So obviously a little later off-camera, Buck had some friends frame Rich for homicide in Madrid County, New Mexico, where he eventually got a cheap autopsy after taking a hollow-pointed lead bullet from the lever action 44-40 Winchester rifle of Madrid County Sheriff Sam Cade.
@nocturnalrecluse1216, Think of it as ‘the not yet gone into production’ animated theatrical movie version of the classic short-lived 1971-72 CBS crime drama series titled “CADE’S COUNTY”, which starred the late actor Glenn Ford as Sheriff Sam Cade. Although, most of the storylines of each episode are usually set in the four-corners region where Arizona, Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico, all come together, in spite of the fact that 20TH Century Fox Television, that produced the series for CBS, actually filmed on location in the desert areas of Southern California, which explains why there were palm trees 🌴 in the opening shot of the opening credits of each episode. In fact, FYI the studio even edited footage from different episodes together for three live-action theatrical releases under the following titles: “SAM CADE”, “SLAY RIDE”, and “THE SHERIFF OF MADRID”. Full episodes plus the three theatrical releases mentioned are on RU-vid, if you can find them, and watch them, research wise that is?! Now, once an animated version for theatre screens goes into production, Stephen Root who voices Bill Dauterive and Buck Strickland will be voicing the character of Sheriff Sam Cade (filling in for the late actor Glenn Ford) and other characters from that series.
@nocturnalrecluse1216, It’s from the classic short-lived 1971-72 CBS crime drama series “CADE’S COUNTY” starring the late actor Glenn Ford as Sheriff Sam Cade.
Hank breaking the 4th wall and going on a philosophical debate about the juxtaposition of comedy on human nature when they are written into a comedy show.
Not really a 4th wall break, but it did break a wall down for sure. I do believe in good humor as long as it doesn't negatively impact an environment where you're supposed to feel like you can operate without fear of offensive shit. PG jokes are cool until you make it PG-13. Pranks are okay, but should only be reserved for either April fool's day or if your school or work has a celebratory day reserved for it outside of AFD. That kid was a good example of taking it too far and if I ever have a company of my own, I will use this episode in my work orientation program among other episodes from different shows. Funny how 90s cartoon creators can make plots that are up to par or better than basic OSHA and anti-harassment videos most run of the mill companies make.
I like to see him doing it to Charles Ruttheimer, III., from the northwestern Baltimore suburb of Lawndale, Maryland, in the animated series “DARIA”, while at the same time doing it to DeMartino from that show while Peggy mud wrestles with Principal Li from there as well.
@NickReynolds-do8do, That sounds nice enough. However, how would you possibly describe Hank Hill in a verbal confrontation with Senior Duty Officer Sergeant Beauregard Wiley of Winslow County, Georgia, just after Wiley gave Hank a ticket for a broken passenger side tail light, even though the tail light glass was personally busted by Wiley’s unwanted partner, namely Officer Wilhameinha Johnson aka The Fox (for brains instead of vanity) of the Atlanta PD on assignment to Winslow County on Governor’s orders, and Officer Johnson used her official police baton to bust out the tail light glass in the first place?!
But if they even try to show their faces in Arlen, Boomhauer would have them in jail doing 360 days of jail time faster than you could possibly say, “Remember The Alamo!”
@2:40 "Oh. Gonna brush your teeth before you kiss me? Still not interested." Rich just had to get one final lick in before Hank got him sorted out. Lolll.
Why not? As long as you get out of dodge before he boils over you'll be fine. It took ages for him to stand up to Rich. And he lets Buck screw him over for years and years. And even Peggy was better at dealing with Cotton than Hank himself was. And she only had to do that because Hank continually refused to step up for his family.
Well, be that as it may, Rich might just as well think things over as he serves 360 days of jail time alongside of Beavis and Butthead, in Heimlich County that is.
This episode is a good example on peer pressure. A person assumes their actions will lead to the worst outcome, within reason, and attempt to avoid them. Problematic people will cause trouble and, if they keep getting away with it, they'll keep doing it. Now the only way to make a real change for the better is with an ultimatum and most people wouldn't have enough influence to make the threat meaningful.
Worked with someone like this years ago in school. Dirty jokes and everything, I laughed and joined in too for a while butthen he started taking it further and further even after we told him to stop, but it got too far when he started "cup checking" everyone and sent a kid to the nurses's office for basically punting another kid's crotch. He was suspended and banned from the student store. So imagine a grown ass MAN doing this in a place of work...
