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Futurama happens to be one of the most popular sci-fi anime shows of all time in the sitcom genre and has been created by the very famed Matt Groening. Launched on 28th March, 1999 on 091109 1026 DownloadFut1 Download Futurama TV Seriesthe Fox network the series came to an end on 10th August, 2003.

Phillip J. Fray is the central character of the show who is a pizza delivery boy in New York but just as the year 2000 is about to start he gets frozen cryogenically, only to be thawed years later, on the New Year Eve of 2999. Now, as he is not very brilliant and is quite juvenile in many ways, his uncle, Professor Huber J. Farnsworth appoints him with a job in his own business which is a ship named Planet Express and his work is all about being a delivery boy for cargo.

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You can download episodes of ‘Futurama’ by becoming a member of this site, which is a genuine site. In order to become a member of this site all you need to do is fill the membership form and pay a very nominal fee. Once you become the member of this site, you can download stuff from this site throughout your life. Apart from this, another prominent feature of this site is that it allows you to watch on-line episodes of ‘Futurama‘ that also at no extra expense. We take all the necessary care to provide you with the best as far as the picture and sound quality are concerned. Besides that, we employ the latest technology because of which downloading material from this site is going to be very easy and user friendly experience for you.

You can download each and every episode of Futurama. Just type the name of the episode that you want to download or type ‘Futurama‘. Within a minute, you will be with your favorite TV show. Downloading the episodes to your PC is a very simple process. You just need some free space on your Hard Disc and a speedy internet connection.

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‘Futurama’ Season 6 Episode 6 ‘Lethal Inspection’ Recap

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072310 1901 FuturamaSea1 Futurama Season 6 Episode 6 Lethal Inspection RecapFor the most part, I’ve been impressed with ‘Futurama’s‘ return to the airwaves. Some episodes have been a little rocky, but there’s always more than a few bumps when a show has to penetrate the thin layer of TV’s re-entry layer.

It feels like the old show did, but something has been missing from the last few episodes: a real sense of emotion. One of the great things about ‘Futurama’ and shows like it are its surprising ability to make you feel something other than laughter. The “Jurassic Bark” episode, the one in which Fry’s dog waits for Fry’s return long after he’s been frozen in the cryogenics lab, was the closest I ever came to crying at a TV show. Thank God for man’s inability to divert tears from flowing by sheer will, even though I had to use a pair of pliers and some loose thigh skin to take my mind off of the emotional pain.

Thankfully, it returned last night.

The episode had a nice mix of comedy and adventure, as did all good ‘Futurama’ episode since it’s main focus is as a space epic in a blue collar future. However, it’s biggest strength was its sense of heart. It not only made for a nice twist that fit together a little too nicely, but it also proved that ‘Futurama’ can be much more than just a simple comedy show about robots that drink and aliens with obvious skin conditions.

This time, Bender realizes that he is just as mortal as the meatbags he works with, thanks to a flaw in his initial design. So he and Hermes set out to find his initial inspector, the fabled “Inspector No. 5,” by infiltrating the never-ending maze of paperwork and fine print that is the Central Bureaucracy.

Episodes that center around this setting are always good because they give the show a “Douglas Adams” feeling that even high speed technology and storage information can make things even more convoluted and confusing. It also sets up for great bits like the giant Rubik’s Cube-like cubicle, complete with Billy West’s dead-on Paul Lynde workmate as the “center square.” The ‘Hollywood Squares’ joke felt like I was watching an episode of ‘Family Guy’ with better plot development (really any “plot development” would be a step up from ‘Family Guy.’)

The plot moves to its road-hopping adventure tangent pretty quickly as Bender and Hermes head to Mexico to find his inspector at the Mom factory where he was born/built. The bits work pretty well. Bender’s attempt to speak Spanish had me cackling, just because John DiMaggio’s thick New York/Brooklyn voice sounded like the farther dialect possible from a Mexican accent.

I still found myself wanting more out of the road trip aspect of the episode. These two are on an adventure and it felt like it ended rather quickly, before it had much of a chance to get started. That’s just a sacrifice to the cruel and heartless gods of time that only gave ‘Futurama’ 30 minutes to get a plot going, 23 if you count the commercials.

The ending where it’s revealed that Hermes was actually Bender’s original inspector and responsible for letting him live in spite of defect felt a little too tacked together, like it had been stapled around something that didn’t quite fit and causing it tear apart at its seams. But it had such a great sense of heart that the thought quickly left my mind. It didn’t beat the lesson over your head that life is always worth living no matter how short it is by sticking to the comedy that makes the show work, like the “Killbots’” ridiculous ability to mistake gun puns for orders.

