Futurama s10e04 Episode Script
The Numberland Gap
1
[upbeat theme music playing]
[glass shatters]
[theme concludes]
[spaceship zooming]
Mm! This Baked Alaska is great, Amy.
What's your secret?
I'm bisexual.
Oh, you mean the dessert!
The trick is to start by
buying real Alaska, then
Mama?
Is it time to show off yet?
It sure is, schmeety-pie.
Show Fry and Leela your painting
so they can compliment it.
Lookit!
It's Mama and Dumdum.
Oh, it's exquisite.
Right?
What? Oh.
- What?
- You really captured
your mommy's unusually shaped hair,
and your daddy's pukey color.
Shapes and colors are the parts
I always have trouble with.
You know, I always wanted
to be an artist, and I
That's so interesting.
Let's talk about something else.
[Newt grunting and giggling]
I'm bored.
I'm more bored.
Oh yeah?
I'm so bored, I wanna
punch myself in the face.
I'll do it for ya.
- Go ahead.
- Make me.
Eh, I'm too bored.
Don't you have like
a built-in TV or something?
No.
But have you ever heard of
AM radio?
[switch clicks]
[electricity buzzing]
[stadium crowd cheering over radio]
[announcer] And Sweden wins!
This has been Don Cunningham
with the nightly war roundup.
Bo-ring.
[buttons clicking]
[antenna warbling]
[German speaker] [over radio]
Fifteen, four, 290, 5,036
[Bender yelps]
What are those, numbers?
- [German speaker] Two
- "Two"?
I'm almost positive that's a number!
Help, help, help, help, help,
help, help, help, help, help.
[glasses clatter]
The radio's saying numbers at me!
[German speaker]
One thousand three hundred sixty-two.
Thirty-four thousand
nine hundred and sixty-nine
Aw, that's just
a numbers station, Bender.
Some people think it's spies
communicating in code.
It's actually a real thing.
Look it up.
[numbers station continues]
Turn it off, turn it off!
I'm not touching your antenna.
[German speaker]
Two hundred ninety.
[Bender screaming]
[glass shattering]
[screaming continues,
fading as Bender falls]
Well, thanks for a lovely evening.
[metal doors whirring]
Man, that hypersonic elevator's
really fast.
[Bender screaming]
[metal crashing]
Ow.
Bender, at the risk of getting personal,
are you scared of numbers?
Not all numbers.
I-I love zero and one.
But two?
And those other guys?
[shudders]
Where does it all end?
Hey look!
A 24-hour art supply store.
Leela, have I ever told you how
I always wanted to be an artist?
Yes, it's one of the most
recent things you said.
Well, I'm not gonna let that stop me.
[door bells jingling]
[thrilling music playing]
[paint brush sloshing]
Guys! Dolls!
Remember the pain I predicted
Professor would live in
the last 10 years of his life?
Well, they've discovered
a miracle drug that'll make it 20!
[pill bottle rattling]
[pill thudding]
[gulps]
[sadly groans]
I'm so tired of this physical existence.
The constant agony.
[yelling]
[bones cracking]
These scratchy physical pajamas.
[scratching]
If only I could live in a world
of pure thought and beauty.
Sure, that'd be great.
[clicking remote]
[static buzzing]
We now go live
to tonight's lottery drawing.
[upbeat jazzy music playing]
[drumroll trilling]
Fifteen,
four,
290
[drumroll continues]
two,
1,362
[drumroll stops]
and 34,969.
That is not a regulation ball!
[gasps]
Hey, aren't those the same numbers
that came over Bender's antenna?
You mean Bender's antenna is magic?
Eh, that's what the fembots say.
[Bender purrs]
Magic is one plausible
but stupid explanation.
[hologram chirping]
Is it possible someone is encoding
some kind of message in lottery numbers?
Hey Leela!
Come see my paintings.
Oh hmm.
That art store had a futuristic technology
that really unlocked my creative powers.
It's called "paint-by-numbers."
Oh, Lord.
They're exquisite!
You really stayed in the lines.
Aren't these exquisite, Amy?
Oh, yeah, exquisite, yeah.
What are you people talking about?
Fry's paintings are crap.
[Leela's foot thudding]
Ow!
I mean, the foot pain makes me see
how beautiful I'm saying they are.
Fry, you foolcompoop!
What are you doing to those
beautiful numbers?
Painting over them to depict
imperfect physical objects?
[Amy gasps]
[mysterious music playing]
Schmeureka!
[printer whirring]
Those weird lottery numbers
encoded paint-by-number plans
for some sort of device.
And once it's colored in, we can build it!
Build it?
That's your answer for everything.
Every time we find a mysterious diagram,
you want to build it.
Well, I'm tired of building things.
The beauty is in the abstract idea.
Everything else is flamboyant excess.
Well, if you won't build it, I will.
I just said I wouldn't build it!
I'm going to go contemplate
the abstract concept of beauty.
If you need me, I'll be in the bathroom.
