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Difference between revisions of "Season 4"

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
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{{Template:Under Construction}}{{Season
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{{PrevNext|Season 3|Season 5}}
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{{Season
 
|name = Season 4
 
|name = Season 4
|image = [[File:Simpsons_s4.png|200px]]
+
|image = [[File:Season 4 iTunes logo.jpg|250px]]
 
|original run = September 24, 1992 – May 13, 1993
 
|original run = September 24, 1992 – May 13, 1993
 
|episodes = 22
 
|episodes = 22
Line 9: Line 10:
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''''[[The Simpsons]]'''''' '''fourth season'' '''''began on 24th September 1992 with the first episode, "[[Kamp Krusty (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.
+
The '''fourth season''' began on September 24, 1992 with the first episode, "[[Kamp Krusty]]", and ended on May 13, 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.
  
Two episodes that had Season 3's Production code, 8FXX i.e."[[Kamp Krusty (Episode)|Kamp Krusty]]" and "[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]" were aired on this season, which Season 4's production code is 9FXX. Several episodes that were produced for the preceding season occasionally air on the succeding season.
+
This was the first time the producers did not submit episodes for the "{{W|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 {{W|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series|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 "{{W|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance|Outstanding Voice-Over Performance}}" by Dan Castellaneta in "[[Mr. Plow]]"; an {{W|Annie Award}} for "Best Animated Television Program"; a {{W|Genesis Award}} for "Best Television Prime Time Animated Series" for "[[Whacking Day]]"; and a {{W|Saturn Award}} for "Best Television Series."
  
This was the first time the producers did not submit episodes for the "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primetime_Emmy_Award_for_Outstanding_Animated_Program_(for_Programming_Less_Than_One_Hour) Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming Less Than One Hour)] award as by 1993, animated TV series were allowed to be nominated for [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primetime_Emmy_Award_for_Outstanding_Comedy_Series Outstanding Comedy Series], which the series could only be nominated for animated awards."[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]" and "[[Mr. Plow]]" were submitted by producers although 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. Winning an Emmy Award "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primetime_Emmy_Award_for_Outstanding_Voice-Over_Performance Outstanding Voice-Over Performance]" by Dan Castellaneta for "[[Mr. Plow]]", an [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annie_Award Annie Award] for "Best Animated Television Program",a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesis_Awards Genesis Award] for "Best Television Prime Time Animated Series" for "[[Whacking Day]]" and a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_Award Saturn Award] for "Best Television Series".
+
Season 4 also marked the first attempt of a ''Simpsons'' feature-length film. [[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. It would not be until over 14 years later that a Simpsons film would finally be made in a form of ''[[The Simpsons Movie]]'', which was released on July 27, 2007 worldwide.
  
All of the 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.
+
All 22 episodes of Season 4, including extras, were released on DVD on June 15, 2004 in {{W|Region 1#Region codes and countries|Region 1}}, August 2, 2004 in {{W|Region 2#Region codes and countries|Region 2}} and August 25, 2004 in {{W|Region 4#Region codes and countries|Region 4}}.
==Episodes==
 
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" class="wikitable" style="width: 930px; height: 10px"
 
! style="white-space: nowrap; width: 50px; background-color: #38A0DC; "| #
 
! style="background-color: #38A0DC; "|
 
Title
 
! style="background-color: #38A0DC; "|Original airdate
 
! style="background-color: #38A0DC; "| Directed by
 
! style="background-color: #38A0DC; "| Written by
 
! style="background-color: #38A0DC; "|Prod. code
 
|-
 
! colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|Summary
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|60 - 1
 
| style="height: 20px; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
 
<p style="text-align:center">[[Kamp Krusty|'''"Kamp Krusty"''']]</p>
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|September 24, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Mark Kirkland
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|David M. Stern
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F24
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
Children of Springfield, including Bart and Lisa, go to Kamp Krusty in for the summer holiday. While they are living in deplorable conditions in the camp, Bart anticipates that Krusty the Clown will apppear. Although the children know that he is impersonated when presumably said he will appear, resulting them to rebel on the camp. The real Krusty eventually arrives at the camp and makes it up for the children to take them to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tijuana Tijuana], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexico Mexico]. Meanwhile, Homer and Marge are having a pleasant time without Bart and Lisa, with Homer gaining more hair and losing weight.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|61 - 2
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''[[Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington|"]]A Streetcar Named Marge"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|October 1, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Rich Moore
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jeff Martin
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F18
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
Marge auditions in a musical production of ''[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Streetcar_Named_Desire_(play) A Streetcar Named Desire]'' as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blanche_DuBois Blanche DuBois] when the play director notices her depression when dealing with an uncaring Homer. She performs well in acts to the brutish [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_Kowalski Stanley Kowalski] (played by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ned_Flanders Ned Flanders]) when she imagines Homer to be him although then compares her husband and Stanley similar. Marge is hostile to him after the play as she believed that he did not pay attention although the remorse Homer did and was moved by Blanche's performance. Meanwhile, Maggie is sent to a daycare which has her and the other babies' pacifiers taken, resulting in her trying to retreive them back.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|62 - 3
 
| style="background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
 
<p style="text-align:center">'''[[When Flanders Failed|"]]Homer the Heretic"'''</p>
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|October 8, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jim Reardon
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|George Meyer
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|9F01
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: #FFFFFF; "|
 
Homer decides to not go to church after having an enjoyable time without attending with the rest of the family. He also forms his own religion customized for himself. Marge, Ned Flanders and Reverend Lovejoy do not appreciate him not attending church and try to convert him back but Homer refuses. Although he then returns to church eventually, after been saved by Ned from accidently setting his house on fire. Reverend Lovejoy considered that God helped Homer's friends with different, convincing him once more to return to church, which he eventually agrees.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|63 - 4
 
| style="background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
 
<p style="text-align:center">'''"Lisa the Beauty Queen"'''</p>
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|October 15, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Mark Kirkland
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jeff Martin
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|9F02
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
Lisa loses her self-esteem after viewing a caricatured drawing of herself at Springfield Elementary's fair. Although Homer wins a ticket to ride on a Duff blimp, he sacrifices his opportunity to enter Lisa to a beauty pageant to make her happier for trading the ticket to Barney for $200. She was originally reluctant to enter but proceeds to compete and becomes second place. The winner, however, became injured after struck by lightning and becomes hospitalized while Lisa takes her place as first place. She notices that she is also a spokesperson for Laramie's cigarettes to encourage children to smoke, which she unsuccessfully protests to eliminate this strategy. Although she loses her title as a result,she has her self esteem restored and thanks Homer.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|64 - 5
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''[[Homer Defined|"]]Treehouse of Horror III"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|October 29, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Carlos Baeza
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Jean Al Jean], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Reiss Mike Reiss], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_Kogen Jay Kogen], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallace_Wolodarsky Wallace Wolodarsky],[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Simon Sam Simon] & [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Vitti Jon Vitti]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|9F04
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
'''Opening:''' Homer asks viewers to not watch the following program and switch the television off, the latter which he dares to have it done. Although a TV in the episode switches off, he and Marge can be heard, asking that he dared viewers although Homer swore he did not.
 
