Season Nine Revisited (Part Four)


20. The Trouble with Trillions

  • At some point every New Year’s Eve night, I’ll think, “Will this horrible year never end?” The opening scene is fantastic; I love the added touch that the Jebediah statue is already TP’d as the townspeople gather to count down. Also a favorite is the snippet we hear of Krusty’s drunken rendition of “Auld Lang Syne.”
  • Ned doing his taxes on January 1st (complete with a fistful of mints) is very in-character, as is his explanation of what taxes are for to his son (“Policemen, trees, sunshine, and let’s not forget the folks who just don’t feel like working, God bless ’em!”)
  • I really like the reveal that Marge is the artist behind the sailboat painting above the couch, and her saying she painted it for Homer is a very sweet detail (I wouldn’t be surprised if in a few seasons, we get an entire terrible episode about the story behind it.) The ending of the scene of Marge hanging the painting back on the wall, lamenting the waste of her talent, is cut in syndication, and maybe better off. It’s kind of a bummer.
  • Homer is in full invincible stupid mode in his frantic rush to the post office, which sucks, but this piece of animation is ironically fantastic. It looks like the totaled car gets smashed flat; whoever was in there is most certainly dead.
  • The reveal of the second IRS agent behind the swivel chair, followed by the first agent sitting and turning back around is a wonderfully stupid gag.
  • The IRS uses Homer to spy on the gang at Moe’s, but they never say that they suspect anyone there. Did they have a target in mind, or did they just assume maybe we could arrest one of these idiot’s buddies? Also, Charlie is dressed identically to Homer with a white collared shirt and blue pants, that’s kind of weird.
  • Milhouse posing in the photo booth shirtless is so great; Pamela Hayden nails his awkward and embarrassed “My… my shirt fell off” when he’s exposed.
  • The whole trillion dollar bill scandal is kind of stupid when you think about it for more than five seconds. The government let Mr. Burns abscond with a literal trillion dollars for over fifty years without any substantial investigation? Plus, it’s revealed that he keeps the damn bill in his wallet, so they could have confronted and arrested him at any time. Why did they need a big dope like Homer to handle this seemingly very important, half-a-century-old assignment?
  • Burns just letting Homer into his home feels off to me. They make a joke out of it, with him wanting to hurt Homer in some way before he leaves, but his feeble concessions to him (“I’ll get you a towel,”) while kind of funny, aren’t worth defanging him like this. Also, the Hall of Burns is really stupid. Why would he have these elaborate museum-quality dioramas in his private home that no one ever visits?
  • I’m all for an episode that’s critiquing worthless government spending, but this episode is such a giant mess that I don’t even know if it’s supposed to have a point or not. Burns makes a speech about thinking for yourself and not letting the government control you, and then the act break is Homer giggling about making one of the unconscious IRS agents touch the other’s ass. Great writing, guys.
  • People rightfully point out how out-of-character Lisa’s “screw college, we got dune buggies!” bit is, but even weirder is Marge, for some reason, assuming they would be keeping the trillion dollars?
  • I love the rear IRS agent’s expression after the other comments, “They’ll be back. They’ll miss American TV.”
  • The third act is pretty terrible, basically tanking an episode that was already careening off a cliff. There’s some good bits with Castro, but the road there wasn’t worth it. There’s also way too much of dumb oblivious Burns (settling for being Vice President after Homer “calls” it first, not remembering he’s flying the plane).
  • Simpsons Archive retro review:A pretty funny episode! The plot meandered, but at least that’s better than last week’s jumpy episode. It was fun to see a good Burns/Smithers episode again. Also amusing was the kids’ reaction to getting a trillion dollars (Lisa doesn’t need college after all!) A nice, if not perfect romp.