Ugh poor Hank… I had a co worker who was very inappropriate as well even after I told him to knock it off, and when I got called into HR I told them my side of the story and they fired the knucklehead
Sounds like my workplace. But it's probably not the same as yours since HR wasn't involved. I'm a stocker at a grocery store. We had one that was inappropriate and even creeped out one of our female cashiers, luckily he got fired.
@JoeCab, That’s true in more ways than one assuredly, but we also need to have heroes such as the following: B.J. McKay, T.J. Hooker, Dan Tanna, Joe Mannix, Frank Cannon, Nero Wolfe, Hercule Poirot, John Steed, Barnaby Jones, Jim Rockford, Sam Cade, Remington Steele, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
@chillivanasmr6607, How would you possibly describe Hank Hill in a verbal confrontation with Maude Findlay from the classic 1972-78 CBS sitcom series “MAUDE”?
And Hank would definitely do the same thing to a New Yorker named Irving if he dares to show his face in Arlen. For those not familiar enough with Irving, he used to be in the Sunday newspaper comics lineup titled “CATHY”, just in case.
Its weird because some episodes will have Budda Sack still working at Strickland even though he’s not voiced by Chris Rock but this character straight up disappeared
@@user-wi6sh6vh8uAlso people saying the guy could sue Hank for doing that to that guy but also the person that was coughing could sue that guy also because he could've died
I remember a kid like Rich in middle school who would also twist the innocent words of other people into annoying innuendos nonstop. One day he kept twisting everything I said during PE, so I broke down and chased him across the field while swinging a hockey stick at him like the Grim Reaper. Nobody-not even the teachers-stopped me. I didn’t even hit him, but he stopped his “comedy act” with me for at least one week. 🎉
I can’t believe Ben Stiller Was in King of The Hill, I didn’t realize. But The Fun Fact: Madagascar Co-Stars Was in King of The Hill between Ben Stiller & Chris Rock.
Then obviously the character in question should have to try doing the same thing to Boomhauer in any number of barrooms in the greater Arlen area, which results in an off-duty arrest of Rich who then finds himself doing 360 days of jail time faster ‘the bloody Red Baron was rolling the score’.
@-James-A, Out of all the characters ever portrayed by the late actor Glenn Ford, which one of them is best suited to take on Rich the way that Hank just did?
Ass tag by Rich? Come on 😒 if rich thinks he can strike much less kick Hank’s ass and get away with it, then the joke’s on him because Hank literally has no ass to kick, he’s been cursed with Diminished Glute Syndrome (DGS)
Hank Hill was the only mature man here. He didn’t want to be involved with the crazy nonsense Rich has caused and his coworkers joining in then ended up being harassed leading that to be their own fault rather than listen to Hank
Man, the character Ben Stiller played in this KOTH episode sure was one mean little Focker. It doesn't surprise me that his behavior at Strickland Propane would be the cause of his getting fired from there like his previous job. And that guy was lucky Hank didn't break out the toilet scrubber or worse, tried to get that potty mouth pulled out of him with a plunger. Good for removing what's clogging the can, and trying to suck something foul of you. In cartoon logic, of course.
Gotta give Hank respect when he first saw him make a inappropriate joke he talks with him outside just to me more moral and understanding and thought he got to him only to see his other coworkers thought his joke was funny Until it got way out of hand as it Important to me Personal at work and be respectful but know when not to go too far with joking around
@comicbookreviewer4856 I struggled with this BAD in high school. You see, I love making people laugh (Like, you don't understand, it gives me life I tell ya), and my thought-process was "If I say things I think are funny, then others will laugh at it too!" The problem was three-fold however; One, that is, in fact, NOT how comedy works. Two, I had (and still have) an incredibly raunchy sense of humor that I nowadays understand is absolutely not everyone's cup of tea, but back then not so much. Three, I was REALLY bad at reading the more subtle words of the room, so at times I would make a less-than-tasteful joke and only find out later that I was out of line when a friend or someone would approach me. I'm way better at picking up on things like this now thankfully, and I've learned to tell new potential friends upfront that if I ever take things too far to very obviously let me know lest I not realize, but there's a reason not many of my high school chums really reach out to me anymore. Either that or their just busy with their lives, who knows.
My oldest son had problems in high school with bullies, but they were protected by a flawed system that was under political pressure to give them a free reign. Hopefully, as soon as my good friend Rocky Adkins is in the Oval Office after January 20TH, 2029, maybe he can get a federal law passed that makes bullying in public schools punishable by life without parole as well as being tried as an adult.
