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Difference between revisions of "Season 5"

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
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{{Template:Under Construction}}{{Season
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{{PrevNext|Season 4|Season 6}}
|name = The Simpsons (Season 5)
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{{Season
|image = [[File:Simpsons_s5.png|200px]]
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|name = Season 5
 +
|image = [[File:Season 5 iTunes logo.png|250px]]
 
|original run = September 30, 1993 – May 19, 1994
 
|original run = September 30, 1993 – May 19, 1994
 
|episodes = 22
 
|episodes = 22
Line 8: Line 9:
 
|boxset = [[The Complete Fifth Season]]
 
|boxset = [[The Complete Fifth Season]]
 
}}
 
}}
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The '''fifth season''' of ''[[The Simpsons]]'' originally aired from September 30, 1993, to May 19, 1994.
  
'''''The Simpsons'''''' '''fifth season''' began on 30th September 1993 with the first episode, "[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]," and ended on 19th May 1994 with "[[Secrets of a Successful Marriage]]." [[David Mirkin]] was the show runner through most of the season's episodes. [[Al Jean]] and [[Mike Reiss]] were show runners of two episodes, "[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]" and "[[Cape Feare]]," which had been produced for the previous season. Consequently, they have [[Season 4]]'s production code, '''9F'''XX, rather than Season 5's, with '''1F'''XX.
+
== Highlights ==
 +
Season 5 began on September 30, [[1993]] with the first episode, "[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]", and ended on May 19, 1994 with "[[Secrets of a Successful Marriage]]". [[David Mirkin]] was the show runner through most of the season's episodes. [[Al Jean]] and [[Mike Reiss]] were show runners of two episodes, "[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]" and "[[Cape Feare]]", which had been produced for the previous season. Consequently, they have [[Season 4]]'s production code, '''9F'''XX, rather than Season 5's, with '''1F'''XX.
  
The season received eight awards nominations. It won an {{w|Annie Award}} for "{{w|Annie Award for Best Animated Television Production|Best Animated Television Production}}", an {{w|Environmental Media Award}} for "Best Television Episodic Comedy" for "[[Bart Gets an Elephant]]," a {{w|Genesis Award}} for "Best Television Comedy Series". [[David Silverman]] earned a nomination for "Best Individual Achievement for Creative Supervision in the Field of Animation", [[Alf Clausen]] and [[Greg Daniels]] received a nomination in the "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics" category for the song "[[Who Needs the Kwik-E-Mart?]]", a song from "[[Homer and Apu]]." Clausen had another nomination for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)" for the episode "[[Cape Feare]]" and the series was nominated for a {{w|Saturn Award}} for "Best Genre Television Series." The producers again tried to submit episodes for "{{w|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series|Outstanding Comedy Series}}" category rather than the "{{w|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming less than One Hour)|Outstanding Animated Program}}" as they had previously done, but were still not nominated.
+
"Cape Feare" was the final episode written by the "original team", who wrote the first four seasons of ''[[The Simpsons]]''. The episodes was considered to be "cartoonish" compared to their previous efforts, due to the fact that the writers became careless before their departure.
  
All 22 episodes of Season 5 including extras were released on DVD on 21st December 2004 in Region 1, 21st March 2005 in Region 2 and 23rd March 2005 in Region 4.
+
"[[Deep Space Homer]]" stirred up some controversy as some deemed the episode to be too "large" of an idea. Matt Groening encouraged the writers to produce the episode as they had "nowhere [else] to go". As a result, every aspect of the show was worked on to make the concept work. The writers focused more upon the relationship between Homer and his family and Homer's attempts to be a hero.<ref>{{cite video | people=Groening, Matt; Mirkin, David; Silverman, David; Kirkland, Mark|date=2004|title=Commentary for the episode "Cape Feare". ''The Simpsons: The Complete Fifth Season''| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref>
  
==Episodes==
+
"[[Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song]]" was the 100th ''Simpsons'' episode broadcasted (with Season 6's "[[Lisa's Rival]]" being the 100th produced). "Baadasssss" was intentionally made the show's 100th episode because it heavily featured Bart who was the most popular ''Simpsons'' character at the time. "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song" was promoted as "Bart's biggest prank ever", even though Bart did not actually pull any pranks in the episode;<ref>{{cite video | people=Groening, Matt; Mirkin, David; Silverman, David; Oakley, Bill; Weinstein, Josh; Anderson, Bob|date=2004|title=Commentary for the episode "Cape Feare". ''The Simpsons: The Complete Fifth Season''| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> [[Cletus Spuckler]] and [[the Rich Texan]] were the only recurring characters to be introduced this season, first appearing in "[[Bart Gets an Elephant]]" and "[[$pringfield (Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Legalized Gambling)|$pringfield]]" respectively. Other minor characters who first appeared this season were [[Luigi Risotto]] and [[Baby Gerald]].
  
 +
Production of the fifth season ended abruptly when the Northridge earthquake affected the [[Film Roman]] building where ''Simpsons'' writers and animators were working in, forcing them to move temporarily while producing "[[Bart of Darkness]]" and "[[Lisa's Rival]]".<ref>Richmond, pp. 148–150</ref> Both episodes aired early in [[Season 6|the following season]] as the staff of the show were given an extra month to complete them. The only staff members that came in expecting to work were future show runners [[Bill Oakley]] and [[Josh Weinstein]].
  
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" class="wikitable" style="width: 930px; height: 10px"
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The season received eight awards nominations. It won an Annie Award for "Best Animated Television Production", an Environmental Media Award for "Best Television Episodic Comedy" for "[[Bart Gets an Elephant]]" and a Genesis Award for "Best Television Comedy Series". [[David Silverman]] earned a nomination for "Best Individual Achievement for Creative Supervision in the Field of Animation", [[Alf Clausen]] and [[Greg Daniels]] received a nomination in the "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics" category for the song "[[Who Needs the Kwik-E-Mart?]]", a song from "[[Homer and Apu]]". Clausen had another nomination for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)" for the episode "[[Cape Feare]]" and the series was nominated for a Saturn Award for "Best Genre Television Series". The producers again tried to submit episodes for "Outstanding Comedy Series" category rather than "Outstanding Animated Program" as they had previously done, but were still not nominated.
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'''Picture'''
 
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'''#'''
 
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'''Title'''
 
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'''Original airdate'''
 
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'''Directed by'''
 
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'''Written by'''
 
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'''Prod. code'''
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Homers Barbershop Quartet.gif|100px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|82 - 1
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
 
[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet|'''"Homer's Barbershop Quartet"''']]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|September 30, 1993
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Mark Kirkland
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jeff Martin
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|9F21
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Homer tells the time when he was a member of a barbershop quartet named The Be Sharps that had him, Principal Skinner, Apu and Chief Wiggum (later replaced by Barney). Their popularity soared by their hit song, "Baby on Board", which earned them an Grammy. Although, Homer began missing his family and the Be Sharps popularity began to decline so they then broke up and they each returned to their regular routines. The group then reunite and perform "Baby on Board" on the roof of Moe's Tavern in the present day.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[File:Sideshowbob8.gif|100px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|83 - 2
 
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Cape Feare|'''"Cape Feare"''']]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|October 7, 1993
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Rich Moore
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jon Vitti
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|9F22
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Bart receives threatening letters written in blood to him by an unknown sender. He becomes further worried when he finds out that the sender is Sideshow Bob and that he has recently been released from prison. Bart is then placed on the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witness_Protection_Program Witness Relocation Program] and the family move to Terror Lake to live in a houseboat as well as change their surname to Thompson. Unbeknownst to them, Bob has followed them to Terror Lake and corners Bart in a sailing houseboat to kill him. Bart then stalls him as he notices they are drifting back to Springfield through skits such as Bob singing ''[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Pinafore HMS Pinafore].''The boat finally reaches to Springfield and Bob is once again arrested for attempted murder on Bart.'' ''
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Homer Goes to College promo.gif|100px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|84 - 3
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
 
[[Homer Goes to College|'''"Homer Goes to College"''']]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|October 14, 1993
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jim Reardon
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Conan O'Brien
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F02
 
|-
 
| colspan="7" style="background-color: #FFFFFF; "|
 
One Sunday morning, Homer skips church and has what he considers to be the best day of his life. He then decides to quit church completely and forms his own religion, customized for himself. Marge, Ned Flanders, and Reverend Lovejoy try to talk Homer into coming back, but Homer refuses. However, the very next Sunday, Homer falls asleep and a lighted cigar sets the house on fire. The volunteer fire department puts out the fire and saves Homer, and Reverend Lovejoy asks Homer to consider that the hand of God was working through his friends, saving him from the fire. Now convinced, Homer returns to church.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Rosebud.JPG|100px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|85 - 4
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
 
[[Rosebud|'''"Rosebud"''']]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|October 21, 1993
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Wes Archer
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|John Swartzwelder
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F01
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
Lisa feels she is ugly after she sees a caricatured drawing of herself. To boost her confidence, Homer enters Lisa in the Little Miss Springfield beauty pageant. Although reluctant to enter, Lisa does well, winning second place, then becomes Little Miss Springfield by default after the original winner is hit by lightning and hospitalized. Lisa enjoys her reign until she learns that she is expected to be a spokesperson for Laramie Cigarettes. Lisa then rebels, and the pageant officials dethrone her on a technicality. Although she loses her title, Lisa has her self-esteem restored and thanks Homer for caring about her.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Burnsvampiro.gif|100px]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|86 - 5
 
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''[[Homer Defined|"]][[Treehouse of Horror IV]]'''
 
'''"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|October 28, 1993
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|David "Dry Bones" Silverman
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
 
Watch Conan O'Brien, The Late Bill Oakley & The Estate of Josh Weinstein, Greg "It's Aliiive!" Daniels & Disfigured Don McGrath, Billious Bill Canterbury
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F04
 
|-
 
| colspan="7"|
 
'''Opening:''' Homer advises viewers that the following program is scary, then switches to taunting them and dares them to turn the TV off. A TV in the episode switches off, but Marge can be heard angrily asking Homer if he dared them, which he denies.
 
