Difference between revisions of "Season 6"
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− | In a | + | In a Link title, Lisa stumbles upon a fortune teller who predicts the future fifteen years later. Lisa falls for a British student named Hugh Parkfield and their relationship grows. As she returns to Springfield with him, Hugh proposes a wedding. Lisa is embarrassed by the family when interacting with him and Hugh reveals his dislike to the Simpsons when he wishes that he and Lisa would move back to England after they are married and to never see them again. Outraged, she then calls off the wedding. Back in the present, the fortune teller says that an unmarried Hugh went back to England without Lisa and then never sees her again. She then leaves and walks away with Homer as she happily listens to what he had done in the fair. |
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Revision as of 14:19, June 13, 2011
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Season 6
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Season Information
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The sixth season began on September 4, 1994 with the first episode, "Bart of Darkness". The season finale, which aired on May 21, 1995, was "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part One)". It was the only two-part episode of the series; the conclusion aired as the premiere of the seventh season. David Mirkin was the show runner throughout the season as, as he had been for Season 5.
Season 6 had two holdover episodes from Season 5: "Bart of Darkness" and "Lisa's Rival". They aired as part of Season 6 because of the 1994 Northridge earthquake, which put production a month behind schedule. Consequently, they have the Season 5 production code, 1FXX, rather than Season 6's, 2FXX.
Controversy erupted as Matt Groening requested to have his name left off the credits of "A Star is Burns", a crossover episode which featured Jay Sherman from the ABC/FOX animated series The Critic. Groening's reason was reportedly that he felt that having Sherman appear on The Simpsons was merely a blatant advertisement for the other show, as the FOX premiere of The Critic aired immediately after "A Star is Burns".
The sixth season won one Emmy Award, and received three other nominations. "Lisa's Wedding" won the Emmy for "Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming One Hour or Less). Alf Clausen was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)" for "Treehouse of Horror V", while he and John Swartzwelder were nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics" for the Stonecutters' song "We Do" in the episode "Homer the Great". Finally, "Bart vs. Australia" was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special".
All 25 episodes of Season 6 including extras were released on DVD on August 16, 2005 in Region 1, October 17, 2005 in Region 2 and September 24, 2005 in Region 4. The sixth season also marked the beginning of the "clam-shell" packaging design for DVD boxsets, with the package being shaped like a Simpsons character's head as a limited alternative to the regular DVD boxset. The Season 6 clamshell design featured Homer's head and was received with much criticism.
Episodes
Picture |
# |
Title |
Original airdate |
Directed by |
Written by |
Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
104 - 1 | "Bart of Darkness" | September 4, 1994 | Jim Reardon | Dan McGrath | 1F22 | |
Springfield is hit by a summer heat wave, and the Simpsons buy a backyard swimming pool. Bart breaks his leg in a diving accident and is stuck indoors for the rest of the summer. To help him pass the time, Lisa gives him her telescope. He quickly becomes bored with it, until he hears a high-pitched scream coming from the Flanders house and sees Ned burying something in his backyard. Suspecting that Ned killed his wife Maude, Bart has Lisa go next door and investigate, but Ned catches her. Still in his cast, Bart hobbles next door and confronts Ned about Maude's murder. All is revealed when Maude comes home and explains that she was at Bible camp, and Ned confesses to accidentally killing Maude's favorite plant. Bart had seen Ned burying the plant, and the scream had come from Ned himself. Meanwhile, Lisa enjoys the popularity that comes with having a pool until Martin Prince gets an even better one. Martin's reign, however, is cut short when his pool collapses and Nelson steals his swimming trunks. | ||||||
100px | 105 - 2 | "Lisa's Rival" | September 11, 1994 | Mark Kirkland | Mike Scully | 1F17 |
