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| - Of everything that can be tied together - squirrels, beauty pageants, rhinos and peach cobbler, along with a Randy Jackson quote - this to the casual viewer might seem wrong to bundled, but then again, half an episode that features floating eyeballs without good witches telling everyone to take a yellow sidewalk seems strange. Thus the story of the last two segment episode for Season 3, "Blackout!" and "What'd I Miss?".
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abstract
| - Of everything that can be tied together - squirrels, beauty pageants, rhinos and peach cobbler, along with a Randy Jackson quote - this to the casual viewer might seem wrong to bundled, but then again, half an episode that features floating eyeballs without good witches telling everyone to take a yellow sidewalk seems strange. Thus the story of the last two segment episode for Season 3, "Blackout!" and "What'd I Miss?". We'll start off with the latter since that premiered first. Ferb and Perry have returned early from debate camp, and asks what occurred with cupcakes made with "training nuts". Phineas tells of the previous day's events involving Isabella earning her Fireside Girls surfing patch, domesticated squirrels and nuts. Meanwhile, Agent P learns about Doofenshmirtz's plan on peaches, and hears about his previous day's events using Agent R, the domesticated squirrels, beauty contests where everyone wins and the named for a certain push ups on a table diva in a Harlem Shake video that also is a storyboarder faucet-inator. And we also get a reference of being "in it to win it, dog" to an actual canine for a bonus. Sadly, I'd wish I would have said the same about "Blackout!". Half of the episode is nothing but that sight gag of just people's eyeballs floating in the dark. And this is all caused by a blackout from Doof's sad-eye-inator leaving Danville - as well as most of the Tri-State Area - under the same type of darkness that would interrupt a Super Bowl game in New Orleans. If you're from there, or Baltimore or San Francisco, you'll get the joke. Anywho, we get a surprise vocalist on the song from this episode, as Fee Waybill of that 1980's band The Tubes lend his vocals to "What Is This Thing?" As Neil Everett on ESPN's SportsCenter will tell you, "She's a Beauty, that number nine," however, this "One in a Million" song is the best part of the episode to say the least, although the traditional evil jingle tells us that Doofenshmirtz isn't illuminated for that. The bottom line is that the late part is better than the first part. And trust me, power outages are no fun whatsoever.
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