  
'''Prologue''': The Simpson family and several local children in their costumes gather in the Simpsons' living room for a Halloween party. Lisa, Grampa, and Bart each tell a scary story.
+
All 22 episodes of Season 5 including extras were released on [[The Complete Fifth Season|DVD]] on December 21, [[2004]] in Region 1, March 21, [[2005]] in Region 2 and March 23, 2005 in Region 4.
  
'''Clown Without Pity''': Homer has forgotten Bart's birthday, and hastily buys him a Krusty the Clown doll in spite of the store clerk's warning that the doll is evil. Bart is happy with the gift, but (initially unknown to the rest of the family) the doll repeatedly tries to kill Homer. Marge learns that the doll has a good/evil switch and changes the switch from "evil" to "good," after which the doll becomes Homer's slave.
+
== Episodes ==
 +
{{Table|
 +
{{TH|Picture|width=200px}}
 +
{{TH|#|width=40px}}
 +
{{TH|Title}}
 +
{{TH|Directed by}}
 +
{{TH|Written by}}
 +
{{TH|Original airdate}}
 +
{{TH|Prod. code}}
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Homer's Barbershop Quartet promo.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|82 - 1}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jeff Martin]]}}
 +
{{TB|September 30, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F21}}
 +
{{TCsT|Homer tells the story of when he was a member of a barbershop quartet consisting of himself, Principal Skinner, Apu and Chief Wiggum. The group became popular in Springfield and eventually got an agent, who told Homer to get rid of Wiggum because he was "too Village People". Homer complied, and after auditioning and rejecting several applicants (including a disguised Wiggum), the group settled on Barney as a replacement and called themselves The Be-Sharps. The group became popular very fast, largely due to their album's hit song, "Baby on Board", which earned them a Grammy. The award was presented by David Crosby, and Homer got to meet ex-Beatle George Harrison. The Be-Sharps went on tour and recorded a second album, but Homer missed his family. The group's popularity began to decline when Homer ran out of song ideas and Barney got a girlfriend whose influence pushed him into musical directions that bewildered the rest of the group. Soon after that, the group broke up and the members returned to their regular lives. Back in the present, Homer calls the other members and the group reunites to perform "Baby on Board" on the roof of Moe's Tavern. A crowd gathers, and George Harrison happens by in his limo and dismissively says, "It's been done." The gathering also draws Wiggum and the police, and they also enjoy the performance, but Wiggum still orders Lou to get the tear gas.
  
'''King Homer''': In a parody of ''King Kong'', Mr. Burns hires Marge Bouvier to help him capture a mysterious large ape called King Homer. They capture him, take him back to New York City, and put him in a show. King Homer escapes, runs amok in the city, and abducts Marge. King Homer's rampage is short-lived, however, as he collapses from exhaustion, unable to climb even one story of the Empire State Building. King Homer is eventually married to Marge.
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[George Harrison]] as {{Ch|George Harrison|himself}}, [[David Crosby]] as {{Ch|David Crosby|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Cape Feare promo.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|83 - 2}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Cape Feare]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Rich Moore]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jon Vitti]]}}
 +
{{TB|October 7, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F22}}
 +
{{TCsT|Bart is worried when he receives anonymous threatening letters written in blood, and even more worried when he learns that the sender is Sideshow Bob, and Bob has recently been released from prison. For their protection, the Simpsons are placed on the Witness Relocation Program, given new identities and moved to a houseboat in a town called Terror Lake, 15 miles upriver from Springfield. Unbeknownst to the Simpsons, Bob follows them to Terror Lake, stowing away by clinging to the undercarriage of their car. That night, Bob breaks into the boat, ties up the family, sets the boat adrift, and advances on Bart to kill him. Thinking quickly, Bart appeals to Bob's vanity by asking him to sing the entire score of ''H.M.S. Pinafore''. Bob consents and gives an excellent performance, but is unaware that while he's singing, the boat is drifting downriver—and back into the jurisdiction of the Springfield Police. When Bob finishes, he is about to kill Bart when the boat runs aground. The police then board the boat, arrest Bob and take him back to jail.
  
'''Dial "Z" for Zombies''': Bart discovers a book of magic and attempts to raise Lisa's cat Snowball I from the dead, but instead accidentally re-animates hundreds of corpses from the cemetery, unleashing a plague of zombies on Springfield. To set things right, Bart must return to the book and cast the correct spell to send the zombies back to their graves, all while the zombies relentlessly pursue him and the rest of the family.
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Kelsey Grammer]] as [[Sideshow Bob]].|7|color=white}}
|-
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Marge on the lam.gif|100px]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:Homer Goes to College.gif|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|87 - 6
+
{{TB|84 - 3}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Marge on the Lam|'''"Marge on the Lam"''']]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer Goes to College]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|November 4, 1993
+
{{TB|[[Jim Reardon]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Mark Kirkland
+
{{TB|[[Conan O'Brien]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Bill Canterbury
+
{{TB|October 14, 1993}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F03
+
{{TB|1F02}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|Inspectors from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission conduct a surprise evaluation of worker competence at Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, and Homer is discovered to be underqualified for his own job because he has no college training in nuclear physics. Homer enrolls at Springfield University, where he tries to live the stereotypical college life of pranks and parties. His schoolwork doesn't go as well, however, as Homer causes a meltdown in class and is assigned supplemental tutoring with three physics nerds. Unabated, Homer continues his pranking and partying ways and gets the nerds to go along with him. When one prank gets the nerds expelled, they move in with the Simpsons and cause all kinds of problems for the family. Homer is able to get the nerds back into school, but fails his class. The nerds hack into the college computer and give Homer a passing grade, but Marge finds out and makes him retake the class.|7|color=white}}
| colspan="7"|
+
 
Bart's behavior is worse than ever, as Homer and Marge learn at Parents Night at Springfield Elementary. Homer warns Bart that he needs to improve his behavior, and Marge warns Homer that he needs to do better at punishing Bart and sticking to it. Bart is asked to watch Maggie, doesn't do it, and she crashes the family car. Homer has finally had enough, and he forbids Bart from seeing "Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie," which has just come out and all the kids are eager to see it. Bart tries to change Homer's mind, and later tries to sneak into the movie, but all to no avail as he misses the movie. However, it pays off when in a flash forward scene forty years into the future, Bart has become the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, instead of a male stripper as Marge had feared.
+
{{TBT|[[File:Rosebud.png|200px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|85 - 4}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Bart'sInnerChild.JPG|100px]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Rosebud]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|88 - 7
+
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]]}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Bart's Inner Child]]"'''
+
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|November 11, 1993
+
{{TB|October 21, 1993}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Bob Anderson
+
{{TB|1F01}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|George Meyer
+
{{TCsT|Smithers overhears Mr. Burns talking in his sleep, saying he misses someone called Bobo. Burns then falls into a depression and nothing brings him out of it, not even a birthday performance from The Ramones. Smithers discovers that Bobo is Burns's long-lost childhood teddy bear and begins searching for the bear. Maggie Simpson is discovered to be in possession of Bobo, and Burns offers the Simpsons a large reward to give him back. They decline, however, when they see how attached Maggie is to Bobo. Burns and Smithers try threats and begging to get Bobo back, but nothing succeeds. When the next step (cutting off beer and TV) affects all of Springfield, the whole town forces Homer to return the bear, but they relent when they see the expression on Maggie's face. Finally, Burns confronts Maggie in person and persuades her to gives Bobo back to him. Now reunited with Bobo, Burns snuggles up with him and wonders what the future holds for Bobo.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F05
+
 
|-
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Ramones]] {{small|([[Joey Ramone]], [[Johnny Ramone]], [[C. J. Ramone]], and [[Marky Ramone]])}} as {{Chs|Ramones|themselves}}.|7|color=white}}
| colspan="7"|
+
 
