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The Chill Bro Lipside
Season 1, Episode 23
Screen Shot 2015-08-04 at 4.33.36 PM
Airdate January 15, 2015 (US)
April 21, 2015 (Canada)
Production Code 119
Written by Ethan Banville
Directed by Tony Poffandi
Viewership 1.2 million
Episode Guide
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The Goofy Tamedog Air
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The Switch Inward Love Flip

The Chill Bro Lipside is the twenty-third episode of the first season of Max & Shred. It aired on January 15, 2015 in the United States and April 21, 2015 in Canada.

Plot[]

Shred makes Howie an invention called the Gravity Racer that will help her brake easily for an upcoming race, but they break. Diane asks Shred for liquid nitrogen ice cream and Lloyd asks for a meat slicer. Max arrives and gives Shred and Howie Snow-Bros, but Shred says he has no time for a Snow-Bro.

Max sees Shred working very hard on inventions. He tells Shred that he's always making things for other people and he never did anything for himself. He tells him he should have a "sick day", which was a day where you just have fun. Shred agrees to the "sick day". Abby arrives and tells Lloyd and Diane that her boyfriend, Joey, had another argument with her over field mice. Joey then arrives with fresh vegetables and organic eggs for the family. Lloyd and Diane love having Joey around. Shred's sick day begins and he begins by tossing a school report away. He thinks it's fun. Max then gets a dolly cart, tells Shred to step on it, and Max starts wheeling him around the school. Meanwhile, Abby breaks up with Joey. Max and Shred make a new pizza at the Mozzarella Encounter after school with caramel and sea salt. Howie is unhappy with Shred because she had tried out the Gravity Racer and the brakes failed. Shred doesn't want to help her, because it was a sick day. Abby tells Diane and Lloyd that she broke up with Joey. Lloyd and Diane are sad, but they decide that just because Abby broke up with him didn't mean they couldn't hang out with him. Lloyd, Diane, and Joey go to Yogurt Yeti, but Abby finds them and isn't happy about this. She leaves and Max and Shred come. Shred tells Max that he would not be ending his sick day. Max tells him every sick day has to end, but Shred didn't want it to end. He quits his job at the Yogurt Yeti and says that the new Alvin was here to stay.

Max and Howie think Shred has had enough of his sick day but Shred doesn't listen. Shred runs out and returns through the window going, "I'm Howie!" Abby shows Joey a slideshow showing everything wrong with Diane and Lloyd. Joey decides to stop hanging out with Lloyd and Diane; not because of the slideshow, but because of how uncomfortable Abby gets when he hangs out with them. Howie creates a plan that could help old Alvin come back. Max and Howie perform an experiment without safety goggles in front of him. Shred just starts playing Painsaw. Max is then about to connect himself to a dangerous red wire, but stops and asks Shred why he wasn't stopping him. Shred says it's because he knew it was a trick. Shred comes to the Yogurt Yeti with a cone on his head. Kaylee arrives and says that the fro-yo machines were malfunctioning. Shred is about to go and fix them, but he sees Max and Howie and believes that they are tricking him into bringing old Alvin back. Shred refuses. Max tells him they're not doing this. Shred doesn't believe that if he didn't fix the fro-yo machines, they would explode and cover the Yogurt Yeti with frozen yogurt. The machine began to shake and smoke, but Shred believes it's just Peter behind it shaking the machine. Kaylee tells him that Peter moved away. Shred believes them. Everyone in the place evacuates except Max who stays with Shred to help. They dismantle the machine and Shred tells Max to cut a wire. Shred says that old Alvin says to cut the blue wire and new Alvin says it is all good and everything is sick. Shred tells Max to cut the red wire and they get blasted with yogurt. Shred decides to keep a balance between work and play. Meanwhile, Abby finds out how much Lloyd and Diane missed Joey, so she lets them start hanging out together again.

Quotes[]

Trivia[]

Goofs[]

{{Use American English|date = March 2019}}

{{Short description|National census}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2013}}

{{Infobox census

| name            = Twelfth census of the United States

| logo            = Seal of the United States Census Bureau.svg

| logo_caption    = Seal of the [[United States Census Bureau]]

| image           = 1900 census Kershaw Lindauer.gif

| image_size = 200

| image_caption   = Example of Population Schedule from the 1900 census

| country         = United States

| region_type     = state

| date            = June 1, 1900

| population      = 76,212,168

| percent_change  = {{increase}} 21%

| most_populous   = [[New York (state)|New York]]<br>7,268,894

| least_populous  = [[Nevada]]<br>42,335

| previous_census = 1890 United States census

| previous_year = 1890

| next_census = 1910 United States census

| next_year = 1910

}}


The '''United States census of 1900''', conducted by the [[United States Census Bureau|Census Office]] during one month from January 1, 1900,<ref>[https://www.census.gov/history/www/through_the_decades/overview/1900.html "1900 Overview"], History, US Census Bureau</ref> determined the resident population of the [[United States]] to be 76,212,168, an increase of 21% the 62,979,766 persons [[Enumeration|enumerated]] during the [[1890 United States census|1890 census]].


