Daily Simpsons History

@dailysimpsons

On This Day in Simpsons history, quotes + random Simpsons news and memes. NOT AN OFFICIAL FOX/DISNEY ACCOUNT. Run by , founder of

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Vrijeme pridruživanja: siječanj 2009.

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  1. The first script of the episode was too long and it had to be cut down. Dietter remembered that it "took on a more serious tone" because they had to keep the parts that were essential to the story and cut the many "throwaway gags."

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  2. "Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield" was the first time a woman writer () and director (Susie Dietter) were credited in the same episode.

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  3. February 4, 1996, "Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield" (S07E14) first aired on the Fox network. Dir: Susie Dietter. Wr: . EP: & . Guest-starring Tom Kite as himself.

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  5. This sequence is a parody of Norman Bates' similar dialogue from the 1960 Hitchcock film Psycho. Although she had appeared before this episode, I think this is really the first time we see that Skinner has an uncomfortable relationship with his mother.

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  6. In a made-up story Homer tells Pepi, Bart tells Homer to shut up and shoves half a grapefruit in his face, a reference to the 1931 film The Public Enemy.

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  7. The scene in which Milhouse writes "Trab pu kcip! "Trab pu kcip!" on the wall is a reference to "red rum" from Stanley Kubrick's 1980 film The Shining. (video: Onikorp on YouTube)

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  8. The writing staff was looking for a way to end the episode and suggested that they watch the film The Quiet Man. They were inspired by the film's fight scene between John Wayne and Victor McLaglen's characters to do a fight scene between Homer and Tom in the episode.

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  10. Tuesday Night Live is a parody of . The sequence was longer, but it was cut because , a writer on Saturday Night Live during the 1985–86 season (along with fellow writers, and ) did not want to come off as being bitter.

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    Odgovor korisnicima i sljedećem broju korisnika:

    19. Hit me. 20. Hit me. 21. Hit me. 22.

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  14. The writers based the Corey character on the actors Corey Feldman and Corey Haim, known as The Two Coreys.

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    Pepe: Oh, Papa Homer, you are so learn`ed. Homer: Heh heh heh. Learn'd', son. It's pronounced learn'd'.

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  16. A lot of people misquote Homer's misunderstanding ("pickupbart", "pick a bar", etc.) but I think "pigabar" is correct.

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  17. The scene where Homer accuses Bart of seeing his big brother is a reference to the 1966 film Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, where Richard Burton accuses Elizabeth Taylor of adultery.

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  18. The original ad for this episode.

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  19. Pepi was based on the fictional character Dondi from the daily comic strip of the same name.

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  20. I love that they chose this as the R-rated movie to sneak into. (FYI, I didn't see Barton Fink until a few years ago and it's fantastic.)

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