FoxWithout doubt, the idea of a censorship satellite destroying planets for its inhabitants' indecency could be and (shoulve have been) a top-notch satire on TV policies. It promises infinite possibilities for mocking zealous, overreacting puritanism in media but unfortunately the episode fails to nail it. How did it go wrong? For unclear reasons, In A Gadda... shifted the focus on the weary Leela-Zapp love-hate relationship and relegated the aforementioned censorship plot to the second place. if anything, it's a safe play - nothing can spoil a good ol' situation where two stranded individuals work out their difference. Except when it was done a while ago in A Bicyclops Built for Two where the whole race restoration thingy was lifted from too. Add to that the new mankind progenitor is supposed to be Brannigan, and it makes the final revelation absolutely impossible to see unless it requires the audiences suffering from dehydration-induced delirium as well. Somewhere between these highly original sequences goes a potentially much more interesting plotline abruptly ending in a toothless jab at media executives via an off-screen copulation. Suffice to say the episode fell short of Bender Should Not Be Allowed on TV, a far better foray into TV meta territory. Not only Fry was left frustrated.