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The Simpsons Reaches 400th Episode

By Simon Maxwell Apter, TheNation.com. Posted May 17, 2007.


Over 18 seasons and three presidential eras, The Simpsons has paid badly animated homage to all that sucks in America.
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"Then I had this crazy dream that my family were all just cartoon characters and that our success led to some crazy propaganda network called Fox News." -- Bart Simpson

If Seinfeld had lasted as long as The Simpsons has, its finale would have featured a graying foursome closing in on 55 (60 for Kramer), far nearer, of course, to that much-derided condo in Miami Beach or to those discounted movie tickets than their selfish, or childish, or birdbrained shenanigans would have you believe. Eighteen seasons of The Sopranos -- which ends in June after "only" eighty-six episodes -- would make it statistically impossible for any of the original cast of wise guys not to be dead or incarcerated. And God only knows who would watch a Friends featuring a menopausal Monica and a Flomax-popping Chandler suffering from, as it's wont to be called these days, BPH. No half-hour comedy has ever enjoyed as long of a run as The Simpsons, and, if Seinfeld (nine seasons), Friends (ten seasons), The Cosby Show (eight seasons, one of which matched Cliff and Claire directly against Homer and Marge on Thursday nights) and the other NBC Must See TV warriors are any indication, no half-hour comedy ever will.

Terribly animated (at least by Pixar or Dreamworks standards), unabashedly crude and, at times, prone to deus ex machina endings (including one featuring a robed, sandaled and bearded God who actually booms, "Deus ex machina!" as he sets things right), The Simpsons will present its 400th episode on Fox on May 20. It's important to note the "on Fox" part, as there would be no Fox, let alone a Fox News, without The Simpsons. Indeed, the importance of The Simpsons to Fox was perhaps best illustrated in an episode of Family Guy, another Fox cartoon (and cheap Simpsons knock-off to some, delightful refurbishment of the genre to others), in which its protagonist rattles off some twenty-nine failed Fox programs that network execs had used to try and bolster the paltry Simpsons-Cops-America's Most Wanted triad they were currently (and quite lopsidedly) using to entice primetime viewers.

Further proof of Homer's influence on American culture was later made manifest when a Fox animator, Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane, crashed the gates of the Establishment and delivered the Class Day speech at Harvard's 2006 commencement exercises. (Tim Russert did the honors in 2005; former President Clinton will take to the rostrum this year.) And though The Simpsons is typically associated with (and sometimes berated for) a leftist/liberal outlook, its pure literary, comedic and intellectual appeal is such that, during the run-up to the Iraq War, even National Review commentator Jonah Goldberg swiped "cheese-eating surrender monkeys," an epithet for the French coined by Groundskeeper Willy, for his own criticism of French refusal to join George W. Bush's Coalition of the Willing.

Remarkably, after eighteen years, The Simpsons never strays far from a "smartest show on television" discussion. Actually, it never strays too far from much of anything it laid down in Episode 1, "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire," a Christmas special aired December 17, 1989, which featured the first mainstream animated characters who drank beer to excess, bet the family savings at the dog track and said "damn," "hell" and "ass" like the rest of us (and like their nonanimated TV cousins). The Daily Show, a current contender for that "smartest show" claim -- and, like The Simpsons, often bandied about by the likes of Olbermann when they aspire to hipness -- has juggled formats, correspondents and hosts (even if Craig Kilborn's two-year tenure was long ago eclipsed, if not downright forgotten) during the show's eleven-year stint on Comedy Central. The Simpsons, in contrast, has featured in three different decades the same characters, the same settings and the same scenarios. The Simpsons is the Gordie Howe of sitcoms. Creator Matt Groening has watched as knockoffs, heirs apparent both worthy and unworthy and even an entire network devoted to cartoons of the swearing, non-Saturday morning variety, come, struggle for a time and -- more often than not -- go.

Along with Bart's hyper-aware gem printed above, "Yokel Chords," a recent episode first aired March 7, 2007, also featured what is perhaps to date the most succinct summation and critique of President George W. Bush's foreign policy. "Brandine!" a startled Cletus -- the show's stereotypical hillbilly -- exclaims upon stumbling across his fatigues-clad wife, "You're supposed to be in Iraq, stoppin' 9/11!" It's a hilarious sentence, wrong in too many ways to count, and yet at the same time stunning, for -- as we've seen for the past six years and change -- this is actually how President Bush seems to think, speak and preside over history and his place in it.


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Simon Maxwell Apter, a former muffin baker from Oregon, is an intern at The Nation.

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Thanks Matt Groening!
Posted by: omnivore on May 17, 2007 12:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A sincere congrats for making it this far. Your work shows that an artist can make an impact on the culture of a people, even slovenly boors in this nation. I'm 32 and I can't believe it's been that long! I was a freshman @ Bronx Science when your show came out. Anyway, there's no rest for the weary. Keep doin' what you're doin'. But like the author of this article mentions, try not too water it down too much. I mean, I love Comic Book Guy and Disco Stu, but keep it political.
Long live the Simpsons,
odb

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D'OH!!
Posted by: Tom Degan on May 17, 2007 1:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I haven't seen a Simpsons episode in years. I am a big fan of the show but, during the age of Bush 43, I've been all news all the time. That's a situation that should change. Maybe I'll make a point of tuning in to the Simpsons again. It would probably be good for my mental health. No shown history has more accurately (and hilariously) reflected American culture than this gem of a program.

