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The Man Who Came to Be Dinner

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"The Man Who Came to Be Dinner"
The Simpsons episode
Episode no.Season 26
Directed byDavid Silverman
Written byAl Jean & David Mirkin
Original air dateJanuary 4, 2015 (2015-01-04)
Episode features
Couch gagA piano version of "Great Gate of Kiev" is played in the background as the gag showcases artwork of each Simpson. The camera turns to the Simpsons sitting at an art gallery. Homer grabs the remote control and all the artwork on the wall changes channels, pleasing the family.
Episode chronology
The Simpsons season 26
List of episodes

"The Man Who Came to Be Dinner" is the tenth episode of the twenty-sixth season of the American animated sitcom The Simpsons, and the overall 562nd episode of the series. It aired on January 4, 2015.

Plot

The Simpsons go to Diz-Nee-Land. After a really long journey, they dislike all of the lame games they visit, and decide to go to "Journey to Your Doom", a just-opened queue-less game which wasn't on the map. They get in, and it immediately transforms into a space ship. At first, the family is skeptical, but a screen appears, and Kang and Kodos tell them that they are being taken to their home planet Rigel 7. At the planet, Kang and Kodos show them around on a giant pet cage, and the Simpsons are informed they are prisoners. Then they are taken as exhibitions to a zoo, and after a while, they are informed they must choose one of them to be dined in a ritual. Everybody votes for Homer; even he changes his vote from Bart to himself after seeing the other votes.

After, we can see Homer walking in something that looks like bacon underwear, to be eaten; but he gets rescued by some hippie-looking Rigelians who believe that eating other sentient species is wrong. After an excessive party, he gets on another space ship, only for one, that also pleases all desires, but he realizes he won't enjoy it without his family and goes back to rescue them. The Rigelians, in the meantime, have decided to eat the rest of the family, and they are glazed over giant plates with some lettuce and tomato. When Homer offers to be eaten instead, he gets put on a similar plate, and annoys the cook by eating the glaze and claiming he didn't get any. The Rigelian queen then eats Homer's previously off-camera severed buttock and gets poisoned because of the fast food life they all lead; even Lisa is the most polluted of them all. The queen dies, and the Simpsons get sent home, on a space ship that looks like the interior of the original starship USS Enterprise. They set course to Earth, but after a call from Grandpa Simpson, the family decides to go anywhere else but home. Then, the credits happen over a montage of several images spoofing Star Trek TV and film franchise scenes.

Production

The episode was originally scheduled to air on May 19, 2013 as the finale of season 24, but was replaced by "Dangers on a Train";[1] so as a result, the production code is much older than the rest of season 26.

The explanation for the episode being delayed was explained on Twitter by Al Jean on December 31, 2014 and later by writer David Mirkin on January 3, 2015. Both said the episode was explored as a sequel to The Simpsons Movie.[2][3]

Reception

The episode received an audience of 10.62 million, making it the most watched show on Fox that night, the episode received a 4.7/13 rating/share in the 18-49 demographic, the show's highest since January 15, 2012.[4]

Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club was highly critical of the episode, giving it a D+ and saying, "It would be a lot easier to make the case that The Simpsons still has value if the people behind the show seemed to give a damn. But an episode like "The Man Who Came to Be Dinner" is a product of such slapdash, breezy disregard for what makes The Simpsons The Simpsons that it functions as a dispiriting signpost to the show's hastening irrelevance." He criticized how the episode repeated the scene in which Homer eats chips in zero gravity from season 5's "Deep Space Homer". Perkins likened the episode's ending in which everything returns to normal to the controversial season 9 episode "The Principal and the Pauper", and said "The Simpsons have met The Great Gazoo".[5]

References

  1. ^ "Listings - TheFutonCritic.com - The Web's Best Television Resource". Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  2. ^ "Al Jean on Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  3. ^ "David Mirkin on Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  4. ^ Bibel, Sara (January 7, 2015). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'The Simpsons', 'Madam Secretary', 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine', 'The Celebrity Apprentice', 'Bob's Burgers' and 'CSI' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved January 7, 2015.
  5. ^ Perkins, Dennis (January 4, 2015). "The Simpsons: "The Man Who Came To Be Dinner"". The A.V. Club. Retrieved January 6, 2015.