207. Treehouse of Horror IX

(originally aired October 25, 1998)
The Halloween shows are always really special, truly indicative of how creative and sharp the series can be. One of the greatest bummers for me was when these specials became disappointments year after year after year. If they can’t make these episodes that have absolutely no logical or in-universe restrictions at least somewhat interesting, then there’s a big problem. But this issue is probably best saved for another time, since this year’s Halloween episode isn’t bad, but definitely doesn’t feel all too memorable. The first segment is “Hell Toupee” (a clever play on words, I’ll admit.) Following petty thug Snake’s execution, Homer ends up with his hair surgically implanted on his scalp, a procedure that seems to have some adverse side effects. Now he’s possessed by Snake’s spirit, who seeks to get revenge on the eyewitnesses to his final crime: Apu, Moe, and Bart Simpson. The premise is kind of intriguing, but a lot of it feels a bit dry. You know exactly where the plot’s going, the order of the murders, and the resolution, so there’s no real suspense, you’re just kind of riding out the seven minutes. There are some laughs to be had, but when Marge cuts off her daughter explaining the scenario with, “Oh, please, Lisa, everyone’s already figured that out,” it’s very telling on a number of levels.

“Terror in Toon Town” is memorable for me in one respect: I remember watching it as a kid and having my mom shut it off at about the same time as Marge turned off the Krusty show. She was pretty skeptical about this show, thinking it would warp my young mind, but it wasn’t long before I browbeat her into letting me watch. I was quite the persuasive youngster. Anyway, Bart and Lisa get sucked into an Itchy & Scratchy cartoon. Yeah. Again, it just feels kind of empty on the whole. And call it splitting hairs to nitpick plot holes in a Halloween show, but rather than scour for batteries for the remote, Bart and Lisa are already sitting right up to the TV. Couldn’t they just, y’know, turn the knob? The Itchy & Scratchy antics take up most of the time, which ultimately aren’t that funny. The best bits occur around the main stuff, like the bizarre live action Regis & Kathie Lee cameo. And the twist at the end is okay, I guess.

“Starship Poopers” is easily the standout segment. First off, alien Maggie is a pretty neat design, and seeing her limbs just pop out is genuinely disconcerting. Also the first part is like a build-up to the inevitable appearance of Kang and Kodos. Once you see her green tentacles, you know they’re coming… Marge reveals that Kang is actually Maggie’s father, the result of a bizarre abduction/in-breeding program Marge was part of against her will, told in a spectacular flashback (“Oh, you look lovely this evening. Have you decreased in mass?”) Unable to come to a compromise regarding Maggie’s custody, Bart steps in, assuring only one man can resolve the conflict: Jerry Springer. The show segment is certainly memorable, albeit at this point a little hackneyed, but at the time having Jerry on and doing this spoof was topical, I’m sure. Plus Homer and Kang exchanging blows and bleeped curse words is pretty fantastic. There’s a sort of genius attributed to making bleeps funny, they need to be timed just right. Anyway, I’d say this is definitely the weakest “Treehouse” thus far, but there’s nothing terrible about it. But save the last segment, there’s not a whole lot to highly recommend either.

