Season 4
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Season 4
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Season Information
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The Simpsons' fourth season began on 24th September 1992 with the first episode, "Kamp Krusty," and ended on 13th May 1993 with "Krusty Gets Kancelled." Al Jean and Mike Reiss were the show runners of the season, as they also were for the previous season.
This was the first time the producers did not submit episodes for the "Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming Less Than One Hour) award. By 1993, animated TV series were allowed to be nominated for Outstanding Comedy Series, whereas previously the series could only be nominated for animated awards."A Streetcar Named Marge" and "Mr. Plow" were submitted by producers, but neither had a nomination as voters deemed it unsuitable to have animation nominated alongside live action TV series. Nonetheless, the season was nominated for 6 awards and won an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Voice-Over Performance" by Dan Castellaneta in "Mr. Plow"; an Annie Award for "Best Animated Television Program"; a Genesis Award for "Best Television Prime Time Animated Series" for "Whacking Day"; and a Saturn Award for "Best Television Series."
Season 4 is also notable for the Simpsons movie that wasn't. James L. Brooks suggested the script for "Kamp Krusty" as a possible movie idea. However, due to problems with making the story long enough for an 80-minute film, the idea was dropped.
All 22 episodes of Season 4, including extras, were released on DVD on 15th June 2004 in Region 1, 2nd August 2004 in Region 2 and 25th August 2004 in Region 4.
Contents
Episodes
# |
Title |
Original airdate | Directed by | Written by | Prod. code |
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Summary | |||||
60 - 1 | September 24, 1992 | Mark Kirkland | David M. Stern | 8F24 | |
The children of Springfield, including Bart and Lisa, are excited about going to Kamp Krusty because the camp's ad promises they will get to spend the summer with Krusty the Clown. When they arrive, however, they find that conditions at the camp are deplorable, Krusty is nowhere to be found, and the camp is staffed by an uncaring director (Mr. Black) and the school bullies. When they try to pass off a bad impersonator (Barney Gumble in a clown wig) as the real Krusty, Bart has had enough. He leads a revolt where the kids take over the camp, driving out Mr. Black and the bullies. Back at home, Homer and Marge are having a pleasant time without Bart and Lisa, with Homer gaining more hair and losing weight, until they learn of Bart's revolt on the TV news (Homer promptly loses his new hair and regains his weight). Krusty finally arrives at the camp and apologizes to the children. To make up for the terrible time they had, he takes them to Tijuana, Mexico. | |||||
61 - 2 | "A Streetcar Named Marge" | October 1, 1992 | Rich Moore | Jeff Martin | 8F18 |
Marge auditions for the part of Blanche DuBois in a local musical production of A Streetcar Named Desire. When she channels her depression and anger over Homer's indifferent treatment of her into her acting, she impresses the director and wins the part. Marge forgives Homer, however, when he attends the play, is genuinely moved by the story, and recites some details of the plot, showing that he really was paying attention. Meanwhile, Maggie is sent to a strict daycare which takes away her and the other babies' pacifiers, and Maggie leads the babies in a revolt to get them back. | |||||
62 - 3 | October 8, 1992 | Jim Reardon | George Meyer | 9F01 | |
One Sunday morning, Homer skips church and has what he considers to be the best day of his life. He then decides to quit church completely and forms his own religion, customized for himself. Marge, Ned Flanders, and Reverend Lovejoy try to talk Homer into coming back, but Homer refuses. However, the very next Sunday, Homer falls asleep and a lighted cigar sets the house on fire. The volunteer fire department puts out the fire and saves Homer, and Reverend Lovejoy asks Homer to consider that the hand of God was working through his friends, saving him from the fire. Now convinced, Homer returns to church. | |||||
63 - 4 | October 15, 1992 | Mark Kirkland | Jeff Martin | 9F02 | |
Lisa feels she is ugly after she sees a caricatured drawing of herself. To boost her confidence, Homer enters Lisa in the Little Miss Springfield beauty pageant. Although reluctant to enter, Lisa does well, winning second place, then becomes Little Miss Springfield by default after the original winner is hit by lightning and hospitalized. Lisa enjoys her reign until she learns that she is expected to be a spokesperson for Laramie Cigarettes. Lisa then rebels, and the pageant officials dethrone her on a technicality. Although she loses her title, Lisa has her self-esteem restored and thanks Homer for caring about her. | |||||