The Simpson home is in dire need of foundation repairs, as one end of the house is sinking. Marge decides to get a job to help pay for them. She is hired on at Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, where she ends up working alongside Homer. Mr. Burns quickly becomes attracted to Marge and attempts to seduce her, but backs off when he sees how Homer stands up for her. Meanwhile, Bart repeatedly pretends to be ill to avoid taking a test.
+
{{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of horror iv title.png|200px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|86 - 5}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:BoyScoutz.JPG|100px]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Treehouse of Horror IV]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|89 - 8
+
{{TB|[[David Silverman]]}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Boy-Scoutz 'n the Hood|Boy-Scoutz 'N the Hood]]"'''
+
{{TB|[[Conan O'Brien]], [[Bill Oakley]] & [[Josh Weinstein]], [[Greg Daniels]] & [[Dan McGrath]], [[Bill Canterbury]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|November 18, 1993
+
{{TB|October 28, 1993}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jeffrey Lynch
+
{{TB|1F04}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Don McGrath
+
{{TCsT|When Homer announces he will sell his soul for a donut, the Devil, disguised as Ned Flanders, shows up to take him up on the offer. Second Act, while riding to school, Bart believe he sees a malevolent gremlin on the side of the bus. And final act, Mr. Burns is Dracula, in a spoof of Francis Ford Coppola's vampire film.|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F06
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Marge on the Lam.png|200px]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|87 - 6}}
The Simpsons have new next-door neighbors: Ruth Powers and her daughter, Laura. Bart quickly develops a crush on Laura, but is heartbroken when she tells him that she is in love with Jimbo Jones. Bart pulls a prank which lets Laura see that Jimbo is no good for her, and she says that she would date Bart if he were a little older. Meanwhile, Homer clashes with a local seafood restaurant, "The Frying Dutchman," over the definition of their "all-you-can-eat" special. They end up in court, but reach a compromise: Homer can eat all he wants in exchange for the restaurant being allowed to exhibit him as a freak of nature.
+
{{TB|'''"[[Marge on the Lam]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:The Last Temptation of Homer Promo Card.gif|100px]]
+
{{TB|[[Bill Canterbury]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|90 - 9
+
{{TB|November 4, 1993}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[The Last Temptation of Homer]]"'''
+
{{TB|1F03}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|December 9, 1993
+
{{TCsT|When Homer misses a date to take Marge to the ballet, Marge instead takes the family's neighbor, Ruth Powers. The two have so much fun that the next night they have a girls' night out, hanging out at a country bar and doing some target shooting using a farmer's antique cans as targets. Homer, meanwhile, decides to prove he can have fun on his own. He hires Lionel Hutz to babysit the children and goes out by himself. To Homer's disappointment, however, it's just not the same without Marge. He meets up with Chief Wiggum, who offers him a ride home. Then Wiggum sees a car with a broken taillight and tries to pull it over, but it speeds away: It's Ruth and Marge, and Ruth doesn't want to pull over because she's driving her ex-husband's car, which she stole from him to get even for his failing to pay child support. A high-speed pursuit follows, and the police eventually catch up to Ruth and Marge. In the end, a ''Dragnet''-style voice-over summary says that the car theft charges against Ruth were dropped, but Marge was fined for shooting the farmer's cans.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Carlos Baeza
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Frank Mula
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[George Fenneman]] as the narrator, [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Lionel Hutz]] and [[Pamela Reed]] as [[Ruth Powers]].|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F07
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Bart'sInnerChild.png|200px]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|88 - 7}}
Homer wrecks both of the family cars during a blizzard, buys a snowplow, and goes into business by starting his own plowing service business, "Mr. Plow." Homer's business succeeds, but he ends up facing competition as Barney starts his own rival snowplow business, the "Plow King." Barney creates a winning advertising jingle (with Linda Ronstadt's help) and steals all of Homer's customers. The business competition puts a strain on Homer's and Barney's friendship, but they manage to resolve their conflict -- just in time for the spring thaw.
+
{{TB|'''"[[Bart's Inner Child]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Bob Anderson]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:$pringfield.JPG|100px]]
+
{{TB|[[George Meyer]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|91 - 10
+
{{TB|November 11, 1993}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[$pringfield (Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Legalized Gambling)]]"'''
+
{{TB|1F05}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|December 16,1993
+
{{TCsT|Marge realizes she is addicted to nagging and consults a self-help guru, Brad Goodman, to overcome it. Marge and Homer put Goodman's teachings into practice and find that it improves their relationship. Encouraged, they take the whole family to hear Goodman speak, hoping that he can do something about Bart's bad behavior. Instead, Goodman uses Bart as an example of how people should behave: "Do what you feel." The whole town starts acting like Bart, which Bart at first enjoys, but later finds it disturbing as he feels he's losing his identity as a rebel. The town then holds a "Do what you feel" festival, but it causes a number of dangerous mishaps due to people not feeling like doing their jobs. The festival flops, and things in Springfield return to normal.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Wes Archer
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Albert Brooks]] as [[Brad Goodman]], [[James Brown]] as {{Ch|James Brown|himself}} and [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Troy McClure]].|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F08
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Boy-Scoutz N the Hood (Promo Picture).gif|200px]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|89 - 8}}
Marge tells the story of how the Simpson family moved to their house when Bart was a toddler and Marge was pregnant with Lisa. Homer was frustrated with Bart because he said all kinds of words, but not "Daddy" -- instead, he called Homer by his first name. (Bart's first words had been "Ay, caramba!" when he walked in on Homer and Marge in the bedroom.) When Lisa was born, Bart took an instant dislike to her, but she won his heart when she learned to talk and her first word was "Bart." She quickly said several other words, but not "Daddy," to Homer's continued frustration. Back in the present, Marge finishes her story, and Bart and Lisa start arguing. Homer then puts Maggie to bed and says to her, "The sooner kids talk, the sooner they talk back. I hope you never say a word." After Homer leaves, Maggie takes her pacifier out of her mouth and, unheard by anyone else, says her own first word: "Daddy."
+
{{TB|'''"[[Boy-Scoutz 'n the Hood]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Jeffrey Lynch]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:HomertheVigilante.JPG|100px]]
+
{{TB|[[Dan McGrath]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|92 - 11
+
{{TB|November 18, 1993}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
+
{{TB|1F06}}
'''"[[Homer the Vigilante]]"'''
+
{{TCsT|Bart and Milhouse go on an all-syrup Squishee bender, and Bart awakens the next morning to find that he's joined a Boy Scouts-esque group called the Junior Campers. Bart at first hates the group and wants to quit (especially when he learns the patrol leader is Ned Flanders), but comes to enjoy it when he discovers that the skills he learns are highly useful for pranking Homer. The group has a father-son rafting trip, and Bart reluctantly invites Homer. True to Bart's expectations, Homer's bumbling causes the raft with himself, Bart, Ned and Rod to take the wrong turn at a river fork and end up adrift at sea with no supplies. Homer saves the day, however, when he smells hamburgers and leads them to a Krusty Burger restaurant on an oil rig, where they are rescued. Meanwhile, the rest of the rafters (led by "celebrity dad" Ernest Borgnine) take the correct fork, but end up being stalked by hillbillies, attacked by a bear, and finally attacked by a mysterious person or creature at an abandoned summer camp.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|January 6, 1994
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jim Reardon
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Ernest Borgnine]] as {{Ch|Ernest Borgnine|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|John Swartzwelder
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F09
+
{{TBT|[[File:The Last Temptation of Homer promo.png|200px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|90 - 9}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Last Temptation of Homer]]"'''}}
The effects of years of unhealthy eating combined with work-related stress finally catch up to Homer, and he has a heart attack. He needs a triple bypass, but the family can't afford the $40,000 that Dr. Hibbert says it will cost. The family seek help from cut-rate doctor Nick Riviera, who says he'll do the operation for $129.95. Homer chooses the cheaper operation. During the surgery, Dr. Nick doesn't know what to do next because the critical part of the instructional video he had watched to prepare was taped over. With some help from Lisa, Nick succeeds in finishing the operation and Homer makes a full recovery.
+
{{TB|[[Carlos Baeza]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Frank Mula]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:BartGetsFamous.JPG|100px]]
+
{{TB|December 9, 1993}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|93 - 12
+
{{TB|1F07}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
+
{{TCsT|Homer finds himself highly attracted to Mindy Simmons, a new employee at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, but is torn because having an affair with her would ruin his marriage to Marge. It gets worse when Homer discovers that he and Mindy have very similar traits, such as a fondness for beer, TV, naps and junk food. A vision where Colonel Klink shows Homer what his and Marge's lives would have been like if Homer had married Mindy only leaves him more confused. Matters come to a head when Homer and Mindy are sent on an out-of-town overnight business trip and accidentally kiss while gorging on food they order from Room Service. In the end, Homer and Mindy acknowledge their mutual attraction, but Homer stays faithful to Marge. Meanwhile, a series of medical treatments temporarily transforms Bart into a nerd, making him a target for the school bullies.
'''"[[Bart Gets Famous]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|February 3, 1994
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Michelle Pfeiffer]] as [[Mindy Simmons]] and [[Werner Klemperer]] as [[Colonel Klink]].|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Susie Dietter
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
+
{{TBT|[[File:$pringfield.png|200px]]}}
John Swartzwelder
+
{{TB|91 - 10}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F11
+
{{TB|'''"[[$pringfield (Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Legalized Gambling)]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|[[Bill Oakley]] & [[Josh Weinstein]]}}
Mr. Burns is fined three million dollars for illegally dumping nuclear waste, and a town meeting is held to decide how to spend the money. The people are about to adopt Marge's idea to repair Main Street, when a smooth-talking stranger named Lyle Lanley shows up and convinces them to buy a monorail, even though the town has no need for one. Suspicious, Marge travels to other towns that bought Lanley's monorails and learns that Lanley is a con man and his monorails are all dangerous due to shoddy materials. Marge then quickly returns to Springfield, but is too late to stop the monorail from opening. The monorail's brakes fail and it speeds out of control. Fortunately, monorail conductor Homer manages to stop the train with an improvised anchor, saving the passengers.
+
{{TB|December 16, 1993}}
|-
+
{{TB|1F08}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Ad.jpg|100px]]
+
{{TCsT|A declining economy prompts Springfield to legalize gambling, and Mr. Burns opens a fancy casino, whose staff includes retired boxer Gerry Cooney as the greeter. Homer is hired as a blackjack dealer, and becomes popular among customers when they realize he always loses. Marge, however, becomes addicted to gambling, ignoring her family in favor of playing slot machines. She realizes she has a problem when Homer confronts her about breaking a promise to Lisa. Meanwhile, Mr. Burns becomes a reclusive clean freak (''a. la.'' Howard Hughes), and Bart, after being kicked out of Burns' casino due to being underage, takes revenge by opening his own casino in his treehouse and tricking Robert Goulet (who had been booked into Burns' casino) into giving a performance for the neighborhood kids.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|94 - 13
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Gerry Cooney]] as {{Ch|Gerry Cooney|himself}} and [[Robert Goulet]] as {{Ch|Robert Goulet|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
'''"[[Homer and Apu]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|February 10, 1994
+
{{TBT|[[File:Homer the Vigilante.png|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Mark Kirkland
+
{{TB|92 - 11}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Greg Daniels
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer the Vigilante]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F10
+
{{TB|[[Jim Reardon]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|January 6, 1994}}
Marge's, Patty's, and Selma's Aunt Gladys passes away, and in her video will, Gladys admonishes Patty and Selma to raise families rather than die alone as she did. Selma takes the advice to heart, investigating and discarding several possibilities for having a child. Meanwhile, Homer gets food poisoning from eating a rotten sandwich, and it looks like a planned family trip to Duff Gardens will be postponed again (the first postponement was for Aunt Gladys's funeral). Marge asks Selma to take Bart and Lisa, and she agrees. At Duff Gardens, the kids get into all kinds of trouble, causing Selma to think twice about having a child. As a substitute, she adopts Gladys's pet iguana, Jub-Jub, who had orginally been willed to Selma's, Patty's, and Marge's mother Jacqueline.
+
{{TB|1F09}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|A wave of burglaries hits Springfield, and many items, such as Lisa's saxophone, are stolen from people's homes. When the police can't catch the cat burglar, Homer forms a neighborhood watch group. However, it too is ineffective due to Homer's bungling, and the cat burglar steals the world's largest cubic zirconium from the Springfield Museum. Grampa Simpson reveals that the cat burglar is Molloy, a fellow resident of Springfield Retirement Castle. When the townspeople confront Molloy, he confesses, returns the stolen items, and says he's hidden a treasure worth millions of dollars in town. Everyone races to dig up the treasure, but they find only a note where Molloy says that there is no treasure and he tricked everyone so he could make his escape. Mayor Quimby, however, insists they keep digging just in case there really is a treasure.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Ae.gif|100px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|95 - 14
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Sam Neil]] as [[Molloy]].|7|color=white}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|February 17, 1994
+
{{TBT|[[File:Bart Gets Famous.png|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jeffrey Lynch
+
{{TB|93 - 12}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein
+
{{TB|'''"[[Bart Gets Famous]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F12
+
{{TB|[[Susie Dietter]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|February 3, 1994}}
Fed up with Homer's neglect, Bart signs up with "BIgger Brothers," a mentor program, and is matched with a hip, cool, and caring young man named Tom. Homer finds out, and for revenge he joins Bigger Brothers as a mentor and is matched with an orphan boy named Pepe. When Homer and Tom finally meet, they get into a fight, Homer and Bart reconcile, and Tom takes Pepe under his wing. Meanwhile, Lisa struggles with an addiction to the 900-number hotline of a young celebrity named Corey, running up huge phone bills until she is caught and kicks her habit.
+
{{TB|1F11}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|Bart sneaks away from a school field trip and ends up getting a job assisting Krusty the Clown. When Krusty puts Bart into a sketch as a last-minute replacement for Sideshow Mel, Bart flubs his line and accidentally trashes the stage. He then says, "I didn't do it", which the audience finds hilarious. Krusty then puts Bart into more sketches to say "I didn't do it", and Bart's catchphrase catapults him to instant stardom. Bart, however, finds fame to be dissatisfying, and becomes tired of being known for only one line. He appears on ''Late Night with Conan O'Brien'' and tries to cultivate a more intelligent image, but to his frustration, all Conan and the audience are interested in is hearing him say "I didn't do it." Eventually Bart's popularity fades and he returns to being average.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Deep Space Homer promo.gif|100px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|96 - 15
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Conan O'Brien]] as {{Ch|Conan O'Brien|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Deep Space Homer]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|February 24, 1994
+
{{TBT|[[File:HomerandApu.png|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Carlos Baeza
+
{{TB|94 - 13}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|David Mirkin
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer and Apu]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F13
+
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Greg Daniels]]}}
| colspan="7"|
+
{{TB|February 10, 1994}}
When Ralph doesn't get any cards for Valentine's Day, Lisa feels sorry for him and gives him a card to cheer him up. Ralph misinterprets the gesture and falls in love with Lisa, relentlessly pursuing her to the point of getting the two of them cast as George and Martha Washington in the Presidents' Day Pageant. Eventually, Lisa tells Ralph (on live TV) that she was never interested in him and only gave him the card out of pity. Ralph is humiliated and heartbroken, but he gives a brilliant performance as George Washington, moving the audience (and Lisa) to tears. After the play, Ralph and Lisa agree to be friends.
+
{{TB|1F10}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|Homer gets food poisoning twice from expired products at the Kwik-E-Mart. When Kent Brockman does an exposé on the store, Apu is fired and replaced by actor James Woods. Apu moves in with the Simpsons, and Homer decides to help Apu by going with him to India so he can ask the Kwik-E-Mart chain owner for his job back. However, the trip is unsuccessful as Homer's bumbling spoils Apu's chance to talk to the owner. Apu then visits the Kwik-E-Mart and saves James Woods from being shot in a robbery (by taking the bullet himself). A grateful Woods then helps Apu get his job back.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Ag.jpg|100px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|97 - 16
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[James Woods]] as {{Ch|James Woods|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Homer Loves Flanders]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|March 17, 1994
+
{{TBT|[[File:Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy.gif|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Wes Archer
+
{{TB|95 - 14}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|David Richardson
+
{{TB|'''"[[Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F14
+
{{TB|[[Jeffrey Lynch]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Bill Oakley]] & [[Josh Weinstein]]}}
| colspan="7" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|
+
{{TB|February 17, 1994}}
Homer is arrested for drunk driving, and his license is revoked and he is ordered to attend traffic school and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Marge persuades Homer to give up beer for a month, and the experience of living without beer gives him a whole new outlook on life. When the month is up, Homer is tempted to start drinking again, but passes up beer at Moe's Tavern in favor of bicycling with Marge. Meanwhile, Bart destroys Lisa's science fair project, a large genetically engineered tomato, and she replaces it with a project that compares the intelligence of Bart and a hamster.
+
{{TB|1F12}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|Lisa is dissatisfied with the new talking Malibu Stacy doll because everything it says is demeaning to women. Lisa visits Stacy Lovell, the doll line's reclusive creator, and persuades her to make a doll to be a more positive role model for girls. Together they make the doll, named "Lisa Lionheart" after Lisa. The Malibu Stacy executives see Lisa Lionheart as a threat, and sabotage her roll-out by distracting the customers with a Mailbu Stacy doll that has a new hat. Meanwhile, Grampa worries that he is getting old and tries to make the most of life by working at Krusty Burger. Grampa does not do well at the job, however, and when he sees how the restaurant treats seniors, he quits his job and leads a group of seniors in a boycott of Krusty Burger.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Elephant.jpg|100px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|98 - 17
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Kathleen Turner]] as [[Stacy Lovell]].|7|color=white}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Bart Gets an Elephant]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|March 31, 1994
+
{{TBT|[[File:Deep Space Homer promo.gif|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jim Reardon
+
{{TB|96 - 15}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|John Swartzwelder
+
{{TB|'''"[[Deep Space Homer]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F15
+
{{TB|[[Carlos Baeza]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[David Mirkin]]}}
| colspan="7" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|
+
{{TB|February 24, 1994}}
Springfield Nuclear Power Plant announces its intention to cancel the dental plan, and the Simpsons have just learned that Lisa needs braces. Homer realizes that he needs the plan to pay for Lisa's braces, and almost before he knows it, he finds himself leading the power plant employees' union in a strike to win back the dental plan. Lisa, meantime, is forced to wear cheap, but large and outdated, braces that look hideous. In spite of Homer's bumbling, Mr. Burns is convinced that Homer is a master negotiator, and a long standoff ensures, during which the plant uses tactics such as shutting off power to the entire town. Burns finally agrees to bring back the dental plan on the condition that Homer step down as union leader. Homer eagerly agrees and Lisa gets her new braces.
+
{{TB|1F13}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|Homer is passed over yet again for the "Worker of the Week" award at the nuclear plant, the award going this time to an inanimate carbon rod. At the same time, NASA decides to launch an average American into space to improve TV ratings for space missions. Homer and Barney are selected as candidates, and Homer is chosen to make a shuttle flight with Race Banyon and veteran astronaut Buzz Aldrin. During the mission, an emergency arises when Homer accidentally breaks an ant farm, releasing ants and sand to drift into the controls. Matters aren't helped when James Taylor, in Misson Control, insists on singing for the astronauts in spite of the crisis. Taylor redeems himself, however, when he suggests opening the hatch to blow the ants and sand out of the shuttle's controls. Taylor's idea works, but in the process the hatch is damaged and won't close. Homer saves the day, albeit purely serendipitously, by using a carbon rod as an improvised latch to seal the hatch. The shuttle lands safely, and the rod is hailed as a hero—which disappoints Homer, but he wins his family's respect for making the trip.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Burns'Heir.JPG|100px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|99 - 18
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Buzz Aldrin]] as {{Ch|Buzz Aldrin|himself}} and [[James Taylor]] as {{Ch|James Taylor|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Burns' Heir]]"'''
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|April 14, 1994
+
{{TBT|[[File:HomerLovesFlanders.png|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Mark Kirkland
+
{{TB|97 - 16}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jace Richdale
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer Loves Flanders]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F16
+
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[David Richardson]]}}
| colspan="7" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|
+
{{TB|March 17, 1994}}
For an April Fool's Day prank on Homer, Bart shakes a can of Duff Beer in a paint shaker, then leaves the beer in the refrigerator for Homer to find. When Homer opens the beer, the resulting explosion blows the roof off the house and puts Homer into a coma. During his coma, the family reminisce by way of clips from previous episodes. Homer shows some signs of life during the stories, but when Bart confesses to the shaken beer prank, Homer immediately wakes up and begins strangling Bart. The rest of the family are glad to see that Homer has recovered.
+
{{TB|1F14}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|Homer is unable to get tickets to the Pigskin Classic football game, but Ned Flanders has an extra and invites Homer to come to the game as his guest, They have a good time and Homer is grateful, but his gratitude turns annoying when he constantly hangs out around Ned. Ned realizes he can't stand Homer when the two families go to the lake and the Simpsons start a food fight. In an attempt to get away from Homer, Ned drives off in his car and is pulled over and given a sobriety field test. The incident causes the Flanders family to be shunned at church, but Homer intervenes, lecturing the congregation for misjudging Ned. The churchgoers back off, and Homer and Ned finish up as friends—but things are back to normal within a week the next time Ned gets on Homer's nerves.|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:100thepisode.jpg|100px]]
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|100 - 19
+
{{TBT|[[File:Bart Gets an Elephant.png|200px]]}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song]]"'''
+
{{TB|98 - 17}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|April 28, 1994
+
{{TB|'''"[[Bart Gets an Elephant]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Bob Anderson
+
{{TB|[[Jim Reardon]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein
+
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F18
+
{{TB|March 31, 1994}}
|-
+
{{TB|1F15}}
| colspan="7" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|
+
{{TCsT|Bart wins a radio contest where the prize is either $10,000 or an elephant. Bart insists on the elephant, even though it's obviously a gag prize. When the announcers are threatened with being fired, they give Bart the elephant, which he names Stampy. Taking care of Stampy proves to be too expensive for the family finances, and the Simpsons look for a new home for him. They consider donating Stampy to a nature preserve, which Homer rejects in favor of selling him to an ivory dealer. Stampy escapes and wreaks havoc on Springfield. The family find Stampy again at the Springfield Tar Pits, and Homer insists on going through with selling Stampy to the ivory dealer. However, when Homer gets stuck in a tar pit and Stampy saves him, Homer relents and sends Stampy to the nature preserve.|7|color=white}}
Disappointed with the quality of a recent ''Itchy & Scratchy'' episode, Bart and Lisa write one of their own and submit it to Roger Meyers, CEO of the cartoon's studio. Meyers immediately rejects the script because Bart and Lisa are too young, so they re-submit it under Grampa's name. This time it is accepted, and Grampa finds himself with a new job as an ''Itchy & Scratchy'' writer, with Bart and Lisa doing the creative work while Grampa gets the credit. The front falls through, however, when Grampa's writing wins him an award, he sees the cartoon for the first time, and in his acceptance speech he denounces violence in cartoons. Meanwhile, Homer and Marge attend their high school reunion and learn that Homer never officially graduated because he failed a science class.
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Burns' Heir.png|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Ai.jpg|100px]]
+
{{TB|99 - 18}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|101 - 20
+
{{TB|'''"[[Burns' Heir]]"'''}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[The Boy Who Knew Too Much]]"'''
+
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|May 5, 1994
+
{{TB|[[Jace Richdale]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Jeffrey Lynch
+
{{TB|April 14, 1994}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "| John Swartzwelder
+
{{TB|1F16}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F19
+
{{TCsT|Mr. Burns nearly drowns in his bathtub and decides he needs an heir to inherit his wealth. He holds auditions and rejects many local children, including Bart, but when Bart takes revenge by vandalizing Burns' mansion, Burns decides that Bart is what he's looking for and selects Bart to be his heir. Marge encourages Bart to spend time with Burns, which turns into Bart living at the Burns mansion full-time when Bart discovers the perks of living with Burns. The Simpsons become concerned about Bart and hire Lionel Hutz to try to force Burns to return Bart, but to no avail. Bart starts missing his family, but Burns shows him a video showing that they no longer care about him. (The "family", however, are obviously actors.) Bart then enjoys life with Mr. Burns, and Burns has Bart fire power plant workers for fun. As a loyalty test, Burns tells Bart to fire Homer, but Bart refuses, gives up being Burns' heir, and returns home to live with his family.
|-
+
 
| colspan="7" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Lionel Hutz]].|7|color=white}}
It's time for Whacking Day, a Springfield holiday where snakes are driven to the town square and beaten to death, a tradition dating back to town founder Jebediah Springfield. Lisa speaks out against the violence, but no one listens. Bart, who has become a serious student since being expelled from Springfield Elementary, discovers that Jebediah couldn't have started Whacking Day and suggests that Lisa enlist the help of Barry White and his smooth bass singing voice to lure the snakes to the Simpson home where they'll be safe. The plan succeeds and Bart tells the town the truth about Whacking Day: It was actually invented in the 1920s as an excuse to beat up the Irish. The townspeople renounce the holiday, and Principal Skinner allows Bart to return to school.
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song promo.png|200px]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:Aj.jpg|100px]]
+
{{TB|100 - 19}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
+
{{TB|'''"[[Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song]]"'''}}
102 - 21
+
{{TB|[[Bob Anderson]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|
+
{{TB|[[Bill Oakley]] & [[Josh Weinstein]]}}
'''"[[Lady Bouvier's Lover]]"'''
+
{{TB|April 28, 1994}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|May 12, 1994
+
{{TB|1F18}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Wes Archer
+
{{TCsT|Bart brings Santa's Little Helper to school for show and tell. The dog is a hit with the children, but he escapes and causes a series of mishaps, resulting in Principal Skinner being fired. Ned Flanders is hired as principal and Skinner rejoins the Army. At school, Flanders proves to be ineffective at discipline and the school turns into a madhouse. Bart, meanwhile, befriends Skinner and enjoys their friendship, but he realizes that the school needs Skinner, which means they need to be enemies again. Bart persuades Skinner to return to the school if Flanders is fired, and Superintendent Chalmers fires Flanders when he hears him saying "Thank the Lord" over the school's PA system. Skinner is re-hired as principal, and he and Bart return—reluctantly—to being enemies.|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F21
+
{{TBT|[[File:The Boy Who Knew Too Much.png|200px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|101 - 20}}
| colspan="7" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "| Marge accidentally takes an item from the Kwik-E-Mart without paying, and is sentenced to thirty days in prison for shoplifting. Her absence is felt at home, as the house turns into a total mess. Marge's absence also impacts the entire town, as without her marshmallow squares, a bake sale fails to raise enough money for the Springfield Parks Commission to buy a statue of Abraham Lincoln. Instead, the Commission gets a statue of Jimmy Carter, but the townspeople dislike it and a riot breaks out. To restore order, Mayor Quimby orders Marge to be released early, and everyone welcomes her back.
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Boy Who Knew Too Much]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Jeff Lynch]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|[[Image:SuccsessfulMarriage.JPG|100px]]
+
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|103 - 22
+
{{TB|May 5, 1994}}
| style="background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|'''"[[Secrets of a Successful Marriage]]"'''
+
{{TB|1F19}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|May 19, 1994
+
{{TCsT|Deeming the day too beautiful to stay inside, Bart ditches school. Principal Skinner nearly catches him, but Bart escapes by stowing away in a car driven by the mayor's nephew Freddy Quimby, who is on his way to his birthday party. Bart witnesses a confrontation between Freddy and a waiter, after which the waiter is injured in a bizarre series of mishaps. When Freddy is put on trial for assaulting the waiter, only Bart knows that Freddy is innocent; everyone else believes Freddy to be guilty in spite of Lionel Hutz's inept prosecution. However, in order to reveal the truth, Bart will have to admit to ditching school. In the end, Bart decides to testify. Freddy is acquitted, but Bart gets four months' detention for ditching school. Meanwhile, Homer serves on the jury and takes advantage of the situation, getting the jury sequestered and put up in a fancy hotel.
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Carlos Baeza
+
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|Greg Daniels
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Lionel Hutz]].|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 228, 228); "|1F20
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Lady Bouvier's Lover.png|200px]]}}
| colspan="7" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|
+
{{TB|102 - 21}}
A new children's TV program, featuring a ventroloquist's dummy named Gabbo and airing opposite the Krusty the Clown show, is an instant success. Krusty's show, meanwhile, declines in ratings and popularity and is soon cancelled. Bart and Lisa are uninmpressed with Gabbo and manage to record him on a live TV camera insulting the children of Springfield, creating a scandal which decreases Gabbo's popularity. Bart and Lisa then convince several of Krusty's celebrity friends (Bette Midler, Johnny Carson, Luke Perry, Hugh Hefner and the Red Hot Chili Peppers) to take part in a special comeback program for Krusty. The Krusty Comeback Special is very successful, and Krusty's show returns to the air.
+
{{TB|'''"[[Lady Bouvier's Lover]]"'''}}
|}
+
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]]}}
[[Category:Seasons|5]]
+
{{TB|[[Bill Oakley]] & [[Josh Weinstein]]}}
[[Category:Episodes]]
+
{{TB|May 12, 1994}}
[[Category:Season 5]]
+
{{TB|1F21}}
 +
{{TCsT|Grampa falls for Marge's mother, Jacqueline, and they begin dating. However, when they go to a dance, Mr. Burns cuts in and Jacqueline decides to date Burns instead. She and Burns become engaged, and Grampa interrupts their wedding to win her back. Jacqueline says she doesn't want to marry either man. Grampa says that's good enough for him, and the two of them board a bus and ride off together. Meanwhile, Bart sees Troy McClure on TV selling Itchy & Scratchy animation cels, and uses Homer's credit card to buy one. To his disappointment, it only shows Scratchy's hand. Taking advantage of Burns' dating his grandmother, Bart extorts $350 from Mr. Burns to pay Homer back.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Troy McClure]].|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Secrets of a Successful Marriage.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|103 - 22}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Secrets of a Successful Marriage]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Carlos Baeza]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Greg Daniels]]}}
 +
{{TB|May 19, 1994}}
 +
{{TB|1F20}}
 +
{{TCsT|Tired of being called "slow", Homer teaches a class at the Adult Education Annex on how to build a successful marriage. The class proves to be popular, drawing the interest of prominent Springfieldians such as Sideshow Mel, Waylon Smithers, Principal Skinner and Lionel Hutz. Homer discovers, however, that the only way he can hold his students' interest is by telling them stories about his and Marge's love life. When Marge finds out, she asks Homer to stop, but when the students threaten to walk out of the class, Homer resumes telling intimate stories and invites them to the house for dinner to see their marriage in action. At this, Marge has had enough and throws Homer out of the house. After only one day of living in Bart's treehouse, Homer realizes he can't survive without Marge and begs her forgiveness on the grounds that he can't afford to lose her trust again. Marge admits that Homer does make her feel needed, and she forgives him and lets him move back into the house.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Lionel Hutz]].|7|color=white}}
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
== Season 5 episodes script covers ==
 +
{{Scroll|
 +
<gallery>
 +
File:9F22 Script.jpg
 +
File:1F06 Script.jpg
 +
File:1F07 Script.jpg
 +
File:1F08 script.jpg
 +
File:1F12 Script.jpg
 +
File:1F13 Script.jpg
 +
File:1F16 Script.jpg
 +
</gallery>
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
== DVD release ==
 +
Season 5 was released on DVD in its entirety as '''[[The Complete Fifth Season]]''' on December 21, 2004 in Region 1, March 21, 2005 in Region 2 and March 23, 2005 in Region by 20th Century Fox. While primarily containing the original 22 episodes, the boxset also consists on bonus features such as storyboards.
 +
 
 +
{{Table|
 +
{{TH|'''The Complete Fifth Season'''|colspan=4}}
 +
{{THT|'''Set Details'''|colspan=3|width=50%}}
 +
{{TH|'''Special Features'''}}
 +
{{TCsT|
 +
*22 episodes
 +
*4-disc set
 +
*1.33:1 aspect ratio
 +
**Languages:
 +
**English (Dolby Digital 5.1, with subtitles)
 +
**Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo, with subtitles)
 +
**French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
 +
**Special language feature for "[[Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song]]" (Czech, Italian, Polish and Hungarian)|3}}
 +
{{TRs|
 +
*Optional commentaries for all 22 episodes
 +
*Introduction from [[Matt Groening]]
 +
*Animation showcases
 +
*A "look back" with [[James L. Brooks]]
 +
*Deleted scenes for 14 episodes
 +
*Commercials
 +
*Illustrated commentaries
 +
*Audio outtakes
 +
*Original sketches|4}}
 +
{{THT|'''Release Dates'''|colspan=3}}
 +
{{THT|Region 1}}
 +
{{TH|Region 2}}
 +
{{TH|Region 4}}
 +
{{TBT|December 21, 2004}}
 +
{{TB|March 21, 2005}}
 +
{{TB|March 23, 2005}}
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
== Awards ==
 +
The season received eight awards nominations. It won an Annie Award for "Best Animated Television Production", an Environmental Media Award for "Best Television Episodic Comedy" for "[[Bart Gets an Elephant]]", a Genesis Award for "Best Television Comedy Series". [[David Silverman]] earned a nomination for "Best Individual Achievement for Creative Supervision in the Field of Animation", [[Alf Clausen]] and [[Greg Daniels]] received a nomination in the "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics" category for the song "[[Who Needs the Kwik-E-Mart?]]" from "[[Homer and Apu]]". Clausen had another nomination for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)" for the episode "[[Cape Feare]]" and the series was nominated for a Saturn Award for "Best Genre Television Series." The producers again tried to submit episodes for "Outstanding Comedy Series" rather than "Outstanding Animated Program" as they had previously done, but were still not nominated.
 +
 