  
'''Prologue''': Bart, Lisa and local children in their costumes gather in the Simpsons living room for their Halloween party, which each tells a a story.
+
== History ==
  
'''Clown Without Pity''': Homer searches for a birthday present for Bart as he had forgotten his birthday. He buys a Krusty doll which is warned by the clerk of a store that it is evil. Bart is happy for the gift although the doll repeatedly tries to kill Homer, where the family are not aware of this. When Marge notices this, she has an operator to turn the doll to good which it and Homer become allied. Although, it eventually becomes a slave for him.
+
The fourth season was executively produced by [[Al Jean]] and [[Mike Reiss]], who also were showrunners of [[Season 3|the previous season]]. Some of ''The Simpsons''<nowiki>'</nowiki> original writers, dubbed as the "original team"<ref name="vitti"/> as they had been writing for the show since [[Season 1|the first season]], had left after the completion of "[[Cape Feare]]", which was the final episode made in Season 4 though aired in [[Season 5|the following season]] as a hold-over episode.<ref name="vitti">{{cite video | people=Vitti, Jon|date=2004|title=The Simpsons season 5 DVD commentary for the episode "Cape Feare"| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> [[Jay Kogen]], [[Wallace Wolodarsky]], [[Sam Simon]],[[Jeff Martin]], [[David M. Stern]] and [[Jon Vitti]] left ''The Simpsons'' following the season though the latter two returned to write more episodes.  
  
'''King Homer''': In a parody of King Kong, Mr. Burns hires Marge Bouvier to help trap the large ape that is King Homer. He is successfully captured and sent back to New York City and held in a play in chains. He breaks out and runs amok in the city and abducting Marge. His run through the city is short lived as he collapses in exhaustion due to not be able to climb up the Empire State Building. King Homer is eventually married to Marge.
+
After their role as showrunners of ''The Simpsons'' ended in Season 4, Jean and Reiss left to produce their own animated series, ''[[The Critic]]''. Director [[Rich Moore]] also left to work on Jean and Reiss' show. The former ''Simpsons'' staff eventually returned to work on ''The Simpsons'' after the failure of ''The Critic''. Jean and Reiss returned to write more ''Simpsons'' episodes, with the former becoming showrunner since Season 13.<ref name="jean">{{cite video | people=Jean, Al|date=2004|title=The Simpsons season 5 DVD commentary for the episode "Cape Feare"| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> And Moore returning years later to assist the animation of ''[[The Simpsons Movie]]''<ref name=com2>{{cite video | people=Anderson, Mike B.; Dean Moore, Steven; Moore, Rich; Silverman, David|date=2007|title=Audio Director's commentary| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> [[George Meyer]] and [[John Swartzwelder]] remained while [[Conan O'Brien]], [[Frank Mula]] and future show runners [[Bill Oakley]] and [[Josh Weinstein]] received their first writing credits. One-time writers for the season include [[Adam I. Lapidus]], [[Gary Apple]] and [[Michael Carrington]], the latter who returned to voice characters in "[[Simpson Tide]]" and "[[Million-Dollar Abie]]".<ref name="Carrington">{{cite video | people=Carrington, Michael|date=2004|title=The Simpsons season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Cape Feare"| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref>
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|65 - 6
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|November 3, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Rich Moore
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|John Swartzelder
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|9F03
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|66 - 7
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''[[Treehouse of Horror II|"]]Marge Gets a Job"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|November 5, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jeffery Lynch
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|9F05
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
'''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.
+
Season 4 was also the conception of a feature length ''Simpsons'' film. ''The Simpsons''<nowiki>'</nowiki> creator, [[Matt Groening]], intended for a film to be made after the show ended although came to deny this when he commented, "but that [''The Simpsons''] was undone by good ratings". The season's premiere and Season 3 hold-over, "[[Kamp Krusty]]", was attempted to be adapted into a film but was scrapped when the producers were unable to make the episode to a suitable length of a feature length film, which tends to be 80 minutes minimum while it was 18 minutes as stated.<ref name="Al Jean.">{{cite video | people=Jean, Al|date=2004|title=The Simpsons The Complete Fourth Season DVD commentary for the episode "Kamp Krusty"| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref>
  
'''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.
+
This was the final season that had episodes animated by [[Klasky Csupo]], where the studio also animated [[The Simpsons shorts]] and the first three seasons of the show, including the two hold-over episodes of Season 4, "[[Kamp Krusty]]" and "[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]". ''The Simpsons'' would then be animated by [[Film Roman]] to this day.
  
'''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.
+
== Episodes ==
 +
{{Table|
 +
{{TH|Picture}}
 +
{{TH|#}}
 +
{{TH|Original title (top)<br>Alternate title (bottom)}}
 +
{{TH|Directed by}}
 +
{{TH|Written by}}
 +
{{TH|Original airdate}}
 +
{{TH|Prod. code}}
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Kamp Krusty promo.jpg|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|60 - 1}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Kamp Krusty]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[David M. Stern]]}}
 +
{{TB|September 24, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|8F24}}
 +
{{TCsT|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 children 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.|7|color=white}}
  
'''Homer's Nightmare:''' In an effort to create the ultimate worker, Mr. Burns transplants Homer's brain into a robot.
+
{{TBT|[[File:A Streetcar Named Marge.png|200px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|61 - 2}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|67 - 8
+
{{TB|'''"[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"New Kid on the Block"'''
+
{{TB|[[Rich Moore]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|November 12, 1992
+
{{TB|[[Jeff Martin]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Wes Archer
+
{{TB|October 1, 1992}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Conan O'Brian
+
{{TB|8F18}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|9F06
+
{{TCsT|Marge auditions for the part of Blanche DuBois in a local musical production of ''{{W2|A Streetcar Named Desire|play}}'', directed by community theatre personality Llewellyn Sinclair. Homer, however, is completely unsupportive of Marge's effort. When Homer's apathy motivates Marge to channels her anger and resentment into her acting, she impresses Sinclair 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 (run by Sinclair's sister) which takes away her and the other babies' pacifiers, and Maggie leads the babies in a revolt to get them back.
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|68 - 9
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''[[Life on the Fast Lane|"]][[Saturdays of Thunder]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|November 14,1991
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jim Reardon
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Ken Levine & David Isaacs
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F07
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
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 will not 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 is driving. Homer goes to the race, wishes Bart luck, and he wins. Bart and Homer then celebrate the victory.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|69 - 10
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"[[Flaming Moe's]]"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|November 21,1991
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Rich Moore & Alan Smart
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Robert Cohen
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F08
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|70 - 11
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
 
[[Burns Verkaufen der Kraftwerk|'''"Burns Verkaufen der Kraftwerk"''']]
 
  
"Burns Sells the Power Plant"*
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Jon Lovitz]] as [[Llewellyn Sinclair]] and [[Ms. Sinclair]] and [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Troy McClure]] and [[Lionel Hutz]]|7|color=white}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|December 5,1991
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Mark Kirkland
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jon Vitti
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F09
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|
 
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.
 