[foot thudding]
Exquisite!
[mysterious music playing]
[paint brush sloshing]
[Fry] Blue.
What a strange gizmo.
I wonder if it's some kind of
advanced spaceship!
Well, I'm not quite done.
It might turn out to be a kitten.
[dramatic music playing]
[Amy] That's no kitten.
Rats.
I'm gonna go paint a kitten.
[mysterious music playing]
[sighs]
Be honest with me, Zoidberg.
Is this really good?
[foot crushing]
[groaning] Yes.
Sometimes I worry that my rote copies
of other artists' work lack originality.
Don't say that, Fry.
Great artists don't let badness
stand in the way of greatness.
And Zoidberg will prove
[muttering indistinctly]
Why did you mutter that last part?
Because I wasn't that sure.
♪♪
[indistinct chatter]
[calculator] Hello, hello. Don't touch.
[children giggling]
Excuse me, killer robot coming through.
[children yelling]
[kid] Aw, come on!
Ah, there you are,
actress, mathematician,
author Danica McKellar.
Could you sign this book?
Sure.
Wait, I didn't write this.
It's my autobiography.
[gasps] You're Bender?
The Bender?
[laughs] I'm a huge fan.
Um, no,
that's actually a different Bender.
You're not the extreme boogie boarder?
How do people tell you apart?
Different serial numbers.
That's kinda why I came.
See, I'm scared of numbers.
I thought maybe you could help me,
'cause you write all these books
about having confidence with math.
Uh, yeah. Uh
Do you know the other Bender?
[chuckles]
Like, could you introduce me, or
Hey, could we talk
about me for a minute?!
I don't know.
Could you buy a copy of my book?
[Bender sighing]
Math shouldn't be scary, Bender.
You just have
an irrational fear of numbers.
[emotional]
And a fear of irrational numbers!
Don't be afraid.
If you're even half as great
as your book jacket says you are
I'm not! Nobody is!
Well, hopefully this will help.
But if it doesn't, no refunds.
Next!
♪♪
This is garbage.
I give up.
[pencil scratching]
A letter came for you, Fry.
Your work's been accepted
in a citywide art contest!
Why are you reading my mail, Hermes?
Also, I don't remember
entering any art contest.
I entered you! Zoidberg.
I got the idea when
I was bandaging my foot.
And my work was accepted?
[gasps] Thank you, Zoidberg.
You've given me the courage
to try the parakeet.
♪♪
Ladies and gentlemen,
and Zoidberg,
after great effort and expense
Expense?!
I've completed the mystery machine!
[mimics trumpet fanfare]
[Zoidberg] I'm blind!
What does it do?
Can it kill at least one human?
Maybe.
The only way to find out is to turn it on.
Zero and one?
No problem.
[switch clicks]
[gears grinding]
[electricity crackling]
[energy zapping]
[group gasping]
It looks like some sort of space hole.
I'll be the judge of that.
[Bender shudders]
[energy whooshing]
[screaming]
[dramatic music playing]
[Bender screaming]
[screaming continues]
[Bender yelling]
Exquisite!
So what's in there?
[panting] These numbers!
Almost all of 'em greater than one!
[cranking]
Finished installin'
the new plate glass wind-er.
Thank you!
[glass shattering]
[Bender screaming]
[distant metal clattering]
We'll sweep him off the sidewalk later.
I wanna see these numbers!
[energy whooshing]
[group gasping]
- Oh!
- Wow!
[Professor Farnsworth]
It's my dear friends, the integers.
Come, everyone,
through the Numberland Gap.
[whooshing]
It's just what I've always dreamt of.
A realm of pure theoretical beauty.
[Number 55] Hello!
I don't believe I've seen you around here.
No, we're from the physical world.
[Number 55] The physical world?
I thought that was just
an abstract concept.
Nice to meet you.
Fifty-five, is it?
[Number 55]
Oh, ya doesn't have to call me 55.
My decimal representation
is five 10s plus five ones.
But you can call me five times 11.
Or you can call me 9 plus 10
plus 11 plus 12 plus 13.
Or you can call me six-squared
plus three-squared
plus three-squared plus one-squared.
But ya doesn't have to call me 55!
I'm gonna call you 55.
So, could you give us a tour?
[Number 55] Of what?
There's nothing but numbers.
Maybe you could introduce us to
some of the more interesting numbers.
Every number is interesting!
Otherwise, there'd be
a smallest uninteresting number,
and that would make it interesting.
[Number 55]
I didn't quite follow that but, yes,
every number is equally interesting.
Or equally uninteresting.
[Number 55] I don't like you.
Nobody does.
[child giggling]
Who's that goomer?
[Number 55] That's little 3/7ths,
the fractional child of three and seven.
What about 7/3rds?
Is that also their child?
[Number 55] [quietly]
Their illegitimate child.
Um, Professor?
I'm sorry to bring the mood up,
but can we get going soon?
It's time for the art show.
[Number 55] Time? What is time?
