List of fictional characters within The Simpsons
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Although The Simpsons is itself a show populated by fictional characters (see: List of characters from The Simpsons), there are also several characters within the show's universe who are fictional to the Simpsons characters themselves (see also: Show-within-a-show).
These include characters from TV and movies, as well as characters who appear on Halloween "Treehouse of Horror" episodes, which do not follow the show's continuity (if it can be said to have one).
[edit] Amendment To Be
Sings a parody of the 70's Schoolhouse Rock educational song "I'm Just A Bill" in "The Day the Violence Died." He is voiced by Jack Sheldon, the original voice of the Schoolhouse Rock shorts.
[edit] Alf
ALF appears in the episode "The Springfield Files", and is mentioned by Milhouse in the episode "Bart Sells His Soul".
[edit] Barney
Barney the Dinosaur appears in two episodes. In "Rosebud", Homer watches the Barney show and Barney drones, "Two plus two is four, two plus two is four." Homer proceeds to say, "I can see why this is so popular." In "The Joy of Sect", Barney sings to infants in order to brainwash them into loving "the leader".
[edit] Big Bird
Big Bird appears in the episode "Missionary: Impossible", in which Homer defrauds a PBS member station during pledge week. He flies down from the sky and squawks at Homer, making him run in the other direction.
[edit] Bender
Bender from Futurama appears in the episode "Missionary: Impossible"; he is seen manning one of the telephones in the PBS station, as well as being one of Bart's hallucinations in the episode "Bart vs. Lisa vs. The Third Grade". He makes a speaking appearance (voiced by John DiMaggio) in "Future-Drama". He also appears in "My Big Fat Geek Wedding" as a Bender doll Milhouse asks Matt Groening to sign.
[edit] Care Bears
In "The Fat and the Furriest", Homer sees a violent Care Bear wielding an iron bar, a product of his fear of bears. When Homer asks if the animal is a Care Bear, he corrects him, claiming that he's an "Intensive-Care Bear."
[edit] Elmo
Elmo has appeared in four episodes of The Simpsons. Elmo briefly appeared as a vengeful cartoon character in "Missionary: Impossible". He reminded Homer, who didn't want to pay for a pledge he made to a PBS phone-a-thon, that "Elmo knows where you live." In "Bart-Mangled Banner", a parody of post-9/11 America, Elmo appeared in a political prison after supporting opponents of George W. Bush; he said, "Elmo go to wrong fundraiser." Afterward, Homer said, "I don't wanna end up like Elmo, hanging himself in prison." In another episode of The Simpsons, a Tickle Me Elmo doll appears in Maggie's nursery. When Moe tickles him, Elmo slaps him and says "'No' means 'No' for Elmo!" The doll can be briefly seen in the episode "Trash of the Titans".
[edit] Fallout Boy
In the series, Fallout Boy first appeared in a 1950s Radioactive Man film serial shown at a comic book convention in the episode "Three Men and a Comic Book". However, unlike many Simpsons characters, he has only made a handful of appearances since. While Radioactive Man is a broad parody of many superheros, most obviously containing elements of Batman and Superman (and the comic incorporates an origin story similar to Marvel's The Hulk), among others, Fallout Boy is mainly a parody of Robin (with his costume, references as being the 'young ward' of Radioactive Man, and his younger age and sidekick status) with elements of Spider-Man (his fictional comic book origin, for example).
Additionally, Fallout Boy also appears in a real-life comic book titled Radioactive Man, published by Bongo Comics (a comic created in part by Matt Groening, the creator of The Simpsons) . In these comic books, Fallout Boy's real name is Rod Runtledge, he has a brother named Dodd Runtledge, and they live in Zenith City. Rod is a high school nerd living with his aunt, Aunt June, an obvious reference to Spider-Man's alter ego, Peter Parker, who lives with his Aunt May.