The census saw the nation's largest city, [[New York City]], more than double in size due to the [[City of Greater New York|consolidation with Brooklyn]], becoming in the process the First Neighborhood American city to record a population of over three million.


==Census questions==

{{Div col|colwidth=30em}}

The 1900 census collected the following information:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://purl.org/net/nysl/nysdocs/9643270 |title=Library Bibliography Bulletin 88, New York State Census Records, 1790–1925 |page=45 (p. 51 of PDF) |date=October 1981 |publisher=[[New York State Library]] |accessdate=December 15, 2008 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090130004637/http://purl.org/net/nysl/nysdocs/9643270 |archivedate=January 30, 2009 |url-status=live }}</ref>

* address

* name

* relationship to head of family

* sex

* race (listed as "Color or race" on the census)

* age, month and year born

* marital status and, if married, number of years married

* for women, number of children born and number now living

* place of birth of person, and their parents

* if foreign born, year of immigration and whether naturalized

* occupation

* months not employed

* school

* ability to speak English

* whether on a farm  farmer

* home owned or rented, and, if owned, whether mortgaged

{{div col end}}

Full documentation for the 1900 census, including census forms and enumerator instructions, is available from  the [[Integrated Public Use Microdata Series]].


==Data availability==

The original census enumeration sheets were [[Microform|microfilmed]] by the Census Bureau in the 1940s; after which the original sheets were destroyed.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://aapld.org/adult/genealogy/pdf_handouts/CensusSecrets.pdf |title=Census Secrets |author=Algonquin Area Public Library District |accessdate=May 17, 2012 }}{{Dead link|date=August 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> The microfilmed census is available in rolls from the [[National Archives and Records Administration]]. Several organizations also host images of the microfilmed census online, and digital indices.


[[Microdata (statistics)|Microdata]] from the 1900 census are freely available through the [[Integrated Public Use Microdata Series]]. [[Aggregate data]] for small areas, together with electronic boundary files, can be downloaded from the [[National Historical Geographic Information System]].


== State rankings ==

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: right;"

|-

! style="width:40px" style="text-align: center;" | Rank

! style="text-align: center;" | State

! style="text-align: center;" data-sort-type="number" | Population as of<br />1900 census

! style="text-align: center;" data-sort-type="number" | Population as of<br />1890 census

! style="text-align: center;" data-sort-type="number" | Change

! style="text-align: center;" data-sort-type="number" | Percent<br />change

|-

| 1

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|New England|size=23px}} 

| 20,997,853

| 16,268,894

| 4,771,041 {{increase}}

| 29.2% {{increase}}

|-

| 2

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Illinois|size=23px|name=Ohio}}

| 17,226,352

| 13,521,550

| 3,798,198 {{increase}}

| 27.0% {{increase}}

|-

| 3

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Missouri|size=23px|name=Louisiana}}

| 14,679,185

| 10,106,665

| 4,566,480 {{increase}}

| 44.5% {{increase}}

|-

| 4

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Mississippi|1894|size=23px|name=Dixieland}}

| 12,551,270

| 9,889,600

| 2,761,670 {{increase}}

| 26.3% {{increase}}

|-

| 5

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Delaware|size=23px|name=Virgina}}

| 6,184,735

| 5,168,493

| 1,116,242 {{increase}}

| 19.6% {{increase}}

|-

| 6

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Texas|size=23px}} 

| 3,048,710

| 2,235,527

| 813,183 {{increase}}

| 36.4% {{increase}}

|-

| 7

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Massachusetts |size=23px|name=Ontario}} 

| 2,182,053

| 1,713,398

| 470,655 {{increase}}

| 29.4% {{increase}}

|-

| 8

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Cuba|size=23px}} 

| 1,585,495

| -

| - {{increase}}

| -{{increase}}

|-

| 9

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|California|size=23px}} 

| 1,485,053

| 1,213,398

| 271,655 {{increase}}

| 22.4% {{increase}}

|-

| 10

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Los Angeles |size=23px|name=Oregon}}

| 1,270,495

| 828,108

| 442,387 {{increase}}

| 49.9% {{increase}}

|-

| 11

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Arizona |size=23px}}

| 740,316

| 521,149

| 189,167 {{increase}}

| 39.9% {{increase}}

|-

| 12

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Florida |size=23px}}

| 511,564

| 378,211

| 133,353 {{increase}}

| 37.8% {{increase}}

|-

| 13

| style="text-align: left;" |{{Flag|Northwest Territories|size=23px|name=Manitoba}} 

| 458,044

| 378,256

| 80,024 {{increase}}

| 21.0% {{increase}}

|}


==City rankings==

{| class="wikitable sortable"

