Posts Tagged ‘The Simpsons’

A Tribute To Michael Jackson

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Leon Kompowsky as Michael Jackson

In the 1991 Simpsons episode “Stark Raving Dad,” Homer wears a pink shirt to work, is mistaken for a “free thinking anarchist,” and gets sent to a mental institution. When it’s time to decide on his roommate, one of the asylum workers says “put him in with the big white guy who thinks he’s the little black guy.”

It turns out to be someone who thinks he’s Michael Jackson (and who was actually voiced by Michael Jackson, though credited as John Jay Smith and not revealed until later).

This guy may be delusional, but he sure is nice and helpful. When Bart doesn’t get his sister Lisa a birthday present, she gets very upset. “Michael” tells Bart that when he was a kid he didn’t have much money, so for his sisters’ birthdays he wrote them a song to show that he cared. And so he helps Bart find the words he can’t say in the song Happy Birthday Lisa (written by the real Michael Jackson though sung by Kipp Lennon). Lisa calls it the best present she ever got.

After “Michael” says his work is done and starts walking away, Bart asks why his voice suddenly changed. His answer is:

“This is my real voice. My name is Leon Kompowsky and I’m a brick layer from Patterson, New Jersey. All my life I was very angry until one day I just [switching to Michael Jackson voice] talked like this. All of a sudden everybody was smiling at me and I was only doing good on this Earth. So I kept doing it. To make a tired point, which one of us is truly crazy?”

This is just one of the many gifts Michael Jackson gave the world. Maybe not his biggest one, but just another thing he did to make people smile.

The Abraham Simpson Guide To Being Miserable

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Abraham Simpson
Image from The Simpsons

Abraham Simpson, also known as “Grampa,” is well known to fans of The Simpsons around the world. One of the leading experts on misery, he can teach us much about how to live more miserable lives. Here are some of his most important lessons.

1. Don’t take any crap from inanimate objects.

Being inanimate is just another excuse for being lazy, and we have to show these objects who’s boss. Abraham’s crowning achievement was being featured in the newspaper for yelling at a fluffy white cloud. In his day, clouds respected their elders. Nowadays, they’re floating around like they own the place. Don’t let them.

2. Be a lousy father.

Your kids probably won’t take care of you in your golden years, so why not get revenge in advance? Your children are the future…unless you stop them.

When his son Homer was six years old, Abraham told him, “Homer, you’re dumb as a mule and twice as ugly. If a strange man offers you a ride, I say take it!”

When Homer grew up, one day he realized that his parents never told him his middle name. When he asked what it was, Abraham said, “How should I know? It was your mother’s job to name you, and love you and such. I was mainly in it for the spanking.”

3. Write letters to complain about anything that isn’t exactly how you like it.

Abraham wrote a letter to the president, saying “Dear Mr. President, there are too many states nowadays. Please eliminate three.” While he didn’t specify which ones should be cut in the letter, on another occasion he said, “I’ll be deep in the cold, cold ground before I recognize Missourah.”

He also wrote a letter to complain about the commercials on TV, saying, “Dear advertisers, I am disgusted with the way old people are depicted on television. We are not all vibrant, fun loving sex maniacs. Many of us are bitter, resentful individuals who remember the good old days when entertainment was bland and inoffensive. The following is a list of words I never want to hear on television again. Number one: bra. Number two: horny. Number three: family jewels.”

While many people would let these things slide, Abraham knows that the squeaky wheel gets the grease. If you’re not part of the solution, then you’re part of the problem.

4. Make enemies with animals.

While humans deserve most of your wrath, animals aren’t automatically exempt. Every one of them is a potential threat, and you can never let your guard down.

Abraham once underestimated a turtle, who stole his false teeth and ran off. Adding insult to injury, when he finally caught up, the turtle bit him with his own teeth.

When a gorilla threatened to move in on his girlfriend, Abraham vowed to give him the frowning of a lifetime.

He was looking for a new pet at the retirement home, after they “accidentally killed that smart mouth bird.” Sure, “accidentally.”

5. Remain stuck in the past. Preferably, a past that never actually happened.

Abraham is very much stuck in a past that he created with his imagination, as well as what he was able to piece together from sugar packets. The past is much more important than the present, because you can make it whatever you want it to be, as long as you don’t get caught.

He claims to have invented the toilet, turned cats and dogs against each other, canceled Star Trek, lived in the head of the Statue of Liberty, been spanked by Grover Cleveland on two non-consecutive occasions, nearly killed Hitler with a javelin in the 1936 Olympics, invented kissing as a new way of spreading germs in World War I, and died in World War II.

Go ahead, try to prove him wrong (well, maybe we can prove he didn’t die in World War II since he’s alive today). Anything that’s not verifiably false is true enough. Don’t pay any attention to the present, because soon enough it becomes the past, and then you can change it to your liking.

This post is a sample entry for my “How To Be Miserable” Contest, sponsored by life coach Tim Brownson. Enter for your chance to win a book or a coaching session!

Desegregating Our Minds

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

First, Steve Pavlina wrote How to Be a Man. Then I wrote How To Be A Woman. Now Robin has written How to be a Man and a Woman Both At The Same Time.

For the purposes of her post, Robin describes intuition as the female energy that is in us all, and taking action as the male energy that is in us all. You might object to this, saying that men do have intuition, and women do take action. Of course they do. But certain characteristics tend to be more pronounced in one gender than the other.

What happens when someone becomes 100% aligned with so-called “male” characteristics, or 100% aligned with so-called “female” characteristics? Like many critical issues, this has been explored on The Simpsons.

In one episode, Principal Skinner makes a sexist comment that causes him to be replaced by a new principal, a woman. As her first act of business, the new principal separates the boys and girls into separate schools, and gender-based stereotypes run amok in each school.

The girls school is completely based on feelings, without any regard for logic. In their math class, the teacher turns on an electronic device that plays soft music and projects colorful mathematical symbols all around the classroom. She asks the class “How do numbers make you feel? What does a plus sign smell like? Is the number 7 odd, or just different?” When Lisa asks if they’re going to do any actual math problems, the teacher says “Problems? That’s how men see math, something to be attacked, something to be figured out.”

The boys school is filled with violence and destruction. We see garbage, graffiti, stray wolves, and flaming cars. There’s always a fight going on for no reason. Nelson is shown drawing “a robot with guns for arms, shooting a plane made out of guns, that shoots guns.”

The result is a complete disaster. In the end, they decide to desegregate the school, because everyone needs the opposite sex to balance them out.

Should we desegregate our minds as well? Is there enough room in each person’s brain to allow maybe 20% of it to think like the opposite sex? It might take some bravery to speak up on this, but if you’re feeling up to it, share your thoughts in the comments.