I find lazy, sexual double-entendres to be the worst thing to happen to comedy since the drug overdose, so this moment was incredibly cathartic for me.
Just out of curiosity, how would you feel if Orville Snorkel aka Sarge (from the Beetle Bailey comics) bought the Gribble house at 522 Rainey Street now that Dale’s passed away?
@@user-vi4xy1jw7e Many people now are excessively crude and disrespectful; it's been a mounting problem in this new millennium. The western world desperately needs a renaissance in civility.
@LordVader1094, How would you possibly describe a verbal confrontation between Hank Hill and Sheriff Horatio Masters of Winslow County, Georgia, after Senior Duty Officer Sergeant Beauregard Wiley gives Hank a ticket for a broken tail light, even though Wiley’s unwanted partner Officer Wilhameinha Johnson aka The Fox (for brains instead of vanity) personally smashed out the tail light glass with her regulation Atlanta PD police baton?
It's almost bizarre how the same man responsible for a show where two boys found innuendos in many otherwise innocent words wrote this very speech Hank gives.
@cinna-manspice4449, How would you possibly describe a verbal confrontation between Hank Hill and Sheriff Elroy P. Lobo of Orly County, Georgia? Remember, I’m in reference to the character of Sheriff Lobo himself from both the classic 1979-81 NBC action adventure comedy series’ of “BJ & THE BEAR” and “THE MISADVENTURES OF SHERIFF LOBO”.
Just go to IMDb and type in the titles of each show looking up each one individually. They are both quite interesting, although the first one mentioned ran for three seasons while the second one only ran for two seasons. “BJ & THE BEAR” is an action adventure comedy series about a self-employed semi truck driver, known in the trucking profession as an owner-operator; Bear is the name of the driver’s pet chimpanzee named for NCAA 🏈 coach Bear Bryant of the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. Sheriff Elroy P. Lobo of Orly County, Georgia, was a crooked law enforcement officer of the southeastern United States who they had at least four different run-ins with, including their pilot episode “THE FOUNDLINGS”, which was an NBC movie of the week in October 1978, which not only garnered high ratings, but come Saturday February 10TH, 1979, is when it wound up becoming a regular basis series, often tying in the ratings each week with CBS’ “THE DUKES OF HAZZARD”, which aired mostly on Friday nights. By September 1979, the villain character of Sheriff Elroy P. Lobo of Orly County, Georgia, was granted his own spin-off series “THE MISADVENTURES OF SHERIFF LOBO”, which aired mainly on Tuesday night to draw viewers away from a wannabe chef named Jack Tripper on “3’S COMPANY”. No sooner did the second season of “BJ & THE BEAR” conclude as well as the first season of “THE MISADVENTURES OF SHERIFF LOBO”, when suddenly our nation was faced with the 1980 strike of the Screen Actors Guild. By December 1980, “THE MISADVENTURES OF SHERIFF LOBO” was back on the air for its second season; this time with the title shortened to just “LOBO”, the original theme song “THE BALLAD OF SHERIFF LOBO” sung by the late singer Frankie Laine was replaced with the song “GEORGIA ON MY MIND” by the late singer Ray Charles. Meanwhile, “BJ & THE BEAR” had its third and final season starting in January 1981. Thus, both shows began losing ratings really slow, especially since the network had moved “BJ & THE BEAR” from its popular Saturday night spot to Tuesday night directly behind “LOBO”. In fact, check out anything about these shows that RU-vid has as well, just in case? Plus, a few “BJ & THE BEAR” stories have been submitted to www.fanfiction.net, strictly for the fun of both reading and writing thereof. In fact, on the page for “THE DUKES OF HAZZARD” at www.fanfiction.net, there’s a remarkable story titled “BJ McKAY GOES TO HAZZARD”, which proves an interesting link between the characters of those shows.
@cinna-manspice4449, You can definitely learn more about the shows “BJ & THE BEAR” as well as “THE MISADVENTURES OF SHERIFF LOBO” by simply just checking out their pages at IMDb.
The sad thing is that I actually dealt with a guy like this recently. It was on Instagram a few days ago, and he turned almost everything I said into something extremely raunchy.