  
* - An English translation of the original German title.
+
{{TBT|[[File:Homer the Heretic.png|200px]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|62 - 3}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|71 - 12
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer the Heretic]]"'''}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
+
{{TB|[[Jim Reardon]]}}
[[I Married Marge|'''"I Married Marge"''']]
+
{{TB|[[George Meyer]]}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|December 26, 1991
+
{{TB|October 8, 1992}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jeffrey Lynch
+
{{TB|9F01}}
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
+
{{TCsT|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. Flanders rescues Homer from the burning house, and the volunteer fire department puts out the fire. 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.|7|color=white}}
Jeff Martin
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F10
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|72 - 13
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
 
[[Radio Bart|'''"Radio Bart"''']]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|January 9, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Carlos Baeza
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jon Vitti
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F11
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|73 - 14
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|[[Lisa the Greek|'''"Lisa the Greek"''']]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|January 23, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Rich Moore
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F12
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|74 - 15
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|[[Homer Alone|'''"Homer Alone"''']]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|February 6, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Mark Kirkland
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|David M. Stern
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F14
 
|-
 
| colspan="6"|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|75 - 16
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"Bart the Lover"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|February 13, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Carlos Baeza
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jon Vitti
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F16
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|76 - 17
 
| style="background-color: #E3F2FF; text-align: center; "|'''"Homer at the Bat"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|February 20, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jim Reardon
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|John Swartzwelder
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(227, 242, 255); "|8F13
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|77 - 18
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"Separate Vocations"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|February 27, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jeffrey Lynch
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|George Meyer
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F15
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|78 - 19
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"Dog of Death"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|March 12, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jim Reardon
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|John Swartzwelder
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F17
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|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.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|79 - 20
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"Colonel Homer"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|March 26, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Mark Kirkland
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "| Matt Groening
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F19
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|Homer meets a barmaid named Lurleen Lumpkin, who possess a talent for singing. He tries to make her famous by being her manager on her way to be a singer. He does not seem to know most of the time that Lurleen has fallen in love in Homer, which prompts him to consider the importance of his marriage with an upset Marge, who thinks that he is having an affair on her than his wife.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
 
80 - 21
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|
 
'''"Black Widower"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|April 9, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|David Silverman
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jon Vitti,Thomas Chastain and Sam Simon
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F20
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|Sideshow Bob is released from prison and has a relationship with Selma. Bart is suspicious about this so called renewal of him, with Bob's history deeming him sinister after an attempt to frame Krusty the Klown. Bart discovers that he is planning to kill her by a gas explosion with her cigarette. He proceeds to prevent this, saving Selma's life and having Bob arrested again.
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|81 - 22
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|'''"The Otto Show"'''
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|April 23, 1992
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Wes Archer
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|Jeff Martin
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: #E3F2FF; "|8F21
 
|-
 
| colspan="6" style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|Otto finds out that he had never had an official license after damaging a school bus, resulting in being fired by authorities. He is also evicted from his home and moves in with the Simpsons, while teaching Bart how to play a guitar
 
|}
 
  
==DVD Release==
+
{{TBT|[[File:Lisa the b queen.gif|200px]]}}
Season 4 was released on DVD in its entirety as '''[[The Complete Second Season|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.
+
{{TB|63 - 4}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Lisa the Beauty Queen]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jeff Martin]]}}
 +
{{TB|October 15, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|9F02}}
 +
{{TCsT|Lisa feels that 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. Lisa is reluctant to enter, particularly when she sees the competition she faces from seasoned pageant participant Amber Dempsey. However, Lisa does quite well, finishing in second place to Amber. Lisa then becomes Little Miss Springfield by default after Amber is hit by lightning and hospitalized for her injuries. Lisa enjoys the perks of her reign (among other things, going on a USO tour with Bob Hope) 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.
  
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" style="width: 930px; "
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Bob Hope]] as {{Ch|Bob Hope|himself}}|7|color=white}}
| colspan="6" style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(226, 199, 221); "|[[The Complete Second Season|'''The Complete Third Season Boxset''']]
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror III - Title Card.png|200px]]}}
! colspan="3" style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(247, 240, 245); "|'''Set Details'''
+
{{TB|64 - 5}}
! colspan="3" style="text-align: center; width: 50%; background-color: rgb(247, 240, 245); "|'''Special Features'''
+
{{TB|'''"[[Treehouse of Horror III]]"'''
|-
+
"The Simpsons Halloween Special III"}}
| colspan="3"|
+
{{TB|[[Carlos Baeza]]}}
*24 episodes
+
{{TB|{{small|Part 1:}} [[Al Jean]] & [[Mike Reiss]]<br>{{small|Part 2:}} [[Jay Kogen]] & [[Wallace Wolodarsky]]<br>{{small|Part 3:}} [[Sam Simon]] and [[Jon Vitti]]}}
*4-disc set
+
{{TB|October 29, 1992}}
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspect_ratio_(image)#4:3_standard 1.33:1 aspect ratio]
+
{{TB|9F04}}
*Languages:
+
{{TCsT|'''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.
**English ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolby_Digital Dolby Digital] 5.1, with subtitles)
+
 
**French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround)
+
'''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.
**Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround,with subtitles)
+
 
| colspan="6" rowspan="6" style="vertical-align: top"|
+
'''Clown Without Pity''': Homer has forgotten Bart's birthday, and as a last-minute gift 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.
*Optional commentaries for all 24 episodes, plus four [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_egg easter egg] commentaries featuring either [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Jean Al Jean] or [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Reiss Mike Reiss]
+
 
