Watch Beavis and Butthead - Drones Online S08E03 2011

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Drones

One pattern that remains consistent is Mike Judge saving his toothiest material for the back end. (Damnit.) "Drones" is an almost taxing 22 minutes of B And B, if that's possible, and bears fundamental similarities to Beavis And Butt-Head Do America. Once again, the guys wander off from their designated group and manage to nearly affect the safety and well-being of the American people. Only this time, it's less a goof on overanxious, Clinton-era watchdogs than a pretty bleak and vicious critique of superfluous war-mongering and dubious recruitment strategy.

The music video for Deadmou5 actually addressed what happened to Daria she moved. Yeah we all actually knew that but I think it indicates that the new episodes of B&B happened AFTER Daria moved and got her spinoff thus she won't be in the show, which honestly I don't know why people thought differently anyway as Daria completed her story and putting her back in B&B would just be character de-evolution, and who wants that? Did like Beavis's story espiecally him admitting that the guy would just say he made it up to other people.

To wit, the two literally misread a sign for the "Drone Control" room as "Drain Center" (i.e. the bathroom) and subsequently assume the training module is a live game of Grand Theft Auto. They tire soon enough, after Butt-Head sums up that, "Mine doesn't have any guns or bombs. This must be, like, the kids' version." Where were the actual trainees, you ask? Having birthday cake down the hall. Heavy, heady stuff, and closer to South Park satire, even if not likely to double viewers over.

Watch Beavis and Butthead - Drones Online


Beavis and Butthead S08E03/S08E04 - Drones

Not that "Drones" goes without a gut-buster or four. Butt-Head telling an officer that he needs to "pee all I can pee" is yet another notch in Judge and his writers' "How has no one else thought of that?" stuprofundity belt (yes, I've used this platform to create yet more fake verbiage). It's those kinds of asides that earn Beavis' admiration when, as they take in Benny Benassi's absurd "Satisfaction" video, he tells his fellow couch potato, "You're pretty funny Butt-Head." When Butt-Head earnestly answers, "Thank you," it's as close to a Hallmark moment as these two get, and exactly why it's a highlight exchange. It's as if, on occasion, they accidentally almost act civil.

Even Mr. Van Driessen gets transformed. In his previous incarnation, the peace-loving high school teacher represented dated flower-power idealism and was the imprint for great-but-goofy, kindred TV role players like Freaks and Geeks' Mr. Rosso. In "Drones," he's pretty much the voice of political reason but keeps meeting resistance when the class's Army guide speaks with chronic transparency about how he wishes education and military training went hand in glove, "but statistically, we find that juvenile delinquents make the best warriors." At that point, as if on cue, one of Beavis and Butt-Head's drone planes nearly clips everyone's heads while whizzing by. (Speaking of chronic speech tendencies....)
butthead
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