Hungry, Hungry Homer

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The Simpsons episode
"Hungry, Hungry Homer"
Homer on his hunger strike.
Episode no. 262
Prod. code CABF09
Orig. airdate March 4, 2001
Show runner(s) Mike Scully
Written by John Swartzwelder
Directed by Nancy Kruse
Chalkboard "Temptation Island was not a sleazy piece of crap"
Couch gag The Simpsons are black belts in karate. They use their hands to chop up the couch while Homer does an elaborate flip and switches on the TV with his remote.
Guest star(s) Stacy Keach as Howard K. Duff VIII
Season 12
November 1, 2000May 20, 2001
  1. "Treehouse of Horror XI"
  2. "A Tale of Two Springfields"
  3. "Insane Clown Poppy"
  4. "Lisa the Tree Hugger"
  5. "Homer vs. Dignity"
  6. "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes"
  7. "The Great Money Caper"
  8. "Skinner's Sense of Snow"
  9. "HOMR"
  10. "Pokey Mom"
  11. "Worst Episode Ever"
  12. "Tennis the Menace"
  13. "Day of the Jackanapes"
  14. "New Kids on the Blecch"
  15. "Hungry, Hungry Homer"
  16. "Bye Bye Nerdie"
  17. "Simpson Safari"
  18. "Trilogy of Error"
  19. "I'm Goin' to Praiseland"
  20. "Children of a Lesser Clod"
  21. "Simpsons Tall Tales"
List of all The Simpsons episodes

"Hungry, Hungry Homer" is the fifteenth episode of the twelfth season of The Simpsons. It aired on March 4, 2001.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The Simpson family visits Blockoland, a theme park which is completely made of blocks. Lisa is ripped off when her Eiffel Tower kit has a missing Blocko piece. In response, Homer "sticks up for the little guy", and he gets Lisa the piece she needs. He also stands up for the little guy by helping Bart get a girlfriend for an upcoming school dance and helps Marge get two free hair streaks. When he tries to help Lenny by getting him a refund on his tickets for the Springfield Isotopes, Homer encounters the Isotopes' owner Howard K. Duff VIII. The owner refuses to give Homer a refund but in his haste to leave, Homer discovers evidence that the Isotopes are moving to Albuquerque. Duff insists that they are not moving and he has Duffman drug Homer to cover up the truth.

Homer is shocked and attempts to alert the media to the plan, but Duff removes all traces of the evidence Homer found. The journalists dismiss Homer's story and call him a liar. In response, Homer stages a hunger strike in which he chains himself to a pole near Duff Stadium in order to force the owners of the team to admit they are moving to Albuquerque. He attracts a great deal of attention so the team decides to move him into the ballpark and exploit his popularity using the name "Hungry, Hungry Homer." Eventually Homer becomes so thin and sickly that the team decides to get rid of him, replacing him with a man who drinks a bucket of paint but falls down twitching doing so. In a public ceremony, the team's owner unchains him and offers him a free hot dog. Homer realizes the hot dog is topped with Southwestern ingredients and this proves the team really is moving to Albuquerque. The crowd then takes notice that the hot dogs are even wrapped with "Albuquerque Isotopes" paper and are enraged. Howard K. Duff VIII tries to continue his denials but even Duffman turns against him. Homer's hunger strike is over as he celebrates under a shower of food thrown by the cheering fans who now praised him as a hero. He eats the food as well.

Meanwhile, the mayor of Albuquerque decides to abandon his plan to steal the Isotopes and instead plans to purchase the Dallas Cowboys and make them play baseball because, as he menacingly says in the final shot of the episode, "for I am the MAYOR OF ALBUQUERQUE!"

[edit] Trivia

  • Duffman's first name is Sid, but in the season eleven episode Pygmoelian, the actor's name was Larry. It is learned in later episodes (namely Jaws Wired Shut and Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play), however, that Duffman is played by different actors (who have all died), or in the case of "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play", there are multiple Duffmen who look, act, and sound alike (but this is kept a secret so as not to disillusion children).
  • The hair salon is called Hairy Shearers, after The Simpsons voice actor and former SNL castmember Harry Shearer.
  • Although purely fictional at the time, the Albuquerque Isotopes became a real baseball team in 2003 as a minor league affiliate of the Florida Marlins, which used to be the Calgary Cannons from Calgary, AB, Canada. The name was inspired by this episode (although New Mexico does have a connection with nuclear energy) and was selected by fans.
  • On subsequent airings of this episode, the ending with the mayor of Albuquerque choosing another city for his baseball team was cut in syndication, so the episode ends with Homer celebrating in the stadium. The original ending with the sinister mayor is still shown in Denmark, Britain, Canada, Australia and France.
  • This is the only time Homer tries to strangle Milhouse. Mainly, he does that to Bart.

[edit] Cultural references

  • Blockoland is a parody of Legoland.
  • The ghost of César Chávez visits Homer during his hunger strike, but takes the appearance of Cesar Romero, because Homer doesn't know what Chavez looks like.
  • The scene where Bart sees Homer lying on top of the red dog house is a direct reference to Charlie Brown and Snoopy. Bart even utters Charlie Brown's signature line "Good Grief".
  • The title is a play on the game, Hungry Hungry Hippos. Coincidentally, one of the hippos in the game is named Homer.
  • When Kent Brockman says that Mr. Duff is insisting that Homer is a liar, they show footage of Homer with his pants on fire. This is a nod to the classic chant, Liar, Liar, Pants On Fire.
  • When Marge gets streaks in her hair, this resembles the look of the Bride of Frankenstein's hair; tall white with two black streaks.

[edit] External links

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