Difference between revisions of "C.E. D'oh"
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− | "'''C.E. D'oh'''" is the fifteenth episode of [[Season 14]]. | + | "'''C.E. D'oh'''" is the fifteenth episode of [[Season 14]]. It aired on March 16, 2003, and was written by [[Dana Gould]] and directed by [[Mike B. Anderson]]. |
== Plot == | == Plot == | ||
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[[Category:Episodes]] | [[Category:Episodes]] | ||
[[Category:Season 14]] | [[Category:Season 14]] |
Revision as of 00:53, July 20, 2010
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"C.E. D'oh"
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Episode Information
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"C.E. D'oh" is the fifteenth episode of Season 14. It aired on March 16, 2003, and was written by Dana Gould and directed by Mike B. Anderson.
Plot
On Valentine's Day, Homer wants to have sex with Marge but she is too tired for it, which disappoints Homer, who dejectedly leaves the house. He sees a billboard for a school offering courses. He goes to the school and takes a course on stripping for Marge , which Dr. Hibbert teaches, but he is thrown out for hogging the stripping oil and ends up in the Successmanship 101 class. The class teaches Homer how to succeed in the workplace.
It gives Homer inspiration, and he begins to investigate problems at the power plant, so he develops solutions to the problems, which are rejected by Mr. Burns, (who doesn't even read them.) This angers Homer and then he overhears Burns admit that the plant’s real owner is a canary. Homer and Bart, devise a plan to overthrow Burns by releasing the bird from its cage and sending it to the Canary Islands. Once they release the bird, Homer informs Mr Burns, that inspectors are visiting. Out of panic, Mr. Burns, names Homer the new owner of the plant. Homer reveals that it was a trick, which angers Mr Burns. As Homer’s first act as the new Boss he fires Mr Burns, (who travels to a middle eastern country where everything is made of drugs, with Smither's to buy opium.)
However, Homer discovers there are problems with running the Plant. He has less time to do things with the family, which disappoints them greatly. One night, Mr. Burns visits Homer and shows him the people who he was too busy working to have good relationships with. He makes Homer understand how much he has missed his family. Homer then decides to quit. Burns drugs Homer and manages to cart him to the cemetery, where he attempts to encase him in the wall of a crypt. Unfortunately for Burns, he is too weak to carry each brick from the cart to the intended wall. By the time he manages to finish a couple of layers, it is daytime. Homer wakes up and steps easily over the few layers of bricks that Mr. Burns had painstakingly managed to cement in place. He tells Burns that the power plant is his again and walks away.