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"Brain Grub" is the 16th episode of Season 1 of Chowder and the 32nd episode overall. It aired on June 26, 2008.
Synopsis[]
Mung attempts to cure Chowder's constant scatterbrained behavior. But it could spell disaster for the kitchen!
Plot[]
Mung thinks Chowder needs something to make him not so scatterbrained, so he makes some Brain Grub. At first it goes well, but he becomes too smart and notices the fourth wall. Realising the world he's in is no more than a 'silly cartoon' filled with nonsensical and fake foods, Chowder proceeds to turn the entire show into Cooking Talk with Chowder, a boring intellectual show where Ms. Endive and Panini sing soft rock, Gazpacho is an accountant, and Kiwi sells used cars. Mung tells Chowder about all of this and how it even made the viewers cry, and Chowder realises the severity of his mistake. In an attempt to return the show to its former state, he pulls his now-oversized brain from his nose and smashes it with a hammer, sending everyone into a white void room with an on-off switch in the middle. Mung is glad to have his normal apprentice back, but Chowder wonders what the switch does and pulls it, cutting the cartoon to black abruptly.
Trivia[]
- In "The Hot Date," when being interrogated, Chowder mentions the events of this episode during one of many confessions.
- The song that Ms. Endive and Panini sing is a parody of John Denver's Leaving on a Jet Plane.
- Chowder is shown to survive the removal of his brain despite it being a vital organ that control his movement and actions, further reinforcing the cartoon world where logic does not apply.
Breaking down the fourth wall[]
- The largest and most notable fourth wall breakage in this episode was when Chowder grew so smart from the brain grub he had consumed that he realized that he, and everyone else, were in a television show. He then proceeded to turn it into a boring & educational cooking show.
- The other instances include:
- At some point in the episode, Mung states that an order is going to take a while and Truffles responds with "We've only got 11 minutes." This references the runtime of an average Chowder episode.
- After transforming the show, Mung tells Chowder that he's making the audience cry.
- The crying man in the scene following this is Peter Browngardt, a writer and storyboard artist for the show.[1]
References[]