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Difference between revisions of "Get Smart"
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Revision as of 11:11, 12 January 2018
"Get Smart" | |
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Season/Series: | 16 |
Number in season: | 4a |
Original Airdate: | October 18, 2012[1] April 9, 2013[2] |
Credits | |
Written by: | Claudia Silver |
Storyboard by: | Cilbur Rocha |
Episodes | |
Previous "Blockheads" |
Next "Baby Steps" |
Read transcript |
Summary
A battle begins when HUGO, the new interactive whiteboard, corrects Mr. Ratburn in front of the class.
Plot
The intro starts as a match between Mr. Ratburn and the unknown Challenger as announced by Arthur. Francine and Buster were shocked to see the Challenger.
The episode starts with Principal Haney announcing that Mr. Ratburn's class was chosen to test out a whiteboard for two weeks. After Brain helped Mr. Ratburn turned on HUGO, the smartboard, the students asked HUGO questions. Then, Mr. Ratburn tried to read the directions but was unable to do so. Luckily, Brain offered to help him after Mr. Ratburn tried to read the directions. With that, Mr. Ratburn accepted Brain's offer, and after school that day, Brain spent some time trying to help Mr. Ratburn; then they manage to go through the whole manual. Then Brain saw something in the manual that said that HUGO was 100 percent accurate and questions how something can be 100 percent accurate. The next day at school, HUGO said that Mr. Ratburn was incorrect when he said that Jacob Katzenellenbogan was Elwood City's founder because HUGO believed that Francis Wheaton was the actual founder of Elwood City.
But it turned out that Jacob Katzenellenbogan was Elwood City's real founder. Brain did some research on the history of Elwood City and even brought Alfred Katzenellenbogan, the great-nephew of Jacob Katzenellenbogan, to school to reveal a letter that says that his great-uncle was the founder of Elwood City.
After HUGO was proven wrong by the evidence Brain presented, HUGO malfunctioned. Mr. Ratburn asked if Alfred Katzenellenbogan would mind telling the class about Elwood City in the earlier days, which Alfred Katzenellenbogan was more than glad to do.
Characters
Major
Minor
- Alfred Katzenellenbogan
- Arthur Read
- Binky Barnes
- Buster Baxter
- Dave
- Francine Frensky
- Francis Haney
- Paige Turner
- Technician
Cameo
- Alex
- Carlos (pictured)
- Fern Walters
- Francis Wheaton (pictured)
- George Lundgren
- Jacob Katzenellenbogan (pictured)
- Maria Pappas
- Muffy Crosswire
- Prunella Deegan
- Vladimir and Estragon
Songs
Trivia
Cultural references
- This episode is set in 2012, as 'cymotrichous' was the winning word of the 2011 national spelling bee, and Mr. Ratburn said it was the winning word of last year's national spelling bee.
- When Mr. Ratburn asks Hugo a question about poetry, a theme music similar to the music theme from "Who Wants to be a Millionare."
- Hugo is a reference to the supercomputer HAL-9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey. In fact, both computers sing the 'Daisy Bell' song when they break down.
- In Brain's dream segment, one of the scientists in the lab testing on Hugo is referred to as Dave, which is the name of a main character in 2001: A Space Odyssey
- The title is a reference to the television show Get Smart. The word "smart" also refers to high-tech devices.
- In the cold open of the episode, "The Challenger" is said to originate from Cupertino, California, the real location of Apple Computers's headquarters.
Animation errors
Episode connections
- The Bolivia postcard from Sue Ellen's old journal from "April 9th* can be briefly seen as one of the pictures right after "Alan Powers" turns on the new computer.
- This episode's plot is similar to "Mr. Alwaysright," where Buster continuously tries to prove Brain wrong. However, this time, it is Brain who is trying to prove HUGO wrong.
- Vladimir and Estragon appear again since their debut in "Cents-less".
Gallery
References