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TV Review: The Simpsons

TV Review: The Simpsons

By Bikram GaihrePublished 4 years ago 4 min read
TV Review: The Simpsons
Photo by Stefan Grage on Unsplash

On Simpsons TV, the program uses a lot of credits, and the favorite American family sits in their living room and plays episodes of the first 11 series on a 32GB SD card, meaning no internet connection is required.

The Simpsons are back for their 33rd season hitting another joke with another Foxtel music episode, and let’s not pretend it didn’t happen this time around with the voice skills of Frozen star Kristen Bell. Singing and dancing to lazy program clips is your favorite Simpson music number, they are a pleasure to me, and when the Simpsons sing with clips like these, it’s stupid I can’t smile. Key & Springfield itself is a follow-up to The Simpsons and is part of the Simpsons collection of the first unforgettable music from Fox's long-running sitcom.

That’s the disrespect that makes The Simpsons add a promising addition to the original. The amazing thing about Simpsons is not just the sardonic wit that makes you want more, but also that Ullman can laugh for half a full hour. There is also a surprising touch of the series the relationship between father Homer and the evil boy Bart.

It helps, of course, that this is a caricature from a time when media coverage was declining and Simpsons was avoiding jokes and ideas that could provoke protests in some of the high-profile shows. The jokes have gone from being clever and funny to being stupid and good for the whole family, the show doesn't have to be annoying.

The Simpsons also make better use of the voices of their stars than many celebrity shows all over the body. The sitcom of the sitcom King of the Hill, which followed, also benefits from this freedom, like every half hour devoted to it shows.

Suppose season 15 was the time when the Simpsons were introduced, and that happened in season 15, 17 years ago. Today, the current program is still one of the best programs on first-time television. Simpsons ended two years before marking a decade this season, 32 years after once again settling under the Disney banner.

In May 2007, The Simpsons reached its 400th episode at the end of its 18th season at the end of May 2007. Fox's first television series made it to the top 30 states each season. It also has a record number of episodes of any American animated series, though another animated series has passed it.

On February 9, 1997, the Simpsons released the Flintstones episode "The Itchy and Scratchy Poochie Show" as the longest-running series in the United States. Probably the most controversial episode of the year and the last of The Simpsons.

The most controversial episode of the year put Homer on the rise in the 1990s when the show was still broadcasting and was still an important part of pop culture. Despite the endless criticism of the episode "The Poor Poor", I can bet a penny that it would have done at least another decade after this season.

Many of the episodes are well-worn, and thanks to the writers and the talent. The show I found late for me as I have seen it since the first season, but I grew up on 80 sitcoms like The Cosby Show and The Boss and Growing Pains, and I would love to see an animated series that has more depth and reality than all live-action programs put together.

One of the musical moments in this episode is season 13 featuring Billy Joel's parody "We As Not Starting A Fire" - a shout-out of "They Never Stop" from The Simpsons, and it's crazy to see that the show wasn't even there. in the middle while this clip was being broadcast.

I would say there is nothing new to talk about in season 15, considering what the Simpsons have been doing since then. Homer has become a leading character, Lisa's freedom is less annoying, Marge is no longer moral, many episodes revolve around Moe and Marge, and for some reason or a combination of reasons, everything has changed. Somehow, I can see that the Simpsons, culminating in its 30th season with more than 50 episodes, are a real symbol of our world standing on end.

The Simpsons this season is their 33rd and longest recorded game on the network, and as their characters grow older, the show has reset its timeline. It is a well-organized affair that has led millions of people to open three major networks on Sunday night to focus on the program. I remember the episode of "Great Union" from season 4, "The Last Out of the City" and "Springfield," from a variety of Simpsons' best episodes.

The Simpsons portrayed the daily lives of the working-class family, their parents Homer and Marge, their children Bart, Lisa, and Maggie, and countless weird residents of Springfield. The main characters are the Simpsons, who live in the fictional town of Central America Springfield. Season 17 is slowly becoming the Simpsons' storyline.

In today’s episodes, the Simpsons go from a charm (a respectable gag about a golden retriever to a Christmas fashion show) to a story about Marge, when she’s not angry enough with Homer to think about divorce.

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About the Creator

Bikram Gaihre

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