Misplaced Pages

HOMR: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 00:15, 8 December 2006 edit70.35.90.193 (talk) Quotes← Previous edit Latest revision as of 01:38, 19 December 2024 edit undoToscahydra (talk | contribs)514 editsNo edit summaryTags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit 
(654 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2023}}
<!--Please use only the HOMR image. The Unicode character that looks like a backwards R is the Cyrillic letter Ya, not a backwards R.-->

{{No unicode character|]}}
{{Infobox Simpsons episode {{Infobox Simpsons episode
| image = SimpsonsOzmodiar.png
| episode_name = ]
| caption = Ozmodiar, a parody of ] from '']'', appears by Homer's side after he inadvertently gets all his friends fired from work. The alien had previously appeared in ]'s "]".
| image = ]
| episode_no = 257 | season = 12
| prod_code = BABF22 | episode = 9
| airdate = ], ] | director = ]
| show runner = ] | writer = ]
| production = BABF22
| writer = ]
| director = ] | airdate = {{Start date|2001|01|07}}
| blackboard = "] is not dead" | blackboard = "] is not dead"
| couch_gag = There are five pneumatic tubes over the couch, which spit out Homer, Marge, Maggie, Lisa, and Fry (from '']''). Fry is sucked back up, and Bart replaces him. | couch_gag = The ], except for ], are placed on the couch by the ] transport tubes seen on '']''. ] (from ''Futurama'' with the Simpsons' yellow skin tone) is on the couch for a split second, before the family looks at him in confusion. He is then sucked up into a tube and replaced by Bart.
| commentary = ]<br>Al Jean<br>Mike B. Anderson<br>]<br>]<br>]
| season = 12
| prev = ]
| next = ]
}} }}
"'''HOMR'''" (styled as "'''HOMЯ'''") is the ninth episode of the ] of the American animated television series '']''. The 257th episode overall, it originally aired on the ] in the United States on January 7, 2001. In the episode, while working as a human guinea pig (to pay off the family's lost savings after making a bad investment), ] discovers the root cause of his subnormal intelligence: a ] that was lodged in his brain ever since he was six-years-old. He decides to have it removed to increase his ], but soon learns that being intelligent is not always the same as being happy.

The episode was written by ] and directed by ]. Its plot takes inspiration from '']'' and its film adaptation '']''. "HOMR" was viewed in 10.2 million households, and it received positive reviews from television critics.

In 2001, the episode won an ] for ], while Al Jean received a nomination in the category "Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television Production".

==Plot==
When the ] visits an animation festival, ] discovers Animotion, a ] technology that enables a real person to control a cartoon character with his or her own movements. Homer volunteers to demonstrate this technology and likes it so much that he invests his life savings in the Animotion stock. Two days later, he discovers that the stock has plunged and the company behind the technology has gone out of business. At ], he tells ] and ] about his economic troubles, and Barney suggests that Homer become a ] to earn money.

Homer gets a job at a medical testing center. During one experiment, while commenting on Homer's stupidity, the doctors find a ] lodged in Homer's brain from a childhood incident when he stuck sixteen crayons up his nose and sneezed all but one of them out. The doctors offer to surgically remove the crayon, and Homer accepts their offer. Homer survives the operation, and his ] goes up fifty points to 105, allowing him to form a bond with his intelligent daughter ]. Homer's newfound brain capacity soon brings him enemies, however, after he performs a thorough report on the ]'s many hazards, leading to massive layoffs when the plant is shut down until its many problems can be repaired or resolved.

When Homer visits Moe's Tavern, he sees an ] of himself being burnt by his friends who worked at the plant. Homer realizes that due to his improved intelligence, he is no longer welcome and that his life was a lot more enjoyable when he was an idiot. He therefore begs the test center doctors to put the crayon back into his brain. The scientists refuse to do it, but recommend Homer to someone who can: Moe, who is also an unlicensed physician.

