Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?

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The Simpsons episode
"Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?"
Episode no. 229
Prod. code AABF21
Orig. Airdate October 24, 1999
Writer(s) Al Jean
Director Nancy Kruse
Chalkboard "I am not the Last Don"
Couch gag The family, running into the living room, is surprised to see that Matt Groening has written his name on the carpet. Marge washes the name off, but Groening comes in again to write it down.
Guest star(s) Edward Asner as the Newspaper Editor
SNPP capsule
Season 11
September 26, 1999May 21, 2000
  1. Beyond Blunderdome
  2. Brother's Little Helper
  3. Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?
  4. Treehouse of Horror X
  5. E-I-E-I-(Annoyed Grunt)
  6. Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder
  7. Eight Misbehavin'
  8. Take My Wife, Sleaze
  9. Grift of the Magi
  10. Little Big Mom
  11. Faith Off
  12. The Mansion Family
  13. Saddlesore Galactica
  14. Alone Again, Natura-Diddily
  15. Missionary: Impossible
  16. Pygmoelian
  17. Bart to the Future
  18. Days of Wine and D'oh'ses
  19. Kill the Alligator and Run
  20. Last Tap Dance in Springfield
  21. It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Marge
  22. Behind the Laughter
List of all Simpsons episodes...

"Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?" is the third episode of the eleventh season of The Simpsons. It aired on October 24, 1999.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The students of Springfield Elementary go on a field trip to the Springfield Shopper newspaper facility for a tour, and they are joined by parents of students, including Homer. When he's there, he smells cake from a room, which is designed to celebrate the retirement of the paper's food critic. Homer eats some of the food and sings a song about how much he likes it. The newspaper's editor says that they are looking for a new food critic, and ask Homer to write a 500-word sample review. If the review is good, Homer will become the new food critic. He makes a first attempt that does not succeed, but his second attempt is more successful with aid from Lisa. The paper makes Homer its new food critic.

Inevitably, Homer turns in positive reviews of restaurants across Springfield, but when the positive reviews keep coming in, all of Springfield (except the Simpson family) is overweight. Homer continues writing nothing but positive reviews, until the other critics at the paper chastise Homer for liking everything. The critics convince Homer that a real critic looks down upon everything. Now that he's sure his job is to hate everything, Homer gives a negative review of a performance of King Lear at a local dinner theater, featuring Krusty as King Lear. Eventually, Homer gives negative reviews of other Springfield restaurants, and no one in Springfield likes him anymore. As the Taste of Springfield Festival is coming up, the owners of many Springfield restaurants Homer has critiqued hatch an evil plot to have him killed. The chef of a pastry restaurant (The French Confection) makes a very high-calorie éclair loaded with lots of butter, chocolate, and poison. Homer shows up at the festival and almost eats the éclair, but is stopped when Lisa tells him it's low-fat. He throws the éclair into the air and it lands in a pot of gruel and explodes. The restaurant's evil chef is arrested but escaped when the cops weren't looking. At the end, Homer and Lisa are chased by an angry mob.

[edit] Trivia

  • People seen at Planet Springfield: Reverend Lovejoy, Julius and Bernice Hibbert, Principal Skinner, Edna Krabappel, Kirk Van Houten, Scott Christian, and Martin Prince's parents.
  • Booths at the food festival: Ugli, The Gilded Truffle, Ah, Fudge!, Much Ado About Muffins!, The French Confection, The Texas Cheesecake Depository, Phineas Q. Butterfats 5600 Flavors Ice Cream Parlor, The Pimento Grove, The Happy Sumo, The Frying Dutchman, The Hungry Hun, and Moleman's Gruel.
  • Lisa says that they recently visited a restaurant called the Pate Le-Belle, a reference to Patti LaBelle.

[edit] Cultural references

[edit] Goofs

  • While Homer writes his first review, the typewriter's "E" key doesn't work. However, his review contains the words "screw Flanders", which clearly has the letter "E". It is possible that Homer did not use the letter "E"; he might have written "SCRW FLANDRS" which can be easily understood as "SCREW FLANDERS" (or wrote it as "SCRU FLANDURS")


[edit] External links