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Xandir and Tim, Sitting in a Tree - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Xandir and Tim, Sitting in a Tree

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Xandir and Tim, Sitting in a Tree
Drawn Together episode
Image:Xandirandtim2.jpg
Tim and Xandir share a moment.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 11
Written by Bill Freiberger
Directed by Raymie Muzquiz
Guest stars Jimmy Kimmel as Spanky's wife
Chris Edgerly
Production no. 209
Original airdate February 15, 2006
Episode chronology
← Previous Next →
"A Tale of Two Cows" "The Lemon-AIDS Walk"

"Xandir and Tim, Sitting in a Tree" is the eighteenth episode of the animated series Drawn Together.

Contents

[edit] Storyline

Captain Hero announces that his "friend", Tim Tommerson, is coming for a visit and asks Xandir to look after him. Xandir is annoyed and initially refuses to help, but when Tim shows up, Xandir reluctantly plays along despite his very visible irritation. Tim appears to be just like Captain Hero, except that he wears glasses. Xandir is certain that Tim is actually Hero himself playing some kind of game with him. However, when Xandir realizes that Tim is much nicer than Captain Hero, and more sensitive and open-minded, a romance begins to blossom between the two. Xandir decides that Tim is actually Hero's homosexual side which Captain Hero is in denial about. Xandir tries to encourage Tim to be open about who he is, and to tell Hero about how he feels. Tim tries, but Captain Hero proceeds to get extremely violent when the topic is addressed. Finally, Tim tells Xandir that the only way to reconcile the situation is to shoot Captain Hero; this will symbolically kill off the Captain Hero the world knows, and allow the true person, Tim, to take over. Xandir walks into Hero's room, sees Hero standing in the shadows, and shoots him. Unfortunately, he does not realize until it is too late that it was actually Tim he shot. Hero/Tim then tells Xandir that since it was Tim that was killed, this must mean that Hero isn't gay after all. Xandir gets fed up with the whole charade and leaves.

Meanwhile, the other housemates watch the conclusion of a show featuring a flying British kangaroo, and they all agree it was terrible. If only, they sigh, there was some way to know ahead of time what TV shows are worth watching. The answer to their prayers then comes wafting down the chimney: an issue of Entertainment Weekly. They are as excited as kids in a candy store as they flip through the pages; that is, until they come across the magazine's review of Drawn Together. EW declares that the show is disgusting and offensive and just basically worthless, and gives it a letter grade of "F". Everyone is devastated except Spanky, who continues with his disgusting fart jokes, figuring that Entertainment Weekly just doesn't know what they're talking about. However, he reads some of their other reviews, and finding them to be fairly accurate, he comes to the horrible realization that EW is right. Spanky blames himself and his toilet humor for dragging the show down, and leaves the house. He goes back to his old life in the suburbs, which includes a wife and child, and gets a regular 9 to 5 job as a hostage crisis negotiator.

Spanky misses being on Drawn Together, however. Then one day at a hostage situation, a cop pulls his finger, causing him to fart and making everyone laugh; the cops realize that Spanky is the pig from Drawn Together and tell him how great they think he is. Spanky realizes that despite what Entertainment Weekly said, a lot of people still love his toilet humor. Having been given new reason for being, he returns triumphantly to the Drawn Together house and convinces the housemates that the time has come for taking action, so the group pays a visit to the EW offices. While the rest of the group cause general chaos in the office, mostly by murdering the employees, Spanky searches for the person who wrote the review. When he finds them, he immediately realizes why they gave the show such a bad review: the TV critic is a Jewish conservative pro-life born again overweight Asian (Indian) homophobic lesbian broad who cuts herself—in short, everything the show makes fun of every week. Spanky doesn't succeed in getting the critic to change her mind about the show, but he does realize that since she's not the kind of person they're making the show for, the bad review isn't so bad, and accepts that one person's opinion isn't necessarily indicative of the show's actual worth. The critic, wanting to be constructive, tells Spanky that one of Drawn Together's biggest problems is that they never know how to end the show. Spanky dismisses this notion, then hitches a ride to the rodeo with the flying kangaroo whom the housemates had mocked earlier in the episode. Back in the Drawn Together house, the housemates watch the ending of the program. Foxxy declares that it was really terrible, and Spanky farts in agreement.

Musical number: "Morning Train", which accompanies a montage of Spanky's new life in the suburbs. The song was originally sung by Sheena Easton, but here it is performed by the episode's guest star Jimmy Kimmel.

