My Fair Laddy

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The Simpsons episode
"My Fair Laddy"
Episode no. 368
Prod. code HABF05
Orig. Airdate February 26, 2006
Written by Michael Price
Directed by Bob Anderson
Couch gag Claymation versions of the Simpsons and Gumby roll onto the couch
SNPP capsule
Season 17
September 11, 2005May 21, 2006
  1. Bonfire of the Manatees
  2. The Girl Who Slept Too Little
  3. Milhouse of Sand and Fog
  4. Treehouse of Horror XVI
  5. Marge's Son Poisoning
  6. See Homer Run
  7. The Last of the Red Hat Mamas
  8. The Italian Bob
  9. Simpsons Christmas Stories
  10. Homer's Paternity Coot
  11. We're on the Road to D'ohwhere
  12. My Fair Laddy
  13. The Seemingly Never-Ending Story
  14. Bart Has Two Mommies
  15. Homer Simpson, This Is Your Wife
  16. Million Dollar Abie
  17. Kiss Kiss, Bang Bangalore
  18. The Wettest Stories Ever Told
  19. Girls Just Want to Have Sums
  20. Regarding Margie
  21. The Monkey Suit
  22. Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play
List of all Simpsons episodes...

"My Fair Laddy" is the twelfth episode of The Simpsons' seventeenth season. It first aired in the US on February 26, 2006. It aired in the UK on March 26, 2006.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

When the old gym teacher announces that she will be gone until fall because of her sex change operation, a substitute takes her place. Every gym class, he has them play a game called "Bombardment," which basically just involves him throwing dodgeballs at the students. When Bart gets sick of the constant bullying, he fills a ball full of water and sticks it in the freezer overnight (Nelson calls it an Ice-ball). The next day, he throws it at the gym teacher, who ducks, and the ball crashes through the window and hits Willie's shack and destroys it. When Marge picks up Bart from school and sees Willie homeless, she offers to let him stay at their house, and he accepts (after realizing that the "pan over [his] head" was actually a colander). When there, Lisa has Willie realize that his life could be much better, and she decides to turn him into a proper gentlemen. Bart, however, doesn't believe that she can do it, but Lisa bets that she can do it in time for the school science fair.

Meanwhile, Homer comes home with his last pair of blue pants ripped and torn after his seat breaks at the go-cart track. As he searches through town for a new pair, he finds no store that sells his favorite type of pants. When he goes to the factory that sells them, the manager tells him that they don't make blue pants anymore due to poor sales, but Homer tells him that he'll get more customers. Not surprisingly for him, he does this by writing "Buy blue pants" on the back of his head. However, it works, and soon everyone is wearing blue pants.

While this is happening, Lisa is struggling to get Willie to act sophisticated. Soon, it is the day before the science fair, and he is still his same old self. When he sees how disappointed Lisa is, he suddenly surprises both Bart and Lisa by correctly (and with a 'proper' accent/dialect) saying a sentence she gave him. At the science fair the next day, he impresses everyone with his politeness. However, no one actually knows that it is the old groundskeeper until Lisa announces it to everyone. Once again, she wins the science fair, and the bet along with it.

Even though he is respected by everybody, Willie misses his old life, but his job and his shack were both taken by the music teacher. He explains to Lisa that he wishes to go back to the way things were, and she understands. Soon, he's back to cleaning and living in his shack.

[edit] Trivia

  • In the show's entire 17-year run, this is the very first full-length episode centered around Groundskeeper Willie. He was, however, the central character in "Nightmare on Evergreen Terrace", one of the three segments of "Treehouse of Horror VI", and had a large amount of screentime devoted to him in "Girly Edition"—in which his shack was also destroyed by Bart's shenanigans and left him temporarily homeless.
  • Connections: This episode covers the same topic as "My Fair Lady." This episode is also somewhat similar to the season 11 episode "Pygmoelian", in the sense that it features another secondary character getting a 'makeover' or 'new look'; last time it was Moe Szyslak. "My Fair Lady" is also a retelling of Pygmalion.
  • In the gym teacher's date book, "Double Bombardment" is listed on Christmas.
  • In this episode's end credits, instead of the normal music there was a mix-up of the songs (without words) "Wouldn't it be adequate?", "What flows from the nose does not go on my clothes", "I could be indoors all night" and "I miss being a groundskeeper".
  • The man in the commercial sits down and the music stops, but when Homer and Eli Stern VI have stopped talking, he is standing up again and the music is playing.
  • In the Italian version of this episode, the gym teacher is voiced by famous footballer and World Cup winner Gennaro Gattuso.

[edit] Cultural references

  • The title is a take-off of My Fair Lady. Also, the episode features songs similar to the style featured in the play.
  • The gym teacher saying "What is your major malfunction, Simpson?" is a reference to Full Metal Jacket. In fact, the entire scene is modeled after a similar scene in the film, from camera angles to Bart's facial expression.
  • The wager that Jimbo Jones makes with Kearney is a reference to Around the World in 80 Days, by Jules Verne.
  • Groundskeeper Largo tells Willie that "If I had your voice I'd talk-sing everything!" This is a reference to actor Rex Harrison, who spoke his songs over music rather than singing them in My Fair Lady.
  • The company that makes Homer's blue pants is known as Worldwide Pants. A marquee outside the corporate offices of Worldwide Pants claims the company had the name before David Letterman, whose production company is also known as Worldwide Pants.
  • The music heard in the Super Bowl commercial for Blue Pants is "Baby Elephant Walk" by Henry Mancini, composed for the film Hatari!. This song was also used in Dancin' Homer.
  • Homer advertises blue pants by writing on his head, which may be a reference to online casino GoldenPalace.com. Among other stunts, the company has paid athletes to wear temporary tattoos of its logo while they compete.

[edit] External links

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