“By their own follies they perished, the fools.”
~ Homer, The
Odyssey
“Operator! Give me the number for 911!”
~ Homer Simpson, The Simpsons
I’m far from alone in taking The Simpsons seriously as
a force to be reckoned with in American culture. After 400 original
episodes over 18 full seasons – the longest run by far of any sitcom
in U.S. television history – a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame,
a dubbing by Time magazine as the "20th century’s best
television series," and a new, rave-reviewed box-office smash
motion picture, The Simpsons is anything but obscure and
avant-garde nowadays. It’s downright mainstream.
College courses are taught about The Simpsons. Modern philosophers
have waxed existential about what the fictional family means for
humanity. Social and political pundits have opined about the series’
relevance and impact on American culture for years. Even our language
has been forever changed by that dysfunctional Every-family from
Springfield, U.S.A. – in 2001, the Oxford English Dictionary
added Homer’s trademark exclamation “D’oh!” to its comprehensive
catalog of the lingo…
In fact, so many articles – more than 300, as an educated guess
– have been written about The Simpsons since their first
TV appearance more than 20 years ago (as a comedic sketch on The
Tracey Ullman Show) that I had trouble coming up with an original
title for this essay. Options I labored to come up with that were
already in print included gems like "Homer’s Odyssey,"
and "The Tao of D’oh!" Both have been used, multiple times.
But all this is beside my point. What I want to talk about today
isn’t that The Simpsons has become a staple of American TV
and a permanent fixture of Americana itself – or even whether or
not it’s a good influence on the culture. My goal is to reveal just
how IMPORTANT Homer and company are to America’s freedom.
Yes, that’s right: The Simpsons play a vital role in the
preservation of our liberty.
Homer’s Homer of a Flick
Everyone who’s ever seen The Simpsons on television knows
that – at least on the surface – the show is largely pointless.
Like an animated Seinfeld, the storylines are basically vehicles
for the writers’ creativity and barbed (yet remarkably clean) humor.
It doesn’t aim to be the social conscience of a culture or to reflect
the zeitgeist of an age. Nor does it attempt to preach at us like
some animated after-school special for adults.
Therein lies The Simpsons’ beauty and genius.
Because its fundamental goal is to spread laughs instead of lessons,
the show’s writers are free to skewer everyone and everything in
America without fear of undermining any overarching agenda. And
this they do – gleefully freed from the shackles of political correctness
by their two boorish bards, Bart and Homer Simpson. In fact, The
Simpsons is such an equal-opportunity heckler of the American
condition that it’s really the only thing on the Fox network (or
any network) that truly approaches "fair and balanced."
True, if one looks really hard, the slightest suggestion of a
skew to the political left can be detected in The Simpsons.
But it’s so light-handed as to be almost irrelevant – and it tends
to highlight general issues (chiefly, the environment) more than
any particular political party. In fact, recognizable caricatures
of politicians from both sides of the aisle get roasted regularly
on The Simpsons.
In my opinion, the fact that there are no sacred cows in Springfield
is one of the reasons why the show is still running strong after
18 seasons. What’s lampooned mercilessly in one episode (like organized
religion) might be glorified in the next. In simplest terms, The
Simpsons is like that box of chocolates in Forrest
Gump. You really never know what you’re going to get in
the way of satire. And as you’ll see in a minute, this is integral
to the show’s relevance as a beacon of freedom…
However, even more important than this satirical even-handedness
is that year in and year out, the show’s primary gag-fodder isn’t
political movements, pop-culture icons, or high-profile figures
in the news or current events (though all of these make occasional
cameo appearances) – but rather, the media, big business and government.
And specifically, the hypocrisy and corruption rampant in these
institutions.
I was afraid that, in the movie version of The Simpsons,
these elements would be diluted or tempered in pursuit of the wide-reaching
mega-appeal summer blockbusters strive for. I needn’t have worried.
This dissenting spirit is not only alive and well on the big screen,
but applied with such alternately brutish and near-subliminal expertise
that, in my humble opinion, The Simpsons Movie sets a new
American cinematic benchmark (not to mention sounds a new wake-up
call) for the criticism of government, Big Business and the major
media in this country…
But especially the government.
In fact, the entire premise of the movie casts government as the
antagonist. Basically, the plotline is that after the town lake
becomes hopelessly contaminated with all sorts of pollutants (Homer
himself administering the toxic coup de grâce), the Environmental
Protection Agency seizes control of Springfield. In short order,
the entire town is wiped off maps and GPS grids by the government,
then sealed under an impregnable glass dome and left to implode
into an anarchic, might-makes-right state that’s like something
out of Lord
of the Flies or Hobbes’ Leviathan.
When this plan fails, the EPA chief decides to nuke the city
inside the dome – then convert its vast annihilation crater into
a "new grand canyon" tourist attraction. The Simpson family,
having escaped the dome through a sinkhole in their backyard, first
flees to Alaska, then return to save their hometown and foil the
Feds…
Of course, The Simpsons Movie is farfetched and nonsensical.
But it’s also brilliantly crystalline in its illustration of the
very essence of government – how it does exactly the wrong things,
for the wrong reasons (like their own enrichment and expansion),
while selling it to the public under the auspices of acting in their
interests.
