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» » Рик и Морти Raising Gazorpazorp (2013– )

Short summary

Morty becomes a father to an alien baby, while Rick and Summer get trapped in a dangerous dimension.

Morty Jr does a reenactment of the scene of Kevin Bacon from Footloose [1984].

The giant stone head that rains sex robots is a reference to the cult science fiction show "Zardoz" (1974) starring Sean Connery and written and directed by John Boorman.

Claudia Black and Virginia Hey also worked together on Farscape (1999).

The phrase "droppin' loads," spoken by the floating head is a reference to adult film star Nick Manning's extremely prolific use of the phrase.

Summer's line "If you think my top is cute, you can not execute." is a reference to the quote from the O.J. Simpson murder trials: "If it doesn't fit, you must acquit."

Rick et Morty: Raising Gazorpazorp (2014)is an homage to Zardoz (1974), the floating head is directly from the movie. This has been confirmed by Dan Harmon, the creator.

Raising Gazorpazorp takes its title and plot also from the show "Raising Hope" which has a teenager whom gets a girl pregnant and tries raising it the best he can.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Windbearer
    The first Rick and Summer adventure, and this is considered to be the "second worst" episode? OK then. Beside showing the standards of the series for being the second lowest rated part with an 8,2 average, I can't help the feeling that this one was downvoted for the seemingly misogynist jokes. However, as with nearly every episodes, this one also touches serious issues under the surface. Gender roles, teen pregnancy, taking the responsibility and what role model you give for your kids, and that men and women are equally needed to form a healthy society. Beside, the episode is full of with hilarious moments, as usual, and you can bear witness to the very first Summer+Rick adventure throughout the series.
  • comment
    • Author: Anicasalar
    This episode is horrible in almost every single way. It does the straw feminist utopia plot from KND's FUTURE all wrong! It's supposed to be okay that Morty lies to Morty Junior about the air being poison because all male Gazorpians are destructive beasts. Rick is even worse because he shames Summer for being a girl when male Gazorpians almost rape her. Female Gazorpians are only a little better. They're just women stereotypes because Gazorpazorp is a horrible planet of sexist stereotypes. The episode tries to give us social commentary of gender inequality on Earth at one point, but it fails to go anywhere.

    Rick and Morty needs to make better episodes after Rick Potion #9 and it's off to a terrible start here. After that previous episode where Morty's love potion made everyone but his family try to rape him, THIS episode starts with Morty having a Gazorpian baby with a sex robot. The female Gazorpians give silent treatment to women who wear bad bangs because female stereotypes, but they sentence Rick to death by boulder for farting in public like they never do that themselves. Summer's attempt to save Rick and make the Gazorpians realize they're hypocrites for liking her top made by a guy only tells me that gender separation, like Gazorpazorp does, is only okay when you follow every gender stereotype just to make one infinitely better than the other by comparison only.

    I have no doubt in my mind that this is the 3rd worst episode of Rick and Morty, and Vindicators 3 is the 2nd worst while Rick Potion #9 is the 1st worst, and that's just 1/10 of all Rick and Morty episodes excluding the pilot. Can we please get longer, sooner Rick and Morty seasons when they get writers who know what they're doing so they can do the right thing? This episode tries to be insightful and entertaining, but it fails to do anything for me and it's only somewhat funnier than Rick Potion #9 and Vindicators 3. This episode really ruins Rick's character more than Ricksy Business ever did, yet I still agree with his opinion about epiphanies of gender politics at the end because Summer was almost as much of a jerk, playing into female stereotypes just so the female Gazorpians would like her.

    Do you know what the saddest part about this episode is? It's that men wrote it. Men who are so insecure about themselves that they think it's right to make women superior to the point of seeing farts as a deathly offense. I don't want to see another Rick and Summer adventure until Something Ricked This Way Comes. Why do you give Rick and Morty more praise than it deserves, even for the bad things that it does when you hated how Family Guy made the exact same mistakes as Rick Potion #9 in Seahorse Seashell Party?
  • comment
    • Author: Barit
    This episode portrays a marvellous absurd caricature of genders & talks a whole lot about education and influences to the young - and makes a wonderful satire of it
  • Episode complete credited cast:
    Justin Roiland Justin Roiland - Rick Sanchez / Morty Smith (voice)
    Chris Parnell Chris Parnell - Jerry Smith (voice)
    Spencer Grammer Spencer Grammer - Summer Smith (voice)
    Sarah Chalke Sarah Chalke - Beth Smith / Gazorpian (voice)
    Claudia Black Claudia Black - Ma-Sha (voice)
    Richard Christy Richard Christy - Zardoz Head / Teenager Morty Jr. (voice)
    Virginia Hey Virginia Hey - Gazorpian (voice)
    Megan Elizabeth Adams Megan Elizabeth Adams - Criminal #2 / Assembly Line Worker (voice) (as Megan Adams)
    Jackie Buscarino Jackie Buscarino - Criminal #1 (voice)
    Will Jennings Will Jennings - Child Morty Jr. (voice)
    Tom Kenny Tom Kenny - Pawnshop Clerk (voice)
    Maurice LaMarche Maurice LaMarche - Brad Anderson / Adult Morty Jr. (voice)
    Finnegan Perry Finnegan Perry - Baby Morty Jr. (voice)
    Kari Wahlgren Kari Wahlgren - Gazorpian Judge (voice)
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