@@user-wi6sh6vh8u Good grief is right... when it comes to these work jaggoffs. I notice and like that they alone are returning to the office in droves after the pandemic because they want to... and because they don't have more work-ccentric and reserved people to bounce off of, they just piss each other off and cause chaos, less productivity, more ruckus... and a mountain of lawsuits (most of them stalking, parking drama violations, and harassment of course). Last office I went to is a building that belongs to another business friend of mine, and it was literally starting to burn down with the lot of them screaming in each others faces. Someone placed aluminum in the microwave, got distracted to go yell-gossip and start some screaming match in the bathroom over something stupid, then, FWOOSH. One thing I notice about the entire lots of employees returning to the office? Loud @ss, offensive, self absorbed, chatty, crap-where-you-eat extroverts. Just about every single last one of them, it's uncanny. I see it everywhere, because sometimes I got to swing by quite a few offices in person, but I will NEVER go back to actually work in an office setting as an employee again. Even if I lost everything, and I had to start from square one, I'd rather work alone or with a few people in a literal sewer with fatbergs and roaches. I will never stop preaching for people to work from home, start their own business, or go into a trade with less people. There are options. You don't have to feed the madness, and if someone acts up online, at least it's better to document and nip that $hit in the bud, or leave a damning paper trail for court.
@@user-wi6sh6vh8u True, but most back down when they know they'll get in some major, boiling-hot legal water, and there's a record behind them a mile long. The more defiant ones tend to be those with $$$ to spare, or some kind of connections... or they're just that delusional, or effed up in the head.
@ARedMagicMarker, Go to the different RU-vid channels with the episodes of the 1976-80 ABC soap opera series titled “family”, and then after having watched them, feel free to give us a description of the outcome when Rich calls in the character of Lawyer Doug Lawrence from that series to represent him in his lawsuit against Hank Hill and Strickland Propane?
3:00 precisely how I would have responded had I got in trouble for saying “STFU” to my younger less experienced coworker who isn’t my boss but totally acts like it in addition to always telling me how to do my job and looking for some excuse to criticize me.
Laughing at meat or tool or unit is funny given the situation, you're not going laugh about it in front of grandma, but you can Chuckle about it with a group of friends or when alone, it's about knowing when and where.
I work in manufacturing. I once worked at a plant in Northwest Wisconsin where the company used that plant to specialize in the plastic injection molding machines and I recall Otter Box is their biggest customer for making the cases. Well that's not the main point I'm getting at but anyways on second shift in the assembly area, I don't know what it was but we often would attract the most dirty minded people. Now I have no qualms with telling dirty sex jokes on a regular basis but sometimes these jokes would just go way too far. I once snapped because one guy I was working with way twisting everything I say into sometime dirty and it was getting to be annoying. I made a joke because I didn't know what kumquats were at the time because most of my life, the only citrus fruit I had were oranges that came from California, Texas, or Florida. Well needless to say that was the joke was just too much for me. They made fun of me for being a virgin at the time, I'm not one now but that's not really relevant here, and they made fun of me because they would ask me questions and I would answer them stupidly and not knowing it was meant to get more bait, and they often just found subtle things about my personality and would just drag out jokes for months until it was no longer funny. I snapped and I just remember my line lead at the time finally doing her job. Before that when I was saying I was being harasses, she dismissed and said it was my fault for giving them reasons to pick on me. Anyways, this scene just resonates with me in some way. Hank Hill represents what I wished I could have done. Although I have since then left that company and now work for a different company. I just remember that time back in 2013/2014 when this all happened. Like I say, I'm fine with a dirty joke here and there but I really lose my patients when I can't even say anything without it being twisted.
There's times when guys will try to take the piss out of you, all in good fun, of course. Assholes like the ones you described, though, are most often the ones who end up in music videos for shoes, if you catch my drift. At least, I wish they were.
How about possibly when pretty Judy Barnes the Cozy Kitchen representative asks Peggy’s help to make corporate think that they both died in the explosion when Dale blew up Hank’s tool shed?
Let’s just hope that Eustace Miller doesn’t call him to the stand to rebuttal Hank’s testimony when Chane Wassanasong is on trial for murdering Lucky and Luanne.
I don’t suppose that you’ve ever seen the scene from the classic 1983 movie “A CHRISTMAS STORY” in which Ralphie Parker gets his mouth washed out with Life Buoy soap by his own mother?
He’ll probably get 360 days in the Heimlich County Jail, especially after Boomhauer’s elected Sheriff of Heimlich County after the demise of Sheriff Mumford.
@denjeez, How would you possibly describe a verbal confrontation between Hank Hill and Sheriff “Big Ed” Little of Chickasaw County, Georgia, from the classic 1979-85 CBS action adventure comedy series “THE DUKES OF HAZZARD”?