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Sunday, Cruddy Sunday

 
Wikipedia: Sunday, Cruddy Sunday
"Sunday, Cruddy Sunday"
The Simpsons episode
Aabf08.jpg
Dolly Parton talking to Homer and the rest of his crew in Super Bowl jail
Episode no. 215
Prod. code AABF08
Orig. airdate January 31, 1999
Written by Tom Martin
George Meyer
Brian Scully
Mike Scully
Directed by Steven Dean Moore
Chalkboard "I will not do the Dirty Bird"
Couch gag The living room is in water and the Simpsons leap on the couch. An iceberg passes by the couch and causes it to sink, sending the family underwater. Maggie resurfaces on a couch cushion with the remote control in hand.
Guest star(s) Fred Willard as Wally Kogen
Troy Aikman as Himself
Rosey Grier as Himself
John Madden as Himself
Dan Marino as Himself
Rupert Murdoch as Himself
Dolly Parton as Herself
Pat Summerall as Himself
DVD
commentary
Matt Groening
Mike Scully
George Meyer
Tom Martin
Matt Selman
Steven Dean Moore

"Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" is the twelfth episode of The Simpsons' tenth season. The episode aired on January 31, 1999, on the same day as Super Bowl XXXIII.

Contents

Plot

When Bart and Lisa and the students of Springfield Elementary go on a field trip to the post office, Bart gets a piece of undeliverable mail as a souvenir, which is a Val-U-Qual coupon book, which he gives to Homer as a birthday present. He uses one of his coupons at a tire business on a free wheel balancing, and is told by the "customer care specialist" that his car will not take a balance. This man informs Homer that he will need four new tires because legally they cannot let customers drive off with faulty tires. Homer is tricked into accepting. He meets a man named Wally Kogen, a travel agent who only came into the business to use the phone and ends up getting the "road king package". He shares with Homer how he got shafted and the two form a bond. They go to Moe's for a beer, watching a special on the Super Bowl. Wally says his travel agency has a charter bus going to the game and suggests to Homer that he can fill the bus and ride for free. They ask Moe to come to the Super Bowl, and he agrees (knowing that his "favorite team" the Atlanta Falcons is in it), as do Lenny, Carl, and other prominent men of Springfield. This episode was animated long before anyone knew who would go to Super Bowl XXXIII. The producers emphasized this by the deliberately obvious audio splicing in Moe's Tavern, and the awkward way the men held the beer mugs in front of their mouths (so you could not read their lips). The joke also references the Clinton impeachment trial with Wally mentioning that President...Clinton would be watching with his wife...Hillary.

The posse, led by Homer, along with Bart, go to the Super Bowl at Miami's Pro Player Stadium on a double-decker bus and arrive for pre-game festivities with Rosey Grier (offering sermons), "Take a leak with NFL greats", Troy Aikman (drawing caricatures of everyone he sees on a dune buggy), and catch a pass from Dan Marino. Expecting to get in the game, they are stopped when a scalper offers them tickets. Homer threatens to give the man a caning. They check in, but realize that the tickets they have are counterfeit due to the missing hologram, a made-up team called "The Spungos", and since they were written on a cracker. The scalper then does not sell them tickets. When Bart sees the halftime show costumes they use them to knock over the guards and rush into the stadium. However, stadium security confronts them, and they are locked up in the stadium jail.

Homer's posse, in jail, is freed when Dolly Parton (whom Kogen knows) uses her extra-strength makeup remover to dissolve the lock and release them. As they are freed, they run into a skybox suite and get a view of the game (and plenty of snacks), until Rupert Murdoch arrives and confronts them, as he owns the skybox. He gets guards to seize them, but Homer's posse runs away and head to the field, until they get lost in the sea of players when they win the Super Bowl. The group ends up in the locker room, and everyone has a Super Bowl ring on one of their hands at game's end. Homer is hoisting the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

Meanwhile, Marge and Lisa try to find their own activity at home. They use the crafting kit, "Vincent Price's Egg Magic", for their activity time. They succeed, until they realize that the product was shoddy because the feet were not included (even though the box states, "Feet Included"). Despite the kit being from 1967, Marge decides to call the help-line number listed on the box. Surprisingly, she is greeted with the voice of Vincent Price (voiced by Dan Castellaneta) — who, in a slightly unsettling manner, assures her that his grandson Jody will bring the missing feet to them. Lisa expresses surprise, believing Price to be dead. In real life, Vincent Price died in 1993.