Tidbits and Quotes
– The bit with Snake using nacho cheese to slick back his hair is pretty gross. Then you have old crusty cheese in your hair. Sick!
– Nice set-up where Moe asks Apu for a cereal for people with syphilis, then later we see him eating the wonderfully named Penicill-O’s.
– Troy McClure was originally supposed to host FOX’s “World’s Deadliest Executions. I believe he even recorded the part too, but the writers wisely considered recasting the part following Hartman’s death. Ed McMahon is a well suited replacement, if only to have him doing his patented “Hi-yohh!” immediately following Snake’s death.
– Great moment with Dr. Nick prepping for Homer’s surgery, holding up a syringe that will make the operation feel like a wonderful dream. He proceeds to punch Homer to knock him out, then injects himself, and drowsily utilizes a pizza cutter to tear at Homer’s scalp.
– Chief Wiggum is as incompetent as ever here, busy sucking on a Squishee and disregarding Apu’s mangled corpse shoved inside the machine (“Jeez, Lou, how long were you going to let me keep drinking this thing?”) and later in his attempted arrest of Homer (“You’re under arrest for the murders of Moe Syzslak and Apu Nahassa… passa… well, just Moe, just Moe.”)
– I like the animation of the sentient hair piece shaking its “fist,” and just how many bullets it takes for it to stay down.
– The reveal of Homer’s tattered hobo clothes to not be a costume is an easy joke, but I do like his harmonica-assisted lament of Bart and Lisa’s plight (“Mama took those batteries / she took ’em away / Mama took those batteries / Size double-A!”), swiftly cut off by Bart slamming the kitchen door, a door we’ve never seen before or since.
– Its random and pointless, but I still like the reappearance of Poochie, if only to have him mowed down mercilessly.
– I guess Regis and Kathie Lee are the only guest stars to appear in live action. Can anyone prove me wrong? They make a pretty sweet cameo, with Kathie Lee as bitchy as ever (“That’s it! I’m going home! Dom DeLouise can interview himself!”)
– Homer and Marge take alien Maggie to Dr. Hibbert, who offers up his educated prescription (“Fire, and lots of it!” “Oh, that’s your cure for everything.”)
– I love the censor subversion of Kang’s exclamation “Holy flerking schnit!” If you’re not really paying attention, it basically sounds like the genuine article.
– Two great moments of male insecurity: upon finding Marge has “made it” with an alien monster, Homer sobs uncontrollably, only to quickly snap back and ask, “Was he better than me?” Then in the flashback we see the “mating” consisted of Kang shooting a ray gun at Marge’s head for a split second. She comments how fast it was, to which Kang defensively responds, “What are you implying?”
– Kang and Kodos pull out all the stops for their breeding program (“To put you at ease, we have recreated the most common spawning locations of your species. You may choose either the back seat of a Camaro, an airplane bathroom, a friend’s wedding, or the alley behind a porno theater.”) Marge remains indignant (“I absolutely refuse to go along with this… but since I have no choice, I’ll take the alley.”)
– There’s a fair share of great lines on the Springer show: Homer’s response to Jerry asking how he felt about the situation (“It made me angry, Jerry. Angry and tired,”) Kang’s “I hear all!!“, and the final bit of Maggie killing Jerry, with Kang and Homer exchanging blows, to which Marge laments, “I’m so [bleep]ing embarrassed…”
– A rather dated ADR line when Kang and Kodos leave to wipe out all of Earth’s politicians, Bart comments, “Don’t forget Ken Starr!” Yeah, because Bart totally knows who that is.

206. Bart the Mother

(originally aired September 27, 1998)
While the season premiere was aggressively awful, this episode is of a different color, namely in that it’s incredibly dry from start to finish. Despite a third act twist that seems like it should be a lot more biting, the tone throughout this show remains constant, and it’s something I can’t quite place. Marge forbids Bart from hanging out with troublemaker Nelson, but he ignores her plea so he can try out the hoodlum’s new BB gun. Bart ends up accidentally killing an innocent bird, which Marge finds out about, causing her to effectively give up on her son, having been disappointed one too many times. This episode has shades of “Marge Be Not Proud” since it’s about Bart trying to do right by his mother, except this one feels so much more heavy-handed. Nelson taunting Bart to shoot the bird feels like it belongs in an after-school special about peer pressure, and his remorse afterwards basically engulfs the entire episode. The first act ends with an extended slow zoom on Bart dropping the gun and looking regretful. The rest of the show never shakes this bummer feeling.

Bart finds two lone eggs in the newly empty nest and takes it upon himself to care for the orphaned birds until they hatch. Sounds scintillating, doesn’t it? I wouldn’t say it’s wildly out of character for Bart to want to make good like this, but it’s not something I’m that interested in watching, and there’s not much in terms of jokes you can milk from it. Act two is kind of one big dead zone. Around that you have Marge’s dissatisfaction with her son, which I felt worked a lot better in “Proud.” Her disillusionment of Bart stealing was a whole lot more interesting than her over-dramatic throwing up of her hands (“You wanna play with little hoodlums? Fine. Have fun killing things.”) As if the episode wasn’t overbearing enough. The mother-son disconnect in “Proud” felt very genuine and purposeful, but here, it comes off as very sour, and gives the entire episode this feeling of unease and displeasure. Not that I want every episode to be a laugh riot, but I don’t want to feel down either.