This was no “Jurassic Bark,” but the ending had plenty of bite.

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‘Futurama’ Season 6 Episode 5 ‘The Duh-Vinci Code’ Recap

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071610 1758 FuturamaSea1 Futurama Season 6 Episode 5 The Duh Vinci Code RecapA friend of mine who was also a big fan of the original ‘Futurama’ before Fox kicked it out of bed quicker than one of Tiger Woods’ mistresses didn’t have any very nice things to say about the new premiere episodes. I’d reprint them here if the childhood literacy rate wasn’t so, er, darn high.

In his defense, the first two didn’t have the feel of the original series, even if they were able to stand on their own for the most part. Last night’s hilarious adventure, however, could cause him to choke on those very words he used to describe the show’s creators’ digestive systems (don’t ask).

It had just about everything that made those original shows so much fun to watch: deep creativity, adventure, pathos and lots and lots of comedy. This actually felt like the first episode so far in the new season that belonged in the show’s original run. In other words, it was just good clean fun.

The writers seem to have gotten back into the swing of the original show by playing more the characters and what makes them work so well. This time, the characters weren’t just plot drivers that helped bring the story home. They drove the humor of the show as well from major plot devices (Prof. Farnsworth’s disgust with Fry’s ignorance) to even the tiniest joke (learning that Dr. Zoidberg has a PhD in art history). Most of all, the old Bender is finally back to his full, fabulous form. He stole every chance he got, cracked inappropriate jokes at inappropriate times and laid into other people’s misery with the force of a high school linebacker.

The plot, however, moved pretty fast. Ten minutes into the episode, it felt like they had traveled halfway around the world without giving the audience time to get over the jet lag. The episode had a lot of ground to cover in a half hour and it felt like there were a lot of bits and even whole plot points that had go on the film pyre for the sake of time (guess I’ll have something to look forward to on the DVD extras). It probably could have felt less contained if they split the whole thing into two episodes, just to give it more space and ground to cover.

However, the plot twists were very inventive and tied the whole episode together nicely without trying to force them together with an acetylene torch. The idea of making da Vinci the dumbest man on a planet of know-it-alls was a brilliant twist and the discovery of his lost machine as a doomsday device set up for a great climatic ending.

And I laughed throughout this thing. Not just little tiny snickers, but great big throat laughs. The kind of laughs you save for when a friend tries to pick up a model and ends up falling off the barstool as he tries to make his big move. The kind of laughs you only have during Slim Pickens’ scenes in ‘Blazing Saddles.’ The kind of laughs that suck your attention to whatever is causing it and won’t let you go until the endorphins in your brain have fizzled away like so much carbonation in a freshly poured soda.

It had funny lines, funny twists and (my all time favorite kind of funny) funny cartoon gags like Fry failing at sitting and da Vinci getting flattened by a giant cog. If you don’t find that stuff funny, I feel sorry for you and then I laugh at you.

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Some Memorable Moments of Futurama

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Hi to Futurama fans!

The day is not far, when you will enjoy the brand new Futurama episodes
on your TV screens. The show is created by the same person who is responsible for creating The Simpsons.

As the show is returning after a long time, let’s go back to some moments that we can’t even dream of forgetting.

Guys, do you remember an episode called ‘Jurassic Bark?’ That episode proved to be emotional and heartbreaking. When Fry found the remains of his dog Seymour in a museum, he decided to clone it.

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Jurassic Bark

The story gets emotional when the scene goes into flashback, where Seymour dies waiting for him to come back.

If you don’t remember that scene, you can watch Futurama online to see the love between Fry and Seymour.

In an episode ‘Godfellas’, Benders meets God when he was moving in space. This episode is memorable as during Bender’s interstellar familiarity, the show dealt directly with the unnecessarily contentious idea that God can be powerful and kind without the unseen friend/cruel Old Testament fiend tags involved.

If you watch Futurama episodes title ‘Amazon Women in the Mood’, you will find that Fry and Zapp immediately spoil the holidays, when they get down to primitive Amazon culture.

They insulted the resident women. The scene became hilarious as they were ordered death by Snoo! You’re thinking, what’s so funny?! Well, the word ‘Snoo’ is used by the women of Amazon for sex!

There are many such moments, which are remembered by the fans of the show. Now, the show will air on Comedy Central, so let’s see how the show makes its impact on the fans of the previous shows!

