Planet Simpson How a cartoon masterpiece defined a generation

Chris Turner, 1973-

Book - 2004

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Subjects
Published
Cambridge, Mass. : Da Capo Press c2004.
Language
English
Main Author
Chris Turner, 1973- (-)
Edition
1st Da Capo Press ed
Physical Description
xiv, 450 p. ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9780306813412
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: The Birth of the Simpsonian Institution
  • 1. The Life & Times of the Simpsons
  • 2. Homer's Odyssey
  • 3. Bart Simpson, Punk Icon
  • 4. Citizen Burns
  • 5. Lisa Lionheart
  • 6. Marge Knows Best
  • 7. The Simpsons in Cyberspace
  • 8. The Ugly Springfieldianite
  • 9. The Simpsons Go Hollywood
  • 10. The Simpsons Through the Looking Glass
  • 11. Planet Simpson
  • Acknowledgements
  • Image
  • Credits
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

On the verge of becoming the all-time longest-running situation comedy, The Simpsons 0 has had unprecedented effect on American popular culture, as Turner convincingly argues. He traces the show's history, from cultural touchstone to beloved institution, and offers lengthy profiles of the characters, elucidated with tidbits from 15 years' worth of episodes. Especially fascinating is his depiction of the online community devoted to The Simpsons0 , which pores over each episode for arcane references and whose efforts have been subtly acknowledged in metatextual gags on the show. While Turner overstates the case for The Simpsons0 ' cultural importance, even claiming that, since it appeals to all ages, it is in some respects more important than rock and roll, his observations are thoughtful and perceptive, and he conveys them in a breezy, sometimes smart-alecky tone totally appropriate to the subject. Long-winded but never dull, dense but never academic, Planet Simpson0 may be too much for casual viewers. For the show's sizable hardcore audience, however, especially the most serious-minded viewers, it's a feast. --Gordon Flagg Copyright 2004 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Although this unauthorized book "was not prepared, licensed, approved, or endorsed by any entity involved in creating or producing" The Simpsons, Canadian journalist Turner embarks on an encyclopedic exposition of the show's episodes, catchphrases, characters, cultural impact, social commentary, themes and influences. In 1987, 33-year-old cartoonist Matt Groening devised the dysfunctional family during a 15-minute wait before pitching the concept to producer James L. Brooks. Short segments on Fox's Tracey Ullman Show escalated into the full series in 1989-1990, with accolades and awards piling up during the following 15 years. Turner flavors his straightforward Simpsons study with footnotes and facts on everything from Ayn Rand and Columbine to Y2K and Yeats. Unraveling and analyzing plot threads, he views the series as "more anti-authoritarian by far than almost anything else that's ever aired in prime time," and he praises it as a "cultural institution" comparable to the Beatles. Turner's fannish enthusiasm and tsunami of trivia will appeal mainly to devotees, though cultural historians may value it for its vision of Springfield as a satirical mirror reflecting the trials and tribulations of contemporary life. (Nov. 1) Forecast: Although the show is past its heyday, diehard fans will gravitate to this like Homer to donuts. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

For the past 15 years, the longest-running sitcom in television history has also been the most influential and culturally subversive instrument in the entertainment industry. That it also happens to be a cartoon is wickedly ironic and appropriate. This in-depth cultural analysis of The Simpsons is what happens when the eggheads deconstruct pop culture and put it in their postmodern Veg-O-Matic. Turner, an award-winning Canadian journalist, devotes entire chapters to the show's main characters and the explication of the societal facets that they both represent and refract. He offers detailed and trenchant analysis befitting academic geekdom, but he also freely and enthusiastically flys his fan-boy colors with favorite bits, episodes, and anecdotes. More for the chi-chi American studies crowd, this one belongs in the Simpsonian next to Malibu Stacy's lunar rover.-Barry X. Miller, Austin P.L., TX (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

