Missionary: Impossible: Difference between revisions
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==Reception== |
==Reception== |
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'''JEEBUS''' |
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Jeff Cotton of ''[[The Observer]]'' characterizes the episode as "A Classic".<ref name="cotton">{{cite news | last = Cotton | first = Jeff | title = OTV: 6 May: Pick of the day: Jebus Loves Ya: The Simpsons: Missionary Impossible Channel 4 | work = [[The Observer]] | page = 89 | publisher = Guardian Newspapers Limited | date = May 1, 2005 }}</ref> Cotton notes: "There's a big finish, and one of those jokes at Fox's expense you know they wouldn't allow if The Simpsons wasn't their biggest cash cow."<ref name="cotton" /> In a review of the episode for ''[[The Gazette (Montreal)|The Gazette]]'', Alex Strachan writes: "Missionary: Impossible ... may not be the funniest Simpsons episode ever made. But it has some of the funniest lines about TV.."<ref name="strachan">{{cite news | last =Strachan | first =Alex | coauthors =CanWest News Service | title =Classic Simpsons and SCTV: Strong night on comedy network. And voting begins anew on Canadian Idol with first two of 10 finalists revealed | work =[[The Gazette (Montreal)|The Gazette]] | page =D4 | publisher =CanWest Interactive | date =June 17, 2004}}</ref> Strachan quotes Homer's description of the television program ''Do Shut Up'' to Bart: "If they're not having a go with a bird, they're having a row with a wanker," as one of the funniest moments in the episode.<ref name="strachan" /> Writing in his review of the episode for ''The Simpsons'' eleventh season DVD release, Colin Jacobson of DVD Movie Guide is critical of an "inane" choice by the producers to have Homer refer to Jesus as "Jeebus".<ref name="jacobson">{{cite news | last =Jacobson | first =Colin | title =The Simpsons: The Complete Eleventh Season (1999) | work =DVD Movie Guide | publisher =www.dvdmg.com | date =November 19, 2008 | url =http://www.dvdmg.com/simpsonsseasoneleven.shtml | accessdate = 2008-12-23 }}</ref> However Jacobson gives the episode a positive review overall: "Highlighted by a fun turn from Betty White, the PBS segment amuses, and the pieces with Homer on the island do nicely as well. Despite 'Jeebus', this becomes arguably Season 11’s best episode."<ref name="jacobson" /> |
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THIS SITE SUCKS ASS |
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The episode has become study material for sociology courses at [[University of California Berkeley]], where it is used to "examine issues of the production and reception of cultural objects, in this case, a satirical cartoon show", and to figure out what it is "trying to tell audiences about aspects primarily of American society, and, to a lesser extent, about other societies."<ref name="gold" /> Some questions asked in the courses include: "What aspects of American society are being addressed in the episode? What aspects of them are used to make the points? How is the satire conveyed: through language? Drawing? Music? Is the behavior of each character consistent with his/her character as developed over the years? Can we identify elements of the historical/political context that the writers are satirizing? What is the difference between satire and parody?"<ref name="gold">{{cite web|url=http://sociology.berkeley.edu/documents/undergrads/syllabi/Soc190_1.pdf|publisher=University of California Berkeley|title=The Simpsons Global Mirror |year=2008|author=Thomas B. Gold}}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 23:07, 12 April 2009
"Missionary: Impossible" | |
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The Simpsons episode | |
File:Teletubbies11x15.png | |
Episode no. | Season 11 |
Directed by | Steven Dean Moore |
Written by | Ron Hauge |
Original air date | February 20, 2000 |
Episode features | |
Chalkboard gag | A Belch is not an oral report |
Couch gag | The living room is a subway station. The family (seated on a bench) get on the next train that arrives on the track and leave. |
Commentary | Mike Scully George Meyer Ron Hauge Ian Maxtone-Graham Matt Selman Steven Dean Moore |
"Missionary: Impossible" is the fifteenth episode of the eleventh season of The Simpsons, which originally aired February 20, 2000.