 +
== References ==
 +
{{Reflist}}
 +
 
 +
{{Seasons}}
 +
{{PrevNext|Season 4|Season 6}}
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Season 5| ]]
 +
[[Category:Seasons|05]]
 +
[[Category:1993]]
 +
[[Category:1994]]

Latest revision as of 11:08, August 30, 2024

Season 4
Season 5
Season 6
Season 5
Season 5 iTunes logo.png
Season Information
Original run: September 30, 1993 – May 19, 1994
No. of episodes: 22
Previous season: 4
Next season: 6
DVD boxset: The Complete Fifth Season

The fifth season of The Simpsons originally aired from September 30, 1993, to May 19, 1994.

Highlights[edit]

Season 5 began on September 30, 1993 with the first episode, "Homer's Barbershop Quartet", and ended on May 19, 1994 with "Secrets of a Successful Marriage". David Mirkin was the show runner through most of the season's episodes. Al Jean and Mike Reiss were show runners of two episodes, "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" and "Cape Feare", which had been produced for the previous season. Consequently, they have Season 4's production code, 9FXX, rather than Season 5's, with 1FXX.

"Cape Feare" was the final episode written by the "original team", who wrote the first four seasons of The Simpsons. The episodes was considered to be "cartoonish" compared to their previous efforts, due to the fact that the writers became careless before their departure.

"Deep Space Homer" stirred up some controversy as some deemed the episode to be too "large" of an idea. Matt Groening encouraged the writers to produce the episode as they had "nowhere [else] to go". As a result, every aspect of the show was worked on to make the concept work. The writers focused more upon the relationship between Homer and his family and Homer's attempts to be a hero.[1]

"Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song" was the 100th Simpsons episode broadcasted (with Season 6's "Lisa's Rival" being the 100th produced). "Baadasssss" was intentionally made the show's 100th episode because it heavily featured Bart who was the most popular Simpsons character at the time. "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song" was promoted as "Bart's biggest prank ever", even though Bart did not actually pull any pranks in the episode;[2] Cletus Spuckler and the Rich Texan were the only recurring characters to be introduced this season, first appearing in "Bart Gets an Elephant" and "$pringfield" respectively. Other minor characters who first appeared this season were Luigi Risotto and Baby Gerald.

Production of the fifth season ended abruptly when the Northridge earthquake affected the Film Roman building where Simpsons writers and animators were working in, forcing them to move temporarily while producing "Bart of Darkness" and "Lisa's Rival".[3] Both episodes aired early in the following season as the staff of the show were given an extra month to complete them. The only staff members that came in expecting to work were future show runners Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein.

The season received eight awards nominations. It won an Annie Award for "Best Animated Television Production", an Environmental Media Award for "Best Television Episodic Comedy" for "Bart Gets an Elephant" and a Genesis Award for "Best Television Comedy Series". David Silverman earned a nomination for "Best Individual Achievement for Creative Supervision in the Field of Animation", Alf Clausen and Greg Daniels received a nomination in the "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics" category for the song "Who Needs the Kwik-E-Mart?", a song from "Homer and Apu". Clausen had another nomination for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)" for the episode "Cape Feare" and the series was nominated for a Saturn Award for "Best Genre Television Series". The producers again tried to submit episodes for "Outstanding Comedy Series" category rather than "Outstanding Animated Program" as they had previously done, but were still not nominated.

All 22 episodes of Season 5 including extras were released on DVD on December 21, 2004 in Region 1, March 21, 2005 in Region 2 and March 23, 2005 in Region 4.

Episodes[edit]

Picture # Title Directed by Written by Original airdate Prod. code
Homer's Barbershop Quartet promo.png 82 - 1 "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" Mark Kirkland Jeff Martin September 30, 1993 9F21
Homer tells the story of when he was a member of a barbershop quartet consisting of himself, Principal Skinner, Apu and Chief Wiggum. The group became popular in Springfield and eventually got an agent, who told Homer to get rid of Wiggum because he was "too Village People". Homer complied, and after auditioning and rejecting several applicants (including a disguised Wiggum), the group settled on Barney as a replacement and called themselves The Be-Sharps. The group became popular very fast, largely due to their album's hit song, "Baby on Board", which earned them a Grammy. The award was presented by David Crosby, and Homer got to meet ex-Beatle George Harrison. The Be-Sharps went on tour and recorded a second album, but Homer missed his family. The group's popularity began to decline when Homer ran out of song ideas and Barney got a girlfriend whose influence pushed him into musical directions that bewildered the rest of the group. Soon after that, the group broke up and the members returned to their regular lives. Back in the present, Homer calls the other members and the group reunites to perform "Baby on Board" on the roof of Moe's Tavern. A crowd gathers, and George Harrison happens by in his limo and dismissively says, "It's been done." The gathering also draws Wiggum and the police, and they also enjoy the performance, but Wiggum still orders Lou to get the tear gas.

Guest starring: George Harrison as himself, David Crosby as himself.

Cape Feare promo.png 83 - 2 "Cape Feare" Rich Moore Jon Vitti October 7, 1993 9F22
Bart is worried when he receives anonymous threatening letters written in blood, and even more worried when he learns that the sender is Sideshow Bob, and Bob has recently been released from prison. For their protection, the Simpsons are placed on the Witness Relocation Program, given new identities and moved to a houseboat in a town called Terror Lake, 15 miles upriver from Springfield. Unbeknownst to the Simpsons, Bob follows them to Terror Lake, stowing away by clinging to the undercarriage of their car. That night, Bob breaks into the boat, ties up the family, sets the boat adrift, and advances on Bart to kill him. Thinking quickly, Bart appeals to Bob's vanity by asking him to sing the entire score of H.M.S. Pinafore. Bob consents and gives an excellent performance, but is unaware that while he's singing, the boat is drifting downriver—and back into the jurisdiction of the Springfield Police. When Bob finishes, he is about to kill Bart when the boat runs aground. The police then board the boat, arrest Bob and take him back to jail.

Guest starring: Kelsey Grammer as Sideshow Bob.