Lisa is outperformed in everything she does by new student Allison Taylor, who is younger than Lisa yet smarter and a better saxophone player. Lisa vows to beat her in the school diorama contest, and enlists Bart's help. Allison makes an elaborate diorama based on a scene from "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe, and Bart and Lisa replace it with a cow's heart. Principal Skinner, judging the contest, strongly criticizes the cow heart and questions Allison's overall academic prowess. The guilt gets to Lisa, however, and she puts Allison's real diorama back. Skinner is unimpressed with both Allison's and Lisa's dioramas and declares Ralph Wiggum's collection of Star Wars action figures to be the winner. Allison and Lisa set aside their differences and become friends. Meanwhile, Homer gets 100 pounds of sugar from an overturned truck and goes to obsessive lengths to protect it and sell it. | ||||||
100px | 106 - 3 | September 25, 1993 | David Silverman |
Jon Vitti (Credited as "Penny Wise") |
2F33 | |
Marge decides that the family should share their romantic experiences. Marge tells of her near-affair with Jacques the bowling instructor ("Life on the Fast Lane") and Homer of his near-affair with Mindy Simmons ("The Last Temptation of Homer"). Lisa tells about Ralph Wiggum's crush on her ("I Love Lisa") and Bart about his crush on Laura Powers ("New Kid on the Block"). In search of a love story with a happy ending, they next talk about other family members' experiences ("Black Widower", "Lady Bouvier's Lover"), but still don't find one. Finally, Homer tells the story of his and Marge's first kiss ("The Way We Was"), which Homer describes as "one time I got it right". Marge and Homer joyfully kiss at having found a happy ending, and Marge tries to tell the kids that's what she means by romance, but the kids have already lost interest in the story and are watching Itchy & Scratchy. | ||||||
100px | 107 - 4 | "Itchy & Scratchy Land" | October 2, 1994 | Wes Archer | John Swartzwelder | 2F01 |
Bart and Lisa want the family vacation to be at the newly opened Itchy & Scratchy Land theme park; Marge and Homer are persuaded by the park's "Parents' Island", an area with adult-friendly entertainment. The family at first has a good time (among other things, enjoying the Itchy & Scratchy robots on parade attacking each other), but behind the scenes Professor Frink delivers a dire warning that eventually the robots will attack humans. The Simpsons' fine time begins to unravel when both Bart and Homer assault a park cast member dressed as Itchy, and the vacation derails completely when the robots (as predicted) start attacking humans. Park officials evacuate the guests, but leave the Simpsons behind due to the assault incidents. Left to face the robots on their own, the family discover that photography flashes make the robots malfunction and succeed in defeating the robots with cameras from the gift shop. In the end, Marge accepts Lisa's reasoning that it was indeed the best vacation ever, but asks that they never speak of it again. | ||||||
100px | 108 - 5 | "Sideshow Bob Roberts" | October 9, 1994 | Mark Kirkland |
Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein |
2F02 |
Sideshow Bob is released from prison and becomes the Republican candidate for Mayor of Springfield in the upcoming election. Bob wins handily, defeating Mayor Quimby by a nearly unanimous vote. Bart and Lisa suspect foul play when Bob, immediately after he takes office, tells the Simspons that his pet project, the Matlock Expressway, will demolish their house. Bart's and Lisa's efforts to uncover evidence of fraud come up empty, until a mysterious man (revealed to be Waylon Smithers, who disagrees with Bob's policies) gives them a name to check. They discover that the man Smithers named is dead, yet voted for Sideshow Bob. Further investigation of voter records reveals that many deceased Springfieldians (including family pets) voted in the election, and all of them for Sideshow Bob. Armed with this evidence, Bart and Lisa confront Bob and manipulate him into confessing to rigging the election. Sideshow Bob is sent back to prison and Mayor Quimby returns to office. | ||||||
100px | 109 - 6 | "Treehouse of Horror V" | October 30, 1994 | Jim Reardon | Bob Kushell, Greg Daniels, Dan McGrath and David S. Cohen | 2F03 |
Prologue: Marge warns the viewers that the upcoming Halloween episode is very, very scary. Then she receives a note saying that Congress won't allow the episode to be shown and they should air a classic Western film instead. A clip from the film briefly rolls, but is quickly replaced by an oscilloscope whose waves move as Bart introduces the episode. Homer discovers the oscilloscope waves and plays with them, annoying Bart. However, Bart finishes the introduction as the oscilliscope waves form the shapes of the Simpsons' heads. The Shinning: The Simpsons are the winter caretakers at Mr. Burns' mountain lodge. While the family tours the lodge, Bart meets Groundskeeper Willie and learns that they both have a form of telepathy called "The Shinning". Homer discovers that Burns has cut the TV cable and taken away the beer to ensure an honest winter's work from the family. Homer later encounters a ghostly Moe, who tells Homer he can have beer if he kills his family. Homer agrees and goes on a rampage, chasing them with an axe. Bart calls Willie for help, but Willie is quickly hit in the back with the axe by Homer when he tries to come to the rescue. The chase moves outdoors, where Lisa finds Willie's portable TV and the sight of it brings Homer back to normal. Later, the family is frozen in the snow. As the Tony Awards come on and the family is unable to change the channel, Homer's urge to kill begins rising again. Time and Punishment: Homer fixes the family's toaster and inadvertently turns it into a time machine. When he tries to make toast, he is transported back to the era of the dinosaurs. Homer remembers that Grampa told him to not touch anything if he ever traveled back to the past so that he wouldn't change the future. However, Homer kills a mosquito and when he returns to the present, he finds himself in a world where Ned Flanders is the ruler of the world. Trying to get back to his own world, Homer makes several trips to the past and back, each time returning to a different world as he keeps changing things in the past. Groundskeeper Willie appears and says he can help Homer get back to his own time, but before he can say anything else he is hit in the back with an axe by Maggie. Homer finally gets to a world where everything is normal except that humans have lizard-like tongues and use them to eat instead of silverware. Homer shrugs and decides it's close enough. Nightmare Cafeteria: Principal Skinner notes that the detention area is dangerously overcrowded, and Lunchlady Doris complains about not having decent meat to serve in the cafeteria. Skinner figures out a solution to both problems: serving the detention students as food. When the first two students disappear, Bart and Lisa become suspicious and tell Marge, but she refuses to intervene, instead telling them that they're old enough to fight their own battles. At school, most of the students are in "permanent detention" and Bart, Lisa and Milhouse are among the few left in class. The trio decide to escape, but are quickly caught by Lunchlady Doris. Groundskeeper Willie tries to come to the rescue, but is hit in the back with an axe by Skinner, which prompts Willie to say, "Ach, I'm bad at this." The three of them are cornered above a giant food processor and Milhouse falls in to his death, quickly followed by Bart and Lisa. Closing Sequence: After falling into the food processor, Bart screams and wakes up in his own bed. Marge tells him that he had a nightmare and that there's nothing to worry about except the mysterious fog that turns people inside out. The fog seeps in through the window and does just that. Then, as the closing credits roll, the family and Groundskeeper Willie perform a musical number where they sing about being inside out. At the end, Santa's Little Helper drags Bart away by his intestines. | ||||||
100px | 110 - 7 | "Bart's Girlfriend" | November 6, 1994 | Susie Dietter | Jonathen Collier | 2F04 |
Reverend Lovejoy's daughter Jessica returns from boarding school and Bart quickly falls for her. He tries to impress her by doing good, but can't keep it up. He is later overjoyed to learn that she's as bad as he is, and they begin a relationship. Bart becomes disillusioned, however, when he sees that her behavior is even worse than his. Matters come to a head when Jessica steals the money from a church collection plate and everyone in the church suspects Bart. Lisa comes to Bart's aid and exposes Jessica as the thief. Everyone apologizes to Bart, and Jessica gets a new boyfriend but continues to beguile Bart by flirting with him. | ||||||
100px | 111 - 8 | "Lisa on Ice" | November 13, 1994 | Mark Kirkland | Mike Scully | 2F05 |
Lisa learns that she is failing gym, but can pass if she joins a Peewee team outside of school. Hockey coach Apu sees that she is a natural at goaltending, and Lisa joins Apu's team. This gives rise to sibling rivalry at home as Bart plays for a rival team and resents sharing the spotlight with Lisa. The rivalry culminates when their teams play each other and Bart is awarded a penalty shot with the score tied and only four seconds left in the game. Bart and Lisa remember past events when they helped each other and decide not to compete, resulting in the game ending in a tie. The tie enrages the fans, and as Bart and Lisa skate off the ice arm-in-arm, a riot breaks out in the arena. | ||||||
100px | 112 - 9 | "Homer Badman" | November 27, 1994 | Jeffery Lynch | Greg Daniels | 2F06 |
Homer is accused for harassment by Ashley Grant, a college graduate who babysat the children while he and Marge were in a candy convention, and has a mob of protesters with her. Despite claiming that he just peeled off a gummy Venus De Milo off her pants, they do not believe him and bother Homer's life against this perceived crime. The family try to prove that he is innocent but fail numerous times until finally having the mob believe him by a footage from another angle of the incident caught by Groundskeeper Willie, who has a habit of taping people. | ||||||