[edit] Notes and inside references

  • As the creators mention in the DVD commentary for "The One Wherein There Is a Big Twist", Entertainment Weekly actually did give the show the rating of "F". In fact, the review shown is the actual review EW originally gave the pilot episode. Once the plot of this episode became known to EW, they took the opportunity to review the show again. Not surprisingly, they ended up giving this episode an "F" as well.
    • The actual text of the original review in EW reads as follows:
      "Drawn Together (Comedy Central, TV-MA) It's what happens when women call each other nasty names or rappers drop the N-word like spare change: Everyone starts to think it's ok. Taking offensiveness to new levels, Drawn Together uses the Surreal Life conceit of B-list celebs thrown into a house, but with Z-level cartoon characters. Sample dialogue: "Nothing reminds me of my first time like a chick crying." Sample Scene: A vote to keep the black girl in the house devolves into a mock slave auction. This is TV that's so bad, it's bad for you, and more appropriately belongs in What Not to Watch. F."
    • The text of the review EW wrote in response to this episode reads as follows:
      "Drawn Together (Comedy Central, TV-MA) When Tonight's Best TV overlord Alynda Wheat reviewed this bawdy cartoon series in 2004, she gave it an F. For fun! (Or... funless? I can't recall.) Apparently, this grade wedgie snagged the attention of the Drawn scribes; this week, the gang wreaks bloody revenge on EW after reading the aforementioned critique. (What's most shocking is not the grisly body count but that the show's animators think we actually wear suits to work.) Based on Spanky Ham's uncorking of a (precisely) 60-second fart, we could award this episode an A. But we don't want that first F getting lonely, so here's another one. F."
  • The line, "Grapes are fun!" was originally spoken by Xandir in "Hot Tub." The clip played from that episode, which features Xandir saying the line while Ling-Ling is in the background playing with Xandir's sword, was originally shown in black and white as part of a flashback sequence, but here, the clip appears in normal color and shown in the opposite direction.
    Clara copes with the shock.
    Clara copes with the shock.
  • When we first see her after the shock from the bad review has taken effect, Princess Clara is barefoot, clad in a ragged dress made from sack cloth, and kneeling while reciting the Lord's Prayer. In this instance, she is practicing a medieval form of penance, furthering the notion that she is Roman Catholic. Wooldoor is nude and flagellating himself, practicing a more extreme version of this same practice.
    • Also in this scene, Toot repeatedly stabs a knife between her fingers, a feat frequently attempted by characters in movies to show either courage or manual dexterity, but instead of a table, Toot's hand rests upon her own leg, resulting in another instance of self-mutilation on her part. Foxxy dons a long veil and chants "Entertainment Weekly" over and over in a quasi-hypnotic trance, while Ling-Ling prepares to commit seppuku again.
  • Spanky, already a confirmed Muslim, makes an interesting reference to "Allah Herself!" (grammatically speaking, though, the -ah sound usually represents the feminine in Arabic). Islam actually considers Allah to be genderless, but as the Arabic language contains no gender-free pronouns, Allah is usually referred to in the masculine.
  • Spanky first calls his son Todd, and his wife corrects him, saying the child is named Randy. Later he calls the same child Randy, but is told his name is Todd.
  • When Xandir and Tim retreat to the bedroom, fireworks appear in the sky that take the shape of a pink triangle and a rainbow flag, two prominent symbols for gay pride. The fireworks then form the Greek letters ΣΦΔ (Sigma Phi Delta), the initials of an engineering fraternity; the reason is not clearly indicated.
  • When Spanky first encounters the EW critic, he refers to her as "Asian", among many other things. The second time he refers to her, the word "Asian" is changed to "Indian", and a red dot suddenly appears on her forehead. The pocketknife stuck in the EW critic's thigh also appears and disappears between shots.
  • Spanky's wife in this episode is voiced by Jimmy Kimmel. Kimmel and Adam Carolla (who voices Spanky on Drawn Together) are best friends in real life, and have done numerous works together including The Man Show and Crank Yankers.
    • This is the second time Kimmel voiced a guest character opposite Carolla's usual role. The first time was in the Family Guy episode "Mr. Saturday Knight", when he portrayed the Death Dog, alongside Carolla's more frequent role as Death.
    • Jimmy Kimmel is also the older brother of former Drawn Together writer Jonathan Kimmel.
  • In a running gag in this episode, whenever Xandir speaks about homosexual love, the scene cuts to the confessional chair with Xandir saying, "Right, Craig?", seemingly indicating a former lover of Xandir's who would not come out of the closet. Craig would be mentioned again in the Season Three episode "Unrestrainable Trainable".
  • There are two gags in this episode referring to the closet as a metaphor for being open or quiet about one's sexuality. After Spanky convinces everyone that the show's humor is worth defending despite its questionable taste, several of the housemates proudly proclaim "stereotypes" as something to defend, and then proceed to immediately embody their personal stereotype. Xandir, the show's gay stereotype, delivers his line while literally stepping out of the closet. In another scene, when Tim tells Xandir that Hero is sending him off for good, he is literally walking into a closet.
  • When Tim tells Xandir that he must shoot Captain Hero, he opens a case holding a revolver and several bullets. However, when Xandir actually performs the deed, he uses an automatic.
  • Xandir states that shooting Captain Hero will only serve as a symbolic gesture since, as everyone knows, superheroes are impervious to bullets. However, this didn't seem to help Captain Hero during Bob the Cucumber's shooting spree in "Clum Babies."
  • EW is currently owned by Time Warner, which once owned a 50% stake in Comedy Central.

