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Difference between revisions of "Grampa's Christmas Origins: Christmas Cookies"

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
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== Plot ==
 
== Plot ==
[[Bart]] and [[Lisa]] leave milk and cookies for Santa, but meet [[Grampa]] in the living room. He talks about how the tradition started. An orphan kid gave Santa a hot cake to get the best gift as a bribe. The cake was so hot that Santa burned himself and he did not get any presents, but his friends received them. The incident spread, and the next year  everyone begins making cakes for Santa, which lead to the cookie prohibition of 1929-1987. Grampa explains that it shows how evil orphans are. Bart and Lisa go away and Lisa is tired of the stories Grampa tells and Bart reminds her that there will be more holidays soon.
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It's Christmas Eve at [[742 Evergreen Terrace|the Simpson home]]. [[Bart]] and [[Lisa]] are leaving milk and cookies out for [[Santa Claus]], even though Bart is decidedly unimpressed with Lisa's selections of vegan carob chip cookies and unsweetened soy milk. They are suprised to find [[Grampa]] sitting in the chair next to the fireplace. He calls the cookies-for-Santa tradition malarkey, then tells how the tradition got started.
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The setting changes to Christmas Eve in an orphanage "back in the olden days", most likely the 1920s. In residence are the old-time counterparts of [[Milhouse]] and the school bullies ([[Nelson]], [[Dolph]], [[Jimbo]] and [[Kearney]]). Milhouse says that he's sure to get the best toy because of the candy cane flambé cake he has made for Santa. The bullies, however, make fun of his cake and say that his idea is crazy because Santa will be too busy to stop and eat.
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Later that night, Santa arrives. Milhouse shyly offers the cake (which is still ablaze) to Santa, and Santa eagerly takes a bite. The flaming cake sets Santa's mouth on fire, and he drops the cake and starts jumping around and screaming. The commotion wakes up the bullies, and they quickly go into action: Jimbo stands behind Santa and holds him upright; Dolph douses the flames by pouring a glass of milk into Santa's mouth; Kearney stands ready with a bottle of milk; and Nelson holds up a plate full of cookies and offers one to Santa.
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After Santa has the milk and cookies, things calm down. He is grateful for the bullies' help ("You boys saved Christmas!") and promises to give them his best toys and find them new families. However, he is angry with Milhouse, calls him "Bakey McTongue-Torcher", and says he will get "a lifetime of unfilfilled hopes and dreams."
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By next Christmas, Grampa says, everyone in the world was leaving cookies out for Santa. The "Cookie Initiative" was declared and [[Fatty Arbuckle]] became its national spokesman. This led to the "Great Cookie Prohibition of 1929", and cookies were not seen again until 1987, when [[Geraldo Rivera]] opened Al Capone's vault. The scene shifts back to the present as Grampa finishes the story: After the reappearance of cookies in 1987, "Santa went on a cookie bender and died from obesity, rendering the cookies-and-milk tradition a morbid reminder of how truly evil orphans can be!" (Ironically, he says this just as he finishes the vegan cookies and soy milk that Bart and Lisa had brought for Santa.)
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Annoyed, Bart and Lisa walk away. Lisa asks if Grampa will try to ruin every Christmas tradition with his stories. In response, Bart grimly reminds her that Grampa also has theories on Easter, evolution and Kevin James's career.
  
 
{{Grampa's Christmas Origins}}
 
{{Grampa's Christmas Origins}}

Revision as of 16:23, February 21, 2013

Grampa's Christmas Origins: Christmas Carols
Grampa's Christmas Origins: Christmas Cookies
Grampa's Christmas Origins: Christmas Lights


Grampa's Christmas Origins: Christmas Cookies
Grampa's Christmas Origins Christmas Cookies.png
Comic Information
Release date: November 2011
Comic series: The Simpsons Winter Wingding
Pages: 2
"Santa went on a cookie bender and died from obesity, rendering the cookies-and-milk tradition a morbid reminder of how truly evil orphans can be!"
Abraham Simpson

Grampa's Christmas Origins: Christmas Cookies is a Simpsons Winter Wingding story that appears in The Simpsons Winter Wingding 6.

Synopsis

Grampa tells the story of how a group of orphans started the custom of leaving cookies out for Santa Claus.

Plot

It's Christmas Eve at the Simpson home. Bart and Lisa are leaving milk and cookies out for Santa Claus, even though Bart is decidedly unimpressed with Lisa's selections of vegan carob chip cookies and unsweetened soy milk. They are suprised to find Grampa sitting in the chair next to the fireplace. He calls the cookies-for-Santa tradition malarkey, then tells how the tradition got started.

The setting changes to Christmas Eve in an orphanage "back in the olden days", most likely the 1920s. In residence are the old-time counterparts of Milhouse and the school bullies (Nelson, Dolph, Jimbo and Kearney). Milhouse says that he's sure to get the best toy because of the candy cane flambé cake he has made for Santa. The bullies, however, make fun of his cake and say that his idea is crazy because Santa will be too busy to stop and eat.

Later that night, Santa arrives. Milhouse shyly offers the cake (which is still ablaze) to Santa, and Santa eagerly takes a bite. The flaming cake sets Santa's mouth on fire, and he drops the cake and starts jumping around and screaming. The commotion wakes up the bullies, and they quickly go into action: Jimbo stands behind Santa and holds him upright; Dolph douses the flames by pouring a glass of milk into Santa's mouth; Kearney stands ready with a bottle of milk; and Nelson holds up a plate full of cookies and offers one to Santa.

After Santa has the milk and cookies, things calm down. He is grateful for the bullies' help ("You boys saved Christmas!") and promises to give them his best toys and find them new families. However, he is angry with Milhouse, calls him "Bakey McTongue-Torcher", and says he will get "a lifetime of unfilfilled hopes and dreams."

By next Christmas, Grampa says, everyone in the world was leaving cookies out for Santa. The "Cookie Initiative" was declared and Fatty Arbuckle became its national spokesman. This led to the "Great Cookie Prohibition of 1929", and cookies were not seen again until 1987, when Geraldo Rivera opened Al Capone's vault. The scene shifts back to the present as Grampa finishes the story: After the reappearance of cookies in 1987, "Santa went on a cookie bender and died from obesity, rendering the cookies-and-milk tradition a morbid reminder of how truly evil orphans can be!" (Ironically, he says this just as he finishes the vegan cookies and soy milk that Bart and Lisa had brought for Santa.)

Annoyed, Bart and Lisa walk away. Lisa asks if Grampa will try to ruin every Christmas tradition with his stories. In response, Bart grimly reminds her that Grampa also has theories on Easter, evolution and Kevin James's career.