Simpsons Tall Tales

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The Simpsons episode
"Simpsons Tall Tales"
Bart as Tom Sawyer and Nelson as Huckleberry Finn
Episode no. 269
Prod. code CABF17
Orig. airdate May 20, 2001
Show runner(s) Mike Scully
Written by John Frink &
Don Payne
Bob Bendetson
Matt Selman
Directed by Bob Anderson
Chalkboard "I should not be twenty-one by now"
Couch gag The living room is a subway station. The family (seated on a bench) get on the next train that arrives on the track and leave
Season 12
November 1, 2000May 20, 2001
  1. "Treehouse of Horror XI"
  2. "A Tale of Two Springfields"
  3. "Insane Clown Poppy"
  4. "Lisa the Tree Hugger"
  5. "Homer vs. Dignity"
  6. "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes"
  7. "The Great Money Caper"
  8. "Skinner's Sense of Snow"
  9. "HOMR"
  10. "Pokey Mom"
  11. "Worst Episode Ever"
  12. "Tennis the Menace"
  13. "Day of the Jackanapes"
  14. "New Kids on the Blecch"
  15. "Hungry, Hungry Homer"
  16. "Bye Bye Nerdie"
  17. "Simpson Safari"
  18. "Trilogy of Error"
  19. "I'm Goin' to Praiseland"
  20. "Children of a Lesser Clod"
  21. "Simpsons Tall Tales"
List of all The Simpsons episodes

"Simpsons Tall Tales" is the season finale and twenty-first episode of the twelfth season of The Simpsons. It aired on May 20, 2001.

Contents

[edit] Plot

After the Simpsons win a trip to Delaware, Homer refuses to pay a $5 airport tax for his flight. The family jumps onto a freight train and meets a singing, although clearly weird, hobo who tells them three tall tales. They are as follows:

[edit] Paul Bunyan

Homer plays Paul Bunyan, a great burden on local townspeople, as he crushes their houses and consumes all their food. Eventually, the townspeople drug him and drag him out of their town. Out of loneliness, he carves a block of stone from the mountains into a blue ox that he calls Babe, who is rendered alive by an electric shock, similar to lightning, which apparently originated from the northern lights. However when a meteor is soon to hit the town, the townspeople call Paul back to help them. Paul obliges and throws the meteor towards Chicago, starting the Great Fire there. Paul meets Marge and they fall in love.

After the hobo has told this story, he asks them for a sponge bath as compensation. Disgusted, Homer is forced to oblige, as nobody else will do so, but the hobo does not mind anyone seeing his nakedness.

[edit] Connie Appleseed

The hobo's second tall tale is loosely based on the legend of Johnny Appleseed, except Lisa portrays him, and her name is adapted to "Connie Appleseed." Connie is part of a wagon train, and all of the travelers shoot and eat buffalo. Connie is against the practice because "If you aren't careful, you'll wipe the species off the face of the earth." She is worried that no one is eating a renewable source of food and finds some apples for the pioneers to eat, but they reject them. Eventually, she changes her last name to "Appleseed", and leaves her family to journey across America and plant apple seeds wherever she goes. Meanwhile, the Simpsons change their surname to "Bufflekill" and they succeed in killing all the buffalo. Just as they are about to cannibalize Homer, Connie returns and offers them apples. They like them, and Homer is spared.

[edit] Tom and Huck

Though it is not actually a tall tale (Lisa points this out before the story begins), the hobo tells this tale based on Mark Twain's story about Tom Sawyer, whom Bart portrays, and Huckleberry Finn, whom Nelson portrays. Huck is caught holding hands with Becky (Lisa) and is forced to marry her. He dodges this marriage and goes on the run with Tom, leaving Missouri for Missoura. However, they are chased by townspeople (led by Becky's father (Homer) and their families. They flee to a river boat, but are thrown by Moe into the Mississippi River and are presumed dead. At their funeral, Tom and Huck secretly watch the proceedings from the rafters, until Reverend Lovejoy orders their bodies lowered into the caskets, saying that they are actually dead but they clutter when goes near revealing they are actually fake statues of them.

The family arrives in Delaware and disembarks the train, but the hobo reminds them that they owe him two more sponge baths as compensation. Homer promises to catch up with them in an hour and volunteers to stay behind to do the dirty work.

[edit] Cultural references

[edit] External links

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