Everybody has a go-to restaurant. It’s probably not the best one around or the trendiest, but it’s the place you can count on to give you a decent meal cordially served.

Everybody has a television show like that, too — reliably good, visit after visit. Whether Bob’s Burgers the restaurant is a go-to-caliber establishment is open to question, but “Bob’s Burgers” the animated TV show certainly is.

It concludes an enjoyable fifth season Sunday night on Fox with not one but two finales. “Bob’s Burgers” might sometimes get lost in the shadow of “The Simpsons” and “Family Guy,” Fox’s animated institutions. But its final two episodes demonstrate this show’s ability to find fodder in practically anything: One is about old Japanese samurai movies, the other about a rent strike that becomes an epic water-balloon fight.

The philosophical/grammatical question of whether a season can in fact have two finales is the kind of thing that would be debated in quick, droll asides by the family at the center of “Bob’s Burgers”: Bob and Linda Belcher and their children, Tina, Gene and Louise. But nevermind; if they’re both called finales, they must both be finales.