animated television show Futurama. ...
Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth is a fictional character appearing in the animated television series Futurama, voiced by Billy West. ...
Hermes Conrad is a character in the Futurama animated series. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: // Kif Kroker Kif Kroker (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) - Alien assistant to Captain Zapp Brannigan and first officer of the Democratic Order of Planets (DOOP) starship Nimbus. ...
Doctor John D. Zoidberg is a fictional lobster-like alien from the planet Decapod 10 in the television series Futurama. ...
Titanic is a 1997 American romantic drama film directed, written, produced and edited by James Cameron about the sinking of the RMS Titanic. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
Trump Trapezoid -
- First featured in "Hell Is Other Robots".
Located in Atlantic City, it is the year 3000 version of the Trump Towers. Hell Is Other Robots is the ninth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
WNYW -
- First featured in "When Aliens Attack".
A 21st century New York television broadcast station. It was transmitting Single Female Lawyer when Fry accidentally spilled beer on the console, shorting it out. One-thousand year later, Lrrr was enraged when his show was cut off, and demanded to see the end. He rated the ad-libbed show a "C+". When Aliens Attack is episode twelve in season one of Futurama. ...
20XX redirects here. ...
This article is about the state. ...
When Aliens Attack is episode twelve in season one of Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
LRRR can refer to: Lrrr, a recurring minor character in the television show series Futurama Lunar laser ranging experiment Category: ...
Zapp Brannigan's Bedroom - First featured in "Loves Labors Lost in Space".
Captain (Later twenty-five star General) Zapp Brannigan maintains a love-shack rumpus room aboard the Nimbus. The room is covered in candles and velour - lots of velour. Brannigan himself sleeps on a heart-shaped, motorized hover-bed. He and Leela had relations in a weak moment of pity. Loves Labours Lost in Space is the fourth episode in season one of Futurama. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
The Nimbus: DP-1729 is a spaceship in the fictional series Futurama. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
See also The animated television series Futurama is set in a time when galactic travel is commonplace, and the series features a wide variety of inhabited worlds. ...
Notes e This article is about the television series. ...
Star Trek novels, see Pocket Books Star Trek novels. ...
This article is about the television series. ...
The complete Futurama DVD collection The following is an episode list for the FOX animated television series Futurama. ...
The complete Futurama DVD collection The following is an episode list for the FOX animated television series Futurama ordered by date broadcast instead of the intended order. ...
Futurama Comics is a comic book series published by Bongo Comics and based on the television series Futurama. ...
Futurama is a 3D platform game based on the science fiction cartoon series Futurama. ...
The complete Futurama DVD collection The following is an episode list for the FOX animated television series Futurama. ...
Philip J. Fry is the protagonist of the animated television series Futurama and is voiced by Billy West. ...
Turanga Leela (often referred to simply as Leela) (born A.D. 2975) is the primary female character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Bender, full name Bender Bending RodrÃguez or designated Bending Unit 22, is a fictional robot character in the animated television series Futurama. ...
Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth is a fictional character appearing in the animated television series Futurama, voiced by Billy West. ...
Doctor John D. Zoidberg is a fictional lobster-like alien from the planet Decapod 10 in the television series Futurama. ...
Hermes Conrad is a character in the Futurama animated series. ...
Amy Wong (born August 4, 2980 [1]) is a fictional character, one of the main characters from the FOX television animated series Futurama. ...
Major General Webelo Zapp Brannigan is a fictional character in the television series Futurama. ...
Lieutenant Kif L. Kroker is a fictional character in the animated television show Futurama. ...
Lord Nibbler is a fictional character from the animated television series Futurama. ...
Cubert Farnsworth is Professor Hubert Farnsworths clone from the fictional animated television series Futurama. ...
Calculon is a fictional recurring character on the animated television series Futurama. ...
Mom in her first appearance, wearing her fatsuit and kindly public persona Mom is a fictional character and recurring antagonist on the animated series Futurama, voiced by Tress MacNeille. ...
Not to be confused with [[Richard Nixon]]. Nixons Head is introduced in the pilot episode when Fry and Bender run into the head museum to evade the police. ...
Futurama has a large number of recurring characters which help add comic energy to the series. ...
Futuramas recurring robot characters: // Boxy is a crude, Dalek-like robot similar to the Gonk droid from Star Wars, that is capable of communicating only by beeping. ...
Futuramas recurring characters: // The Brain Slugs are small, gelatinous, fist-sized aliens that attach themselves to human heads and act as mind-control devices, reducing their hosts to a zombie-like state. ...
A male and female Cygnoid A Cygnoid is an extraterrestrial creature occasionally featured on the animated series Futurama, first appearing in the episode A Leela of Her Own. They closely resemble cockroaches (right down to their diet), and have disinct Italian-American accents. ...
Doctor John Zoidberg, a Decapodian. ...
Elzar is a Neptunian. ...
The United States of Earth flag, Old Freebie. The United States of Earth is the fictional world government in the TV series Futurama. ...
The Democratic Order Of Planets (D.O.O.P.) logo, a rotational ambigram. ...
The animated science fiction show Futurama makes a number of satirical and humorous references to religion, including inventing several fictional religions which are explored in certain episodes of the series. ...
Not to be confused with cryogenics. ...
The Nimbus: DP-1729 is a spaceship in the fictional series Futurama. ...
The Planet Express Ship is a fictional spaceship in the animated series Futurama. ...
Bender, the shows breakout robot character The animated television series Futurama takes place in a future where advanced technologies, such as robotics have become a part of everyday life. ...
A Stop and drop style Suicide Booth on Futurama A suicide booth is a fictional machine for committing suicide. ...
The animated television series Futurama is set in a time when galactic travel is commonplace, and the series features a wide variety of inhabited worlds. ...
Futurama is an animated United States cartoon series (March 28, 1999-2003) created by Matt Groening (who also created The Simpsons). ...
A typical blernsball scorecard Blernsball is a game from the Futurama fictional universe. ...
A chroniton (also spelled chronoton) is a fictional elementary particle in some works of science fiction. ...
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