Difference between revisions of "Fat Man and Little Boy"
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− | [[Bart]] fires spitballs at [[Lisa]] and [[Janey]] and one is covered in blood. Lisa then complains to Bart about it but Bart finds out he is losing his last baby tooth. Bart then starts to worry that he is becoming an adult and has to give up his life as a kid. He sits in a kiddie ride outside the [[Try-N-Save]] to try and regain his youth, but when [[Jimbo Jones|Jimbo]], [[Dolph Starbeam|Dolph]] and [[ | + | [[Bart]] fires spitballs at [[Lisa]] and [[Janey]] and one is covered in blood. Lisa then complains to Bart about it but Bart finds out he is losing his last baby tooth. Bart then starts to worry that he is becoming an adult and has to give up his life as a kid. He sits in a kiddie ride outside the [[Try-N-Save]] to try and regain his youth, but when [[Jimbo Jones|Jimbo]], [[Dolph Starbeam|Dolph]] and [[Kearney Zzyzwicz|Kearney]] come, he goes home and decides to give his toys a viking funeral. Lisa then tells Bart that when she is feeling down she writes stuff and Bart decides to write cynical messages on T-shirts. They quickly become popular and Bart opens his own T-shirt stand but [[Chief Wiggum]] shuts it down as he does not have a vending license. |
[[File:ScratchBob ItchPants.jpeg|thumb|right|200px|One of Krusty's shirts.]] | [[File:ScratchBob ItchPants.jpeg|thumb|right|200px|One of Krusty's shirts.]] | ||
Revision as of 11:35, August 31, 2013
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"Fat Man and Little Boy"
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Episode Information
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"Fat Man and Little Boy" is the fifth episode of season 16. It originally aired on December 12, 2004 and the last new episode of 2004. It was written by Joel H. Cohen and directed by Mike B. Anderson.
Contents
Synopsis
Bart begins designing T-shirt slogans, and his T-shirts become very popular among the citizens of Springfield.
Plot
Act I
Bart fires spitballs at Lisa and Janey and one is covered in blood. Lisa then complains to Bart about it but Bart finds out he is losing his last baby tooth. Bart then starts to worry that he is becoming an adult and has to give up his life as a kid. He sits in a kiddie ride outside the Try-N-Save to try and regain his youth, but when Jimbo, Dolph and Kearney come, he goes home and decides to give his toys a viking funeral. Lisa then tells Bart that when she is feeling down she writes stuff and Bart decides to write cynical messages on T-shirts. They quickly become popular and Bart opens his own T-shirt stand but Chief Wiggum shuts it down as he does not have a vending license.
Act II
Bart makes a new T-shirt stand and takes it to the local expo, where it gets crushed by Krusty's bigger stand. Dejected, he goes outside and gets run over by a businessman named Goose Gladwell, who sees Bart's T-shirts and offers to distribute them, as he finds them "hilarious". There Bart finds out that Krusty is selling better t-shirts and Bart gives up. Homer then realizes he just lost his spot in the family and ends up watching a Declan Desmond documentary about lions on TV, which convinces him to spend the remainder of his life bonding with Lisa instead of mvoing to the Springfield Retirement Castle.
Act III
Homer enjoys spending time with Lisa but after Lisa's project on nuclear energy is about to lose to Martin's robot named CHUM (short for "Childlike Humanoid Urban Muchacho") and Homer uses real plutonium to power Lisa's project and Lisa begins to hate Homer again. In the mean time Goose Gladwell is selling the rights to Bart's t-shirts to the Disney company and Bart is not even given a single penny. Homer then comes to the store and after a discussion with Goose Homer is able to end sales to Bart's t-shirts and Homer is able to reprise his role as father again. In a deleted scene during the credits, Bart tries to lose a tooth by getting Nelson to punch him, a plan that fails when Nelson leaves to think about the insults he recieved.
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