This may be a bit complicated.
Despite the introduction of John Redcorn, Peggy's struggles with shoe shopping, another flashback involving Cotton Hill's cruel behavior and a simple plotline, the episode seems rushed at the end.
Hank and the gang decides to take his son and his friends to an Order of The Straight Arrow meeting in which Hank's questionable parenting is first shown. Hank plays cruel pranks and tricks that leads to Bobby almost committing a federal crime by knocking out an endangered crane, Peggy's trek to a shoe store for women with plus sized feet seems interesting but yet strange, falling short of a joke and sometimes unnecessary even for a cartoon.
Bobby's devotion to making his father appreciate him during the trip is sometimes funny but also painful for anyone with parental issues, his obsession of the fictional creature the snipe and Weymetane ( something Hank quickly culture appropriates just for the trip from John Redcorn ) becomes funny at first but then annoying.
Dale's antics however steal the episode, from his mooning, his strange but hilarious lines, descriptions of the imaginary creature to scare the scouts and overt cowardice bring life into some of the episode but the hippie stereotypes irritate the plot.
The Lesson gives some doubt and is very problematic but shows Hank that he did go too far just for a simple camping trip that was supposed to enjoy with his son and his friends and that as a father, he doesn't have to be like Cotton, something of common sense.
Nope.
Despite the introduction of John Redcorn, Peggy's struggles with shoe shopping, another flashback involving Cotton Hill's cruel behavior and a simple plotline, the episode seems rushed at the end.
Hank and the gang decides to take his son and his friends to an Order of The Straight Arrow meeting in which Hank's questionable parenting is first shown. Hank plays cruel pranks and tricks that leads to Bobby almost committing a federal crime by knocking out an endangered crane, Peggy's trek to a shoe store for women with plus sized feet seems interesting but yet strange, falling short of a joke and sometimes unnecessary even for a cartoon.
Bobby's devotion to making his father appreciate him during the trip is sometimes funny but also painful for anyone with parental issues, his obsession of the fictional creature the snipe and Weymetane ( something Hank quickly culture appropriates just for the trip from John Redcorn ) becomes funny at first but then annoying.
Dale's antics however steal the episode, from his mooning, his strange but hilarious lines, descriptions of the imaginary creature to scare the scouts and overt cowardice bring life into some of the episode but the hippie stereotypes irritate the plot.
The Lesson gives some doubt and is very problematic but shows Hank that he did go too far just for a simple camping trip that was supposed to enjoy with his son and his friends and that as a father, he doesn't have to be like Cotton, something of common sense.
Nope.