At his bar, Moe inserts a crayon into Homer's brain, returning him to the idiot he was before. Lisa is initially saddened that she and her father have lost the new connection they shared. However, she finds a note written by Homer before the operation that reads: "Lisa, I’m taking the coward’s way out. But before I do, I just want you to know being smart made me appreciate how amazing you really are." After reading the note, she gets emotional and hugs her father.

==Production==
] wrote the episode.]]
The episode was written by ] and directed by ] as part of the twelfth season of ''The Simpsons'' (2000–2001).<ref name=Alberti/> The episode is inspired by '']'', the award-winning science fiction work by ], where an intellectually disabled man also has his intelligence enhanced with an experiment.<ref>
{{cite web |year=2013|url=http://www.creators.com/lifestylefeatures/fashion-and-entertainment/hollywood-exclusive/a-talk-with-the-simpsons-al-jean-on-the-show-s-25th-anniversary-season.html |title=A Talk with 'The Simpsons' Al Jean on the Show's 25th Anniversary |last1=Beck |first1=Marilyn|author1-link=Marilyn Beck|last2=Smith |first2=Stacy Jenel |website=]|access-date=2015-10-05 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151006051106/http://www.creators.com/lifestylefeatures/fashion-and-entertainment/hollywood-exclusive/a-talk-with-the-simpsons-al-jean-on-the-show-s-25th-anniversary-season.html |archive-date=2015-10-06 }}</ref> In particular, the title "HOMR" is a take on the novel's 1968 film adaptation '']''.<ref>{{cite web|date=18 June 2014|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-27900662|title=Flowers for Algernon writer Daniel Keyes dies at 86|website=]|access-date=September 6, 2024|archive-date=September 7, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240907032147/https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-27900662|url-status=live}}</ref>

==Reception==
The episode originally aired on the ] in the United States on January 7, 2001.<ref name=Alberti>{{cite book|last=Alberti|first=John|title=Leaving Springfield: The Simpsons and the Possibility of Oppositional Culture|year=2004|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-8143-2849-1|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/leavingspringfie00albe|url-access=registration|quote=Season 12 (2000-2001)}}</ref> It was viewed in approximately 10.2 million households that night. With a ] of 10.0, the episode finished 19th in the ratings for the week of January 1–7, 2001 (tying a ] pre-game show on ]). It was the highest-rated broadcast on Fox that week.<ref>{{cite news|agency=]|title=This week's top shows|newspaper=]|date=2001-01-10|page=A12}}</ref>

On August 18, 2009, "HOMR" was released on DVD as part of the box set ''The Simpsons – The Complete Twelfth Season''. Staff members Mike B. Anderson, Al Jean, ], ], ], ], and ] participated in the DVD ] for the episode.<ref name="tvshowsondvd">{{cite web|url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Simpsons-Season-12/11928|title=The Simpsons – Season 12 Street Date, Detailed Contents & 'Comic Book Guy Head' Box|date=2009-05-20|access-date=2011-11-01|last=Lambert|first=David|publisher=]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090522020622/http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Simpsons-Season-12/11928|archive-date=2009-05-22}}</ref> Deleted scenes from the episode were also featured on the box set.<ref name=Jacobson/>

"HOMR" received generally positive reviews from critics.

In 2009, '']'''s Cindy White called it a classic and in 2003, '']'' writer Soyia Ellison named it one of the ten best ''The Simpsons'' episodes.<ref>{{cite web|last=White|first=Cindy|title=The Simpsons: The Complete Twelfth Season DVD Review|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2009/08/18/the-simpsons-the-complete-twelfth-season-dvd-review|website=]|access-date=2022-01-24|date=2009-08-18|archive-date=January 4, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220104083447/https://www.ign.com/articles/2009/08/18/the-simpsons-the-complete-twelfth-season-dvd-review|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=McAlister|first=Nancy|title=A sassy 'Simpsons' celebration Fox hits a Homer as it broadcasts the 300th episode of the animated sitcom tonight|newspaper=]|date=2003-02-16|page=D-1}}</ref>