Homer Goes to College.gif 84 - 3 "Homer Goes to College" Jim Reardon Conan O'Brien October 14, 1993 1F02
Inspectors from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission conduct a surprise evaluation of worker competence at Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, and Homer is discovered to be underqualified for his own job because he has no college training in nuclear physics. Homer enrolls at Springfield University, where he tries to live the stereotypical college life of pranks and parties. His schoolwork doesn't go as well, however, as Homer causes a meltdown in class and is assigned supplemental tutoring with three physics nerds. Unabated, Homer continues his pranking and partying ways and gets the nerds to go along with him. When one prank gets the nerds expelled, they move in with the Simpsons and cause all kinds of problems for the family. Homer is able to get the nerds back into school, but fails his class. The nerds hack into the college computer and give Homer a passing grade, but Marge finds out and makes him retake the class.
Rosebud.png 85 - 4 "Rosebud" Wes Archer John Swartzwelder October 21, 1993 1F01
Smithers overhears Mr. Burns talking in his sleep, saying he misses someone called Bobo. Burns then falls into a depression and nothing brings him out of it, not even a birthday performance from The Ramones. Smithers discovers that Bobo is Burns's long-lost childhood teddy bear and begins searching for the bear. Maggie Simpson is discovered to be in possession of Bobo, and Burns offers the Simpsons a large reward to give him back. They decline, however, when they see how attached Maggie is to Bobo. Burns and Smithers try threats and begging to get Bobo back, but nothing succeeds. When the next step (cutting off beer and TV) affects all of Springfield, the whole town forces Homer to return the bear, but they relent when they see the expression on Maggie's face. Finally, Burns confronts Maggie in person and persuades her to gives Bobo back to him. Now reunited with Bobo, Burns snuggles up with him and wonders what the future holds for Bobo.

Guest starring: Ramones (Joey Ramone, Johnny Ramone, C. J. Ramone, and Marky Ramone) as themselves.

Treehouse of horror iv title.png 86 - 5 "Treehouse of Horror IV" David Silverman Conan O'Brien, Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein, Greg Daniels & Dan McGrath, Bill Canterbury October 28, 1993 1F04
When Homer announces he will sell his soul for a donut, the Devil, disguised as Ned Flanders, shows up to take him up on the offer. Second Act, while riding to school, Bart believe he sees a malevolent gremlin on the side of the bus. And final act, Mr. Burns is Dracula, in a spoof of Francis Ford Coppola's vampire film.
Marge on the Lam.png 87 - 6 "Marge on the Lam" Mark Kirkland Bill Canterbury November 4, 1993 1F03
When Homer misses a date to take Marge to the ballet, Marge instead takes the family's neighbor, Ruth Powers. The two have so much fun that the next night they have a girls' night out, hanging out at a country bar and doing some target shooting using a farmer's antique cans as targets. Homer, meanwhile, decides to prove he can have fun on his own. He hires Lionel Hutz to babysit the children and goes out by himself. To Homer's disappointment, however, it's just not the same without Marge. He meets up with Chief Wiggum, who offers him a ride home. Then Wiggum sees a car with a broken taillight and tries to pull it over, but it speeds away: It's Ruth and Marge, and Ruth doesn't want to pull over because she's driving her ex-husband's car, which she stole from him to get even for his failing to pay child support. A high-speed pursuit follows, and the police eventually catch up to Ruth and Marge. In the end, a Dragnet-style voice-over summary says that the car theft charges against Ruth were dropped, but Marge was fined for shooting the farmer's cans.

Guest starring: George Fenneman as the narrator, Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz and Pamela Reed as Ruth Powers.

Bart'sInnerChild.png 88 - 7 "Bart's Inner Child" Bob Anderson George Meyer November 11, 1993 1F05
Marge realizes she is addicted to nagging and consults a self-help guru, Brad Goodman, to overcome it. Marge and Homer put Goodman's teachings into practice and find that it improves their relationship. Encouraged, they take the whole family to hear Goodman speak, hoping that he can do something about Bart's bad behavior. Instead, Goodman uses Bart as an example of how people should behave: "Do what you feel." The whole town starts acting like Bart, which Bart at first enjoys, but later finds it disturbing as he feels he's losing his identity as a rebel. The town then holds a "Do what you feel" festival, but it causes a number of dangerous mishaps due to people not feeling like doing their jobs. The festival flops, and things in Springfield return to normal.

Guest starring: Albert Brooks as Brad Goodman, James Brown as himself and Phil Hartman as Troy McClure.

Boy-Scoutz N the Hood (Promo Picture).gif 89 - 8 "Boy-Scoutz 'n the Hood" Jeffrey Lynch Dan McGrath November 18, 1993 1F06
Bart and Milhouse go on an all-syrup Squishee bender, and Bart awakens the next morning to find that he's joined a Boy Scouts-esque group called the Junior Campers. Bart at first hates the group and wants to quit (especially when he learns the patrol leader is Ned Flanders), but comes to enjoy it when he discovers that the skills he learns are highly useful for pranking Homer. The group has a father-son rafting trip, and Bart reluctantly invites Homer. True to Bart's expectations, Homer's bumbling causes the raft with himself, Bart, Ned and Rod to take the wrong turn at a river fork and end up adrift at sea with no supplies. Homer saves the day, however, when he smells hamburgers and leads them to a Krusty Burger restaurant on an oil rig, where they are rescued. Meanwhile, the rest of the rafters (led by "celebrity dad" Ernest Borgnine) take the correct fork, but end up being stalked by hillbillies, attacked by a bear, and finally attacked by a mysterious person or creature at an abandoned summer camp.

Guest starring: Ernest Borgnine as himself.

The Last Temptation of Homer promo.png 90 - 9 "The Last Temptation of Homer" Carlos Baeza Frank Mula December 9, 1993 1F07
Homer finds himself highly attracted to Mindy Simmons, a new employee at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, but is torn because having an affair with her would ruin his marriage to Marge. It gets worse when Homer discovers that he and Mindy have very similar traits, such as a fondness for beer, TV, naps and junk food. A vision where Colonel Klink shows Homer what his and Marge's lives would have been like if Homer had married Mindy only leaves him more confused. Matters come to a head when Homer and Mindy are sent on an out-of-town overnight business trip and accidentally kiss while gorging on food they order from Room Service. In the end, Homer and Mindy acknowledge their mutual attraction, but Homer stays faithful to Marge. Meanwhile, a series of medical treatments temporarily transforms Bart into a nerd, making him a target for the school bullies.

Guest starring: Michelle Pfeiffer as Mindy Simmons and Werner Klemperer as Colonel Klink.

$pringfield.png 91 - 10 "$pringfield (Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Legalized Gambling)" Wes Archer Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein December 16, 1993 1F08
A declining economy prompts Springfield to legalize gambling, and Mr. Burns opens a fancy casino, whose staff includes retired boxer Gerry Cooney as the greeter. Homer is hired as a blackjack dealer, and becomes popular among customers when they realize he always loses. Marge, however, becomes addicted to gambling, ignoring her family in favor of playing slot machines. She realizes she has a problem when Homer confronts her about breaking a promise to Lisa. Meanwhile, Mr. Burns becomes a reclusive clean freak (a. la. Howard Hughes), and Bart, after being kicked out of Burns' casino due to being underage, takes revenge by opening his own casino in his treehouse and tricking Robert Goulet (who had been booked into Burns' casino) into giving a performance for the neighborhood kids.

Guest starring: Gerry Cooney as himself and Robert Goulet as himself.

Homer the Vigilante.png 92 - 11 "Homer the Vigilante" Jim Reardon John Swartzwelder January 6, 1994 1F09
A wave of burglaries hits Springfield, and many items, such as Lisa's saxophone, are stolen from people's homes. When the police can't catch the cat burglar, Homer forms a neighborhood watch group. However, it too is ineffective due to Homer's bungling, and the cat burglar steals the world's largest cubic zirconium from the Springfield Museum. Grampa Simpson reveals that the cat burglar is Molloy, a fellow resident of Springfield Retirement Castle. When the townspeople confront Molloy, he confesses, returns the stolen items, and says he's hidden a treasure worth millions of dollars in town. Everyone races to dig up the treasure, but they find only a note where Molloy says that there is no treasure and he tricked everyone so he could make his escape. Mayor Quimby, however, insists they keep digging just in case there really is a treasure.

Guest starring: Sam Neil as Molloy.

Bart Gets Famous.png 93 - 12 "Bart Gets Famous" Susie Dietter John Swartzwelder February 3, 1994 1F11
Bart sneaks away from a school field trip and ends up getting a job assisting Krusty the Clown. When Krusty puts Bart into a sketch as a last-minute replacement for Sideshow Mel, Bart flubs his line and accidentally trashes the stage. He then says, "I didn't do it", which the audience finds hilarious. Krusty then puts Bart into more sketches to say "I didn't do it", and Bart's catchphrase catapults him to instant stardom. Bart, however, finds fame to be dissatisfying, and becomes tired of being known for only one line. He appears on Late Night with Conan O'Brien and tries to cultivate a more intelligent image, but to his frustration, all Conan and the audience are interested in is hearing him say "I didn't do it." Eventually Bart's popularity fades and he returns to being average.

Guest starring: Conan O'Brien as himself.

HomerandApu.png 94 - 13 "Homer and Apu" Mark Kirkland Greg Daniels February 10, 1994 1F10
Homer gets food poisoning twice from expired products at the Kwik-E-Mart. When Kent Brockman does an exposé on the store, Apu is fired and replaced by actor James Woods. Apu moves in with the Simpsons, and Homer decides to help Apu by going with him to India so he can ask the Kwik-E-Mart chain owner for his job back. However, the trip is unsuccessful as Homer's bumbling spoils Apu's chance to talk to the owner. Apu then visits the Kwik-E-Mart and saves James Woods from being shot in a robbery (by taking the bullet himself). A grateful Woods then helps Apu get his job back.

Guest starring: James Woods as himself.

Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy.gif 95 - 14 "Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy" Jeffrey Lynch Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein February 17, 1994 1F12
Lisa is dissatisfied with the new talking Malibu Stacy doll because everything it says is demeaning to women. Lisa visits Stacy Lovell, the doll line's reclusive creator, and persuades her to make a doll to be a more positive role model for girls. Together they make the doll, named "Lisa Lionheart" after Lisa. The Malibu Stacy executives see Lisa Lionheart as a threat, and sabotage her roll-out by distracting the customers with a Mailbu Stacy doll that has a new hat. Meanwhile, Grampa worries that he is getting old and tries to make the most of life by working at Krusty Burger. Grampa does not do well at the job, however, and when he sees how the restaurant treats seniors, he quits his job and leads a group of seniors in a boycott of Krusty Burger.

