Rabbot

In the episode Master Shake, Frylock, and Meatwad investigate the recent destruction of Carl's car, while a giant mechanical rabbit destroys downtown.

Dr. Weird unveils his newest invention, a titanic robotic rabbit named The Rabbot, to solve the world's "vegetable nightmare".

As the Aqua Teens return home, they head through downtown and notice that the Rabbot is rampaging through the city and is spraying buildings with his hair growing formula.

The Aqua Teens regroup in Carl's pool, where Shake says that the Rabbot (who is still dancing to the music from Meatwad's jam box) has made downtown unsafe and that they must find some new restaurants and nightclubs.

[4] Several backgrounds were borrowed from other Cartoon Network properties like Johnny Quest and SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron for use in "Rabbot".

[4] "Rabbot" is one of the few episodes to feature the main protagonists as detectives, a premise was added to appease Cartoon Network executives, who did not initially understand the series' concept at first.

The Rabbot also makes a third appearance in this episode, where he crushes Frylock, Master Shake, and Meatwad's newly purchased house.

[5] It features backgrounds and settings that differ greatly from the series, including a scrapped laboratory that was to be in the protagonist's house, seen right off the living room.

[8] Frylock is depicted as a wizard-like sorcerer who performs spells, and Master Shake constantly refers to things as being "forbidden" and calls the team to assemble, both of these concepts were soon dropped.

[5] An unfinished version of "Rabbot" originally aired on December 30, 2000 on Cartoon Network, several months before the official launch of Adult Swim.

There was no theme song or opening titles, the segues that cut to another scene were also different – instead of Schooly D narrating over rap music, they showed the old "outer space zoom" segue from the Hanna-Barbera Super Friends cartoon, with the instrumental of the Aqua Teen Hunger Force theme played over it.

[13] The series had already made its official television debut a week earlier on Adult Swim with the second episode "Escape from Leprechaupolis" on September 9, 2001.

The set was released and distributed by Adult Swim and Warner Home Video, and features the original pitch pilot version of "Rabbot" along with optional audio commentary on the original pitch pilot version by Willis, Maiellaro, and Jay Wade Edwards.

Dave Willis co-wrote "Rabbot" along with Matt Maiellaro .