 +
'''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.|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Itchy and scratchy the movie.gif|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|65 - 6}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Rich Moore]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
 +
{{TB|November 2, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|9F03}}
 +
{{TCsT|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 ''The Itchy & Scratchy Movie'', which has just come out and all the children are eager to see it. Bart tries to change Homer's mind by comparing the movie to the Apollo 11 landing and asking how Homer would have felt if he had been forced to miss watching it on TV, but Homer is unmoved. Bart later tries to go to the movie on his own, but finds he has been banned (due to Homer having told the theatre to deny him entry). In spite of all his attempts, Bart 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.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Neil Armstrong]] as {{Ch|Neil Armstrong|himself}} (via archived audio).|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Marge gets a job.gif|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|66 - 7}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Marge Gets a Job]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jeff Lynch]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Bill Oakley]] & [[Josh Weinstein]]}}
 +
{{TB|November 5, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|9F05}}
 +
{{TCsT|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.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Tom Jones]] as {{Ch|Tom Jones|himself}} and [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Troy McClure]] and [[Lionel Hutz]].|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Laura in Red Dress (New Kid on the Block).png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|67 - 8}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[New Kid on the Block]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Conan O'Brian]]}}
 +
{{TB|November 12, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|9F06}}
 +
{{TCsT|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.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Sara Gilbert]] as [[Laura Powers]] and [[Pamela Reed]] as [[Ruth Powers]].|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Mr. Plow promo.jpg|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|68 - 9}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Mr. Plow]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jim Reardon]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jon Vitti]]}}
 +
{{TB|November 19, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|9F07}}
 +
{{TCsT|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.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Adam West]] as {{Ch|Adam West|himself}} and [[Linda Ronstadt]] as {{Ch|Linda Ronstadt|herself}}|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Lisa's First Word promo.jpg|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|69 - 10}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Lisa's First Word]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jeff Martin]]}}
 +
{{TB|December 3, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|9F08}}
 +
{{TCsT|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."
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Elizabeth Taylor]] as [[Maggie Simpson]].|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Homer's Triple Bypass.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|70 - 11}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Homer's Triple Bypass]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[David Silverman]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Gary Apple]] & [[Michael Carrington]]}}
 +
{{TB|December 17, 1992}}
 +
{{TB|9F09}}
 +
{{TCsT|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.|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Marge vs. the Monorail promo.jpg|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|71 - 12}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Marge vs. the Monorail]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Rich Moore]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Conan O'Brien]]}}
 +
{{TB|January 14, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F10}}
 +
{{TCsT|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 another town 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.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Leonard Nimoy]] as {{Ch|Leonard Nimoy|himself}} and [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Lyle Lanley]].|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Selma's Choice.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|72 - 13}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Selma's Choice]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Carlos Baeza]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[David M. Stern]]}}
 +
{{TB|January 21, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F11}}
 +
{{TCsT|Marge's, Patty's, and Selma's Aunt Gladys passes away, and in her video will, Gladys admonishes Patty and Selma to raise families rather than die alone as she did. Selma takes the advice to heart, investigating and discarding several possibilities for having a child. Meanwhile, Homer gets food poisoning from eating a rotten sandwich, and it looks like a planned family trip to Duff Gardens will be postponed again (the first postponement was for Aunt Gladys's funeral). Marge asks Selma to take Bart and Lisa, and she agrees. At Duff Gardens, the children get into all kinds of trouble, causing Selma to think twice about having a child. As a substitute, she adopts Gladys's pet iguana, Jub-Jub, who had originally been willed to Selma's, Patty's, and Marge's mother Jacqueline.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Troy McClure]].|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Brother from the Same Planet.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|73 - 14}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Brother from the Same Planet]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jeff Lynch]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jon Vitti]]}}
 +
{{TB|February 4, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F12}}
 +
{{TCsT|Fed up with Homer's neglect, Bart signs up with "Bigger Brothers", a mentor program, and is matched with a hip, cool, and caring young man named Tom. Homer finds out, and for revenge he joins Bigger Brothers as a mentor and is matched with an orphan boy named Pepe. When Homer and Tom finally meet, they get into a fight, Homer and Bart reconcile, and Tom takes Pepe under his wing. Meanwhile, Lisa struggles with an addiction to the 900-number hotline of a young celebrity named Corey, running up huge phone bills until she is caught and kicks her habit.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Phil Hartman]] as {{ap|Tom|Brother from the Same Planet}}.|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:I Love Lisa promo.jpg|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|74 - 15}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[I Love Lisa]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Frank Mula]]}}
 +
{{TB|February 11, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F13}}
 +
{{TCsT|When Ralph doesn't get any cards for Valentine's Day, Lisa feels sorry for him and gives him a card to cheer him up. Ralph misinterprets the gesture and falls in love with Lisa, relentlessly pursuing her to the point of getting the two of them cast as George and Martha Washington in the Presidents' Day Pageant. Eventually, Lisa tells Ralph (on live TV) that she was never interested in him and only gave him the card out of pity. Ralph is humiliated and heartbroken, but he gives a brilliant performance as George Washington, moving the audience (and Lisa) to tears. After the play, Ralph and Lisa agree to be friends.|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Duffless.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|75 - 16}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Duffless]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jim Reardon]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[David M. Stern]]}}
 +
{{TB|February 18, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F14}}
 +
{{TCsT|Homer is arrested for drunk driving, and his license is revoked and he is ordered to attend traffic school and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Marge persuades Homer to give up beer for a month, and the experience of living without beer gives him a whole new outlook on life. When the month is up, Homer is tempted to start drinking again, but passes up beer at Moe's Tavern in favor of bicycling with Marge. Meanwhile, Bart destroys Lisa's science fair project, a large genetically engineered tomato, and she replaces it with a project that compares the intelligence of Bart and a hamster.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Lionel Hutz]] and [[Troy McClure]].|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:Last Exit to Springfield.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|76 - 17}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Last Exit to Springfield]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Mark Kirkland]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jay Kogen]] & [[Wallace Wolodarsky]]}}
 +
{{TB|March 11, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F15}}
 +
{{TCsT|Springfield Nuclear Power Plant announces its intention to cancel the dental plan, and the Simpsons have just learned that Lisa needs braces. Homer realizes that he needs the plan to pay for Lisa's braces, and almost before he knows it, he finds himself leading the power plant employees' union in a strike to win back the dental plan. Lisa, meantime, is forced to wear cheap, but large and outdated, braces that look hideous. In spite of Homer's bumbling, Mr. Burns is convinced that Homer is a master negotiator, and a long standoff ensures, during which the plant uses tactics such as shutting off power to the entire town. Burns finally agrees to bring back the dental plan on the condition that Homer step down as union leader. Homer eagerly agrees and Lisa gets her new braces.
 +
 
 +
'''Guest starring:''' [[Joyce Brothers]] as {{Ch|Joyce Brothers|herself}}.|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:So It's Come to This A Simpsons Clip Show.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|77 - 18}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Carlos Baeza]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jon Vitti]]}}
 +
{{TB|April 1, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F17}}
 +
{{TCsT|For an April Fool's Day prank on Homer, Bart shakes a can of Duff Beer in a paint shaker, then leaves the beer in the refrigerator for Homer to find. When Homer opens the beer, the resulting explosion blows the roof off the house and puts Homer into a coma. During his coma, the family reminisce by way of clips from previous episodes. Homer shows some signs of life during the stories, but when Bart confesses to the shaken beer prank, Homer immediately wakes up and begins strangling Bart. The rest of the family are glad to see that Homer has recovered.|7|color=white}}
 +
 
 +
{{TBT|[[File:The Front.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|78 - 19}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[The Front]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Rich Moore]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Adam I. Lapidus]]}}
 +
{{TB|April 15, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F16}}
 +
{{TCsT|Disappointed with the quality of recent ''Itchy & Scratchy'' episodes, Bart and Lisa decide to write one of their own and submit it to Roger Meyers, CEO of the cartoon's studio. Meyers rejects their script out of hand because Bart and Lisa are children, thus (in his view) too young to be cartoon writers. Bart and Lisa re-submit the script under Grampa's name, and this time it is accepted. Grampa finds himself with a new job as an ''Itchy & Scratchy'' writer, with Bart and Lisa doing the creative work while Grampa gets the credit. The front falls through, however, when Grampa's writing wins him an award, he sees the cartoon for the first time, and in his acceptance speech he denounces violence in cartoons. Meanwhile, Homer and Marge attend their high school reunion and learn that Homer never officially graduated because he failed a science class.
  
