Jazzy and the Pussycats

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The Simpsons episode
"Jazzy and the Pussycats"
Bart finds a passion for playing the drums.
Episode no. 380
Prod. code HABF18
Orig. airdate September 17, 2006
Show runner(s) Al Jean
Written by Daniel Chun
Directed by Steven Dean Moore
Couch gag Everyone (except for Homer) is sitting on the couch. A giant ape who looks like Homer grabs Marge through the window and takes her to the top of the Empire State Building as biplanes begin attacking him.[1]
Guest star(s) Meg White
Jack White
Season 18
September 10, 2006May 20, 2007
  1. "The Mook, the Chef, the Wife and Her Homer"
  2. "Jazzy and the Pussycats"
  3. "Please Homer, Don't Hammer 'Em"
  4. "Treehouse of Horror XVII"
  5. "G.I. (Annoyed Grunt)"
  6. "Moe'N'a Lisa"
  7. "Ice Cream of Margie (with the Light Blue Hair)"
  8. "The Haw-Hawed Couple"
  9. "Kill Gil: Vols. 1 & 2"
  10. "The Wife Aquatic"
  11. "Revenge Is a Dish Best Served Three Times"
  12. "Little Big Girl"
  13. "Springfield Up"
  14. "Yokel Chords"
  15. "Rome-old and Juli-eh"
  16. "Homerazzi"
  17. "Marge Gamer"
  18. "The Boys of Bummer"
  19. "Crook and Ladder"
  20. "Stop or My Dog Will Shoot"
  21. "24 Minutes"
  22. "You Kent Always Say What You Want"
List of all The Simpsons episodes

"Jazzy and the Pussycats"[1] is the second episode of The Simpsons' eighteenth season and first aired September 17, 2006.[1] When Bart turns a quiet funeral into a chaotic mess, Homer and Marge are faced with angry Springfielders who've had enough of Bart's mischeiviousness. But when a psychiatrist assists Bart by channelling Bart's anger through drums, Lisa feels Bart may have stolen the one thing she held strong: music. For this, Lisa begins collecting animals to subdue her misery. It was written by Daniel Chun and directed by Steven Dean Moore.[1] Meg White and Jack White of the White Stripes guest star as themselves.[1] In its original run, the episode received 8.94 million viewers.[2]

Contents

[edit] Plot

The promotional image for the episode featuring Jack White and Meg White (The White Stripes), Bart and Milhouse.
The promotional image for the episode featuring Jack White and Meg White (The White Stripes), Bart and Milhouse.

Amber, Homer's Vegas wife from "Viva Ned Flanders", dies of a drug overdose, so the Simpson family attends her funeral. Bart, frustrated for having to go to a funeral for someone he doesn't know, plays a game of paddle ball. The game, however, goes awry when the ball flies into Reverend Lovejoy's mouth, choking him, which flies into Moe's mouth, then into a member of the Blue Man Group, who coughs up multiple amounts of balls into everyone's mouths. Homer and Marge are faced with the angry Church, who has had enough of Bart's antics. As a result, he is forced to see a competent psychiatrist (from"Brake My Wife, Please") who suggests Bart get a drum kit in order to harness his anger and the energy he has and find the focus and discipline that he needs. Bart gets a kit and instantly becomes a natural at it. He practices non-stop, and literally bumps into The White Stripes who are playing "The Hardest Button to Button". Eventually, his drumming drives Homer and Marge mad and Lisa suggests to her parents that she can take Bart to a jazz brunch.

Lisa asks Bart to jazz along with her quintet, which he does. Bart easily overshadows everyone, including Lisa, and a legendary jazz group asks him to play with them, much to Lisa's anger. Bart's drumming is such a success that he is a town icon and made the front cover of two magazines, thus making Lisa very annoyed as she thinks Bart is not worthy of his newfound popularity. Lisa is also angry when Bart pronounces jazz "JUZZ." Lisa then tries to overtake Bart in his passion of skateboarding only to run into a stack of barbecue sauce jars. Marge, who does not want Lisa to compete against Bart, decides to let her adopt a puppy in order to make her happy. At the animal shelter, Lisa picks the cutest puppy over a very sick dog that would otherwise die. But at night, the sick dog comes in a ghost-like form to tell her that his fate is doomed because she chose the other dog over him. Lisa decides to go back and adopt the sick puppy, but after seeing how sick many of them are, she decides to adopt them all in order to save their lives. On her way home, many other animals join her, including a horde of circus animals. Having nowhere to put them, Lisa puts them in the attic. After dinner that night, Lisa goes into the attic and finds Bart jazzing with the animals she rescued. A tiger bites Bart's drumming arm causing extensive nerve damage and meaning that he can no longer play.

In order to raise money for the operation he needs, Bart organizes a benefit concert with his Jazz friends. Meanwhile, Lisa is informed that her animals will be taken to a pound and killed if she cannot find a suitable home for them. In the end, after the benefit concert was a good success, Bart feels empathy for Lisa and decides to use the money to build a home for the animals. It is then hinted that another benefit concert will be thrown to repair Bart's arm.[1]

[edit] Cultural references

The title is a play on the fictitious rock band Josie and the Pussycats.[3][4] The White Stripes' sequence is identical in style to their music video for "The Hardest Button to Button".[4] The two are also wearing the same outfits they were in the video.[4] The Blue Man Group are seen at the funeral; when someone gives a choking member the heimlich manouver, a multitude number of balls start falling out, and the member turns into a yellow color.[4] Gunter and Earnst are also seen at Amber's funeral.[4] The scene where Lisa accumulates animals while strolling down the street is a nod to the opening credits from Quentin Tarantino's 1992 film Reservoir Dogs.[4] At Jazzy Goodtimes, Ralph Wiggum plays a Fisher-Price Corn Popper.[4] Moe calls the Titanic unsinkable in the box office.[3] The couch gag references King Kong.[3] A mentioned jazz musician shares the name CSI: Miami.[3] Other songs heard includes "Take Five", by Dave Brubeck[5] and "Killer Joe", by Benny Golson.[5]

[edit] Reception

In its original run, the episode received 8.94 million viewers.[2] Dan Iverson of IGN quotes that like the previous episode, it was decent, and praised the strength of the eighteenth season so far.[6] He called the White Stripes' cameo as funny, and called the episode entirely random, starting off with the death of Homer's Vegas wife Amber.[6] He gives the episode a final rating of 7/10, similar to the previous episode.[6]

[edit] References

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