We numbers are eternal and immutable.
You mean you never age?
You never grow old
and senile and forgetful
and senile and forgetful
and senile and
If we don't leave soon,
we'll miss the awards.
It's almost four.
[Number 55]
What's almost four?
Three?
Ya know, one through 12 are my friends.
I don't appreciate these
racist caricatures.
We need to go!
Yes, you all go.
But I, I choose to stay.
I belong here,
in this realm of beauty bare,
free from the intolerable agony
of physical existence.
- No, Professor!
- No, you can't!
You're my only living relative.
I wanted you to come to
the art contest in case I win a prize.
Oh, don't be sad.
You won't.
[whooshing]
It won't be the same without him.
[whooshing]
I mean, I can't think of
any actual difference.
Just felt like somebody should say that.
[Bender] You escaped?!
That's mathematically impossible!
It was fine, Bender.
We met a nice 50-something guy.
Wait, someone's missing.
Is it you, Amy?!
Is it?
Oh, no. The Professor
decided to stay behind.
And you let him?!
Ah, you fools!
You two-loving fools!
[energy humming]
[Number 55]
And there's 52-factorial.
Yes, we played cards with him earlier.
I suspect he was cheating.
[Number 55] Well, every number
is here in Numberland.
You'll meet them all eventually.
Really? Every number?
[Number 55] Yes.
The whole numbers, the fractions.
What else is there?
Oh, all kinds of junk.
E, pi, i.
[numbers gasping]
[Number 55]
Don't talk like that!
We don't believe in the imaginary one.
Except for some of the more
rural numbers.
- Uh-huh. Right on.
- Amen.
Say, you're a number, right?
I've been wondering,
in my world, we don't know
whether all even numbers
are the sum of two prime numbers.
Do you?
[Number 55]
Of course, they are.
Yes!
But how do you prove it?
[Number 55]
Why should I prove it?
What would that prove?
Well, if math has a point,
and I'm not sure it does,
isn't it to gain understanding?
[Number 55]
"Understanding"?
I don't understand.
You know there are lots of true things
that can't be proven.
Yes, but I know because Gödel proved it.
If you numbers don't care about proofs,
what do you do all day?
Sit around representing
quantities of things?
[Number 55]
I don't even know what things are.
You know things!
Things are the things
we use math to describe,
how planets move,
the different lengths of wire,
how many stars to give
a Keanu Reeves movie.
[Number 2] Yo.
[Number 55] You use numbers?
What are we, your servants?!
Well, I suppose you are.
[Number 55] Servants?!
How dare you.
All numbers are equal!
10,538!
[Number 10538]
Yeah, what is it now?
[Number 55]
Divide him by zero!
[dramatic music playing]
No! That's not allowed!
[Number 10538]
Well, let's try it and see what happens.
[Professor groaning]
Help! 9-1-1!
[Number 911]
Sorry, wrong number.
[dramatic music playing]
No, stop!
I'm too young to be zeroed.
[Number 10538] If you're young,
then I'm divisible by seven.
Get in there!
[Professor grunts]
[energy humming]
[Professor yelling]
A person!
Oh, thank Gott.
You must have my helps message
with the portal plan received.
You got that right.
Who are you?
My name is Georg Cantor.
Georg Cantor?!
The discoverer of
the hierarchy of infinities?
Ja, ja.
I discovered a lot of stuff.
We received your number broadcast,
but how were you able
to build a transmitter
in a land of pure abstraction?
I had fortunately with me
pencils und paper.
I needed only to prove
a transmitter could exist.
And then build it
out of pencils and paper.
But enough about me, Georg Cantor.
We must get far from this zero.
Did you bring with you an arbitrarily
large positive number?
Sorry, no, I packed light.
Ach, ja. Clearer I should
have been in meiner message.
I know not which of us
is the stupider professor.
You.
But we can research that later.
We must for help radio.
I'll do it.
But you know not the right numbers!
I know zero and one.
That's all you really need.
[transmitter beeping in Morse code]
[mysterious music playing]
[door squeaking]
I ain't afraid of no numbers.
I ain't afraid of nothin'.
[transmitter beeping]
[Bender yelling]
[beeping continues]
Wait a minute.
That's Morse code.
I learned that at camp.
[head clanks]
[beeping continues]
P R O
Prostitute?
Wait, F?
Proftitute?
[beeping continues]
E S S Oh, of course!
Professtitute!
No, wait. O R
Professor!
He must need something. But what?
[beeping continues]
H E L
[gasps] He needs helium.
No, help!
He needs help in Numberland!
Oh, but I'm alone
and I'm the world's biggest coward.
I need moral support.
What was it Danica McKellar said?
You're the world's
biggest coward, Bender.
In your case only,
I'd advise you to
stay the heck away from math.
Thanks, Danica.
I'll never face my fears again.
So long, courage!
[grunts]
[book thudding]
[metal clanging]
[Bender yelling]
[warbling]
Numbers!
Meaningless numbers!
