| The Simpsons episode | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "The Monkey Suit" | |||||
| Promotional Artwork for this episode. | |||||
| Episode no. | 377 | ||||
| Prod. code | HABF14 | ||||
| Orig. airdate | May 14, 2006 | ||||
| Written by | J. Stewart Burns | ||||
| Directed by | Raymond S. Persi | ||||
| Chalkboard | “Je ne parle pas Français” (I don’t speak French) | ||||
| Couch gag | The family sits on the couch. A photographer comes in and takes the family's picture, which sets off a chain of future family portraits. In 2006 and 2007, the family is the same. In 2008, Homer is dead. In 2009, Marge is married to Lenny. In 2010, Lenny and Carl are married and caring for the Simpson kids. In 2011, Marge is back in the family and married to Jimbo Jones. In 2012, Homer returns as a robot. In 2013, everyone in the Simpson family is a robot. | ||||
| Guest star(s) | Melanie Griffith as herself Larry Hagman as Wallace Brady |
||||
|
|||||
“The Monkey Suit” is the 21st episode of The Simpsons seventeenth season that originally aired on May 14, 2006.
Contents |
On the last day of summer vacation Bart realizes that he wasted the whole summer. He then makes a list of summer activities such as a winning a ballgame and having a summer romance. After Bart's activities Lisa brings the family to go to the museum to see a weaving exhibit as her summer activity, but to her and Marge's shock (and Homer and Bart’s joy), it has just been canceled and replaced by a “History of Weapons” exhibit. Faced with an incredibly long line, Homer notices Ned Flanders and his kids at the front of the line and cuts in front of them. Others start taking advantage of Ned’s kindness, until they are stuck at the end. At the end of the day, the Flanderses are still waiting, and are denied entry, as it’s closing time for the Weapons exhibit for the day. So they decide to check out the evolution exhibit next door. Ned is horrified to hear that humans evolved from apes and that the creation account in Genesis is characterized as a “myth.” Covering his kids’ eyes, he drags them out of the exhibit.
He meets up with the church council to suggest promotion of Creationism. Reverend Lovejoy is initially against the idea, until his wife tells him that it might help the church regain its patrons, most of who have left Lovejoy's church for a nearby episcopalian church (with vibrating pews). The next day, Ned and Lovejoy blackmail Principal Skinner into introducing Creationism in the school. Lisa is perturbed by this, and at a town meeting asks everyone to make a choice between Creationism and Darwinism, as there is only one truth. The townspeople vote for Creationism, much to Lisa's chagrin, and the act of teaching or learning Darwinism and Evolution are now made illegal. So Lisa decides to start holding secret classes for people interested in Evolution. However, just as the first lesson is about to begin, she is arrested by Chief Wiggum “for the teaching of non-Biblical science.”
She is brought to trial, which is dubbed “Lisa Simpson v. God.” Representing her is Clarice Drummond, a despised ACLU lawyer from New York City, while on God’s (i.e., Ned’s) side is Wallace Brady, a beloved, overweight, southern lawyer. The trial does not go smoothly for Lisa, as Professor Frink (called by Clarice) gives ambiguous answers regarding God’s existence, while a creationist scientist (with a degree in “Truthology” from “Christian Tech”) says that Evolution cannot be real, as there is no proof of a “Missing Link” (depicted in a picture as a savage hominid, holding a rock over his head). At home, Lisa feels dejected and Marge decides to help her out. So she starts reading Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species and becomes engrossed in it. When the trial resumes, Marge tells Lisa that she can help her. While Ned is being cross-examined by Clarice, Marge gives Homer a cold beer. Homer, ecstatic at getting a beer, tries to open it unsuccessfully. The more he tries, the more primitive he gets. Finally, Ned loses his cool and calls him “a big monkey-faced gorilla.” Clarice then asks Ned to compare the picture of the “Missing Link” and Homer shaking the beer over his head. Ned concedes defeat and the case is dismissed. Ned walks off sadly, but Lisa explains that she is all right with his beliefs, but feels that science and religion should never mix together, a point which Ned agrees upon.
The opening of the episode, in which Bart rushes to do everything he planned on doing during summer vacation, was originally written and animated for the season fourteen episode "I'm Spelling as Fast as I Can" but was cut. This episode came in short, and to fill in time, the sequence was added.[1]
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
No comments have been added.