Mike Judge's smash hit King of the Hill had a 13-season run and ended in May of 2010, but here's how the upcoming reboot can deliver on Hank's final perfect line. King of the Hill captured audiences with its funny and relatable Hill family living in the fictional town of Arlen, Texas. Part of the Hill family's appeal was their overwhelming average-ness, Hank's navigation of his son Bobby's pre-teen growth, and the strange group of friends Hank surrounded himself with. King of the Hill was also in the vein of The Simpsons or Roseanne in that it explored a working-class family on TV, something that broad audiences found relatable.
Primarily, King of the Hill focused on the Hill family's day-to-day. Hank Hill, the patriarch of the family voiced by series creator Mike Judge, worked as an assistant manager at Strickland Propane. His wife, Peggy, voiced by comedy veteran Kathy Najimy, was a stay-at-home mom focused on raising their son, Bobby (Pamela Adlon). The couple also encountered some rough waters trying to raise their niece Luanne Platter, voiced by the late Brittany Murphy, after she came to live with them when her mother stabbed her father with a fork and was carted off to jail. After the announcement that the beloved King of the Hill series was getting a revival, audiences were curious whether the new show could properly depict what made the original series great.
Related: King of The Hill's Revival: Every Key Question The Reboot Can Answer
Yet, the reboot can deliver on Hank's final line of the original run that perfectly encapsulates the series' meaning. Hank Hill's perfect last line in King of the Hill is, «You're just getting started Bobby. You'll be grilling your whole life,» which shows that Hank never deviated
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