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| Bart answers the door to a man who has "a special delivery for Homer Simpson". Bart, expecting a package under Homer's name, says "that's me". The man punches Bart in the nose, remarking "don't write no more letters to Mr. Sinatra".<ref>"[[Lady Bouvier's Lover]]"</ref> | | Bart answers the door to a man who has "a special delivery for Homer Simpson". Bart, expecting a package under Homer's name, says "that's me". The man punches Bart in the nose, remarking "don't write no more letters to Mr. Sinatra".<ref>"[[Lady Bouvier's Lover]]"</ref> |
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− | When [[Homer]] said that in showbiz, what goes up, must go down, Frank Sinatra was one of the names [[Bart]] and [[Lisa]] mentioned that flawed this, along with {{ch|Bob Hope}}, [[Dean Martin]] and {{ch|Tom Jones}}.<ref>"[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]"</ref> | + | When [[Homer]] said that in showbiz, what goes up, must go down, Frank Sinatra was one of the names [[Bart]] and [[Lisa]] mentioned that flawed this, along with {{Ch|Bob Hope}}, [[Dean Martin]] and {{Ch|Tom Jones}}.<ref>"[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]"</ref> |
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| When [[Disco Stu]] visited [[Praiseland]] to get a miracle from the statue of [[Maude Flanders]], he had a vision of [[Heaven]] as a huge discothèque. Stu was surprised to see Sinatra there, but Sinatra told him, "For me, this is Hell. Ya dig, pally?"<ref>"[[I'm Goin' to Praiseland]]"</ref> | | When [[Disco Stu]] visited [[Praiseland]] to get a miracle from the statue of [[Maude Flanders]], he had a vision of [[Heaven]] as a huge discothèque. Stu was surprised to see Sinatra there, but Sinatra told him, "For me, this is Hell. Ya dig, pally?"<ref>"[[I'm Goin' to Praiseland]]"</ref> |
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| == Behind the Laughter == | | == Behind the Laughter == |
| *Songs recorded by Sinatra have appeared in other episodes of the show: | | *Songs recorded by Sinatra have appeared in other episodes of the show: |
− | **"{{w|Summer Wind}}" (sung by [[Martin Prince, Jr.]]) is played at the end of "[[Bart of Darkness]]". | + | **"{{W|Summer Wind}}" (sung by [[Martin Prince, Jr.]]) is played at the end of "[[Bart of Darkness]]". |
| **"{{W2|South of the Border|1939 song}}" is played over the closing credits of "[[Kamp Krusty]]". However, the singer is not Sinatra, but a sound-a-like. | | **"{{W2|South of the Border|1939 song}}" is played over the closing credits of "[[Kamp Krusty]]". However, the singer is not Sinatra, but a sound-a-like. |
− | **"{{w|This Town}}" is played when Homer and Marge walk inside Springfield Mall in "[[Trust but Clarify]]". | + | **"{{W|This Town}}" is played when Homer and Marge walk inside Springfield Mall in "[[Trust but Clarify]]". |
− | *The heavy punching "Homer" for hassling Sinatra is a reference to his infamous {{w|Relationships of Frank Sinatra#Alleged organized crime links|alleged organized crime links}}. | + | *The heavy punching "Homer" for hassling Sinatra is a reference to his infamous {{W|Relationships of Frank Sinatra#Alleged organized crime links|alleged organized crime links}}. |
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| == Appearances == | | == Appearances == |
Bart answers the door to a man who has "a special delivery for Homer Simpson". Bart, expecting a package under Homer's name, says "that's me". The man punches Bart in the nose, remarking "don't write no more letters to Mr. Sinatra".[1]