The clever twist is that the two eggs hatch to reveal Bolivian tree lizards, a species who eat bird’s eggs and lay their own in their place, so their newly hatched young can feast upon the mother bird. Bart comes to find that the lizards are federally banned for this reason, and the local birdwatching society seeks to put an end to them. It’s kind of interesting, but given that you need to have a scene or two to explain what the lizards are and their backstory, it’s not as easy to digest to make it a fantastic twist. This revelation gives us more sad, crying Bart, who’s come to care for these lizards, and Marge assists him to get away from the birdwatching mob. In the end, the lizards are set free, but end up being an unseen blessing in that they dramatically reduce the pigeon population in Springfield, although now they’re overrun with lizards instead. When this episode wasn’t making me uncomfortable, it was boring more than anything, with only a few select laughs to cut through the doldrums. Ultimately, it’s just downright forgettable.

Tidbits and Quotes
– I like the bit at the very beginning with Homer’s mail call (“One stinkin’ letter? Why’d you make us gather ’round like that?” “I needed my power fix.”)
– The Family Fun Center set piece isn’t fantastic, but it’s got a few good things: Marge’s slow and steady speed on the go-karts, Nelson knocking Milhouse’s kart off the track, which of course bursts into flames, and Bart’s pathetic choice of prizes with his paltry amount of tickets. But then we also have Homer at the batting cage, which is just him wailing and getting hurt repeatedly, though I do Bart and Lisa’s commentary as balls continue to pelt their father’s motionless body (“Hang in there, Dad, just half a basket left!” “Wow, you sure get a lot of balls for a quarter.”)
– I kinda like how Bart purposely aims to miss the bird but hits it anyway, with Nelson commenting how Bart’s such a pro for compensating for the crooked sight.
– In his last appearance, Troy McClure stars in “Birds: Our Fine Feathered Colleagues,” a video which is pretty much the only bright spot here. Hartman is golden as always (“Precious eggs. If they’re to survive, they require the gentle warmth and tender love that only a mother can provide. Or better yet, a seventy-five watt bulb.”) Maybe not the best episode to go out on, but with the video ending with his callous response to little Jimmy and giving a big ol’ shit-eating grin to the camera, that’s just how I want to remember him. Farewell, Mr. McClure.
– Call me hypocritical for besmirching the batting cage bit, but I like Homer repeatedly falling down the stairs. First it works as a quick joke where Bart talks about finding a light bulb “lying around,” then we see Homer flick on the absent basement light and take a tumble. Then we see it again randomly in a montage, then much later after the whole lizard reveal and you’ve forgotten about it, Homer says he’s going to eat the remaining pies in the basement, and we get hit once more with it. That’s the way you make Homer getting gratuitously hurt be funny.
– The birdwatching society is filled with recognizable faces, some of which make sense, some don’t. Skinner is perfect as the leader, some like Jasper, Apu and even Moe make a little sense, but Edna? Mr. Burns? Kind of like bringing back Alison in “Lard of the Dance,” this is more of a growing trend of inserting as many recognizable characters into scenes as possible, without much regard whether it makes sense for them to be there.
– I like Skinner listing off the tree lizard’s target birds (“It’s already wiped out the Dodo, the Cuckoo, and the Ne-Ne, and it has nasty plans for the Booby, the Titmouse, the Woodcock, and the Titpecker.”) I don’t care for how bloodthirsty he seems to be, though: putting the lizards in the paper cutter works as a quick gag, but then he proceeds to hold up a power drill and talks about preparing for splatter… that doesn’t seem like Skinner. Also, this exchange (“Wow, did you know they had those webbed flaps for gliding?” “Yes, but I was hoping they didn’t know that.”) Why is Skinner a moron all of a sudden?
– Nice paltry gift Quimby bestows upon Bart for unleashing the lizards: a scented candle (“Mmmm… loganberry.”)

