Lisa's First Word

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The Simpsons episode
"Lisa's First Word"
Bart holding Lisa when she was firstborn.
Episode no. 69
Prod. code 9F08
Orig. Airdate December 3, 1992
Show Runner(s) Al Jean & Mike Reiss
Written by Jeff Martin
Directed by Mark Kirkland
Chalkboard "Teacher is not a leper"
Couch gag The family forms a chorus line, which turns into a large production number.
Guest star Elizabeth Taylor as Maggie
DVD commentary by Matt Groening
Al Jean
Jeff Martin
Mark Kirkland
Season 4
September 24, 1992May 13, 1993
  1. Kamp Krusty
  2. A Streetcar Named Marge
  3. Homer the Heretic
  4. Lisa the Beauty Queen
  5. Treehouse of Horror III
  6. Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie
  7. Marge Gets a Job
  8. New Kid on the Block
  9. Mr. Plow
  10. Lisa's First Word
  11. Homer's Triple Bypass
  12. Marge vs. the Monorail
  13. Selma's Choice
  14. Brother from the Same Planet
  15. I Love Lisa
  16. Duffless
  17. Last Exit to Springfield
  18. So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show
  19. The Front
  20. Whacking Day
  21. Marge in Chains
  22. Krusty Gets Kancelled
List of all Simpsons episodes...

"Lisa's First Word" is the 10th episode of The Simpsons' fourth season.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

When Homer, Marge and Bart unsuccessfully try to get Maggie to speak, Marge tells the family the story of when Lisa said her first word.

It is March 1983, and Homer, Marge, and Bart lived in the Lower East Springfield district. One day, Marge says that she is awaiting another baby, with Bart imagining a new brother who he can use as a scapegoat for his own misbehavior. But as Marge is pregnant, she feels that the Simpsons are going to need a bigger house. Homer and Marge try to look for houses, including a houseboat that Captain McAllister has until now. After unsuccessful attempts, the Simpsons find a house on Evergreen Terrace and buy it with a $15,000 down payment from the sale of Grampa's house.

In 1984, the Simpsons move into their new Evergreen Terrace home, with the Flanders family as neighbors. Homer borrows a TV tray from Flanders for "a little while", which he just bought at the hardware store, but he still has it in the present time. Bart turns two years old, and for the first time, he watches Krusty the Clown, as well as Itchy & Scratchy. Krusty also does a promotion for the 1984 Summer Olympic Games with his Krusty Burger chain, which is the "Official Meat-Flavored Sandwich of the 1984 Olympics." The promotion offers scratch-and-win game cards in which people can scrape off the name of the event from the game card, and if the U.S. wins a gold medal, that person wins a free Krusty Burger. However, the game cards were rigged so they only displayed events in which the Soviet Union typically performed strongly. But, when the Soviet Union boycott the Olympics, Krusty loses $44 million and Homer gets a steady supply of Krusty Burgers.

Bart is asked to give up his crib so it can become the new baby's. Homer builds Bart a new bed of a clown, which scares Bart (see below). Marge thinks that the baby is coming, and she and Homer go to the hospital, leaving Bart with the Flanders family. He goes home and is scared until Homer asks him to see Lisa. Bart thinks that he hates Lisa. Everyone, except Bart, agrees that she is a beautiful baby. Later, Bart does bad things to Lisa—such as giving her a haircut with household scissors ("Who's cuter now?"), sticking stamps on her, and sticking her through the Flanders' doggy door—and is punished. He blames Lisa for his problems and leaves, until she says her first word, "Bart." Bart discovers that Lisa can talk, and she even knows the name of David Hasselhoff. After Lisa winds Homer up by saying his real name, Bart holds her close to him for the very first time, and seems to appreciate her more from then on.

However, back in present day, the flashback ends and we see Bart and Lisa having a row. Homer takes Maggie to bed, saying that "the sooner kids talk, the sooner they talk back", and that he hopes that Maggie never says a word. However, when he leaves her bedroom, Maggie removes her pacifier and says "Daddy."

[edit] Trivia

  • This is the first time Maggie has ever spoken in a realistic manner. She would later say other things, such as "Daddily-Doodily" in Home Sweet Homediddly-Dum-Doodily. Elizabeth Taylor provides the voice for Maggie's first word. When the clip of Maggie saying, "Daddy" was shown on the episode "Gump Roast", it was redubbed with Nancy Cartwright's voice.
  • This is the third Simpsons episode devoted entirely to telling the events of the past. The first two were "The Way We Was" and "I Married Marge." There would be several others after this episode, including "Homer's Barbershop Quartet", "And Maggie Makes Three", "Lisa's Sax" and "The Way We Weren't."
  • The FOX censors wrote a note concerning Homer's line, "Bart can kiss my hairy, yellow butt!" after Marge tells Homer that Bart might be jealous of baby Lisa, citing that the line is considered "coarse" since, due to the fact that Bart was two during the flashback, it may imply pedophilia. The line was not taken out.
  • The episode was named "Maggie's First Word" in Latin America, despite the main focus on Lisa. Maggie does say a word however and was voiced by the same voice actress of Lisa.
  • In the 80's flashback, Krusty appears to read a report on the Olympics, despite being illiterate in the first season episode "Krusty Gets Busted".

[edit] Cultural references

Maggie with her pacifier.
Maggie with her pacifier.
  • 1983 references:
  • 1984 Summer Olympics — are referenced.
  • McDonald's — Krustyburger's Summer Olympics promotion is inspired by McDonald's "scratch-and-win" promotion during the Olympics. Customers won a free food item — a hamburger, french fries or a soft drink, or on certain cards, a cash prize up to $10,000 — if they had a ticket listing an event where the United States won a medal. McDonald's lost millions on the promotion, just like Krusty fears will happen. Although Krusty has had the game cards all predetermined to be listed on events that the Soviets had always won, which turns out to go against him when he learns of the Soviets boycotting the 1984 Olympics.
  • Wendy's — The Springfield Shopper headline from the day Lisa was born ("MONDALE TO HART: WHERE'S THE BEEF?") uses the currently popular advertising slogan for Wendy's. Although "where's the beef?" was intended to be a slogan for Wendy's, it gained popularity in jokes and also in political slogans.

[edit] "Can't sleep, clown will eat me"

Bart fears for his life.
Bart fears for his life.

"Lisa's First Word" is perhaps best known as the source of Bart's meme "Can't sleep, clown will eat me".

Inspired by an event in Simpsons writer Mike Reiss' childhood, young Bart does not want to give up sleeping in the crib to make way for his newborn sister. Noticing Bart's affection for Krusty the Clown, Homer decides to build a clown-themed bed to please his son. But thanks to Homer's poor handicraft skills, the bed takes on a sinister appearance and frightens Bart, especially in the darkened room. In his first night in the new bed, far from 'laughing himself to sleep', Bart imagines that the face on the headboard of the bed is coming to life, intoning with sinister glee, "If you should die before you wake...", before collapsing into evil cackling. Bart then curls up into a fetal position on the sofa downstairs, chanting "can't sleep, clown'll eat me..."

The catchphrase inspired the Alice Cooper song, "Can't Sleep, Clowns Will Eat Me," and has become a favorite among insomniacs.

[edit] External links

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