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Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington" The Simpsons episode: Episode no. Season 3 Episode 2: Directed by: Wes Archer: Written by: George Meyer: Production code: 8F01: Original air date: September 26, 1991 () Episode features; Chalkboard gag "Spitwads are not free speech" Couch gag: The family sits down and Homer pulls Santa's Little Helper from under him ...
Episode features; Couch gag: The family members fly in dressed as popular anime characters (Bart is Astro Boy, Homer is Ultraman, Lisa is Sailor Moon, Marge is Princess from Science Ninja Team Gatchaman and Maggie is Pikachu from Pokémon) and land on a bench with "シンプソンズ" on it, Japanese for "Simpsons". Commentary: Al Jean Don ...
The episode was written by Dana Gould and directed by Mike B. Anderson. In this episode, Lisa is elected student body president, but she strikes with the students when the faculty try to corrupt her to allow budget cuts. The episode was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Music by Alf Clausen And Lyrics by Dana Gould.
"Lisa the Iconoclast" is the sixteenth episode of the seventh season of the American animated television series The Simpsons. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on February 18, 1996. In this episode, Lisa writes an essay on Springfield founder Jebediah Springfield for the town's bicentennial. While doing research, she learns he was ...
[1] [3] The episode was selected for release in a 2000 video collection of selected political episodes of the show, titled: The Simpsons Political Party. [4] The episode appeared on the second volume of the collection, together with the episode "Duffless" from season four. [5] The episode was included in The Simpsons season seven DVD set, which ...
The episode's main plot, in which Lisa becomes a Buddhist, was pitched by Jean, who wanted to expand Lisa's personality. When he pitched the plot idea to the Simpsons writing staff, they became concerned about the episode's originality. They argued that the series had already explored religious themes in earlier episodes, but Jean assured them ...
"Bart to the Future" was written by Dan Greaney and directed by Michael Marcantel as part of the eleventh season of The Simpsons (1999–2000). [1] [2] It was the second episode of the series to show the Simpson family's life in the future, following the season six episode "Lisa's Wedding" that aired five years earlier in 1995.
In this episode, Lisa files a restraining order against Bart when she loses patience on his pranks on her while Homer works at a hypermarket. Jane Kaczmarek guest starred as Judge Constance Harm while actor Gary Busey appeared as himself. The episode was temporarily banned in some countries following the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.