205. The Wizard of Evergreen Terrace

(originally aired September 20, 1998)
Well, this is our official season premiere, and boy oh boy is it a bad sign. I had more problems with “Lard of the Dance” then I remembered, but I still kind of enjoyed it on the whole. This one is pretty damn terrible, from its directionless beginning to its ridiculous twist ending. I knew we were trouble from the start: hearing on the radio that the new average life expectancy, Homer realizes he’s already lived half his life, stops his car on the freeway, wanders through traffic and picks up the phone in the call box thinking he’s talking to his wife. I don’t know, I guess the writers think it’s funny to see how unbelievably stupid they can make Homer, which may be amusing just talking about it in the writer’s room, but actually seeing it in the show, it just makes him less like an actual person and more of a caricatured dolt. The leap to the main story couldn’t be more tenuous: the family’s film projector breaks, prompting Lisa to comment that it was originally invented by Thomas Edison. Homer then becomes obsessed with researching the man, then realizes that his life can be fulfilled if he follows in Edison’s footsteps and becomes an inventor. Your guess is as good as mine as to how this make sense.

There’s not much to comment on in act two, since nothing at all really happens. Really. Homer sequesters himself in the basement to come up with ideas for inventions, so it’s just scene after scene of either him trying to jump start his brain (a nigh impossible task) or the other members of the family coming down to help and/or bother him. Eventually he comes up with four awful contraptions, which are faulty products, but still seem too well done. I mean, Homer couldn’t even build a spice rack properly, you think he’d be able to make an electric hammer? Or a make-up gun which he hilariously holds up and shoots in his wife’s face? Marge tells her husband as politely as she can that the inventions are fucking terrible, which he takes to heart. “I’m not saying you’re a bad inventor…” she starts off. Why? This is another thing that would develop over these seasons, when it’s a wacky Homer story, the other Simpsons are just tag-alongs, enabling him in his goofy antics. Later when they discover Homer’s chair with two extra legs, they shower him with praise and give him a group hug with big smiles on their faces. It’s a really eerie shot, like they need to cheer up this mentally insane person or fear the consequences. They’re treating a delusional idiot with kid’s gloves or something.

Now we get to the big dumb ending. Homer finds that he subconsciously stole the six-legged chair idea from his Edison poster, which leaves him with only one option: go to Menlo Park, find said chair and destroy it. Bart questions this, thinking his father loved Edison. Homer replies, “Ah, the hell with him!” He’s spent the entire episode praising the man’s name, now fuck this guy, smashy smashy, I’m an inventor too! But before he can commit the deed, he finds that Edison had the same stupid invention graph as he did, competing with his own idol Leonardo Da Vinci for the most patents held. Totally makes sense. Then the finale of the show is that Homer leaves his electric hammer behind in the museum, which is then credited to Edison and his newly wealthy heirs. Still totally makes sense. I chuckled a handful of times here, but this one’s an absolute mess beginning to end. What’s most puzzling to me is that it was written by John Swartzwelder, who penned some of the greatest episodes of the show’s history, and his detective novellas are just as hilarious. Meanwhile, he also wrote some of the worst episodes ever: this one, “Kill the Alligator and Run,” “Simpson Safari,” and so on. Lots of talented people still work on this show, are these seasons just a higher form of comedy? Or is it all a big damn joke? Well either way, I’m not laughing.

