New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext ) | '{{Infobox television episode
| image =
| image_size =
| caption =
| title = Hug N' Bugs
| series = [[Bless the Harts]]
| season = 1
| episode = 1
| director = [[Pete Michels]]
| writer = Erin Wagoner
| production = 1BPJ03
| airdate = September 29, 2019
| guests = [[Fortune Feimster]] as Brenda<br>[[Gary Anthony Williams]] as Leonard
| season_list =
| prev = N/A
| next = [[Can't Get There from Here (Bless the Harts)|Can't Get There from Here]]
| season_article =
| episode_list = Bless the Harts#Episodes
}}
'''''Hug N' Bugs''''' is the debut episode of ''[[Bless the Harts]]''. Originally the third episode produced, this episode aired September 29, 2019.
==Plot==
Norma tells Jenny that her water bill is due in 3 days. As Jenny goes through the bills, her mother Betty tells her to come in and see a "me-me". Jenny corrects her and tells her it's a meme, when she questions the storage bill she saw earlier. Betty tells Jenny that she has a storage unit there, and Jenny threatens to remove it because the water in the house is going to get shut down. But Betty says Jenny can't do anything without the key.
Violet's room is full of the family stuff as Wayne, Jenny's boyfriend, comes in and does the laundry, since the laundry was broken at his place. While he's waiting, he sees Violet drawing and asks her what the drawings symbolize. Wayne is shown as a tree stump. Thinking in his head, he sets off to be a better father figure to Violet. He sees a picture of a building of Violet's drawings, which Violet says is called Fort Indigo.
Jenny finds the key while going through some stuff and heads down to the storage unit, where she finds out that there are a lot of old toys called Hug N' Bugs that swept the nation 20 years ago. She then calls her mother, who says they can make tons of money selling these. At the Last Supper, Brenda warns Jenny to be mindful of reflections, as when she sold something on Craiglist, everyone saw her rear end. Jenny's figment of imagination Jesus comes out of the painting and Jenny tells him that she's gonna make cash from selling the leftover toys to pay the water bill. Jesus tells her that's a fad, but when they're talking, EYay (a parody of Ebay) notifies Jenny that her toy sold for $150.
As Jenny keeps racking up EYay sales on the toys, the toys keep coming back because Betty keeps buying them back, setting them back to nowhere. At this point, their water gets shut off. They both go down to the water district to try to sell them a Hug N' Bug toy, when the employee says they will never sell for that price.
Wayne and his friend Leonard finish a building and show VIolet it is Fort Indigo. Amazed, she goes inside to get her stuff, eager to move in. While she's gone, a building inspector tells Wayne the building has to come down at the end of the week because it violates many codes. He goes to the city hall to try to get a permit, but Mayor Webb denies it. Wayne tells Violet it has to come down and apologizes, but Violet tells Wayne that he didn't finish looking at all her visuals and that Fort Indigo explodes at the end of her story, revealing that the stump shows the girl (a caricacture of Violet) her way home. When Betty goes next door to try to trade a toy for 10 minutes of water, Wayne tells her to tell the neighbor not to smoke around the toys beause they will explode, which gives Violet an idea.
Jenny and Betty insert the highly flammable toys that were worthless to destroy Fort Indigo, but Jenny sells a toy on EYay at that moment, a Colin Powell Hug N' Bug. Wayne rushes into the fire to save the toy and succeeds. Jenny asks Betty if she bought the toy, which she did not. The family gets their water back on and Jenny thanks whoever bought the toy. The collector, Colin Powell himself, is shown putting Betty's toy on his collectors shelf.