100px | 113 - 10 | "Grampa vs. Sexual Inadequacy" | December 4, 1994 | Wes Archer | Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein | 2F07 |
Homer and Marge's sex lives begin to fade, which Grampa creates a tonic to stimulate relationships. Seeing that it is successful as Homer and Marge, he and Grampa then sell it as "Simpson and Son's Tonic" to people which becomes a success. The two get into an argument after visiting a farmhouse where Homer grew up and kicks Grampa out of the car and refuses to talk to him ever again when he said Homer was an accident. He decides to not follow his footsteps by being a good father to his own children, Bart, Lisa and Maggie. He and coincidentally Grampa revisits the farmhouse and reconcile while each both accidentally set the building on fire. | ||||||
114 - 11 | "Fear of Flying" | December 18, 1994 | Mark Kirkland | David Sacks | 2F08 | |
Homer is kicked out of Moe's after causing sugar to spill intended as a joke when the others were joking around. He then finds another bar to drink, none which are suitable for his needs and finds one that only pilots can buy alcohol in. He impersonates as one to have beer but is mistaken as a real pilot and is forced to fly an airplane with no experience in flying. To make it up for this mistake, the family are given free tickets to anywhere in America (not including Alaska or Hawaii). The vacation is then aborted when a fearful Marge insists to be off the plane when she admits that she has a fear of flying, having the rest of the family except Grampa also off the plane. This phobia also alters her behavior for the worse and the family decide for Marge to contact a therapist. She goes into treatment with one called Dr. Zweig who says for Marge to think of her earliest memory of her phobia which occurred as a child upon noticing her father as a male flight attendant, much to her shock and depression. Along with recalling other moments involving flight when she was younger and Zweig stating that male flight attendants are now common, Marge is cured as she is no longer tense of flying. | ||||||
100px | 115 - 12 | "Homer the Great" | January 8, 1995 | Jim Reardon |
John Swartzwelder |
2F09 |
Wanting to find out the mystery of how Lenny and Carl get better benefits than he does, Homer stalks them and finds out they are part of a secret society called the "Stonecutters". Wanting in Homer finds the only for him is to save a member's life or being the son of a member. Fortunately with his father Abe as a member he is allowed in. After damaging the sacred parchment Homer is about to be thrown out when the birthmark he has on his butt depicts him as the "Chosen One". Despite having great power, Homer becomes bored, so Lisa talks him into helping the community. In the end, this enrages the other members so they decide to form a new club, one where Homer will never become a member. | ||||||
100px | 116 - 13 | "And Maggie Makes Three" | January 22, 1995 | Swinton O. Scott III | Jennifer Crittenden | 2F10 |
While viewing old family photos, Bart and Lisa note there are no pictures of Maggie. Homer decides to tell them the story of how before Marge became pregnant with Maggie, Homer was able to quit his job at the Nuclear Power Plant to work his dream job at a bowling ally, with enough reduced spending to support the family despite not making as much money at his new job. But after a night of sex with Marge, and then soon finding out Marge is pregnant again (largely due to Patty and Selma), Homer is forced to leave the bowling ally return to work at the Power Plant with the punishment he can never quit again. Despite this the reason why there are no pictures of Maggie is because Homer keeps them at the Power Planet to provide emotional support. | ||||||
100px | 117 - 14 | "Bart's Comet" | February 5, 1995 | Bob Anderson | John Swartzwelder | 2F11 |
After Bart gets caught who tampered with the school's new weather balloon and secretly turned it into an embarrassing version of Principal Skinner, Skinner forces Bart to help with him with his morning astrology in monitoring stars, hoping to find a new discovery that he could name himself. While Skinner is distracted by the balloon, Bart discovered a comet. However, that comet is heading right towards Springfield which will destroy it. With the government refusing to help, the only safe place for Springfield's residents is in Ned Flanders' bomb shelter. When Flanders is forced out due to lack of space, Homer feeling guilty for encouraging him to leave encourages the townsfolk to go out after him. In the end, the pollution from the town causes the comet to break apart, with the only real damage, being both the weather balloon and Flanders empty bomb shelter. | ||||||
118 - 15 | "Homie the Clown" | February 12, 1995 | David Silverman | John Swartzwelder | 2F12 | |