Plot
In an attempt to end a pledge drive which interrupts a favorite show of his on PBS (a British sitcom entitled Do Shut Up), Homer pledges $10,000 to the network. Homer is applauded for saving the network. However, it quickly becomes apparent that Homer does not have the money, prompting pledge drive host Betty White and a mob of characters and personalities from various PBS shows (including the Teletubbies, Elmo, Fred Rogers and Big Bird) to chase him through the streets. Fortunately, Reverend Lovejoy saves Homer after he runs into the church. Reverend Lovejoy gets Homer past the mob by hiding him in a bag disguised as a sack of children's letters to God. Lovejoy puts Homer on a cargo plane to the South Pacific, where he will become a missionary in "Microasia," despite Homer's lack of religious faith (to the point he mistakenly calls Jesus "Jebus").
Homer calls back to Marge in Springfield with a radio, during which he promotes Bart to "the man of the house", Lisa to "boy", Maggie to the "smart girl" and the toaster to "Maggie", making Marge a consultant. Bart replaces Homer at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, where Mr. Burns criticizes Homer's record and, not recognizing whom he is talking to, pokes Bart with a stick. After coming home from a hard day at work, Bart agrees to take Marge out for dinner one night.
Homer arrives on the island and he meets Qtoktok and Ak. He also meets a native girl who looks and sounds exactly like Lisa that he names her "Lisa Jr." At first, he is so desperate that he drops to the ground writhing and crying "Oh God!" repeatedly (which the natives all imitate, following his example). Homer eventually begins trying to teach them about religion, but realizing that he knows nothing about it, he tries something new. While the natives were noble savages ignorant of and unspoiled by civilization, Homer decides to build a casino on the island, which he names "The Lucky Savage". This introduces alcohol, gambling, and violence to the island, and ruins the natives' virtuous way of life.
After the failure of the casino, Homer builds a chapel in penance, but he and Lisa Jr. ring the bell too loudly, causing an earthquake that releases a river of lava. The chapel, carrying Homer and Lisa Jr., starts to sink into the lava. As the two are about to meet their death, the scene cuts to another pledge drive, this time for the Fox network. It is revealed that Homer's adventures and mishaps were all recorded while he was on the island, but the show as well as the network are in danger of cancellation. Various Fox show personalities are manning the phones, joined by a cranky Rupert Murdoch and hosted again by Betty White, who entreats the viewers to help keep "crude, low-brow programming", such as Family Guy, on air. Bart calls in and pledges a $10,000 donation. Murdoch remarks that Bart Simpson has saved his network, to which Bart replies "Wouldn't be the first time".
Cultural references
In the beginning of the episode Homer is watching a program called Do Shut Up, described as "a delicious British sitcom about a hard-drinking yet loving family of soccer hooligans".[1] British English expressions terms used in the sitcom include "noggin" and "soddin".[1] When Homer defaults on his financial pledge of support to PBS, references seen to characters from other programs that pursue him through the town include Yo-Yo Ma, the Teletubbies, and Garrison Keillor.[1]
Censorship
When Homer is watching Do Shut Up, he says about the main characters "If they're not having a go at a bird, they're having a row with a wanker!" On Sky One, the last word in this line is redubbed with "bird", since the word "wanker" is considered obscene in the United Kingdom and is often censored in programs airing before the watershed.[2]
Reception
JEEBUS
THIS SITE SUCKS ASS
References
- ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference
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Further reading
- Mackey, Margaret (June 26, 2008). "Extreme Literacies and Contemporary Readers". English in Education. 36 (2). NATE: 31–39. doi:10.1111/j.1754-8845.2002.tb00759.x.
- Cappelle, Bert (2006), "Negation in the margin of grammar" (PDF), La négation: Formes, figures, conceptualisation / Negation: Form, Figure of Speech, Conceptualisation. Actes du colloque de littérature et de linguistique des 8 et 9 octobre 2004, Presses Universitaires François Rabelais, pp. 403–425, Stéphanie Bonnefille and Sébastien Salbayre (eds.), retrieved 2008-12-23