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Good Hill Hunting is the 43rd episode of King of the Hill. It was first aired on December 1, 1998. The episode was written by Joe Stillman, and directed by Klay Hall. The name is a reference to Good Will Hunting.

Synopsis

As Hank and his friends make final preparations to take their children on a deerhunting trip, Hank admits to Peggy that he has yet to purchase Bobby's hunting permit. As the conversation progresses, Hank admits he is frightened of being alone with his son, as he sometimes uncertain what the boy is talking about. Hank declares that he has one last errand to run before the journey gets under way. He drives to the county office to purchase the hunting permit. But a clerk informs him that no more licenses will be sold, due to an agreement with environmentalists. An angered Hank returns home. As his neighbors and their children head off for the hunt, Hank pulls into his own driveway and parks.

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Bobby creates a deer out of cardboard and uses it for target practice. Hank and Peggy notice this, and grow concerned that their boy may descend into madness if he fails to achieve manhood by killing an animal. Later, Hank encounters Eustice at Strickland Propane. Eustice shows him a brochure for a private hunting reserve operated by the La Grunta Inn & Resort. Eustice explains that he is taking his son Randy to the reserve for his rite of passage, as the company takes care of guns, permits and the like. Shortly thereafter, the Gribbles, the Souphanousinphones and other neighbors return home with their kill. Bobby begins crying, as all of his friends have shot a deer. "Everything looks so Christmasy. Now I know how the Jewish kids feel." Hank decides a trip to LaGrunta is in order.

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When Hank and his son arrive at LaGrunta Hotel, they are directed to shuttle and are dropped off at LaGrunta Ranch. They see Eustice and Randy who is carrying a stack of deer meat. They are directed to a shooting stand in the woods. As the pair await their prey, an automatic feed spreader whirrs into action, and deer causally emerge from the forest. But Bobby and Hank realize there is no sport in killing an animal in such a fashion, and they leave the resort empty handed. On the drive home, Hank decides it's time for Bobby to try his hand behind the wheel, as Bobby's learning how to drive is just as much a rite of passage to Hank as shooting a deer. Bobby climbs into the driver's seat and navigates a deserted road. Suddenly, a deer bolts in front of the truck. Bobby slams on the brakes, but it is too late, and the animal dies. Hank congratulates his son, as it is a "clean kill."

Characters

Trivia

  • After Hank and Bobby return from the La Grunta hotel, Hank parks the car halfway into the garage. But when Peggy washes the blood from the deer off the front of the truck, the truck is now on the driveway, away from the garage.
  • The episode is named after the 1997 drama film Good Will Hunting.
  • Hank: "If I wanted to get sloppy drunk and shoot guns, I'd go to my dad's Oscar party."
  • When Hank looks through the various brochures at the La Grunt hotel, he reads aloud a particular brochure that advertises an activity that allows you to swim with a dolphin. This exact event (Dolphin Encounter) as advertised in the brochure, is featured in the later episode John Vitti Presents: Return to LaGrunta, in which Hank takes part in the event.
  • We learn that Dale's father took him hunting as a child twenty-five years earlier.
  • The song that Hank sings to himself while shaving is Travelin' Man by Ricky Nelson


Season 2 Season 3 Season 4

Death of a Propane Salesman · And They Call it Bobby Love · Peggy's Headache · Pregnant Paws · Next of Shin · Peggy's Pageant Fever · Nine Pretty Darn Angry Men · Good Hill Hunting · Pretty, Pretty Dresses · A Fire Fighting We Will Go · To Spank, with Love · Three Coaches and a Bobby · De-Kahnstructing Henry · The Wedding of Bobby Hill · Sleight of Hank · Jon Vitti Presents: Return to La Grunta · Escape from Party Island · Love Hurts and So Does Art · Hank's Cowboy Movie · Dog Dale Afternoon · Revenge of the Lutefisk · Death and Texas · Wings of the Dope · Take Me Out of the Ball Game · As Old as the Hills
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