Season 3
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Season 3
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Season Information
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While "Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish" was the first episode produced for the season, "Bart Gets an F" became the season premiere as Bart was the series' breakout character at the time and the producers wanted to debut with an episode centering on him.
The second season had two Emmy nominations, both of them for "Homer vs. Lisa and the 8th Commandment." That episode won the Emmy award for Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming less than One Hour) and was nominated for "Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special," which it did not win.
All 22 episodes of Season 2, including extras such as optional commentaries of all the episodes, were released on DVD on 6th August 2002 in Region 1, 8th July 2001 in Region 2 and September 2002 in Region 4.
Episodes
# |
Title |
Original airdate | Directed by | Written by | Prod. code |
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Summary | |||||
36 - 1 | September 19, 1991 | Rich Moore | Al Jean & Mike Reiss | 7F24 | |
Through a series of misunderstandings, Homer is put into a mental hospital and his roommate is a man who talks and sings like Michael Jackson. Everything is cleared up and Homer is released. Meanwhile, many have forgotten about Lisa's birthday, including Bart. In honour for her birthday, Bart and Michael perform a song for Lisa celebrating her birthday. She is elated from this and has | |||||
37 - 2 | "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington" | September 26, 1991 | Wes Archer | George Meyer | 8F01 |
Lisa wins the local competition of an essay contest, earning the family a trip to Washington, D.C. for the finals. Lisa sees Bob Arnold (her own representative) taking a bribe. Disgusted, she changes her previous uplifting essay into a cynical one denouncing corruption in government in general and Bob Arnold in particular. Her faith in the system is restored when Arnold is arrested and expelled from Congress. | |||||
38 - 3 | October 3, 1991 | Jim Reardon | Jon Vitti | 7F23 | |
Ned Flanders opens the Leftorium, a store specializing in merchandise for left-handed people. Homer thinks it's a stupid idea and secretly wishes for the store to fail and Ned to be humiliated. Homer's wish comes true when business is very slow, and Ned is facing financial ruin and the loss of his house. Homer goes through a change of heart, tells Ned to open the store one more time, and calls every left-handed person he knows to tell them about the Leftorium. They all come to the store the next morning and buy all kinds of left-handed items, and Ned's store is saved. | |||||
39- 4 | October 10, 1991 | Rich Moore | John Swartzwelder | 8F03 | |
Bart is hired to work in a Mafia bar run by Fat Tony (making his first appearance). Bart is late for work due to having been put in detention by Principal Skinner. Fat Tony announces that he and his men will "meet and greet" Skinner, and shortly after that, Skinner disappears. Both Bart and Fat Tony are accused of Skinner's murder, and at trial Fat Tony tries to pin the murder (and all of his other illegal activities) on Bart. Skinner then re-appears, telling the court that he had an accident at home and was trapped under a pile of newspapers for a week. The case is dismissed and Bart quits his job at Fat Tony's bar. | |||||
40 - 5 | "Homer Defined" | October 17, 1991 | Mark Kirkland | Howard Gewirtz | 8F04 |
At the nuclear power plant, Homer prevents a meltdown through sheer luck. He is hailed as a hero, but fears being found out as being only lucky rather than brave or clever. When the truth comes out, the phrase "to pull a Homer" becomes a widely used term meaning "to succeed despite idiocy," and Homer's picture ends up in the dictionary, illustrating the definition. Meanwhile, Bart's and Milhouse's friendship is strained when Mihouse's mother considers Bart to be a bad influence and orders Milhouse to stay away from him. | |||||
41 - 6 | "Like Father, Like Clown" | October 24, 1991 | Jeffrey Lynch with Brad Bird | Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky | 8F05 |
Krusty the Clown has dinner with the Simpsons, and reveals that he is Jewish, his real name is Herschel Krustofski, and he is estranged from his rabbi father. They parted ways over Krusty's becoming a clown instead of following his father and becoming a rabbi. Bart and Lisa see Krusty becoming depressed, and they take it upon themselves to reunite him with his father. They find Rabbi Krustofski, and after several attempts convince him to meet Krusty on the set of his show, where they reconcile their differences. Krusty introduces his father to the audience, and together they sing a song. | |||||
42 - 7 | "Treehouse of Horror II" | October 31, 1991 | Jim Rondo Reardon | Atrocious Al Jean & Morbid Mike Reiss, Jittery Jeff Martin, Gasping George Meyer, Silthering Sam Simon, Spooky John Swartzelder | 8F02 |
Opening: Marge warns viewers again that the following episode will be even scarier than last years for young viewers. Aware that she will be ignored like the previous Halloween special, she resigns herself. Prologue: Lisa, Bart, and Homer eat an excessive amount of candy, which Marge warns them that they will get nightmares if they do so. While they ignore her warning, each of the three begin to have them. Lisa's Nightmare: The Simpsons buys a severed monkey paw from Morocco, which can grant a limited amount of wishes for a particular set of users depending on the amount of fingers out. Maggie, Bart, Lisa and Homer make a wish from it, which most result in unexpected circumstances. Bart's Nightmare: Bart has an ability to manipulate things by his mind. Everyone is compelled to carry his orders, opinions etc to prevent his potent ability on them. Homer's Nightmare: In an effort to create the ultimate worker, Mr. Burns transplants Homer's brain into a robot. | |||||
43 - 8 | "Lisa's Pony" | November 7, 1991 | Carlos Baeza | Al Jean & Mike Reiss | 8F06 |
Homer loses much of Lisa's appreciation for him after he was unable to give her a required saxophone reed for her role in a talent show on time. After seeing that he had ignored her greatly when she was younger, presuming that had caused her lack of pride in him, she purchases a pony to change her opinion on him and that she likes the type of animal. While she loves Homer as a result and happily keeps the pony named "Princess", he is required to carry another job, a Kwik-E-Mart cashier at graveyard shifts, to pay for Princess's expensive housing. He becomes more and more tired when doing his secondary job, gaining lack of sufficent to no sleep, which prompts Lisa to decide to keep the pony or have her father exhausted. | |||||
44 - 9 | "Saturdays of Thunder" | November 14,1991 | Jim Reardon | Ken Levine & David Isaacs | 8F07 |
Trying to be a better father, Homer helps Bart build a soapbox racer. Bart's racer is a flop, but Martin Prince's is the fastest and wins the race. When Martin is hurt, he asks Bart to fill in as driver so that at least one of them can beat Nelson Muntz in the race. This angers Homer, as Bart won't be driving the racer that they built. Homer, however, does some thinking and realizes the experience has brought him closer to Bart and made him a better father, and Bart needs his support regardless of what racer he's driving. Homer goes to the race, wishes Bart luck, and he wins. Bart and Homer then celebrate the victory. | |||||
45 - 10 | "Flaming Moe's" | November 21,1991 | Rich Moore & Alan Smart | Robert Cohen | 8F08 |
Moe steals the recipe for a beverage created by Homer, which is made from several liquids including cough syrup and that fire improves its taste, for the fledging Moe's Tavern to gain more profits. Initially called "Flaming Homer" by Homer, Moe renames it "Flaming Moe" under his control of it. stating that he created it without Homer and subsequently sells it. Although the drink is a success and has elevated Moe's Tavern by business and patronage, Homer is angered by Moe for not mentioning his association to the drink and vows revenge. | |||||
46 - 11 |
"Burns Verkaufen der Kraftwerk" "Burns Sells the Power Plant"* |
December 5,1991 | Mark Kirkland | Jon Vitti | 8F09 |
Rumours of a takeover of a successor to take over the power plant as Mr.Burns wishes to resign to pursue other interests. All but Homer each have received $5,200 for the rise of stocks. Homer, however, sold his stocking for 25¢ and earns $25 dollars, spending it on a beer which he was unaware of the skyrocketed stock. The takeover then unfolds as German Businessmen had paid Burns $100,000,000 for the plant, which worries employees to possibly being fired by Germany's stricter and hard working ethic.