It’s simultaneously stupid slapstick camp and quasi-polemical high
art. And it’s hilariously funny, especially if you’re alert. An
unbelievable amount of stuff is happening in the margins of the
screen or in the background of scenes here that’s pure comedic gold.
If you take a bathroom break from this 87-minute film, you’ll miss
five good chuckles at least…
Among the funniest highlights in The Simpsons Movie that
poke a hot stick in the eye of government are:
-
When EPA Chief Cargill – a business wizard who was appointed
to bring his PR savvy to the largely invisible agency – presents
President Schwarzenegger (they never show his face, but he’s
remarkably similar in voice and background to a certain West
Coast governor) with dossiers outlining five options for dealing
with the environmental crisis in Springfield, he chooses one
at random, offering the heavily-accented justification "I
was elected to lead, not to read."
-
Later in the movie, the same scenario plays out in the Oval
Office after the containment dome plan begins to show weaknesses
that could backfire, hurting the EPA’s image. Villain Cargill
again presents the President with five options – but hints and
prods and coaches him until he picks Option 4, which calls for
the nuclear annihilation of Springfield. At other points in
the film, we discover that Cargill’s conglomerate had a hand
in making not only the bomb, but also the dome that originally
sealed off the town.
-
Not exactly a MENSA candidate himself, Homer outwits a jack-booted
military guard (and breeches the dome to rescue the town) by
appearing out of the bushes dressed in a gold-piped, epaulette-equipped
hotel doorman’s outfit. Consulting the uniform’s nametag, he
pretends to be General "Marriot Suites" and orders
the guard away with an official-looking letter – written on
a leaf!
-
In an attempt to win public support for the creation of a "new
Grand Canyon" where Springfield used to be, the Feds enlist
the aid of über-popular Tom Hanks to appear in a public service
announcement, in which he says: "Hello, I'm Tom Hanks.
The U.S. Government has lost its credibility, so it’s borrowing
some of mine…" And later, "Because if you have to
trust a government, why not this one?"
-
When Cargill calls in the troops to protect Springfield from
Homer’s attempt to rescue both his family (whom the EPA has
taken prisoner) and the town, one of his minions calls him on
the carpet – accusing the bureaucrat of having let power go
to his head. Cargill answers: "Of course I've gone mad
with power! Have you ever tried going mad without power? It's
boring and no one listens to you!"
-
Having fled Springfield as wanted fugitives, the Simpson family
takes refuge in Alaska. But after seeing the Tom Hanks commercial
about the "new Grand Canyon" coming soon to where
Springfield is on the map, Marge realizes that the EPA plans
to nuke her home. But Homer refuses to help save the town, so
she takes the children and leaves him, heading back to Springfield
with no real plan except to sound the alarm and do whatever
else she can. While on a train across the tundra, they talk
openly, Marge assuring the kids that they’re far from the prying
eyes and ears of government. Just then, the conductor – who’s
actually a surveillance robot – picks up and starts transmitting
their conversation to a vast installation of the NSA, where
hundreds of Federal agents are eavesdropping on thousands of
conversations across the nation. The pointy-headed geek who
hears them jumps up and gleefully screams to the whole cavernous
room: "The government finally found someone we were looking
for!"
These are just a few from many of the comedic barbs The Simpsons
Movie hurls at our government. And it would take multiple essays
to catalog even the most obvious shots the film takes at the media,
popular culture and big business. If you see the film (and you should),
keep an eye out for Bart’s almost under-the-radar swipe at Disney.
It’s priceless!
But I digress. Again. I’m here to talk about why The Simpsons is
important to America, and why – even if you can’t stand them – you
should cheer their very existence…
The (Free) World According to Bart
As I alluded to earlier, it’s my opinion that what The Simpsons
does better than any other television show, radio gripe-fest, blog
or anything else on the scene today is reveal the hypocrisy in a
lot of establishment institutions. This is a very necessary thing
for the care and feeding of a proper democracy – in America and
elsewhere in the free world.
But what’s really scary these days is the fact that so much of
this type of healthy dissent gets quashed – by the media’s political
correctness, the increasing hyper-sensitivity of a litigation-happy
victim state, or by the bullying (or outright mandate) of government
and the courts. This should make us all a bit leery. When the most
biting, accurate and poignant kinds of dissent in our society have
to be delivered with animated pratfalls, quips and pranks in order
to be palatable to the masses and those who rule them, something’s
wrong…
Then again, perhaps I’m being too dramatic here. It could be that
the lightest form of comedy – not the earnest, dire commentary of
somber-faced, over-educated talking heads – really is the best vehicle
for simplifying and exposing the root of institutional hypocrisies.
Perhaps the ambiguity of the inane and farcical creates the perfect
receptive condition in the mind for the realization of just how
screwed we really are by those whom we’re trusting to look after
our interests on a larger scale.
But regardless of WHY The Simpsons are able to speak truth
to power whilst so many others are muzzled, one thing’s clear: Biased,
culturally destructive or not, Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, Maggie
and their friends reflect more accurately than anything else in
mainstream culture the things Americans from all points on the political
spectrum should have in common: A healthy, objective, and constant
skepticism of not only our government, but the other institutions
that rule over or influence us by virtue of their position, doctrine,
proximity, wealth, mythology, dogma or technology…
That’s what I mean when I say The Simpsons can save America.
If only we will let them.