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Difference between revisions of "Season 21"

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
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{{PrevNext|Season 20|Season 22}}{{Season
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{{PrevNext|Season 20|Season 22}}
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{{Season
 
|name = Season 21
 
|name = Season 21
 
|image = [[File:Season 21 iTunes logo.jpg|250px]]
 
|image = [[File:Season 21 iTunes logo.jpg|250px]]
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== Reception ==
 
== Reception ==
 
The season received mainly positive reviews from critics, with the most praised episodes being "[[The Squirt and the Whale]]", "[[To Surveil with Love]]" and "[[The Bob Next Door]]". Some episodes made the series receive many award nominations, winning two: an {{w|Emmy Award}} for [[Anne Hathaway]] for her voicing of [[Princess Penelope]] in "[[Once Upon a Time in Springfield]]" and an {{w|Annie Award}} for "[[Treehouse of Horror XX]]".
 
The season received mainly positive reviews from critics, with the most praised episodes being "[[The Squirt and the Whale]]", "[[To Surveil with Love]]" and "[[The Bob Next Door]]". Some episodes made the series receive many award nominations, winning two: an {{w|Emmy Award}} for [[Anne Hathaway]] for her voicing of [[Princess Penelope]] in "[[Once Upon a Time in Springfield]]" and an {{w|Annie Award}} for "[[Treehouse of Horror XX]]".
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 +
 +
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==Episodes==
 
==Episodes==
{| border-bottom: 3px solid #D0ECF2;" valign="bottom" | cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" class="wikitable" style="height: 10px; width: 100%; "
+
{{Table|
! style="white-space: nowrap; width: 50px; background-color: #FFD733; "|Picture
+
{{TH|Picture|width=250px}}
! style="white-space: nowrap; width: 50px; background-color: #FFD733; "| #
+
{{TH|#}}
! style="background-color: #FFD733; "| Original title (top)<br />Alternate title (bottom)
+
{{TH|Original title}}
!! style="background-color: #FFD733;"| Directed by
+
{{TH|Original airdate}}
!! style="background-color: #FFD733;"| Written by
+
{{TH|Directed by}}
! style="width: 140px; background-color: #FFD733; "|Original airdate
+
{{TH|Written by}}
!! style="background-color: #FFD733;"|Prod. code
+
{{TH|Prod. code}}
|-
+
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Homer the Whopper promo.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:Homer the Whopper promo.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|442 - 1
+
{{TB|442 - 1}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer the Whopper]]"'''}}
'''"[[Homer the Whopper]]"'''
+
{{TB|September 27, 2009}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Lance Kramer]]
+
{{TB|[[Lance Kramer]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Seth Rogen]]<br/>[[Evan Goldberg]]
+
{{TB|[[Seth Rogen]]<br/>[[Evan Goldberg]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|September 27, 2009
+
{{TB|LABF13}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF13
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Comic Book Guy's comic book hero, Everyman, becomes a big hit in Springfield, and he agrees to a movie version. CBG insists that he chooses who plays the lead role, and gives the part to Homer. However, the movie company hire a personal trainer for Homer, called Lyle, so that he can get fit for the part. When Lyle leaves, Homer puts on weight again, and the movie is a disaster. The company offer CBG the chance to direct a sequel if he pretends he liked the movie, but he criticises it.|7}}
|-
+
 