Tidbits and Quotes
– I like Homer’s vision of his funeral, featuring multi-Oscar-winning Barney, President Lenny and Heckle and Jeckle for some reason. The shot of the dump truck dropping Homer’s bloated corpse into the ground is pretty funny.
– I feel like there’s some kind of meat that could be pulled from Homer’s mid-life crisis. I like his line about not being able to remember anything (“You know how many memories I have? Three! Standing in line for a movie, having a key made, and sitting here talking to you. Thirty-eight years and that’s all I have to show for it!”) I have a piss poor memory, I can’t imagine what it’s going to be when I get that old. Spring boarding from that to the family showing him the home movies of his achievements makes sense, but then the show completely derails. I do love the shot of Homer’s space shuttle ramming the Mir station. Wonder how they got that footage.
– Homer at the school library starts out fine, citing some unexplained “unpleasantness” at the “big people library.” But then he acts more infantile than Bart and is quick with a “SCHOOL” pennant to show the librarian. There was a weird sort of pennant running gag through the Scully years for some reason… don’t know what that was about.
– Homer’s Edison obsession is really boring. I don’t get why they thought this was a good idea.
– I like the bit where Homer backs up from his work, then rushes toward the paper, hoping kinetic momentum will jog an idea out of him, but… nothing.
– The scene with Homer and Frink is indicative of how empty this episode feels. Homer wants to be an inventor to give his life meaning, but doesn’t know what the fuck he’s doing at all (“I just wanna know how to invent things. Tell me!”) As a result, the whole episode feels very meandering and meaningless. At least we got Frink’s hamburger earmuffs out of it (“These babies will be in the stores while he’s still grappling with the pickle matrix!”)
– Homer holding the gun up to Marge’s face is slightly uncomfortable. But then again he did it in “The Cartridge Family,” but it made more sense story-wise there. And I hate his line, “Women will like what I tell them to like!” It just encapsulates this new Homer attitude, that he thinks he’s better than everyone else and he’s the only one that matters. Remember when he was kind of a humble guy?
– I like the bit with Edison’s ghost getting “run over” by Homer, him screaming back at him, then Homer backing up as Edison worriedly hides behind some bushes.
– The only really great stuff in the show is at the Edison Museum: the sign out front, “No Gang Colors,” the tour guide’s lame riddle much to the crowd’s amusement, Edison’s boyhood gift shop, and an incredible tease (“Now, behind that door is Edison’s actual preserved brain. Ordinarily, folks, tour groups are not allowed to see it. And of course, today will be no exception.”)
– The ending is so goddamn stupid with that Edison/Da Vinci poster. And it doesn’t really close off the Homer inventor story at all, just his sporadic random intention to destroy Edison that we got a mere three minutes ago. Also apparently Bart knows who Da Vinci is.
– The framing for the final shot of Homer on his toilet chair is pretty poor. We clearly see that he’s right next to Bart on the couch up until the last shot. I’m all for cheats, but only if you try a little hard to cover them up.

204. Lard of the Dance

(originally aired August 23, 1998)
Here’s an episode that I always thought was of ‘meh’ distinction, and I pretty much still do after a re-watch, but some things kind of rubbed me the wrong way about it. The main story is simple: Lisa feels ostracized as a trendy new girl Alex usurps her friends and sweeps them into the mature world of fashion, make-up and dating. Act one ends with her being abandoned, and after the break we see Lisa complaining to her mother that her friends were stolen. We’ve seen Lisa hang out with girls before, but we’ve also seen her isolated by her fellow classmates a lot more. She’s an established social outcast already, how is this situation any different? I could say the same for the randomly reappearing Allison, except they just made her a generic girl character. But then why make her Allison at all? I guess they just figured it would be better to put in a familiar face. Or easier. But why would she and Lisa be hanging out with Sherri and Terri who are two grades older then them? Grades never intersected in elementary school, everybody knows that.

The foundations of the plot are shaky for me, and since Lisa is already a loner, this premise about her losing her “friends” doesn’t hold much weight to me. I get the basic idea, that Alex represents the new wave of youth who are much more inclined to try to act older like teenagers, and there’s genuine humor to be mined from that. They nab a few good jokes out of it, but something else bothers me about applying this mentality to characters this young. These eight-year-olds, including Lisa, are tarting themselves up in mini cocktail dresses trying to seduce boys to go to the dance… part of me just felt icky about watching it. Again, I get what they’re going for, but it just felt like a premise that maybe would work better for kids a little older. But even with all these complaints, the story itself flows logically, and there are some amusing jokes to be had. Lisa Kudrow does a pretty good job as Alex, where she’s actually an important character with a personality, unlike later celebrity-voiced classmates we would have.

Now we have our sub-plot, featuring Homer and Bart becoming grease bandits. I feel like this was the season where Homer really went off the deep end, one particular avenue of that being giving him wacky job after wacky job after wacky job. Where “Simpson Tide” was the good recent version of this trope, this feels like its polar opposite: Homer is wildly impulsive when it comes to this new hare-brained scheme, against all sense of reality or logic dispensed by his sidekick… er, son Bart. When he gets sixty-three cents for all his toils, he’s still happy as a clam. Wouldn’t Homer get upset that he didn’t get the riches he felt he was owed? No, because here he’s braindead Homer, with a one-track mind and one last flickering brain cell. Then we end with a silly all-out brawl in the school air ducts with Willie, a finale that at least ties the two plots together in an amusing and satisfying way. Like the A-story, I can at least say I laughed at a few points, so it’s not all bad. I got a lot of gripes about this episode, and while a fair amount of jokes managed to sop up some of the negativity, it’s still not enough for me to feel like rewatching this any time in the future.