21. Girly Edition

  • The opening with Krusty and Lindsey Naegle is so solid. Krusty attesting to Itchy & Scratchy’s educational value (“What don’t they learn? Don’t trust mice, cats are made of glass…”), the set-up of the Mattel and Mars Bar Quick-Energy Choco-bot Hour (“That’s barely legal as it is,”) Krusty outlining his show (“There’s a monologue, those idiot puppets, Krusty’s nap time, the second monologue, Paul Harvey, Senor Papino… I tell you, it’s the tightest three hours and ten minutes on TV!”)
  • I like how we see the small splats of creamed corn against the school window representing Willie’s shack exploding. It feels more creative and shows some restraint from making the event more bombastic… as well as not needing to animate it, which was probably a plus.
  • Lindsey Naegle would be dulled and overused in future seasons, but she’s at her strongest in this episode (maybe second to “The Itchy & Scratchy & Poochie Show.”) Her rambling off all her showbiz buzzwords, then not understanding Lisa’s simple turn of phrase (“Let’s be honest, Bart’s not exactly the brightest penny in the fountain.” “In English, Lisa?”) is just excellent.
  • The Mojo B-plot feels like a crazy Homer story, but it never gets too off-the-wall, considering the most extreme thing Homer does with the monkey is get it to steal donuts for him, which is appropriate for him. Also great is Marge’s consistent horror at this filthy monkey being in her house, and her irritation at Homer that just grows and grows throughout the episode.
  • The best section of this episode is the look into Kent Brockman’s human interest stories (“They tug at the heart and fog the mind.”) Him on the carousel pausing as it goes around (“This is Kent Brockman…..  reporting”) always makes me laugh. I also like how we see Bart attempt to mimic Brockman’s tone and some of his phrasings as he does his own imitation special reporting.
  • I have no idea why the hell Burns and Smithers are in bean bag chairs, but this scene still cracks me up (“Smithers… do you think maybe my power plant killed those ducks?” “There’s no ‘maybe’ about it, sir.” “…excellent.”)
  • Oh my, the Crazy Cat Lady. Great in her first appearance, terrible in every other one.
  • The obese Mojo struggling to breathe is pretty disconcerting, but still funny.
  • Milhouse’s report about discreetly discarding urine-soaked bed sheets is great, but it’s compounded and made even funnier when Bart observes the “soiled mattresses” at the dump and we quickly cut back to a guilt-ridden Milhouse.
  • I love Willie’s incredibly loud and shocked “WHAT?!” at Lisa telling him Bart’s his son. I also love that Lisa saves the day by channeling her own version of Bart/Kent’s empty schmaltz reporting, and she’s smart enough to come up with one completely off the cuff (“That little hellraiser is the spawn of every shrieking commercial, every brain-rotting soda pop, every teacher who cares less about young minds than about cashing their big, fat paychecks. No, Bart’s not to blame.  You can’t create a monster and then whine when he stomps on a few buildings!  I’m Lisa Simpson.”)
  • Simpsons Archive retro review: “While there were a few things in the episode which were quite funny; all of it is lost for me in the absolutely inexcusable behavior of Lisa… this was like watching PTA Disbands all over again. I have always had a soft spot for Lisa Simpson, and to see this episode was very disheartening… This wasn’t Lisa Simpson; this was someone who acted cold-hearted, egoistic, and downright selfish. Whoever wrote this episode needs a serious slap in the face… I don’t think anyone should be allowed to write for the Simpsons unless you know how the characters are supposed to act; this was horrible, and it totally ruined what I thought was an otherwise decent episode.”

22. Trash of the Titans

  • The opening few minutes is easily the best stuff in the episode: Costington’s concocting a bullshit holiday to increase their profits even further (I’d love to hear more about Christmas 2), and Marge eating up the idea of “Love Day” feels very appropriate. I also love Homer’s ridiculous disappointment at getting the “wrong” bear (“They didn’t have Lord Huggington?”)
  • The scenario of Homer and the kids prolonging taking out the trash for as long as possible is excellent (Bart stapling the banana peel to the pile is a great gag), but then that snowballs after Homer pisses off the garbagemen to them living in increasing levels of filth. It goes on way longer than Marge would reasonably be able to tolerate, as rancid trash covers the interior and exterior of their house. It feels like an instance where the writer’s room came up with a bunch of gags (Marge tossing bacon outside to distract the rats, her talking about the crazy lady who lives in their trash pile), forsaking any realism that Marge would put up with any of this. She may be generally submissive, but she most definitely would have written that forged apology after the first scene.
  • The poison pill of this episode is Homer, who acts like an absolute maniac from the moment he storms into Ray Patterson’s office. He rants and raves about standing up for the little guy, “rattling a few cages,” but for the entire episode, I have absolutely no idea what his motivation or wants are, and I don’t think he does either. It’s just supposed to be funny that he’s a directionless lunatic? The episode even acknowledges it with the “Local Nut at it Again” subheadline in the newspaper starting act two. Homer’s confusing, intolerable behavior for the entire runtime makes this episode the worst of season 9 for me (excluding “All Singing, All Dancing.”)
  • Continuing that, Homer waltzing on stage with U2 without a care in the world feels like a big turning point. He has absolutely no qualms about breaking into a rock show, attacking the female technician backstage, and addressing the crowd under the belief they’ll be thrilled to see him. The scene also ends with the very first instance of me enjoying Homer getting hurt because it felt like satisfying karma to an asshole character, as he gets beat up by U2’s goons.
  • The best gag in the episode is actually at the U2 show, where the crowd is going nuts, except for Otto, who is still seated and shouting, “Sit down! You’re ruining it for everyone!” I grew to love that line even more the year I went to Comic-Con and attended the Steven Universe panel, where the crowd full-on cheered almost every few minutes. It got to be kind of annoying, as the panelists could have actually talked more if they didn’t have to constantly stop for the crowd to keep going nuts, and I felt exactly like Otto in that moment.
  • More than halfway into the episode, Homer actually gets some fucking direction with his “Can’t Someone Else Do It?” campaign slogan. I like the idea of it, directly appealing to a lazy populous with grandiose claims of hired hands doing all your dirty work for you, but Homer’s attitude just sours everything it touches. “The Garbageman Can” thankfully comes off unscathed, one of the last classic songs of the series. It’s a real showstopper that I only wish was in an episode that wasn’t shit.
  • Homer cutting Patterson’s brakes is his first attempted murder of the series, and sadly would not be his last.
  • “Simpson, the American people have never tolerated incompetence in their government officials.” Just gets funnier each passing year!
  • When we get to the third act, the episode really starts to feel like the Wacky Homer Adventures, guest starring the rest of the family, a template that would follow through the rest of the Mike Scully years and beyond. The scene where they’re at home and Homer interrupts Lisa’s explanation about sanitation work (“Wait, shut up! I have an idea!”) and runs out the door, leaving the family just sitting them, looking around vacantly is a pretty telling moment.
  • I can’t really get all that upset about the reality-breaking ending of moving the entire town. I actually would have embraced a crazy ending like this if it were tacked on the end of an episode that actually tried to be about something.
  • Simpsons Archive retro review:I’m starting to wonder why I bother reviewing these anymore. Mike Scully rightfully held this episode until now, and the high-quality animation and extra attention to detail given to it because it was the 200th are the only things that can compliment it enough. I’ll soon be quoting everything like crazy so watch out… everyone with 14.4kb modems thank me for my short review. (A+)

