Misplaced Pages

Bobby Hill (King of the Hill): Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 03:31, 18 July 2005 editSneech (talk | contribs)23 edits Quotes:← Previous edit Revision as of 02:11, 6 August 2005 edit undoFabulous Creature (talk | contribs)1,007 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Bobby Hill''' is a character on the animated television show '']'' and is voiced by ]. Born Robert Jeffrey Hill, he is the only child of ] and ]. Overweight and lacking strength, Bobby is not suited for ], nor is he useful with his hands, making him a comic foil to his ex-high-school-]-playing, ]-savvy father. Different as night and day, they eventually form a relationship based on an understanding of these differences. Bobby Hill was once sent to Fort Berk, a ] where his grandfather ] attended as a young man. He is also friends with ] and next door neighbor ]. Bobby has aspired to be a ladies' man, runway ], ], ], ], and a salesman of ] and propane accessories. In later seasons he served as the mascot for his middle school football team, the Tom Landry Longhorns. His father is occasionally embarrassed by Bobby's sometimes effeminate mannerisms, but Bobby most of all wants his father to be proud of him. '''Bobby Hill''' is a character on the animated television show '']'' and is voiced by ]. Born Robert Jeffrey Hill, he is the only child of ] and ]. Overweight and lacking strength, Bobby is not suited for ], nor is he useful with his hands (though he is a gifted marksman), making him a comic foil to his ex-high-school-]-playing, ]-savvy father. Different as night and day, they eventually form a relationship based on an understanding of these differences. Bobby Hill was once sent to Fort Berk, a ] where his grandfather ] attended as a young man. He is also friends with ] and next door neighbor ]. Bobby has aspired to be a ladies' man, runway ], ], ], ], and a salesman of ] and propane accessories. In later seasons he served as the mascot for his middle school football team, the Tom Landry Longhorns. His father is occasionally embarrassed by Bobby's sometimes effeminate mannerisms, but Bobby most of all wants his father to be proud of him.


Bobby once ate a ] in a mere 37 minutes. He also ran away with Connie to ], where they met his favorite comic, ]. Bobby once ate a ] in a mere 37 minutes. He also ran away with Connie to ], where they met his favorite comic, ].

Revision as of 02:11, 6 August 2005

Bobby Hill is a character on the animated television show King of the Hill and is voiced by Pamela Segall. Born Robert Jeffrey Hill, he is the only child of Hank and Peggy Hill. Overweight and lacking strength, Bobby is not suited for sports, nor is he useful with his hands (though he is a gifted marksman), making him a comic foil to his ex-high-school-football-playing, tool-savvy father. Different as night and day, they eventually form a relationship based on an understanding of these differences. Bobby Hill was once sent to Fort Berk, a military academy where his grandfather Cotton Hill attended as a young man. He is also friends with Joseph Gribble and next door neighbor Connie Souphanousinphone. Bobby has aspired to be a ladies' man, runway model, proctologist, comedian, shaman, and a salesman of propane and propane accessories. In later seasons he served as the mascot for his middle school football team, the Tom Landry Longhorns. His father is occasionally embarrassed by Bobby's sometimes effeminate mannerisms, but Bobby most of all wants his father to be proud of him.

Bobby once ate a 72-ounce steak in a mere 37 minutes. He also ran away with Connie to Branson, Missouri, where they met his favorite comic, Yakov Smirnoff.

Bobby loves to eat fruit pies.

Quotes:

  • "I'm a little worried about being a slut."
  • "Taco Bueno in high school? I thought that was just an urban legend!"
  • Hank Hill: I told you it wasn't easy. You didn't believe me, did you?
    Cotton Hill: I guess he was just born a pile of mush.
    Hank Hill: Well, I guess you could say that, but maybe mush isn't so bad. You can keep stomping on it, but it's all give. It just stays mush. You can't build it up, but you can't break it down either. In a funny way, mush has the edge.
Category: