The Official Simpsons Griefing Thread

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Still rewatching old episodes, just got the the one where Homer and his mom reunite and are again torn apart. That ending was legit one of the saddest things I've ever watched on TV in my life. Used to be this show could hit you right in the feels with the force of a charging bison, now it just induces eyerolls whenever it tries.

That was the beauty of the Golden Era episodes: the animation was wacky, the colors were crazy, and plots were absurd...yet they knew how to contrast that with completely grounded, based drama and elements that truly invoked real emotion. You know a TV show is a work of art when a fat, yellow-skin bald man with goofy eyes makes you feel legitimately emotional when you see him sitting on his car alongside the highway longing for his long lost mother who abandoned him.
 
Still rewatching old episodes, just got the the one where Homer and his mom reunite and are again torn apart. That ending was legit one of the saddest things I've ever watched on TV in my life. Used to be this show could hit you right in the feels with the force of a charging bison, now it just induces eyerolls whenever it tries.
The old ones actually worked to get you to the emotional ending while balancing the jokes throughout the episode vs the new ones which are too tryhard with the emotions or are too jokey and expect the audience to care when sappy music plays during an out of nowhere emotional scene. Mother Simpson has those heartwarming scenes of mother and son reuniting after so many years, but makes sure that the audience will laugh just as their eyes start to water. When Homer first reunites with his Mother at his grave its after kicking Walt Whitman's grave in anger and the emotional reunion is ruined when a pelican just happens to land on Homers head through no fault of his own. Even the ending scene balances humor and tragedy well, where, even as Mother and Son say goodbye for the final time, now awake this time, it still has jokes about crummy electric cars and Monas final words to her son being ruined when she slams her head on the door and yells "D'oh". Then the final shot happens, dialogue free, letting the music and visuals hit you in the heart, taking in everything that just happened, letting the simple shot of a man watching the stars mean so much. Same thing with "Daddy", Do It for Her, Seymour, and Fry and his brother Nancy. They all took their time to get to the big emotional finale using humor to carry the story making the ending take you a little off guard and effect you all that much more.

There's also probably a sort of subconscious reason why these episodes have a reputation for resonating with people. They're about things such as saying goodbye to a parent in the most idealized way possible, the death of a beloved pet, the sacrifices a parent makes to give their child a better future, losing a sibling, all things people will have to deal with in reality and will cause some soul searching when they happen.

Space. It seems to go on forever...

But then you get to the end and the gorilla starts throwing barrels at you!
Perfect example of what I'm trying to get at. Hint at a deeper scene or characterization before cracking a joke to keep it from getting too schmaltzy. Fry wants to leave his crummy life behind for something more, a sentiment shared by everyone worldwide, but he's also an idiot who gets his virtual ass kicked by Donkey Kong and disrespected by 12 year olds.
 
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Here's a moment that always makes me feel genuine happiness. And it involves Lisa and a side character (who was never popular), to boot.
 
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Here's a moment that always makes me feel genuine happiness. And it involves Lisa and a side character (who was never popular), to boot.

And of you want to dive deeper into that episode, let's not forget that Lisa was able to get the rare copy of Bleeding Gums' record thanks to Bart purchasing it from Comic Book Guy using the money from his lawsuit. Bart won $500 from his settlement, and instead of splurging it on a stupid Steve Allen Pog, he decides to get the record for his sister since she was the only one who believed him when he said his stomach hurt and needed surgery. It's like, they could do really intense and heartfelt storylines amidst comedic plots.
 
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Still rewatching old episodes, just got the the one where Homer and his mom reunite and are again torn apart. That ending was legit one of the saddest things I've ever watched on TV in my life. Used to be this show could hit you right in the feels with the force of a charging bison, now it just induces eyerolls whenever it tries.
Then remember that in 2016 Simpsons if she were alive, she would be a TDS Antifa lover.
 
The episodes going back to the kid's early childhoods were always great. Let's not forget this little gem that shows us that Homer used to be a good father.
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In the early episodes, Homer was a loving husband and father who meant well, but wasn’t the smartest. It was part of what made the show work so well. When the writing turnover happened, they turned everyone into cartoon characters and the show began sliding into it’s interminable decline.
 
Since we're talking about episodes that give you feels, Lisa's Substitute is one that still manages to tug on my heart a bit. As much as everyone is saying Homer used to be a bumbling, but decent and well meaning dad before being turned into a borderline retarded jerkass, Lisa used to be just a regular little girl as well before being turned into an insufferable SJW mouthpiece for the writers. Her last conversation with Mr. Bergstrom and what he tells her really gets to me in a way no other "sad" episodes did. One of my all time favorites from The Simpsons
 
That was the beauty of the Golden Era episodes: the animation was wacky, the colors were crazy, and plots were absurd...yet they knew how to contrast that with completely grounded, based drama and elements that truly invoked real emotion. You know a TV show is a work of art when a fat, yellow-skin bald man with goofy eyes makes you feel legitimately emotional when you see him sitting on his car alongside the highway longing for his long lost mother who abandoned him.

