HOMR

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The Simpsons episode
"HOMR"
Image:Happiness-intelligence-lisasimpson.jpg
Episode no. 257
Prod. code BABF22
Orig. airdate January 7, 2001
Show runner(s) Mike Scully
Written by Al Jean
Directed by Mike B. Anderson
Chalkboard "Network TV is not dead"
Couch gag The Simpsons are placed on the couch by the pneumatic transport tubes used on Futurama. Philip J. Fry (the protagonist from Futurama) is in on the couch for a split second before he’s sucked up and replaced by Bart.
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

"HOMR" is the ninth episode of the twelfth season of The Simpsons. It aired on January 7, 2001, and won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program.

Contents

[edit] Plot

When the family visits the Sick, Twisted and Totally F***ed up Animation Festival,[1] Homer discovers Animotion, a motion capture technology that enables a cartoon character to mimic a human's movements. He likes it so much that he invests the family's life savings in Animotion. However, just after making the investment, the company goes into "super-duper" bankruptcy. To earn the family's life savings money back, Homer takes a job at a medical testing center. During one experiment, the doctors find a crayon lodged in Homer's brain from when he was a child, which has been the cause of his life-long stupidity. The scientists then say that if they remove the crayon, it could increase his brainpower, or it could possibly just kill him. Homer decides to have the operation, believing that it will increase his killing power.

After the crayon is removed, Homer's IQ goes up from 55 to 105 points, which allows him to form a bond with Lisa. Homer then writes a report on the nuclear plant's safety, which results in the plant's shutting down, and the laying off of all employees. Homer's friends, initially thrilled to have a smarter Homer around, quickly reject him, and Homer is even burned in effigy at Moe's Tavern. Lisa tries to explain, with the aid of a graph, that as you get smarter, happiness decreases. Homer decides to put a crayon back in his brain, with the aid of Moe—who says he is an unlicensed surgeon, and describes the procedure as "the old Crayola oblongata", a reference to the medulla oblongata. He arrives home his old, dumb, self, which initially disappoints Lisa. However, she finds a letter Homer wrote to her before the surgery, explaining that he now understands what it is like to be smart like her, and how much more he appreciates her because of this. Instead of being upset over her father's decision, the episode ends with Lisa embracing him.

[edit] Censorship

  • In the United Kingdom, the title of the festival is Totally Sick and Twisted Animation Festival, with "F***ed Up" blurred out. The "F***ed Up" was omitted because it was far too obscene to be broadcast, since many children also watch The Simpsons and can easily decipher the stars used to omit the letters.

[edit] Cultural references

  • The title is a reference to CHAЯLY and its novel adapation Flowers for Algernon (which also deal with a mentally retarded man who gets an experimental operation to increase his IQ, only to end up retarded by the story's end).
  • The Sick, Twisted, and Totally F***ed Up Animation Festival may be modeled after Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation.
  • The clay animation watched by Flanders and his kids, The New Gravey and Jobriath, is a parody of Davey and Goliath, a similarly Christian-themed animation. This is one of the few scenes in the show to depart from traditional cel or cel-style animation.
  • The faux old footage of Itchy & Scratchy advertising for Laramie Cigarettes is likely a reference to the first season of The Flintstones, when commercials aired featuring Fred and Barney enjoying Winston Cigarettes.
  • Ozmodiar, a parody of The Great Gazoo from The Flintstones, appears twice during this episode, once after Bart says cartoons do not have to make sense, and once more after all the employees are laid off from the plant.
  • Homer blames eBay (rapidly gaining fame at the time this episode premiered) for the poor-quality cowbell he purchased.
  • Intelligent Homer solves multiple Rubik's Cubes in his spare time.
  • The Film "Love is Nice", starring Julia Roberts, Richard Gere and Bill Pullman (but not Bill Paxton) is a parody of the other Roberts and Gere films, Runaway Bride and Pretty Woman.
  • The line "Is that your final answer?" refers to Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.
  • When the researchers examine the X-ray of Homer's brain they use a visual enhancement machine similar to the one used by Deckard in Ridley Scott's film Blade Runner.
  • The name of the animation firm, Animotion is probably taken from the band known for their 1985 hit "Obsession"
  • The animated dog that dances to Homer's movements during the Animotion process resembles Snoopy.
  • During the couch gag in the opening credits, Fry from Futurama is on the sofa, before being sucked away again. However, his skin is yellow, like almost every character on the Simpsons.
  • While mailing his suggestions in the suggestion tube, Homer is humming Johann Sebastian Bach's Concerto Brandenburg #3.
  • When the Simpson family visit the animation convention, Bob and Larry, from VeggieTales, are shown on one of the booths.
  • This episode is referenced in The Simpsons comic "Laughter is not the Best Medicine". Dr. Hibbert shows an X-Ray of Homer's head and the crayon is seen.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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