- "Mercy!"
- ―C.H.U.M., after the incident, and when Bart turns its right foot around.
C.H.U.M.
|
Character Information
|
C.H.U.M., short for Childlike Humanoid Urban Muchacho, is a robot that Martin built.
C.H.U.M. is most probably Martin's best friend, and presumably was installed with a voice chip so it would provide speaking company for him. Martin's reaction to the incident in which C.H.U.M. was broken suggests this further, and so does the way Martin treats C.H.U.M..
History
Martin and C.H.U.M., after the incident.
Martin originally built C.H.U.M. for a science fair at Springfield Elementary School; Martin showed off C.H.U.M. to Lisa outside of the Simpson residence, so she would become jealous of Martin becoming the probable winner of the science fair.[1]
A clip of Martin and C.H.U.M. skipping was shown at Martin's memorial in Springfield Elementary School.[2]
Martin brought C.H.U.M. into show and tell at Springfield Elementary School one day, and Bart, having recently discovered his grandfather's secret wrestling career and his controversial moves, hit C.H.U.M. over the head with a folding chair and then proceeded to climb to the blackboard ledge and jump on the robot, breaking it. This shocking turn of events caused Martin to break down in tears. This was filmed by someone in the fourth grade class, and Homer showed the video to Grampa, to show him how Bart's behavior had changed since discovering he was a former wrestler.
One day, when Lisa and Nelson were eating an ice-cream waffle outside of an ice cream shop, Martin walked by with C.H.U.M., put back together and a cast around its neck.[3]
Non-canon
|
The contents of this section are considered to be non-canon and therefore may not have actually happened or existed.
|
Martin danced with C.H.U.M. at Springfield Elementary's prom, having found no date. Martin asked C.H.U.M. if he had any plans for after graduation. C.H.U.M. suggested "Travel". When Martin asked C.H.U.M. if he needed a traveling companion, C.H.U.M. said "Travel cancelled".[4]
Appearances
References