64 - 5 | "Treehouse of Horror III" | October 29, 1992 | Bloodcurdling Carlos Baeza | Atrocious Al Jean & Morbid Mike Reiss, Johnny Katastrophe Kogen & Warped Wally Wolodarsky, Scarifying Sam Simon, Vicious Jack Vitti | 9F04 |
Opening: Homer advises viewers that the following program is scary, then switches to taunting them and dares them to turn the TV off. A TV in the episode switches off, but Marge can be heard angrily asking Homer if he dared them, which he denies. Prologue: The Simpson family and several local children in their costumes gather in the Simpsons' living room for a Halloween party. Lisa, Grampa, and Bart each tell a scary story. Clown Without Pity: Homer has forgotten Bart's birthday, and hastily buys him a Krusty the Clown doll in spite of the store clerk's warning that the doll is evil. Bart is happy with the gift, but (initially unknown to the rest of the family) the doll repeatedly tries to kill Homer. Marge learns that the doll has a good/evil switch and changes the switch from "evil" to "good," after which the doll becomes Homer's slave. King Homer: In a parody of King Kong, Mr. Burns hires Marge Bouvier to help him capture a mysterious large ape called King Homer. They capture him, take him back to New York City, and put him in a show. King Homer escapes, runs amok in the city, and abducts Marge. King Homer's rampage is short-lived, however, as he collapses from exhaustion, unable to climb even one story of the Empire State Building. King Homer is eventually married to Marge. Dial "Z" for Zombies: Bart discovers a book of magic and attempts to raise Lisa's cat Snowball I from the dead, but instead accidentally re-animates hundreds of corpses from the cemetery, unleashing a plague of zombies on Springfield. To set things right, Bart must return to the book and cast the correct spell to send the zombies back to their graves, all while the zombies relentlessly pursue him and the rest of the family. | |||||
65 - 6 | "Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie" | November 2, 1992 | Rich Moore | John Swartzelder | 9F03 |
Bart's behavior is worse than ever, as Homer and Marge learn at Parents Night at Springfield Elementary. Homer warns Bart that he needs to improve his behavior, and Marge warns Homer that he needs to do better at punishing Bart and sticking to it. Bart is asked to watch Maggie, doesn't do it, and she crashes the family car. Homer has finally had enough, and he forbids Bart from seeing "Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie," which has just come out and all the kids are eager to see it. Bart tries to change Homer's mind, and later tries to sneak into the movie, but all to no avail as he misses the movie. However, it pays off when in a flash forward scene forty years into the future, Bart has become the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, instead of a male stripper as Marge had feared. | |||||
66 - 7 | "Marge Gets a Job" | November 5, 1992 | Jeff Lynch | Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein | 9F05 |
The Simpson home is in dire need of foundation repairs, as one end of the house is sinking. Marge decides to get a job to help pay for them. She is hired on at Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, where she ends up working alongside Homer. Mr. Burns quickly becomes attracted to Marge and attempts to seduce her, but backs off when he sees how Homer stands up for her. Meanwhile, Bart repeatedly pretends to be ill to avoid taking a test. | |||||
67 - 8 | "New Kid on the Block" | November 12, 1992 | Wes Archer | Conan O'Brian | 9F06 |
The Simpsons have new next-door neighbors: Ruth Powers and her daughter, Laura. Bart quickly develops a crush on Laura, but is heartbroken when she tells him that she is in love with Jimbo Jones. Bart pulls a prank which lets Laura see that Jimbo is no good for her, and she says that she would date Bart if he were a little older. Meanwhile, Homer clashes with a local seafood restaurant, "The Frying Dutchman," over the definition of their "all-you-can-eat" special. They end up in court, but reach a compromise: Homer can eat all he wants in exchange for the restaurant being allowed to exhibit him as a freak of nature. | |||||
68 - 9 | "Mr. Plow" | November 19,1992 | Jim Reardon | Jon Vitti | 9F07 |
Homer wrecks both of the family cars during a blizzard, buys a snowplow, and goes into business by starting his own plowing service business, "Mr. Plow." Homer's business succeeds, but he ends up facing competition as Barney starts his own rival snowplow business, the "Plow King." Barney creates a winning advertising jingle (with Linda Ronstadt's help) and steals all of Homer's customers. The business competition puts a strain on Homer's and Barney's friendship, but they manage to resolve their conflict -- just in time for the spring thaw. | |||||