*Trivia tracks for "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonel_Homer Colonel Homer]"
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Brooke Shields]] as {{Ch|Brooke Shields|herself}}.|7|color=white}}
*Storyboards
 
*Commercials
 
*Easter egg audio outtakes
 
*Multi Language Featurette
 
*Clip from the 1991 [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macy%27s_Thanksgiving_Day_Parade Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade] featuring a balloon of Bart
 
*Jukebox Feature (11 songs)
 
*Previously unseen promo footage of Colonel Homer
 
|-
 
! colspan="3" style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(247, 240, 245); "|'''Release Dates'''
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; "|Region 1
 
| style="text-align: center; "|Region 2
 
| style="text-align: center; vertical-align: baseline; "|Region 4
 
|-
 
| style="text-align: center; "|26th August 2003
 
| style="text-align: center; "|6th October 2003
 
| style="text-align: center; "|22nd October 2003
 
|}
 
  
==Awards==
+
{{TBT|[[File:Whacking Day.png|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|79 - 20}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Whacking Day]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jeff Lynch]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
 +
{{TB|April 29, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F18}}
 +
{{TCsT|It's time for Whacking Day, a Springfield holiday where snakes are driven to the town square and beaten to death, a tradition dating back to town founder Jebediah Springfield. Lisa speaks out against the violence, but no one listens. Bart, who has become a serious student since being expelled from Springfield Elementary, discovers that Jebediah couldn't have started Whacking Day and learns that snakes are attracted to bass sounds. Lisa enlists the help of Barry White and his smooth bass singing voice to lure the snakes to the Simpson home where they'll be safe. The plan succeeds and Bart tells the town the truth about Whacking Day: It was actually invented in the 1920s as an excuse to beat up the Irish. The townspeople renounce the holiday, and Principal Skinner allows Bart to return to school.
  
Season 3 won one Emmy award. Six voice actors shared the Emmy for "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primetime_Emmy_Award_for_Outstanding_Voice-Over_Performance Outstanding Voice-Over Performance]":
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Barry White]] as {{Ch|Barry White|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
  
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Cartwright Nancy Cartwright] as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bart_Simpson Bart Simpson] in "[[Separate Vocations]]"
+
{{TBT|[[File:Marge in Chains promo.jpg|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|80 - 21}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Marge in Chains]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[Jim Reardon]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[Bill Oakley]] & [[Josh Weinstein]]}}
 +
{{TB|May 6, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F20}}
 +
{{TCsT| Marge accidentally takes an item from the Kwik-E-Mart without paying, and is sentenced to thirty days in prison for shoplifting. Her absence is felt at home, as the house turns into a total mess. Marge's absence also impacts the entire town, as without her marshmallow squares, a bake sale fails to raise enough money for the Springfield Parks Commission to buy a statue of Abraham Lincoln. Instead, the Commission gets a statue of Jimmy Carter, but the townspeople dislike it and a riot breaks out. To restore order, Mayor Quimby orders Marge to be released early, and everyone welcomes her back.
  
*[[Dan Castellaneta]] as [[Homer Simpson]] in "[[Lisa's Pony]]"
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[David Crosby]] as {{Ch|David Crosby|himself}} and [[Phil Hartman]] as [[Lionel Hutz]] and [[Troy McClure]].|7|color=white}}
  
*[[Julie Kavner]] as [[Marge Simpson]] in "[[I Married Marge]]"
+
{{TBT|[[File:Krusty Gets Kancelled.gif|200px]]}}
 +
{{TB|81 - 22}}
 +
{{TB|'''"[[Krusty Gets Kancelled]]"'''}}
 +
{{TB|[[David Silverman]]}}
 +
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
 +
{{TB|May 13, 1993}}
 +
{{TB|9F19}}
 +
{{TCsT|A new children's TV program, featuring a ventriloquist's dummy named Gabbo and airing opposite the Krusty the Clown show, is an instant success. Krusty's show, meanwhile, declines in ratings and popularity and is soon cancelled. Bart and Lisa are uninmpressed with Gabbo and manage to record him on a live TV camera insulting the children of Springfield, creating a scandal which decreases Gabbo's popularity. Bart and Lisa then convince several of Krusty's celebrity friends (Bette Midler, Johnny Carson, Luke Perry, Hugh Hefner and the Red Hot Chili Peppers) to take part in a special comeback program for Krusty. The Krusty Comeback Special is very successful, and Krusty's show returns to the air.
  
*[[Jackie Mason]] as Rabbi [[Hyman Krustofski]] in "[[Like Father, Like Clown]]"
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Johnny Carson]] as {{Ch|Johnny Carson|himself}}, [[Hugh Hefner]] as {{Ch|Hugh Hefner |himself}}, [[Bette Midler]] as {{Ch|Bette Midler|herself}}, [[Luke Perry]] as {{Ch|Luke Perry|himself}}, [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]] as {{Chs|Red Hot Chili Peppers|themselves}}, [[Elizabeth Taylor]] as {{Ch|Elizabeth Taylor|herself}} and [[Barry White]] as {{Ch|Barry White|himself}}.|7|color=white}}
 +
}}
  
*[[Yeardley Smith]] as [[Lisa Simpson]] in "[[Lisa the Greek]]"
+
== DVD release ==
 +
Season 4 was released on DVD in its entirety as [[The Complete Fourth Season]] on August 26, 2003 in {{W|Region 1#Region codes and countries|Region 1}}, October 6, 2003 in {{W|Region 2#Region codes and countries|Region 2}} and October 22, 2003 in {{W|Region 4#Region codes and countries|Region 4}} by 20th Century Fox. While primarily containing the original 22 episodes, the boxset also consists on bonus features such as storyboards.
 +
 
