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Contents

   



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1 Plot  





2 Production  





3 Recpetion  





4 Cultural References  





5 References  





6 External links  














The Thanksgiving Special: Difference between revisions






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==Cultural References==

==Cultural References==

Stettman's football jersey resembles the jersey used by the NFL team, the [[Pittsburgh Steelers]], in the 1970s. The water tower in the episode also has the current logo of [[Cartoon Network]]. The episode's main antagonist, Richard Buckner, is a parody of businessman, television host, and future (now former) [[President of the United States|United States President]] [[Donald Trump]].<ref name="Allison"/>

Stettman's football jersey resembles the jersey used by the NFL team, the [[Pittsburgh Steelers]], in the 1970s. The water tower in the episode also has the current logo of [[Cartoon Network]]. The episode's main antagonist, Richard Buckner, is a parody of businessman, television host, and future (now former) [[President of the United States|United States President]] [[Donald Trump]] and Walmart Founder [[Sam Walton|Sam Walton.]]<ref name="Allison"/>



==References==

==References==


Revision as of 14:37, 15 November 2022

"The Thanksgiving Special"
Regular Show episodes
Title Card
Episode nos.Season 5
Episodes 13 &14
Directed byJ. G. Quintel
Mike Roth
Written byCalvin Wong
Toby Jones
Benton Connor
Andres Salaff
Story byJ. G. Quintel
Matt Price
Sean Szeles
Mike Roth
John Infantino
Michele Cavin
Original air dateNovember 25, 2013 (2013-11-25)
Running time23 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Power Tower"
Next →
"The Heart of a Stuntman"
Regular Show (season 5)
List of episodes

"The Thanksgiving Special" is the collective name for the thirteenth and fourteenth episodes of the fifth season of the American animated television series Regular Show. A Thanksgiving special, the episode aired on November 25, 2013, on Cartoon Network.

The episode drew in 3.04 million viewers, making it one of the most-watched programs on cable.

Plot

Mordecai and Rigby accidentally wreck the park's Thanksgiving dinner by playing football in the house. The other park workers decide to replace the meal before their families arrive, refusing to let Mordecai and Rigby help. The duo then sees a commercial on TV advertising a contest to write a Thanksgiving song with the chance of winning a “turducken” (achicken stuffed into a duck stuffed into a turkey). They decide to enter the contest but quickly find that writing the song isn't as easy as they thought.

Meanwhile, Benson, Pops, and Skips go to the store for another turkey and get in a battle with three men dressed as a pilgrim, an Indian, and a turkey over the last one in stock eventually run over in the street. Muscle Man and High-Five Ghost go out for more sides and get in an end zone dance competition with Broc Stettman, a football player. Thomas goes to the airport to pick up the park workers' families. Mordecai and Rigby get caught in traffic and ride from Margaret's father Frank in his weather helicopter. They arrive just in time to enter, still very unprepared. The previous entry, in which a billionaire, Richard Buckner, paid a group of professional singers to write and perform, is the clear favorite.

As Mordecai and Rigby are about to start, Thomas informs them that their families’ flights have been delayed to the following day. They decide to sing about how family and friends are more important than food, with Buckner's back-up musicians joining in, and win the contest. However, Buckner, furious over his loss, steals the turducken. The rest of the park workers, who saw the song on TV, decide to work with their rivals to get it back. They catch his blimp, and he reveals that the reason he wants the turducken is because it has a golden wishbone that actually grants wishes, and he wants to gain rights to Thanksgiving and have all his employees thank him, much to Mordecai and Rigby's shock. Mordecai and Rigby fight Buckner with help from their friends; however, they fall out of the blimp, but not before swiping the wishbone and replacing it with Rigby's spoons. Buckner makes his wish, only to realize that Mordecai and Rigby have deceived him, moments before the blimp crashes and kills him. While falling, Mordecai and Rigby wish to be safe at home with their families and break the bone just in time. After appearing back at the house, Thomas informs them he was mistaken about the flights being delayed (having checked the departure schedule instead of the arrivals), and their families, along with Broc and his team, Farmer Jimmy, some of Buckner's singers, and the three costumed men, are already there and have replaced the dinner. Benson gives Mordecai and Rigby a toast thanking them for saving Thanksgiving, and the episode ends with everyone eating the meal.

Production

The episode was written and storyboarded by Benton Connor, Toby Jones, Andres Salaff, and Calvin Wong and was directed by the series creator J. G. Quintel and supervising producer Mike Roth. The episode includes guest stars' Terry Crews, Chord Overstreet, LaToya Luckett and Josh Keaton. The episode even included two original songs, What Are You Thankful For? and Chewing on Freedom.

According to J. G. Quintel, this episode "has some really awesome songs, but [they] ended up having to record the people in the songs all at separate times and that was really challenging."[1]

The episode was watched by 3.04 million viewers.[2]

Recpetion

Alasdair Wilkins of the AV Club states that the special was『A worthy companion to last year’s brilliant Christmas special.』Complementing the special for all the things associated with thanksgiving: food, football, good cheer, and most importantly family. Wilkins also complements the family and friendship bonds throughout the show that the special has shown.[3] Austin Allison from Collider places the special as one of the Top 10 Cartoon Thanksgiving Animated Specials to Gobble Down This Season. Praising the special for managing to "ring in the true meaning of the holiday of being thankful for the ones closest to you, through song-form and hamboning."[4]

Paul Le also places the special as one of the 14 Best Thanksgiving Episodes in Animated Television, Ranked. Stating "Regular Show is always weird, but this Thanksgiving special takes the cake. Or should we say, "turkey?"" [5]

Cultural References

Stettman's football jersey resembles the jersey used by the NFL team, the Pittsburgh Steelers, in the 1970s. The water tower in the episode also has the current logo of Cartoon Network. The episode's main antagonist, Richard Buckner, is a parody of businessman, television host, and future (now former) United States President Donald Trump and Walmart Founder Sam Walton.[3]

References

  1. ^ Starpulse (July 16, 2013). "Interview: Kid Q&A With 'Regular Show' Creator J.G. Quintel".
  • ^ "Monday Cable Ratings: 'Monday Night Football' Wins Night, 'Love and Hip Hop', 'WWE Raw', 'Black Ink Crew', 'Fast N' Loud' & More". November 26, 2013. Archived from the original on November 12, 2016.
  • ^ a b Wilkins, Alasdair (November 26, 2013). "Regular Show: "The Thanksgiving Special"".
  • ^ Allison, Austin (November 12, 2021). "Top 10 Thanksgiving Animated Specials to Gobble Down This Season".
  • ^ Le, Paul (June 15, 2021). "14 Best Thanksgiving Episodes in Animated Television, Ranked".
  • External links


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Thanksgiving_Special&oldid=1122039552"

    Categories: 
    Regular Show episodes
    2013 American television episodes
    Thanksgiving television specials
    Parodies of Donald Trump
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Television episode articles with short description for multi-part episodes
    Pages using infobox television episode with unnecessary list markup
     



    This page was last edited on 15 November 2022, at 14:37 (UTC).

    This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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