"Lisa the Iconoclast"
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Episode Information
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Springfield's bicentenial is coming up, to celebrate, the town prepares a parade.
Lisa, decides to enter a report about
Jebediah Springfield into a school contest. To research for the report, she visits the history museum, where she meets
Hollis Hurlbut, a renowned scholar who specializes in researching
Jebediah. Meanwhile,
Homer tries out for the position of town crier in the upcoming parade.
Flanders, who was originally town crier, gracefully gives up the position and
Homer takes over.
Lisa finds a rolled up peice of parchment concealed in
Jebediah's
flute. The parchment reveals that Jebediah's real name was Hans Sprungfeld, an evil pirate who shot a wild buffalo rather than taming it, and got in a fistfight with George Washington. Lisa reveals this to Homer and they set off to reveal the truth, largely because Homer believes Lisa has been right about things in the past. No one believes them, so they set out to dig up Jebediah's corpse. Hans Sprungfeild had a silver prosthetic toungue. If they find the toungue, they prove that Jebediah was not the hero he was thought to be. When they dig up the corpse, they find no tongue. Homer is banned from the parade, and he and Lisa are shunned. Lisa gives up until the middle of the night when she is visited by the ghost of George Washington, who commends her for exposing Hans Sprungfeld as a fraud and hints to look to the famous torn portrait of himself; the missing piece being where Sprungfeld wrote his confession. Determined to find the tongue, Lisa goes back to the museum. There she finds that Hollis Hurlbut stole and hid the toungue to sheild the town from the truth. Hurlbut finally accepts that Jebediah Springfield was really a brutal pirate, and says they must stop this sham celebration. However, just as Lisa is about to reveal the truth about Hans Sprungfeld to the town, she sees positive factors such as veterans attending the parade and kids on floats, to which she simply says Jebediah Springfield was a great man. When Hollis Hurlbut asks Lisa in private why she did not speak about the pirate whom Hans Sprungfeld really was, she says the myth about Jebediah Springfield is valuable due to it bringing out the best in the community, and then sits atop Homer's shoulders as he participates in the parade.