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Two Bad Neighbors

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Revision as of 02:26, August 1, 2009 by Joeyaa (talk) (Very minor consistency fix)
"Two Bad Neighbors"
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Episode Information
Showrunner: [[{{{showrunner}}}]]



"Two Bad Neighbors" is the 13th episode of The Simpsons' Season 7.

In September 1990, Barbara Bush said in an interview for People magazine that The Simpsons was the dumbest thing she had ever seen. Five years later, an episode had George H. W. Bush and Barbara Bush move to Springfield and leave after George gets involved in a feud with the Simpson family (in a style reminiscent of Dennis the Menace and Mr. Wilson; Barbara Bush acts just like Mrs. Wilson, even using her catchphrase "Oh, George..."). The The Simpsons: The Complete Fourth Season DVD set includes a special feature that presents an exchange of letters between the First Lady and show staff. In another address, Bush said that America needed to be more like The Waltons than The Simpsons, causing Bart to say they were a lot like the Waltons, since they were both praying for an end to the Depression.

Synopsis

Evergreen Terrace holds a garage sale. As Homer dances on the tables selling his junk, there is a diversion: the empty house across from Homer's is being moved into. It is occupied by Former President George Bush with his wife Barbara. Bart decides to visit, and Barbara takes a liking to him. However Bart's habit of calling adults by their first names and his overall annoying attitude does not do much for George. Eventually, after Bart accidentally shreds George's newly typed memoirs, the former President takes Bart across his knee and spanks him. Homer is outraged and confronts George. Both men vow to make trouble for each other.

Homer sends bottle-rockets at George's window. George puts up an anti-Bart-n'-Homer banner, which confuses everyone else so that doesn't last long. Homer then glues a rainbow wig on his opponent's head just before he is to give an important speech to a local club. George retaliates by chewing up the Simpsons' lawn with his car. Despite Barbara urging her husband to apologize, the confrontation continues. Homer and Bart are just making their way through the sewers to release locusts in George’s house, but he spots them and climbs down to fight. Finally, after pressure from his wife, George apologises, but sells the house as the neighbourhood clearly brought out the worst in him. The vacated house is immediately bought by Gerald Ford, who invites Homer to watch a football game with him, and to enjoy some beer and nachos at his house.

Trivia

  • Despite the hype over the appearance of George and Barbara Bush in this episode, they were actually voiced by regular cast members Harry Shearer and Tress MacNeille. Dan Castellaneta voiced Gerald Ford. This is actually the second appearance for Barbara Bush, although in the earlier cameo in "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington", she was voiced by Maggie Roswell and showed off the Presidential bathroom.
  • George Bush also appeared in the episodes "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington" (while he was President), "Mr. Plow," when Homer met him in a daydream, and Rosebud, not being allowed into Mr. Burns' birthday party because he was a "one-termer". This scene, however, was cut in syndication.
  • Gerald Ford also made an appearance in the episode Simpsoncalifragilisticexpiala(Annoyed Grunt)cious as a guest on the Krusty the Clown show.
  • This episode was inspired by the animosity towards the show by the Bushes from earlier in the series' run.
  • When Gerald Ford moves in at the end of the episode, the license plates for his two cars are MRDUH and LUV2SKI. The latter celebrates the former President's passion for skiing since he owned a house in Vail, Colorado in real life.
  • This episode sees the first appearance of Disco Stu.
  • In the DVD commentary for this episode, the writers claim that they were not even vaguely aware that George Bush had a younger son also named George W. Bush (at that time, he was Governor of Texas, later being chosen President of the United States of America in 2000), and Homer's reference to one of the cardboard cut-out sons as "George Bush Jr." was simply meant to be a joke about the stupidity of Homer and Bart's plan.
  • During the rummage sale, Marge is seen selling t-shirts with the words "I Didn't Do It" on them. This is a reference to "Bart Gets Famous", in which Bart said that line while he appeared in a sketch on the Krusty the Clown show. This is one of many examples of the writers reusing props that appeared in previous episodes.
  • Grampa saying he was spanked by Grover Cleveland on two non-consecutive occasions, is making a reference to Grover Cleveland serving two non-consecutive terms.
  • Lisa mentions that a possible motive for the Bushes moving there is that Springfield is located in one of the nine states that Bush has claimed residency in. This would narrow down Springfield's location to either California, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Texas, Virginia, or possibly Washington D.C..
    Check Season Seven, Episode 3F09 for reference
  • According to the DVD commentary, Wes Archer, the episodes' director, attempted to TP George H. W. Bush's house during his childhood.
  • When Bart is questioning George the first time they meet, Bart asks "How many times were YOU president, George?" This may be a reference to his loss to Bill Clinton when running for a second term. Also, the destruction of his memoirs after a lot of hard work may be meant as a comical reason to explain why, in real life, he does not plan to write them.
  • Homer is against spanking in this episode, yet in Two Dozen and One Greyhounds, he says he has "a hankerin' for some spankerin'".
  • The popular "Ayatollah Assa-hola" shirt being sold is shown twice with the second 'S' purposely being censored as to prevent an actual swear for showing. Marge's finger covers it the first time, the camera angle and a fold in the shirt covers in the next.
  • Lisa Simpson only has one line in this entire episode, simlar to how Marge Doesn't have any lines in Krusty Gets Kancelled.

