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"MoneyBart"
The Simpsons episode
Episode no.Season 22
Directed byNancy Kruse
Banksy (couch gag)
Written byTim Long
Original air dateOctober 10, 2010
Episode features
Chalkboard gagI must not write all over the walls. (Copied all over the walls, door, and blackboard)
Couch gagThe Simpsons are seen as a picture on the wall of a sweatshop where Asian workers are seen drawing the couch gag and creating Simpsons merchandise.
Episode chronology
The Simpsons season 22
List of episodes

"MoneyBART" is the third episode of The Simpsons' twenty-second season. It premiered in the United States on October 10, 2010, on the Fox network. In the episode, Lisa coaches Bart's Little League baseball team to a record winning streak by using her book smarts in statistics and probability. However, when Bart questions Lisa’s coaching tactics and accuses her of taking the fun out of baseball, Lisa benches him from the championship game.

The episode was written by Tim Long and directed by Nancy Kruse. It features an opening sequence and couch gag written by British graffiti artist and political activist Banksy, who stated he had been "inspired by reports that Simpsons characters are animated in Seoul, South Korea."[1]

The episode was watched in a total of 6.74 millon households, the ratings decreasing from the previous episode. Critical reception was generally favorable, with praises towards the story and jokes but criticism towards the episode's use of celebrity cameos.

Plot

A visit by Dahlia Brinkley, the only Springfield Elementary graduate ever to enter an Ivy League college, gives Lisa a severe inferiority complex because she is involved in very few extracurricular activities. When Ned Flanders resigns as coach of Bart's Little League team, the Springfield Isotots, Lisa seizes the chance to extend her resumé and takes the position. Since she knows nothing about baseball, she seeks advice from the patrons of Moe's Tavern, who direct her to Professor Frink and his scientific colleagues. She learns about sabermetrics from them and uses this science to organize the Isotots' strategy; as a result, their record quickly improves and they rise in the league standings. However, Bart eventually rebels against her management, saying that she has taken all the fun out of the game, and hits a home run despite her orders to let the pitcher walk him. The Isotots win the game, but Lisa throws Bart off the team for his insubordination.

The dismissal raises tension at the Simpson household, with Homer and Marge siding with Lisa and Bart, respectively. Homer believes that Lisa needs to do what is good to the team, while Marge thinks she should reconsider, since the family comes first. Under Lisa's leadership, the team advances to the championship against Capital City. On the day of the game, Marge takes Bart to an amusement park; while they ride the roller coaster, Lisa calls Bart to beg for his help, but he brushes her off. Mike Scioscia, manager of the Los Angeles Angels, pops up in the seats behind Marge and Bart and tells him that the best players listen to their managers, pointing out his three World Series wins — two as player, one as manager. Marge takes Bart to the game, which is now in its last inning with the Isotots down 11-10. Bart puts aside his differences with Lisa and offers to pinch-run from first base, then ignores her signs and steals both second and third. As he begins to steal home, Lisa realizes the odds are vastly against him, then decides to ignore the numbers and cheer him on anyway. He is tagged out at the plate, costing the Isotots their championship bid, but Lisa thanks him for helping her learn to love baseball as a game, and the team cheers them for resolving their differences.

Production

The episode was written by Tim Long, his second writing credit of the season after "Elementary School Musical", and was directed by Nancy Kruse, her first directing credit of the season. This marks the second appearance of Mike Scioscia on The Simpsons. The first was "Homer at the Bat" in 1992, which is referenced in the episode.[2] Baseball sabermetrician Bill James also makes a guest appearance, being used as a reference when Professor Frink points out to Lisa that "baseball is a game played by the dextrous but only understood by the poindextrous."[3]

Opening sequence

Approximately the first half minute of the opening sequence remains the same, with a few oddities: the word "BANKSY" is sprayed onto a number of walls and other public spaces; Krusty's billboard advertises that he now performs at funerals (first seen on "Take My Life, Please", but this had "Banksy" on it). The chalkboard gag ("I must not write all over the walls") is written all over the classroom walls, clock, door, and floor.[2]