[Bender yelling]
[crashing]
[Number 10] Hey!
[Bender whimpering]
[numbers chiming]
[whimpering]
♪♪
[people chattering]
These are really good.
I mean, I'd hang that
in my second-best mansion.
And there's mine on the very same wall.
You think it might win a prize?
Maybe.
But, just being included
is the best prize of all.
Wow, better than the one for winning?
[microphone feedback squealing]
Attention, please.
I'm Art Judge,
the art judge. And these
are the judges with regular names.
I'm proud to present
the prizes in this year's
Friends with Benefits of
the Zoo Charity Art Contest.
Third place goes to
[paper rustling]
"Icarus Redeemed" by Polly Madison.
[audience applauding]
[Zoidberg] Boo!
Second place
[paper rustling]
"Yellow Flower,"
by a truly good, good boy,
Philip J. Fry.
[group cheering]
[audience applauding]
Congratulations.
And where is your pet?
Oh, I'm not allowed to have pets.
They always die.
I'm on the Humane Society's
"No Adopt" list.
I mean the animal who painted this.
Animal? I painted it.
But this contest is
for paintings by animals.
It is?
Bad Fry, bad!
[envelope thumps]
[audience booing]
[elephant trumpets]
[parrot squawks]
[brush clatters]
Aw, you must feel awful.
Second place.
I won second place!
Yeah, in a contest for animals.
And I beat all of them.
Well, except Vincent Van Goat.
[loud chewing]
[bleating]
[screaming]
[numbers chiming]
[Bender whimpering]
[whimpering]
[energy humming]
- Ah!
- [yelps] Humans!
Bender has arrived to save us.
Bender, Cantor.
Cantor, Bender.
Ein metall mensch?
This is the most amazing thing
I've ever seen!
Yeah, wait till you see my ass!
[energy zapping]
[Bender yelling]
[ethereal music playing]
[Number 1]
The prisoners stand accused
of hypothesis with intent to prove
and contributing to
the delinquency of a fraction.
Cantor made me do it!
[Number 1]
Are all the numbers here?
[numbers murmuring agreement]
[Number 1]
Then let the trial begin.
You're full of number two, Number 1!
Lots of numbers are not here.
Ya, you are the whole numbers
and the fractions merely.
[Number 1] Heresy!
There are infinitely many of us.
So we must all be here.
Falsch!
[numbers gasping]
[Number 1] Order! Order!
[numbers clattering]
Look, you, I can prove it.
[Number 1] I doubt that.
But if you can, we shall free you.
- Really?
- [Number 1] Maybe.
Good enough.
To begin, I write down all
of your children fractions like so.
One-half, then 1/3rd und 2/3rds,
then 1/4th, 2/4ths und 3/4ths und sofort.
Und next to each, its decimal expansion.
[numbers whooshing]
But after we list every child,
there must be another not on the list.
[Number 2/9]
What you talkin' 'bout, Cantor?
For this new child,
I change the first digit
of the first child,
then change the second digit
of the second child,
the third digit of the third child,
und so on.
[numbers whooshing]
Now, look at this new number.
[numbers screaming]
[Number 12] It's a freak!
You think so only because
it's not any of your children!
It is different from the first child
at the first digit,
and the second child at the second digit.
And in this way, it must be different
from every child here!
Therefore, it is not in Numberland,
so you are incomplete!
[numbers gasping]
[Number 1] Blasphemy!
Wait, let me see that again?
[whooshing]
You know there are
easier ways to prove that.
Of course, I know.
I'm Georg Cantor.
Infinities beyond infinity? Neat.
[Number 1]
You're blowing my mind, but still,
blasphemy!
Get 'em, Googol.
[Googol snarling]
Stand back, fellow math lovers,
and watch as I break up Googol,
right between O's.
[grunts]
[Googol groaning]
[dramatic music playing]
[fragments crashing]
[all yelling]
[dramatic music continues]
We're almost back to reality.
Oh, you'll love it, Cantor.
We've found so many more
applications for math.
Like computer machines?
Und this annoying metall mensch?
[metal thumping]
Indeed.
Mathematics underlies
everything that exists.
That's what I love about it.
Not me, Herr Professor.
What I love is the pure,
abstract understanding.
For me, even this world is too real.
[solemn music playing]
[pencil scratching]
[door creaking]
[Bender] See ya later.
[energy zapping]
[Professor yelling]
♪♪
[Bender scat singing]
I'm glad you're back, Professor.
I mean, I don't really care,
it just felt like somebody
should say that.
I don't care either.
But it does feel like
I should say thank you, Hermes.
Professor, come see
what Fry's working on.
Yes, yes.
What are you painting now?
Another second-place, third-rate puppy?
No, it's a paint-by-number
I'm unmaking just for you.
[wet sponge sloshing]
See? Nothing but numbers.
[soft, uplifting music playing]
[Professor sniffling]
I don't know which is more beautiful,
the idea or the thing itself.
♪♪
Exquisite.