23. King of the Hill

  • McBain fights the CommieNazis in his last great appearance. I also like that Homer crosses paths with Rainier in a believable fashion (of course he’d be the only one in Springfield using an all-night gym) and Rainier’s motivational insults are great too (“Go past the max! Master your ass!”)
  • Lovejoy’s exasperated “Just play the damn game, Ned!” always makes me laugh.
  • A reliable classic era story motivator was Homer wanting to regain the love of his kids or make them proud of him, and this episode holds that firm from the beginning. Him embarrassing himself during the capture-the-flag game is just devastating enough for Homer to actually feel ashamed of it (him wailing on the floor covered in deviled eggs definitely seems scar-worthy for Bart) and I like how this motivates Homer through the rest of the episode.
  • The tub of ice cream with miniature pies looks pretty damn good to me right now.
  • I am incapable of seeing a sign for a gym and not thinking it’s pronounced “guy-m.”
  • I appreciate the restraint of showing that Homer has gotten fitter, but is not like absolutely ripped. The scene of him daring the family to find any flab, only for them to find a whole bunch of soft spots, much to his chagrin, is pretty adorable. Only two months of working out at night and he’s certainly built up his arm muscles, but he’s not a bodybuilder, unlike a handful of future episodes where he got completely roided out at the drop of a hat if the plot required him to (“Homer the Whopper” comes to mind.) 
  • I don’t know why they cast Brendan Fraser and Steven Weber together as the Powersauce reps, but their repartee with each other is very good. The product itself is a great send-up on “diet” bars as nutritional substitutes (unleashing the awesome power of apples!) and Fraser and Weber play the perfect energetic corporate shills. I like later in act three when they actually break their facades to warn Homer not to climb the mountain alone, and then immediately throw him under the bus with faux-seriousness in broadcasting that Homer has switched to their market competitor (the Vita-Peach Health Log), absolving themselves of any wrongdoing or bad press.
  • Those flapjacks in a can look really good too. If you had a little slot on the bottom to separate the syrup so they didn’t got soggy… man, that sounds delicious.
  • Homer getting assistance from the sherpas not only makes the insane idea of him scaling a gigantic mountain a little more believable, but they also provide some of the best lines of the episode (“I foresaw your death last night.” “Stop saying that!”) I also like their absolute glee at being dismissed by Homer, and their hitchhiking inexplicably in front of the Simpson house, just so the family could see them outside and realize that Homer is fucked.
  • I don’t know if I ever registered this before, but it’s odd that Abe’s rambling stories are usually complete bullshit, but him climbing up the mountain (and falling 8,000 feet?) is apparently true, as Homer finds the frozen body of his “buddy” McAllister. Abe’s failure is meant to mirror Homer’s, but before that point, it was just a nonsense story, so any emotional impact isn’t really felt. But no matter, McAllister’s last words (“Tell my wife my last thoughts were of her… blinding and torturing Abe Simpson”) and the grim finale of Homer using the frozen body as a sled are more than worth the trouble.
  • Homer using the Simpson flag from the church picnic game in place of the Powersauce one is a pretty sweet detail, making the story feel like it’s coming full circle. The entire top half of the mountain collapsing is pretty ridiculous, but I don’t know how else you’d get Homer to have his moment of triumph. It’s a little rickety, but the Homer-Bart emotional through-line works surprisingly well, especially for a show this deep into season 9.
  • Simpsons Archive retro review:This episode seemed to play upon the viewer’s emotions more than usual. I think the communazi’s death was one of the most graphic scenes I’ve seen on the Simpons. Also, the closing of act I was big on emotional content. Lastly, the victorious ending. This almost seemed like a WWF match with its emotional choreography! I think that’s especially potent for those of us that see similarities between Homer and ourselves. Anyway, the whole ep ended up being a real watchable pick-me-up, due primarily to the emotional content. The amount of hilarity was kept to a minimum, which i suppose is needed in order to have a real emotional response from your audience. Here’s hoping for something crazy next week…”

