Children of a Lesser Clod

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The Simpsons episode
"Children of a Lesser Clod"
Image:Cabf16.jpg
Episode no. 268
Prod. code CABF16
Orig. airdate May 13, 2001
Show runner(s) Mike Scully
Written by Al Jean
Directed by Mike Polcino
Chalkboard "Today is not Mothra's Day"
Couch gag The Simpsons are a family of crash test dummies that get slammed into the TV as part of the test. The Homer dummy’s head falls off from the sudden trauma.
Guest star(s) none
Season 12
November 1 2000May 20 2001
  1. Treehouse of Horror XI
  2. A Tale of Two Springfields
  3. Insane Clown Poppy
  4. Lisa the Tree Hugger
  5. Homer vs. Dignity
  6. The Computer Wore Menace Shoes
  7. The Great Money Caper
  8. Skinner's Sense of Snow
  9. HOMR
  10. Pokey Mom
  11. Worst Episode Ever
  12. Tennis the Menace
  13. Day of the Jackanapes
  14. New Kids on the Blecch
  15. Hungry, Hungry Homer
  16. Bye Bye Nerdie
  17. Simpson Safari
  18. Trilogy of Error
  19. I'm Goin' to Praiseland
  20. Children of a Lesser Clod
  21. Simpsons Tall Tales
List of all The Simpsons episodes
Seasons
1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10
11 · 12 · 13 · 14 · 15 · 16 · 17 · 18 · 19

Children of a Lesser Clod is the 20th episode of The Simpsons twelfth season.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The family goes to the YMCA to attend one-time-only free classes, along with many other Springfieldians who admit they will never return to the Y and pay for any of the regular classes. Lisa takes gymnastics, Bart gets tricked into taking an etiquette class, and Homer participates in a basketball class for men over the age of 35, but suffers a torn ACL after a dunk attempt ends with the backboard crashing down on his leg. After Homer gets his surgery, he is told by Dr. Hibbert that he cannot go to work, and he must stay home. Homer finds himself extremely bored, even going so far as attempting to create a breed between Santa's Little Helper and Snowball II. One evening, Ned wants Marge to watch Rod and Todd while he attends a Chris Rock concert (that he misinterprets to be an abbreviation for a Christian Rock concert), but Marge is out identifying a body (which ends up being a very much alive Hans Moleman) so Ned asks Homer instead. The kids like having Homer take care of them, which allows Homer to establish his own day care center.

Homer starts a day care center (under Marge's ownership), "Uncle Homer's Day Care Center", to entertain himself, but makes Bart and Lisa feel like outcasts by ignoring them, giving Bart's jacket to Milhouse, forcing them out of their bedrooms for a film crew that is making a documetary about him, and having them work long hours at night to cut out paper hearts in his honor. The daycare center is wildly successful, and Homer earns a nomination for the "Good Guy Awards" ceremony. For the ceremony, Bart and Lisa splice in footage of home movies for the documentary to prove that Homer is an incompetent, rage-filled father and "beer-drinking meanie". The audience becomes outraged and Homer angrily strangles Bart on stage. Everyone in the audience becomes horrified by Homer's behavior, and decide to prevent their kids from being watched over by him. Homer escapes from the ceremony with all the kids on a van, until he crashes the van into a tree (none of the kids are hurt) and tries to escape before Chief Wiggum stops him. After going through three mistrials, Homer says he is sorry for neglecting Bart and Lisa, on whom he now decides to focus his love (along with the forgotten Maggie).

[edit] Cultural references

  • The title is a spoof of the play Children of a Lesser God and the 1986 film based upon it.
  • Professor Frink's use of "Flubber" directly references the 1997 film of the same name.
  • Homer's line "I believe you can fly!" references the R. Kelly song "I Believe I Can Fly" from the 1996 film Space Jam.
  • As Homer recalls his memory of him doing a slam dunk into space (which never happened), George Jetson later crashes into his leg. Homer responds by yelling "JETSON!!" as Mr. Spacely often did.
  • Rainier Wolfcastle's plan to convert the YMCA so he can hunt "the most dangerous prey of all: man" is a reference to The Most Dangerous Game.

[edit] Trivia

Image:Lugash.jpg
Coach Lugash
  • This episode marks the first appearance of Lugash the Béla Károlyi-esque gymnastics coach. He would later appear in "Little Girl in the Big Ten".
  • This is the first episode where it's revealed that Kent Brockman and Arnie Pie (the helicopter news reporter) don't get along at work. In previous episodes, the two characters did not audibly hate each other (in fact, they were shown bowling together on the season seven episode Team Homer as part of the Channel 6 Wastelanders bowling team along with Krusty the Clown and The Spanish Bumblebeeman), but there were many times where Kent Brockman would brush off any misfortune that Arnie Pie happened upon (cf. Mr. Plow). In later episodes, Kent and Arnie would either argue or express hatred for each other (cf. the season thirteen finale "Poppa's Got a Brand New Badge", the season fourteen episode "Pray Anything", the season fifteen episode "The Wandering Juvie", and the season 18 finale "You Kent Always Say What You Want").
  • A short segment of the episode features Bill Cosby asking a child on his show Kids Say the Darndest Things about what he likes to play. The child promptly replies "Pokémon!" Cosby begins incoherently rambling about what Pokémon is, an often parodied mannerism of Cosby's.
  • This episode was advertised as featuring Ron Howard in what would have been his third appearance on "The Simpsons" (his first two appearances can be found in season ten's When You Dish Upon a Star and season eleven's Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder). However, he was not in the aired version. No guest voices were used at all in this episode.
  • The original title for this episode was "The Kids Stay In The Picture", which is a play on the title of legendary producer Robert Evans' "The Kid Stays In The Picture".
  • When Homer goes hysterical and kidnaps the children, Ralph asks where they're going. Homer replies they're getting frosty chocolate milkshakes. When the series was on the Tracey Ullman Show this was Homer's catchphrase. It was also something of a running joke in the first two seasons (and was mentioned again in the Treehouse of Horror story where Homer buys a hammock that produces clones of himself, one of which is his Tracy Ullman Show persona).

[edit] External links

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