♪♪
[fanfare playing]
[upbeat theme music playing]
[glass shatters]
[theme concludes]
[spaceship zooming]
Mm! This Baked Alaska is great, Amy.
What's your secret?
I'm bisexual.
Oh, you mean the dessert!
The trick is to start by
buying real Alaska, then
Mama?
Is it time to show off yet?
It sure is, schmeety-pie.
Show Fry and Leela your painting
so they can compliment it.
Lookit!
It's Mama and Dumdum.
Oh, it's exquisite.
Right?
What? Oh.
- What?
- You really captured
your mommy's unusually shaped hair,
and your daddy's pukey color.
Shapes and colors are the parts
I always have trouble with.
You know, I always wanted
to be an artist, and I
That's so interesting.
Let's talk about something else.
[Newt grunting and giggling]
I'm bored.
I'm more bored.
Oh yeah?
I'm so bored, I wanna
punch myself in the face.
I'll do it for ya.
- Go ahead.
- Make me.
Eh, I'm too bored.
Don't you have like
a built-in TV or something?
No.
But have you ever heard of
AM radio?
[switch clicks]
[electricity buzzing]
[stadium crowd cheering over radio]
[announcer] And Sweden wins!
This has been Don Cunningham
with the nightly war roundup.
Bo-ring.
[buttons clicking]
[antenna warbling]
[German speaker] [over radio]
Fifteen, four, 290, 5,036
[Bender yelps]
What are those, numbers?
- [German speaker] Two
- "Two"?
I'm almost positive that's a number!
Help, help, help, help, help,
help, help, help, help, help.
[glasses clatter]
The radio's saying numbers at me!
[German speaker]
One thousand three hundred sixty-two.
Thirty-four thousand
nine hundred and sixty-nine
Aw, that's just
a numbers station, Bender.
Some people think it's spies
communicating in code.
It's actually a real thing.
Look it up.
[numbers station continues]
Turn it off, turn it off!
I'm not touching your antenna.
[German speaker]
Two hundred ninety.
[Bender screaming]
[glass shattering]
[screaming continues,
fading as Bender falls]
Well, thanks for a lovely evening.
[metal doors whirring]
Man, that hypersonic elevator's
really fast.
[Bender screaming]
[metal crashing]
Ow.
Bender, at the risk of getting personal,
are you scared of numbers?
Not all numbers.
I-I love zero and one.
But two?
And those other guys?
[shudders]
Where does it all end?
Hey look!
A 24-hour art supply store.
Leela, have I ever told you how
I always wanted to be an artist?
Yes, it's one of the most
recent things you said.
Well, I'm not gonna let that stop me.
[door bells jingling]
[thrilling music playing]
[paint brush sloshing]
Guys! Dolls!
Remember the pain I predicted
Professor would live in
the last 10 years of his life?
Well, they've discovered
a miracle drug that'll make it 20!
[pill bottle rattling]
[pill thudding]
[gulps]
[sadly groans]
I'm so tired of this physical existence.
The constant agony.
[yelling]
[bones cracking]
These scratchy physical pajamas.
[scratching]
If only I could live in a world
of pure thought and beauty.
Sure, that'd be great.
[clicking remote]
[static buzzing]
We now go live
to tonight's lottery drawing.
[upbeat jazzy music playing]
[drumroll trilling]
Fifteen,
four,
290
[drumroll continues]
two,
1,362
[drumroll stops]
and 34,969.
That is not a regulation ball!
[gasps]
Hey, aren't those the same numbers
that came over Bender's antenna?
You mean Bender's antenna is magic?
Eh, that's what the fembots say.
[Bender purrs]
Magic is one plausible
but stupid explanation.
[hologram chirping]
Is it possible someone is encoding
some kind of message in lottery numbers?
Hey Leela!
Come see my paintings.
Oh hmm.
That art store had a futuristic technology
that really unlocked my creative powers.
It's called "paint-by-numbers."
Oh, Lord.
They're exquisite!
You really stayed in the lines.
Aren't these exquisite, Amy?
Oh, yeah, exquisite, yeah.
What are you people talking about?
Fry's paintings are crap.
[Leela's foot thudding]
Ow!
I mean, the foot pain makes me see
how beautiful I'm saying they are.
Fry, you foolcompoop!
What are you doing to those
beautiful numbers?
Painting over them to depict
imperfect physical objects?
[Amy gasps]
[mysterious music playing]
Schmeureka!
[printer whirring]
Those weird lottery numbers
encoded paint-by-number plans
for some sort of device.
And once it's colored in, we can build it!
Build it?
That's your answer for everything.
Every time we find a mysterious diagram,
you want to build it.
Well, I'm tired of building things.
The beauty is in the abstract idea.
Everything else is flamboyant excess.
Well, if you won't build it, I will.
I just said I wouldn't build it!
I'm going to go contemplate
the abstract concept of beauty.
If you need me, I'll be in the bathroom.
[foot thudding]
Exquisite!
