"To Surveil with Love" is the twentieth episode of The Simpsons' twenty-first season. It premiered on the Fox Broadcasting Company in the United States on May 2, 2010 as the 461st episode of the whole series. In the episode, radiation seeps out of Homer's gym bag after a bomb squad blows it up and Springfield officials decide to suspend all civil liberties. Meanwhile, Lisa dyes her hair after being stereotyped for being blonde.[1][2]
The episode was written by Michael Nobori and directed by Lance Kramer and guest stars Eddie Izzard. It also featured a new sequence with Kesha's single "Tik Tok" as the theme song, replacing the whole opening sequence. "To Surveil with Love" has received overwhelmingly positive reviews with TV Squad, who have named it the best episode in years. The episode also received a 2.7/8 in the 18-49 Nielsen Rating demographic going down one-tenth from the previous episode "The Squirt and the Whale".
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When Mr. Burns is informed that the Nuclear Power Plant has run out of room to store waste plutonium, Smithers hides some of the radioactive matter in Homer's Duff gym bag. Shortly afterwards, Homer goes to the train station to eat macaroni and cheese (because Lenny told him it was better than the one in the plant), but when a passenger tells him that he should try macaroni and cheese in Ogdenville, he rushes there, forgetting the bag. The police see the bag as a threat and decide to detonate it, causing a nuclear explosion in the train station (which, according to Kent Brockman, released enough radioactive power to create seventeen Incredible Hulks and a Spider-Man). The incident sparks fears of terrorism, and the town votes to hire an English security consultant named Nigel Bakerbutcher (Eddie Izzard) to install surveillance cameras all around Springfield. Soon the entire town is being watched, but Chief Wiggum and the other officers tire of watching the surveillance screens and recruit some of the townspeople — including Marge and Ned Flanders — to keep watch. Marge is not comfortable watching the activities of her fellow townspeople, but Ned discovers he enjoys being Springfield's "conscience" and proceeds to nag everyone through loudspeakers on the cameras.
Bart becomes frustrated by Ned's constant nagging and discovers that the Simpson family's backyard contains a blind spot. Soon, he and Homer are charging the townsfolk to use the yard to relax and do anything they want. Marge voices her disapproval and Ned overhears. When Ned confronts Homer and scolds him for creating a "Church of Misdemeanors", Homer retorts that it was Ned's fault, saying that his nagging has forced the whole towns misbehaviour into one place because the of his power abuse and points out that Ned is literally playing of God. Ned gets troubled by this statement and apologizes to Springfeild's citizens for interfering in their free will. In order to avoid any futher abuse from the surveillance, he and Homer proceed to destroy every security camera in town.
Meanwhile, Lisa is invited to join the school debate team but soon discovers that she faces prejudice from the brunette supremacist judges (that her competition readily capitalizes on) because she has blonde hair. Even Cletus mocks her when she raises concerns about infringement upon civil liberties at the town hall meeting, and Bart couldn't help but also follow the same prejudicial beliefs about blonds (although in his conception, blond boys aren't dumb but evil.). Marge tried to cheer Lisa up with a children's book which talks about prejudice, but unfortunately, it only makes her feel worse, since the "moral" of the book makes clear that there is nothing she could do but endure the abuse. Refusing to give up, Lisa intentionally dyes her hair dark brown in order to teach everyone a lesson.
At the next debate meeting, she intentionally presents a weak argument about how school uniforms would be good for the school and the judges enthusiastically agree with her, angering her rival. When Lisa realises this, she points out that the judges only agreed with her because she has darker hair and they should have judged her on the strength of her debate skills. The other judges tried to disagree with her by mentioning she had a strong argument in her debate, but the female judge admitted to the truth. Upset, Lisa tells everyone that there are exceptions to every stereotype. She mentions just because she is a natural blonde, does not mean she falls into the stereotype of being dumb and only dyed her hair in order to teach them a lesson. Just as Lisa says that another wrong steoreotype is that not all old people are bad drivers, though, Grampa crashes his car through the wall of the gym where the meeting is being held, stating "this building cut me off!", weakening Lisa's argument.
In the end, it is revealed that the antics of Springfield's citizens were broadcast as a reality TV show in the United Kingdom, known as American Oafs. Queen Elizabeth remarks "I'll miss that Ralph Wiggum. Reminds me of my boy", and her son Prince Charles replies with a quintessential Ralphism: "Oh Mummy, my cat's breath smells like cat food."
The episode was written by Michael Nobori who served as a production assistant for seasons 20 and 21 and directed by Lance Kramer and guest stars Eddie Izzard performing impressions of Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Charles and the character Nigel Bakerbutcher.[3] In an effort to attract more viewers for May sweeps, Fox made a week full of musical segments in all the shows called Fox Rocks. For The Simpsons, they had a couch gag with the characters lip dubbing Kesha's song "Tik Tok".[4] In an interview about the show, Izzard stated "I'd love to be in it, but they never asked me, and I don't want to push it. I think it's because I'm a cult – rather than a mainstream – name".[5]
Kesha's song "Tik Tok" is used in place of the regular theme song, as an extended couch gag sequence as part of Fox Rocks, a week of musical-themed programming on Fox.[6] Bart states that blond boys are not dumb, but "evil like in The Karate Kid or World War II".[7] The gay bar features Sesame Street-like characters.[8] The surveillance of the town references George Orwell's famous novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. The plutonium that is put in Homer's bag is stated to be powerful enough to create 17 Incredible Hulks and one Spider-Man.[8] Also, Comic Book Guy says he is not jolly because San Diego Comic-Con International might be moving to Anaheim.[7]
In its original American broadcast, "To Surveil with Love" was viewed by an estimated 6.057 million viewers and a 18-49 Nielsen Rating of 2.7 and a share of 8% coming second in its timeslot and going down one-tenth from the previous episode, "The Squirt and the Whale".[9] The episode ranked 25th in the 18-49 Nielsen Ratings for the week the 7th top rated show on Fox in the demographic and 5th highest scripted show.[10]
The episode was met with high positive reviews. Robert Canning of IGN gave the episode 8/10 and remarked that "Overall, it was a fun episode, hurt only by the uninteresting filler of Lisa dealing with blonde stereotypes. But even that delivered its share of memorable quotes. If the past few episodes are any indication, this season may go out on a very high note."[7] TVFanatic.com gave the episode 4/5 and stated "The Homer's backyard sequences felt reminiscent of the prior prohibition episode, but were still plenty of funny moments. While the actual plot was nothing too unique, we liked the ending with Flanders realizing he was playing God and the whole camera-setup being set up as a reality show in England."[11]
Sharon Knolle of TV Squad stated "From the inspired 'Tik Tok' musical opening sequence to the last gag, 'To Surveil With Love' ranks as one of the best 'Simpsons' episodes in years. I never expected the rest of the episode to live up to that killer opening, but, unbelievably, it just got better as it went along."[8] Todd VanDer Werff of A.V. Club gave the episode an A- and said "I thought this was a strong episode of The Simpsons. I laughed frequently throughout, I thought both of the major storylines mostly made sense and concluded well, and I enjoyed some of the ways the episode turned satire on its ear. I particularly liked the idea of Lisa conforming by becoming a brunette after everyone made fun of her for being a blonde. Dumb blonde jokes are as old as time itself, but the way the episode turned the whole thing into a sly parody of diversity and conformity was winning."[12]
Ariel Ponywhether of FireFox News gave the episode an A, remarked that "the episode is one of the better outings of the season" and concluded "There were some very slight characterization flaws, which detract slightly from the grade, as does the well-written but underdeveloped Lisa subplot. Add in excellent voice-over work by Eddie Izzard to the mix, however, and you have a solid episode."[13]