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TBT|[[File:Zacharyvaughn.png|250px]]}}
Comic Book Guy's comic book hero, Everyman, becomes a big hit in Springfield, and he agrees to a movie version. CBG insists that he chooses who plays the lead role, and gives the part to Homer. However, the movie company hire a personal trainer for Homer, called Lyle, so that he can get fit for the part. When Lyle leaves, Homer puts on weight again, and the movie is a disaster. The company offer CBG the chance to direct a sequel if he pretends he liked the movie, but he criticises it.  
+
{{TB|443 - 2}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|'''"[[Bart Gets a "Z"]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|October 4, [[2009]]}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Zacharyvaughn.png|250px]]
+
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|443 - 2
+
{{TB|[[Matt Selman]]}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|LABF15}}
'''"[[Bart Gets a "Z"]]"'''
+
{{TCsT|color=white|When Mrs Krabappel confiscates her students' mobile phones, they hatch a plan to get their teacher drunk to get her to "loosen up". When Principal Skinner fires her, she is replaced by a cool new teacher, Zachary Vaughn, who impresses the kids with his love of texting, Facebook and Twitter. Bart has a lingering guilt about getting Edna fired, and tries to help her. With the assistance of a self-help book-slash-DVD, she opens her own muffin store - but she still longs to be a teacher.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Mark Kirkland]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Matt Selman]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:Greatwifehopebanner.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|October 4, 2009
+
{{TB|444 - 3}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF14
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Great Wife Hope]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|October 11, [[2009]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|[[Matthew Faughnan]]}}
When Mrs Krabappel confiscates her students' mobile phones, they hatch a plan to get their teacher drunk to get her to "loosen up". When Principal Skinner fires her, she is replaced by a cool new teacher, Zachary Vaughn, who impresses the kids with his love of texting, Facebook and Twitter. Bart has a lingering guilt about getting Edna fired, and tries to help her. With the assistance of a self-help book-slash-DVD, she opens her own muffin store - but she still longs to be a teacher.
+
{{TB|[[Carolyn Omine]]}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|LABF16}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|color=white|The men and boys in Springfield become obsessed with Ultimate Punch Kick and Choke Championships, a violent sport where fighters inflict severe pain on each other. When Marge and her friends stage a protest against the spot, the show's promoter embraces the controversy and challenges Marge to a match, promising to shut down the competition if she wins. She begins to train with rhythmic gymnastics, but her family step in and get her professional martial arts help to give her a real chance at winning.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Greatwifehopebanner.jpg|250px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|444 - 3
+
{{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XX promo 1.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|445 - 4}}
'''"[[The Great Wife Hope]]"'''
+
{{TB|'''"[[Treehouse of Horror XX]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Matthew Faughnan]]
+
{{TB|October 18, [[2009]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Carolyn Omine]]
+
{{TB|[[Mike B. Anderson]]<br/>[[Matthew Schofield]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|October 11, 2009
+
{{TB|[[Daniel Chun]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF16
+
{{TB|LABF14}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|color=white|In "Dial 'M' for Murder or Press Main Menu," Lisa is forced into a Hitchcockian murder scheme by Bart, in "Don't Have a Cow, Mankind," Springfield is once again overrun by zombies thanks to Krusty Burger's latest sandwich, and in the Sweeney Toike Moe Biness," Moe the bartender bleeds Homer dry to create the perfect microbrewed beer.|7}}
| colspan="7"|
+
 
The men and boys in Springfield become obsessed with Ultimate Punch Kick and Choke Championships, a violent sport where fighters inflict severe pain on each other. When Marge and her friends stage a protest against the spot, the show's promoter embraces the controversy and challenges Marge to a match, promising to shut down the competition if she wins. She begins to train with rhythmic gymnastics, but her family step in and get her professional martial arts help to give her a real chance at winning.
+
{{TBT|[[File:Charity Chicks.png|250px]]}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|446 - 5}}
|-
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Devil Wears Nada]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XX promo 1.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|November 15, 2009}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|445 - 4
+
{{TB|[[Nancy Kruse]]}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|[[Tim Long]]}}
'''"[[Treehouse of Horror XX]]"'''
+
{{TB|LABF17}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Mike B. Anderson]]<br/>[[Matthew Schofield]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Marge poses for a calendar for charity, but she is soon the talk of the town after she reveals a little too much during her photo shoot. Meanwhile, Carl receives a promotion at the plant. He then promotes Homer to be his executive assistant and drives him up the wall with requests.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Daniel Chun]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|October 18, 2009
+
{{TBT|[[File:Simp PranksandGreens v2F.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF14
+
{{TB|447 - 6}}
|-
+
{{TB|'''"[[Pranks and Greens]]"'''}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|November 22, 2009}}
In "Dial 'M' for Murder or Press Main Menu," Lisa is forced into a Hitchcockian murder scheme by Bart, in "Don't Have a Cow, Mankind," Springfield is once again overrun by zombies thanks to Krusty Burger's latest sandwich, and in the Sweeney Toike Moe Biness," Moe the bartender bleeds Homer dry to create the perfect microbrewed beer.
+
{{TB|[[Chuck Sheetz]]}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|[[Jeff Westbrook]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|LABF18}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Charity Chicks.png|250px]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Groundskeeper Willie tells Bart about [[Andy Hamilton]], a former student who was an even better prankster than Bart is. Bart tracks down Andy, now 19 and still pulling pranks, and the two become quick friends.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|446 - 5
+
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TBT|[[File:Rednecks and Broomsticks.jpg|250px]]}}
'''"[[The Devil Wears Nada]]"'''
+
{{TB|448 - 7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Nancy Kruse]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Rednecks and Broomsticks]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Tim Long]]
+
{{TB|November 29, 2009}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|November 15, 2009
+
{{TB|[[Bob Anderson]]<br/>[[Rob Oliver]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF17
+
{{TB|[[Kevin Curran]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|LABF19}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TCsT|color=white|After stumbling upon some teenage Wiccans, Lisa accepts an invitation to join their coven. Just before Lisa is inducted Clancy Wiggum arrives and arrests the three teens on charges of witchcraft; Lisa becomes the chief witness in the trial. Meanwhile, Homer starts to hang out with his new pal Cletus after discovering the slack-jawed yokel makes moonshine and becomes the local moonshine taste-tester.|7}}
Marge poses for a calendar for charity, but she is soon the talk of the town after she reveals a little too much during her photo shoot. Meanwhile, Carl receives a promotion at the plant. He then promotes Homer to be his executive assistant and drives him up the wall with requests.  
+
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TBT|[[File:MABF01.jpg|250px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|449 - 8}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Simp PranksandGreens v2F.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Oh Brother, Where Bart Thou?]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|447 - 6
+
{{TB|December 13, 2009}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|[[Steven Dean Moore]]}}
'''"[[Pranks and Greens]]"'''
+
{{TB|[[Matt Selman]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Chuck Sheetz]]
+
{{TB|MABF01}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Jeff Westbrook]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|When Lisa tells Bart he'll never have the special bond that she has with Maggie because he doesn't have any brothers, he tries to get Homer and Marge to make him a baby brother, but when that doesn't work, he goes to the orphanage - where a young boy follows him home.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|November 22, 2009
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF18
+
{{TBT|[[File:Thursday with abie.jpg|250px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|450 - 9}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|'''"[[Thursdays with Abie]]"'''}}
Groundskeeper Willie tells Bart about Andy Hamilton, a former student who was an even better prankster than Bart is. Bart tracks down Andy, now 19 and still pulling pranks, and the two become quick friends.  
+
{{TB|January 3, [[2010]]}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|[[Michael Polcino]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Mitchell H. Glazer]]<br/>[[Don Payne]]}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Rednecks and Broomsticks.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|MABF02}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|448 - 7
+
{{TCsT|color=white|A Springfield Shopper reporter takes an interest in Grampa's stories, making him front-page news, which makes Homer jealous, until he discovers what the reporter has in store for the final column; Lisa loses the classroom stuffed lamb she was watching for Bart - down a sewer drain.|7}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
 
'''"[[Rednecks and Broomsticks]]"'''
+
{{TBT|[[File:Once Upon Time In Springfield.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Bob Anderson]]<br/>[[Rob Oliver]]
+
{{TB|451 - 10}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Kevin Curran]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Once Upon a Time in Springfield]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|November 29, 2009
+
{{TB|January 10, [[2010]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF19
+
{{TB|[[Matthew Nastuk]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Stephanie Gillis]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|LABF20}}
After stumbling upon some teenage Wiccans, Lisa accepts an invitation to join their coven. Just before Lisa is inducted Clancy Wiggum arrives and arrests the three teens on charges of witchcraft; Lisa becomes the chief witness in the trial. Meanwhile, Homer starts to hang out with his new pal Cletus after discovering the slack-jawed yokel makes moonshine and becomes the local moonshine taste-tester.
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Krusty is forced to add a female character named Princess Penelope to his show in order to attract more female viewers. She immediately overshadows Krusty as the ratings improve. Bart and Milhouse want to get the show back to the way it was, but the situation gets more complicated when Krusty and Penelope fall in love and decide to get married. Meanwhile, Homer, Lenny, and Carl consider working at a competing nuclear plant when Mr. Burns cuts off their daily doughnut service.|7}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Promocold.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:MABF01.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|452 - 11}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|449 - 8
+
{{TB|'''"[[Million Dollar Maybe]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|January 31, [[2010]]}}
'''"[[Oh Brother, Where Bart Thou?]]"'''
+
{{TB|[[Chris Clements]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Steven Dean Moore]]
+
{{TB|[[Bill Odenkirk]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Matt Selman]]
+
{{TB|MABF03}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|December 13, 2009
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Homer skips a date with Marge so he can buy a lottery ticket; when he wins a million dollars, he fears Marge's reaction to having blown off the date for a chance at fortune and he keeps his winnings a secret while showering the family with anonymous gifts. Meanwhile, Lisa helps to keep the senior citizens at the Springfield Retirement Castle stimulated with some video games.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF01
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Boy Meets Curl promo.jpg|250px]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|453 - 12}}
When Lisa tells Bart he'll never have the special bond that she has with Maggie because he doesn't have any brothers, he tries to get Homer and Marge to make him a baby brother, but when that doesn't work, he goes to the orphanage - where a young boy follows him home.
+
{{TB|'''"[[Boy Meets Curl]]"'''}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|February 14, 2010}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Chuck Sheetz]]}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Thursday with abie.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|[[Rob LaZebnik]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|450 - 9
+
{{TB|MABF05}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TCsT|color=white|After discovering their love of curling, Marge and Homer try out for the Olympic team and actually make it to the 2010 Vancouver Games. Meanwhile, in Vancouver, Lisa develops an addiction to collecting Olympic pins.|7}}
'''"[[Thursdays with Abie]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Michael Polcino]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:TheColorYellow.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Mitchell H. Glazer]]<br/>[[Don Payne]]
+
{{TB|454 - 13}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|January 3, 2010
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Color Yellow]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF02
+
{{TB|February 21, 2010}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Raymond S. Persi]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|[[Billy Kimball]]<br/>[[Ian Maxtone-Graham]]}}
A Springfield Shopper reporter takes an interest in Grampa's stories, making him front-page news, which makes Homer jealous, until he discovers what the reporter has in store for the final column; Lisa loses the classroom stuffed lamb she was watching for Bart - down a sewer drain.
+
{{TB|MABF06}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TCsT|color=white|When researching her family tree for someone who isn't a total boob or criminal, Lisa finds the 1860 diary of Eliza Simpson, a young girl who was in the Underground Railroad and tried to help a slave escape to Canada, but a diary by one of Milhouse's ancestors casts doubt on just what Eliza accomplished.|7}}
|-
+
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Once Upon Time In Springfield.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:Postcards from the Wedge.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|451 - 10
+
{{TB|455 - 14}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|'''"[[Postcards from the Wedge]]"'''}}
'''"[[Once Upon a Time in Springfield]]"'''
+
{{TB|March 14, 2010}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Matthew Nastuk]]
+
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Stephanie Gillis]]
+
{{TB|[[Brian Kelley]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|January 10, 2010
+
{{TB|MABF04}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|LABF20
+
{{TCsT|color=white|When Homer receives a letter from [[Edna Krabappel|Mrs. Krabappel]] saying that Bart is way behind in his studies, he tries to take a hard line with him, but Marge thinks he has too much work, so Bart finds a way to turn their difference of opinion into a full-blown fight, only for it to end up with the two of them deciding that they need to worry about themselves more than Bart - at least until Bart discovers that running trains on the old Springfield Subway is causing the school's structure to crumble.|7}}
|-
+
 
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TBT|[[File:Stealing First Base.jpg|250px]]}}
Krusty is forced to add a female character named Princess Penelope to his show in order to attract more female viewers. She immediately overshadows Krusty as the ratings improve. Bart and Milhouse want to get the show back to the way it was, but the situation gets more complicated when Krusty and Penelope fall in love and decide to get married. Meanwhile, Homer, Lenny, and Carl consider working at a competing nuclear plant when Mr. Burns cuts off their daily doughnut service.
+
{{TB|456 - 15}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|'''"[[Stealing First Base]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|March 21, 2010}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Promocold.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|[[Steven Dean Moore]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|452 - 11
+
{{TB|[[John Frink]]}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|MABF07}}
'''"[[Million Dollar Maybe]]"'''
+
{{TCsT|color=white|When Springfield Elementary's two fourth grade classes have to share desks rather than pay for a substitute teacher, Bart falls for his new deskmate, but after he kisses her, she starts sending him mixed signals; Lisa gets advice on how to handle being a female overachiever...from Michelle Obama.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Chris Clements]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Bill Odenkirk]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:The Greatest Story ever D'ohed.png|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|January 31, 2010
+
{{TB|457 - 16}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF03
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Greatest Story Ever D'ohed]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|March 28, 2010}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|[[Michael Polcino]]}}
Homer skips a date with Marge so he can buy a lottery ticket; when he wins a million dollars, he fears Marge's reaction to having blown off the date for a chance at fortune and he keeps his winnings a secret while showering the family with anonymous gifts. Meanwhile, Lisa helps to keep the senior citizens at the Springfield Retirement Castle stimulated with some video games.
+
{{TB|[[Kevin Curran]]}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|MABF10}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|color=white|"The Simpsons are going to..." Jerusalem, when Ned invites Homer along on a church retreat in an attempt to save his soul, but when Homer defiles one too many sacred sites, Ned says he's had enough.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Boy Meets Curl promo.jpg|250px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|453 - 12
+
{{TBT|[[File:American History X-cellent.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|458 - 17}}
'''"[[Boy Meets Curl]]"'''
+
{{TB|'''"[[American History X-cellent]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Chuck Sheetz]]
+
{{TB|April 11, 2010}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Rob LaZebnik]]
+
{{TB|[[Bob Anderson]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|February 14, 2010
+
{{TB|[[Michael Price]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF05
+
{{TB|MABF08}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|color=white|When stolen paintings are found in Burns Manor, Mr. Burns is arrested, so he has Smithers take over for him at the nuclear plant, but when he starts working the employees night and day, they try to get Mr. Burns back, even if it means breaking him out of prison - which it does; Bart and Lisa bond over one ant that survives an accident involving Lisa's ant farm.|7}}
| colspan="7"|
+
 
After discovering their love of curling, Marge and Homer try out for the Olympic team and actually make it to the 2010 Vancouver Games. Meanwhile, in Vancouver, Lisa develops an addiction to collecting Olympic pins.
+
{{TBT|[[File:Chief of Hearts.png|250px]]}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|459 - 18}}
|-
+
{{TB|'''"[[Chief of Hearts]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:TheColorYellow.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|April 18, 2010}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|454 - 13
+
{{TB|[[Chris Clements]]}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|[[Carolyn Omine]]<br/>[[William Wright]]}}
'''"[[The Color Yellow]]"'''
+
{{TB|MABF09}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Raymond S. Persi]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Homer and Chief Wiggum become close friends during Homer's community service stint, but when Homer leaves Wiggum's side during his recuperation to go to Moe's, the Chief takes offense; Bart becomes addicted to "Battle Ball", a Japanese game with cards and plastic balls that turn into creatures.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Billy Kimball]]<br/>[[Ian Maxtone-Graham]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|February 21, 2010
+
{{TBT|[[File:TheSquirtAndTheWhale.png|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF06
+
{{TB|460 - 19}}
|-
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Squirt and the Whale]]"'''}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|April 25, 2010}}
When researching her family tree for someone who isn't a total boob or criminal, Lisa finds the 1860 diary of Eliza Simpson, a young girl who was in the Underground Railroad and tried to help a slave escape to Canada, but a diary by one of Milhouse's ancestors casts doubt on just what Eliza accomplished.
+
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|[[Matt Warburton]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|MABF14}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Postcards from the Wedge.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Fed up with high electric bills, Homer puts up a windmill generator in the backyard. When he sees that the excess energy goes back to the power company, he takes the house off the power grid, making it entirely dependent on the windmill. Then a violent windstorm hits Springfield, and among the victims are the windmill and a whale which ends up beached, prompting Lisa, Homer, and many other townspeople to attempt to save it.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|455 - 14
+
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TBT|[[File:To Surveil With Love screenshot.jpg|250px]]}}
'''"[[Postcards from the Wedge]]"'''
+
{{TB|461 - 20}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Mark Kirkland]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[To Surveil With Love]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Brian Kelley]]
+
{{TB|May 2, 2010}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|March 14, 2010
+
{{TB|[[Lance Kramer]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF04
+
{{TB|[[Michael Nobori]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|MABF12}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Thanks to Homer leaving a gym bag with radioactive waste (planted there by Smithers) unattended in a train station, Springfield has surveillance cameras installed throughout the town, but when citizen video monitor scanner Ned abuses his ability to speak through the cameras' speakers, Homer uses the camera blind spot Bart discovers to the town's advantage; Lisa, having heard one too many dumb blonde jokes, dyes her hair brown.|7}}
When Homer receives a letter from Edna Krabappel saying that Bart is way behind in his studies, he tries to take a hard line with him, but Marge thinks he has too much work, so Bart finds a way to turn their difference of opinion into a full-blown fight, only for it to end up with the two of them deciding that they need to worry about themselves more than Bart - at least until Bart discovers that running trains on the old Springfield Subway is causing the school's structure to crumble.
+
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TBT|[[File:Moeletterblues.png|250px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|462 - 21}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Stealing First Base.jpg|250px]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Moe Letter Blues]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|456 - 15
+
{{TB|May 9, 2010}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
{{TB|[[Matthew Nastuk]]}}
'''"[[Stealing First Base]]"'''
+
{{TB|[[Stephanie Gillis]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[Steven Dean Moore]]
+
{{TB|MABF13}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|John Frink
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Homer, Apu, and Reverend Lovejoy take a day trip with their kids on Mother's Day so their wives can have a day to themselves, but the three of them receive a message from Moe saying that he's leaving Springfield...with one of their wives.|7}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|March 21, 2010
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF07
+
{{TBT|[[File:The Bob Next Door.jpg|250px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|463 - 22}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Bob Next Door]]"'''}}
When Springfield Elementary's two fourth grade classes have to share desks rather than pay for a substitute teacher, Bart falls for his new deskmate, but after he kisses her, she starts sending him mixed signals; Lisa gets advice on how to handle being a female overachiever...from Michelle Obama.  
+
{{TB|May 16, 2010}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
{{TB|[[Nancy Kruse]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[John Frink]]}}
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:The Greatest Story ever D'ohed.png|250px]]
+
{{TB|MABF11}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|457 - 16
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Bart becomes convinced that his new neighbor, Walt, is his archenemy, Sideshow Bob, disguised and back for revenge. But when Marge tries to convince Bart otherwise by taking him to the state penitentiary, a disturbing truth is revealed, leading to danger for the spiky-haired boy.|7}}
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
+
 
'''"[[The Greatest Story Ever D'ohed]]"'''
+
{{TBT|[[File:Judge Me Tender promo 3.jpg|250px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Michael Polcino
+
{{TB|464 - 23}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Kevin Curran
+
{{TB|'''"[[Judge Me Tender]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|March 28, 2010
+
{{TB|May 23, 2010}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF10
+
{{TB|[[Steven Dean Moore]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Dan Greaney]]<br/>[[Allen Glazier]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|MABF15}}
"The Simpsons are going to..." Jerusalem, when Ned invites Homer along on a church retreat in an attempt to save his soul, but when Homer defiles one too many sacred sites, Ned says he's had enough.
+
{{TCsT|color=white|American Idol host Ryan Seacrest and judges Simon Cowell, Randy Jackson, Kara DioGuardi, and Ellen DeGeneres welcome a new judge to the show - Moe, who displays an exceptional talent in judging things; while Moe is away, Homer has more time to spend at home with Marge... much to her dismay.|7}}
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
+
}}
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:American History X-cellent.jpg|250px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|458 - 17
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
 
'''"[[American History X-cellent]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Bob Anderson
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Michael Price
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|April 11, 2010
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF08
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
When stolen paintings are found in Burns Manor, Mr. Burns is arrested, so he has Smithers take over for him at the nuclear plant, but when he starts working the employees night and day, they try to get Mr. Burns back, even if it means breaking him out of prison - which it does; Bart and Lisa bond over one ant that survives an accident involving Lisa's ant farm.  
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Chief of Hearts.png|250px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|459 - 18
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
 
'''"[[Chief of Hearts]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Chris Clements
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Carolyn Omine<br/>William Wright  
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|April 18, 2010
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF09
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Homer and Chief Wiggum become close friends during Homer's community service stint, but when Homer leaves Wiggum's side during his recuperation to go to Moe's, the Chief takes offense; Bart becomes addicted to "Battle Ball", a Japanese game with cards and plastic balls that turn into creatures.
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:TheSquirtAndTheWhale.png|250px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|460 - 19
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
 
'''"[[The Squirt and the Whale]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Mark Kirkland
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Matt Warburton
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|April 25, 2010
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF14
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Fed up with high electric bills, Homer puts up a windmill generator in the backyard. When he sees that the excess energy goes back to the power company, he takes the house off the power grid, making it entirely dependent on the windmill. Then a violent windstorm hits Springfield, and among the victims are the windmill and a whale which ends up beached, prompting Lisa, Homer, and many other townspeople to attempt to save it.
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:To Surveil With Love screenshot.jpg|250px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|461 - 20
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
 
'''"[[To Surveil With Love]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Lance Kramer
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Michael Nobori
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|May 2, 2010
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF12
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Thanks to Homer leaving a gym bag with radioactive waste (planted there by Smithers) unattended in a train station, Springfield has surveillance cameras installed throughout the town, but when citizen video monitor scanner Ned abuses his ability to speak through the cameras' speakers, Homer uses the camera blind spot Bart discovers to the town's advantage; Lisa, having heard one too many dumb blonde jokes, dyes her hair brown.
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Moeletterblues.png|250px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|462 - 21
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
 
'''"[[Moe Letter Blues]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Matthew Nastuk
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Stephanie Gillis
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|May 9, 2010
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF13
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Homer, Apu, and Reverend Lovejoy take a day trip with their kids on Mother's Day so their wives can have a day to themselves, but the three of them receive a message from Moe saying that he's leaving Springfield...with one of their wives.
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:The Bob Next Door.jpg|250px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|463 - 22
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
 
'''"[[The Bob Next Door]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Nancy Kruse
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|John Frink
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|May 16, 2010
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF11
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Bart becomes convinced that his new neighbor, Walt, is his archenemy, Sideshow Bob, disguised and back for revenge. But when Marge tries to convince Bart otherwise by taking him to the state penitentiary, a disturbing truth is revealed, leading to danger for the spiky-haired boy.
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; width: 100px; height: 80px; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|[[File:Judge Me Tender promo 3.jpg|250px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|464 - 23
 
| style="text-align: left; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|
 
'''"[[Judge Me Tender]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Steven Dean Moore
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|Dan Greaney<br/>Allen Glazier
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|May 23, 2010
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #FFF4A7; "|MABF15
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
American Idol host Ryan Seacrest and judges Simon Cowell, Randy Jackson, Kara DioGuardi, and Ellen DeGeneres welcome a new judge to the show - Moe, who displays an exceptional talent in judging things; while Moe is away, Homer has more time to spend at home with Marge... much to her dismay.
 
|- style="background:#BBC9D1; color: white" border-color: #BBC9D1; width="50"
 
|}
 
  
 
{{Seasons}}
 
{{Seasons}}
 
[[Category:Seasons|21]]
 
[[Category:Seasons|21]]

Revision as of 13:54, January 30, 2014

Season 20
Season 21
Season 22
Season 21
250px
Season Information
Original run: September 27, 2009 - May 23, 2010
No. of episodes: 23
Previous season: 20
Next season: 22

Season 21 of The Simpsons aired from September 27, 2009 to May 23, 2010. It was the first season to air entirely in high-definition.

With this season, The Simpsons established itself as the longest-running American primetime television series, replacing Gunsmoke, which consisted of 20 seasons.

In 2009, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the premiere of The Simpsons, Fox announced a year-long celebration of the show titled "Best. 20 Years. Ever". It run from January 14, 2009 to January 14, 2010 and it included the documentary The Simpsons 20th Anniversary Special – In 3-D! On Ice!.

Reception

The season received mainly positive reviews from critics, with the most praised episodes being "The Squirt and the Whale", "To Surveil with Love" and "The Bob Next Door". Some episodes made the series receive many award nominations, winning two: an Emmy Award for Anne Hathaway for her voicing of Princess Penelope in "Once Upon a Time in Springfield" and an Annie Award for "Treehouse of Horror XX".






Episodes

Picture # Original title Original airdate Directed by Written by Prod. code
250px 442 - 1 "Homer the Whopper" September 27, 2009 Lance Kramer Seth Rogen
Evan Goldberg
LABF13
Comic Book Guy's comic book hero, Everyman, becomes a big hit in Springfield, and he agrees to a movie version. CBG insists that he chooses who plays the lead role, and gives the part to Homer. However, the movie company hire a personal trainer for Homer, called Lyle, so that he can get fit for the part. When Lyle leaves, Homer puts on weight again, and the movie is a disaster. The company offer CBG the chance to direct a sequel if he pretends he liked the movie, but he criticises it.
250px 443 - 2 "Bart Gets a "Z"" October 4, 2009 Mark Kirkland Matt Selman LABF15
When Mrs Krabappel confiscates her students' mobile phones, they hatch a plan to get their teacher drunk to get her to "loosen up". When Principal Skinner fires her, she is replaced by a cool new teacher, Zachary Vaughn, who impresses the kids with his love of texting, Facebook and Twitter. Bart has a lingering guilt about getting Edna fired, and tries to help her. With the assistance of a self-help book-slash-DVD, she opens her own muffin store - but she still longs to be a teacher.
250px 444 - 3 "The Great Wife Hope" October 11, 2009 Matthew Faughnan Carolyn Omine LABF16
The men and boys in Springfield become obsessed with Ultimate Punch Kick and Choke Championships, a violent sport where fighters inflict severe pain on each other. When Marge and her friends stage a protest against the spot, the show's promoter embraces the controversy and challenges Marge to a match, promising to shut down the competition if she wins. She begins to train with rhythmic gymnastics, but her family step in and get her professional martial arts help to give her a real chance at winning.
250px 445 - 4 "Treehouse of Horror XX" October 18, 2009 Mike B. Anderson
Matthew Schofield
Daniel Chun LABF14
In "Dial 'M' for Murder or Press Main Menu," Lisa is forced into a Hitchcockian murder scheme by Bart, in "Don't Have a Cow, Mankind," Springfield is once again overrun by zombies thanks to Krusty Burger's latest sandwich, and in the Sweeney Toike Moe Biness," Moe the bartender bleeds Homer dry to create the perfect microbrewed beer.
Charity Chicks.png 446 - 5 "The Devil Wears Nada" November 15, 2009 Nancy Kruse Tim Long LABF17
Marge poses for a calendar for charity, but she is soon the talk of the town after she reveals a little too much during her photo shoot. Meanwhile, Carl receives a promotion at the plant. He then promotes Homer to be his executive assistant and drives him up the wall with requests.
250px 447 - 6 "Pranks and Greens" November 22, 2009 Chuck Sheetz Jeff Westbrook LABF18
Groundskeeper Willie tells Bart about Andy Hamilton, a former student who was an even better prankster than Bart is. Bart tracks down Andy, now 19 and still pulling pranks, and the two become quick friends.
250px 448 - 7 "Rednecks and Broomsticks" November 29, 2009 Bob Anderson
Rob Oliver
Kevin Curran LABF19
After stumbling upon some teenage Wiccans, Lisa accepts an invitation to join their coven. Just before Lisa is inducted Clancy Wiggum arrives and arrests the three teens on charges of witchcraft; Lisa becomes the chief witness in the trial. Meanwhile, Homer starts to hang out with his new pal Cletus after discovering the slack-jawed yokel makes moonshine and becomes the local moonshine taste-tester.
250px 449 - 8 "Oh Brother, Where Bart Thou?" December 13, 2009 Steven Dean Moore Matt Selman MABF01
When Lisa tells Bart he'll never have the special bond that she has with Maggie because he doesn't have any brothers, he tries to get Homer and Marge to make him a baby brother, but when that doesn't work, he goes to the orphanage - where a young boy follows him home.
250px 450 - 9 "Thursdays with Abie" January 3, 2010 Michael Polcino Mitchell H. Glazer
Don Payne
MABF02
A Springfield Shopper reporter takes an interest in Grampa's stories, making him front-page news, which makes Homer jealous, until he discovers what the reporter has in store for the final column; Lisa loses the classroom stuffed lamb she was watching for Bart - down a sewer drain.
250px 451 - 10 "Once Upon a Time in Springfield" January 10, 2010 Matthew Nastuk Stephanie Gillis LABF20
Krusty is forced to add a female character named Princess Penelope to his show in order to attract more female viewers. She immediately overshadows Krusty as the ratings improve. Bart and Milhouse want to get the show back to the way it was, but the situation gets more complicated when Krusty and Penelope fall in love and decide to get married. Meanwhile, Homer, Lenny, and Carl consider working at a competing nuclear plant when Mr. Burns cuts off their daily doughnut service.
250px 452 - 11 "Million Dollar Maybe" January 31, 2010 Chris Clements Bill Odenkirk MABF03
Homer skips a date with Marge so he can buy a lottery ticket; when he wins a million dollars, he fears Marge's reaction to having blown off the date for a chance at fortune and he keeps his winnings a secret while showering the family with anonymous gifts. Meanwhile, Lisa helps to keep the senior citizens at the Springfield Retirement Castle stimulated with some video games.