In 2007, the staff of ] listed it at number eighteen on a list of the top twenty best episodes of the series.<ref>{{cite news|title='The Simpsons' Best Episodes: No. 20 - 16|url=http://www.aoltv.com/feature/the-simpsons/2|access-date=2012-06-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090101074259/http://television.aol.com/feature/the-simpsons/2|archive-date=2009-01-01|publisher=]}}</ref>
"''']'''" is the ninth episode of the ] of '']''. It aired on ], ], and won an ] for Outstanding Animated Program.


Nancy Basile of ] enjoyed the episode, commenting in 2005 that the storyline was "solid and didn't go off track" and that the jokes "were clever, just like the old days."<ref name=Basile/> She added that she "was surprised to find Homer even funnier as a genius", and praised the many references to popular culture included in the episode, "such as Japanimation, smoking, pipe bombs and planned parenthood, ebay and more that I can't remember."<ref name=Basile/> Basile was, however, disappointed that the writers put Moe in the role of the unlicensed physician when they had an opportunity to use the character ].<ref name=Basile>{{cite web|last=Basile|first=Nancy|title='The Simpsons' Episode Guide - Season Twelve|url=http://animatedtv.about.com/od/thesimpsonsepisodes/a/epguidesimp12.htm|publisher=]|access-date=2011-11-02|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111105023033/http://animatedtv.about.com/od/thesimpsonsepisodes/a/epguidesimp12.htm|archive-date=2011-11-05}}</ref>
==Synopsis==
{{spoiler}}
When the family visits the ''Sick, Twisted and Totally F***** up ] Festival''<ref> </ref>, Homer discovers Animotion, a ] technology that allows a cartoon character to mimic a human's movements. He likes it so much that he invests the family's life savings in Animotion. However, just after making the investment, the company goes into ''super-duper'' bankruptcy. To earn the family's life savings money back, Homer finds a job at a medical testing center. During one experiment, the doctors find what appears to be a crayon lodged in Homer's brain from when he was a child.


Jason Bailey of ] wrote in 2009, that he thought Homer got "hilariously smart" in "HOMR".<ref name=Bailey>{{cite web|last=Bailey|first=Jason|title=The Simpsons: The Twelfth Season|url=https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/38345/simpsons-the-complete-twelfth-season-the/|publisher=]|access-date=2011-11-01|date=2009-08-18|archive-date=August 12, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210812183131/https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/38345/simpsons-the-complete-twelfth-season-the/|url-status=live}}</ref>
After the crayon is removed, Homer's ] goes up to 105 points (that is, to 5 points above average intelligence), which allows him to form a bond with Lisa. Homer then writes a report on the nuclear plant's safety, which results in the plant's shutting down, and the laying off of all employees. Homer's friends, initially thrilled to have a smarter Homer around, quickly reject him, and Homer is even burned in ] at ]. Lisa tries to explain that as you get smarter, happiness decreases. Homer decides to put a crayon back in his brain, with the aid of Moe&mdash;who says he is an unlicensed ]. He arrives home his old self, which initially disappoints Lisa. However, she finds a letter written before the surgery in which Homer explains that he now understands what it is like to be smart like her, and how much he more appreciates her because of it. Instead of being upset over her father's choice to revert, the episode ends with Lisa embracing Homer.


DVD Movie Guide's Colin Jacobson was less positive, writing in a 2009 review that one should not "expect a lot of thrills" from the episode as he thought it had "a moderately rehashed feel". He noted that "brainy Homer sure does remind me a lot of loquacious Homer from Season Three’s ']'."<ref name=Jacobson>{{cite web|last=Jacobson|first=Colin|title=The Simpsons: The Complete Twelfth Season (1999)|url=http://www.dvdmg.com/simpsonsseasontwelve.shtml|publisher=DVD Movie Guide|access-date=2011-11-01|date=2009-09-02|archive-date=November 3, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111103131030/http://www.dvdmg.com/simpsonsseasontwelve.shtml|url-status=live}}</ref>
==Trivia==
*Moe is revealed to be an unlicensed surgeon in his spare time.
*Moe describes the procedure of putting a crayon into Homer's brain via the nasal cavity as "the old ] oblongata", a ] of the part of the ] called the ].


