The Simpsons Season 34 - Episode 7
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Season 34 is the 34th season of The Simpsons that premiered on September 25, 2022, with Habeas Tortoise and will conclude on May 21, 2023 with \"Homer's Adventure Through the Windshield Glass\". This season will include the series' 745th episode, making the total amount of episodes exceed the Simpsons house number. It will also include the 750th episode.
\"The Simpsons\" episode \"From Beer to Paternity\" was another hilarious entry from the Emmy-winning series from start to finish, and some may have noticed a touching dedication at the end for a well-renowned TV producer with a special connection to the show.
The episode \"From Beer to Paternity\" was dedicated to TV producer and writer David Davis. The dedication was shown after the credits with an image of Davis as a Simpsons character. He sadly passed away on November 4, 2022, in Los Angeles, at the age of 86 years old (via The New York Times).
While \"From Beer to Paternity\" may not be a candidate for the coveted list of best \"Simspons\" episodes, there were undeniably a few laughs and heartwarming moments along the way, ending things off with a very touching dedication to a champion of the small screen.
In episode 7 of season 34 of The Simpsons, Lisa is seen sitting in the backseat of the car. Her dad, Homer, asks if she wants to listen to her favorite genre of music, jazz. Lisa replies that she is not in the mood. She then tells her dad that she wants to listen to her \"second favorite\" genre of music. Subsequently, Homer tries to guess his daughter's second favorite genre of music. He fails at guessing the right genre and then Lisa tells him:
As the popularity and consumption of K-pop are increasing worldwide, their references in famous shows have also become the talk of the town. As soon as the episode featured Lovesick Girls, BLINKS went berserk with excitement and enthusiasm.
The Simpsons has been around for three decades now, spawning over 700 episodes and one theatrical movie (Homer voice: one theatrical movie so far!). It wasn't an easy task considering how many there were to choose from, but these 34 episodes are essential viewing for anyone who enjoys hanging out in Springfield, USA.
\"Homer the Great\" is a classic, absurdist Simpsons episode of the type only the inimitable John Swartzwelder could write. When Homer discovers that Lenny and Carl are members of a secret society known as the Stonecutters, he winds up joining and bumbling his way into becoming their fabled Chosen One. Power goes to Homer's head, of course, and the ensuing rise and fall of Springfield's new god-king is a real hoot. Plus, this episode gets bonus points for its great use of guest star Patrick Stewart and having one of the show's catchiest original songs in \"We Do.\"
Like the series as a whole, the annual Treehouse of Horror specials peaked fairly early on, back when the emphasis was more on spooky fun than parodying the hot movie franchises of the moment. The sixth special still ranks among the best of the bunch, particularly thanks to its hilarious slasher movie spoof \"Nightmare on Evergreen Terrace.\" This is also the episode that gave us Homer Cubed, a then-groundbreaking segment that dragged Homer kicking and screaming into 3D.
Thanks to the perpetually sliding timeline of The Simpsons, the series has given us many conflicting accounts of what life was like when Homer and Marge were younger and learning the ropes of being parents. This episode ranks as the best of that particular formula. It springs from a simple question - \"Why are there no baby pictures of Maggie in the house\" - and uses it as a springboard for a surprisingly heartfelt look at Maggie's origins and Homer's brief stint as a bowling alley employee. As cynical as The Simpsons can be, this episode truly wears its heart on its sleeve.
In this episode, Lisa learned the same lesson Batman would come to understand in The Dark Knight - sometimes you need to let a city have its heroes, even if the reality doesn't actually measure up to the ideal. \"Lisa the Iconoclast\" is one of the stronger episodes to focus on Lisa's moral dilemma of the day. Here she makes it her mission to force Springfield to realize the truth about its beloved founder, Jebediah Springfield, only to once again find herself a town pariah. As with a lot of great Lisa-driven episodes, the focus is as much on Homer and the conflict between following his whims and wanting to live up to Lisa's expectations. A memorable guest performance from Donald Sutherland is the icing on the cake in this episode.
While The Simpsons was still honing its voice in Season 2, this unusually dramatic episode offered a glimpse of the golden period that was to come for the series. Here Homer confronts his own mortality in a very real and immediate way, fearing he's just ingested a poisonous blowfish and has only one day left to live. The result could have been overly sentimental and melodramatic, but this episode toes the line between humor and tragedy easily enough. The scenes of Homer bidding farewell to his family and confronting his imminent demise show an unusually human side of a character who so often comes across as a self-centered, even sociopathic jerk.
