: Rick treats the Devil’s "magic" as a simple challenge for science. He sets up "ncurse," a shop across the street where he uses scientific gadgets to remove the curses for free, effectively rendering the Devil’s "ironic" punishments meaningless.
: The conflict shifts from a supernatural battle to a business war, highlighting how modern convenience and "hacks" can strip traditional morality plays of their power. The B-Plot: Jerry and Pluto
: Jerry is willing to lead a movement based on a lie just to be "right" in front of his son, which critics often note as a perfect encapsulation of his insecure character. Passing Butter - Daily Absurdist [S1E9] Something Ricked This Way Comes
One of the series' most iconic moments occurs in this episode: Rick builds a small robot solely to pass butter.
The A-plot follows Summer working for (The Devil), who runs a shop that gives customers cursed items that fulfill their deepest desires for a terrible price. : Rick treats the Devil’s "magic" as a
: Rick’s dismissive "Welcome to the club, pal" underscores a central theme of the show: that most existence is mundane, defined by small, repetitive tasks rather than a grand cosmic design. Rick vs. The Devil (Science vs. Magic)
The "deep content" of the episode " Something Ricked This Way Comes " (Season 1, Episode 9) explores themes of existentialism, the commodification of value, and the battle between science and the supernatural. The "Butter Robot" & Existential Dread The B-Plot: Jerry and Pluto : Jerry is
: When the robot asks, "What is my purpose?" and receives the answer "You pass butter," it experiences an immediate existential crisis.