==Reception==
Jonathan Wilson of ''Ready, Set, Cut'' gave the episode 3 out of 5 stars, stating, "'Hug N' Bugs' though tasked with a lot of setup, was likable and diverting enough to suggest good things for Fox’s new animated sitcom."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://readysteadycut.com/2019/09/30/bless-the-harts-season-1-episode-1-recap-fox/|title=Bless the Harts Season Episode 1 recap|last=Wilson|first=Jonathan|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
Kathryn VanArendonk of ''[[New York (magazine)|Vulture]]'' stated, "Bless the Harts is a very nice way to round out the revived Animation Domination block. Even in the pilot episode, you feel how interesting and rich the story can be when several generations live in the same house. The burden of supporting the family largely falls on Jenny, but Betty has financial responsibility too, and the economic and social pressures are distributed more evenly between the three protagonists than they would be in a traditional dad-brings-home-the-bacon structure. Each character has more autonomy and more power. With its fast, absurd, dry sense of humor, hopefully Bless the Harts will have a chance to stick around for a long time."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.vulture.com/2019/09/bless-the-harts-shakes-up-foxs-animation-domination.html|title=Bless the Harts shakes up FOX's Animation Domination|last=VanArendonk|first=Kathryn|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
Caroline Framke of ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' stated, "And as a prolific 'Saturday Night Live' veteran, Spivey’s assembled an ace voice cast that can make the most of any joke, especially the ones that veer towards the surreal. (One of the pilot’s best and weirdest gags involves Jenny venting her frustrations to a hallucinated Jesus, voiced as a playful weirdo by Kumail Nanjiani.) And frankly, even if the jokes were less sharp, there’s rarely any going wrong with the pair of Wiig and Rudolph, who show exactly why they’ve become such ubiquitous comedy players. In their hands, every joke gets told to its fullest potential, and their easy chemistry makes the relationship between their characters feels all the realer, even when they’re at direct odds. That’s the best a family sitcom can hope for with its cast, so with a bit more time, 'Bless the Harts' could absolutely distinguish itself from its Fox animation peers."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/2019/tv/reviews/bless-the-harts-fox-review-wiig-rudolph-1203352134/|title=Bless the Harts
TV Review|last=Framke|first=Caroline|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
Tim Goodman of ''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]'' stated, "It's just... an animated thing that Fox did and those turn out, for the most part, pretty well after a while. This one just kind of sits there for 30 minutes, pleasant but not particularly funny as it sets up the Hart family. Lots of comedies get better after four or five episodes."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/bless-harts-review-1243781|title=Bless the Harts Pilot Review|last=Goodman|first=Tim|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
''[[New York (magazine)|Decider]]'' voted "Stream it!", stating, "We wish we could make more of a slam-dunk recommendation of 'Bless The Harts'. The show has a lot of room to improve, but the writers and cast are top-notch, and the story is warm enough to give it a chance."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://decider.com/2019/09/29/bless-the-harts-fox-stream-it-or-skip-it|title=Bless the Harts FOX Stream it or skip it?|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
''[[Slant Magazine]]'' gave the episode 3 out of 4 stars, stating, "You can feel Bless the Harts figuring itself out in its first episode. There are bits that go on for too long; Wayne’s internal monologues, for one, move at too relaxed a pace and result in little comedic payoff. But the episode also features promising signs of the madcap humor that the series will hopefully settle into."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/tv/review-bless-the-harts-first-episode-is-a-madcap-if-uneven-introduction/|title=Bless the Harts first episode is a madcap, if uneven introduction|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:2019 American Television Episodes]]' |
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff ) | '@@ -1,5 +1,53 @@
-#REDIRECT [[Bless the Harts #ep1]]
+{{Infobox television episode
+| image =
+| image_size =
+| caption =
+| title = Hug N' Bugs
+| series = [[Bless the Harts]]
+| season = 1
+| episode = 1
+| director = [[Pete Michels]]
+| writer = Erin Wagoner
+| production = 1BPJ03
+| airdate = September 29, 2019
+| guests = [[Fortune Feimster]] as Brenda<br>[[Gary Anthony Williams]] as Leonard
+| season_list =
+| prev = N/A
+| next = [[Can't Get There from Here (Bless the Harts)|Can't Get There from Here]]
+| season_article =
+| episode_list = Bless the Harts#Episodes
+}}
+
+'''''Hug N' Bugs''''' is the debut episode of ''[[Bless the Harts]]''. Originally the third episode produced, this episode aired September 29, 2019.
+
+==Plot==
+Norma tells Jenny that her water bill is due in 3 days. As Jenny goes through the bills, her mother Betty tells her to come in and see a "me-me". Jenny corrects her and tells her it's a meme, when she questions the storage bill she saw earlier. Betty tells Jenny that she has a storage unit there, and Jenny threatens to remove it because the water in the house is going to get shut down. But Betty says Jenny can't do anything without the key.
+
+Violet's room is full of the family stuff as Wayne, Jenny's boyfriend, comes in and does the laundry, since the laundry was broken at his place. While he's waiting, he sees Violet drawing and asks her what the drawings symbolize. Wayne is shown as a tree stump. Thinking in his head, he sets off to be a better father figure to Violet. He sees a picture of a building of Violet's drawings, which Violet says is called Fort Indigo.