After the Simpsons arrive at home, the camera cuts to a shot of them on the couch, then zooms out to show this as a picture hanging on the wall of a fictional overseas Asian animation and merchandise sweatshop. The animation color quickly becomes drab and gray, and the music turns dramatic à la Schindler's List.[4] A large group of tired and sickly artists draw animation cels for The Simpsons among piles of human bones and toxic waste, and a female artist hands a barefoot child employee an animation cel, which he washes in a vat of biohazardous fluid.[4]

The camera tracks down to a lower floor on the building, where small kittens are thrown into a woodchipper-type machine to provide the filling for Bart Simpson plush dolls.[4] The toys are then placed into a cart pulled by a sad panda which is driven by a man with a whip.[4] A man shipping boxes with The Simpsons logo on the side uses the tongue from a decapitated dolphin head to fasten shut the packages.[4] Another employee uses the horn of a sickly unicorn to smash the holes in the center of The Simpsons DVDs. The shot zooms out to reveal that sweatshop is contained within a grim version of the 20th Century Fox logo, surrounded by barbed wire, searchlights, and a watchtower.[2]

Creation

British graffiti artist and political activist Banksy is credited with creating the opening titles and couch gag for this episode, in what amounted to the first time that an artist has been invited to storyboard the show.[2] Executive producer Al Jean first took note of Banksy after seeing his 2010 film Exit Through the Gift Shop.[5] According to Jean, "The concept in my mind was, 'What if this graffiti artist came in and tagged our main titles?'"[6] Simpsons casting director Bonnie Pietila was able to contact the artist through the film's producers, and asked if he would be interested in writing a main title for the show. Jean said Banksy "sent back boards for pretty much what you saw."[5] Series creator Matt Groening gave the idea his blessing, and helped try to make the sequence as close to Banksy's original storyboards as possible.[5] Fox's standards and practices department demanded a handful of changes, but, according to Jean, "95 percent of it is just the way he wanted."[5]

The Simpsons is storyboarded at Film Roman, a company based in California. The storyboards, voice tracks and coloring instructions are then sent to AKOM, a company in Seoul, South Korea. According to Nelson Shin, the founder of AKOM, they received the storyboard for the sequence in August 2010. Believing the sequence to be "excessive and offending" he pushed for some of the darker jokes to be removed. He was successful, though "not nearly as much as he had pushed for." For example, in the storyboards, the workers were wearing conical Asian hats, but these were removed.[7]

Banksy told The Guardian that his opening sequence was influenced by The Simpsons long-running use of animation studios in Seoul, South Korea.[1] The newspaper also reported that the creation of the sequence "is said to have been one of the most closely guarded secrets in US television – comparable to the concealment of Banksy's own identity."[1]

BBC News reported that "According to [Banksy], his storyboard led to delays, disputes over broadcast standards and a threatened walk out by the animation department."[8] However, Al Jean disputed this, saying " [The animation department] didn't walk out. Obviously they didn't. We've depicted the conditions in a fanciful light before."[6] Commenting on hiring Banksy to create the titles, Jean joked, "This is what you get when you outsource."[1] Although conceding to the fact that The Simpsons is largely animated in South Korea, Jean went on to state that the scenes shown in titles are "very fanciful, far-fetched. None of the things he depicts are true. That statement should be self-evident, but I will emphatically state it."[5]

Cultural references

The title is a play on the Michael M. Lewis book Moneyball, which examines the 2002 Oakland Athletics' use of sabermetrics to build a competitive baseball team.[9] Moe laments his decision to advertise his drink specials in Scientific American magazine, which led to Frink and company coming in.[2]

Reception

In its original American broadcast on October 10, 2010, "MoneyBART" was viewed by an estimated 6.74 million viewers, according to the Nielsen Media Research, receiving a 3.0 rating/8% share among adults between the ages of 18 and 49, beating The Cleveland Show and American Dad! in the demographic and total viewers and ranking third in its timeslot.[10] The episode received a 29% drop in the demographic from the previous episode, "Loan-a Lisa".[10][11]