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47 - 12 | "I Married Marge" | December 26, 1991 | Jeffrey Lynch |
Jeff Martin |
8F10 |
Marge worries that she may be again pregnant. While she is going to contact Dr.Hibbert, Homer tells Bart, Lisa and Maggie how he and Marge got married and the conception and birth of Bart as well as Homer applying for a job at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant. | |||||
48 - 13 | "Radio Bart" | January 9, 1992 | Carlos Baeza | Jon Vitti | 8F11 |
Bart has a disapointing birthday and presents although later, he then appreciates Homer's present to him, a microphone able to have a user's voice from the microphone to a nearby radio. He uses it for mainly pranks, which he sets up a particular one where he impersonates a fictitious boy named Timmy O'Toole trapped in a local well, gaining public attention, as he put a radio in the well. | |||||
49 - 14 | "Lisa the Greek" | January 23, 1992 | Rich Moore | Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky | 8F12 |
Homer and Lisa begin to bond as they watch American football which Lisa can accurately predict which team will win. An ability that Homer wagers on people for matches which Lisa thinks Homer is using her as a tool for this and loses much appeciation for him. | |||||
50 - 15 | "Homer Alone" | February 6, 1992 | Mark Kirkland | David M. Stern | 8F14 |
Marge decides to take a vacation to calm down. Homer take cares of Maggie while Lisa and Bart are under Patty and Selma's responsibility. While Marge is enjoying the spa in her vacation, the family are struggling without her and misfortune ensures. | |||||
51 - 16 | "Bart the Lover" | February 13, 1992 | Carlos Baeza | Jon Vitti | 8F16 |
Bart writes love letters to Mrs.Krabappel under a pseudonym of a fictionous man named Woodrow Wilson, named after the 28th US president. Meanwhile, Ned Flanders convinces Homer to control his swearing as his son, Todd, learns profanity by Homer. | |||||
52 - 17 | "Homer at the Bat" | February 20, 1992 | Jim Reardon | John Swartzwelder | 8F13 |
Springfield Nuclear Power Plant employees, including Homer, sign up for softball and are a runaway success with Homer's homemade yet efficent Wonderbat. Mr. Burns, however, seeks for professional baseball players to replace the team members. | |||||
53 - 18 | "Separate Vocations" | February 27, 1992 | Jeffrey Lynch | George Meyer | 8F15 |
Students of Springfield Elementary are assigned to take an aptitude exam to see what career would suit them. Bart is noted as a policeman and Lisa a homemaker. After they had experience the jobs, Bart's performance and discipline in school has him a hall monitor while Lisa then develops a poorer attitude. | |||||
54 - 19 | "Dog of Death" | March 12, 1992 | Jim Reardon | John Swartzwelder | 8F17 |
Santa's Little Helper becomes severely ill, which as the Simpsons subsequently notice, they are forced to make budget cuts to afford his expensive operation to cure him. While the operation was a success, the family then resent the sacrifices they had to make to save Santa's Little Helper's life which they required, prompting him to run away before being owned and changed by Mr. Burns. | |||||
55 - 20 | "Colonel Homer" | March 26, 1992 | Mark Kirkland | Matt Groening | 8F19 |
56 - 21 |
"Black Widower" |
April 9, 1992 | David Silverman | Jon Vitti,Thomas Chastain and Sam Simon | 8F20 |
57 - 22 | "The Otto Show" | April 23, 1992 | Wes Archer | Jeff Martin | 8F21 |
58 - 23 | "Bart's Friend Falls in Love" | May 7, 1992 | Jim Reardon | Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky | 8F22 |
59 - 24 |
"Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?" | August 27, 1992 | Rich Moore | John Swartzwelder | 8F23 |
DVD Release
The Complete Third Season Boxset | ||||||||
Set Details | Special Features | |||||||
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Release Dates | ||||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | ||||||
26th August 2003 | 6th October 2003 | 22nd October 2002 |
The Simpsons (Seasons) | |||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
Season 3 | 1991 - 1992 | 24 episodes | 7F24 - 8F23 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Previous - Season 2 | Next - Season 4 |