The Great Simpsina

"The Great Simpsina" is the eighteenth episode of season 22. It originally aired on April 10, 2011.

Plot
One day, the Simpsons go peach picking. They come back home with too many peaches, so they eat only recipes with peaches. After an while, all the family except Marge gets tired of eating peaches. In an attempt to get rid of the peaches, Homer takes Marge to get a massage. Meanwhile, Bart, Lisa, and Maggie take the peaches to different locations. Bart no longer has his peaches when bullies take over. Lisa is lost in a deserted area. A raccoon chases Lisa inside an illusionist's house. When the illusionist called "The Great Raymondo" finds her, he questions her and teaches her some magic tricks. Lisa starts presenting magic tricks to the school, and to "The Great Raymondo". It soon turns to trouble when she finds the secret to "The Great Milkcan Escape". She presents to the school but after, the son of "Cregg Demon" "magic freak" tricks her into giving the secret. Then he tells him. Cregg Demon said that he is going to present it at his next magic show, the "World Magic Championship", and says Houdini's ghost told him in a dream. Raymondo, upset, tells Lisa to get out. Lisa tries to stop doing magic. Soon after, Raymondo forgives her. At the magic show, some other magicians replace the fake milkcan with a real one so that Cregg Demon cannot get out. Lisa wants to save him, but no one does. After a magic battle, Raymondo saves him by making a girder fall onto the magicians, and Cregg Demon quits magic. At the end, Raymondo and Lisa do their act.

Production
"The Great Simpsina" was written by Matt Warburton and directed by Chris Clements. The episode guest starred Martin Landau as The Great Raymondo and David Copperfield, Ricky Jay, Jack McBrayer, Penn Jillette and Teller as themselves. The episode has no blackboard nor couch gag in the opening credits, making it the second episode of the series to do so, the first being "Sideshow Bob Roberts" from seventeen years earlier.

Reception
The episode was watched in an estimated 4.996 million households, at the time, one of the lowest recorded viewing figures in the show's history. When this episode premiered in the UK, this episode was watched in 513,000 households.