24. Lost Our Lisa

  • I’m sure my wife wishes that teacher conference day was as much fun as it’s shown here. Also very nice of them to invite Willie along with them.
  • Bart and Milhouse just show up at the power plant to bug Homer about getting super glue, just because, I guess. They couldn’t have gotten the glue some other way? Also, why is Bart allowed to wander around the entire town on his day off but Lisa is forbidden to take the bus by herself? Maybe Marge thought Bart was just at Milhouse’s house, but with no line explaining that, it reads kind of weird to me.
  • I really like Lisa playing Homer like a fiddle in order to get his “permission” to take the bus, inflating her request to a limousine and acting faux-disappointed in Homer delicately downgrading her. Lisa hanging up on her father in the middle of him saying he loves her is a perfect capper to the scene.
  • The two flocks of geese flying at each other is a stupid gag I love; the pan over revealing the second flock, and one of the poor birds nosediving out of the sky during the fight, it’s so funny.
  • When offered a ride in the back of Cletus’s pick-up truck full of roadkill, Lisa holds back vomit and squeals as she flees the scene. I assume it’s Yeardley Smith vocalizing while clasping her hands to her mouth, but the sound has always sounded like a baby cry to me. Does anyone else hear that?
  • Dr. Hibbert’s frightening button applicator feels a little too silly for a “serious” doctor like him to use, but I love his incredibly severe insistence that “it had to be terror sweat!”
  • My goodness does the episode plunge into the abyss when Homer goes after Lisa. The end of act two into act three has Homer and Lisa frantically looking for each other with a whole lot of suspenseful music in place of any humor. And then we get Homer in the cherry picker, and man… not only isn’t it funny, but it’s a very early example of Homer-getting-hurt being used as a humor crutch for the writers. He scrapes his skull against a low bridge, he smashes through an entire wooden dock neck-first, and finally, a fucking drawbridge closes on his head. Homer fell down a goddamn gorge (twice!) in “Bart the Daredevil,” and not only was he horrifically injured and hospital-bound, there’s multiple layers as to why the scene is funny outside of him getting hurt (he skateboarded over it himself to “teach Bart a lesson,” the absurdity that the “lesson” would even work, his cockiness in thinking he would make it.) Here, Homer experiences a cavalcade of serious injuries for no reason, then walks away scot free with a tire mark on his cranium and a smile on his face. How far we have fallen.
  • Despite the episode seeming to have blown its wad with the endless cherry picker scene, we still have Homer’s soapbox about taking stupid risks, because that makes total sense for his character (”Me, I’m a risk taker! That’s why I have so many adventures!”) This characterization isn’t even consistent in this very episode: Homer was wary about Lisa taking the bus at the beginning of the episode, and he runs off scared for his daughter’s safety after Lenny and Carl worry him about it. Where was Captain Wacky then? But there’s even more doom lurking behind that quote. “Homer’s Enemy” cast a spotlight on Homer, the not-so-average Joe, and how many crazy escapades he’s gotten into over eight seasons. It effectively breaks the character to some extent, and it feels like some of the writers took that as permission to just go for broke on not only Homer getting up to crazy shenanigans, but for him to just flat-out admit it too. This is Homer now, and this scene is his new mission statement. And it fucking sucks.
  • Boredom continues with the museum break-in. There’s just so much of it played for suspense with barely any jokes. Homer can’t even break open the stupid orb without needing a pointless sequence of all of the rope pylons tipping over as Lisa gasps in horror. This episode and “Trash of the Titans,” both at the tail end of season 9, are the biggest terrible omens for things to come: over-dramatic action and/or suspense sequences, knee-jerk character changes, forced sentimentality, and Homer the human punching bag/sentient asshole.
  • Simpsons Archive retro review:A pleasant surprise which makes Season Nine better than Season Eight, in that it’s the first episode I’ve given an A to since Season Seven’s finale, ‘Summer of 4’2.’ A realistically troubling situation for both Lisa and Homer when Lisa’s natural immaturity gets her lost in Springfield. Most of the humor is woven well into the story, too, which is rare. Not to mention everyone is in character for once, and the episode deals primarily with the family–and not the entire town. Act Three’s change of pace feels more like a story progression and less a jump from one thing to a completely unrelated other. All and all, an outstanding effort, especially for the waning ninth season.”

