After Hank has a car accident, he has to go to traffic school. The teacher of the traffic school is a comedian, Booda Sack, who gets laughs by insulting the audience. Inspired by Booda Sack, Bobby tries developing a stand-up act of his own. Booda Sack tells Bobby that to be funny, he needs to get in touch with his roots as a white man. Looking for something about "white roots" on the internet, Bobby comes across all the material he needs on a site called the White Nationalist Brotherhood.
Season 2 Episode 16 of King of the Hill resulted in a 0.00 rating in the 18-49 demographic.
s02e01 - How to Fire a Rifle Without Really Trying
s02e02 - Texas City Twister
s02e03 - The Arrowhead
s02e04 - Hilloween
s02e05 - Jumpin' Crack Bass (It's a Gas, Gas, Gas)
s02e06 - Husky Bobby
s02e07 - The Man Who Shot Cane Skretteburg
s02e08 - The Son That Got Away
s02e09 - The Company Man
s02e10 - Bobby Slam
s02e11 - The Unbearable Blindness of Laying
s02e12 - Meet the Manger Babies
s02e13 - Snow Job
s02e14 - I Remember Mono
s02e15 - Three Days of the Kahndo
s02e16 - Traffic Jam
s02e17 - Hank's Dirty Laundry
s02e18 - The Final Shinsult
s02e19 - Leanne's Saga
s02e20 - Junkie Business
s02e21 - Life in the Fast Lane, Bobby's Saga
s02e22 - Peggy's Turtle Song
s02e23 - Propane Boom (1)
King of the Hill is another animation hit from Beavis and Butthead creator Mike Judge, who also voices the starring character Hank Hill, a propane gas salesman in the fictional town Arlen, Texas. Hank is often besieged by the idiosyncrasies of society, but he finds (some) serenity in his home-life with his wife, substitute Spanish teacher Peggy, his awkward son Bobby and his live-in niece-in-law Luanne Platter. Adding flavor to the ordinary dish the series serves are Hank's friends, divorcee military barber Bill Dauterive, paranoid Dale Gribble (with an obsession with Government conspiracy theories) and gibberish spouting Boomhauer.