The adventures of a late-20th-century New York City pizza delivery boy, Philip J. Fry, who, after being unwittingly cryogenically frozen for one thousand years, finds employment at Planet Express, an interplanetary delivery company in the retro-futuristic 31st century.
The best episode of "Futurama" season 6 is "Rebirth", rated 7.8/10 from 814 user votes. It was directed by Frank Marino and written by Matt Groening, David X. Cohen. "Rebirth" aired on 6/24/2010 and is rated 0.0 point(s) higher than the second highest rated, "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela".
After a devastating spaceship crash, Professor Farnsworth attempts to resuscitate the crew with his birth machine.
Director: Frank Marino
Writer: Matt Groening, David X. Cohen
Leela and Zapp Brannigan find themselves stranded on an Eden-like planet.
Director: Dwayne Carey-Hill
Writer: Matt Groening, Carolyn Premish
The latest trend in social networking and having no life takes over Earth!
Director: Stephen Sandoval
Writer: Patric M. Verrone
Bender leads a campaign to make robosexual marriage between humans and robots legal on Earth.
Director: Crystal Chesney
Writer: Michael Rowe
The Planet Express crew races to future Rome to unearth the shocking secret of Leonardo da Vinci.
Director: Raymie Muzquiz
Writer: Maiya Williams
Bender learns that he suffers from a mortal manufacturing defect.
Director: Ray Claffey
Writer: Eric Horsted
The Professor invents a one-way time machine. He, Fry and Bender go forward 1,000 years accidentally, and keep traveling forward in time until a backwards time machine has been invented.
Director: Peter Avanzino, Ira Sherak
Writer: Lew Morton, Ken Keeler
Earth is invaded by a race of intelligent cats.
Director: Frank Marino
Writer: Josh Weinstein
The theory of evolution is put to the test on a planet inhabited by robots.
Director: Dwayne Carey-Hill
Writer: Dan Vebber
A revolutionary invention allows the crew members to exchange minds.
Director: Stephen Sandoval
Writer: Ken Keeler
After a bungled Earth invasion, alien leader Lrrr faces a midlife crisis.
Director: Crystal Chesney
Writer: Patric M. Verrone
Leela leads an army of underground mutants in a rebellion against the surface people.
Director: Raymie Muzquiz
Writer: Eric Horsted
An episode describing the three winter holidays of the future: X-Mas, Robonica, and Kwanzaa.
Director: Ray Claffey
Writer: Michael Rowe
An alien who does not understand the concept of gender conducts experiments on the crew, changing all their genders.
Director: Edmund Fong
Writer: J. Stewart Burns
Bender creates duplicates of himself, who in turn create duplicates of themselves, until they threaten to consume all of the matter on Earth.
Director: Crystal Chesney
Writer: Aaron Ehasz
Fed up with the crew, Bender decides to kill himself using a suicide booth. After he dies, his software takes on a ghostly existence.
Director: Ray Claffey
Writer: Patric M. Verrone
Fed up with his go-nowhere job, Fry joins the police force.
Director: Stephen Sandoval
Writer: Josh Weinstein
Bender enters a witness-protection program after testifying against the Robot Mafia.
Director: Frank Marino
Writer: Eric Rogers
Leela becomes a Hollywood Big Shot after creating a hit children's television series.
Director: Frank Marino
Writer: Eric Horsted
Professor Farnsworth licks George Washington's head and it sends him on a trip to the Revolutionary War.
Director: Stephen Sandoval
Writer: Josh Weinstein
While traveling through the Bermuda Tetrahedron, the crew encounters a giant 4-dimensional space whale.
Director: Dwayne Carey-Hill
Writer: Dan Vebber
Fry nurtures an alien egg out of which hatches a monster.
Director: Dwayne Carey-Hill
Writer: Michael Rowe
The crew learns shocking secrets of how Professor Farnsworth and Dr. Zoidberg met.
Director: Raymie Muzquiz
Writer: Ken Keeler
Fry inadvertently reintroduces the common cold to the 31st century.
Director: Crystal Chesney
Writer: Dan Vebber
Bender is overclocked, gradually becoming more powerful in computing ability, until eventually becoming omniscient and able to foresee events in the future.
Director: Raymie Muzquiz
Writer: Ken Keeler