 +
{{Table|
 +
{{TH|'''The Complete Fourth Season'''|colspan=4}}
 +
{{THT|'''Set Details'''|colspan=3}}
 +
{{TH|'''Special Features'''}}
 +
{{TCsT|
 +
*22 episodes
 +
*4-disc set
 +
*{{W|Aspect ratio (image)#4:3 standard|1.33:1 aspect ratio}}
 +
**Languages:
 +
**English ({{W|Dolby Digital}} 5.1, with subtitles)
 +
**Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0, with subtitles)
 +
**French (Dolby Digital 2.0)|3}}
 +
{{TRs|
 +
*Optional commentaries for all 22 episodes
 +
*Introduction from [[Matt Groening]]
 +
*Deleted/Extended Scenes with optional commentary
 +
*Featurette: {{W|A Streetcar Named Marge#Controversy|The Cajun Controversy}}
 +
*Featurette: {{W|History of The Simpsons#Feud with George H. W. Bush|Bush vs. Simpsons}}
 +
*Animatic/StoryBoards for;
 +
**"[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]"
 +
**"[[Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie]]"
 +
**"[[Homer's Triple Bypass]]"
 +
**"[[So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show]]"
 +
*Commercials
 +
*Easter egg bonus commentary and sketches|4}}
 +
{{THT|'''Release Dates'''|colspan=3}}
 +
{{THT|Region 1}}
 +
{{TH|Region 2}}
 +
{{TH|Region 4}}
 +
{{TBT|15 June 2004}}
 +
{{TB|2 August 2004}}
 +
{{TB|25 August 2004}}
 +
}}
  
*[[Marcia Wallace]] as [[Edna Krabappel]] in "[[Bart the Lover]]"
+
== Production ==
The show received one other Emmy nomination for Season 3: "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primetime_Emmy_Award_for_Outstanding_Animated_Program_(For_Programming_less_than_One_Hour) Outstanding Animated Program]" for "[[Radio Bart]]."
+
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 succeeding season, i.e., Season 4, with Season 3's production code, '''8F'''xx. 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 '''9F'''xx.
  
[[Michael Jackson]] and [[Kipp Lennon]] guest-starred in "[[Stark Raving Dad]]." Jackson appeared under the pseudonym of "John Jay Smith" and voiced his character's speaking parts, while Lennon performed all of the singing. Jackson also wrote the song "Lisa, It's Your Birthday." After the episode was produced, the show instituted a policy that celebrities wishing to guest-star on the show had to be willing to be credited under their real names rather than using pseudonyms.
+
== Awards ==
 +
This was the first time the producers did not submit episodes for the "{{W|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 {{W|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series|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 "{{W|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance|Outstanding Voice-Over Performance}}" by Dan Castellaneta in "[[Mr. Plow]]"; an {{W|Annie Award}} for "Best Animated Television Program"; a {{W|Genesis Award}} for "Best Television Prime Time Animated Series" for "[[Whacking Day]]"; and a {{W|Saturn Award}} for "Best Television Series."
  
 +
== References ==
 +
{{Reflist}}
  
 +
{{Seasons}}
 +
{{PrevNext|Season 3|Season 5}}
  
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" style="font-size: 13px; color: black; background-color: white; height: 20px; width:100%; "
+
[[Category:Season 4| ]]
| colspan="22" style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 0); border-top-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); border-right-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); border-bottom-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); border-left-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); "|''[[The Simpsons|'''The Simpsons''']] ''(Seasons)
+
[[Category:Seasons|04]]
|-
+
[[Category:1992]]
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|[[Season 1|1]]
+
[[Category:1993]]
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); "|[[Season 2|2]]
 
| style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(226, 199, 221); border-top-color: rgb(226, 199, 221); border-right-color: rgb(226, 199, 221); border-bottom-color: rgb(226, 199, 221); border-left-color: rgb(226, 199, 221); "|'''3'''
 
| style="text-align: center; "|[[Season 4|4]]
 
| style="text-align: center; "|[[Season 5|5]]
 
| style="text-align: center; "|6
 
| style="text-align: center; "|7
 
| style="text-align: center; "|8
 
| style="text-align: center; "|9
 
| style="text-align: center; "|10
 
| style="text-align: center; "|11
 
| style="text-align: center; "|12
 
| style="text-align: center; "|13
 
| style="text-align: center; "|14
 
| style="text-align: center; "|15
 
| style="text-align: center; "|16
 
| style="text-align: center; "|17
 
| style="text-align: center; "|18
 
| style="text-align: center; "|19
 
| style="text-align: center; "|20
 
| style="text-align: center; "|21
 
| style="text-align: center; "|22
 
|-
 
| colspan="22" style="background-color: rgb(247, 240, 245); text-align: center; "|'''Season 3 |''' 1991 - 1992 '''| '''24 episodes''' |''' 7Fxx - 8Fxx
 
|-
 
| colspan="11" style="text-align: center; background-color: rgb(239, 245, 247); "|Previous - '''Season 2'''
 
| colspan="11" style="text-align: center; width: 50%; background-color: rgb(224, 236, 248); "|Next - '''Season 4'''
 
|}
 
[[Category:Seasons|4]]
 

Revision as of 09:44, January 17, 2023

Season 3
Season 4
Season 5
Season 4
Season 4 iTunes logo.jpg
Season Information
Original run: September 24, 1992 – May 13, 1993
No. of episodes: 22
Previous season: 3
Next season: 5
DVD boxset: The Complete Fourth Season

The fourth season began on September 24, 1992 with the first episode, "Kamp Krusty", and ended on May 13, 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 also marked the first attempt of a Simpsons feature-length film. 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. It would not be until over 14 years later that a Simpsons film would finally be made in a form of The Simpsons Movie, which was released on July 27, 2007 worldwide.

All 22 episodes of Season 4, including extras, were released on DVD on June 15, 2004 in Region 1, August 2, 2004 in Region 2 and August 25, 2004 in Region 4.

History

The fourth season was executively produced by Al Jean and Mike Reiss, who also were showrunners of the previous season. Some of The Simpsons' original writers, dubbed as the "original team"[1] as they had been writing for the show since the first season, had left after the completion of "Cape Feare", which was the final episode made in Season 4 though aired in the following season as a hold-over episode.[1] Jay Kogen, Wallace Wolodarsky, Sam Simon,Jeff Martin, David M. Stern and Jon Vitti left The Simpsons following the season though the latter two returned to write more episodes.

After their role as showrunners of The Simpsons ended in Season 4, Jean and Reiss left to produce their own animated series, The Critic. Director Rich Moore also left to work on Jean and Reiss' show. The former Simpsons staff eventually returned to work on The Simpsons after the failure of The Critic. Jean and Reiss returned to write more Simpsons episodes, with the former becoming showrunner since Season 13.[2] And Moore returning years later to assist the animation of The Simpsons Movie[3] George Meyer and John Swartzwelder remained while Conan O'Brien, Frank Mula and future show runners Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein received their first writing credits. One-time writers for the season include Adam I. Lapidus, Gary Apple and Michael Carrington, the latter who returned to voice characters in "Simpson Tide" and "Million-Dollar Abie".[4]

Season 4 was also the conception of a feature length Simpsons film. The Simpsons' creator, Matt Groening, intended for a film to be made after the show ended although came to deny this when he commented, "but that [The Simpsons] was undone by good ratings". The season's premiere and Season 3 hold-over, "Kamp Krusty", was attempted to be adapted into a film but was scrapped when the producers were unable to make the episode to a suitable length of a feature length film, which tends to be 80 minutes minimum while it was 18 minutes as stated.[5]

This was the final season that had episodes animated by Klasky Csupo, where the studio also animated The Simpsons shorts and the first three seasons of the show, including the two hold-over episodes of Season 4, "Kamp Krusty" and "A Streetcar Named Marge". The Simpsons would then be animated by Film Roman to this day.