Krusty is informed by his accountant that he is facing serious financial problems largely due to Krusty with his poor gambling skills and wasteful spending habits. Krusty reluctantly agrees to form a Clown College, to train remedial Krusty's for all events and birthday parties that the real Krusty would never agree to appear in. Homer joins the class and after graduating, his impersonation is so good that people think he is the real Krusty (despite not having hair on top of his head), which he takes advantage of to get discounts and other benefits. However, it goes too far when the mob mistakes him as Krusty to whom he has a gambling dept to them. Before Homer is killed, the real Krusty show up and they perform a difficult clown trick together saving their lives. In the end Krusty, pays back his debt and Homer returns to his family. | ||||||
100px | 119 - 16 | "Bart vs. Australia" | February 19, 1995 | Wes Archer | Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein | 2F13 |
Bart notices that water always drains counterclockwise except clockwise in the southern hemisphere as stated by Lisa. To prove her wrong, he calls several countries in the southern hemisphere, with one collect call to Australia where a boy there answers that water in fact drains clockwise. The call lasts six hours as Bart had forgotten to hang up and the boy's father fines him AUD$900.00. When Bart does not pay, the father reports this to his neighbor who is federal Member of Parliament who in turn reports it to the country's prime minister. Bart is subsequently indicted for fraud after ignoring many letters and is wanted to be imprisoned by the United States Department of State to make Australia less hostile to him but negotiate on having Bart to apologize to the country after the former decision being declined by Marge. While he apologizes, the parliament also wants a punishment with a booting. Bart and Homer then flee although Bart is then forced to take a booting, this time with a regular shoe. He purposely misses and moons the Australians, making them even madder at him. The family then flee back to the United States in a helicopter while a breed of frogs then populates Australia. | ||||||
100px | 120 - 17 | "Homer vs. Patty and Selma" | February 26, 1995 | Mark Kirkland | Brent Forrester | 2F14 |
After losing all of his investment on Halloween pumpkins, Homer then is forced to borrow money of Patty and Selma to avoid for the bank to foreclose on his house, while the pair in return try to make him miserable since they'll threaten to tell Marge. When Marge does find out, Homer out of shame decides to become a chauffeur to pay back the twins. However he gets pulled over by Chief Wiggum and since he doesn't have a chauffeur's license, Homer gets sent to the DMV where the twins work. After Homer arrives with Marge, Patty and Selma then deliberately fail his test. Just as the two light up their cigarettes in success, only to be spotted by their supervisor who threatens that this offense could cost them their recent promotions. Seeing Marge upset Homer claims the cigarettes as his own that saves them, and makes a deal to call off the debt. Meanwhile after he is late for school on the day to sign up for a gym class, Bart is forced to take ballet. Despite disliking it at first, Bart becomes fond of it and does a performance in disguise so the bullies will not recognize him and will not beat him up. Once the bullies find out he runs off and tries to jump across a trench, but fails and is injured in the process. | ||||||
100px | 121 - 18 | "A Star is Burns" | March 5, 1995 | Susie Dietter | Ken Keeler | 2F31 |
After a national survey places Springfield as the least popular city in America due to the antics of various townspeople, Marge at a town meeting suggests holding a film festival to show the world Springfield's good side to attract more tourists. When Marge asks the critic Jay Sherman to help judge the festival, Homer feels replaced by Jay, due to Jay doing everything better than him. Regardless of his problems, Marge reluctantly agrees to have Homer as one of the judges, while Mr. Burns decides to use the film festival to boost his own image. During the competition, despite his untalented and unoriginal film being the worst received Mr. Burns bribes two of the judges (Mayor Quimby and Krusty) to vote for his film, while Marge and Jay vote on Barney Gumble's film about alcoholism. With Homer as the deciding vote, he wants to vote on Hans Moleman's pointless film, but with Marges advice and seeing it himself, Homer changes his vote allowing Barney to win the film festival. | ||||||
100px | 122 - 19 | "Lisa's Wedding" | March 19, 1995 | Jim Reardon | Greg Daniels | 2F15 |
