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- Feb 3, 2013
What should the final episode be like?
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What should the final episode be like?
I think a big part of what happened to the Simpsons was societal change.
The original seasons were counter-culture for the era they were made in, a glorious response to the wholesome family values that the media was pushing. It was willing to tackle the things most sitcoms wouldn't touch, and it worked. It challenged people, and if I had to sum up that era it was the battle for America's soul between Bart Simpson and the Carebears. A satirical version of reality vs. bubble-wrapped niceness.
The problem is the show changed the way TV was made. As time went on not only were more shows emulating The Simpsons, and they were willing to take it further. The show lost it's main draw and became in essence became culture. It lost it's place on TV, so it scrambled to not be left further behind. After all, it was still making money. Episodes become more topical whereas classic Simpsons transcended it's era. Fads and guest stars take center stage in an obvious attempt to stay relevant. The characters further degrade themselves to compete with the likes of Family Guy, leading to the likes of Jerkass Homer.
I remember being on a job and talking to my coworker about how we both agreed the show has gone downhill and should be axed. The sad part was this was about 10 years ago.
This is exactly the reason they started tanking. They were born out of the Reagan/Bush Sr. era when there was a very active religious right that held a lot of sway over the media and kept most television very sterile. There's a reason Barbara Bush took a potshot at them in the middle of a campaign.I think a big part of what happened to the Simpsons was societal change.
The original seasons were counter-culture for the era they were made in, a glorious response to the wholesome family values that the media was pushing. It was willing to tackle the things most sitcoms wouldn't touch, and it worked. It challenged people, and if I had to sum up that era it was the battle for America's soul between Bart Simpson and the Carebears. A satirical version of reality vs. bubble-wrapped niceness.
Eh, the newer Mickey Mouse shorts have been pretty good.This is exactly the reason they started tanking. They were born out of the Reagan/Bush Sr. era when there was a very active religious right that held a lot of sway over the media and kept most television very sterile. There's a reason Barbara Bush took a potshot at them in the middle of a campaign.
By the late 90's that had all evaporated and the new counter-culture was a backlash against political correctness. The only problem was the Simpsons producers didn't get the memo and kept sticking it to a man who didn't exist anymore. This is when the Simpsons started treading water and stuff like South Park cropped up as the relevant satire of the day.
Then they just kind of stuck around and languished as commercial mascots for Fox. The Simpsons are like how Mickey Mouse stuff is all over Disney marketing even though no one has really cared about Mickey Mouse for decades.
And they had an episode that dared to show that strippers are people too ("Homer's Night Out").For fuck's sake, Homer wrote a suicide note in the third episode of the series
This is exactly the reason they started tanking. They were born out of the Reagan/Bush Sr. era when there was a very active religious right that held a lot of sway over the media and kept most television very sterile. There's a reason Barbara Bush took a potshot at them in the middle of a campaign.
By the late 90's that had all evaporated and the new counter-culture was a backlash against political correctness. The only problem was the Simpsons producers didn't get the memo and kept sticking it to a man who didn't exist anymore. This is when the Simpsons started treading water and stuff like South Park cropped up as the relevant satire of the day.
What should the final episode be like?
We start with the beginning of a normal, modern day Simpsons episode. Maybe play it up to it being a more out-there concept than normal. After the initial setup, we actually find out it's all in Homer's head. He's been in a coma since Bart the Daredevil, and the time equivalent to the number of years since the initial airing has passed in the real world. It's revealed Bart is successful with his life and has been paying for Homer's medical care out of guilt.
The episode then becomes this really serious discussion between Bart, Lisa and Maggie about pulling the plug on Homer (and by extension, the show itself).
I like this mostly because it throws Bart a bone. Every "future" episode features Bart as a strung-out loser with a string of unsuccessful marriages and a poor relationship with his kids if has any. Not even Homer struck out that bad. It started out kind of funny but by this point it's such a common gag it honestly feels like the writers are A-Logging their own character. Especially since a common them is Bart is actually a pretty decent and responsible kid at heart.
That and the writers really want Lisa and Milhouse to be a couple. In the first future episode Lisa outright say's she was with Milhouse but the line was done as a joke.
That and the writers really want Lisa and Milhouse to be a couple. In the first future episode Lisa outright say's she was with Milhouse but the line was done as a joke.
Won't happen since Lisa is their pet character.
This always bothered me. Despite the show's zaniness, the writers we're always pretty good at adding a human element. But for some reason not even in the show's golden era did the writers consider a gifted child could turn out average and boring and a troubled child could get his act together. Lisa will always be an ivy-league genius in the future, and Bart will always be a mooching blue-collar slob
Edit: wait I forgot about the episode where Bart grows up and becomes Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
Don't forget he mentioned he mentioned he was working out his aggression "till I go to law school", so I'm guessing that Bart becoming a judge is as canon as it can get in a show like this.I would argue that Bart got his shit together in the first future episode. He was working in construction and liked his job.
More like the entirety of the series after season 10 or so is badly written and pointless.It's almost like the rest of the future episodes are badly written and pointless. I know that's a crazy idea though.
More like the entirety of the series after season 10 or so is badly written and pointless.
More like the entirety of the series after season 10 or so is badly written and pointless.
What? You're talking crazy talk. No one else agrees with you and the show's wiki page disagrees as well. And if Wikipedia say's something than it's absolutely true.