+
+Jenny finds the key while going through some stuff and heads down to the storage unit, where she finds out that there are a lot of old toys called Hug N' Bugs that swept the nation 20 years ago. She then calls her mother, who says they can make tons of money selling these. At the Last Supper, Brenda warns Jenny to be mindful of reflections, as when she sold something on Craiglist, everyone saw her rear end. Jenny's figment of imagination Jesus comes out of the painting and Jenny tells him that she's gonna make cash from selling the leftover toys to pay the water bill. Jesus tells her that's a fad, but when they're talking, EYay (a parody of Ebay) notifies Jenny that her toy sold for $150.
+
+As Jenny keeps racking up EYay sales on the toys, the toys keep coming back because Betty keeps buying them back, setting them back to nowhere. At this point, their water gets shut off. They both go down to the water district to try to sell them a Hug N' Bug toy, when the employee says they will never sell for that price.
+
+Wayne and his friend Leonard finish a building and show VIolet it is Fort Indigo. Amazed, she goes inside to get her stuff, eager to move in. While she's gone, a building inspector tells Wayne the building has to come down at the end of the week because it violates many codes. He goes to the city hall to try to get a permit, but Mayor Webb denies it. Wayne tells Violet it has to come down and apologizes, but Violet tells Wayne that he didn't finish looking at all her visuals and that Fort Indigo explodes at the end of her story, revealing that the stump shows the girl (a caricacture of Violet) her way home. When Betty goes next door to try to trade a toy for 10 minutes of water, Wayne tells her to tell the neighbor not to smoke around the toys beause they will explode, which gives Violet an idea.
+
+Jenny and Betty insert the highly flammable toys that were worthless to destroy Fort Indigo, but Jenny sells a toy on EYay at that moment, a Colin Powell Hug N' Bug. Wayne rushes into the fire to save the toy and succeeds. Jenny asks Betty if she bought the toy, which she did not. The family gets their water back on and Jenny thanks whoever bought the toy. The collector, Colin Powell himself, is shown putting Betty's toy on his collectors shelf.
+
+==Reception==
+Jonathan Wilson of ''Ready, Set, Cut'' gave the episode 3 out of 5 stars, stating, "'Hug N' Bugs' though tasked with a lot of setup, was likable and diverting enough to suggest good things for Fox’s new animated sitcom."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://readysteadycut.com/2019/09/30/bless-the-harts-season-1-episode-1-recap-fox/|title=Bless the Harts Season Episode 1 recap|last=Wilson|first=Jonathan|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
+
+Kathryn VanArendonk of ''[[New York (magazine)|Vulture]]'' stated, "Bless the Harts is a very nice way to round out the revived Animation Domination block. Even in the pilot episode, you feel how interesting and rich the story can be when several generations live in the same house. The burden of supporting the family largely falls on Jenny, but Betty has financial responsibility too, and the economic and social pressures are distributed more evenly between the three protagonists than they would be in a traditional dad-brings-home-the-bacon structure. Each character has more autonomy and more power. With its fast, absurd, dry sense of humor, hopefully Bless the Harts will have a chance to stick around for a long time."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.vulture.com/2019/09/bless-the-harts-shakes-up-foxs-animation-domination.html|title=Bless the Harts shakes up FOX's Animation Domination|last=VanArendonk|first=Kathryn|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
+
+Caroline Framke of ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' stated, "And as a prolific 'Saturday Night Live' veteran, Spivey’s assembled an ace voice cast that can make the most of any joke, especially the ones that veer towards the surreal. (One of the pilot’s best and weirdest gags involves Jenny venting her frustrations to a hallucinated Jesus, voiced as a playful weirdo by Kumail Nanjiani.) And frankly, even if the jokes were less sharp, there’s rarely any going wrong with the pair of Wiig and Rudolph, who show exactly why they’ve become such ubiquitous comedy players. In their hands, every joke gets told to its fullest potential, and their easy chemistry makes the relationship between their characters feels all the realer, even when they’re at direct odds. That’s the best a family sitcom can hope for with its cast, so with a bit more time, 'Bless the Harts' could absolutely distinguish itself from its Fox animation peers."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/2019/tv/reviews/bless-the-harts-fox-review-wiig-rudolph-1203352134/|title=Bless the Harts
+TV Review|last=Framke|first=Caroline|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
+
