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The luck of the Irish meets the bad luck of Bob's Burgers

TV Reviews Bob's Burgers
The luck of the Irish meets the bad luck of Bob's Burgers
Image: Fox

The static nature of a cartoon universe means that Bob’s Burgers will always be on the brink of disaster. If Bob’s Burgers the restaurant is ever permanently forced to close down, or somehow becomes a mainstream success, then Bob’s Burgers the show completely ceases to be what it once was. Either you’d see Bob as a failed restauranteur trying to launch a new business every week (5 Broke Belchers?) or Bob trying not to let success spoil his high standards and general decency (The Belchers: Movin’ On Up?). And so the Belcher family are caught in an eternal Sisyphean loop, pushing that burger up the hill every week and watching it roll down.

It’d be a tragedy if Bob’s Burgers wasn’t so good at plugging an optimistic spirit into that crusade, each new endeavor shot through with a steadfast belief that this one could be what turns things around. Even in “Flat Top O’ The Morning To Ya,” an episode that’s about the fate that could befall them in a worst-case scenario, the energy is still less around the failure than it is making lemonade from lemons. Or barbecue sauce from powdered orange drink mix, such as it is.

While St. Patrick’s Day festivities are distracting most of the town, for Bob and the kids it’s business as usual. And there’s no business like “going out of business,” with a recent BBQ restaurant closure offering the chance for Bob to pick up some reasonably priced supplies. While hunting for bargains, it doesn’t take long to Louise to spot something else—a tag on a fake mustache being worn by the restaurant’s former owner Jules Beachum. Voiced by the always welcome Richard Kind, Jules is the exact sort of weirdo Bob’s Burgers excels at depicting, the ones who don’t even let the most practical obstacles get in their way. It doesn’t matter that he’s got no real plan, natural talent, or even a fake mustache that will stay on his face, he’s going to achieve his goal.

The goal in question is to hang onto one piece of his family’s history, the restaurant’s flattop grill. It’s one of those Bob’s Burgers plots where the family isn’t the instigator in the trouble but they’re more than happy to throw themselves into it, and if anything the lower stakes make them even more invested. Louise in particular is in fine form this week, thrilled to get in on a caper that she can technically classify as a bank robbery. She’s so excited she’s literally bouncing in place—an adorable bit of animation—and literally has to shush herself when the caper gets underway. Gene’s happy to be part of anything where he doesn’t have to work too hard and can just sit down and navigate, and while Tina puts up some token resistance (“We can’t steal the flattop, that’s stealing”) it quickly gives way to her natural empathy once she draws the parallels between Jules and her father.

Tina can see the parallels, but “Flat Top O’ The Morning To Ya” is less effective in connecting this crusade to Bob’s own personal doubts. It’s all the more glaring given that one of the things we still have yet to understand about Bob is how much kinship he feels with other restaurant owners that aren’t named Jimmy Pesto. His prior interactions with his peers are limited (though similarly chaotic) and there’s no real instances of him sticking up for or being threatened by them. Instead of exploring that interaction, we just get his normal wet blanket nature at even wetter levels, only participating in the scheme via inertia and not having a good time at any point of it. It even costs him the plates he had his eye on, plates he could have saved twenty bucks on and now can only whimper as he loses. It feels like the most Bob Belcherian defeat you can possibly concoct.

What’s the most bothersome about it is that it misses an real opportunity to take things to the next level for Bob. After being trapped in the spice closet, Jules finally admits that the restaurant failed because he let the quality sag, and caring about and perfecting the barbecue flavor was more his dad’s thing. (He’s really more of a beekeeper, especially now that he knows you can’t mash dead bees together and get honey. Seriously, this guy is a perfect Bob’s Burgers supporting player.) That feels tailor-made for Bob to really connect with the failure of Jules’s restaurant on a personal level, especially given how little it takes for his own kids to stop paying attention to the restaurant and what must be his fear that no one will pick up the spatula once he’s done. Instead, the focuses on Bob’s own general fear of failure, where despite being conveyed through song the import is deflated by constant interruptions of the kids and their acknowledgment that they know about those fears. Gene puts it best: “We know about the secret failure dungeon in your butt.”

“Flat Top O’ The Morning To Ya” does recover some steam once they get out of the spice closet. Bob’s able to work up as motivated a sales pitch as he can—albeit one where he can’t stop himself from nitpicking the grill’s cleanliness—and Jules ruins what little momentum he gets from that speech by pushing the grill out the door and sending it to collide with his car. Yet that damage leads to a happy ending for all parties, the resale value ruined enough that an aspiring restauranteur is able to purchase it for his waffle cone/cheesesteak fusion restaurant Yummy Yummy Cheesy Beefs. (Tina: “That place sounds perfect.”) Again, Bob’s Burgers’s soft spot for its damaged goods makes up for a lot.

Bob decides he’ll just tell Linda the plates were haunted, but he shouldn’t have any fear about telling his wife about his bad decisions, because she’s making plenty of them herself. This week’s b-plot is a natural outgrowth of what happens when you leave Linda and Teddy alone without adult supervision in the restaurant, and when you happen to do so on a holiday where alcohol is involved. It’s surprising that this is the first Bob’s Burgers St. Patrick’s Day episode given how the holiday is defined by chaos and drunkenness, two regular menu items on the show and ones that many other shows thrived on.