[edit] Animated cameos

  • The characters involved in hostage situations include Pluto and Goofy of Walt Disney fame, and the family from The Family Circus.
    • Pluto holds a gun to Goofy's head and demands to be allowed to be the one to wear the pants.
    • Little Billy of The Family Circus goes on a killing spree complete with a dotted line marking his path of destruction, one of the trademarks of that comic strip.
    • In both situations, the hostage crisis ends in tragedy, with the hostages dead and the killer taking his own life.
  • In the background of the Goofy/Pluto scene, Elmer Fudd and a Sockbat can be seen.
  • During the massacre at Entertainment Weekly, a primitive trap brings out Ewoks, who used a similar attack in Return of the Jedi. The Ewoks here are similar in design to how they appeared in the 1980s animated series Star Wars: Ewoks.
  • The character Dilbert is found as a victim of the massacre.

[edit] Cultural references

  • The title of this episode is a reference to an old children's rhyme in which two people thought to be in love are said to be "sitting in a tree, k-i-s-s-i-n-g."
  • The scene where Pluto holds Goofy hostage takes place in Toontown, Disney's attempt at an MMORPG. Just before the scene takes place, the newspapers on the subway have headlines reading "Toontown Tension", "Toontown Standoff", and "Toontown Terror". The house where the standoff takes place is modeled after the house players receive upon joining Toontown. It is also very similar to a house in the Toontown section of Disneyland.
  • The scene in which the copy of Entertainment Weekly comes gliding out of the chimney is a reference to the first Harry Potter film, including a parody of the musical score.
  • The Xandir and Tim/Hero story in this episode is a spoof of Brokeback Mountain. The background music heard during some of their scenes together is very similar to the movie's score. Xandir's line, "I wish I could quit you", is a variation on the film's most famous line, "I wish I knew how to quit you".
    • Comedy Central wanted to ensure that people knew this episode would be a parody of Brokeback Mountain, so in promotional ads for the episode, they interspersed scenes of the Xandir-Tim relationship with captions reading, "When their love goes for BROKE... there's no turning BACK".
  • The back cover of the Entertainment Weekly issue the housemates read shows an ad for an alcoholic beverage called Positiv, a pun on Absolut Vodka, a beverage frequently pictured in magazine ads. The magazine's front cover (which is not a real EW cover) features Paris Hilton.
The housemates in panic after EW's bad review.
The housemates in panic after EW's bad review.
  • When Spanky returns to the Drawn Together house, Foxxy climbs up the wall, twists her head back, hisses and says, "Sucker", mimicking the behavior of vampires.
  • The scene where the housemates trick out a green car in preparation for their commando mission at the Entertainment Weekly office is a reference to The A-Team. The music playing in the background during this scene is almost identical to The A-Team's theme music.
  • When Spanky scrutinizes the house of Family Circus through his binoculars, the word 'Redrum' is seen written on the mirror. This is s reference to the Stephen King's novel The Shining.
  • Captain Hero's aputation is a reference to a scene in the movie Mission: Impossible II, in which the antagonist punishes a flunky by cutting off a part of his index finger with a cigar cutter.
  • After Tim is "beaten up" by Captain Hero, Tim says, "Look away, I'm hideous." This is a reference to a scene in The Elephant Man in which John Hurt's character Joseph Merrick exclaims, "Don't look at me, I'm hideous." The large bulbous bruises on the side of Tim's face resemble a milder version of Merrick's facial deformities.
  • After the crew enters the EW building, Foxxy can be seen holding what looks like a Star Trek tricorder in her hand as the group scans the office. This marks the second appearance of a tricorder on the show, following Wooldoor's usage of one in "Terms of Endearment".
  • When Spanky describes the EW critic as a homophobic lesbian, a photograph is shown of the critic embracing her partner and holding a sign which reads, "God Hate Fags". This is a reference to homophobic followers of the Reverend Fred Phelps of Westboro Baptist Church, who openly protests at known gay-related events holding homophobic banners and signs.
Preceded by
A Tale of Two Cows
Xandir and Tim, Sitting in a Tree
February 15, 2006
Succeeded by
The Lemon-AIDS Walk


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