25. Natural Born Kissers

  • The opening where Homer discovers Frank Grimes’ funeral program feels like yet another season 9 warning sign. As I talked about in “Homer’s Enemy,” that episode works only within its own vacuum, but multiple episodes past this point feature casual mentions of Frank Grimes where Homer continues acting like an inconsiderate dick, the biggest offender being “The Great Louse Detective,” where he acts like a braindead dope in front of Grimes’s own illegitimate son. Homer sleeping through Grimes’s funeral was a dark button on a subversive, but isolated story, but him not recognizing the man who killed himself right in front of him makes him seem like a sociopath.
  • Up, Up and Buffet is a neat set piece, the perfect polar opposite to Homer and Marge’s intended romantic evening. The valet attendants manually shaking the restaurant to dip the wings feels like a classic Simpsons bit.
  • There’s something I noticed in the scene where Homer and Marge soberly look out the plane window at the happy romantic couple at the Gilded Truffle. It feels like the character design standards shifted during the Mike Scully years where new characters were designed with slightly more detail and features more akin to actual humans than bug-eyed, simplified cartoon characters. Just look how different the dining couple looks compared to Homer and Marge. This issue would continue up through the present, as the Simpson family and other Springfield residents would look weirdly out-of-place against celebrity guests and one-off characters, like they were plucked from two different series.
  • I really love how we see Homer not close the freezer door, but they don’t highlight the moment, so you might not totally connect it with what happens the next morning. Moments of restraint like this are incredibly rare in episodes nowadays.
  • Great use of “Spanish Flea” during the divorce radio commercial.
  • “Hey, are they pulling the plug on anybody today?” “Nope, everybody’s paid up!”
  • I absolutely love Bart’s pirate dream with the practical pirate suggesting they use their gold to buy things they like, which immediately gets him shot. It’s a syndication cut, but I wish they’d kept that bit and cut it off at the captain showing the map carved on a cracker, definitely not as good of a joke.
  • I love Marge’s read of “Hey! Look at that!” when Homer takes his shirt off trying to get the magic going. You can really hear the strained attempt at enthusiasm in Kavner’s voice.
  • Much appreciated continuity at Homer and Marge acknowledging the windmill as their old love nest, and story-wise, it makes sense that their undoing as adults would occur at the same place they acted like reckless, carefree kids (“We drank so much that night!” “Yeah, I thought Bart would be born a dimwit!”)
  • Even though it’s basically cribbed from a joke from The Critic, I still enjoy the Casablanca alternate ending, especially with the “The End?” end card (“Wasn’t it great? And the question mark leaves the door open for a sequel.”) But why exactly was it buried in Springfield? I guess the Crazy Old Man had all the reels in his possession when he moved to Springfield, attempted to bury some of them but then just gave up? Ah, who cares.
  • It’s kind of weird that Homer knows Gil’s name when he bumps into him, but it’s a pretty solid scene, with Gil so desperate for a sale he doesn’t bat an eyelash at his potential customer’s nudity.
  • Most of act there is kind of a slog, with Homer and Marge scurrying across town, then into the hot air balloon, with plenty of suspense music. Also a lot of Homer getting hurt, which is throughout the whole episode (the avalanche of silverware falling on him at Up, Up and Buffet was pretty excessive), but the bit of Homer hanging from the balloon and Marge causing him to get torched with flames that come out of absolutely nowhere is pretty damn stupid. There’s no actual joke there other than him getting inexplicably hurt. The pastor at the crystal cathedral and Sideshow Mel’s “Look at that blimp! He’s hanging from a balloon!” deserve kudos, but that’s about it.
  • Simpsons Archive retro review:I have mixed feelings about this one. While it’s a very funny episode, with an appealing plot, I would prefer it if this episode had never happened. Running around town naked and having sex in public is a road I hoped the Simpsons would never go down. Such a ridiculous idea.”

Season 9 episodes I would pluck from the scrap heap: “The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson,” “The Cartridge Family,” “Bart Star,” “The Joy of Sect,” “Lisa the Simpson,” “Simpson Tide,” “Girly Edition,” “King of the Hill”

23 thoughts on “Season Nine Revisited (Part Four)

  1. Odd, you thought Trash of the Titans was a “fair episode” when you reviewed it way back when. What a difference a decade can make.

    Anyways, that was season 9. Count your blessings: it’s a huge drop from season 8, and it’s undoubtedly the start of Zombie Simpsons…

    …but I’d gladly watch it over literally anything coming up (a few big stinkers aside). Plus, it arguably has the last great episodes of the series.

    Season 10 is where the rot really kicks into high gear. It’s all dark roads from here, Mike. Brace yourself. At least you’re only rewatching up to season 11.

    1. I am looking forward to the eventual season 11 revisit. A lot of that season had the writers at least try to play with continuity; Barney sobering up, Maude’s death, Apu and Manjula having kids. Problem is that they got apathetic and either completely retconned things or just demoted those changes to background noise.
      Behind the laughter will be nice to revisit bc I still believe that it would’ve been an amazing series finale. Or rather, after they created a “traditional” final episode, release this right after as a sort of epilogue.
      Sigh, what could’ve been.

      1. Surely, there’s an alternate universe out there where the show ended after season 8.

    2. In my headcanon, If Season 8 was the last season, then the series finale would be the Simpsons Spinoff Showcase, demonstrating why you don’t want a season 9 and why you don’t want any spinoffs.

      1. For me, if season 8 was the last season, it would have included “New York vs. Homer Simpson” and “Lisa’s Sax”, with “New York” being the series finale.

  2. Interesting. I thought “Lisa’s Sax” was an episode worth keeping, despite it clearly being meant for season seven. Oh, well.