The episode received favorable reviews. Brad Trechak of the TV Squad said of the episode: "In the end, the episode was really good at the beginning and the ending, but the middle kind of dragged."[2] Eric Hochburger of TV Fanatic criticized the Mike Scioscia cameo, although he said that "[w]hile this week's installment will never replace our favorite Simpsons baseball episode, "Homer at the Bat," there [was] certainly plenty of great jokes and a strong enough story with heart to keep us entertained."[12] Rowan Kaiser of The A.V. Club compared the episode favorably to "Lisa on Ice" although he also criticized the Scioscia cameo, calling it "awkward".[13] In conclusion he gave the episode an A-, the best grade of the night.[13]

The opening sequence received a generally mixed response. Nelson Shin, the founder of AKOM, the Korean company that animates The Simpsons, said that he and his staff did protest being asked to animate the sequence. Shin said that the sequence suggests that animators work in sweatshops, but they actually work in "high-tech workshops." He added, "Most of the content was about degrading people from Korea, China, Mexico and Vietnam. If Banksy wants to criticize these things ... I suggest that he learn more about it first."[7]

Colby Hall of Mediaite called the sequence "a jaw-dropping critique of global corporate licensing, worker exploitation and over-the-top dreariness of how western media companies (in this case, 20th Century Fox) takes advantage of outsourced labor in developing countries."[14] Melissa Bell of The Washington Post felt Banksy's titles had helped revive The Simpsons' "edge", but after "the jarring opening, the show went back to its regular routine of guest cameos, self-referential jokes and tangential story lines."[15] Marlow Riley of MTV wrote "as satire, [the opening is] a bit over-the-top. What is shocking is that Fox ran Banksy's ballsy critique of outsourcing, The Simpsons, and the standards and human rights conditions that people in first world nations accept. It's uncomfortable and dark, and not what's expected from the modern Simpsons, which mainly consists of 'Homer hurts himself' jokes."[16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Halliday, Josh (October 11, 2010). "Banksy takes Simpsons into sweatshop". The Guardian. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Trechak, Brad (October 11, 2010). "'The Simpsons' Season 22, Episode 3 Recap (VIDEO)". TV Squad. Retrieved 2010-10-11. Cite error: The named reference "tvsquad" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ Hurley, Michael (October 11, 2010). "Sabermetrician Bill James Pokes Fun at Himself on 'The Simpsons'". NESN. Retrieved 2011-4-25. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e Soraya Roberts (October 11, 2010). "Banksy's 'Simpsons' couch gag targets Twentieth Century Fox banking on its most famous cartoon". New York Daily News. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  5. ^ a b c d e Itzkoff, Dave (October 11, 2010). "'The Simpsons' Explains Its Button-Pushing Banksy Opening". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  6. ^ a b Snierson, Dan (October 11, 2010). "Banksy does 'The Simpsons': Exec producer Al Jean talks about pulling off the ultimate couch gag". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  7. ^ a b Cain, Geoffrey (September 30, 2010). "South Korean Cartoonists Cry Foul Over The Simpsons". Time. Retrieved 2010-11-03.
  8. ^ "Banksy creates new Simpsons title sequence". BBC News. October 11, 2010. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  9. ^ Abbott, Henry (October 11, 2010). "The Simpsons go sabermetric". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  10. ^ a b Gorman, Bill (October 11, 2010). "TV Ratings: Against Sunday Night Football & Baseball; Simpsons, Cleveland, Family Guy, American Dad, Housewives Dive". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  11. ^ Seidman, Robert (October 4, 2010). "TV Ratings: Simpsons, Desperate Housewives, Sunday Night Football Rise; CSI: Miami Premieres". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  12. ^ Hochburger, Eric (October 11, 2010). "The Simpsons review: "MoneyBART"". TV Fanatic. Retrieved 2011-05-22.
  13. ^ a b Kaiser, Rowan (October 11, 2010). ""MoneyBART"/"How Cleveland Got His Groove Back"/"Welcome Back Carter"/"Son of Stan, Pt. 2 of 2"". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  14. ^ Hall, Colby (October 11, 2010). "Banksy Directed Simpsons Opener Portrays Bleak And Exploitative 20th Century Fox". Mediaite. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  15. ^ Bell, Melissa (October 11, 2010). "Banksy revives Simpsons' edge with wild opening scene". Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  16. ^ Riley, Marlow (October 11, 2010). "Banksy Blasts 'The Simpsons' And Fox In The Opening Sequence Of 'The Simpsons' On Fox". MTV. Retrieved 2010-10-11.