#OnThisDay#OTD May 19, 1994, "Secrets of a Successful Marriage" (S05E22) first aired on the Fox network. Dir: Carlos Baeza. Wr: Greg Daniels. EP: @DaveMirkin. Guest-starring Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz. (Check out this original TV promo with deleted dialogue!) #TheSimpsons
It was the second script Greg Daniels wrote for the show. He thought the staff had previously done many episodes where Homer "wasn't good at anything", so he tried to figure out something Homer was really good at, and he came up with the idea of Homer being a good husband.
Showrunner Dave Mirkin was very fond of the fact that Homer and Marge have the biggest fight they have ever had on the show in the episode, and he thought it was a "really great" exploration of their marriage.
Just found this old tweet of mine from nine years ago. Spoiler alert: Turns out it did not bode well.
It is revealed in a flashback that Smithers was briefly married to a woman, but the two split up when he devoted too much time to his boss Mr. Burns. It is a parody of scenes from two Tennessee Williams plays: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and A Streetcar Named Desire.
Author Matthew Henry: "To fully appreciate [the joke], one must know something of not only the two plays cited but also of Williams himself, of his own struggles with both heterosexual and homosexual desires and the way in which these struggles were incorporated into his art."
The first instance of Moe's declaring his crush on Marge (aka Midge aka Blanche).
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This shot in of Krusty in "Who Shot Mr. Burns? Part One" is definitely more Homer-looking. So it makes me think they used the Homer Krusty design (except the hair) from "Homie the Clown" which had just aired earlier in Season 6, perhaps as another red herring. Just compare.
The idea for the episode came from Matt Groening, who had wanted to do an episode in which Mr. Burns was shot, which could be used as a publicity stunt. The writers decided to write the episode in two parts with a mystery that could be used in a contest.
While deciding who the culprit was, Oakley and Weinstein pitched Barney Gumble because he was a character that could go to jail and it could change the dynamic of the show. Mirkin suggested Maggie; he felt it was funnier and wanted the culprit to be a Simpsons family member.
It was Dan Greaney's second episode on The Simpsons. The staff of the show wanted to do a summer episode because there was "so much stuff" about summer vacations that they felt had to be covered in an episode.
THURSDAY at 8pm ET/7pm CT, we will stream the ORIGINAL May 19, 1996 premiere broadcast of "Homerpalooza" AND "Summer of 4 Ft. 2" COMPLETE with commercials at twitch.tv/dailysimpsons. It'll be a classic Thursday night! Join us, won't we?
They billed this as a "one-hour season finale" even though it was actually two new episodes back-to-back. ("Summer of 4'2" was the second episode, which I will be giving its own thread later today.) Below is the print ad for both episodes.
A few years back, Josh Weinstein shared his photo with the Smashing Pumpkins at the recording session for this episode in 1995.
The episode was partially inspired by Terry Rakolta, who protested the Fox network over the show Married... with Children in 1989. The writers tried not to have a point of view and looked at both sides. bundyology.com/rakolta.html
This was the first episode directed by Jim Reardon, who had previously made a student film called "Bring Me the Head of Charlie Brown" (with @_rich_moore) which was very violent and the experience served him well for this episode.