At the ], "HOMR" won the award for "]".<ref>{{cite news|last=Durden|first=Douglas|title=The show must go on, so the Emmys finally did|newspaper=]|date=2001-11-05|page=A-7}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Emmy 2001 nomination list|url=https://variety.com/2001/tv/news/emmy-2001-nomination-list-2-1117802665/|work=]|access-date=2022-01-24|date=2001-07-12|archive-date=January 24, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220124234512/https://variety.com/2001/tv/news/emmy-2001-nomination-list-2-1117802665/|url-status=live}}</ref>
==Cultural references==
*This episode is similar to the novel '']'', and the reverse R, similar in shape but otherwise completely unrelated to the ] letter Ya (Я), in the title is from that novel's first film adaptation, '']''.
*The ''Sick, Twisted, and Totally F***ed Up Animation Festival'' may be modeled after '']''.
*The faux old footage of '']'' advertising for Laramie Cigarettes is likely a reference to the first season of '']'', when commercials aired featuring ] and ] enjoying ].
*], a parody of ] from '']'', appears twice during this episode, once after Homer says cartoons don't have to make sense, and once more after Homer all the employees are laid off from the plant.


At the ], Jean received a nomination in the category "Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television Production" for his work on "HOMR". However, he lost to ]—the writer of the ''Futurama'' episode "]".<ref name="A29">{{cite news|url=http://annieawards.org/29thwinners.html |title=Legacy: 29th Annual Annie Award Nominees and Winners (2001) |access-date=2012-06-28 |publisher=] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725010814/http://annieawards.org/29thwinners.html |archive-date=July 25, 2011 }}</ref>
== Quotes ==
*'''Phone Announcer''': For automated stock prices, please state the company name.<br>'''Homer''': Animotion.<br>'''Phone Announcer''': Animotion: up one and one-half.<br>'''Homer''': (excitedly) Yahoo!<br>'''Phone Announcer''': ]: up six and a quarter.<br>'''Homer''': Huh, what is this crap?<br>'''Phone Announcer''': ]: down eight.<br>(Homer smiles slyly towards the camera).
*'''Homer''': Now, who's up for a trip to the library tomorrow? Notice I no longer say "liberry" or "tomorry".
*''']''': Question!<br>'''Homer''': Yes, Nelson?<br>'''Nelson''': (into his hand) A moron says, "What?"<br>'''Homer''': Not being a moron, I wouldn't know. However...(he mumbles inaudibly)<br>'''Nelson''': What?<br>'''Homer''': Ladies and gentlemen, I give you your moron.<br>'''Nelson''': Huh?<br>'''Students''': (pointing their fingers at Nelson) Haw-haw! <br>
*'''Homer''': Nothing burns like an effigy.
*'''Homer''': (in a backstage bathroom, still wearing a motion capture suit and microphone) Urinal cake eroding...eroding...GONE! (Audience cheers, family in slight embarrassment.)
*'''Moe''': ...and I was a lot happier before I knew ] was a man! A lot happier!
*'''6-year old Homer''': (counting the crayons he puts in his nose)...14...15...16. Woo-hoo! I don't feel so good. (sneezes, and all the crayons but one fall out of his nose). I think that's all of them.
*'''Lisa''': Dad, as intelligence goes up, happiness often goes down. In fact, I made a graph. I make a lot of graphs.
*''']''': Homer's the guy who rigged up my pants with this special cod piece.<br>'''Homer''': Comfy, isn't it?<br>'''Carl''': Oh, yeah. It provides the freedom and protection I so sorely need.
*'''Scientist''': We could remove the crayon for you! It could vastly increase your brain power! Or it could possibly kill you.<br>'''Homer''': Hmm... increase my killing power eh? Let's do it! <br>
*'''Homer''': Come on Marge, we're a team! It's ], not uterYOU. <br>
*'''Lisa''': Dad, did you read all those books today?<br>'''Homer''': Everything from ] to ]. It's so tragic the way they hopped on pop.
*'''Homer''': Is there no place for a man with a 105 IQ?
*'''Kent Brockman''': Animotion is up an eighth... after plunging seventy five points this morning!<br>'''Homer''': Oh, I hope plunging means up, and seventy five means two hundred!<br>'''Kent Brockman''': The firm declared super-dooper bankruptcy, which is terrible news for the company's one stockholder, Homer Simpson.
*'''Lisa:''' How does a wolf shoot webs?<br>'''Bart:''' Cartoons don't have to make sense!<br>'''Gazoo:''' ''(pops up)'' Damn straight, Bart!
*'''Homer:''' ''(cudding the shares of stock)'' Sleep tight My Beloved. You're my ticket out of this hell hole!<br>'''Marge:''' Homer!<br>'''Homer:''' I mean... ''our'' ticket out of this hell hole.
*'''Barney:''' Y'know Homer, I got a great way to make money. I'm a human Guinea Pig.
'''Homer:''' You mean like, medical testing?
<br>'''Barney:''' Yeah. Medical, military, chewin' stuff.
<br>'''Moe:''' Chewin' stuff?
<br>'''Barney:''' Yeah, Like you chew on a telephone wire 'til you get a shock.
<br>'''Moe:''' Oh, oh right okay.
<br>'''Homer:''' Yeah, but arent those experiments dangerous?
<br>'''Barney:''' Ah you get a few side affects. (opens shirt revealing ears on chest)
<br>'''Moe:''' Are those ears?
<br>'''Barney:''' Ow! Not so loud!
*'''Amelia:''' Wow a shooting gallery with blindfolds.
'''Bart:''' Oops.
'''Amelia:''' ahhh


