In 2009,
TV Guide created
TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All-Time, with this episode ranked number 15.
Earl Pomerantz was nominated for the
Writers Guild of America Award for Best Screenplay - Episodic Comedy and the
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series for this episode. The episode was also nominated for an Emmy in the category of Outstanding Live and Tape Sound Mixing and Sound Effects for a Series. The episode finished third in the
Nielsen Media Research ratings for the week with a 19.1 million person viewership and a 22.5 share for the week ending September 30 behind
Dallas (22.4 million) and
Falcon Crest (19.8 million). This followed a first-place ranking for the "
Pilot" the week before. This was the first episode of the series to air after the September 24 date that marked the official beginning of the
1984–85 United States network television season. David Hinckley of the
Daily News describes Rudy as "impossibly cute" in this episode. Producer
Marcy Carsey considered the episode to be an example of how the series dealt with the "reactions to small-scale events". According to
Lisa Schwarzbaum of
Entertainment Weekly, this is considered by many to be the most memorable episode of the series. Other critics consider it to be among the highlights of the series including Allison Samuels of
Newsweek who remembered Cosby for two performances in the series in which he "hid his potato-chip habit from his wife and delivered a deadpan eulogy as he flushed his daughter's goldfish down the toilet".
William Raspberry of
The Washington Post and Graham Jefferson of
USA Today considered the episode to be a highlight of the series. Cosby was quoted in
Ebony as counting the episode on the short list of highlights from the series. This was the first episode mentioned by several writers discussing the series, including Renee Graham of the
Boston Globe, Matt Roush of
USA Today (in 1987 after the first 81 episodes), and Candace Murphy of the
Oakland Tribune. In the fourth season two-part November 12, 1987 "
Looking Back" episode, the family tries to help the newlywed Sondra Huxtable and Elvin reconcile after their first fight. The episode recounts highlights of the first 81 episodes to help Elvin understand Sondra and her family and this episode is highlighted. According to
TBS, the following lines in the funeral part of the script were among the most memorable in the entire series: :Cliff: "We're here to say goodbye to a cherished friend: Lamont, the goldfish." :Vanessa: "I always felt safe with him around." ==Notes==