In a Link title, Lisa stumbles upon a fortune teller who predicts the future fifteen years later. Lisa falls for a British student named Hugh Parkfield and their relationship grows. As she returns to Springfield with him, Hugh proposes a wedding. Lisa is embarrassed by the family when interacting with him and Hugh reveals his dislike to the Simpsons when he wishes that he and Lisa would move back to England after they are married and to never see them again. Outraged, she then calls off the wedding. Back in the present, the fortune teller says that an unmarried Hugh went back to England without Lisa and then never sees her again. She then leaves and walks away with Homer as she happily listens to what he had done in the fair. | ||||||
100px | 123 - 20 | "Two Dozen and One Greyhounds" | April 9, 1995 | Bob Anderson | Mike Scully | 2F18 |
Santa's Little Helper falls for a female greyhound named She's the Fastest, whom he had met during a dog racing track resulting her losing. They have a relationship which results in She's the Fastest giving birth to 25 puppies. The family then struggle having them as they cause problems for them. Homer and Marge decide to sell them away, much to Bart and Lisa's dismay, which do so as they still cause trouble. Seeing that the puppies do not want to be separated, the family decide to not sell them although Mr. Burns then steals them. Bart and Lisa then follow him to his mansion and sees that he intends to kill the puppies except for one who can stand who Burns names "Little Monty" after him and have their fur made into a tuxedo. The pair then attempt to help them escape but Burns corners them and decides to not make anymore animal clothing as he is touched by the puppies as they both stand and cannot tell which is Little Monty. An unspecified time later, all of the puppies, now bought by Burns, grow up into greyhound racing like their parents and have earned him over $10,000,000, causing Homer to fight a lightbulb as it is the only thing that cheers him up after giving away the largely profitable greyhounds although it breaks onto his head. | ||||||
100px |
124 - 21 |
April 16, 1995 | Swinton O. Scott III | Jennifer Crittenden | 2F19 | |
Edna Krabappel decides to call up a strike among with other teachers of Springfield Elementary against Principal Skinner as he spends cheaply on the school. Bart further fuels the strike by having them repeatedly turn against Skinner. Parents of the students decide to hire townspeople as substitutes and even themselves such as Marge. When this change proves aggravating for him, Bart then locks Krabappel and Skinner in a room until they resolve the strike. After a long while inside and demanding to be out, they eventually decide on renting school cloakrooms to the Springfield Prison in exchange with prison cells at the back of classrooms for restraining troublesome students's particular behavior. | ||||||
100px | 125 - 22 | "'Round Springfield" | April 30, 1995 | Steven Dean Moore | Al Jean & Mike Reiss
Joshua Sternin and Jeffrey Ventimilia |
2F32 |
Bart gets a stomachache after swallowing a jagged metal Krusty-O by accident and is forced to go to school despite the intensity of the pain he is suffering. He eventually is cured by having his appendix removed in the hospital and Lisa meets Bleeding Gums Murphy in another ward. After lending his saxophone to her for a school recital, Murphy passes away for unknown reasons. Mourning over his loss, Lisa is the only one who attends his funeral and vows to make Murphy posthumously famous. She proceeds to do this by wanting to buy an album he produced prior his death to be played in honor of him in The Android's Dungeon, but cannot afford its $250 price tag. Comic Book Guy doubles the price to $500 when he is made aware of Murphy's death. Meanwhile, Bart has successfully sued Krusty the Clown for the jagged metal Krusty-O for $100,000 but is only given $500. Originally intending to use the earned money for a roulette, Bart then buys the album for Lisa, to repay the favor, since Lisa was the only one who initially believed him about his stomachache. She then has it played at the KBBL station although the signal is too weak to be received by radio. Lightning then strikes the radio station's antenna, strengthening the signal enough to be received by every radio in Springfield. Bleeding Gums Murphy then appears from the heavens and states that Lisa had made him satisfied. They then say a final goodbye before playing "Jazzman" for the final time. | ||||||
100px | 126 - 23 | "The Springfield Connection" | May 7, 1995 | Mark Kirkland | Jonathan Collier | 2F21 |
Marge decides to enroll to the police force when she finds such an experience exhilarating after having a chased Snake arrested after a conned Three-card Monte game. She is then qualified as an official police officer after taking training. Homer's original opinions on Marge's job is fine but has his mind changed when she arrests him for illegal parking and stealing her police hat, the former which he repeatedly refuses to sort out despite her insistence. When he is released, Homer discovers a group that are producing counterfeit jeans, led by Herman, before being taken hostage. Marge then deals with the group, although Herman escapes, with Homer still as his captive. Marge then rescues her husband, has Herman apprehended, and ultimately decides to resign from the police force when she finds it corrupt. | ||||||