[mysterious music playing]
[paint brush sloshing]
[Fry] Blue.
What a strange gizmo.
I wonder if it's some kind of
advanced spaceship!
Well, I'm not quite done.
It might turn out to be a kitten.
[dramatic music playing]
[Amy] That's no kitten.
Rats.
I'm gonna go paint a kitten.
[mysterious music playing]
[sighs]
Be honest with me, Zoidberg.
Is this really good?
[foot crushing]
[groaning] Yes.
Sometimes I worry that my rote copies
of other artists' work lack originality.
Don't say that, Fry.
Great artists don't let badness
stand in the way of greatness.
And Zoidberg will prove
[muttering indistinctly]
Why did you mutter that last part?
Because I wasn't that sure.
♪♪
[indistinct chatter]
[calculator] Hello, hello. Don't touch.
[children giggling]
Excuse me, killer robot coming through.
[children yelling]
[kid] Aw, come on!
Ah, there you are,
actress, mathematician,
author Danica McKellar.
Could you sign this book?
Sure.
Wait, I didn't write this.
It's my autobiography.
[gasps] You're Bender?
The Bender?
[laughs] I'm a huge fan.
Um, no,
that's actually a different Bender.
You're not the extreme boogie boarder?
How do people tell you apart?
Different serial numbers.
That's kinda why I came.
See, I'm scared of numbers.
I thought maybe you could help me,
'cause you write all these books
about having confidence with math.
Uh, yeah. Uh
Do you know the other Bender?
[chuckles]
Like, could you introduce me, or
Hey, could we talk
about me for a minute?!
I don't know.
Could you buy a copy of my book?
[Bender sighing]
Math shouldn't be scary, Bender.
You just have
an irrational fear of numbers.
[emotional]
And a fear of irrational numbers!
Don't be afraid.
If you're even half as great
as your book jacket says you are
I'm not! Nobody is!
Well, hopefully this will help.
But if it doesn't, no refunds.
Next!
♪♪
This is garbage.
I give up.
[pencil scratching]
A letter came for you, Fry.
Your work's been accepted
in a citywide art contest!
Why are you reading my mail, Hermes?
Also, I don't remember
entering any art contest.
I entered you! Zoidberg.
I got the idea when
I was bandaging my foot.
And my work was accepted?
[gasps] Thank you, Zoidberg.
You've given me the courage
to try the parakeet.
♪♪
Ladies and gentlemen,
and Zoidberg,
after great effort and expense
Expense?!
I've completed the mystery machine!
[mimics trumpet fanfare]
[Zoidberg] I'm blind!
What does it do?
Can it kill at least one human?
Maybe.
The only way to find out is to turn it on.
Zero and one?
No problem.
[switch clicks]
[gears grinding]
[electricity crackling]
[energy zapping]
[group gasping]
It looks like some sort of space hole.
I'll be the judge of that.
[Bender shudders]
[energy whooshing]
[screaming]
[dramatic music playing]
[Bender screaming]
[screaming continues]
[Bender yelling]
Exquisite!
So what's in there?
[panting] These numbers!
Almost all of 'em greater than one!
[cranking]
Finished installin'
the new plate glass wind-er.
Thank you!
[glass shattering]
[Bender screaming]
[distant metal clattering]
We'll sweep him off the sidewalk later.
I wanna see these numbers!
[energy whooshing]
[group gasping]
- Oh!
- Wow!
[Professor Farnsworth]
It's my dear friends, the integers.
Come, everyone,
through the Numberland Gap.
[whooshing]
It's just what I've always dreamt of.
A realm of pure theoretical beauty.
[Number 55] Hello!
I don't believe I've seen you around here.
No, we're from the physical world.
[Number 55] The physical world?
I thought that was just
an abstract concept.
Nice to meet you.
Fifty-five, is it?
[Number 55]
Oh, ya doesn't have to call me 55.
My decimal representation
is five 10s plus five ones.
But you can call me five times 11.
Or you can call me 9 plus 10
plus 11 plus 12 plus 13.
Or you can call me six-squared
plus three-squared
plus three-squared plus one-squared.
But ya doesn't have to call me 55!
I'm gonna call you 55.
So, could you give us a tour?
[Number 55] Of what?
There's nothing but numbers.
Maybe you could introduce us to
some of the more interesting numbers.
Every number is interesting!
Otherwise, there'd be
a smallest uninteresting number,
and that would make it interesting.
[Number 55]
I didn't quite follow that but, yes,
every number is equally interesting.
Or equally uninteresting.
[Number 55] I don't like you.
Nobody does.
[child giggling]
Who's that goomer?
[Number 55] That's little 3/7ths,
the fractional child of three and seven.
What about 7/3rds?
Is that also their child?
[Number 55] [quietly]
Their illegitimate child.
Um, Professor?
I'm sorry to bring the mood up,
but can we get going soon?
It's time for the art show.
[Number 55] Time? What is time?
We numbers are eternal and immutable.
