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The action begins with [[Jake Morgendorffer|Jake]] accidentally setting the house on fire, forcing the family to temporarily move to a hotel. In the course of this episode, [[Sandi Griffin]] becomes jealous (and suspicious) of the attention heaped upon [[Quinn Morgendorffer|Quinn]] by a bellboy, [[Daria Morgendorffer|Daria]] temporarily moves in with [[Jane Lane|Jane]] (thus exacerbating the emerging conflict between them about [[Tom Sloane]]'s and Daria's increasingly obvious connection), Quinn temporarily winds up in the care of the police, and Jake and [[Helen Morgendorffer|Helen]] have a lot of sex (offstage, thank God) to get around the fact that they no other meaningful communication with each other. The final scene, with Daria staring out of the family car's side window as she mulls over her feelings about Tom, is potent and evocative.
The action begins with [[Jake Morgendorffer|Jake]] accidentally setting the house on fire, forcing the family to temporarily move to a hotel. In the course of this episode, [[Sandi Griffin]] becomes jealous (and suspicious) of the attention heaped upon [[Quinn Morgendorffer|Quinn]] by a bellboy, [[Daria Morgendorffer|Daria]] temporarily moves in with [[Jane Lane|Jane]] (thus exacerbating the emerging conflict between them about [[Tom Sloane]]'s and Daria's increasingly obvious connection), Quinn temporarily winds up in the care of the police, and Jake and [[Helen Morgendorffer|Helen]] have a lot of sex (offstage, thank God) to get around the fact that they no other meaningful communication with each other. The final scene, with Daria staring out of the family car's side window as she mulls over her feelings about Tom, is potent and evocative.


This is one of the few episodes that actually leads somewhere, setting up the coming triangle in "[[Dye! Dye! My Darling]]." Every other conflict and issue in the story is resolved except for the growing attraction between Daria and Tom, and Jane's recognition of the same, all of which was first seen in "[[I Loathe a Parade]]" and expanded upon here. Most reviewers have given this episode high marks, despite the fact that it leads into the most controversial episode of all, "[[Dye! Dye! My Darling]]."
This is one of the few episodes that actually leads somewhere, setting up the romantic triangle between Daria, Tom, and Jane in "[[Dye! Dye! My Darling]]." Every other conflict and issue in the story is resolved except for the growing attraction between Daria and Tom, and Jane's recognition of the same, all of which was first seen in "[[I Loathe a Parade]]" and expanded upon here. Most reviewers have given this episode high marks, despite the fact that it leads into the most controversial episode of all, "[[Dye! Dye! My Darling]]."


[[Image:Firedaria.gif|left|frame|The final scene in "Fire!"]]
[[Image:Firedaria.gif|left|frame|The final scene in "Fire!"]]

==Trivia==
==Trivia==
The title of this episode is one of the trademark phrases that [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beavis Beavis] often used in ''[[Beavis and Butt-head]]'', the show from which ''[[Daria (TV series)|Daria]]'' was derived.
The title of this episode is one of the trademark phrases that [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beavis Beavis] often used in ''[[Beavis and Butt-head]]'', the show from which ''[[Daria (TV series)|Daria]]'' was derived.