Guest starring: Kathleen Turner as Stacy Lovell.

Deep Space Homer promo.gif 96 - 15 "Deep Space Homer" Carlos Baeza David Mirkin February 24, 1994 1F13
Homer is passed over yet again for the "Worker of the Week" award at the nuclear plant, the award going this time to an inanimate carbon rod. At the same time, NASA decides to launch an average American into space to improve TV ratings for space missions. Homer and Barney are selected as candidates, and Homer is chosen to make a shuttle flight with Race Banyon and veteran astronaut Buzz Aldrin. During the mission, an emergency arises when Homer accidentally breaks an ant farm, releasing ants and sand to drift into the controls. Matters aren't helped when James Taylor, in Misson Control, insists on singing for the astronauts in spite of the crisis. Taylor redeems himself, however, when he suggests opening the hatch to blow the ants and sand out of the shuttle's controls. Taylor's idea works, but in the process the hatch is damaged and won't close. Homer saves the day, albeit purely serendipitously, by using a carbon rod as an improvised latch to seal the hatch. The shuttle lands safely, and the rod is hailed as a hero—which disappoints Homer, but he wins his family's respect for making the trip.

Guest starring: Buzz Aldrin as himself and James Taylor as himself.

HomerLovesFlanders.png 97 - 16 "Homer Loves Flanders" Wes Archer David Richardson March 17, 1994 1F14
Homer is unable to get tickets to the Pigskin Classic football game, but Ned Flanders has an extra and invites Homer to come to the game as his guest, They have a good time and Homer is grateful, but his gratitude turns annoying when he constantly hangs out around Ned. Ned realizes he can't stand Homer when the two families go to the lake and the Simpsons start a food fight. In an attempt to get away from Homer, Ned drives off in his car and is pulled over and given a sobriety field test. The incident causes the Flanders family to be shunned at church, but Homer intervenes, lecturing the congregation for misjudging Ned. The churchgoers back off, and Homer and Ned finish up as friends—but things are back to normal within a week the next time Ned gets on Homer's nerves.
Bart Gets an Elephant.png 98 - 17 "Bart Gets an Elephant" Jim Reardon John Swartzwelder March 31, 1994 1F15
Bart wins a radio contest where the prize is either $10,000 or an elephant. Bart insists on the elephant, even though it's obviously a gag prize. When the announcers are threatened with being fired, they give Bart the elephant, which he names Stampy. Taking care of Stampy proves to be too expensive for the family finances, and the Simpsons look for a new home for him. They consider donating Stampy to a nature preserve, which Homer rejects in favor of selling him to an ivory dealer. Stampy escapes and wreaks havoc on Springfield. The family find Stampy again at the Springfield Tar Pits, and Homer insists on going through with selling Stampy to the ivory dealer. However, when Homer gets stuck in a tar pit and Stampy saves him, Homer relents and sends Stampy to the nature preserve.
Burns' Heir.png 99 - 18 "Burns' Heir" Mark Kirkland Jace Richdale April 14, 1994 1F16
Mr. Burns nearly drowns in his bathtub and decides he needs an heir to inherit his wealth. He holds auditions and rejects many local children, including Bart, but when Bart takes revenge by vandalizing Burns' mansion, Burns decides that Bart is what he's looking for and selects Bart to be his heir. Marge encourages Bart to spend time with Burns, which turns into Bart living at the Burns mansion full-time when Bart discovers the perks of living with Burns. The Simpsons become concerned about Bart and hire Lionel Hutz to try to force Burns to return Bart, but to no avail. Bart starts missing his family, but Burns shows him a video showing that they no longer care about him. (The "family", however, are obviously actors.) Bart then enjoys life with Mr. Burns, and Burns has Bart fire power plant workers for fun. As a loyalty test, Burns tells Bart to fire Homer, but Bart refuses, gives up being Burns' heir, and returns home to live with his family.

Guest starring: Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz.

Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song promo.png 100 - 19 "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song" Bob Anderson Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein April 28, 1994 1F18
Bart brings Santa's Little Helper to school for show and tell. The dog is a hit with the children, but he escapes and causes a series of mishaps, resulting in Principal Skinner being fired. Ned Flanders is hired as principal and Skinner rejoins the Army. At school, Flanders proves to be ineffective at discipline and the school turns into a madhouse. Bart, meanwhile, befriends Skinner and enjoys their friendship, but he realizes that the school needs Skinner, which means they need to be enemies again. Bart persuades Skinner to return to the school if Flanders is fired, and Superintendent Chalmers fires Flanders when he hears him saying "Thank the Lord" over the school's PA system. Skinner is re-hired as principal, and he and Bart return—reluctantly—to being enemies.
The Boy Who Knew Too Much.png 101 - 20 "The Boy Who Knew Too Much" Jeff Lynch John Swartzwelder May 5, 1994 1F19
Deeming the day too beautiful to stay inside, Bart ditches school. Principal Skinner nearly catches him, but Bart escapes by stowing away in a car driven by the mayor's nephew Freddy Quimby, who is on his way to his birthday party. Bart witnesses a confrontation between Freddy and a waiter, after which the waiter is injured in a bizarre series of mishaps. When Freddy is put on trial for assaulting the waiter, only Bart knows that Freddy is innocent; everyone else believes Freddy to be guilty in spite of Lionel Hutz's inept prosecution. However, in order to reveal the truth, Bart will have to admit to ditching school. In the end, Bart decides to testify. Freddy is acquitted, but Bart gets four months' detention for ditching school. Meanwhile, Homer serves on the jury and takes advantage of the situation, getting the jury sequestered and put up in a fancy hotel.

Guest starring: Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz.

Lady Bouvier's Lover.png 102 - 21 "Lady Bouvier's Lover" Wes Archer Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein May 12, 1994 1F21
Grampa falls for Marge's mother, Jacqueline, and they begin dating. However, when they go to a dance, Mr. Burns cuts in and Jacqueline decides to date Burns instead. She and Burns become engaged, and Grampa interrupts their wedding to win her back. Jacqueline says she doesn't want to marry either man. Grampa says that's good enough for him, and the two of them board a bus and ride off together. Meanwhile, Bart sees Troy McClure on TV selling Itchy & Scratchy animation cels, and uses Homer's credit card to buy one. To his disappointment, it only shows Scratchy's hand. Taking advantage of Burns' dating his grandmother, Bart extorts $350 from Mr. Burns to pay Homer back.

Guest starring: Phil Hartman as Troy McClure.

Secrets of a Successful Marriage.png 103 - 22 "Secrets of a Successful Marriage" Carlos Baeza Greg Daniels May 19, 1994 1F20
Tired of being called "slow", Homer teaches a class at the Adult Education Annex on how to build a successful marriage. The class proves to be popular, drawing the interest of prominent Springfieldians such as Sideshow Mel, Waylon Smithers, Principal Skinner and Lionel Hutz. Homer discovers, however, that the only way he can hold his students' interest is by telling them stories about his and Marge's love life. When Marge finds out, she asks Homer to stop, but when the students threaten to walk out of the class, Homer resumes telling intimate stories and invites them to the house for dinner to see their marriage in action. At this, Marge has had enough and throws Homer out of the house. After only one day of living in Bart's treehouse, Homer realizes he can't survive without Marge and begs her forgiveness on the grounds that he can't afford to lose her trust again. Marge admits that Homer does make her feel needed, and she forgives him and lets him move back into the house.

Guest starring: Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz.


Season 5 episodes script covers[edit]

DVD release[edit]

Season 5 was released on DVD in its entirety as The Complete Fifth Season on December 21, 2004 in Region 1, March 21, 2005 in Region 2 and March 23, 2005 in Region by 20th Century Fox. While primarily containing the original 22 episodes, the boxset also consists on bonus features such as storyboards.

The Complete Fifth Season
Set Details Special Features
  • 22 episodes
  • 4-disc set
  • 1.33:1 aspect ratio
    • Languages:
    • English (Dolby Digital 5.1, with subtitles)
    • Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo, with subtitles)
    • French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
    • Special language feature for "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song" (Czech, Italian, Polish and Hungarian)
  • Optional commentaries for all 22 episodes
  • Introduction from Matt Groening
  • Animation showcases
  • A "look back" with James L. Brooks
  • Deleted scenes for 14 episodes
  • Commercials
  • Illustrated commentaries
  • Audio outtakes
  • Original sketches
Release Dates
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
December 21, 2004 March 21, 2005 March 23, 2005

Awards[edit]

The season received eight awards nominations. It won an Annie Award for "Best Animated Television Production", an Environmental Media Award for "Best Television Episodic Comedy" for "Bart Gets an Elephant", a Genesis Award for "Best Television Comedy Series". David Silverman earned a nomination for "Best Individual Achievement for Creative Supervision in the Field of Animation", Alf Clausen and Greg Daniels received a nomination in the "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics" category for the song "Who Needs the Kwik-E-Mart?" from "Homer and Apu". Clausen had another nomination for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)" for the episode "Cape Feare" and the series was nominated for a Saturn Award for "Best Genre Television Series." The producers again tried to submit episodes for "Outstanding Comedy Series" rather than "Outstanding Animated Program" as they had previously done, but were still not nominated.

References[edit]

  1. Groening, Matt; Mirkin, David; Silverman, David; Kirkland, Mark. Commentary for the episode "Cape Feare". The Simpsons: The Complete Fifth Season' [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  2. Groening, Matt; Mirkin, David; Silverman, David; Oakley, Bill; Weinstein, Josh; Anderson, Bob. Commentary for the episode "Cape Feare". The Simpsons: The Complete Fifth Season' [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  3. Richmond, pp. 148–150


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