Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The billboard gag is a running visual joke added to the opening sequence with the updated 2009 high-definition opening. In the gag, a billboard is seen on the roof of the building across the street from the elementary school as the camera pans through the town. The billboard changes every episode.
The A.V. Club gave the episode a C, commenting "Fresh off a summer of Simpsonsmania, thanks to the phenomenally successful FXX marathon of every episode ever, The Simpsons returns for its 26th season with a nondescript, anticlimactic premiere whose overstuffed cameos and would-be big character death amount to little more than a disspiriting ...
11th episode of the 10th season of The Simpsons " Wild Barts Can't Be Broken " The Simpsons episode Episode no. Season 10 Episode 11 Directed by Mark Ervin Written by Larry Doyle Production code AABF07 Original air date January 17, 1999 (1999-01-17) Guest appearance Cyndi Lauper as herself Episode features Chalkboard gag "Sherri does not" got back "" Couch gag A parody of a scene from the film ...
Chalkboard gag "I will not demand what I'm worth" Couch gag: The living room is a sauna, with three men in towels relaxing. The Simpsons (also in towels) arrive, but leave sheepishly as the three men glare at them. [1] Commentary: Matt Groening Mike Scully George Meyer Ian Maxtone-Graham Swinton O. Scott III Matt Selman: Episode chronology
The Simpsons episode: Episode no. Season 5 Episode 10: Directed by: Wes Archer: Written by: Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein: Production code: 1F08: Original air date: December 16, 1993 () Guest appearances; Gerry Cooney as himself; Robert Goulet as himself; Episode features; Chalkboard gag "I will not say 'Springfield' just to get applause" [1 ...
Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club gave the episode a C commenting, "There’s room for audaciousness, even cruelty, in The Simpsons’ comedy, if it's earned. ‘Monty Burns’ Fleeing Circus’ wears its breezy brutality and laziness like a sign reading ‘It’s just a cartoon.’ But at its best, The Simpsons is a much better cartoon than this ...
"So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show" was The Simpsons ' first clip show, created to relieve the long hours put in by all of the show's overworked staff. [5] There was intense pressure on producers of the show to create extra episodes in each season and the plan was to make four clip shows per season to meet that limit.
During the fourth season, The Simpsons usually aired on a Thursday, but "Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie" aired on a Tuesday because the executives at Fox had wanted to air an episode during the 1992 presidential election results because they felt it would mean increased ratings. [4] Instead, the episode dropped from its normal audience. [3] "