==See also== ==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
*]
]


==External links== ==External links==
{{Wikiquote|The_Simpsons/Season_12#HOM.D0.AF|"HOMЯ"}}
*{{snpp capsule|BABF22}}
{{Portal|The Simpsons}}
*{{imdb episode|id=0762497|episode=HOMR}}
*{{Snpp capsule|BABF22}}
*{{IMDb episode|id=0762497}}


{{The Simpsons episodes|12}}
==Notes==
{{EmmyAward AnimationLessThanHour}}
<references/>


{{DEFAULTSORT:Homr}}
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 01:38, 19 December 2024

9th episode of the 12th season of The Simpsons
"HOMR"
The Simpsons episode
Ozmodiar, a parody of The Great Gazoo from The Flintstones, appears by Homer's side after he inadvertently gets all his friends fired from work. The alien had previously appeared in Season 8's "The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase".
Episode no.Season 12
Episode 9
Directed byMike B. Anderson
Written byAl Jean
Production codeBABF22
Original air dateJanuary 7, 2001 (2001-01-07)
Episode features
Chalkboard gag"Network TV is not dead"
Couch gagThe Simpsons, except for Bart, are placed on the couch by the pneumatic transport tubes seen on Futurama. Fry (from Futurama with the Simpsons' yellow skin tone) is on the couch for a split second, before the family looks at him in confusion. He is then sucked up into a tube and replaced by Bart.
CommentaryMike Scully
Al Jean
Mike B. Anderson
Ian Maxtone-Graham
Matt Selman
Tom Gammill & Max Pross
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Skinner's Sense of Snow"
Next →
"Pokey Mom"
The Simpsons season 12
List of episodes

"HOMR" (styled as "HOMЯ") is the ninth episode of the twelfth season of the American animated television series The Simpsons. The 257th episode overall, it originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on January 7, 2001. In the episode, while working as a human guinea pig (to pay off the family's lost savings after making a bad investment), Homer discovers the root cause of his subnormal intelligence: a crayon that was lodged in his brain ever since he was six-years-old. He decides to have it removed to increase his IQ, but soon learns that being intelligent is not always the same as being happy.

