[s8e9] Used Car-bounty Hunters 〈2025〉

They eventually target a man who is simply waiting for a bus, convinced he is a high-profile fugitive. Their "apprehension" techniques involve a lot of aimless wandering, nonsensical threats, and Beavis getting predictably over-excited.

Inspired by a reality TV show (a parody of Dog the Bounty Hunter ), the pair decides to pursue a new "cool" career path.

The episode kicks off with the boys visiting a used car lot with the impossible goal of buying a vehicle despite having no money. [S8E9] Used Car-Bounty Hunters

In the double-segment episode from the 2011 revival of Beavis and Butt-Head (Season 8, Episode 9), the duo’s signature brand of oblivious destruction is aimed at two classic American tropes: the high-pressure car sale and the gritty world of professional skip-tracing. Segment 1: "Used Car"

They encounter a slick salesman who mistakes their utter lack of intelligence for a clever negotiating tactic. They eventually target a man who is simply

The segment satirizes the predatory nature of car dealerships, showing that even the most manipulative salesman is no match for the sheer, impenetrable stupidity of Beavis and Butt-Head. Segment 2: "Bounty Hunters"

The episode mocks the self-serious machismo of early 2010s reality television, highlighting how the "bounty hunter" persona is often just an excuse for public harassment. The episode kicks off with the boys visiting

While trying to "test out" the cars, Beavis and Butt-Head managed to inadvertently destroy a vehicle's interior while obsessing over the "new car smell" (which they eventually decide is actually just "old car smell").