“Flat Top O’ The Morning To Ya” thankfully doesn’t go overboard on the presentation, instead using the holiday’s excess to feed Linda’s natural attitude of “more is more” once she’s free of Bob’s edict on keeping the holiday out of things. Drunk on the power to dye beer green—and the green beer itself—and realizing there’s nothing stopping her from applying that to the rest of the food in the restaurant. In the natural escalation of things, she winds up dying all of their available hamburger meat too late to realize that a green hamburger patty winds up looking disgusting. It’s the sort of casual “slow day at work” plot that feels like it grew out of John Roberts and Larry Murphy riffing in the room, backing themselves into a corner at the end of it. (The pot of gold medal goes to Teddy’s suggestion that they say the hamburgers are made from ground-up leprechauns. I can’t even imagine that Burger of the Day pun.)

It even gives Bob something of a happy ending, despite his aversion to doing anything at all for the holiday. Linda’s long shot plan to give out the free samples turns her into a tipsy Pied Piper, leading a whole St. Patrick’s Day crowd over to the restaurant and give them an unexpected windfall. It’s a strange outcome but also the sort of thing you’d never see at Beachum BBQ, and an explanation as to why Bob’s Burgers can plausibly keep the restaurant teetering on the edge of failure. At the end of the day, it’s always going to be just crazy enough to work.


Stray observations:

  • Burger of the Week: The Happy Paint Paddy’s Day Burger (whiskey brushed patty)
  • Store Next Door: Let’s Talk About Ex, Baby: Divorce Counseling.
  • Pest Control Truck: Bugshead Re-Squisheted Pest Control.
  • In another welcome bit of casting, Andy Daly returns to the show as the auctioneer. I’d love to have heard him give more of an auction fast patter—and to share some tips with Gene given his early interest in the profession—but the slightly beaten-down quality of his character has its own comedy gold. “Do I hear $10? Pretty please? That’s an auctioning term.”
  • Bob might secretly fear none of his kids will follow in his footsteps, but let’s be honest: we all know that adult Louise is going to take the restaurant over and figure out how to franchise it in six states, while her husband Regular Sized Rudy meekly but happily does her bidding. That’s my head canon at least and you should respect it.
  • Teddy’s suggestions for days they can dye the meat green: Arbor Day, Labor Day, Green Day Day.
  • Gene has a foolproof plan to steal Jules’s whisk. “That’d just be like ‘plop,’ down the pants. And if anyone asks ‘Is that a whisk in your pants,’ we’d say ‘That’s my weiner, sir!’ And we’d tip our cap and off we go.”
  • Really, all Gene’s lines are great this week. “No slot-shaming!” “Laps are the plates of the body.” “This one’s either paprika or dog.” “And why does it look like a Shrek exploded in here?”
  • “You gonna join me, or am I celebrating alone like a sad person?”
  • Louise: “Dad, you’re so good at touching strangers.” Bob: “I feel alive, or something.”

37 Comments

  • jeffreyyourpizzaisready-av says:

    we all know that adult Louise is going to take the restaurant over and figure out how to franchise it in six statesWell, either that or burn it to the ground for the insurance money.  I’m about 50/50 on that.

    • toddisok-av says:

      But you’re all in on her being with Regular Size Rudy, right?

      • systemmastert-av says:

        Much like how everyone you or I know married a person they were in fourth grade with, of course.

        • toddisok-av says:

          It’s a cartoon you fucking moron. Grow the motherfuck up.

          • systemmastert-av says:

            I did, and I married my fourth grade sweetheart!  I dunno why you’re being so hostile, maybe you should go have a talk with the first person you ever kissed and are now married to, get calmed down a little.

          • toddisok-av says:

            Ew, I didn’t marry her! Seriously wtf is wrong with you?

          • systemmastert-av says:

            Me?  Nothing, I followed societal dictates and fell in love with the first person I ever haltingly dated.  You know, like you’re supposed to! 

          • toddisok-av says:

            Actually, a guy from my high school class married the chick he started dating freshman year. If the social media are to believed, they’re still together. But, still, that’s gotta be a minority.

          • mikevago-av says:

            Well that escalated quickly!

          • toddisok-av says:

            I’m feeling much better now.

        • mikevago-av says:

          I went to Hogwarts, so, yes, that sounds legit.

      • smittywerbenjagermanjensen22-av says:

        By talking about this, you’re embarrassing Louise in front of Rudy! Which is hard to do! 

    • umbrielx-av says:

      Insurance fraud of the week is a dicey premise for an animated comedy series, but this cast might sell it.

  • toddisok-av says:

    You have a head cannon? That’s awesome!