INTRODUCTION: The Birth of the Simpsonian Institution I wish it was the sixties I wish I could be happy I wish, I wish, I wish that something would happen --Radiohead, "The Bends" Once in a great while, we are privileged to experience a television event so extraordinary, it becomes part of our shared heritage. 1969 : Man walks on the moon. 1971 : Man walks on the moon . . . again. Then for a long time nothing happened. Until tonight. --Krusty the Clown, Episode 4f12 ("The Itchy & Scratchy & Poochie Show") On Thursday, January 21, 1993, around 8:20 P.M. (Eastern Standard Time), I was standing on the edge of a dance floor at a campus pub called Alfie's with a glass of cheap draft beer in my hand. The dance floor before me was packed with people, all of them waiting -- as I was -- for the next mind-blowing riff from the in-house entertainment. There was no band up on the stage at Alfie's on this night, though, and no dancers gyrating sweatily out on the dance floor, either. Instead, all the pub's chairs and tables were jumbled into a kind of auditorium arrangement, covering the stage and half of the dance floor and every other inch of available space. Every seat in the joint was taken, and all eyes were fixed on a big-screen TV set up in the middle of the dance floor itself, where the third and final act of Episode 9F11 of The Simpsons ("Selma's Choice") was about to begin. Now, 9F11 had already had some crowd-pleasing moments. The premise of the episode is that one of Marge's aunts, Gladys, has died a bitter spinster, setting a panicked Selma (one of Marge's ghoulish twin sisters) on a quest to have a child before her biological clock runs out. The episode opens with a TV commercial for Duff Gardens -- a theme park inspired by Springfield's favourite brew -- that shows the Duff "Beer-quarium," an enormous mug of beer full of "the happiest fish in the world." (This joke played especially well with the Alfie's crowd, with hooting and cheering accompanying the image of one fish, cross-eyed and smiling, bumping repeatedly into the glass.) As Selma sets about the doomed task of finding a father for her child -- via video personals, random passes at assorted minor characters and a visit to the sperm bank, 9F11 fills in with the usual grab bag of great gags: Selma shows her sexy side by tying a lit cigarette in a knot using only her mouth; while on a date with the blind, shrivelled midget Hans Moleman, she imagines a rec room full of sightless children bumping cluelessly into each other; the Sweathog whose sperm is available for purchase turns out, to everyone's disappointment, not to be Horshack; and, in a stellar example of The Simpsons ' ability to condense note-perfect parody into a few short seconds, another TV commercial for Duff Gardens features a brief snippet of the teen variety act Hooray! for Everything singing a saccharine bastardization of Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side," in a wonderfully silly send-up of Up with People. All in all, it had been a solid episode so far, and certainly no one nursing their beers through the second commercial break that night had any reason to be disappointed. By the dawn of 1993, however, the crowds that gathered around North America to watch The Simpsons had come to expect each episode to be not just solid but full-on transcendent . By this time, The Simpsons was what network executives call an "appointment show" -- that rare breed of TV program you schedule your evenings around, the kind you want to share with your peers. In the consummate college town of Kingston, Ontario, where I kept my Simpsons appointments each Thursday at 8:00, observance of the show verged on a religious rite: pretty much every pub in town broadcast The Simpsons live every week because otherwise nobody would show up for cocktails until 8:30 at the earliest. Which is to say that for many of us watching that Thursday night -- at Alfie's and elsewhere -- the critical bar had been set vertiginously high, and this new episode had only one act left to meet this lofty standard. The show came back on, and the crowd at the pub went quiet. Because Homer is sick (he's been picking away at a rotting ten-foot hoagie for weeks) it has fallen to Selma to take Bart and Lisa to Duff Gardens. Chuckles from the crowd as Bart and Lisa point out four of the beer- bottle- costumed Seven Duffs: Tipsy, Queasy, Surly and Remorseful. Somewhat scattered -- but deeper -- laughter as they enter the Hall of Presidents to watch tacky animatronic former statesmen (including Abraham Lincoln recast as "Rappin' A.B.") sing the praises of Duff beer. Cut to the Simpsons' living room, where Marge and Homer are settling in to watch Yentl . Cut back to Duff Gardens, where Bart, Lisa and Selma are poking around a souvenir stand. Bart approaches a display of clunky sunglasses. He reads the label: "BEER GOGGLES -- See the world through the eyes of a drunk!" All at once, the pub shook with a single great roaring laugh. It was like a force of nature, this laugh, spontaneous and open-mouthed and enormous . It was as if a train was suddenly there in the room, its horn blaring. It nearly drowned out the next line: Bart puts on the beer goggles and turns to Selma, who has morphed fuzzily into a voluptuous babe, striking a seductive pose. "You're charming the pants off of me," she says in a sultry voice. The laughter seemed to expand exponentially. People were doubled over, had tears streaming down their faces, were pounding tables with fists. I'm not kidding -- the gag just destroyed the crowd. It was as if that single gag were written for precisely this audience, an act of clairvoyance in which some TV-writer wizard had invaded the brains of everyone in the bar, rooted around for just the right common reference and then brought it flawlessly to life. Excerpted from Planet Simpson: How a Cartoon Masterpiece Documented an Era and Defined a Generation by Chris Turner All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.