Guys who have recently added themselves in the fan list of the show, let me tell them something about the show. Futurama full series aired earlier on Fox from 1999 to 2003. There are many characters in the show that play an important role. Turanga Leela, Bender Bending Rodríguez, Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth, Dr. John A. Zoidberg and many more.

The voice-over of these characters is given by Billy West, Katey Sagal, John DiMaggio, Lauren Tom, Phil LaMarr and many more.

So guys don’t miss Futurama with new and improved episodes, on the new network and with new changes. Enjoy!

Futurama Season 6 Episode 4 Proposition Infinity

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070710 1900 FuturamaSea1 Futurama Season 6 Episode 4 Proposition Infinity

Watch a sneak peek of the upcoming episode of Futurama Season 6 Episode 4 Proposition Infinity which air on Thursday, July 8 starting at 10:30pm on Comedy Central.

Synopsis: Futurama Season 6 Episode 4 Proposition Infinity – Bender leads a campaign to legalize robosexual marriage between humans and robots.

Description: “Futurama” follows the life of Philip J. Fry (Billy West), a pizza delivery boy who accidentally stumbles into a freezer on December 31, 1999 and wakes up a thousand years later. In his future home of New New York City, Fry goes to work for the Planet Express Intergalactic delivery company, where he befriends Bender (John DiMaggio), a booze-fueled robot, and sets his romantic sights on Leela (Katey Sagal), a sexy cyclops who enjoys beating him up.

Special guest stars this season include Chris Elliot, Craig Ferguson, George Takei, Sergio Aragones, Matt Groening, David X. Cohen, Katee Sackhoff and Mark Mothersbaugh.

Futurama Season 6 Episode 3 ‘Attack of the Killer Apps’ Recap

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Futurama‘ always works best, in my mind, when it tackles the pop tech world. When the show struggled to stay on Fox, no other show would even go near the subject in fear of alienating their cool audience by discussing things that only members of the high school audio-visual club could understand without their eyes bleeding.

Apple needed to be taken down a peg or two and that’s coming from someone who is pounding out this article on a dusty old MacBook, listening to an Elvis Costello compilation on an iPod and watching his stocks sink into the Earth’s core on his iPhone.

This time, the “EyePhone” gets the sharp end of Matt Groening and David X. Cohen’s very sharp pointing stick and it works … for the most part.

It’s really the perfect target for ‘Futurama‘ because it represents an unrelenting encroachment of technology on our lives and how society just drools at its awesome shininess while overlooking its obvious flaws. Nothing sums up that theme better than Fry’s encounter with a “Mom Store” employee who describes the “EyePhone” as a device that comes with only one service provider and get lousy reception, as dumb ol’ Fry screams: “Shut up and take my money!” The old saying, “It’s funny because it’s true,” is true.

I was also happy to see the little funny touches that the writers and animators wrote into the background for us to find, like those tiny comic strips in the margins of ‘MAD’ magazine. Things like the bird flying through the smoke stack and coming out as a skeleton not only make the show funny, but give me a reason to watch it again. I hoped I would see more of them in the earlier episodes … or did I just miss them?

Of course, the evil “Mom,” one of the most ingenious characters on the show, is behind all of this “EyePhone” infatuation and it turns into yet another plan for world domination with Bender and Fry in the middle. The two are in a “Twitcher” race to attract one million followers and the loser has to do a double somersault into a hot tub sundae of “Puke-Me-Poop-U” vomit/diarrhea, a lovely crude crack at the original ‘Doctor Dolittle’ and its Tibetan “Pushmi-Pullyu.” Mom plans to release a virus through one of the two in order to turn their followers into walking zombies. Then, it gets weird.

The whole episode takes a huge spin into “Druggachussettes” when Fry discovered the singing “boil” on Leela’s ass, a not-so-subtle crack at singing sensation and Internet heroine Susan Boyle. It’s certainly more creative than just turning one-eyed Leela into a surprisingly good singer (it also made a nice little trick as it lead up to that moment) but it goes so far over the top that it’s hard to find it really funny. Craig Ferguson’s surprise cameo as the voice of “Susan Boil,” however, was a riot.

It also gave me an excuse to stare at Leela’s ass for the last ten minutes of the show. (At least this time it was an integral part of the plot.)

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Futurama Season 6 Episode 2 ‘In-a-Gadda-Da-Leela’ Recap

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062810 1046 FuturamaSea1 Futurama Season 6 Episode 2 In a Gadda Da Leela RecapThe real challenge of ‘Futurama’s’ return is one of precarious balance.

In order to survive (again), the show has to find a way to please the hardcore fans that have kept it everyone’s consciousness and bring in new fans who haven’t kept up with it.