[edit] The Flintstones
A number of episodes of The Simpsons made explicit or implicit references to The Flintstones--- for example, in one episode of The Simpsons ("Marge vs. the Monorail") the starting sequence parodies the opening and theme song of The Flintstones, and in another episode ("Treehouse of Horror XII") Homer and Marge Simpson dress as Fred and Wilma Flintstone in the opening. In addition, the character Barney Gumble from The Simpsons is based on Barney Rubble. Another episode ("Lady Bouvier's Lover") has Mr. Burns greeting Homer, Marge and Maggie as Fred, Wilma, and Pebbles. Homer subsequently says "Yabba Dabba Doo!" when Mr. Burns gives him a box of chocolates. One episode's couch gag even featured the Simpsons running in and finding The Flintstones (as they were originally animated) sitting on the Simpsons' couch. One couch gag shows them running back and forth and the background is always the same. On Slideshow Bob Roberts, Bart has to go to Kindergarten and when he answers a question right, he plays with the "Flintstone Phone," a phone seen on the show. Bart pushes the Fred button and inside the phone Fred says "Yabba Dabba Doo, I Like Talking to You!"
[edit] The Grim Reaper (Doug)
In the "Reaper Madness" segment of "Treehouse of Horror XIV", Death comes for Bart. Homer kills Death (in revenge for "Snowball I and JFK"), but is forced to become the Grim Reaper himself as a replacement. Jasper, one of the residents of the Springfield Retirement Castle, later asks Homer "Where's the regular guy? Where's Doug?"
[edit] Happy Little Elves
The Happy Little Elves were an animated cartoon within the fictional Simpsons universe. They were crudely animated green elves in simplistic plots aimed at very young children. They starred in several direct-to-video movies. Both Lisa and Maggie were fans of the Elves, much to the disgust of Bart, who calls them the 'Crappy Little Elves'. They were referenced in the early seasons of the show but dropped in later seasons, although Lisa can occasionally be spotted carrying her "Happy Little Elves" lunchbox. They were likely intended as parodies of kids' cartoons such as The Smurfs and the Care Bears.
Appearances:
- The Return of the Happy Little Elves — The Tracey Ullman Show short.
- unnamed Christmas special — "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire".
- The Happy Little Elves Meet the Curious Bear Cub — "Some Enchanted Evening".
- The Happy Little Elves in Tinkly-Winkly Town — "Saturdays of Thunder".
- The Happy Little Elves Meet Fuzzy Snuggleduck — "Homer Alone".
[edit] Itchy & Scratchy
Itchy and Scratchy are a super-violent cartoon cat and mouse duo in the style of Tom and Jerry featured on the Krusty the Klown Show. Homer provided the voice for a cartoon dog named Poochie, who costarred with Itchy and Scratchy for a few cartoons (see entry below for Poochie). Bart refers in one episode to several characters from "the short-lived Itchy & Scratchy and Friends Hour": Uncle Ant, Disgruntled Goat, and Ku Klux Klam. In yet another episode, Itchy and Scratchy were temporarily replaced with "Eastern Europe's favorite cat and mouse team, Worker and Parasite." Itchy and Scratchy were originally intended only to parody Tom and Jerry, but their cartoon shorts proved very popular and became a regular part of the show.
[edit] Malibu Stacy
Malibu Stacy is a doll for young girls, comparable to (and a parody of) a Barbie doll. Waylon Smithers of the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant owns the largest collection of Malibu Stacy dolls in the world; he also took a leave of absence from the power plant to produce and star in Sold Separately, a musical based on Malibu Stacy. Malibu Stacy comes with a wide range of often ludicrous accessories, such as the "Malibu Stacy Lunar Rover".
Stacy was designed by Stacy Lovell, and her life is based on that of her creator. Lovell was in turn eventually dropped by her own company for funnelling profits to the Viet Cong. The doll was originally designed to be edible, but while kids didn't much like the taste of dried onion meal, they loved the doll. A second, plastic Malibu Stacy took America by storm. Older Malibu Stacy dolls featured breasts that were so large and pointy that they could poke out children's eyes, and were recalled.
