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* At the time, only Steve Sax and Don Mattingly had played for the ]. Four of the other ringers would later play for the Yankees (Boggs, Clemens, Canseco, and Strawberry). | * At the time, only Steve Sax and Don Mattingly had played for the ]. Four of the other ringers would later play for the Yankees (Boggs, Clemens, Canseco, and Strawberry). | ||
* Although the episode said the team was a softball team, it was actually a ] team as the pitcher pitched the ball overhand and the games were nine innings long (where as in softball, the ball is pitched underhand and in an arc and games are usually seven innings long). Also, Mr. Burns used ] players to play the games. | * Although the episode said the team was a softball team, it was actually a ] team as the pitcher pitched the ball overhand and the games were nine innings long (where as in softball, the ball is pitched underhand and in an arc and games are usually seven innings long). Also, Mr. Burns used ] players to play the games. | ||
* Several of the players in this episode are purposely given distinctly different personalities than what they are known for. Darryl Strawberry, well known for being self-serving and hard to deal with is depicted as an ass kissing |
* Several of the players in this episode are purposely given distinctly different personalities than what they are known for. Darryl Strawberry, well known for being self-serving and hard to deal with is depicted as an ass kissing coach's dream. Jose Canseco, known for his self-promotion and grandiosity is shown as a hero who rescues everything a woman owns from a fire. | ||
==Cultural References== | ==Cultural References== |
Revision as of 20:14, 7 December 2006
Episode of the 3rd season of The Simpsons"Homer at the Bat" | |
---|---|
The Simpsons episode | |
"Homer at the Bat" | |
Episode no. | Season 3 |
Directed by | Jim Reardon |
Written by | John Swartzwelder |
Original air dates | February 20, 1992 |
Episode features | |
Chalkboard gag | "I will not aim for the head." |
Couch gag | Everyone but Maggie runs to the couch, and all bang their heads. Maggie gets to the couch successfully. |
Episode chronology | |
The Simpsons season 3 | |
List of episodes |
"Homer at the Bat" is the seventeenth episode of The Simpsons' third season. The episode involves Homer's boss, Mr. Burns, trying to guarantee victory in a softball game between the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant and the Shelbyville Nuclear Power Plant by signing several Major League Baseball players. Things do not go as planned.
Synopsis
Template:Spoiler The Springfield Nuclear Power Plant softball team has gone through their season undefeated, and in the championship game, they will face the Shelbyville Nuclear Power Plant. Homer is the team's leading hitter, thanks to his homemade bat (a takeoff of the plot of the film The Natural).
Mr. Burns makes a million dollar bet with Aristotle Amadopolis, owner of the Shelbyville plant, that his team will win. To secure victory in the game, Mr. Burns wants to hire major league stars, but Smithers tells Mr. Burns that the players he picked are all dead (mostly from the 1920s-1930s). Thus Mr. Burns orders Smithers to find some current superstar players and hires several Major League Baseball players to work at the plant (Clemens, Boggs, Griffey, Sax, Smith, Canseco, Mattingly, Strawberry and Scioscia) and to play on the team, much to the dismay of the plant workers who got the team to the championship game in the first place.
However, the night before the game, all the players but Strawberry have different incidents that don't allow them to play. Because of this, Mr. Burns must use actual employees, but keeps Homer on the bench because Strawberry plays his position. Homer does get in, though, with the score tied and bases loaded in the 9th inning, when Burns wants a right-handed hitter against a left-handed pitcher. The very first pitch hits Homer in the head, rendering him unconscious and forcing in the winning run. Homer is then paraded as a hero, still unconscious.
During the credits, Terry Cashman, who wrote the song "Talkin' Baseball", sings a take on his hit with "Talkin' Softball".
Trivia
- José Canseco was originally slated to wake up in bed with Edna Krabappel and miss the game, but Canseco's then-wife, Esther Haddad, objected.
- Because of the change, Marcia Wallace was listed in the credits, even though Mrs. Krabappel didn't appear at all in the episode.
- The players in this episode were an extremely talented group. They combined for 77 All Star selections, 34 Gold Gloves, 7 Cy Youngs, and 4 league MVP awards. They also won a combined 12 World Series.
- Smith and Boggs are the only members of the Baseball Hall of Fame from this group
- In the DVD commentaries, Al Jean hints that 8 of the baseball players were really nice guys, except for one guy whose name rhymes with "Manseco". He later says that Canseco had a hard time saying his lines and was really difficult every time he was told to do a retake. As well, he insisted that his original part be rewritten, so he was written as a hero.
- As of December 2006, Ken Griffey, Jr. and Roger Clemens are the only remaining active players (Mike Scioscia manages the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, José Canseco plays for the Long Beach Armada in the Independent Golden Baseball League, and Don Mattingly serves as the New York Yankees bench coach).
- This episode marks the second time in the series that someone mentions the phrase "It's like there's a party in my mouth and everyone's invited!" Ken Griffey Jr. says it after trying Mr. Burns's nerve tonic. The first being Moe's exclamation upon sampling the episode's titular beverage in the season 3 episode "Flaming Moe's". This line was parodied in "Parasites Lost", a season 3 episode of Futurama, another cartoon created by Matt Groening, when Fry eats a very expired egg salad sandwich and exclaims "It's like there's a party in my mouth and everyone's throwing up!" Griffey had trouble performing the line, a number of outtakes of which are presented as a hidden feature on the Season 3 DVD set.
- At the time, only Steve Sax and Don Mattingly had played for the New York Yankees. Four of the other ringers would later play for the Yankees (Boggs, Clemens, Canseco, and Strawberry).