It's ironic that, as this article points out, that the Simpsons are more resposible than anything for the creation of FOX News. I forgive you, Matt.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» RE: D'OH!! Posted by: otto
» RE: D'OH!! Posted by: kabac55
I don't agree with the lean years, all had much to offer
Posted by: chaoslegs on May 17, 2007 6:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seasons 9-14.

Season 9 you have:
Apu's arranged marriage
Lisa and the angel skeleton
Movementarians
Submarine episode with the penguin navy
Bart and Lisa doing news, Bart does the human interest stories

Season 10:
Bart killing the bird, then raising the egg
Lisa cheating on a test that helps school get funding
Homer bodyguarding for mayor and seeing the corruption
Apu's amazing valentine efforts and jealous husbands
Marge with road rage in a SUV
Homer's failed bbq construction is pop art
Lisa and other smart characters attempt to run Springfield

Season 11:
Homer ruining Mel Gibson's remake of Mr Smith goes to Washington with senseless violence.
Bart on meds, commentary on ADHD meds
Toy company uses school as focus group
Lisa fills in mother role for incapcitated Marge
The reneging on the PBS pledge is one of my all time favorites in so many ways.
Moe's plastic surgery
Bart and Milhouse living in a mall.

Season 12:
Split area code episode. Right side/wrong side of the tracks.
Mr X, first real news, then made up stuff.
Homer's crayon in brain. Gets smarter and isolated when removed.
Boy band episode which is also military recruitment of 10 yr olds.
Baseball team leaving town episode.
Christian theme park, and the gas leak that cause visions.

Season 13:
Unusual justice, Homer and Bart tethered together.
Moe makes bar more hip, loses old customers
Lisa switches from Christianity to Buddhaism
Ban on sugar
Grandpa getting his license to impress lady friend.
Brazilian orphan episode was priceless.
Apu's cheating

Season 14:
Bart drops to 3rd grade, Lisa moves up to 3rd grade.
Marge's breast implants, and how men treat her differently
Homer hires a detective to learn about Lisa's interests
Marge's bodybuilding, self esteem and agressiveness
Tempting Lisa to cheat on spelling bee for the sake of the bee.
Marge having to drive everyone when Homer loses license.


Maybe not every episode was the greatest commentary, but there were plenty in each of those seasons.

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Then Homer said,
Posted by: mizipi on May 17, 2007 7:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"D'OH!"

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It's like America, but funny...
Posted by: CriminallySane on May 17, 2007 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do believe one of Matt Groening's original notions with Futurama was that The Simpsons was still running original episodes 1000 years into the future.

And while South Park may offer more laugh-out-loud moments from time to time, they do much shorter seasons, and manage to make The Simpsons' animation look like Fantasia by comparison. (Not that much of a Pixar fan, everything they do looks like molded plastic to me.) All that said, the episode where they tipped their hats to The Simpsons was hilarious.

So, if they keep making them, I'll keep watching them. After all, mediocre Simpsons episodes are better than almost anything else that's considered "good" in the sitcom world. And good Simpsons episodes are as good as anything out there. And they are...out there.

Mmmm...donuts...

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Nerding out
Posted by: greghxc on May 17, 2007 8:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I appreciate the sentiment of the article, but neither of the two characters you mentioned were introduced in seasons 9 - whatever. Carry on.

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Love the Simpsons, but....
Posted by: jroth420 on May 17, 2007 8:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Family Guy has taken the genre to a whole other level. That show takes jokes farther and says things that are so much more outrageous than the Simpsons, that you can hardly believe that they air it at all (which they didn't for a little while thank you very much "Wish upon a Weinstein"). It is what the Simpsons used to be in a lot of ways.

That being said, none of it would have been possible if it weren't for the groundbreaking show that the Simpsons turned out to be, and for that I have to say, "Thanks" to Matt and the entire Simpsons' family.

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» RE: Love the Simpsons, but.... Posted by: jroth420
A "Firesign Theater" for the eyes . . .
Posted by: KaptainSpiffy on May 17, 2007 8:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and a "Mystery Science Theater 3000 for . . . uh, the eyes as well . . . . Still something to be watched after all these years.

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Badly animated?
Posted by: McJulie on May 17, 2007 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have got to be kidding me. And by "Dreamworks" standards? The people who brought us Shrek? Puh-lease. Clearly the author has some kind of weird 3D animation bias.

And The Family Guy has only ever been as good as the worst episodes of The Simpsons. The Simpsons took several years to start chucking character and world consistency for the sake of a joke, Family Guy started out doing that. And the Simpson's jokes are still funnier.

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» RE: Badly animated? Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Badly animated? Posted by: helenwheels
I appreciate the Simpsons loyalty...
Posted by: jroth420 on May 17, 2007 12:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I felt the same way for a long time, but sorry, Family Guy does it better now and has for some years.

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oh the irony...
Posted by: Ghoulman on May 17, 2007 12:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... of a network like FOX, who's right wing propaganda is actually paid for from the popularity of a satire on the American Dream.

Glad the article points this out. :)

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Indeed
Posted by: apophenia_monkey on May 17, 2007 7:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
a lovely thing the simpsons--saves us from the humourless types like universal with their class club as the end to all evil.

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I live for the intro
Posted by: mombot on May 20, 2007 6:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't you always watch to see what happens when everyone has arrived home and gets to the living room? Our whole house waits for that moment! Hail the Simpsons!

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Best.Show.Ever.
Posted by: Maxwell House on May 22, 2007 4:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks forever to Matt and The Simpsons for paving the way for brilliant shows like Futurama, Family Guy, South Park, and my new fave, American Dad.

And thanks to DVD's so we can watch them over and over again, even when the dumb ass networks, with their low IQ's and even lower standards of comedy, kill them off!

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