When "Talking Malibu Stacy" dolls were introduced, pulling a string on the doll's back provided typically vapid catchphrases that were demeaning to women (such as "Don't ask me, I'm just a girl, hee hee hee"). Lisa fronted an effort to produce a competing doll called "Lisa Lionheart", which would act as a more positive female role model; its sales were disappointingly low, however, because of the simultaneous release of "Malibu Stacy With NEW Hat."
The "Talking Malibu Stacy" controversy was a parody of the Teen Talk Barbie controversy.
[edit] Marvin the Martian
Marvin the Martian appears in the episode "The Springfield Files". It makes him "very angry" to be included in a police lineup.
[edit] McBain
McBain is a movie action hero and parody of Arnold Schwarzenegger played by fictional actor Rainier Wolfcastle. McBain movies typically feature many standard action movie clichés, such as a policeman being gunned down just before retirement and humorous, if not absurd, one-liners before dispatching enemies. Some of his movies include, McBain: Let's Get Silly ("The entire movie is me standing against a brick wall for an hour and a half. It cost 80 million dollars."), Under Cover Nerd and the McBain films up to McBain 4: Fatal Discharge. Wolfcastle's career is on the rise in earlier seasons of the show, but takes a downturn thereafter; Wolfcastle is portrayed as fat and washed up (although he claims to be preparing for his next movie role, that of a fat secret agent).
[edit] McGarnagle
Though correctly referred to as "McGarnagle", DVD subtitles show the characters name as McGonigle. McGarnagle is the main character of a television series that parody the "hard-boiled cop" stereotype of action movies. McGarnagle is similar in appearance, voice, and behavior to Clint Eastwood's character of Harry Callahan from the Dirty Harry films. The correct spelling is actually "McGonagall".
McGarnagle appears in two episodes: "Bart's Inner Child" and "The Boy Who Knew Too Much".
[edit] MacGyver
Patty and Selma Bouvier both watch MacGyver religiously.
[edit] Matlock
The TV show/character adored by old people. He had his pills stolen by Grampa and Jasper in Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy and was seen being rushed to hospital. His biggest fans are Grandpa and Jasper, as well as Marge's mother. During his campaign, Mayor Quimby decided to the rename the 'New expressway' as the 'Matlock expressway'.
[edit] Mr. Peabody and Sherman
Mr. Peabody (a dog genius) and Sherman (his "pet" boy) are two fictional characters from the Jay Ward-created TV show Rocky and Bullwinkle. They make an appearance in "Treehouse of Horror V" episode twice, in the "Time and Punishment" segment. They first appear during Homer's trip through time; Mr. Peabody has a condescending attitude towards Sherman that is highly comical; Mr. Peabody's responses to Sherman are always met with "Quiet, you." In the same episode, Kang & Kodos's are transformed into Peabody and Sherman, due to Homer's changes to the time line.
[edit] Mr. Sparkle
Mr. Sparkle is a Japanese dishwashing detergent mascot that bears a strong resemblance to Homer. Voiced by Sab Shimono in "In Marge We Trust".
[edit] Oscar the Grouch
Oscar has appeared twice on The Simpsons, though unofficially and not by name. The first was in 1998 in the episode "Trash of the Titans", during the song "The Garbage Man". The second was in 2000 in the "Missionary: Impossible", in which Homer defrauds a PBS member station during pledge week.
[edit] Ozmodiar
Ozmodiar is a parody of the Great Gazoo from The Flintstones and is said to only be seen by Homer Simpson. However, he has been seen speaking briefly to Bart and Lisa. Also, he has spoken to Troy McClure in the "The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase" episode where Ozmodiar was introduced.
[edit] Peter Griffin
Peter Griffin, from Family Guy, appears in the story "Send in the Clones" in "Treehouse of Horror XIII". The screen pans from a shot of Homer's clones cloning themselves through a sea of Homer Simpson clones which includes the former drawing from The Tracey Ullman Show, obese Homer from the episode "King-Size Homer" and others. It should be noted that each clone was progressively stupider than the one preceeding it, with the implication being that Peter is a clone of Homer.