Cultural references

  • At the beginning of this episode, Bart and Homer interrupt Apu singing the Cheap Trick song "Dream Police" while washing his car.
  • Homer asks Bush to "apologize for the tax hike", a reference to Bush creating a 31% income tax as part of the 1990 Budget Reconciliation Act, despite his 1988 campaign promise of no new taxes.
  • When Homer and Bart shoot bottle rockets at the Bush house, it parodies a scene similar to the "Desert Storm" operation of the 1991 Gulf War, which occurred when Bush was in office.
  • Bush uses a trick he "learned in CIA". Bush was director of the CIA from January 30, 1976 to January 20, 1977.
  • Bart references blowback from the "wig offensive," a reference to Bush's role as CIA chief.
  • Bush says that he'll ruin Homer "like a Japanese banquet", a reference to an incident that happened on January 8, 1992. During a state dinner, then-president Bush vomited on the lap of the Prime Minister of Japan, Kiichi Miyazawa.
  • Homer tricks Bush into coming to the door so he can glue a rainbow wig to his head by placing cardboard cutouts of Bush's sons in front of the door leading Bush to believe they're real. The sons represented are former President George W. Bush and Florida Governor Jeb Bush (it should be noted that the former son's reference was unintentional, as they didn't even know that George W. Bush existed at the time).
  • Bush is paid a visit by Mikhail Gorbachev. Homer calls him a "Commie friend" to Bush, referencing Gorbachev's role as the last leader of the Soviet Union before the fall of Communism and the thaw in relations between the two countries during Bush's term in office.
  • Homer attempts to persuade Marge not to sell his "Ayatollah Assa-hola" (Ayatollah Khomeni) t-shirt, claiming it works for any Ayatollah.
  • During the shot in which the shredded memoir is falling, a torn piece of paper briefly falls past the screen, with the only non-shredded words reading "V.P. Quayle" and "embarrassment."
  • When Bart and Bush are looking through a photo album, Bart says that Bob Mosbacher is "a dumb name."
  • When Homer calls Bush a "wimp", this is a reference to the Wimp Factor, a criticism of Bush during the 1988 Election claiming that Bush looked "too weak" to be a president.
  • Homer and Ford simultaneously fall over the sidewalk incline when the show ends. This is a parody of Gerald Ford's perceived clumsiness and trick knee (most notably when he fell down the stairs of Air Force One several times) while in office.
  • Barbara Bush says George and Homer got off on the wrong foot, claiming their relationship is "just like the Noriega thing - now he and George are the best of friends." This reference to the former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega is actually the opposite of the real situation: as CIA director, Bush had arranged for annual payments to General Noriega, but years later Bush launched Operation Just Cause to depose him.