250px 453 - 12 "Boy Meets Curl" February 14, 2010 Chuck Sheetz Rob LaZebnik MABF05
After discovering their love of curling, Marge and Homer try out for the Olympic team and actually make it to the 2010 Vancouver Games. Meanwhile, in Vancouver, Lisa develops an addiction to collecting Olympic pins.
250px 454 - 13 "The Color Yellow" February 21, 2010 Raymond S. Persi Billy Kimball
Ian Maxtone-Graham
MABF06
When researching her family tree for someone who isn't a total boob or criminal, Lisa finds the 1860 diary of Eliza Simpson, a young girl who was in the Underground Railroad and tried to help a slave escape to Canada, but a diary by one of Milhouse's ancestors casts doubt on just what Eliza accomplished.
250px 455 - 14 "Postcards from the Wedge" March 14, 2010 Mark Kirkland Brian Kelley MABF04
When Homer receives a letter from Mrs. Krabappel saying that Bart is way behind in his studies, he tries to take a hard line with him, but Marge thinks he has too much work, so Bart finds a way to turn their difference of opinion into a full-blown fight, only for it to end up with the two of them deciding that they need to worry about themselves more than Bart - at least until Bart discovers that running trains on the old Springfield Subway is causing the school's structure to crumble.
250px 456 - 15 "Stealing First Base" March 21, 2010 Steven Dean Moore John Frink MABF07
When Springfield Elementary's two fourth grade classes have to share desks rather than pay for a substitute teacher, Bart falls for his new deskmate, but after he kisses her, she starts sending him mixed signals; Lisa gets advice on how to handle being a female overachiever...from Michelle Obama.
250px 457 - 16 "The Greatest Story Ever D'ohed" March 28, 2010 Michael Polcino Kevin Curran MABF10
"The Simpsons are going to..." Jerusalem, when Ned invites Homer along on a church retreat in an attempt to save his soul, but when Homer defiles one too many sacred sites, Ned says he's had enough.
250px 458 - 17 "American History X-cellent" April 11, 2010 Bob Anderson Michael Price MABF08
When stolen paintings are found in Burns Manor, Mr. Burns is arrested, so he has Smithers take over for him at the nuclear plant, but when he starts working the employees night and day, they try to get Mr. Burns back, even if it means breaking him out of prison - which it does; Bart and Lisa bond over one ant that survives an accident involving Lisa's ant farm.
Chief of Hearts.png 459 - 18 "Chief of Hearts" April 18, 2010 Chris Clements Carolyn Omine
William Wright
MABF09
Homer and Chief Wiggum become close friends during Homer's community service stint, but when Homer leaves Wiggum's side during his recuperation to go to Moe's, the Chief takes offense; Bart becomes addicted to "Battle Ball", a Japanese game with cards and plastic balls that turn into creatures.
TheSquirtAndTheWhale.png 460 - 19 "The Squirt and the Whale" April 25, 2010 Mark Kirkland Matt Warburton MABF14
Fed up with high electric bills, Homer puts up a windmill generator in the backyard. When he sees that the excess energy goes back to the power company, he takes the house off the power grid, making it entirely dependent on the windmill. Then a violent windstorm hits Springfield, and among the victims are the windmill and a whale which ends up beached, prompting Lisa, Homer, and many other townspeople to attempt to save it.
250px 461 - 20 "To Surveil With Love" May 2, 2010 Lance Kramer Michael Nobori MABF12
Thanks to Homer leaving a gym bag with radioactive waste (planted there by Smithers) unattended in a train station, Springfield has surveillance cameras installed throughout the town, but when citizen video monitor scanner Ned abuses his ability to speak through the cameras' speakers, Homer uses the camera blind spot Bart discovers to the town's advantage; Lisa, having heard one too many dumb blonde jokes, dyes her hair brown.
Moeletterblues.png 462 - 21 "Moe Letter Blues" May 9, 2010 Matthew Nastuk Stephanie Gillis MABF13
Homer, Apu, and Reverend Lovejoy take a day trip with their kids on Mother's Day so their wives can have a day to themselves, but the three of them receive a message from Moe saying that he's leaving Springfield...with one of their wives.
250px 463 - 22 "The Bob Next Door" May 16, 2010 Nancy Kruse John Frink MABF11
Bart becomes convinced that his new neighbor, Walt, is his archenemy, Sideshow Bob, disguised and back for revenge. But when Marge tries to convince Bart otherwise by taking him to the state penitentiary, a disturbing truth is revealed, leading to danger for the spiky-haired boy.
250px 464 - 23 "Judge Me Tender" May 23, 2010 Steven Dean Moore Dan Greaney
Allen Glazier
MABF15
American Idol host Ryan Seacrest and judges Simon Cowell, Randy Jackson, Kara DioGuardi, and Ellen DeGeneres welcome a new judge to the show - Moe, who displays an exceptional talent in judging things; while Moe is away, Homer has more time to spend at home with Marge... much to her dismay.