BoJack is jealous of Diane's relationship with Mr. Peanutbutter Todd's in a new environment.
A lovestruck BoJack tries to sabotage a wedding Todd accepts a surprising new professional role.
Karl, the James-Jennings family neighbor, reveals to the kids that he knows Stans secret.
BoJack decides to mentor Todd Diane's ex-boyfriend writes an article about Mr. Peanutbutter.
When Jessie lands two VIP wristbands to Emma and Zuris dream concert, the girls compete to be her guest. Meanwhile, Bertram becomes infatuated with his new talking coffee maker.
Team Avatar hatches a plan to save the Airbenders, but all is not what it seems like. Zaheer rediscovers an old Airbender talent. The motive of the Red Lotus is finally revealed.
Carol and Trevor celebrate their th wedding anniversary. With Joyce having organised a gastro-pub lunch, it looks like it could be a party to remember.
BoJack sabotages himself with an epic bender Princess Carolyn's agency merges with another.
Thackery weighs performing surgery on a former flame, and orders Gallinger and Chickering to experiment on pigs. Barrow goes the extra yard to square a debt. After a bad day at work, Edwards takes out his frustrations at a local bar. Robertson is relieved when her pleas about treating a patient with typhoid fever are finally heard.
When he learns that his old friend from Horsin' Around is dying, BoJack tries to mend fences.
From the beginning of recorded history, humans have told stories about beings with super-human strength, super-sonic speed, and supernatural abilities. The ancients had heroic tales about Zeus, Thor, and Hanuman while today we have superhero stories about Superman, Batman, and Spider-man. Mythologists say these epic stories resemble each other because they may have all come from a common set of oral legends created eons ago by our earliest ancestors. But might there be another, more otherworldly reason that the world's heroic myths are so similar? Is it possible, as many Ancient Astronaut Theorists contend, that these stories are actually based on extraordinary-- and possibly extraterrestrial--beings that lived on Earth in the distant past?
BoJack shoots a movie at Mr. Peanutbutters house Diane finishes her book.
BoJack embarks on a project in his typically gonzo style, leading to a drug-fueled revelation.
To help with the memoir he hopes will put him back in the spotlight, BoJack hires a ghostwriter.
Don explores the story of an escape from slavery while visiting a historic home in Boston and investigates a majestic oak tree's connection to witchcraft while on Hatteras Island, N.C. Also: how the Holmdel Horn Antenna changed the way people understand life.
Chef and culinary writer Rachel Khoo tours London's food scene.
Mike Kennedy calls in his "A Team" in order to snag a Czechoslovakian fighter jet. Ken Cage and Danny Thompson go after a $2 million Citation CJ1 and end up under fire. While Kevin Lacey has a run in with an old adversary at the Sundance Air Show.
In 1958, a bulldozer operator in Northern California discovered 16-inch human-like footprints, and the legend of Bigfoot was born. Today, there are hundreds of reported sightings of big hairy monsters in America, but nowhere are the stories more prolific than in America's Pacific Northwest. Many reports of encounters with the giant hair-covered creature are accompanied by accounts of UFO activity and unexplained lights in the sky. Could the creature known as Bigfoot, or Sasquatch, really exist? If so, could it be living proof that extraterrestrials were not only here,...