Simpsonized! (Outside events parodied on the show)
“That’s odd. Usually the blood gets off on the second floor.” - Mr. Burns, in a parody of The Shining, watching blood flow from the elevators.
FOPS and DANDIES - Signs at the two separate entrances to the Vienna Opera House, parodying Amadeus
Rosebud - The Simpsons send up Citizen Kane with Mr. Burns and his bear Bobo.
“Doctor Zaius” - sung to the tune of “Rock Me Amadeus”, and performed in musical adaptation of The Planet of the Apes (re-named on the show as “Stop the Planet of the Apes I Want to Get Off!”, itself a play on the title of another musical, “Stop the World - I Want to Get Off!”)
2001: A Space Odyssey is referenced in “Deep Space Homer” in a few ways - thinking specifically of the zero-grav potato-chip-eating ballet set to “The Blue Danube.”
In “Bart vs. Australia,” the Simpson family is air lifted out of the US Embassy in Australia, referencing the helicopter evacuation of the US Embassy in South Vietnam during the Fall of Saigon.
[quote=“Prof.Pepperwinkle, post:6261, topic:972711, full:true”] Simpsonized! (Outside events parodied on the show)
“That’s odd. Usually the blood gets off on the second floor.” - Mr. Burns, in a parody of The Shining, watching blood flow from the elevators.
FOPS and DANDIES - Signs at the two separate entrances to the Vienna Opera House, parodying Amadeus
Rosebud - The Simpsons send up Citizen Kane with Mr. Burns and his bear Bobo.
“Doctor Zaius” - sung to the tune of “Rock Me Amadeus”, and performed in musical adaptation of The Planet of the Apes (re-named on the show as “Stop the Planet of the Apes I Want to Get Off!”, itself a play on the title of another musical, “Stop the World - I Want to Get Off!”)
2001: A Space Odyssey is referenced in “Deep Space Homer” in a few ways - thinking specifically of the zero-grav potato-chip-eating ballet set to “The Blue Danube.”
In “Bart vs. Australia,” the Simpson family is air lifted out of the US Embassy in Australia, referencing the helicopter evacuation of the US Embassy in South Vietnam during the Fall of Saigon.
Simpsonized! (Outside events parodied on the show)
“That’s odd. Usually the blood gets off on the second floor.” - Mr. Burns, in a parody of The Shining, watching blood flow from the elevators.
FOPS and DANDIES - Signs at the two separate entrances to the Vienna Opera House, parodying Amadeus
Rosebud - The Simpsons send up Citizen Kane with Mr. Burns and his bear Bobo.
“Doctor Zaius” - sung to the tune of “Rock Me Amadeus”, and performed in musical adaptation of The Planet of the Apes (re-named on the show as “Stop the Planet of the Apes I Want to Get Off!”, itself a play on the title of another musical, “Stop the World - I Want to Get Off!”)
2001: A Space Odyssey is referenced in “Deep Space Homer” in a few ways - thinking specifically of the zero-grav potato-chip-eating ballet set to “The Blue Danube.”
In “Bart vs. Australia,” the Simpson family is air lifted out of the US Embassy in Australia, referencing the helicopter evacuation of the US Embassy in South Vietnam during the Fall of Saigon.
“Who Shot Mr. Burns” - parody of Dallas’s “Who shot J.R.?” campaign.
Also in “Bart vs Australia”. The international incident regarding Bart’s punishment, parodied the issue with Michael Fey in Singapore.
Not long after Tony Blair became British PM, he provided his own voice on the show, welcoming the Simpsons to the UK and then flying away with his jetpack.
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
The first series appearance for the aliens Kang and Kodos; their cookbook (“How to Cook for Forty Humans”), and the entire segment, is a reference to the Twilight Zone episode “To Serve Man.”
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
James Earl Jones reads Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven.”
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
James Earl Jones reads Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven.”
The Simpsons move into a smart house, whose Pierce Brosnan-voiced AI falls in love with Marge.
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
James Earl Jones reads Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven.”
The Simpsons move into a smart house, whose Pierce Brosnan-voiced AI falls in love with Marge.
Homer3 - Homer hides behind a bookcase and enters a world that is 3D. He is then sucked through a black hole and ends up in Sherman Oaks where he is frightened to see live action people until he finds an erotic cake store.
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
James Earl Jones reads Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven.”
The Simpsons move into a smart house, whose Pierce Brosnan-voiced AI falls in love with Marge.
Homer3 - Homer hides behind a bookcase and enters a world that is 3D. He is then sucked through a black hole and ends up in Sherman Oaks where he is frightened to see live action people until he finds an erotic cake store.
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
James Earl Jones reads Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven.”
The Simpsons move into a smart house, whose Pierce Brosnan-voiced AI falls in love with Marge.
Homer3 - Homer hides behind a bookcase and enters a world that is 3D. He is then sucked through a black hole and ends up in Sherman Oaks where he is frightened to see live action people until he finds an erotic cake store.
King Homer - a parody of King Kong.
I Know What You Diddily Iddily Did - parody of I Know What You Did Last Summer
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
James Earl Jones reads Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven.”
The Simpsons move into a smart house, whose Pierce Brosnan-voiced AI falls in love with Marge.
Homer3 - Homer hides behind a bookcase and enters a world that is 3D. He is then sucked through a black hole and ends up in Sherman Oaks where he is frightened to see live action people until he finds an erotic cake store.
King Homer - a parody of King Kong.
I Know What You Diddily Iddily Did - parody of I Know What You Did Last Summer
In “Time and Punishment” Homer travels to the past using a toaster. At first he tries not to change the future but he gets angrier and more destructive every time he goes back.
A Clown Without Pity - An evil Krusty doll terrorizes Homer
Hell Toupee - A hairpiece made from hair donated from an executed killer turns Homer homicidal
Hungry Are the Damned - Two aliens abduct the Simpsons, and hold a feast for them, though Lisa suspects it’s a ploy to fatten the Earthlings up, in order to be eaten.
James Earl Jones reads Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven.”
The Simpsons move into a smart house, whose Pierce Brosnan-voiced AI falls in love with Marge.
Homer3 - Homer hides behind a bookcase and enters a world that is 3D. He is then sucked through a black hole and ends up in Sherman Oaks where he is frightened to see live action people until he finds an erotic cake store.
King Homer - a parody of King Kong.
I Know What You Diddily Iddily Did - parody of I Know What You Did Last Summer
In “Time and Punishment” Homer travels to the past using a toaster. At first he tries not to change the future but he gets angrier and more destructive every time he goes back.
Monkey’s paw: Parody of WW Jacobs short story of the same name, the paw grants wishes which generally come true in a bad way, except when Flanders uses it.
Iconic questions that appear in TV episodes or commercials.
How many licks does it take to get to the tootsie roll center of a tootsie pop?