  • FredtheSavage-av says:

    Surprised to read that you think we never get to see Bob’s sense of kinship to his peers when the link you provided goes to Season 9’s “Roamin’ Bob-iday,” in which he completely identifies with, and works alongside, Tiffany Haddish’s sandwich shop owner — and then warns her against making the restaurant her be-all and end-all. Let’s not forget, too, “Secret Admiral-irer” in Season 6, in which a couple of chefs admire Bob’s burger creations so much they take him into their little clique that goes out drinking and partying until the wee hours every single night, much to Bob’s delight (until he can’t keep up anymore). And there’s also the ep called “Uncle Teddy” in Season 4 where we learn that Bob has been eagerly participating in an online North Atlantic Burger Lovers discussion group but has been doing it all wrong. As we learned a long time ago, Bob is an artist, not a businessman, and relates well to peers who approach food-prep the way he does — with a sense of artistry and selfless dedication (and some truly painful puns).   
     

    • whoiswillo-av says:

      Don’t forget about Skip! 

    • lydiahosek-av says:

      “As we learned a long time ago, Bob is an artist, not a businessman, and
      relates well to peers who approach food-prep the way he does — with a
      sense of artistry and selfless dedication (and some truly painful puns).”See also his criticism of the restaurateurs in “Moody Foodie” who don’t bother using quality ingredients.

  • miss-tina-av says:

    Loved the continuity of Linda and Teddy’s mouths remaining green. It takes a LOT of dye to turn that beef green! 

    • rtpoe-av says:

      “It takes a LOT of dye to turn that beef green!”Maybe I DON’T want to know how you know this…..(grin) 

    • mrwaldojeffers-av says:

      It takes a LOT of dye to turn that beef green!Title of the world’s worst sex tape.

  • pak-man-av says:

    I like that Linda’s St. Patrick’s Day craziness ended up paying off. Green burgers should absolutely be a failure, and the early seasons would have had them be a huge financial bust, Linda’s so earnest in the way she knows things are supposed to be, it’s nice to see that rewarded now and then. Really, that’s kind of an underlying theme in Bob’s Burgers. The Belchers are constantly standing up for the way things SHOULD be (But not the way they are, necessarily).

    • disqusdrew-av says:

      I get more invested in Bob’s potential failures than anyone should. It always bums me out a little bit when Bob comes out on the wrong end of things. The way both plots were trending it was looking like two big Ls for Bob again so it was nice to see Linda and Teddy’s trainwreck actually ended up paying off.

      • mikevago-av says:

        My 11-year-old loves the show, but he starts to get angry when it all goes wrong for Bob again. “Ugh. Why is Bob so dumb? I hate this show!”He basically has the same relationship to Bob’s that I have to Curb Your Enthusiasm. Half the episodes are someone else being a dick to Larry and him over-reacting, and I love those. The other half are Larry being a huge dick, and I find those hard to watch. My son feels that way about the episodes where everything goes wrong because of Bob, rather than despite him.

    • umbrielx-av says:

      That crowd’s going to need a lot of corned beef coffee to sober up.

    • Borkowskowitz-av says:

      Linda has good ideas, they just….take some time. And frequently a scenery change.It’s like a puzzle piece you have to turn. Like a dozen times, but it fits. It will fit.

  • umbrielx-av says:

    I’ll probably use the “My idea going once… twice… sold. Lets do my idea” line, but it would sound a lot more clever if I was actually an auctioneer.

  • disqusdrew-av says:

    Bob might secretly fear none of his kids will follow in his footsteps,
    but let’s be honest: we all know that adult Louise is going to take the
    restaurant over and figure out how to franchise it in six states, while
    her husband Regular Sized Rudy meekly but happily does her bidding.
    That’s my head canon at least and you should respect it.

    This fits neatly into my canon idea for when the show does end that the final moments are a montage with the show’s theme song playing showing everyone aging up, different life events, and the final shot is Grandpa Bob and Grandma Linda sitting at a family reunion dinner. Tina, Gene, and Louise are all there with their spouses (and Teddy too) and all the grandkids running around

  • julian9ehp-av says:

    Why isn’t this review on the front page?

  • cybersybil3-av says:

    This ep had me at “NO SLOT-SHAMING!”

  • americatheguy-av says:

    I am a strict adherent of Green Day Day. I celebrate by taking a Dookie on American Idiots and Nimrods.

    • mbond84-av says:

      Ok, this Warning Uno, Dos, and Tre about that kind of Shenanigans! You may think that you are the Father Of All , but you can just drop that Dookie in the toilet,Kerplunk! Dont need a complete 21st Century Breakdown, or a 1000 Hours to see how much of an American Idiot you are. Save that stuff for all the rest of the Nimrods and Insomniacs out there. Dont you know that Love Is For Losers?!

    • mbond84-av says:

      Damn. Thought i could work em all in lol

      • americatheguy-av says:

        That was almost Awesome as Fuck! Just about 39 shy of being completely Smoothed Out.Um, err… Revolution Radio!

  • dragonfly452-av says:

    The Bob’s Burgers Movie will be 1. They get super successful and have to scale it back to remember who they were for their family and community’s sake. There’s a ton of shoehorned songs. or 2. The business goes under and the Belchers have to find a way to get back into business. There’s a ton of shoehorned songs.

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