Tidbits and Quotes
– I’ve always loved Milhouse’s pathetic forlorn crush toward his best friend’s sister. I like here it’s clear that the attraction is skin deep, and he really doesn’t connect with her at all (“Did you have a nice summer? Don’t you hate that we have to go back to stupid school tomorrow?” “I like school.” “Me too! We have so much in common.”)
– I like this bit with Skinner over the intercom (“Attention please, I need a volunteer for a thankless chore. …shall I assume the only hand in the air is Lisa Simpson? Thank you, Lisa.”) Lisa basically becomes Skinner’s helper monkey through the whole episode, which I guess would bother me more if the core of the main two stories didn’t already bother me enough.
– It could have been easy to make Alex kind of a bitch, but they didn’t. I like that she’s a pretty nice person. She apologizes to Lisa for ditching her, reassures her about finding a date, it adds a bit more dimension to her one-off character. The dichotomy between her and Lisa couldn’t be more stark though: while Alex sprays on “Pretension” by Calvin Klein, Lisa is crowing about the new Malibu Stacy doll with an achievable chest.
– I guess the writers thought it was funny to have Homer drag his son around on his zany schemes and keep him out of school, but I just felt bad for the kid. And it would fluctuate; one scene Bart looks forlorn out to all the kids in the school yard, then he seems pleased as punch to tell his father about all the grease there is at Krusty Burger. Also, Marge may put up with her husband’s stupid new “occupation,” but no way would she let him keep Bart out of school. No way.
– The funniest bit in the whole show is Homer staring down the greasy-faced teenager at the Krusty Burger cash register (“My God, you’re greasy…”)
– I like that Homer’s competition is aptly named “Acne Grease and Shovel.” Homer bemoans his failure (“I can’t believe those goons muscled me out of my grease business. I’ve been muscled out of everything I’ve ever done. Including my muscle-for-hire business.”)
– The Donner Party Supplies store, with “Winter Madness Sale!” in the window, is very inspired. I also like the name of the trendy youth store “Dingo Junction” with the manic marsupial logo. I also think it’s the same model of the Crash Bandicoot rip-off later this season in “Lisa Get An A.”
– When Marge suggests Homer take up another “far-out money-making scheme,” like starting an emu farm, it really felt like the writers were conscious of how dumb this was and were delving into parody at that point. But we’ve got over ten seasons more of this kind of stuff, so I guess they later realized they had a lot more gas in the tank.
– I like Homer’s attempt to make peace with the Lord before his last big grease score (“I know You’re busy, seeing as how You can watch women changing clothes and all that. But if You help us steal this grease tonight, I promise we’ll donate half the profits to charity.” “Dad, He’s not stupid.” “All right, screw it, let’s roll!”)
– Nice visual with a dissatisfied Lisa sitting outside the gymnasium, getting lit up with disco lights and hip music as each happy couple enters.
– Another season 10 staple: Homer getting hurt… a lot. I guess it wasn’t enough that he gets pummeled by Willie, they had to add the dumb bit where his face gets sucked in the tube and his eye bulges out. Hilarious, right? Willie gets some laughs in, with his childish shriek backpedaled to a manly “Ach!” and his excitement to meet a fellow North Kilttowner. And of course “My retirement grease! Nooooooo!!”
– Lisa posits to Alex the beauty of being young (“We’ve only got nine, maybe ten years tops where we can giggle in church, and chew with our mouths open and go days without bathing! We’ll never have that freedom again.”) Even this feels wrong. Lisa chewing with her mouth open and not bathing? I get she’s a kid, but this doesn’t sound like her at all.
– I love the end with the kids playing in the grease like it’s snow (Milhouse tastes and comments, “It’s like a hamburger milkshake!”) It’s kind of a sweet ending, complete with Nelson inadvertently calling Luigi an ethnic slur (“Here comes the greaseball!” “Hey! Luigi bring-a you kids-a free pizza! Why do you hafta make-a the fun, huh?”)