Episodes

Picture # Original title (top)
Alternate title (bottom)
Directed by Written by Original airdate Prod. code
Kamp Krusty promo.jpg 60 - 1 "Kamp Krusty" Mark Kirkland David M. Stern September 24, 1992 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 children 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.
A Streetcar Named Marge.png 61 - 2 "A Streetcar Named Marge" Rich Moore Jeff Martin October 1, 1992 8F18
Marge auditions for the part of Blanche DuBois in a local musical production of A Streetcar Named Desire, directed by community theatre personality Llewellyn Sinclair. Homer, however, is completely unsupportive of Marge's effort. When Homer's apathy motivates Marge to channels her anger and resentment into her acting, she impresses Sinclair 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 (run by Sinclair's sister) which takes away her and the other babies' pacifiers, and Maggie leads the babies in a revolt to get them back.

Guest starring: Jon Lovitz as Llewellyn Sinclair and Ms. Sinclair and Phil Hartman as Troy McClure and Lionel Hutz

Homer the Heretic.png 62 - 3 "Homer the Heretic" Jim Reardon George Meyer October 8, 1992 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. Flanders rescues Homer from the burning house, and the volunteer fire department puts out the fire. 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.
Lisa the b queen.gif 63 - 4 "Lisa the Beauty Queen" Mark Kirkland Jeff Martin October 15, 1992 9F02
Lisa feels that 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. Lisa is reluctant to enter, particularly when she sees the competition she faces from seasoned pageant participant Amber Dempsey. However, Lisa does quite well, finishing in second place to Amber. Lisa then becomes Little Miss Springfield by default after Amber is hit by lightning and hospitalized for her injuries. Lisa enjoys the perks of her reign (among other things, going on a USO tour with Bob Hope) 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.

Guest starring: Bob Hope as himself

Treehouse of Horror III - Title Card.png 64 - 5 "Treehouse of Horror III"

"The Simpsons Halloween Special III"

Carlos Baeza Part 1: Al Jean & Mike Reiss
Part 2: Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky
Part 3: Sam Simon and Jon Vitti
October 29, 1992 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 as a last-minute gift 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.

Itchy and scratchy the movie.gif 65 - 6 "Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie" Rich Moore John Swartzwelder November 2, 1992 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 The Itchy & Scratchy Movie, which has just come out and all the children are eager to see it. Bart tries to change Homer's mind by comparing the movie to the Apollo 11 landing and asking how Homer would have felt if he had been forced to miss watching it on TV, but Homer is unmoved. Bart later tries to go to the movie on his own, but finds he has been banned (due to Homer having told the theatre to deny him entry). In spite of all his attempts, Bart 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.

Guest starring: Neil Armstrong as himself (via archived audio).

Marge gets a job.gif 66 - 7 "Marge Gets a Job" Jeff Lynch Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein November 5, 1992 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.

Guest starring: Tom Jones as himself and Phil Hartman as Troy McClure and Lionel Hutz.

Laura in Red Dress (New Kid on the Block).png 67 - 8 "New Kid on the Block" Wes Archer Conan O'Brian November 12, 1992 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.

Guest starring: Sara Gilbert as Laura Powers and Pamela Reed as Ruth Powers.

Mr. Plow promo.jpg 68 - 9 "Mr. Plow" Jim Reardon Jon Vitti November 19, 1992 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.

Guest starring: Adam West as himself and Linda Ronstadt as herself

Lisa's First Word promo.jpg 69 - 10 "Lisa's First Word" Mark Kirkland Jeff Martin December 3, 1992 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."

Guest starring: Elizabeth Taylor as Maggie Simpson.

Homer's Triple Bypass.png 70 - 11 "Homer's Triple Bypass" David Silverman Gary Apple & Michael Carrington December 17, 1992 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.
Marge vs. the Monorail promo.jpg 71 - 12 "Marge vs. the Monorail" Rich Moore Conan O'Brien January 14, 1993 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 another town 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.

Guest starring: Leonard Nimoy as himself and Phil Hartman as Lyle Lanley.

Selma's Choice.png 72 - 13 "Selma's Choice" Carlos Baeza David M. Stern January 21, 1993 9F11
Marge's, Patty's, and Selma's Aunt Gladys passes away, and in her video will, Gladys admonishes Patty and Selma to raise families rather than die alone as she did. Selma takes the advice to heart, investigating and discarding several possibilities for having a child. Meanwhile, Homer gets food poisoning from eating a rotten sandwich, and it looks like a planned family trip to Duff Gardens will be postponed again (the first postponement was for Aunt Gladys's funeral). Marge asks Selma to take Bart and Lisa, and she agrees. At Duff Gardens, the children get into all kinds of trouble, causing Selma to think twice about having a child. As a substitute, she adopts Gladys's pet iguana, Jub-Jub, who had originally been willed to Selma's, Patty's, and Marge's mother Jacqueline.

Guest starring: Phil Hartman as Troy McClure.

Brother from the Same Planet.png 73 - 14 "Brother from the Same Planet" Jeff Lynch Jon Vitti February 4, 1993 9F12
Fed up with Homer's neglect, Bart signs up with "Bigger Brothers", a mentor program, and is matched with a hip, cool, and caring young man named Tom. Homer finds out, and for revenge he joins Bigger Brothers as a mentor and is matched with an orphan boy named Pepe. When Homer and Tom finally meet, they get into a fight, Homer and Bart reconcile, and Tom takes Pepe under his wing. Meanwhile, Lisa struggles with an addiction to the 900-number hotline of a young celebrity named Corey, running up huge phone bills until she is caught and kicks her habit.

Guest starring: Phil Hartman as Tom.