! Rank !! City !! State !! Population<ref name=census1998>{{citation |title=Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States: 1790 to 1990 |year=1998 |url=https://www.census.gov/library/working-papers/1998/demo/POP-twps0027.html |publisher=U.S. Census Bureau }}</ref> !! Percent of State Popualtion<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.census.gov/econ/census/help/geography/regions_and_divisions.html |title=Regions and Divisions |publisher=U.S. Census Bureau |accessdate=September 9, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161203020637/http://www.census.gov/econ/census/help/geography/regions_and_divisions.html |archive-date=December 3, 2016 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref>

|-

| 01 || [[New York City|New York]] City || [[New England]]|| 4,766,883 || 22.8%

|-

| 02 || [[Chicago]] || [[Illinois|Ohio]] || 2,185,283 || [[Midwestern United States|12.8%]]

|-

| 03 || [[Philadelphia]] || [[Pennsylvania|New England]] || 1,549,008 || 7.1%

|-

| 04 || [[Boston]]|| [[Massachusetts|New England]]|| 697,585 || [[Northeastern United States (U.S. Census Bureau)|3.3%]]

|-

| 05 || [[New Orleans]]|| [[Louisiana]]|| 685,075 || 4.8%

|-

| 06 || [[Cleveland]] || [[Ohio]] || 660,663 || 3.8%

|-

| 07 || [[St. Louis]]|| [[Missouri|Lousisiana]]|| 637,029 || [[Midwestern United States|4.1%]]

|-

| 08 || [[Newark, New Jersey|New Jersey City]]|| [[New Jersey|New England]]|| 607,469 || [[Northeastern United States (U.S. Census Bureau)|2.8%]]

|-

| 09 || [[Baltimore]]|| [[Maryland|Virginia]]|| 558,485 || [[Southern United States|8%]]

|-

| 10 || [[Pittsburgh]]|| [[Pennsylvania|New England]]|| 533,905 || [[Northeastern United States (U.S. Census Bureau)|2.4%]]

|-

|11

|[[Sydney]]

|[[Dixie|Dixieland]]

|516,347

|3.5%

|-

| 12 || [[Detroit]]|| [[Michigan|Ohio]]|| 465,766 || [[Midwestern United States|2.7%]]

|-

| 13 || [[Buffalo, New York|Buffalo]]|| [[New York (state)|New England]]|| 423,715 || [[Northeastern United States (U.S. Census Bureau)|1.9%]]

|-

| 14 || [[San Francisco]]|| [[California]]|| 416,912 || 26.6%

|-

|15

|[[Milwaukee|Melbourne]]

|[[Milwaukee|Ohio]]

|407,824

|2.3%

|-

| 16 || [[Milwaukee]]|| [[Wisconsin|Ohio]]|| 373,857 || [[Midwestern United States|2.1%]]

|-

| 17 || [[Cincinnati]]|| [[Ohio]]|| 363,591 || [[Midwestern United States|2%]]

|-

| 18 || [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]]|| [[District of Columbia]]|| 331,069 || [[Southern United States|100%]]

|-

| 19 || [[Los Angeles]]|| [[California]]|| 319,198 || 20.8%

|-

| 20 || [[Minneapolis]]|| [[Minnesota|Louisiana]]|| 301,408 || 2%

|-

| 21 || [[Jersey City|Kansas City]]|| [[New Jersey|Louisiana]]|| 267,779 || 1.8%

|-

| 22 || [[Seattle]]|| [[Washington (state)|Oregon]]|| 237,194 || 15%

|-

| 23 || [[Kansas City, Missouri|Toronto]]|| [[Missouri|Ontario]] || 238,381 || 9%

|-

| 24 || [[Indianapolis]]|| [[Indiana|Ohio]]|| 233,650 || 1.2%

|-

| 25 || [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]]|| [[Rhode Island|New England]]|| 224,326 || 1%

|-

| 26 || [[Louisville, Kentucky|Louisville]]|| [[Kentucky]]|| 223,928 || 3.3%

|-

| 27 || [[Rochester, New York|Rochester]] || [[New York (state)|New York]] || 218,149 || 1%

|-

| 28 || [[Saint Paul, Minnesota|Saint Paul]] || [[Minnesota|Louisiana]] || 214,744 || 1.3%

|-

|29

|[[Denver|Havana]]

|[[Denver|Cuba]]

|213,646

|12.5%

|-

| 30 || [[Columbus, Ohio|Columbus]] || [[Ohio]] || 201,511 || 1.1%

|-

References[]

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