    You can tell as the season goes on, Scully becomes more and more comfortable with making The Simpsons his own thing. There’s nothing wrong with that. Every showrunner before him did it, but like I said before, I just don’t think his vision was right for The Simpsons. His tendencies were reined in slightly during season nine, but it just gets worse from this point forward. I still believe season nine is the bridge between the classic era and the decline, but it definitely started here, and it becomes undeniable during season ten.

    What’s interesting to me is that even as the show gradually becomes worse, it is still capable of doing certain things. It can still tell jokes very well. Even “The Trouble of Trillions,” an episode you didn’t like, had Homer frantically trying to do his taxes (which was a scene packed with jokes), and him having that checklist in Cuba of why he was there. At this point, the show is still sharp when it keeps the pace up and has an actual story to tell.

    1. Scully’s main problem as showrunner, besides a lack of experience between him and his staff, was that his vision for the series was for it to be off-the-wall insanity after years of years of “grounded” episodes, which in Season 8, included Homer somehow becoming a boxing contender purely for his ability to take beatings, Homer getting hired by a Bond villain, and Homer going on a psychedelic trip. I specifically focus on Homer since Homer becomes the focus during the Scully years for both an inhuman amount of abuse he takes but also his changes in behavior to suit the more madcap nature of the series. Yeah, Jerkass Homer is the official term, but I still think “Captain Wacky” is more appropriate due to how absurd things get.

      He once defended his reputation by suggesting that people have to lower their standards at some point in life, but I still argue the difference between Season 10 and Season 11 is the most jarring in show history.

  3. The last good season of the show and it goes out with a pretty solid run of episodes.

    I maintain that “The Trouble with Trillions” is the first really bad episode of the series for me but the others here rebound nicely for the most part.

    Season 10 should be an interesting one for you to revisit. On your first run, you thought it marked the biggest drop in quality in the shows history and I fully agree. All remnants of the classic era are nearly gone by the end of season 10 and it only gets so much worse.

  4. “Homer cutting Patterson’s brakes is his first attempted murder of the series, and sadly would not be his last.”

    And it’s played for laughs, just like all the other crimes he commits. It’s staggering what they have him get away with. The episode could’ve worked, two-three seasons earlier, it would’ve, but their insistence on overdoing everything drains any subtlety away. Steve Martin does good work, but I wish he was in a better episode.

    ‘Girly Edition’ has a nonsensical ending. Lisa finds Willie living in the junkyard and decides to exploit him. She gives Bart the letter late, and Bart has to take the chopper to get there in time. As he begins his report, the camera pans, but he’s alone when attacked. So either the cameraman ran, leaving a child to die, or the camera was magic. Willie throws an engine block at his head. Lisa laughs. Five seconds later, Willie attacks Bart with a fender and Lisa is concerned. What did she think would happen? Lisa arrives by bike, but how far away is the junkyard? How could she have gotten to Bart in mid-peril if it takes twenty minutes? That’s extreme time compression, especially as Bart is fooled by Willie pretending to be a policeman. She saves Bart with schmaltz, fine, but she doesn’t apologise for being a jealous egomaniac who almost got him killed.

    ‘Lost Our Lisa’ bugs the hell out of me too, primarily because the bus driver refuses to talk to Lisa. I don’t get it. It seems like he’s a stickler for the rules, even though that rule isn’t to deny people asking for help, but when he tells her it’s the end of the line, he does so with glee. Was he being deliberately vindictive to an 8-year-old? If so, why? Either keep him by the book or give him a reason to be mean. Don’t half do both.

  5. The spoon bit at the end is another nice instance of the show actually being mean to their guest stars, although they went way too easy on Bono. Like the dude’s really not that hard to make fun of.

  6. I hope you enjoyed it while it lasted because that was the last good season of the Simpsons. Time to give my thoughts on the episodes.

    Poor “The Trouble of Trillions.” I really want to like this episode. I really do. It started off so damn good and then the ball dropped after Homer’s “epic” rush to get his taxes. And then it becomes a story about Homer working with the FBI that turns into a story about Homer and Burns becoming partners in crime and then it leads to an impromptu trip to Korea and then the episode just gives up. Oh well, at least there was enough funny jokes and classic moments sprinkled throughout the shit story (I actually liked the Hall of Burns scene) that prevent me from hating it but it’s certainly not an episode I’d watch again…

    “Girly Edition” is easily the strongest episode of the 9th production season. Basically, it’s the episode with the least amount of problems. The story is actually compelling for once, and there’s plenty of great laughs and classic scenes to the point where this episode wouldn’t be out of place in Season 8. (Though I feel it would have a lot of trouble standing out there) Even the stupid B-plot with the monkey is kinda charming, not to mention the episode did an excellent job satirizing sensationalist news.