At the same time, this episode ends on an appropriately sly note. One minute, Homer is celebrating his second lease on life and promising to live every day to the fullest, the next he's stretched out on the couch with a half-eaten bag of pork rinds.
This episode introduced fans to Moana Simpson (voiced by Glenn Close), Homer's long-lost mother who's spent the last several decades on the lam after running afoul of a (slightly) younger Mr. Burns. The ensuing family reunion is a lot of fun, from Homer's childish plays at attention to Lisa finally discovering a family member she can look up to. But ultimately, Moana realized she couldn't outrun her past, and that's where this episode finds its enduring appeal. Homer and Moana's tearful goodbye ranks among the most emotional moments of the show. It's basically The Simpsons' answer to Futurama's \"The Luck of the Fryrish.\"
One of our favorite animated sitcom tropes is the episode where a character goes to extreme lengths to get out of having to perform an annoying task. \"King-Size Homer\" sees Homer transform into a 300-pound caricature of himself in order to get out of Mr. Burns' mandatory exercise program and enjoy the pleasures of working from home. But when nuclear meltdown looms, Homer has to race against the clock and his own, uncooperative body in order to save the day.
Nothing illustrates just how ridiculous and unprecedented The Simpsons' multi-decade run is than episodes like \"Lisa's Wedding.\" This episode flashes forward to what was then the far-flung, futuristic landscape of 2010 to explore what Springfield looks like 15 years in the future. Apart from the presence of Jetsons-style hover cars and Bart being gainfully employed, not much had changed.
The 2010 humor alone would have been enough to make this episode succeed, but it also hinges on a romance between Lisa and her handsome, wealthy British suitor, Hugh (Mandy Patinkin). As much as Lisa may be embarrassed by her family, she can't bring herself to marry a man who won't accept them for who they are. Even though the whole future storyline is just a glorified \"What if\" scenario, it serves as one of the more poignant looks at the love between Lisa and Homer.
We're cheating a bit on this one by technically including two episodes, it's true. To date, \"Who Shot Mr. Burns\" remains the only two-part storyline the show has ever tackled. And it was a gleeful parody of the infamous \"Who Shot J.R.\" storyline on the 1980's soap opera Dallas.
The first episode closed out Season 6, as Mr. Burns managed to piss off just about every resident of Springfield by stealing oil, blocking out the sun, firing Smithers and still, through it all, never remembering Homer's name. The episode ended on a cliffhanger, with Burns shot and dozens of Springfielders as potential culprits. Season 7 continued the drama as Chief Wiggum investigated the crime and Lisa raced to clear her father's name before he actually killed his boss.
This was the first major tragedy to strike the Flanders clan since Ned's brush with financial ruin in Season 1. It upset his comfortable, squeaky-clean world and allowed for an extended character arc to play out over the course of many seasons as Ned adjusted to the single-parent lifestyle and started dating again. It was one of several cases where a key twist has given an old character new life on this show.
With \"Radioactive Man,\" various characters learned that the glamorous allure of Hollywood doesn't always live up to reality. The episode saw a Hollywood studio choose Springfield as the location to shoot their big-budget Radioactive Man movie (starring Ranier Wolfcastle, of course). Bart's dreams of playing Fallout Boy were dashed when the role went to Milhouse. For his part, Milhouse wanted no part of the fame, fortune, and constant hassle that come with child stardom. Meanwhile, production ground to a halt as Mayor Quimby and the rest of Springfield bled the studio dry with bogus taxes and fees. In the end, nobody won, especially not Wolfcastle as he was swept away by a river of toxic waste.
How can you not love an episode that simultaneously parodies Westworld, Jurassic Park and the Walt Disney empire This episode sees the Simpsons travel to the new Itchy & Scratchy theme park for their summer trip. And naturally, it's only a matter of time before Homer and Bart's promise not to embarrass Marge completely falls apart. Luckily, a little Chaos Theory causes an uprising of animatronic Itchy and Scratchy robots, providing for some much-needed family bonding. Anyone who has experienced the overwhelming assault of capitalism and corporate mascots that is Disney World can appreciate this episode.
\"Lemon of Troy\" offered a fun glimpse into Shelbyville, which turned out to be an almost Mirror Universe version of Springfield in some ways. But the episode also hit all the right notes in terms of celebrating the peculiar sense of community among Springfielders and their mythologized town history. 59ce067264