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William "Bill" Fontaine de La Tour Dauterive (/ d oʊ ˈ t r iː v / dough-TREEV; born June 22, 1953) is a fictional character in the American animated television sitcom series King of the Hill. Bill is a divorced , bald , overweight , clinically depressed military barber and former high school football star, voiced by Stephen Root , and named ...
Bill is conflicted between keeping his family legacy alive and selling out when his effeminate cousin, Gilbert (last seen on "A Beer Can Named Desire"), arrives to tell him that everyone in the Dauterive family is either dead, has gone insane, is incapable of getting pregnant, or not blood-related and tries to stop him from selling his family's barbecue sauce recipe to Mr. Strickland to save ...
King of the Hill is an American animated sitcom created by Mike Judge and Greg Daniels. [1] [2] The main characters are Hank Hill, Peggy Hill, Bobby Hill, Dale Gribble, Bill Dauterive, Jeff Boomhauer, Luanne Platter, Nancy Gribble, Joseph Gribble, Kahn Souphanousinphone, Minh Souphanousinphone, Connie Souphanousinphone, John Redcorn, Cotton Hill, Didi Hill, Buck Strickland, and Lucky ...
King of the Hill is an American animated television series created by Mike Judge and Greg Daniels for the Fox Broadcasting Company. The series focuses on the Hills, a middle-class American family in the fictional city of Arlen, Texas.
Hank and Bobby get in some father/son bonding time when Hank dumps the old team of Dale, Bill and Boomhauer to help Bobby in a boat-building competition. During the building process, Hank gets spooked by a bat invading the construction garage, forcing Bobby to do the building all alone.
Seeing the grill inspires Bobby to rejoin the team, but when Peggy drives him there, they learn of the others' absence and Bobby has to represent HCJC by himself. Dale, Bill, and Boomhauer find the stranded bus, having followed it from Arlen, and give Hank and the team a ride to State. On the way, Hank realizes that Bobby was right about the ...
In November 2001, Hal Boedeker of the Orlando Sentinel gave the season opener "Bobby Goes Nuts" a positive review, and described Fox's programming that night as "highly uneven: a clever King of the Hill, a mediocre Simpsons, an amusing Malcolm in the Middle and a pointless X-Files."
Strickland propane salesman and family man, Hank Hill, is accused of beating his son, Bobby, after Bobby gets a black eye from getting hit in the face with a baseball during a Little League game and rumors spread that Hank beat up a teenaged Megalo-Mart employee (when really he just yelled at him for not knowing if the store sells a tap and die ...