The Trouble with Trillions

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The Simpsons episode
"The Trouble with Trillions"
Episode no. 198
Prod. code 5F14
Orig. Airdate April 5, 1998
Show Runner(s) Mike Scully
Written by Ian Maxtone-Graham
Directed by Swinton O. Scott III
Chalkboard "I will not demand what I'm worth"
Couch gag Rather than a couch, there is a sauna , with three guys in towels.
Guest star Paul Winfield as Lucius Sweet
DVD commentary by Matt Groening
Mike Scully
George Meye
Ian Maxtone-Graham
Swinton O. Scott III
Matt Selman
SNPP capsule
Season 9
September 21, 1997May 17, 1998
  1. The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson
  2. The Principal and the Pauper
  3. Lisa's Sax
  4. Treehouse of Horror VIII
  5. The Cartridge Family
  6. Bart Star
  7. The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons
  8. Lisa the Skeptic
  9. Realty Bites
  10. Miracle on Evergreen Terrace
  11. All Singing, All Dancing
  12. Bart Carny
  13. The Joy of Sect
  14. Das Bus
  15. The Last Temptation of Krust
  16. Dumbbell Indemnity
  17. Lisa the Simpson
  18. This Little Wiggy
  19. Simpson Tide
  20. The Trouble with Trillions
  21. Girly Edition
  22. Trash of the Titans
  23. King of the Hill
  24. Lost Our Lisa
  25. Natural Born Kissers
List of all Simpsons episodes...

The Trouble with Trillions is the 20th episode of the ninth season of The Simpsons.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

On January 1st, Ned completes his yearly taxes. Later that year, just before midnight on April 15, Homer realizes he did not do his own taxes. He rushes and provides false information before driving like mad to the post office. The IRS discovers Homer's fraud and arrests him. Held by the government, Homer says he will do anything to stay out of prison. Agent Johnson of the FBI decides that Homer can be useful. With a hidden microphone under his shirt, Homer uncovers that his co-worker Charlie leads a group planning to assault all government officials.

With his superiors impressed, Johnson sends Homer on a secret mission. They reveal that in 1945, President Harry Truman printed a one trillion dollar bill to help reconstruct post-war Europe. He handed the vital cargo over to Montgomery Burns to transport to the Europeans. However, the money never arrived and the FBI suspects Burns still has the money with him. Arriving at Burns' estate, Homer searches for the money before Burns, who believes Homer is a reporter from Collier's magazine, reveals that he kept the money on his person. Johnson and Agent Miller burst in and arrests Burns for grand-grand-grand-grand-larceny. Burns shouts how the US government oppresses the average American and tells Homer to write "don't let the government push you around". Moved by Burns' speech, Homer knocks out the FBI agents and frees Burns.

Burns takes Smithers and Homer in his old plane, setting off to find an island and start a new country. Over the Caribbean, Burns finds a fine island although it already has a name and is a country - Cuba. Going before Fidel Castro, Burns fails to buy the island: Fidel asks to see the trillion dollar bill, and Burns hands it over. Then Burns asks for it back, to which Castro responds: "Give what back?". His cigar is now lit, perhaps implying that Castro has just used the world's most expensive lighter. Cut to scene where Burns, Smithers and Homer are on a make-shift raft. Burns announces he will merely bribe the jury when Smithers, Homer and himself are put on trial, prompting Homer to cheer.

[edit] Trivia

  • Ned Flanders finishes his tax return on January 1st and is reminded by Maude of the opening hours of the post office. On New Year's Day post offices are closed.
  • The top secret film containing adult situations is rated TV-PG. It can also only be viewed by entering a photo booth and saying the top-secret password... 'Cheese'.
  • During the scene when he is being interrogated Homer's tax return turns into a ball of string in one shot.
  • According to the DVD commentary for this episode, the taxi driver in Cuba is ment to look like Avery Schriber. This is a reference to the Burns and Schriber sketch about the taxi driver.
  • Harry Truman notes in this episode that "American tax dollars will go to fund our Allies who fought so poorly and surrendered so readily."

[edit] Cultural references

  • The title "The Trouble with Trillions" is a play on the Star Trek episode "The Trouble with Tribbles".
  • The museum Burns has in his house has a painting showing Burns or an ancestor in a kilt. It may be play on Scrooge McDuck as the typical Scottish miser.
  • Mr. Burns believes Homer is a reporter from Collier's Weekly, a magazine which ended publication in 1957.
  • When Homer says "It goes all the way to the president" is a reference to All the President's Men.
  • There is a caricature of Che Guevara on the Cuban Duff ad, saying El Duffo o Muerte similar to Cuba national motto: Patria o Muerte (Homeland or Death).
  • Homer states that he has not been fired "...after three meltdowns and one China Syndrome. China Syndrome is a hypothetical result of a nuclear meltdown where the nuclear slag drains down into the earth and contaminates ground water, named after the movie 'The China Syndrome'.
  • When Homer is at Havana International Airport, he is made to fill out a form explaining his visit. The choices are "Business/Pleasure", "Smuggle Cigars", and "Assassinate Castro". Homer checks all three, probably thinking it was fun to check boxes.
  • When Homer, Smithers, and Mr. Burns are in Cuba they hail a taxi. As they get inside, Mr. Burns remarks 'This is the new Packard we've been hearing all about'. This is a reference to the Packard Motor Car Company, a vehicle manufacturer that went out of business in 1958, as well as the fact Cubans have a good reputation for making cars last a long time. Burns also was not aware of the Cuban Revolution, when he is informed by the driver that Fulgencio Batista is no longer in power (and had been dead for over thirty years when the episode aired).

[edit] External links

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