I still remember that scene, all these years later.. for those who aren't old enough:



As mentioned above, what makes the scene work is there's no dialogue, no ruining it with heavy-handed "HEY, YOU SAD YET?!" monologue...or there being the PERFECT person for him to talk to coming along...

It's just him, sitting alone on the hood of his car, as evening fades into night, unable to do anything but just ... sit there and contemplate what life and fate have dealt him.... you're expecting something because all shows do that.... EVERY one has a way to let the "Star" down easy from a loss, so you're waiting, waiting... and instead... without the baiting music ending, the credits just start rolling... he DOESN'T get the happy ending.

And it works because we've all been there.

When we experience trauma, genuine loss, we realize how badly TV lies to us...

The final days of a sick loved one, for example, aren't guaranteed to be full of poignant reconciliation or grand speeches like fictional characters get.

The last things your Mom says to you may be beautiful and memorable, but it also could be a harsh whisper for " morphine" or "get the nurse" and not "I'm sorry for that one time... you were right after all" with time for one final hug. They may code while you're in the bathroom down the hall and you don't even get the luxury of hearing the last words at all. They may be so drugged up and full of tubes that they can't talk....

That's why she clonks her head, to make the point: nobody gets the luxury of planning a personal loss, they just happen, once, with no do-overs. What you get is what you get.

TV tells us a loved one dying will be a choreographed experience with all this deep significance and chances for personal growth and epiphanies a plenty... .

It's not, it's basically just you, watching your loved one die, and being unable to stop it..... and it's awful from start to finish.

So, seeing funny cartoon man have to live out his trauma the way we do, not with manufactured pathos made just for him, but alone, on a deserted road somewhere, where nobody can see him crack or bug him as he grieves, with no helpful greater power sending someone or something to make it at least a bit better.... is instantly recognizable as human.
 
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Even better, the show staff had to fight tooth and nail to make sure Fox wouldn't fuck up the credits by showing a split screen ad while the Mother Simpson credits played. No way in hell would the zombie Simpsons staff show that much dedication.
 
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Since we're talking about episodes that give you feels, Lisa's Substitute is one that still manages to tug on my heart a bit. As much as everyone is saying Homer used to be a bumbling, but decent and well meaning dad before being turned into a borderline retarded jerkass, Lisa used to be just a regular little girl as well before being turned into an insufferable SJW mouthpiece for the writers. Her last conversation with Mr. Bergstrom and what he tells her really gets to me in a way no other "sad" episodes did. One of my all time favorites from The Simpsons
The last episode of The Simpsons with a strong emotional pull was Homer’s Crayon.
 
So, with all this shit about voice actors apologizing for voicing black characters or stepping down from such roles. Can we expect Lou and Hibbert to be recast? Or will they just be dropped entirely?
 
Even better, the show staff had to fight tooth and nail to make sure Fox wouldn't fuck up the credits by showing a split screen ad while the Mother Simpson credits played. No way in hell would the zombie Simpsons staff show that much dedication.
It helps they have zero pull left at Fox. The Simpsons isn't even allowed to show naked butts from what I understand and I'm pretty sure even kids' shows have those.
 
Still rewatching old episodes, just got the the one where Homer and his mom reunite and are again torn apart. That ending was legit one of the saddest things I've ever watched on TV in my life. Used to be this show could hit you right in the feels with the force of a charging bison, now it just induces eyerolls whenever it tries.

In future episodes they brought Homer's mom back (even killed her off) and it sucked. This episode never needed a follow up and its one of the best emotional moments in the show's run. Speaking of....

The episodes going back to the kid's early childhoods were always great. Let's not forget this little gem that shows us that Homer used to be a good father.
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Stuff like this is why I like (old) Homer Simpson more than a character like Peter Griffin. Deep down, he cares and loves his family. He's a good man...even if he is a lazy and drunken slob of a man.

Heck, on a rewatch of Seasons 1-9 I did last year, I was surprised at how much I liked the Homer/Lisa episodes. The two polar opposites in the family weirdly have the show's most heart warming bond, probably because of those differences.
 
The simpsons have been around since the last six presidents (counting Reagan because the characters premiered on the Tracey ullman show in 87 while he was still president)
 
Thinking of gags they'd never do anymore on this show, this one still leaves me in stitches.

The simpsons have been around since the last six presidents (counting Reagan because the characters premiered on the Tracey ullman show in 87 while he was still president)
Certainly! Reminded his mug appears in this one short!
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