For the fans, that means sacrificing some of the facets that made the original so much fun and relying more on humor that can reach the broadest possible audience. The second episode of the new season, fortunately and unfortunately, featured a healthy mix of the two, healthy in a “gym class sex lesson” kind of way.

The episode really felt devoid of the usual ‘Futurama’ staples like the rage against technology and little in-jokes that drive its main humor. It also relied a lot more on crude humor that seems to have become the norm for Comedy Central’s newer, homegrown shows (i.e. the horrific ‘Secret Girlfriend’). ‘Futurama’ isn’t above such humor like the penultimate “Spanish Fry” episode, but it also have to be clever and less predictable.

Zapp Branigan is a selfish, piggish and pathetic lump of a man who clearly seems over his head in every situation he encounters whether it’s destroying a squadron of evil brains or trying to make it with a woman (Matt Groening described him as what the actual William Shatner would be like if he were a starship captain). So his very nature made the so-called “twist” of the episode very predictable. Anyone could see the execution of Zapp’s plan coming, even if it took longer than normal (see? I’m not above crude humor).

The execution was still a lot of fun. Zapp and Leela are marooned on an Eden-esque planet after fighting off a giant “Death Sphere” (a clever crack at ‘Star Wars’) that censors anything objectionable in its path with a giant black glob of censor bars. Professor Farnsworth learns the “Sphere” is a really an out-of-control “V-Chip” satellite that crashed with an FCC satellite and the people of Earth have to hold back on the lovin’ until they can stop it.

It was nice to see ‘Futurama’ stick with its satirical roots. The best of the old episodes always had a touch of something that spoke out about something (i.e. global warming in “Crimes of the Hot,” environmental awareness in “A Big Piece of Garbage”). It really knew how to drive the episode, both on plot and humor, and it works here, for the most part.

Still, this episode lacked a real sense of cleverness and the things that make ‘Futurama’ so unique. That and Bender. He barely had a chuckle the entire show! Come on ‘Futurama,’ you can’t keep a good Bender down. Next time, I want to see the robot with a drink in his hand and a chuckle in his mechanical heart for the entire episode. The preview with the two headed vomiting goat is a promising start.

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Futurama Season 6 Episode 1 ‘Rebirth’ Recap (Season Premiere)

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062810 1043 FuturamaSea1 Futurama Season 6 Episode 1 Rebirth Recap (Season Premiere)It’s here! It’s finally here! ‘Futurama‘ is back baby! And Bender! And his banjo! And Fry! (I’ll never get sick of that joke.)

All of my favorite characters are back in action, as if nothing ever happened to them. The first new episode of Matt Groening and David X. Cohen’s genius creation. It’s like being reunited with an old college friend and realizing that they are the same silly, dumb, hard partying freak you spent so much time trying to keep his drooping head from falling in the toilet.

So why, after all this time, does it feel so weird to watch?

Don’t get me wrong. ‘Futurama’ always has been and still is a blast to watch. The clever writing and characterization is still there. The story is engaging and surprising. Bender is, well, Bender. Something about it just still feels strange and haunting.

It’s probably the plucky little back story that kept it in the pop culture consciousness and helped bring it back to life. I’ve been in this situation before with ‘The Simpsons,’ ‘Saturday Night Live’ and ‘Mystery Science Theater 3000.’ My expectations are never as good as the actual re-product.

Fortunately, that wasn’t the case with Comedy Central’s “rebirthing” of ‘Futurama.’ It’s just as smart, fresh and (most importantly) funny as it ever was.

The first new episode had a hazard of being sub-substandard since it has to tie up the loose end that the fourth film, “Into the Wild Green Yonder,” left them with since the future of the show was still up in the air. As you may remember (and if you didn’t, Comedy Central conveniently ran it before the show’s premiere), the Planet Express ship is careening into a worm hole and just as the ship rides off into the galactic sunset, Fry and Leela finally confess their love to each other, a movie that the writers put in as a final thumb nosing to the world since the show’s future was still so uncertain, according to the DVD commentary track.

As the show returns, we eventually learn the ship had gone into the “Panama Worm Hole” that leads them directly back to Earth including the Nimbus, piloted by the always hilarious space ship captain Zap Branigan, causing a calamitous crash that kills the entire crew, hence the “rebirth” (the sticky, sloppy rebirth, ick).

The episode feels a little contained since it has to take time to explain the link from the old series to the new and make time to re-introduce the old characters to the new ones. Thankfully, they are just as colorful and funny as they always were, especially Bender who has to spend the entire episode partying “Slurms MacKensize” style to keep a life saving doomsday device installed in chest cavity in check. The image of Bender boogeying down in the background in such heavy situations was a nice touch.