- Although the episode said the team was a softball team, it was actually a baseball team as the pitcher pitched the ball overhand and the games were nine innings long (where as in softball, the ball is pitched underhand and in an arc and games are usually seven innings long). Also, Mr. Burns used Major League Baseball players to play the games.
- Several of the players in this episode are purposely given distinctly different personalities than what they are known for. Darryl Strawberry, well known for being self-serving and hard to deal with is depicted as an ass kissing coach's dream. Jose Canseco, known for his self-promotion and grandiosity is shown as a hero who rescues everything a woman owns from a fire.
Cultural References
- The episode makes several allusions to The Natural, a movie starring Robert Redford and which is based upon Bernard Malamud's book by the same name. Homer's secret weapon, his self-created "Wonderbat", is akin to Roy Hobbs's "Wonderboy". Both bats are eventually destroyed. The scene featuring the explosion of stadium lights as Homer circles the basepaths is taken directly from the film, as is the scene with the team and the hypnotist.
- The end song "Talkin' Softball" was actually re-written from an older song "Talkin' Baseball" by Terry Cashman, singer/writer of the song. Cashman has rewritten his lyrics several times for particular teams.
- The episode title is a play on the Ernest Lawrence Thayer poem "Casey at the Bat".
"Talkin' Softball" lyrics
Well, Mr. Burns had done it
The power plant had won it
With Roger Clemens clucking all the while
Mike Scioscia's tragic illness made us smile
While Wade Boggs lay unconscious on the barroom tile
We're talkin' softball
From Maine to San Diego
Talkin' softball
Mattingly and Canseco
Ken Griffey's grotesquely swollen jaw
Steve Sax and his run-in with the law
We're talkin' Homer...
Ozzie, and the Straw
We're talkin' softball
From Maine to San Diego
Talkin' softball
Mattingly and Canseco
Ken Griffey's grotesquely swollen jaw
Steve Sax and his run-in with the law
We're talkin' Homer...
Ozzie, and the Straw
The team and why they didn't play
Batting order:
- 2B: Steve Sax (New York Yankees): Arrested and sentenced to serve six consecutive lifetime in prison for every unsolved murder in New York City.
- 3B: Wade Boggs (Boston Red Sox): Punched out in a bar fight by Barney Gumble over Britain's greatest prime minister (Pitt the Elder vs. Lord Palmerston).
- RF: Darryl Strawberry (Los Angeles Dodgers): The only ringer who did play in the game, hitting nine home runs; replaced by pinch-hitter Homer in the bottom of the last inning.
- LF: José Canseco (Oakland Athletics): Rescued a woman and her possessions from her burning house; after saving her child and her cat, the woman had Canseco save her various appliances.
- 1B: Don Mattingly (New York Yankees): Kicked off the team by Mr. Burns for his "sideburns" parodying a fight Mattingly had with Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. This is despite the fact that Mattingly never had sideburns and was still kicked off the team even though by then the entire middle third of Mattingly's head was shaved. Even so, Mattingly remarks that Burns was still better than Steinbrenner.
- CF: Ken Griffey, Jr. (Seattle Mariners): Overdoses on nerve tonic, resulting in gigantism.
- C: Mike Scioscia (Los Angeles Dodgers): Suffered Radiation poisoning, leaving him unable to move or speak at normal rate.
- SS: Ozzie Smith (St. Louis Cardinals): Lost in the Springfield Mystery Spot.
- P: Roger Clemens (Boston Red Sox): Hypnotized into thinking he is a chicken.
Burns' first-choice team
When Burns gets the idea of acquiring ringers, he unveils a team of 19th century and dead-ball era players that he wants Smithers to sign. Smithers then has to tell Burns that all these players have retired and passed on, and that the right fielder (Jim Creighton) has been dead for 130 years.
- P: Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown
- C: Gabby Street
- 1B: Cap Anson
- 2B: Napoleon Lajoie
- SS: Honus Wagner
- 3B: Pie Traynor
- LF: Shoeless Joe Jackson
- CF: Harry Hooper
- RF: Jim Creighton
It should be noted that although most of these players were contemporaries, Traynor (the youngest member of the team) was born more than half a century later than Creighton. In fact, seven of the players (Anson being the exception) weren't even born yet when Creighton died. Anson, too, is a lot older than the rest of the team. He was 44 years old and close to retirement by the time Lajoie and Wagner made their Major League debuts, and had retired before any of the other players reached the Majors. Furthermore, Traynor is significantly younger than the rest of the team, and when he made his Major League debut in 1920, only Hooper was still active.
Quotes
- Lenny: Homer, last season we were 2 and 28!
Homer: I know it wasn't our best season...
Lenny: Actually, it was.
- Umpire: Okay, let's go over the ground rules. You can't leave first until you chug a beer. Any man scoring has to chug a beer. You have to chug a beer at the top of all odd-numbered innings. Oh, and the fourth inning is the beer inning.
Chief Wiggum: Hey, we know how to play softball.
- Homer: You're Darryl Strawberry.
Darryl: Yes?
Homer: You play right field.
Darryl: Yes?
Homer: I play right field, too.
Darryl: So?
Homer: Well, are you better than me?
Darryl: Well, I never met you... but... Yes.
- Homer: Where do you think you're going?
Lisa: To the game.
Homer: No no no. I don't want you to see me sit on my worthless butt.
Bart: We've seen it, Dad.
- Burns: Smithers, I've been thinking. Is it wrong to cheat in order to win a million-dollar bet?
Smithers: Yes, sir.
Burns: Let me rephrase that. Is it wrong if I cheat in order to win a million-dollar bet?
Smithers: No, sir. Who would you like killed?