stuff tagged with "the simpsons"
The Best Part Of Krusty The Clown's Judaism Is That It Doesn't Need To Explain Itself
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So much of being Jewish is explaining yourself. There's only about 16 million Jews on Earth, a pittance of the global population, which means that, unless a Jew in the United States stays in the tiniest of bubblesāand, look, it is possibleāyou at some point invariably end up explaining yourself. Yes, usually it's to well-meaning people who just want to know Why is your new year on a different day? and Why are your holidays always moving around? and How come some of you don't eat pork but some of you do?
And sometimes it's not as simple as that. It's also Why do some of you wear funny hats? and Why do so many Jews work in media? and Why are so many of you rich? and What's up with that George Soros? Even the well-intentioned questions get exhausting after a while, as does smiling through the 10,000th person asking if you had a good Yom Kippurāit's a day of fasting and atonement, it's never goodābecause being a polite, kind, unthreatening Jew feels like the only defense against people thinking we [checks notes] control all the banks and have western civilization in the sites of our Jewish space lasers.
Is this a uniquely Jewish feeling? No. Of course not. Exhaustion at having to explain yourself or just feeling out of place are not experiences that belong to the Jews any more than the story of Noah and the flood does. But it is nice to not have to explain sometimes, to just feel normal. I think that's what still makes the "Krusty is a Jew" episode so special for me. Nothing is explained. Nothing is given context. Jews are just Jews, nothing we do is clarified or justifiedāand if you don't get it, well, we've got five more jokes coming, so buckle up and jot it down so you look it up later. And that might be the most Jewish part of it all.
āThe Simpsonsā Is Good Again
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I donāt know if youāve ever spoken to little kids about The Simpsons. I have, and I highly recommend it. Most of them recounted some version of finding the show during the pandemic.
Their knowledge is encyclopedic: Because every episode is exhaustively listed, all the kids casually threw around official episode titles for which I only had a shorthand when I was growing up. For them, the show is watched on demand in endless quantities. I asked how many episodes they think theyāve seen, and the responses were usually in the 150-to-300 range. And they all intend to watch all 750.
As Iāve humblebragged about often here, I used to run the internetās largest website devoted to Ralph Wiggum.
Such a dubious notoriety would make you think Iāve already exposed my kids to The Simpsons, right?
Well⦠no.
After having roughly 30 years to reflect, what I love about the show is how much care you can tell the creators put into each episode.
Nearly every second within a typical 24-minute episode is loaded with sub jokes, perfectly timed to maximize our enjoyment and make a statement.
I really respect the show and what it meant to have as a dorky little middle schooler who felt like it was hard to get people to understand him.
I guess my hesitation with my kid, aside from the fact that sheās sassy enough as it is, is that Iām afraid she wonāt get it. A lot of the jokes will fly over her head.
And maybe itās a āshame on meā moment for not trusting one of the smartest little kids Iāve ever met.
But I guess as I edit this blog post after already posting it, maybe what Iām really afraid of is that she wonāt appreciate it as much as I do.
Thankfully, this article came at an optimal point in my life, because now I have 5 examples of recent episodes I will absolutely watch with her starting tomorrow.
Itās a double whammy: I get yet another awesome bonding opportunity with my kid, and I get to face another fear of mine (that being the fear of change in life).
Maybe itās okay for The Simpsons to not be the same it was when I was a kid. Maybe itās both worse and better.
Maybe itās okay for something thatās 36 years old to be different than it was back in elementary, middle, and high school.
Ray Jay Johnson And Other People I Know Only From āThe Simpsonsā
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There was a lot I learned from The Simpsons, right from the start. Did I learn that people get āMOTHERā tattoos from the first episode? Maybe! How about the Atilla the Hun reference Bart makes in the credits at the end? Did I know who Atilla the Hun was yet? Did I āgetā the reference at some point from elsewhere? I donāt know! Eat my shorts!
But there are people that I know are real entirely because of The Simpsons. One person towers over them all, even though he is only 5-foot-3 in real life: Ray Jay Johnson. Heās mentioned in the classic episode āKrusty Gets Kancelled.ā When Krusty does, indeed, get kancelled, he says heās never done a bad showāexcept for the week Raymond J. Johnson Jr. guest-hosted.
This was everything I couldāve hoped for in a piece about this reference from The Simpsons which I always found obscure.
And I couldnāt agree more with the authorās assessment of learning about the world of pop culture through The Simpsons. Many of the models by which I view the world were sculpted in part through references from that show.
The Inside Story of The Simpsonsā Remarkable Second Life
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Lest you think Iāve just been watching YouTube all night, hereās a really compelling article about The Simpsons.
This pull quote spoke to me:
āAmerica has certainly turned into Springfield,ā says Matt Selman, who is, along with Al Jean, the current showrunner. āIām gonna generously say: Good people are easily misled. Terrifyingly easily misled. Thatās always been in the DNA of the show, but now itās in the DNA of America. It was a show about American groupthink, and how Americans are trickedāby advertising, by corporations, by religion, by all these other institutions that donāt have the best interests of people at heart.ā
Iāve been rewatching clips from the first ten seasons sporadically over the past few months, and I think thatās an astute point that I hadnāt really considered.
The pro wrestling world has a term for fans who know quite a bit about the backstage politics which makes the show possible: a āsmart markā (with āmarkā being a carny term for someone who can pull one over on).
But much like internet trolls, the only way you could ever āwinā as a pro wrestling fan is by not engaging. By consuming the content, youāre still a mark (even if you are a smart one).
Perhaps the reason so many people are drawn to The Simpsons is similar: you feel like youāre in on the joke, even when you canāt escape the gravitational pull of the society which the show is lampooning.
The Bizarre Modern Reality of The Simpsons
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This video sparked a few thoughts in me:
First, I had never heard of Bartkira or the genre Simpsonswave, but Iām excited to explore those two extensions of the fandom I grew up with.
Second, as someone who built a Ralph Wiggum website as a kid, I can relate to so much of what this YouTuber expresses in his video.
It certainly isnāt my nature to create āartā (in the traditional sense, like painting, drawing, sculpting, etc.). However, Iāve made it a goal to better understand art and the process artists go through to express themselves.
How beautiful is it that our generation has this program, which was intended as a subversive commentary on America in the 1990s, which we can subvert to make own own commentary about America in the 2020s?
John Swartzwelder, Sage of The Simpsons
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Many of my favorite Simpsons episodes of all time, including āHomer at the Batā and āBart Gets an Elephantā, were written by John Swartzwelder.
This article is a rare interview with a notoriously reclusive guy, and as someone who was practically raised at the altar of this show, getting a closer look at one of their disciples was a treat.
Ralphisms
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Speaking with a bit of authority, I'd say this is a pretty good coverage of Ralph's best moments. Although personally, I think they could've replaced anything after season 10 with something a bit more wrigley.
The Lost Jokes and Story Arcs of "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song"
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Being the massive Simpsons snob that I am1, I thoroughly enjoyed this article by Bill Oakley, a writer for the Simpsons during the greatest seasons of the show's existence.
Additional required reading: How We Wrote Classic Simpsons Episodes and The Making Of "Homer At The Bat".
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Qualifications: Owning the internet's largest Ralph Wiggum website and denying the existence any episode made after 2001 ↩