The forum pages are fully operational! See this link for the latest forum topics, where users can collaborate or discuss certain topics in one place!

The Butler Did It

From Arthur Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
This article is about "The Butler Did It". You may be looking for "The Butler Did... What?".
"The Butler Did It"
Tbdi.png
The Butler Did It Title Card.png
Season/Series: 20
Number in season: 5b
Original Airdate: United States May 30, 2017
United Kingdom November 23, 2018[1]
Credits
Written by: Peter K. Hirsch
Storyboard by: Gerry Capelle
Episodes
Previous
"Lend Me Your Ear"
Next
"Prunella's Tent of Portent"

"The Butler Did It" is the second half of the fifth episode in the twentieth season of Arthur.

Summary

Muffy gets her dad a robot butler named Keats for Father's Day; however, she is worried that he might replace Bailey and make him want to retire.

Plot

802-2.PNG Something is Missing!

This article's missing a Plot section. You can help by adding one!



Characters

Major

Minor

Cameo

Trivia

  • Moral: When robots help people don't ruin it for your own benefits.
  • Karma: Keats locked Muffy, so her dad kicked him outside.

Episode connections

References

  • After Bailey leaves for an errand, Francine's phone has the iPhone message sound.
  • While working on his sculpture, Bailey sings Largo al Factotum from the opera The Barber of Seville by Gioachino Rossini.
  • The pear logo on Brain's computer is a parody of the Apple logo.
  • KEATS’ password “Nightingale” refers to the poem Ode to a Nightingale by John Keats.
  • A rootkit is a kind of hidden software that allows a hacker access to a computer. A DDoS attack (distributed denial-of-service) floods the target with requests from several sources, so that it can no longer respond to legitimate requests.
  • KEATS recites I’m a Little Teapot.
  • The painting in Muffy's room is The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dalí.

Errors

  • When Muffy talks to Francine over the phone, Francine's feet are shown to be two left feet instead of left and right.

Sources