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Television Media Entertainment

Original Futurama Cast Seals Deal With Fox 94

Svippy writes "As we discussed earlier, 20th Century Fox Television was attempting to recast Futurama. As it turns out, this was just part of a big negotiation ploy, and the original cast have now completed their deals to return with the show's new episodes. For those of you who did not follow the story, a chronology of the events and reactions from the cast members are available at Infosphere and Voice Actors in the News. Series creators Matt Groening and David X. Cohen said, 'We are thrilled to have our incredible cast back. The call has already gone out to the animators to put the mouths back on the characters.'"
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Original Futurama Cast Seals Deal With Fox

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  • Re:Matt Groening (Score:5, Informative)

    by JWyner ( 653364 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @11:23AM (#28908915)

    So ah, if he wants his last name to be pronounced like "Greyning" then why does he spell it so that it looks like it should be pronounced "Growning?" Seriously, by what rule of English grammar does "Groe" sound exactly like "Grey"??.

    From the same english rule that allows for words like Phoenix (unless you pronounce this Fow-nix). Words where oe is pronounced as "ee" are from the "ioticized omicron" spelling in Greek, ÎÎ, which was originally pronounced like "oy", but is often simplified into just an "ee" sound or similar.

  • by modmans2ndcoming ( 929661 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @11:40AM (#28909065)

    Good News Everyone

    Phrase from Futurama

    Proper usage includes:

    "Good news everyone. You are all going to the planet sodomy to deliver some KY Jelly"

    After such statements, Dr. Zoidburg may sometimes be heard saying "Hurray!"

  • Re:Good news indeed (Score:5, Informative)

    by Svippy ( 876087 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @12:40PM (#28909575) Homepage

    Yes.

    Ken Keeler [theinfosphere.org], Eric Kaplan [theinfosphere.org], David X. Cohen [theinfosphere.org] (obviously), Patric M. Verrone [theinfosphere.org], among others are confirmed back. I probably forgot some.

    Just to give you an idea on what these writers did, I am going to highlight one episode for each, respectively; "The Devil's Hands Are Idle Playthings [theinfosphere.org]", "Jurassic Bark [theinfosphere.org]", "The Why of Fry [theinfosphere.org]" and "The Sting [theinfosphere.org]".

    They already did reveal some of the content for the coming production season [theinfosphere.org] at the Comic-Con panel. In case you want to see if they are still on the edge.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 01, 2009 @12:42PM (#28909597)

    The Simpsons has been doing it a lot longer and a lot harsher than Family Guy.

  • by kklein ( 900361 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @08:38PM (#28913163)

    So much ignorance in your post as to make my head linguist head spin, but this is the sentence I'm picking:

    Seriously, by what rule of English grammar does "Groe" sound exactly like "Grey"??

    Um, none, for a few reasons:

    1) This [wikipedia.org] is what "grammar" means. Clausal structure, etc.

    2) The word you're actually looking for is orthography [wikipedia.org].

    3) Finally, and this is a big one, English orthography wouldn't apply to a German name. One of the reasons spelling is so difficult in English is that it is a loanword slut. It hangs around at the linguistic docks, taking any wayfaring word spelled in roman characters home. It is the reason we have one of the largest vocabularies on the planet, but also the reason why spelling is difficult. I'll take it, though. It beats the socks off of the Academie francaise [wikipedia.org], which exists to keep foreign words out of French in favor of made-up French equivalents that no one uses. It also beats the Japanese system of ghettoization by the use of a different character set for foreign words. And it is simpler than the daunting task ahead of Chinese speakers, who have to find characters which have a similar sound, and whose meaning at least has something to do with the word in question. Overall, English's flexibility and open nature is a key to its strength.

    So there's that.

  • Re:Matt Groening (Score:3, Informative)

    by TheoMurpse ( 729043 ) on Saturday August 01, 2009 @09:17PM (#28913345) Homepage

    Technically, "oe" came before "o-with-umlaut." It was "oe," then it became "o-with-e-on-top." Because of the way an "e" looked at this point in German orthography, it became "o-with-two-parallel-vertical-lines-on-top," which became "o-with-umlaut." This is the same way we got a- and u-with-umlaut. You can see this in old script for "schoen" at Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]: (schoen, scho-with-e-aboven, scho-with-umlautn).

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