I Love Lisa promo.jpg 74 - 15 "I Love Lisa" Wes Archer Frank Mula February 11, 1993 9F13
When Ralph doesn't get any cards for Valentine's Day, Lisa feels sorry for him and gives him a card to cheer him up. Ralph misinterprets the gesture and falls in love with Lisa, relentlessly pursuing her to the point of getting the two of them cast as George and Martha Washington in the Presidents' Day Pageant. Eventually, Lisa tells Ralph (on live TV) that she was never interested in him and only gave him the card out of pity. Ralph is humiliated and heartbroken, but he gives a brilliant performance as George Washington, moving the audience (and Lisa) to tears. After the play, Ralph and Lisa agree to be friends.
Duffless.png 75 - 16 "Duffless" Jim Reardon David M. Stern February 18, 1993 9F14
Homer is arrested for drunk driving, and his license is revoked and he is ordered to attend traffic school and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Marge persuades Homer to give up beer for a month, and the experience of living without beer gives him a whole new outlook on life. When the month is up, Homer is tempted to start drinking again, but passes up beer at Moe's Tavern in favor of bicycling with Marge. Meanwhile, Bart destroys Lisa's science fair project, a large genetically engineered tomato, and she replaces it with a project that compares the intelligence of Bart and a hamster.

Guest starring: Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz and Troy McClure.

Last Exit to Springfield.png 76 - 17 "Last Exit to Springfield" Mark Kirkland Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky March 11, 1993 9F15
Springfield Nuclear Power Plant announces its intention to cancel the dental plan, and the Simpsons have just learned that Lisa needs braces. Homer realizes that he needs the plan to pay for Lisa's braces, and almost before he knows it, he finds himself leading the power plant employees' union in a strike to win back the dental plan. Lisa, meantime, is forced to wear cheap, but large and outdated, braces that look hideous. In spite of Homer's bumbling, Mr. Burns is convinced that Homer is a master negotiator, and a long standoff ensures, during which the plant uses tactics such as shutting off power to the entire town. Burns finally agrees to bring back the dental plan on the condition that Homer step down as union leader. Homer eagerly agrees and Lisa gets her new braces.

Guest starring: Joyce Brothers as herself.

So It's Come to This A Simpsons Clip Show.png 77 - 18 "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show" Carlos Baeza Jon Vitti April 1, 1993 9F17
For an April Fool's Day prank on Homer, Bart shakes a can of Duff Beer in a paint shaker, then leaves the beer in the refrigerator for Homer to find. When Homer opens the beer, the resulting explosion blows the roof off the house and puts Homer into a coma. During his coma, the family reminisce by way of clips from previous episodes. Homer shows some signs of life during the stories, but when Bart confesses to the shaken beer prank, Homer immediately wakes up and begins strangling Bart. The rest of the family are glad to see that Homer has recovered.
The Front.png 78 - 19 "The Front" Rich Moore Adam I. Lapidus April 15, 1993 9F16
Disappointed with the quality of recent Itchy & Scratchy episodes, Bart and Lisa decide to write one of their own and submit it to Roger Meyers, CEO of the cartoon's studio. Meyers rejects their script out of hand because Bart and Lisa are children, thus (in his view) too young to be cartoon writers. Bart and Lisa re-submit the script under Grampa's name, and this time it is accepted. Grampa finds himself with a new job as an Itchy & Scratchy writer, with Bart and Lisa doing the creative work while Grampa gets the credit. The front falls through, however, when Grampa's writing wins him an award, he sees the cartoon for the first time, and in his acceptance speech he denounces violence in cartoons. Meanwhile, Homer and Marge attend their high school reunion and learn that Homer never officially graduated because he failed a science class.

Guest starring: Brooke Shields as herself.

Whacking Day.png 79 - 20 "Whacking Day" Jeff Lynch John Swartzwelder April 29, 1993 9F18
It's time for Whacking Day, a Springfield holiday where snakes are driven to the town square and beaten to death, a tradition dating back to town founder Jebediah Springfield. Lisa speaks out against the violence, but no one listens. Bart, who has become a serious student since being expelled from Springfield Elementary, discovers that Jebediah couldn't have started Whacking Day and learns that snakes are attracted to bass sounds. Lisa enlists the help of Barry White and his smooth bass singing voice to lure the snakes to the Simpson home where they'll be safe. The plan succeeds and Bart tells the town the truth about Whacking Day: It was actually invented in the 1920s as an excuse to beat up the Irish. The townspeople renounce the holiday, and Principal Skinner allows Bart to return to school.

Guest starring: Barry White as himself.

Marge in Chains promo.jpg 80 - 21 "Marge in Chains" Jim Reardon Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein May 6, 1993 9F20
Marge accidentally takes an item from the Kwik-E-Mart without paying, and is sentenced to thirty days in prison for shoplifting. Her absence is felt at home, as the house turns into a total mess. Marge's absence also impacts the entire town, as without her marshmallow squares, a bake sale fails to raise enough money for the Springfield Parks Commission to buy a statue of Abraham Lincoln. Instead, the Commission gets a statue of Jimmy Carter, but the townspeople dislike it and a riot breaks out. To restore order, Mayor Quimby orders Marge to be released early, and everyone welcomes her back.

Guest starring: David Crosby as himself and Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz and Troy McClure.

Krusty Gets Kancelled.gif 81 - 22 "Krusty Gets Kancelled" David Silverman John Swartzwelder May 13, 1993 9F19
A new children's TV program, featuring a ventriloquist's dummy named Gabbo and airing opposite the Krusty the Clown show, is an instant success. Krusty's show, meanwhile, declines in ratings and popularity and is soon cancelled. Bart and Lisa are uninmpressed with Gabbo and manage to record him on a live TV camera insulting the children of Springfield, creating a scandal which decreases Gabbo's popularity. Bart and Lisa then convince several of Krusty's celebrity friends (Bette Midler, Johnny Carson, Luke Perry, Hugh Hefner and the Red Hot Chili Peppers) to take part in a special comeback program for Krusty. The Krusty Comeback Special is very successful, and Krusty's show returns to the air.

Guest starring: Johnny Carson as himself, Hugh Hefner as himself, Bette Midler as herself, Luke Perry as himself, Red Hot Chili Peppers as themselves, Elizabeth Taylor as herself and Barry White as himself.


DVD release

Season 4 was released on DVD in its entirety as The Complete Fourth Season on August 26, 2003 in Region 1, October 6, 2003 in Region 2 and October 22, 2003 in Region 4 by 20th Century Fox. While primarily containing the original 22 episodes, the boxset also consists on bonus features such as storyboards.

The Complete Fourth Season
Set Details Special Features
  • 22 episodes
  • 4-disc set
  • 1.33:1 aspect ratio
    • Languages:
    • English (Dolby Digital 5.1, with subtitles)
    • Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0, with subtitles)
    • French (Dolby Digital 2.0)
Release Dates
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
15 June 2004 2 August 2004 25 August 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 succeeding 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."

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Vitti, Jon. The Simpsons season 5 DVD commentary for the episode "Cape Feare" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  2. Jean, Al. The Simpsons season 5 DVD commentary for the episode "Cape Feare" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  3. Anderson, Mike B.; Dean Moore, Steven; Moore, Rich; Silverman, David. Audio Director's commentary [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  4. Carrington, Michael. The Simpsons season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "Cape Feare" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  5. Jean, Al. The Simpsons The Complete Fourth Season DVD commentary for the episode "Kamp Krusty" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.


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Season 5