King of the Hill Hank Goes to Art Gallery

Ceci Due north'est Pas Une Rex of the Hill is the i hundred-50-eighth episode of Rex of the Colina. Information technology was kickoff aired on January 25, 2004. The episode was written by Etan Cohen, and directed past Tricia Garcia.

Peggy Hill Art Fag01.jpg

Synopsis

When Hank asks Peggy to pattern an fine art piece for Strickland Propane, she creates the "Probot," a statue made out of propane tanks. Her sculpture is rejected past the city board, only picked up by an fine art dealer from Dallas. Unfortunately, Peggy finds out that the dealer presents her to the public as an uneducated hillbilly. Meanwhile, Dale starts wearing a suit of armor and uses his newfound invincibility to insult people without consequences.

Buck Strickland drunkenly crashes into Hank's lawn to tell Hank that the Zoning Board has approved of their unprecedentedly big storage lot. Nonetheless in exchange for turning part of Arlen into a storage lot Buck is charged with "beautifying" another role by adding a piece of public art. He tasks Hank with finding the artwork, and after several trips to baroque art galleries, Hank is at a loss of who to go to for his art. Peggy volunteers to make a piece, and constructs a statue out of propane tanks called the "Pro-Bot." At the unveiling of the Pro-Bot even so the Zoning Board learns that Peggy is not a professional artist and demands Buck find a proven artist to brand a genuine slice of art. Hank informs Peggy that an art-dealer from Dallas, a man named Jazz, is coming to Arlen to assist find a slice of art for Strickland. On his way into Arlen, Jazz sees Peggy's Pro-Bot and is immediately taken by it. He finds Peggy Hill and asks to hear her life story, including her childhood in rural Montana. After hearing information technology he asks her to put on an art prove in Dallas, and she agrees to brand numerous other "Pro-Bots."

At the fine art show at Jazz's art gallery Peggy is excited to exist treated as a 18-carat artist but is heartbroken to acquire that her art is being advertised as being created by a kid-like idiot, with her life story being switched to her being an angry, inbred hillbilly who left Montana immature to get a child-bride for a simple laborer. She is further crushed when she learns that the Art Prove is also featuring art from Arlen crazy Jimmy Wichard, who is introduced as the "only person who could be called Peggy'south peer."

Upon seeing how lamentable Peggy is at this development, Hank angrily confronts Jazz and demands he sells her art honestly. Jazz withal claims that Peggy'southward statues aren't good enough to be sold without her fake tragic backstory, and that without it he can't sell her Pro-Bots. Angry at this, Hank confiscates the remaining Pro-Bots at the art gallery and moves Peggy's original Pro-Bot dorsum to their firm. Upon seeing the original Pro-Bot nevertheless Peggy demands Hank destroy information technology. Hank initially protests but relents and takes Peggy and the Pro-Bot to Strickland, where the tools that can be used to destroy the Pro-Bot are held. As she is about to destroy it however she is approached by a crowd of Strickland customers, who mistakenly believe she is building a new Pro-Bot. The crowd confesses that they loved the Pro-Bot and begin request Peggy if she could build them personalized Pro-Bots. Peggy realizes that while her Pro-Bots may not have been skillful to high-form fine art critics they are adept to the regular citizens of Arlen. Hank tells the crowd to wait while Peggy gets something to write down their orders, referring to her equally "the creative person", much to Peggy's delight.

Meanwhile in the aisle Dale buys a genuine arrange of medieval armor, rendering him allowed to whatsoever attacks with weapons or fists. Afterward using his newfound invincibility to take revenge on former bullies too as to pick (and win) fights with others, Dale begins to abuse his newfound power, bullying numerous other residents of the aisle and even shoving a child off his bike. Upon seeing this Bill constructs a bootleg suit of armor and challenges Dale. In a brief and rather anti-climactic fight Bill successfully defeats Dale by shoving him over (Dale being unable to get upwards do to the weight of the armor.) He then returns the bike to the kid, having ended Dale'southward tyrannical reign.

Characters

  • Hank Loma
  • Peggy Hill
  • Bobby Hill
  • Dale Gribble
  • Bill Dauterive
  • Jeff Boomhauer
  • Jazz Colton
  • Jimmy Wichard
  • Cadet Strickland
  • Margo
  • Minh Souphanousinphone

Stinger Quote

  • MacMaynerberry Artist: "Washington. Hitler. Washington. Hitler."

Notes

  • The episode championship is a reference to the surrealist painting "La trahison des images" ["The treachery of images"] by Renee Magritte (1898-1967), consisting of a painting of a man's piping with the caption "Ceci north'est pas une pipe" or "This is not a pipe." Equally Magritte said of information technology, "The famous pipe. How people reproached me for information technology! And even so, could yous stuff my pipe? No, it's merely a representation, is it not?" In brusk, it'southward a painting, information technology'due south non a piping. The phrase "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" is considered to be a manifesto of modern art and its nonrepresentational nature.

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Source: https://kingofthehill.fandom.com/wiki/Ceci_N%27est_Pas_Une_King_of_the_Hill

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