100px | 127 - 24 | "Lemon of Troy" | May 14, 1995 | Jim Reardon | Brent Forrester | 2F22 |
Springfield's lemon tree has been stolen by the neighboring town of Shelbyville after a conflict with boys of Springfield, including Bart, and boys of Shelbville. The following day, the Springfield boys then find their lemon tree has been stolen by Shelbyville and sets off to retrieve it in the town. Meanwhile, their parents wonder where their sons are and use Flanders' RV to find them in Shelbyville as Bart has hinted earlier that he was going there. The boys then search around the town and cannot find the tree. They then split up and Bart then stumbles upon the Shelbyville boys while disguised from being someone in Shelbyville. He then exposes his real identity while escaping from their leader throughout the town. Bart eventually finds the lemon tree although in a guarded parking lot while the Shelbyville group are using it. The parents then find their sons and they explain why they had went to Shelbyville. They both team up to successfully retrieve the lemon tree, which sustains some damage, back to Springfield. While Shelbyville would have to drink a less appetizing alternative to lemon juice from Springifield's tree which is turnip juice. | ||||||
100px | 128 - 25 | "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part One)" | May 21, 1995 | Jeffery Lynch | Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein | 2F16 |
Springfield Elementary accidently strikes oil, unaware that it had existed beneath it. The school then plans to spend greatly with the vast amount of money it is worth. Mr. Burns then discovers about the oil and establishes a slant drilling operation to have it instead, which coincides with the school intending to take the oil with a vertical drilling operation as Springfield Elementary receive no oil and thus are unable to commence their plans with it. This action by Burns has caused drawbacks to and further alienated many people in Springfield. Moe's Tavern had to be closed due to the oil's exposure to the bar. The oil damages Springfield Retirement Home and Bart's Treehouse, the latter incident which has Santa's Little Helper injured and the school loses all of its money. Homer becomes increasily annoyed at Burns for constantly forgetting his name and Smithers is fired after being reluctant on Burns' next plan which is to build a machine that blocks the sunlight of Springfield. After a town meeting around 3pm of people angered by incidents caused by him, Burns gets shot by an unknown assailant and collapse on a sundial. The townspeople find him mortally injured and with the fact that many of them were angered by Burns, no one knows who shot him presumably as retaliation. Chief Wiggum is then counted on and decides to try to investigate this. The episode's plot then concludes onto "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part Two)", which is in the following season's season premiere. |
DVD Release
Season 6 was released on DVD in its entirety as The Complete Sixth Season on August 16, 2005 in Region 1, October 17, 2005 in Region 2, and September 24, 2005 in Region 4 by 20th Century Fox. While primarily containing the season's 25 episodes, the boxset also has bonus features such as storyboards.
The Complete Sixth Season | |||||
Set Details | Special Features | ||||
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Release Dates | |||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
December 21, 2004 |
March 21, 2005 | March 23, 2005 |
Awards
The sixth season won one Emmy Award, and received three other nominations. "Lisa's Wedding" won the Emmy for "Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming One Hour or Less). Alf Clausen was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore)" for "Treehouse of Horror V", while he and John Swartzwelder were nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music and Lyrics" for the Stonecutters' song "We Do" in the episode "Homer the Great". Finally, "Bart vs. Australia" was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special".
Seasons
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Season 1 • Season 2 • Season 3 • Season 4 • Season 5 • Season 6 • Season 7 • Season 8 • Season 9 • Season 10 • Season 11 • Season 12 Season 13 • Season 14 • Season 15 • Season 16 • Season 17 • Season 18 • Season 19 • Season 20 • Season 21 • Season 22 • Season 23 • Season 24 Season 25 • Season 26 • Season 27 • Season 28 • Season 29 • Season 30 • Season 31 • Season 32 • Season 33 • Season 34 • Season 35 • Season 36* Upcoming episodes Special episodes |
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