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It first aired on the Fox network in the United States on December 10, 2006. [2] In the episode, Bart becomes Nelson's new best friend and under Nelson's protection, no one dares to mess with Bart. It was written by Matt Selman and directed by Chris Clements. [1] In its original run, the episode received 8.31 million viewers. It received ...
The episode is a parody of the 2016 film La La Land. [1] Co-writer Tim Long wanted to write an episode where Nelson sings. When he heard Nelson sing in the sixteenth season episode "Sleeping with the Enemy," Long thought it was crazy but moving, and he want to draw from that pain.
Nelson is a 12-year-old student and bully at Springfield Elementary School.He is known to have terrorized virtually every child in Springfield at one point or another. Most often, it is the school nerds and less popular students, such as Milhouse and Martin, who are the subjects of his cruelty.
How to follow the 10-3-2-1-0 sleep rule 10 hours before bed: No more caffeine. While there’s some variation in the genetics of how different people process caffeine, 10 hours is a reasonable gap ...
Season 10 Episode 1: Directed by: Dominic Polcino: Written by: Jane O'Brien: Production code: 5F20: Original air date: August 23, 1998 () Guest appearance; Lisa Kudrow as Alex Whitney: Episode features; Couch gag: The family goes to sit on the couch, but fall backwards as the couch is pulled out from under them by Nelson Muntz. Nelson exclaims ...
Dolly Parton loves Christmas music! “Well, you know I love all the Christmas songs," the country legend, 78, tells PEOPLE exclusively. "I love the fast ones, I love the slow ones."
The Year Without a Santa Claus, a Christmas special from Jules Bass and Arthur Rankin, Jr., turns 50 this December. The beloved special was adapted from the book of the same name by Phyllis ...
Bart enters Lisa's bedroom and tries to grab the saxophone from her, but he inadvertently tosses it out the window. It lands in the middle of the street and is run over by traffic and stomped on by Nelson Muntz. In a period of mourning, Lisa reveals she cannot remember ever not having that saxophone, so Homer recounts the instrument's origins.