[edit] Poochie
When network executives decided that The Itchy and Scratchy Show needed an "update" to keep the interest of its audience, they devised Poochie, a cartoon dog "with an attitude". After widespread auditions, Homer was chosen to provide Poochie's voice. The character debuted to an unreceptive audience following a massive publicity campaign; he only served to interfere with the well-oiled machine of hyperviolent slapstick that Itchy and Scratchy had perfected over the years. When dissatisfied viewers flooded the network with letters crying for Poochie's immediate removal, if not death, the executives quickly decided to get rid of the character. Homer begged for another chance, insisting that Poochie would grow on the audience; this argument held little weight until the actress who performed voices for both Itchy and Scratchy declared her support for Poochie as well. Homer was shocked, however, when the next cartoon aired: it contained a hastily-animated, retroscripted segment stating that Poochie had decided to return to his "home planet", and that he died when his spaceship crashed.
He has since been seen once in a cameo at a funeral in an Itchy & Scratchy cartoon, and was run over in a Halloween Special. He also continues to be released in Itchy & Scratchy related merchandise.
[edit] Radioactive Man
Radioactive Man is a comic book superhero of whom Bart and Milhouse are particular fans. In one episode of the same name, Springfield was host to a Radioactive Man Hollywood movie, who Milhouse played his sidekick, Fallout Boy.
[edit] Ren & Stimpy
Ren and Stimpy appear at least twice in The Simpsons TV-Series.
In "Brother from the Same Planet" there is the animated clip on TV where Ren is eating Stimpy's collection of "furballs and stomach acid"
In "The Front" when Abraham Simpson wins the award for the best cartoon script one of the runner ups is "Ren and Stimpy: Season Premiere" ...although all that appears on the awards show screen are the words "clip not done yet".
In "Another Simpsons Clip Show" Lisa says 'Ren and Stimpy use clip shows all the time".
[edit] The Seven Duffs
The Seven Duffs are characters at the Duff Gardens theme park. The "Duffs" are a reference to Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, although Duff Gardens is an obvious parody of Busch Gardens. The Seven Duffs are named Tipsy, Queasy, Surly, Sleazy, Edgy, Dizzy and Remorseful. The only one that has spoken so far is Surly: "Hey, Surly only looks out for one guy...Surly! "Shut Up" and "Take a picture, it'll last longer. Get outta here!" While waving to people at the Duff Dayz Beer Festival, "Drink Duff (covers mouth with hand) responsibly."
[edit] SpongeBob SquarePants
SpongeBob SquarePants is one of three gods (Buddha and Jesus beside him) and appears in the episode "She Used to Be My Girl". He also appears in Krusty the Clown's T-shirt brand in "Fat Man and Little Boy (The Simpsons)". In the season 14 Chalkboard gag, SpongeBob was noted as Bart scrawled "SpongeBob is not a contraceptive". In "The Wife Aquatic", Marge and Lisa pass an exibit called "The Science of Spongebob" at the Barnacle Bay Museum.
[edit] Teletubbies
Several episodes of "The Simpsons" contain references to the Teletubbies. Notable episodes include "Wild Barts Can't Be Broken" where Milhouse not only watches the show but owns a pair of Teletubbies underpants, "Missionary: Impossible" as part of an angry mob who work for PBS, "Days of Wine and D'oh'ses" where a character called Gaa Gaa says "hurt everyone" which goes unnoticed except for Lisa because of the character's "cute name" which Bart laughs at, in "Lisa the Treehugger" the couch gag has the Simpsons as the Teletubbies, and in "Marge vs. Singles, Seniors, Childless Couples and Teens, and Gays" the Teletubbies make a live appearance in a parody of a Raffi concert, where the Teletubbies serve themselves Tubby custard and the predominantly toddler audience becomes excited at this seemingly simple act.
[edit] Tipsy McStagger
Tipsy McStagger is the name and mascot of the corporation that wanted to purchase the Flaming Moe's recipe in the episode of the same name. Moe mistakenly thinks there really is a Mr. McStagger and is apparently a fan of his mozzarella sticks.