    “Trash of the Titans” is decent. I’ll give it that. There’s some good jokes, I liked U2, and the song is easily the best thing in the episode. But yeah… Jerkass Homer is insufferable and the episode would’ve been much better if he wasn’t given so much focus. I actually like comparing your reviews of the Season 8-11 episodes to the greatly missed Dead Homer “Crazy Noises” series and while in part three I observed how much harsher their review of “Simpson Tide” was compared to your fawning review, the DHS boys seemed to be a lot more positive on “Trash of the Titans” than you were, especially Mad Jon. I guess it’s kinda like how in the “D-oh-in’ in the Wind Crazy Noises” Charlie admitted to really liking the episode despite the fact that Jon and Dave didn’t like it that much. And hey, I know you like that episode. I do to!

    “King of the Hill” definitely is of a very similar caliber to “Girly Edition” where while neither episodes are groundbreaking, they still manage to be close to the front of the Season 9 pack. For once, we get an episode where I can actually root for Homer and care about his journey. I guess Jerkass Homer had the day off.

    Huh boy… Here it is. The big one. “Lost our Lisa.” The episode that confirmed that Jerkass Homer was here to stay. The sad part is, the first half of the episode really isn’t that bad and has a good amount of jokes but once Homer gets on that forklift… and people say “The Principal and the Pauper” was the Season 9 episode where the Simpsons jumped the shark? Nah, bro. It’s 100% “Lost our Lisa.” And another sad thing is that the “Stupid risks are what make life worth living quote” is good on paper. The problem is it’s not a quote that Homer should be saying. A quote like that would work much better out of the mouth of someone like Bart. Oh yeah, and the museum escapade at the end sucks. For me, this and “Miracle on Evergreen Terrace” are the two big bombs of Season 9.

    Well, let’s wrap this up with some controversy. “Natural Born Kissers” is alright, it feels like a weak re-tread of “Grampa vs. Sexual Inadequacy.” But again, despite the funny stuff that makes it passable (The bit with Bart and Lisa fighting with Hot Wheels tracks is an absolute classic and makes me feel so nostalgic) I’m just not invested in the A-plot, especially when it takes that stupid turn in the third act where Homer and Marge are on the run in the nude. I do love the B-plot though, and if that were more fleshed upon and was the central plot for the entire episode, it would probably be better than most of Season 9.

    “It feels like the character design standards shifted during the Mike Scully years where new characters were designed with slightly more detail and features more akin to actual humans than bug-eyed, simplified cartoon characters.”

    I’m so glad you mentioned this because it’s one of the many reasons why I don’t like modern Simpsons. I hate the more realistically detailed caricatures that plague the double-digit seasons because they easily highlight just how simplistic and cartoony our regular characters look compared to them (And also why the Simpsons are more likely to wear different outfits in the modern era). It didn’t really bother me much this season (In fact, I barely even noticed) but it becomes much more notorious starting next season. I probably wouldn’t mind these caricatures as much if maybe they updated the Simpson designs to look more human and realistic but then there would be massive complaints on the design changes and how it just doesn’t feel like The Simpsons anymore. I would be one of those complainers.

    Up next is Season 10. It may not be Zombie Simpsons but it’s without a doubt, the first of many bad seasons of the show. May God have mercy on all our souls. At least it has some good jokes throughout so there’s that to look forward to.

    1. I think you’re right about “Lost Our Lisa” being the turning point for the series… but it’s only because of the stupid speech Homer makes in the end. It’s still more of a foreshadowing than an actual bad episode. So I would say season 9 is still a good season and the worst episodes were at the very end. “Trash of the Titans” is funny but Homer is a jerk in it, while “Natural Born Kissers” feels like a Family Guy episode. This is the perfect spot to end watching the series.
      I think it was inevitable that the show would become bad sooner or later. Tv shows aren’t meant to last for decades. And American animation as a whole became pretty bad in the last decade if you ask me. I can only name like 4-5 cartoons from the 2010s that I like and Zombie Simpsons is far from being one of them.

  7. Oh yeah, I almost forgot: I said I’d rank the Season 9 episodes in tiers! Well, I’ll do it then.

    S tier: “The City of New York vs. Lisa Simpson,” “Lisa’s Sax”
    A tier: “Treehouse of Horror VIII,” “The Cartridge Family,” “Lisa the Simpson,” “Girly Edition,” “King of the Hill”
    B tier: “Bart Star,” “The Joy of Sect,” “The Last Temptation of Krust,” “Simpson Tide”
    C tier: “The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons,” “Trash of the Titans,” “Natural Born Kissers”
    D tier: “The Principal and the Pauper,” “Lisa the Skeptic,” “Realty Bites,” “Das Bus”
    E tier: “Bart Carny,” “Dumbbell Indemnity,” “This Little Wiggy,” “The Trouble with Trillions,”
    F tier: “Miracle on Evergreen Terrace,” “Lost Our Lisa”

    I also like this “Pluck from the Scrap Heat” section you added, but I wouldn’t call Season 9 a scrap heap. It’s a term that works perfectly for the next three seasons, however. I look forward to tearing apart Seasons 10 and 11 and even though you’re not re-reviewing Season 12, I’ll still give my thoughts on it because it still has more in common with 10 and 11 than the comedy graveyard that is Season 13 onward.

  8. “Lost Our Lisa” mainly stands out to me for having the sloppiest edit I think I’ve ever seen in any Simpsons episode. It occurs at the museum, right after Homer says, “Now it’s we, eh?” – check out just how smoothly he and Lisa make it down to the floor. It’s so conspicuous that for years I assumed that something must have been cut at the last minute, but the DVD’s deleted scenes reel yielded no goods.

  9. It’s always been funny to me how out of place the Simpson family and a few other early characters (most prominently Milhouse) look compared to later characters. Newer characters are drawn with realistic hair colors whereas Bart, Lisa, and Maggie have that thing where their hair is fused with their skin and Marge and Milhouse have blue hair (not to mention the impossible shape of Marge’s hair). The Simpson family don’t seem like they belong on their own series.

    The human characters on Groening’s later show “Futurama” are all drawn realistically (Leela only has purple hair because she’s a mutant) which indicates that he seemed to quickly fall out of favor with the simplistic style he used when designing the Simpsons.

    1. I’d say Matt fell out of favor with the simplistic style when they transitioned from the shorts (as the style was necessary) to a full series when he felt things could be done more professionally, and likely the horror show that was the original “Some Enchanted Evening” convinced him that the style wasn’t going to fly anymore. Early episode commentaries would feature him and the animators complaining about how “ugly” the show looked and pointing out background or incidental characters that annoyed them for being too… unique, even in the 5th season, when the show had long since developed a more consistent art style and setting. As someone who has a strong preference to the first and second season of the show in terms of world building and establishment, I actually liked the imperfections, compared to the factory method of later seasons and especially today.

      My problem with this later thinking is that the majority of the characters were created back when the show was in a more experimental phase, and while some shows are notorious for changing art styles or even animation styles (such as stop motion to CGI) as production goes on, The Simpsons instead did it where new characters would have different rules compared to the old ones, creating a styles clash. I really hate this mindset, as now we have these simplified, crude-looking creatures, including women who dress like Flintstone ladies of the evening, trying to mingle with creations from an entirely different universe, yet it’s played straight instead of the new characters reacting to these “freaks” with shock and horror, unless it’s for a lame meta joke.

  10. You now hating Trash of the Titans after ranking it as middle of the road nearly a decade ago is the most vindicated I’ve felt in years.

  11. Well, I’d keep “Bart Star” on the scrapheap and pluck “Lisa’s Sax” from it instead.

    I’m sorry, but “Bart Star” features the first scene (time-wise) which leaves me actually wanting to punch Homer in the face…

    Homer: “Now, just because I’m Bart’s father, he’ll get no special treatment. He calls me “coach” just like everyone else… which he’ll be doing as our new starting quarterback!”
    (the other kids react with disgust; Bart isn’t happy either)
    Bart: “But, coach…”
    Homer: “What is it, sweetie?” (puts his hands on Bart’s shoulders; narrows his eyes at him)
    Bart: “Nelson’s a great quarterback. He’s carrying this team.”
    (Nelson and the other kids agree)
    Homer: “Not any more. From now on, *you’re* my main man. (keeps one hand on Bart’s shoulder; points at him with the other hand and smiles) Okay, now, everyone, give me five laps and hit the showers!”

    As far as I’m concerned, Homer cares more about himself than anyone else here. He just doesn’t give a fuck about how good Nelson is, and he doesn’t bother listening to even his own son’s perfectly reasonable protests.

    Classic Homer may well have decided to make Bart quarterback too – but I’d like to think he wouldn’t have bigged him up to anywhere near the same extent, nor completely ignored his protests. And, of course, he would have realized his mistakes a lot sooner. (Mind you, Classic Homer quite likely wouldn’t have heckled Ned to *that* extent, and assuming he would have still taken the coach job from him, the way in which he would have done so would almost certainly have been quite different…)

  12. On the subject of character designs becoming more realistic in the Scully episodes – I know Mike Scully had a tendency to slip in cameos of his friends and family (he and his wife and kids are at the zoo in “Marge Simpson in: Screaming Yellow Honkers” and they stick out like a sore thumb). It’s entirely possible that couple at the Gilded Truffle were just some people he knew who he asked “Hey, you wanna be on The Simpsons?”

  13. I view “Trash of Titans” as the final episode. Moving the town makes no sense, but you can get away with it if there is absolutely zero follow up (especially when left with the knowledge that Springfield has learned nothing at all and will fuck everything up again). Like a lot of Season 9, it was a bad episode that still managed to land a lot of really funny and memorable jokes. I think that’s why the show managed to thrive even during the early Zombie period.

    The U2 concert didn’t bother me because, here, the concert-goers are pissed that Homer is ruining the show, compared to later seasons where the whole town would cheer for him. And I thought Bono standing up for him was meant as a mockery of his compulsion to be a champion of every damn cause under the sun.

    Homer’s speech in “Lost Our Lisa” is basically the show’s declaration that Classic Simpsons is dead and we now have Wacky Homer and his spunky sidekicks. Again, some good jokes in that episode, marred by so many, many problems. I still laugh over the whole balloon gag with the cherry-picker.

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