You mean you never age?
You never grow old
and senile and forgetful
and senile and forgetful
and senile and
If we don't leave soon,
we'll miss the awards.
It's almost four.
[Number 55]
What's almost four?
Three?
Ya know, one through 12 are my friends.
I don't appreciate these
racist caricatures.
We need to go!
Yes, you all go.
But I, I choose to stay.
I belong here,
in this realm of beauty bare,
free from the intolerable agony
of physical existence.
- No, Professor!
- No, you can't!
You're my only living relative.
I wanted you to come to
the art contest in case I win a prize.
Oh, don't be sad.
You won't.
[whooshing]
It won't be the same without him.
[whooshing]
I mean, I can't think of
any actual difference.
Just felt like somebody should say that.
[Bender] You escaped?!
That's mathematically impossible!
It was fine, Bender.
We met a nice 50-something guy.
Wait, someone's missing.
Is it you, Amy?!
Is it?
Oh, no. The Professor
decided to stay behind.
And you let him?!
Ah, you fools!
You two-loving fools!
[energy humming]
[Number 55]
And there's 52-factorial.
Yes, we played cards with him earlier.
I suspect he was cheating.
[Number 55] Well, every number
is here in Numberland.
You'll meet them all eventually.
Really? Every number?
[Number 55] Yes.
The whole numbers, the fractions.
What else is there?
Oh, all kinds of junk.
E, pi, i.
[numbers gasping]
[Number 55]
Don't talk like that!
We don't believe in the imaginary one.
Except for some of the more
rural numbers.
- Uh-huh. Right on.
- Amen.
Say, you're a number, right?
I've been wondering,
in my world, we don't know
whether all even numbers
are the sum of two prime numbers.
Do you?
[Number 55]
Of course, they are.
Yes!
But how do you prove it?
[Number 55]
Why should I prove it?
What would that prove?
Well, if math has a point,
and I'm not sure it does,
isn't it to gain understanding?
[Number 55]
"Understanding"?
I don't understand.
You know there are lots of true things
that can't be proven.
Yes, but I know because Gödel proved it.
If you numbers don't care about proofs,
what do you do all day?
Sit around representing
quantities of things?
[Number 55]
I don't even know what things are.
You know things!
Things are the things
we use math to describe,
how planets move,
the different lengths of wire,
how many stars to give
a Keanu Reeves movie.
[Number 2] Yo.
[Number 55] You use numbers?
What are we, your servants?!
Well, I suppose you are.
[Number 55] Servants?!
How dare you.
All numbers are equal!
10,538!
[Number 10538]
Yeah, what is it now?
[Number 55]
Divide him by zero!
[dramatic music playing]
No! That's not allowed!
[Number 10538]
Well, let's try it and see what happens.
[Professor groaning]
Help! 9-1-1!
[Number 911]
Sorry, wrong number.
[dramatic music playing]
No, stop!
I'm too young to be zeroed.
[Number 10538] If you're young,
then I'm divisible by seven.
Get in there!
[Professor grunts]
[energy humming]
[Professor yelling]
A person!
Oh, thank Gott.
You must have my helps message
with the portal plan received.
You got that right.
Who are you?
My name is Georg Cantor.
Georg Cantor?!
The discoverer of
the hierarchy of infinities?
Ja, ja.
I discovered a lot of stuff.
We received your number broadcast,
but how were you able
to build a transmitter
in a land of pure abstraction?
I had fortunately with me
pencils und paper.
I needed only to prove
a transmitter could exist.
And then build it
out of pencils and paper.
But enough about me, Georg Cantor.
We must get far from this zero.
Did you bring with you an arbitrarily
large positive number?
Sorry, no, I packed light.
Ach, ja. Clearer I should
have been in meiner message.
I know not which of us
is the stupider professor.
You.
But we can research that later.
We must for help radio.
I'll do it.
But you know not the right numbers!
I know zero and one.
That's all you really need.
[transmitter beeping in Morse code]
[mysterious music playing]
[door squeaking]
I ain't afraid of no numbers.
I ain't afraid of nothin'.
[transmitter beeping]
[Bender yelling]
[beeping continues]
Wait a minute.
That's Morse code.
I learned that at camp.
[head clanks]
[beeping continues]
P R O
Prostitute?
Wait, F?
Proftitute?
[beeping continues]
E S S Oh, of course!
Professtitute!
No, wait. O R
Professor!
He must need something. But what?
[beeping continues]
H E L
[gasps] He needs helium.
No, help!
He needs help in Numberland!
Oh, but I'm alone
and I'm the world's biggest coward.
I need moral support.
What was it Danica McKellar said?
You're the world's
biggest coward, Bender.
In your case only,
I'd advise you to
stay the heck away from math.
Thanks, Danica.
I'll never face my fears again.
So long, courage!
[grunts]
[book thudding]
[metal clanging]
[Bender yelling]
[warbling]
Numbers!
Meaningless numbers!
[Bender yelling]
[crashing]
[Number 10] Hey!