It also had a few of the background “nerd” jokes that the old show was chocked full of were nice to find, like the not-so-subtle “Studio 54″ sign (do the math). I would have liked to see more of them since that’s one of the reasons that made the old show so much fun, but I’ll take what I can get.

The story itself also felt a little too forced with it’s tied up ending, but it still had a great sense of surprise and shock that worked like a perfect ‘Twilight Zone’ parody mixed with a little Philip K. Dick-esque (snicker) exploration of the meaning of life using robots as a vehicle for exploring the nature of existence.

The entire episode set a nice smooth pace for the new series. I can’t wait for the next episode. Here it comes now!

At this site, you can also watch Futurama episodes online, with excellent buffering speed and superb picture as well as sound quality.

‘Futurama’ Returns with a Mixed Bag

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When I talked to David X. Cohen, executive producer and showrunner of ‘Futurama,’ about what season the show is on, he had a very hard time coming up with an answer. Considering FOX used to air the show in an extremely disjointed manner, he decided to go by production seasons. According to him, this upcoming season, which debuts on Thursday, June 24 at 10PM ET on Comedy Central, is considered the show’s sixth.

062310 1018 FuturamaRet1 Futurama Returns with a Mixed Bag

This included the series of DVDs that were broken up into the initial set of 16 episodes that ran on Comedy Central. And, just like those movies, the first two new standalone episodes were a mixed bag. The season starts of with a bang, and then continues with an episode that could have been better if it wasn’t weighed down with trying to convey a message.

Fans of the show will recall that the last movie, ‘Into the Wild Green Yonder,’ ended with Zapp Brannigan chasing the Planet Express crew into a wormhole, with no idea what was on the other side. Leela and Fry had expressed their love for each other (with the help of brain slugs), and it seemed that everything was up in the air.

The season premiere, ‘Rebirth,’ resolves a lot of these issues, with some clever robot-related satire that seems to parallel scenes from ‘V’ and ‘Star Trek VI’ in equal measure. As is the show’s practice, they refer a few times at the beginning of the episode to the fact that they were canceled by “idiots,” and then picked up by “an even bigger group of idiots,” and make some not-so-subtle allusions to the show’s precarious existence. Oh, and Bender gets to party a lot in this one, and he hates it.

While ‘Rebirth’ is a funny comeback to 22-minute storytelling and takes some clever twists and turns to resolve the hanging issues from the end of the movie, the next episode, ‘In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela,’ stumbles for a couple of reasons. In the episode, a menacing death globe threatens to blot Earth from existence, and World President Nixon enlists the help of both Brannigan and Leela to defeat it.

Of course, Brannigan being Brannigan, he takes this chance to romance Leela once again, even though she’s devoted to Fry. Zapp’s scheming there is always funny to watch, especially the fact that his dreams tend to be in the format of old-timey movie serials.

But the other story, about the death globe, is an “issue” parody, something ‘Futurama’ has never seemed to address with the deft that its cousin, ‘The Simpsons,’ has been able to do over the years. When it works, it’s as funny and thought-provoking as it’s intended to be, but often it doesn’t work, and it comes off as ham-handed or too political. Without going too much into what the message of the death globe story was, I will say that story didn’t generate more than a couple of chuckles from me, and I found it more distracting than informative.

Still, it’s good to have the ‘Futurama’ gang back, especially after last summer’s contentious negotiations with the voice actors. Comedy Central will be airing their 26-episode order in two chunks, and then the fate of the show is again up in the air. But at least we won’t have to worry about that until sometime in 2011.

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Devo to Get Animated for ‘Futurama’ 100th Episode

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New wave rockers Devo are to get animated to celebrate the 100th episode of cult show “Futurama“. The futuristic Matt Groening series was canceled in 2003 but fans brought it back to life.

060810 1815 DevotoGetAn1 Devo to Get Animated for Futurama 100th Episode

To celebrate the 100th show, Groening asked his musical heroes to be a part of the show and they agreed to play mutant rights activists. The episode comes as Devo stage a comeback of their own – their upcoming “Something for Everybody” will be the band’s first album in 20 years.

Although Devo will play animated activists in an episode called ‘The Mutants Are Revolting’, they will still focus on the “devolution” of the human race. Bassist Jerry Casale recently said about the band’s role in society, stating “We’re not the guys who freak people out and scare them. We’re like the house band on the ‘Titanic’, entertaining everybody as we go down.”

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