The episode ends with John Madden and Pat Summerall analyzing the events of the episode. Despite endorsing the character Wally Kogen and the subplot, they are infuriated by a Super Bowl episode guest starring Dolly Parton that does not feature "any football or singing". Madden declares the episode a slap to the show's fanbase, who he says have taken "so much nonsense" from the program. They eventually leave on a bus, nonsensically (as Madden comments "Now I tell ya that doesn't make a lick of sense") driven by Vincent Price.

Cultural references

  • The title of this episode comes from the 1983 U2 song Sunday Bloody Sunday,[citation needed] based on the events known as Bloody Sunday; it is also the name of an unrelated 1971 John Schlesinger film (see Sunday Bloody Sunday)
  • The name Wally Kogen is a nod to Simpsons writing team Jay Kogen and Wallace Wolodarsky, who penned the previous Super Bowl episode, "Lisa the Greek". Football players named Kogen and Wolodarsky were also mentioned in "The Telltale Head", "Bart vs. Thanksgiving" and "When Flanders Failed".
  • Vincent Price's inclusion in this episode is a reference to rumors that Coca-Cola was going to use spliced together audio clips of Price from his various roles to endorse Coca-Cola.[citation needed]
  • The "Vincent Price's Egg Magic" kit is a reference to the "Vincent Price's Shrunken Head" kits, which were a popular toy in the 1970s. The set allowed you to turn a peeled apple into a "shrunken head" of sorts using the provided tools and some household items.
  • Marge describes one of the eggs as "egg-ceptional". This alludes to "egg-cellent", one of the catchphrases of the Batman villain Egghead, who was played by Vincent Price.[citation needed]
  • When Marge is speaking to Vincent Price, she mentions The Abominable Dr. Phibes.
  • Krusty's comment in the post office is in reference to the silent film comedian Fatty Arbuckle scandal. Arbuckle was accused of raping and murdering Virginia Rappe though he was acquitted after 3 trials and given an apology.
  • When Rupert Murdoch demands Homer and the other VIP-box tresspassers to be seized, Homer and the others run away in Three Stooges fashion.
  • When Dolly Parton goes to the half-time show, she wears a mask of a white-eared Snoopy and flies on a jet pack.
  • The coach in Homer's fantasy about going to the Super Bowl bears a striking similarity to long-time Dallas Cowboys coach Tom Landry.
  • Moe mentions Chicago Bear legend Bronko Nagurski when there is a commercial shown about bye weeks, saying "Bronko Nagurski didn't get no bye weeks, and now he's dead! Well, maybe they're a good thing".
  • Rudy runs alongside the bus on the way to the Super Bowl.
  • The montage playing when the group runs around in the stadium corridors is Song 2 by British band Blur, while on the commercial that Lisa and Marge are watching (for the Catholic Church), the music playing is Legs by ZZ Top.
  • When Marge is on the phone to Vincent Price and she is asked to give her address, she says, "742 Evergreen Terrace, Springfield- Oh hiya Maude!". It initially sounds as if she is saying 'Springfield, Ohio'; This is to tease the fans, as the state Springfield is in is one of the unanswered questions of the show.
  • When Nelson asks the postman tour guide if he has ever gone on a killing spree, this is a reference to the Pete the P.O'd Postman comic book series.

Reception

"Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" finished the week 10th in the weekly ratings for the week of January 25-31, 1999 with a Nielsen rating of 11.6.[1] The Orlando Sentinel's Gregory Hardy named it the third best episode of the show with a sports theme.[2]

References

  1. ^ Wire Reports (1999-02-05). "TV RATINGS". St. Petersburg Times. p. 5D. 
  2. ^ Hardy, Gregory (February 16, 2003). "Hitting 300 - For Sporting Comedy, 'The Simpsons' Always Score". Orlando Sentinel: p. C17. 

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