+Tim Goodman of ''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]'' stated, "It's just... an animated thing that Fox did and those turn out, for the most part, pretty well after a while. This one just kind of sits there for 30 minutes, pleasant but not particularly funny as it sets up the Hart family. Lots of comedies get better after four or five episodes."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/bless-harts-review-1243781|title=Bless the Harts Pilot Review|last=Goodman|first=Tim|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
+
+''[[New York (magazine)|Decider]]'' voted "Stream it!", stating, "We wish we could make more of a slam-dunk recommendation of 'Bless The Harts'. The show has a lot of room to improve, but the writers and cast are top-notch, and the story is warm enough to give it a chance."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://decider.com/2019/09/29/bless-the-harts-fox-stream-it-or-skip-it|title=Bless the Harts FOX Stream it or skip it?|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
+
+''[[Slant Magazine]]'' gave the episode 3 out of 4 stars, stating, "You can feel Bless the Harts figuring itself out in its first episode. There are bits that go on for too long; Wayne’s internal monologues, for one, move at too relaxed a pace and result in little comedic payoff. But the episode also features promising signs of the madcap humor that the series will hopefully settle into."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/tv/review-bless-the-harts-first-episode-is-a-madcap-if-uneven-introduction/|title=Bless the Harts first episode is a madcap, if uneven introduction|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>
+
+==References==
+{{reflist}}
-{{Redirect category shell|1=
-{{R to section}}
-}}
+[[Category:2019 American Television Episodes]]
' |
Lines added in edit (added_lines ) | [
0 => '{{Infobox television episode',
1 => '| image = ',
2 => '| image_size = ',
3 => '| caption = ',
4 => '| title = Hug N' Bugs',
5 => '| series = [[Bless the Harts]]',
6 => '| season = 1',
7 => '| episode = 1',
8 => '| director = [[Pete Michels]]',
9 => '| writer = Erin Wagoner',
10 => '| production = 1BPJ03',
11 => '| airdate = September 29, 2019',
12 => '| guests = [[Fortune Feimster]] as Brenda<br>[[Gary Anthony Williams]] as Leonard',
13 => '| season_list =',
14 => '| prev = N/A',
15 => '| next = [[Can't Get There from Here (Bless the Harts)|Can't Get There from Here]]',
16 => '| season_article = ',
17 => '| episode_list = Bless the Harts#Episodes',
18 => '}}',
19 => '',
20 => ''''''Hug N' Bugs''''' is the debut episode of ''[[Bless the Harts]]''. Originally the third episode produced, this episode aired September 29, 2019.',
21 => '',
22 => '==Plot==',
23 => 'Norma tells Jenny that her water bill is due in 3 days. As Jenny goes through the bills, her mother Betty tells her to come in and see a "me-me". Jenny corrects her and tells her it's a meme, when she questions the storage bill she saw earlier. Betty tells Jenny that she has a storage unit there, and Jenny threatens to remove it because the water in the house is going to get shut down. But Betty says Jenny can't do anything without the key.',
24 => '',
25 => 'Violet's room is full of the family stuff as Wayne, Jenny's boyfriend, comes in and does the laundry, since the laundry was broken at his place. While he's waiting, he sees Violet drawing and asks her what the drawings symbolize. Wayne is shown as a tree stump. Thinking in his head, he sets off to be a better father figure to Violet. He sees a picture of a building of Violet's drawings, which Violet says is called Fort Indigo.',
26 => '',
27 => 'Jenny finds the key while going through some stuff and heads down to the storage unit, where she finds out that there are a lot of old toys called Hug N' Bugs that swept the nation 20 years ago. She then calls her mother, who says they can make tons of money selling these. At the Last Supper, Brenda warns Jenny to be mindful of reflections, as when she sold something on Craiglist, everyone saw her rear end. Jenny's figment of imagination Jesus comes out of the painting and Jenny tells him that she's gonna make cash from selling the leftover toys to pay the water bill. Jesus tells her that's a fad, but when they're talking, EYay (a parody of Ebay) notifies Jenny that her toy sold for $150.',
28 => '',
29 => 'As Jenny keeps racking up EYay sales on the toys, the toys keep coming back because Betty keeps buying them back, setting them back to nowhere. At this point, their water gets shut off. They both go down to the water district to try to sell them a Hug N' Bug toy, when the employee says they will never sell for that price.',
30 => '',
31 => 'Wayne and his friend Leonard finish a building and show VIolet it is Fort Indigo. Amazed, she goes inside to get her stuff, eager to move in. While she's gone, a building inspector tells Wayne the building has to come down at the end of the week because it violates many codes. He goes to the city hall to try to get a permit, but Mayor Webb denies it. Wayne tells Violet it has to come down and apologizes, but Violet tells Wayne that he didn't finish looking at all her visuals and that Fort Indigo explodes at the end of her story, revealing that the stump shows the girl (a caricacture of Violet) her way home. When Betty goes next door to try to trade a toy for 10 minutes of water, Wayne tells her to tell the neighbor not to smoke around the toys beause they will explode, which gives Violet an idea.',
