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The first, which shows Krusty in his normal clown attire with several Krusty products, was released in 2000 as part of "wave one". [50] The second, released in 2002 as part of "wave nine", is called "busted Krusty" and shows him in a prison and without his clown makeup, as he was seen in "Krusty Gets Busted". [51]
Bart and Lisa wonder how Krusty did not have a Bar Mitzvah since his father is a rabbi. They go to Rabbi Hyman Krustofsky, who says that he was afraid that Krusty would make a mockery of the whole ceremony. Lisa says that Krusty can still have his Bar Mitzvah as an adult, as there is nothing in Judaism that forbids it. Krusty agrees to it.
Born in Monza, Italy, Mazzotta began his career as a screen actor at an early age. [2] For technical reasons, sometimes he had to redub his own performances in post-syncronization; gaining experience in the studio, he became mainly active as a voice actor, dubbing cartoons and movies and voicing Italian animated characters. [2]
Acclaim published the console versions and sub-licensed the home computer versions to Virgin. The 16-bit versions on the Super NES and the Mega Drive/Genesis were entitled Krusty's Super Fun House. There are two revisions of the Super NES and Genesis games. Version 1.1 has completely different music for the second and fourth world.
Krusty most commonly refers to Krusty the Clown, a fictional character in the cartoon The Simpsons. Krusty may also refer to: Krusty (music group), a female Hong Kong music group formed in 2005; Krusty Krab, a fictional restaurant in the cartoon SpongeBob SquarePants; KRUSTY, NASA project aiming to develop nuclear reactors for space travel
In this episode, Bart inadvertently exposes Krusty the Clown as one of the biggest tax cheats in American history. With his career ruined, Krusty fakes his own death and adopts an alias, until Bart and Lisa convince him to become a television clown again. The episode was written by John Swartzwelder and Bob Kushell, and directed by Jim Reardon.
Drew Barrymore also guest-starred as Krusty the Clown's daughter in the episode. The episode went into a cycle where it was written in season 11 and produced for season 12. [1] Originally, Homer Simpson was the one who was surprised to have a long-lost daughter, but this was changed to Krusty as a suggestion from Mike Scully. [2]
Bart and Lisa listen to a podcast hosted by Marc Maron with Krusty the Clown as a guest. Krusty tells the story of the troubled production of his directorial debut The Sands of Space. In the mid ‘80’s, Krusty's career is taking off following his role as the dog cop in Good Cop Dog Cop. Before he will sign on to film the sequel, Krusty wants ...