Summary: When the twins hit the jackpot with a trash can cleaning business, Karinne makes them question if success is selfish. They learn about true entrepreneurship from Joyce Chen and the grumpy Gurmbledons of Grumbletown!
This episode contains the following tropes:
- An Aesop: "Success is deserved when people are served."
- Audible Gleam: When the twins and Copernicus team up to create a successful garbage can washing business, they're able to use their profits to buy upgraded materials and new, chrome coated bikes, which shine with a chime sound effect. Big Bob's chrome SUV also has this effect.
- Call-Back: Karinne accuses the Tuttles of being just like Big Bob, claiming that their success with their garbage can washing business turns others into losers. But the twins later realize that Big Bob turns everyone into losers by actively and maliciously keeping everyone down, not by simply being successful.
Gabby (to the audience): If you need a refresher, watch season one, episode five.
- Freudian Excuse: Big Bob lets slip that he is the way he is because he has no friends.
- Historical Domain Character: The twins meet Joyce Chen, a Chinese immigrant who became an entrepreneur and opened up a chain of Chinese restaurants to share her culture's food with America.
- Shout-Out:
- The cold open features an obvious parody of the Teenage Mutant Ninj-
Gabby: No! Trust me, niƱos, it's a very important legal distinction.- In the same scene as the above, a rat is seen in the sewer about to indulge in a delicious meal. Sadly, his attempts to eat are thwarted repeatedly, much like a certain saber toothed squirrel.
- Toilet Humor: Copernicus turns a garbage bin full of water into a jacuzzi using flatulence.