32 => '',
33 => 'Jenny and Betty insert the highly flammable toys that were worthless to destroy Fort Indigo, but Jenny sells a toy on EYay at that moment, a Colin Powell Hug N' Bug. Wayne rushes into the fire to save the toy and succeeds. Jenny asks Betty if she bought the toy, which she did not. The family gets their water back on and Jenny thanks whoever bought the toy. The collector, Colin Powell himself, is shown putting Betty's toy on his collectors shelf.',
34 => '',
35 => '==Reception==',
36 => 'Jonathan Wilson of ''Ready, Set, Cut'' gave the episode 3 out of 5 stars, stating, "'Hug N' Bugs' though tasked with a lot of setup, was likable and diverting enough to suggest good things for Fox’s new animated sitcom."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://readysteadycut.com/2019/09/30/bless-the-harts-season-1-episode-1-recap-fox/|title=Bless the Harts Season Episode 1 recap|last=Wilson|first=Jonathan|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>',
37 => '',
38 => 'Kathryn VanArendonk of ''[[New York (magazine)|Vulture]]'' stated, "Bless the Harts is a very nice way to round out the revived Animation Domination block. Even in the pilot episode, you feel how interesting and rich the story can be when several generations live in the same house. The burden of supporting the family largely falls on Jenny, but Betty has financial responsibility too, and the economic and social pressures are distributed more evenly between the three protagonists than they would be in a traditional dad-brings-home-the-bacon structure. Each character has more autonomy and more power. With its fast, absurd, dry sense of humor, hopefully Bless the Harts will have a chance to stick around for a long time."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.vulture.com/2019/09/bless-the-harts-shakes-up-foxs-animation-domination.html|title=Bless the Harts shakes up FOX's Animation Domination|last=VanArendonk|first=Kathryn|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>',
39 => '',
40 => 'Caroline Framke of ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' stated, "And as a prolific 'Saturday Night Live' veteran, Spivey’s assembled an ace voice cast that can make the most of any joke, especially the ones that veer towards the surreal. (One of the pilot’s best and weirdest gags involves Jenny venting her frustrations to a hallucinated Jesus, voiced as a playful weirdo by Kumail Nanjiani.) And frankly, even if the jokes were less sharp, there’s rarely any going wrong with the pair of Wiig and Rudolph, who show exactly why they’ve become such ubiquitous comedy players. In their hands, every joke gets told to its fullest potential, and their easy chemistry makes the relationship between their characters feels all the realer, even when they’re at direct odds. That’s the best a family sitcom can hope for with its cast, so with a bit more time, 'Bless the Harts' could absolutely distinguish itself from its Fox animation peers."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/2019/tv/reviews/bless-the-harts-fox-review-wiig-rudolph-1203352134/|title=Bless the Harts ',
41 => 'TV Review|last=Framke|first=Caroline|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>',
42 => '',
43 => 'Tim Goodman of ''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]'' stated, "It's just... an animated thing that Fox did and those turn out, for the most part, pretty well after a while. This one just kind of sits there for 30 minutes, pleasant but not particularly funny as it sets up the Hart family. Lots of comedies get better after four or five episodes."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/bless-harts-review-1243781|title=Bless the Harts Pilot Review|last=Goodman|first=Tim|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref> ',
44 => '',
45 => '''[[New York (magazine)|Decider]]'' voted "Stream it!", stating, "We wish we could make more of a slam-dunk recommendation of 'Bless The Harts'. The show has a lot of room to improve, but the writers and cast are top-notch, and the story is warm enough to give it a chance."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://decider.com/2019/09/29/bless-the-harts-fox-stream-it-or-skip-it|title=Bless the Harts FOX Stream it or skip it?|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>',
46 => '',
47 => '''[[Slant Magazine]]'' gave the episode 3 out of 4 stars, stating, "You can feel Bless the Harts figuring itself out in its first episode. There are bits that go on for too long; Wayne’s internal monologues, for one, move at too relaxed a pace and result in little comedic payoff. But the episode also features promising signs of the madcap humor that the series will hopefully settle into."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/tv/review-bless-the-harts-first-episode-is-a-madcap-if-uneven-introduction/|title=Bless the Harts first episode is a madcap, if uneven introduction|accessdate=11 November 2019}}</ref>',
48 => '',
49 => '==References==',
50 => '{{reflist}}',
51 => '[[Category:2019 American Television Episodes]]'
] |