The episode was written by Al Jean and directed by Mike B. Anderson. Its plot takes inspiration from Flowers for Algernon and its film adaptation Charly. "HOMR" was viewed in 10.2 million households, and it received positive reviews from television critics.

In 2001, the episode won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program, while Al Jean received a nomination in the category "Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television Production".

Plot

When the Simpson family visits an animation festival, Homer discovers Animotion, a motion capture technology that enables a real person to control a cartoon character with his or her own movements. Homer volunteers to demonstrate this technology and likes it so much that he invests his life savings in the Animotion stock. Two days later, he discovers that the stock has plunged and the company behind the technology has gone out of business. At Moe's Tavern, he tells Barney and Moe about his economic troubles, and Barney suggests that Homer become a human guinea pig to earn money.

Homer gets a job at a medical testing center. During one experiment, while commenting on Homer's stupidity, the doctors find a crayon lodged in Homer's brain from a childhood incident when he stuck sixteen crayons up his nose and sneezed all but one of them out. The doctors offer to surgically remove the crayon, and Homer accepts their offer. Homer survives the operation, and his IQ goes up fifty points to 105, allowing him to form a bond with his intelligent daughter Lisa. Homer's newfound brain capacity soon brings him enemies, however, after he performs a thorough report on the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant's many hazards, leading to massive layoffs when the plant is shut down until its many problems can be repaired or resolved.

When Homer visits Moe's Tavern, he sees an effigy of himself being burnt by his friends who worked at the plant. Homer realizes that due to his improved intelligence, he is no longer welcome and that his life was a lot more enjoyable when he was an idiot. He therefore begs the test center doctors to put the crayon back into his brain. The scientists refuse to do it, but recommend Homer to someone who can: Moe, who is also an unlicensed physician.

At his bar, Moe inserts a crayon into Homer's brain, returning him to the idiot he was before. Lisa is initially saddened that she and her father have lost the new connection they shared. However, she finds a note written by Homer before the operation that reads: "Lisa, I’m taking the coward’s way out. But before I do, I just want you to know being smart made me appreciate how amazing you really are." After reading the note, she gets emotional and hugs her father.

Production

Al Jean wrote the episode.

The episode was written by Al Jean and directed by Mike B. Anderson as part of the twelfth season of The Simpsons (2000–2001). The episode is inspired by Flowers for Algernon, the award-winning science fiction work by Daniel Keyes, where an intellectually disabled man also has his intelligence enhanced with an experiment. In particular, the title "HOMR" is a take on the novel's 1968 film adaptation Charly.

Reception

The episode originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on January 7, 2001. It was viewed in approximately 10.2 million households that night. With a Nielsen rating of 10.0, the episode finished 19th in the ratings for the week of January 1–7, 2001 (tying a 2001 Sugar Bowl pre-game show on ABC). It was the highest-rated broadcast on Fox that week.

On August 18, 2009, "HOMR" was released on DVD as part of the box set The Simpsons – The Complete Twelfth Season. Staff members Mike B. Anderson, Al Jean, Mike Scully, Ian Maxtone-Graham, Matt Selman, Tom Gammill, and Max Pross participated in the DVD audio commentary for the episode. Deleted scenes from the episode were also featured on the box set.

"HOMR" received generally positive reviews from critics.

In 2009, IGN's Cindy White called it a classic and in 2003, The Florida Times-Union writer Soyia Ellison named it one of the ten best The Simpsons episodes.