69 - 10 | "Lisa's First Word" | December 3,1992 | Mark Kirkland | Jeff Martin | 9F08 |
Marge tells the story of how the Simpson family moved to their house when Bart was a toddler and Marge was pregnant with Lisa. Homer was frustrated with Bart because he said all kinds of words, but not "Daddy" -- instead, he called Homer by his first name. (Bart's first words had been "Ay, caramba!" when he walked in on Homer and Marge in the bedroom.) When Lisa was born, Bart took an instant dislike to her, but she won his heart when she learned to talk and her first word was "Bart." She quickly said several other words, but not "Daddy," to Homer's continued frustration. Back in the present, Marge finishes her story, and Bart and Lisa start arguing. Homer then puts Maggie to bed and says to her, "The sooner kids talk, the sooner they talk back. I hope you never say a word." After Homer leaves, Maggie takes her pacifier out of her mouth and, unheard by anyone else, says her own first word: "Daddy." | |||||
70 - 11 | December 17,1992 | David Silverman | Gary Apple & Michael Carrington | 9F09 | |
The effects of years of unhealthy eating combined with work-related stress finally catch up to Homer, and he has a heart attack. He needs a triple bypass, but the family can't afford the $40,000 that Dr. Hibbert says it will cost. The family seek help from cut-rate doctor Nick Riviera, who says he'll do the operation for $129.95. Homer chooses the cheaper operation. During the surgery, Dr. Nick doesn't know what to do next because the critical part of the instructional video he had watched to prepare was taped over. With some help from Lisa, Nick succeeds in finishing the operation and Homer makes a full recovery. | |||||
71 - 12 | January 14, 1993 | Rich Moore |
Conan O'Brien |
9F10 | |
Mr. Burns is fined three million dollars for illegally dumping nuclear waste, and a town meeting is held to decide how to spend the money. The people are about to adopt Marge's idea to repair Main Street, when a smooth-talking stranger named Lyle Lanley shows up and convinces them to buy a monorail, even though the town has no need for one. Suspicious, Marge travels to other towns that bought Lanley's monorails and learns that Lanley is a con man and his monorails are all dangerous due to shoddy materials. Marge then quickly returns to Springfield, but is too late to stop the monorail from opening. The monorail's brakes fail and it speeds out of control. Fortunately, monorail conductor Homer manages to stop the train with an improvised anchor, saving the passengers. | |||||
72 - 13 | January 21, 1993 | Carlos Baeza | David M. Stern | 9F11 | |
Marge, Patty and Selma's aunt, Gladys Bouvier, passes away which the family then attend her funeral although that would have to postpone Homer, Bart and Lisa's trip to Duff Gardens as intended. She made a video will before her death which one is for Patty and Selma to not die alone like herself i.e. form a family. Selma wants to do this by having a child. She goes through unsuccessful dates and has an opportunity to experience raising children as she would take Bart, Lisa and herself to Duff Gardens as Homer is ill from food poisoning, eating a submarine sandwich for so long that it begins to rot. Selma has a difficult experience and decides to not have children before considering Jub-Jub, originally her mother's pet iguana by Gladys' will, as a makeshift baby. | |||||
73 - 14 | "Brother from the Same Planet" | February 4, 1993 | Jeff Lynch | Jon Vitti | 9F12 |
Bart loses his esteem to Homer as he picks him up late from soccer practice and decides to have a "Bigger Brother", eventually being a man named Tom. Homer becomes aware of this and decides to have a "Little Brother" by raising an orphan named Pepi. Although they all are bonding, Bart regrets from using the program. Where Homer and Tom begin to fight over their raised ones and eventually having their little brothers swapped i.e. Bart reconciled with Homer. Meanwhile, Lisa is addicted to a telephone number of a young celebrity named Cory. | |||||
74 - 15 | "I Love Lisa" | February 11, 1993 | Wes Archer | Frank Mula | 9F13 |
Ralph falls for Lisa when she gives him a Valentine's card on Valentine's Day as he did not receive any elsewhere to cheer him up. She is not interested in him and eventually confesses that she does not like him in a televised talk session with Krusty in his 29th Anniversary Special, leading Ralph to become heartbroken. A President's Day play is to be held, which Ralph is cast in a role as George Washington while Lisa is cast as his wife, Martha. The play goes well and they decide to become friends instead. | |||||
75 - 16 | "Duffless" | February 18, 1993 | Jim Reardon | David M. Stern | 9F14 |
