Un vendedor de propano de Arlen, Tejas, intenta ganarse la vida vendiendo las antigüedades de su familia y amigos mientras mantiene a su hijo a raya.Un vendedor de propano de Arlen, Tejas, intenta ganarse la vida vendiendo las antigüedades de su familia y amigos mientras mantiene a su hijo a raya.Un vendedor de propano de Arlen, Tejas, intenta ganarse la vida vendiendo las antigüedades de su familia y amigos mientras mantiene a su hijo a raya.
- Ganó 2 premios Primetime Emmy
- 13 premios y 56 nominaciones en total
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- CuriosidadesThe voice of Boomhauer was based on a message left on Mike Judge's telephone answering machine by an irate viewer of Beavis y Butt-Head (1993). The viewer mistook the show's name as "Porky's Butthole."
- PifiasIn the early episodes, Luanne clearly has automotive skills - she is seen repairing cars and even ordering Hank parts he needs to fix his truck at one point. From "Jumpin' Crack Bass" on she has little to no knowledge of cars.
- Créditos adicionalesThe beginning of the opening title sequence may play a slightly different opening sound depending upon the nature of the episode. For example, an episode where the Hills go to Mexico plays a distinctly Mexican guitar riff at the beginning, whereas the 100th episode had a bell ringing and a hooting sound on top of the other "normal" instrumentation.
- Versiones alternativasWhen Part II of the episode in which Peggy jumps out of a plane and ends up in a body cast aired in syndication, the following was removed: The scene where Bobby cuts G.H.'s umbilical cord, and the scene where Peggy offers to teach Bobby how to change a diaper.
- ConexionesFeatured in America's Teenagers Growing Up on Television (1998)
- Banda sonoraYahoos and Triangles
by The Refreshments
Reseña destacada
Very excellent prime-time animated series from the highly creative and brilliant mind of Mike Judge ("Beavis and Butt-Head" fame). "King of the Hill" deals with a small town Texas family and their wild misadventures. Shades of "The Flintstones" and "The Simpsons" here as the show has vivid characters galore. Propane salesman Hank Hill and substitute Spanish teacher wife Peggy rear awkward adolescent son Bobby in the fictional town of Arlen. Hank has a wild World War II hero for a dad (Cotton), a niece who lives with him and his family (Luanne), a far from perfect boss (Buck Strickland), a slew of childhood friends (conspiracy theorist/bug exterminator Dale, lonely divorcée/Army barber Bill and often verbally incoherent swinging bachelor Boomhauer) and even Laotian neighbors. These vivid characters create a wholesome landscape of small-town Texas community life that accurately shows how lives intertwine and interweave. The situations in the series are hilarious and yet many times life-affirming as the show's brain trust do their best to have messages that center around family, friends and personal sacrifice. The running gags (Dale's wife having a torrid affair with a Native American new age healer who actually conceived her only son while her husband has no earthly clue) and the constant humanity and vulnerability of the featured characters make "King of the Hill" a real sight to behold. The art and science of television production combine to make a truly outstanding and intelligent sitcom for most all age groups. 5 stars out of 5.
- tfrizzell
- 20 jun 2005
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What is the Japanese language plot outline for El rey de la colina (1997)?
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