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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 episode received mixed reviews with praise going to the couch gag with Rick and Morty. Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club gave the episode a D, saying "as the final act of "Mathlete's Feat", the final episode of the 26th season of The Simpsons went to commercial, I was genuinely pissed at how disjointed, lazy, and downright lousy this season ...
On the bus, Bart, Nelson, Ralph, and Milhouse play a game by racing fruit down the aisle, which ends with Milhouse rolling a grapefruit that gets stuck under the bus's brake pedal. When Otto tries to press down on the pedal, it squirts juice into his eyes, causing him to lose control and drive the bus off a bridge into a large body of water.
Chalkboard gag "I must not write all over the walls" (written all over the walls, door, and blackboard) Couch gag: Couch gag by Banksy: The Simpsons are seen as a picture on the wall of a sweatshop where Asian workers are seen drawing the couch gag and creating Simpsons merchandise. Episode chronology
After hosting the Simpsons for dinner, Juliet's father plays track three "Researching the Brief" from James Horner's soundtrack to The Pelican Brief. [4] In the scene when the girls visit the folk art museum, a version of "Wipe Out" by The Surfaris is played. [4] Here the girls see paintings based on the work of American outsider artist Henry ...
Creators of The Simpsons: Hit and Run have admitted they are perplexed as to why the game never got a sequel. The title was a hit upon its release in 2003 and developed a cult following that ...
Couch gag: The family is sitting on the couch. The screen zooms out to show them as a painting in a museum with the handwritten caption "Ceci n'est pas une couch gag." ("This is not a couch gag."), a reference to The Treachery of Images. Commentary: Matt Groening Al Jean Matt Selman Tim Long Tom Gammill Max Pross Raymond S. Persi Yeardley Smith ...
Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club gave this episode a B−, stating, "'3 Scenes Plus A Tag From A Marriage' might only be one of a handful the pair are credited with writing, but they’ve been on board The Simpsons’ ship for a long, long time. That familiarity works to pepper this episode with more than a handful of decent gags that stand on ...