Homer is arrested for drunk driving and is sentenced to attending traffic school as his license has been revoked and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings for drunk driving. He reluctantly decides to not drink beer for a month by Marge's persuasion. Under difficulty and temptation of beer, he eventually succeeds and goes to Moe's for a beer. Although decides to forgo this reward and bicycle with Marge instead. Meanwhile, Lisa has a science project that was originally a large genetically engineered tomato to cure world hunger that had been demolished by Bart and replaces it with a project that compares the intelligence of Bart and a hamster. | |||||
76 - 17 | "Last Exit to Springfield" | March 11, 1993 | Mark Kirkland | Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky | 9F15 |
Springfield Nuclear Power Plant employees go on a strike to have their dental plan back by Homer's tenure as union leader so that the Simpsons could afford better braces for Lisa as she is having to wear large, outdated yet cheaper ones that affects her appearance from some others. Mr. Burns negotiates with Homer several times about the dental plan although he does not understand Mr. Burns' sly innuendos. After resisting the strike's demand into going to great lengths by shutting off the town's electricity and the union still going, he decides to have the dental plan back on one condition that Homer would step down as union leader, which he happily does so and Lisa getting perfect, new braces now finally being insured with the dental plan. | |||||
77 - 18 | "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show" | April 1, 1993 | Carlos Baeza | Jon Vitti | 9F17 |
Homer develops a coma after a prank for April Fool's Day that has a beer can explode all over the house when Bart is tricked into pranks by Homer. During his coma, the family reminisce events from clips of previous episodes. He eventually wakes up and strangles Bart when he confesses to Homer that he caused the prank on him although the rest of the family are glad to see that he had recovered. | |||||
78 - 19 | "The Front" | April 15, 1993 | Rich Moore | Adam I. Lapidus | 9F16 |
Bart and Lisa decide to write an Itchy & Scratchy episode after watching a poor, lackluster one. It is sent to the CEO of the studio that produces the cartoon, Roger Meyers, who immediately rejects the script because of Bart and Lisa's age. They then replace their names with Grampa's name as he is old enough. Meyers then reads the script which he likes and has it produced. It is successful | |||||
79 - 20 | "Whacking Day" | April 29, 1993 | Jeff Lynch | John Swartzwelder | 9F18 |
80 - 21 |
May 6, 1993 | Jim Reardon | Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein | 9F20 | |
81 - 22 | "Krusty Gets Kancelled" | May 13, 1993 | David Silverman | John Swartzwelder | 9F19 |
DVD Release
Season 4 was released on DVD in its entirety as The Complete Fourth Season Boxset on August 26, 2003 in region 1, October 6, 2003 in Region 2 and October 22, 2003 in Region by 20th Century Fox. While primarily containing the original 24 episodes, the boxset also consists on bonus features such as storyboards.
The Complete Fourth Season Boxset | ||||||||
Set Details | Special Feature | |||||||
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Release Dates | ||||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | ||||||
June 15, 2004 |
August 2, 2004 | August 25, 2004 |
Production
This was the final association of Klasky Csupo with The Simpsons as it produced the Ullman shorts and Seasons 1-3. However, two holdover episodes from Season 3, "Kamp Krusty" and "A Streetcar Named Marge," were aired in the succeding season, i.e., Season 4, with Season 3's production code, 8Fxx. Production then shifted to Film Roman, which produced episodes starting in Season 4. Film Roman's first Simpsons episode was "Homer the Heretic," as indicated by the first use of the production code 9Fxx.
Awards
This was the first time the producers did not submit episodes for the "Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming Less Than One Hour) award. By 1993, animated TV series were allowed to be nominated for Outstanding Comedy Series, whereas previously the series could only be nominated for animated awards."A Streetcar Named Marge" and "Mr. Plow" were submitted by producers, but neither had a nomination as voters deemed it unsuitable to have animation nominated alongside live action TV series. Nonetheless, the season was nominated for 6 awards and won an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Voice-Over Performance" by Dan Castellaneta in "Mr. Plow"; an Annie Award for "Best Animated Television Program"; a Genesis Award for "Best Television Prime Time Animated Series" for "Whacking Day"; and a Saturn Award for "Best Television Series."
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 4 | 1992 - 1993 | 22 episodes | 9Fxx | |||||||||||||||||||||
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