[Bender whimpering]
[numbers chiming]
[whimpering]
♪♪
[people chattering]
These are really good.
I mean, I'd hang that
in my second-best mansion.
And there's mine on the very same wall.
You think it might win a prize?
Maybe.
But, just being included
is the best prize of all.
Wow, better than the one for winning?
[microphone feedback squealing]
Attention, please.
I'm Art Judge,
the art judge. And these
are the judges with regular names.
I'm proud to present
the prizes in this year's
Friends with Benefits of
the Zoo Charity Art Contest.
Third place goes to
[paper rustling]
"Icarus Redeemed" by Polly Madison.
[audience applauding]
[Zoidberg] Boo!
Second place
[paper rustling]
"Yellow Flower,"
by a truly good, good boy,
Philip J. Fry.
[group cheering]
[audience applauding]
Congratulations.
And where is your pet?
Oh, I'm not allowed to have pets.
They always die.
I'm on the Humane Society's
"No Adopt" list.
I mean the animal who painted this.
Animal? I painted it.
But this contest is
for paintings by animals.
It is?
Bad Fry, bad!
[envelope thumps]
[audience booing]
[elephant trumpets]
[parrot squawks]
[brush clatters]
Aw, you must feel awful.
Second place.
I won second place!
Yeah, in a contest for animals.
And I beat all of them.
Well, except Vincent Van Goat.
[loud chewing]
[bleating]
[screaming]
[numbers chiming]
[Bender whimpering]
[whimpering]
[energy humming]
- Ah!
- [yelps] Humans!
Bender has arrived to save us.
Bender, Cantor.
Cantor, Bender.
Ein metall mensch?
This is the most amazing thing
I've ever seen!
Yeah, wait till you see my ass!
[energy zapping]
[Bender yelling]
[ethereal music playing]
[Number 1]
The prisoners stand accused
of hypothesis with intent to prove
and contributing to
the delinquency of a fraction.
Cantor made me do it!
[Number 1]
Are all the numbers here?
[numbers murmuring agreement]
[Number 1]
Then let the trial begin.
You're full of number two, Number 1!
Lots of numbers are not here.
Ya, you are the whole numbers
and the fractions merely.
[Number 1] Heresy!
There are infinitely many of us.
So we must all be here.
Falsch!
[numbers gasping]
[Number 1] Order! Order!
[numbers clattering]
Look, you, I can prove it.
[Number 1] I doubt that.
But if you can, we shall free you.
- Really?
- [Number 1] Maybe.
Good enough.
To begin, I write down all
of your children fractions like so.
One-half, then 1/3rd und 2/3rds,
then 1/4th, 2/4ths und 3/4ths und sofort.
Und next to each, its decimal expansion.
[numbers whooshing]
But after we list every child,
there must be another not on the list.
[Number 2/9]
What you talkin' 'bout, Cantor?
For this new child,
I change the first digit
of the first child,
then change the second digit
of the second child,
the third digit of the third child,
und so on.
[numbers whooshing]
Now, look at this new number.
[numbers screaming]
[Number 12] It's a freak!
You think so only because
it's not any of your children!
It is different from the first child
at the first digit,
and the second child at the second digit.
And in this way, it must be different
from every child here!
Therefore, it is not in Numberland,
so you are incomplete!
[numbers gasping]
[Number 1] Blasphemy!
Wait, let me see that again?
[whooshing]
You know there are
easier ways to prove that.
Of course, I know.
I'm Georg Cantor.
Infinities beyond infinity? Neat.
[Number 1]
You're blowing my mind, but still,
blasphemy!
Get 'em, Googol.
[Googol snarling]
Stand back, fellow math lovers,
and watch as I break up Googol,
right between O's.
[grunts]
[Googol groaning]
[dramatic music playing]
[fragments crashing]
[all yelling]
[dramatic music continues]
We're almost back to reality.
Oh, you'll love it, Cantor.
We've found so many more
applications for math.
Like computer machines?
Und this annoying metall mensch?
[metal thumping]
Indeed.
Mathematics underlies
everything that exists.
That's what I love about it.
Not me, Herr Professor.
What I love is the pure,
abstract understanding.
For me, even this world is too real.
[solemn music playing]
[pencil scratching]
[door creaking]
[Bender] See ya later.
[energy zapping]
[Professor yelling]
♪♪
[Bender scat singing]
I'm glad you're back, Professor.
I mean, I don't really care,
it just felt like somebody
should say that.
I don't care either.
But it does feel like
I should say thank you, Hermes.
Professor, come see
what Fry's working on.
Yes, yes.
What are you painting now?
Another second-place, third-rate puppy?
No, it's a paint-by-number
I'm unmaking just for you.
[wet sponge sloshing]
See? Nothing but numbers.
[soft, uplifting music playing]
[Professor sniffling]
I don't know which is more beautiful,
the idea or the thing itself.
♪♪
Exquisite.
♪♪
[fanfare playing]