In 2007, the staff of AOL Television listed it at number eighteen on a list of the top twenty best episodes of the series.

Nancy Basile of About.com enjoyed the episode, commenting in 2005 that the storyline was "solid and didn't go off track" and that the jokes "were clever, just like the old days." She added that she "was surprised to find Homer even funnier as a genius", and praised the many references to popular culture included in the episode, "such as Japanimation, smoking, pipe bombs and planned parenthood, ebay and more that I can't remember." Basile was, however, disappointed that the writers put Moe in the role of the unlicensed physician when they had an opportunity to use the character Dr. Nick.

Jason Bailey of DVD Talk wrote in 2009, that he thought Homer got "hilariously smart" in "HOMR".

DVD Movie Guide's Colin Jacobson was less positive, writing in a 2009 review that one should not "expect a lot of thrills" from the episode as he thought it had "a moderately rehashed feel". He noted that "brainy Homer sure does remind me a lot of loquacious Homer from Season Three’s 'Bart's Friend Falls in Love'."

At the 53rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards, "HOMR" won the award for "Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming Less Than One Hour)".

At the 29th Annie Awards, Jean received a nomination in the category "Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television Production" for his work on "HOMR". However, he lost to Ron Weiner—the writer of the Futurama episode "The Luck of the Fryrish".

References

  1. ^ Alberti, John (2004). Leaving Springfield: The Simpsons and the Possibility of Oppositional Culture. Wayne State University Press. p. 324. ISBN 978-0-8143-2849-1. Season 12 (2000-2001)
  2. Beck, Marilyn; Smith, Stacy Jenel (2013). "A Talk with 'The Simpsons' Al Jean on the Show's 25th Anniversary". Creators Syndicate. Archived from the original on October 6, 2015. Retrieved October 5, 2015.
  3. "Flowers for Algernon writer Daniel Keyes dies at 86". BBC News. June 18, 2014. Archived from the original on September 7, 2024. Retrieved September 6, 2024.
  4. "This week's top shows". Press-Telegram. Associated Press. January 10, 2001. p. A12.
  5. Lambert, David (May 20, 2009). "The Simpsons – Season 12 Street Date, Detailed Contents & 'Comic Book Guy Head' Box". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on May 22, 2009. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  6. ^ Jacobson, Colin (September 2, 2009). "The Simpsons: The Complete Twelfth Season (1999)". DVD Movie Guide. Archived from the original on November 3, 2011. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  7. White, Cindy (August 18, 2009). "The Simpsons: The Complete Twelfth Season DVD Review". IGN. Archived from the original on January 4, 2022. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  8. McAlister, Nancy (February 16, 2003). "A sassy 'Simpsons' celebration Fox hits a Homer as it broadcasts the 300th episode of the animated sitcom tonight". The Florida Times-Union. p. D-1.
  9. "'The Simpsons' Best Episodes: No. 20 - 16". AOL Television. Archived from the original on January 1, 2009. Retrieved June 29, 2012.
  10. ^ Basile, Nancy. "'The Simpsons' Episode Guide - Season Twelve". About.com. Archived from the original on November 5, 2011. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
  11. Bailey, Jason (August 18, 2009). "The Simpsons: The Twelfth Season". DVD Talk. Archived from the original on August 12, 2021. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  12. Durden, Douglas (November 5, 2001). "The show must go on, so the Emmys finally did". Richmond Times-Dispatch. p. A-7.
  13. "Emmy 2001 nomination list". Variety. July 12, 2001. Archived from the original on January 24, 2022. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  14. "Legacy: 29th Annual Annie Award Nominees and Winners (2001)". Annie Awards. Archived from the original on July 25, 2011. Retrieved June 28, 2012.

External links

The Simpsons episodes
Seasons 1–20
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Season 21–present
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
Season 12
Themed episodes
See also
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
Program (Less Than One Hour)
Program (One Hour or More)
2010s
2020s
Categories: