Émission TV: The Simpsons - 34x16
("Weird Al" Yankovic sings) (playing The Simpsons theme) (cheering) So weird.
So, can I stay for dinner?
No.
(accordion resumes playing theme) (Yankovic vocalizes) NARRATOR: And they'll toot their horn-honkers to proclaim its renown.
But there's one tale the townsfolk won't brag of or bray.
It's what happened on Springfield's dum-dummiest day.
(snoring) Ach!
The grid is overloaded.
But who and how and where and what for?
Ach!
Eek!
Loch!
Ewan!
Crivvens!
(cackling) My precious grid.
One more daft device and she'll explode.
No!
(coughing) Dear God, to mitigate the smell of emulsified eggs and vinegar, we'll have to close the school for weeks.
(cheering, whooping) Yay!
Awesome.
That's great!
All right!
You clearly misheard me.
I said the school will be closed.
And we said, "woo-hoo," "awesome," and "that's great."
ANNOUNCER: You're watching SportsCenter Classic.
Stay tuned for more exciting baseball scores from 1986.
1986.
I was two years old then.
Or was I 30?
COMMERCIAL ANNOUNCER: Stressed out from IRS troubles?
Irreversible Mortgage?
Chockaholic's Foot, formerly known as diabetes?
I can make those stresses disappear like a shattered backboard.
(gasps) Late-night commercial legend Shaquille O'Neal?
You need Tightie Mighties, the compression underwear with the proven nerve-soothing properties of copper wire.
Operators are standing by.
It's a slam dunk.
(gasps) That's the best kind of dunk.
For crying out loud.
I said no more buying junk from late-night ads on basic cable.
Look at all this stuff.
Unkinkable garden hoses, squatty potties.
Why do you need the world's most powerful flashlight?
Aah!
It has the most lumens.
(grunts) These late-night cable hucksters are getting rich off gullible people like you.
Oh, no, you're right.
I'm as stupid as the guy who couldn't make spaghetti before he bought the Spaghetti Samurai.
(snoring) LISA: Dad, wake up.
Get up, dummy.
(stammers) Huh?
This is our classroom until our school doesn't smell like eggs.
(shudders) Homeschooling.
Every half-assed parent's nightmare.
Oh...
First law of robotics: you suck.
Okay, so, if I have $500 in the bank, and your mother wants to take two-thirds of it to buy a purse, when her old purse is just fine...
You?
$500 in the bank?
What are you teaching him, science fiction?
No, real fiction, Luann.
It's real fiction.
(bell clangs) Okay, class, it's time for our unit on Springfield history.
Ooh, more pumpkin stickers for me.
I still got room for one more between my toes.
(shuddering laugh) "Chapter four: a Great Endeavor."
Today, we christen the Great Springfield Gazebo, wherein romance-minded gentlemen the world over may come to court their intendeds.
This grand new structure shall make Springfield the woo-pitching capital of America.
Gentlemen, start your ukuleles.
GENTLEMEN: ♪ I will always ♪ ♪ Be true ♪ ♪ Spend my days ♪ ♪ Pitching woo ♪ ♪ To you...
♪ (ladies giggling, swooning) Oh, God, oh, dear God, um, we didn't account for the harmonic frequency of the wooing.
It's too romantic!
Please, I beg you, stop making love in the old-timey sense as we understand it today.
♪ Not a moment I'll rue ♪ ♪ As I serenade you ♪ ♪ My sweet ♪ ♪ Mary Lou.
♪ MARGE: Glory turned to fiasco for the disgraced Mayor of Springfield, Eustace Van Houten.
(coughs) Aw, soup crackers.
MAN 1: Charlatan!
MAN 2: Mountebank!
WOMAN: Dunderhead!
Dad, was he one of our relatives?
Yeah, he was your great-great-grandfather.
Not so great, I guess.
So, the Van Houtens have always been losers.
Not true, son.
Hey, your granddad once prepared a Caesar salad for Dean Martin, right at the table.
(chuckles) Fine, Dad.
I'm gonna go to Phys Ed.
We're doing swimming today.
Mm...
(sighs) My life is hard enough, now I find out that the school is teaching my son that every one of his ancestors is a loser.
(groans) I bought so many stupid useless products.
Pretzel Straightener, Face Bidet, Spray-on Music.
(rattles) (The Price is Right losing horns playing) I'm financially ruined, and it's all his fault.
Now your belly button can live the lint-free lifestyle with the Navel Vac.
And she'll like it, too.
She didn't.
Shaq, you suckered me again.
Hey, hey, hey.
I will not have you badmouthing Shaquille Rashaun O'Neal.
Four-time NBA champ, rapper, actor, sheriff, restaurateur, black belt in Shaq-Fu, Shaq belt in kung fu, and now the Big Aristotle dominates the late-night airwaves.
He is living proof that anybody can make their dreams come true.
You're right.
If I could just think of one thing to sell that nobody needs and everybody wants, I could pay off my bills and be a super-success like Shaq.
And you, Big Milhouse, stop whining.
Somebody calls your family a loser, you stand up for yourself.
I will.
(inspirational music playing) SKINNER: On behalf of the school board, I declare school is officially reopened.
Let the free childcare and intermittent learning resume.
I'm here to officially protest the teaching of the Great Springfield Gazebo Disaster.
It makes our children hate our town and me hate myself.
The Gazebo Disaster?
But we plan to tread water on that unit for months.
We're doing two weeks on the substandard metal bracing alone.
Not anymore.
I demand that you ban Critical Brace Theory now.
Sir, we're not changing our curriculum just to shore up the wet cardboard lean-to that is your family self-esteem.
Then you leave me one choice.
Until you meet my demands, I'm going to play this trumpet, on which I have no formal training.
(dissonant playing) Aah!
Mr.
Van Houten, if we, uh, if we could just...
Look, there's no need for brass instruments.
For 30 years, we've been pleading with parents to get more involved.
What the hell were we thinking?
(Marge grumbles) I know Kirk is angry, but I'm a little worried this meeting will go off the rails.
Marge, stop saying things.
I'm trying to think of an amazing product that can get us out of debt.
Uh...
um...
Handgun Underpants?
Mm, no.
Uh, Bucket in a Box?
Spoon 2.0?
Steak Bedazzler?
Oh...
(clears throat) Yes, we are all here because one lone parent raised an issue that he thinks is worth me missing the new Equalizer starring that delightful Queen Latifah.
Kirk!
You, regrettably, have the floor.
We need to stop teaching that my great-grandfather's gazebo was a disaster.
But it was, and it was his fault.
His dying words were, "My bad."
So?
Why can't our kids learn about things that make our town proud?
Like, how if you want to make a right on red, it's usually not a problem.
Why do we have to focus on the bad stuff?
(indistinct chatter) We completely disagree.
It's essential that all of Springfield's darkest chapters be taught: the monorail, Lady Gaga's visit, and the gazebo collapse.
If our kids aren't made to feel ashamed of the past, how will they learn to be ashamed of the future?
(indistinct chatter) Look at my son.
You think he needs to feel worse about himself than he already clearly does?
(grunts) You are doing this to him!
(cheering) I agree with the bald lady.
Why does history have to be hurtful?
Every book about World War II makes the Germans the bad guys.
Stop teaching facts!
Historical guilt is everything.
You snowflakes are hurting our feelings.
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
On the other hand, those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
People, people, people!
People.
We are not going to settle this tonight.
I move that we end this meeting with everyone angry and dissatisfied.
All in favor?
ALL: Boo!
Wonderful.
It's unanimous.
Mm.
Dad, I know this is a weird thing for a son to say to his father, but I'm proud of you.
You actually convinced people.
I did?
You the man, Kirk.
I am?
No, you the my man.
This marriage may have just got un-sexless.
It's so sad when people can't get along.
It causes upsetment.
Marge, people need to disagree and have their voice shouted over.
That's what democracy was.
Remember that?
But everyone in this country is so divided.
Where will all this hostility lead?
I'll tell you where it leads, Homer.
Straight to the bank...
the money bank.
(backboard clanks) This is the idea you've been looking for.
It is?
What's the one thing every American has in common?
(gasps) They're furious all the time about everything.
Ex-Shaq-ly.
Now, think...
how can you make money from that?
I know just what to do.
Hurry up, everyone!
My thing's coming on.
The thing I never told you about.
Are you full of anger at your kids' school or at life in general?
You know it.
Well, now you can express your scalding hot rage with the light-up "Me-Shirt."
Why, that's so obnoxious.
I love it.
The Me-Shirt has dozens of snappy slogans tailor-made for your recently-acquired but deeply-held views. "
Never Remember," "The Truth Will Make You Sad," and "Don't Teach on Me."
Plus, the copper-infused fiber that powers the lights gives you more energy and pushes all the blood to your face.
I'll never look not angry again.
Wow, Dad, way to milk the rage-bucks out of the red hat crowd.
Well, I found it appalling.
We have a shirt for you, too.
Oh, hi there.
You caught me wearing my carbon-neutral light-up shirt with progressive slogans like: "Shame On Us," "I Know Best," and "Who farted?
All the cows raised by the beef industry!"
That's despicable.
Though that fart slogan makes a good point.
You're pitting people against each other.
Lisa, that's what the T-shirt industry has always done, ever since "I'm With Stupid."
Now, Daddy's just giving "stupid" a chance to respond.
(phone rings) Ooh!
They're responding.
Tell me who you hate and I'll get it right out to you.
♪ ♪ Yeah, I-I just want to say one thing to your millions and millions of viewers: I'm being silenced!
In all this discord, if there's one thing that can bring us all together, it's the holidays.
I don't know.
The Christmas spirit just feels different this year.
Nice shirt.
Go to hell.
Stop the celebration!
Oh, for the love of nog, these loonies again?
Yeah, and we won't stop looning until you stop teaching that the gazebo was a disaster.
But people died.
That's why I'm an orphan.
Oh, this guy's a crisis actor.
How come every bad thing seems to conveniently happen to him?
(screeches) Aah!
Aah!
We must never forget the gazebo, the victims who lost their lives, and the suitors who lost their ukuleles.
Martin?
♪ There's a story that goes of the big gazebo ♪ ♪ That fell down one breezy June Sunday ♪ ♪ The mayor, it's said ♪ ♪ Had rocks in his head ♪ ♪ And he went by the name of Van Houten...
♪ My history!
ALL: My choice!
Our gazebo was "noice!"
Please, please, everyone.
It's the holidays.
Can't we just find common ground and compromise?
I mean, the one thing both sides can agree on is that we all care about our kids, equally.
Marge, you are so right, but there's only one side that I'm afraid will burn this whole godforsaken town to the ground.
Burn it!
Stop teaching the damn gazebo collapse.
Mr.
Mayor, my whole career, I have fought tirelessly to...
Damn it, Gary, it's just one thing.
Fine.
Who gives a crap?
Wow.
I actually won something.
Let's get ready to meddle!
(cheering) Oh.
I'm getting a sick feeling in my stomach.
Oh, don't worry so much, honey.
People just want to feel proud of our town.
And remember, I'm still on the school board, so I can be a guardrail to keep Kirk's worst impulses in check.
I mean, how bad can it be?
(bombastic music playing over speakers) Wow, I can't believe all this happened in only three weeks.
NARRATOR: So the people surrendered to Van Houten's wishes, and his face was on everything, even knishes.
But for Springfield, the outcome was rather pernicious.
ANNOUNCER: It's the Channel 6 News with Kent Brockman.
♪ ♪ (cheering) Brought to you by Homer's House of Copper-ganda, your one-stop shop for form-fitting Kirk-wear.
Good evening, and all hail Kirk.
Our top story: The Springfield bookmobile visits a local landmark, which is getting a new name.
I re-christen thee The Eternal Flame of Redaction and Beauty.
You said you'd only burn half the books.
Half?
No way.
This is all part of my plan to turn eyesores into pride-sores.
(cheering) I didn't sleep a wink.
I can fix that.
I'll adjust your copper number.
Aah!
(exclaiming) Homer, things are terrible in this town.
Kirk got a little bit of power to control what the kids learn and he went cuckoo with it, and we helped him.
I just really thought I could be the grown-up in the room.
Yeah, 'cause that always works.
I've got to do something to save Springfield and I need you to help me.
Great idea.
What's in it for me?
Homer, what does it profit a man if he gains the world but loses his soul?
Uh, he gains the world.
(gasps) I got to put that on a shirt.
D'oh...
Hey there, great leader.
You're looking especially non-repulsive today.
With great power comes great "you have to like me."
(chuckles) Mwah.
(moans) (both moaning) Um, uh, e-excuse me.
Marge, my guardrail.
Have a seat.
So, what's the good word?
And I only want good words.
Ugh.
I know you don't want to hear it, Kirk, but our schools are a disaster.
Reading levels have plummeted because there are no books left for kids to read.
Sure, but those books were bummers.
They're not bummers, they're the sum of human knowledge.
You can't base an entire society on ignorance and forgetting the past.
Hmm.
Marge, thank you for telling me all this.
Top-notch guardrailing.
I know now this moment calls for serious action.
Damn it.
(rock band playing) So how about this gazebo?
It's twice as big as the original...
which never existed.
(cheering) I declare we have won the war against history.
(cheering) It's time to rock out with your Kirk out.
The past never happened!
(whimpering) (grunting) What is happening?
Uh, the electricity running through everyone's copper T-shirts has created a massive electrical field and a full-fledged magnetic disturbance.
Dumb it down for us.
Well, I just did.
(stammers) (groaning) Soup crackers!
(crying) (groans) Attention, everyone.
We learned something very important today.
You can try to ignore history, but not science.
No matter how much we deny it, science is real, and we must not anger her.
(all assenting) And that became known as Springfield's Craziest, Kirkiest, Stupidest, Bloopidest Day.
How dare you teach that horrible story to my child.
Captioning sponsored by 20th CENTURY FOX TELEVISION and FOX BROADCASTING COMPANY and TOYOTA.
Captioned by Media Access Group at WGBH access.wgbh.org MARTIN: ♪ There's a story that goes of the big gazebo ♪ ♪ That fell down one breezy June Sunday ♪ ♪ The mayor, it's said ♪ ♪ Had rocks in his head ♪ ♪ And he went by the name of Van Houten ♪ ♪ The pitching of woo ♪ ♪ Was heartfelt and true ♪ ♪ And it raised all the fair ladies' ardor ♪ ♪ But the braces gave way ♪ ♪ And the corpses, they say ♪ ♪ Stretched out to Lake Gobedygooby ♪ ♪ This song of wrecked steel and human ordeal ♪ ♪ Will go on for 20 more verses ♪ ♪ Gazebos are.
♪ Shh.
So, can I stay for dinner?
No.
(accordion resumes playing theme) (Yankovic vocalizes) NARRATOR: And they'll toot their horn-honkers to proclaim its renown.
But there's one tale the townsfolk won't brag of or bray.
It's what happened on Springfield's dum-dummiest day.
(snoring) Ach!
The grid is overloaded.
But who and how and where and what for?
Ach!
Eek!
Loch!
Ewan!
Crivvens!
(cackling) My precious grid.
One more daft device and she'll explode.
No!
(coughing) Dear God, to mitigate the smell of emulsified eggs and vinegar, we'll have to close the school for weeks.
(cheering, whooping) Yay!
Awesome.
That's great!
All right!
You clearly misheard me.
I said the school will be closed.
And we said, "woo-hoo," "awesome," and "that's great."
ANNOUNCER: You're watching SportsCenter Classic.
Stay tuned for more exciting baseball scores from 1986.
1986.
I was two years old then.
Or was I 30?
COMMERCIAL ANNOUNCER: Stressed out from IRS troubles?
Irreversible Mortgage?
Chockaholic's Foot, formerly known as diabetes?
I can make those stresses disappear like a shattered backboard.
(gasps) Late-night commercial legend Shaquille O'Neal?
You need Tightie Mighties, the compression underwear with the proven nerve-soothing properties of copper wire.
Operators are standing by.
It's a slam dunk.
(gasps) That's the best kind of dunk.
For crying out loud.
I said no more buying junk from late-night ads on basic cable.
Look at all this stuff.
Unkinkable garden hoses, squatty potties.
Why do you need the world's most powerful flashlight?
Aah!
It has the most lumens.
(grunts) These late-night cable hucksters are getting rich off gullible people like you.
Oh, no, you're right.
I'm as stupid as the guy who couldn't make spaghetti before he bought the Spaghetti Samurai.
(snoring) LISA: Dad, wake up.
Get up, dummy.
(stammers) Huh?
This is our classroom until our school doesn't smell like eggs.
(shudders) Homeschooling.
Every half-assed parent's nightmare.
Oh...
First law of robotics: you suck.
Okay, so, if I have $500 in the bank, and your mother wants to take two-thirds of it to buy a purse, when her old purse is just fine...
You?
$500 in the bank?
What are you teaching him, science fiction?
No, real fiction, Luann.
It's real fiction.
(bell clangs) Okay, class, it's time for our unit on Springfield history.
Ooh, more pumpkin stickers for me.
I still got room for one more between my toes.
(shuddering laugh) "Chapter four: a Great Endeavor."
Today, we christen the Great Springfield Gazebo, wherein romance-minded gentlemen the world over may come to court their intendeds.
This grand new structure shall make Springfield the woo-pitching capital of America.
Gentlemen, start your ukuleles.
GENTLEMEN: ♪ I will always ♪ ♪ Be true ♪ ♪ Spend my days ♪ ♪ Pitching woo ♪ ♪ To you...
♪ (ladies giggling, swooning) Oh, God, oh, dear God, um, we didn't account for the harmonic frequency of the wooing.
It's too romantic!
Please, I beg you, stop making love in the old-timey sense as we understand it today.
♪ Not a moment I'll rue ♪ ♪ As I serenade you ♪ ♪ My sweet ♪ ♪ Mary Lou.
♪ MARGE: Glory turned to fiasco for the disgraced Mayor of Springfield, Eustace Van Houten.
(coughs) Aw, soup crackers.
MAN 1: Charlatan!
MAN 2: Mountebank!
WOMAN: Dunderhead!
Dad, was he one of our relatives?
Yeah, he was your great-great-grandfather.
Not so great, I guess.
So, the Van Houtens have always been losers.
Not true, son.
Hey, your granddad once prepared a Caesar salad for Dean Martin, right at the table.
(chuckles) Fine, Dad.
I'm gonna go to Phys Ed.
We're doing swimming today.
Mm...
(sighs) My life is hard enough, now I find out that the school is teaching my son that every one of his ancestors is a loser.
(groans) I bought so many stupid useless products.
Pretzel Straightener, Face Bidet, Spray-on Music.
(rattles) (The Price is Right losing horns playing) I'm financially ruined, and it's all his fault.
Now your belly button can live the lint-free lifestyle with the Navel Vac.
And she'll like it, too.
She didn't.
Shaq, you suckered me again.
Hey, hey, hey.
I will not have you badmouthing Shaquille Rashaun O'Neal.
Four-time NBA champ, rapper, actor, sheriff, restaurateur, black belt in Shaq-Fu, Shaq belt in kung fu, and now the Big Aristotle dominates the late-night airwaves.
He is living proof that anybody can make their dreams come true.
You're right.
If I could just think of one thing to sell that nobody needs and everybody wants, I could pay off my bills and be a super-success like Shaq.
And you, Big Milhouse, stop whining.
Somebody calls your family a loser, you stand up for yourself.
I will.
(inspirational music playing) SKINNER: On behalf of the school board, I declare school is officially reopened.
Let the free childcare and intermittent learning resume.
I'm here to officially protest the teaching of the Great Springfield Gazebo Disaster.
It makes our children hate our town and me hate myself.
The Gazebo Disaster?
But we plan to tread water on that unit for months.
We're doing two weeks on the substandard metal bracing alone.
Not anymore.
I demand that you ban Critical Brace Theory now.
Sir, we're not changing our curriculum just to shore up the wet cardboard lean-to that is your family self-esteem.
Then you leave me one choice.
Until you meet my demands, I'm going to play this trumpet, on which I have no formal training.
(dissonant playing) Aah!
Mr.
Van Houten, if we, uh, if we could just...
Look, there's no need for brass instruments.
For 30 years, we've been pleading with parents to get more involved.
What the hell were we thinking?
(Marge grumbles) I know Kirk is angry, but I'm a little worried this meeting will go off the rails.
Marge, stop saying things.
I'm trying to think of an amazing product that can get us out of debt.
Uh...
um...
Handgun Underpants?
Mm, no.
Uh, Bucket in a Box?
Spoon 2.0?
Steak Bedazzler?
Oh...
(clears throat) Yes, we are all here because one lone parent raised an issue that he thinks is worth me missing the new Equalizer starring that delightful Queen Latifah.
Kirk!
You, regrettably, have the floor.
We need to stop teaching that my great-grandfather's gazebo was a disaster.
But it was, and it was his fault.
His dying words were, "My bad."
So?
Why can't our kids learn about things that make our town proud?
Like, how if you want to make a right on red, it's usually not a problem.
Why do we have to focus on the bad stuff?
(indistinct chatter) We completely disagree.
It's essential that all of Springfield's darkest chapters be taught: the monorail, Lady Gaga's visit, and the gazebo collapse.
If our kids aren't made to feel ashamed of the past, how will they learn to be ashamed of the future?
(indistinct chatter) Look at my son.
You think he needs to feel worse about himself than he already clearly does?
(grunts) You are doing this to him!
(cheering) I agree with the bald lady.
Why does history have to be hurtful?
Every book about World War II makes the Germans the bad guys.
Stop teaching facts!
Historical guilt is everything.
You snowflakes are hurting our feelings.
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
On the other hand, those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
People, people, people!
People.
We are not going to settle this tonight.
I move that we end this meeting with everyone angry and dissatisfied.
All in favor?
ALL: Boo!
Wonderful.
It's unanimous.
Mm.
Dad, I know this is a weird thing for a son to say to his father, but I'm proud of you.
You actually convinced people.
I did?
You the man, Kirk.
I am?
No, you the my man.
This marriage may have just got un-sexless.
It's so sad when people can't get along.
It causes upsetment.
Marge, people need to disagree and have their voice shouted over.
That's what democracy was.
Remember that?
But everyone in this country is so divided.
Where will all this hostility lead?
I'll tell you where it leads, Homer.
Straight to the bank...
the money bank.
(backboard clanks) This is the idea you've been looking for.
It is?
What's the one thing every American has in common?
(gasps) They're furious all the time about everything.
Ex-Shaq-ly.
Now, think...
how can you make money from that?
I know just what to do.
Hurry up, everyone!
My thing's coming on.
The thing I never told you about.
Are you full of anger at your kids' school or at life in general?
You know it.
Well, now you can express your scalding hot rage with the light-up "Me-Shirt."
Why, that's so obnoxious.
I love it.
The Me-Shirt has dozens of snappy slogans tailor-made for your recently-acquired but deeply-held views. "
Never Remember," "The Truth Will Make You Sad," and "Don't Teach on Me."
Plus, the copper-infused fiber that powers the lights gives you more energy and pushes all the blood to your face.
I'll never look not angry again.
Wow, Dad, way to milk the rage-bucks out of the red hat crowd.
Well, I found it appalling.
We have a shirt for you, too.
Oh, hi there.
You caught me wearing my carbon-neutral light-up shirt with progressive slogans like: "Shame On Us," "I Know Best," and "Who farted?
All the cows raised by the beef industry!"
That's despicable.
Though that fart slogan makes a good point.
You're pitting people against each other.
Lisa, that's what the T-shirt industry has always done, ever since "I'm With Stupid."
Now, Daddy's just giving "stupid" a chance to respond.
(phone rings) Ooh!
They're responding.
Tell me who you hate and I'll get it right out to you.
♪ ♪ Yeah, I-I just want to say one thing to your millions and millions of viewers: I'm being silenced!
In all this discord, if there's one thing that can bring us all together, it's the holidays.
I don't know.
The Christmas spirit just feels different this year.
Nice shirt.
Go to hell.
Stop the celebration!
Oh, for the love of nog, these loonies again?
Yeah, and we won't stop looning until you stop teaching that the gazebo was a disaster.
But people died.
That's why I'm an orphan.
Oh, this guy's a crisis actor.
How come every bad thing seems to conveniently happen to him?
(screeches) Aah!
Aah!
We must never forget the gazebo, the victims who lost their lives, and the suitors who lost their ukuleles.
Martin?
♪ There's a story that goes of the big gazebo ♪ ♪ That fell down one breezy June Sunday ♪ ♪ The mayor, it's said ♪ ♪ Had rocks in his head ♪ ♪ And he went by the name of Van Houten...
♪ My history!
ALL: My choice!
Our gazebo was "noice!"
Please, please, everyone.
It's the holidays.
Can't we just find common ground and compromise?
I mean, the one thing both sides can agree on is that we all care about our kids, equally.
Marge, you are so right, but there's only one side that I'm afraid will burn this whole godforsaken town to the ground.
Burn it!
Stop teaching the damn gazebo collapse.
Mr.
Mayor, my whole career, I have fought tirelessly to...
Damn it, Gary, it's just one thing.
Fine.
Who gives a crap?
Wow.
I actually won something.
Let's get ready to meddle!
(cheering) Oh.
I'm getting a sick feeling in my stomach.
Oh, don't worry so much, honey.
People just want to feel proud of our town.
And remember, I'm still on the school board, so I can be a guardrail to keep Kirk's worst impulses in check.
I mean, how bad can it be?
(bombastic music playing over speakers) Wow, I can't believe all this happened in only three weeks.
NARRATOR: So the people surrendered to Van Houten's wishes, and his face was on everything, even knishes.
But for Springfield, the outcome was rather pernicious.
ANNOUNCER: It's the Channel 6 News with Kent Brockman.
♪ ♪ (cheering) Brought to you by Homer's House of Copper-ganda, your one-stop shop for form-fitting Kirk-wear.
Good evening, and all hail Kirk.
Our top story: The Springfield bookmobile visits a local landmark, which is getting a new name.
I re-christen thee The Eternal Flame of Redaction and Beauty.
You said you'd only burn half the books.
Half?
No way.
This is all part of my plan to turn eyesores into pride-sores.
(cheering) I didn't sleep a wink.
I can fix that.
I'll adjust your copper number.
Aah!
(exclaiming) Homer, things are terrible in this town.
Kirk got a little bit of power to control what the kids learn and he went cuckoo with it, and we helped him.
I just really thought I could be the grown-up in the room.
Yeah, 'cause that always works.
I've got to do something to save Springfield and I need you to help me.
Great idea.
What's in it for me?
Homer, what does it profit a man if he gains the world but loses his soul?
Uh, he gains the world.
(gasps) I got to put that on a shirt.
D'oh...
Hey there, great leader.
You're looking especially non-repulsive today.
With great power comes great "you have to like me."
(chuckles) Mwah.
(moans) (both moaning) Um, uh, e-excuse me.
Marge, my guardrail.
Have a seat.
So, what's the good word?
And I only want good words.
Ugh.
I know you don't want to hear it, Kirk, but our schools are a disaster.
Reading levels have plummeted because there are no books left for kids to read.
Sure, but those books were bummers.
They're not bummers, they're the sum of human knowledge.
You can't base an entire society on ignorance and forgetting the past.
Hmm.
Marge, thank you for telling me all this.
Top-notch guardrailing.
I know now this moment calls for serious action.
Damn it.
(rock band playing) So how about this gazebo?
It's twice as big as the original...
which never existed.
(cheering) I declare we have won the war against history.
(cheering) It's time to rock out with your Kirk out.
The past never happened!
(whimpering) (grunting) What is happening?
Uh, the electricity running through everyone's copper T-shirts has created a massive electrical field and a full-fledged magnetic disturbance.
Dumb it down for us.
Well, I just did.
(stammers) (groaning) Soup crackers!
(crying) (groans) Attention, everyone.
We learned something very important today.
You can try to ignore history, but not science.
No matter how much we deny it, science is real, and we must not anger her.
(all assenting) And that became known as Springfield's Craziest, Kirkiest, Stupidest, Bloopidest Day.
How dare you teach that horrible story to my child.
Captioning sponsored by 20th CENTURY FOX TELEVISION and FOX BROADCASTING COMPANY and TOYOTA.
Captioned by Media Access Group at WGBH access.wgbh.org MARTIN: ♪ There's a story that goes of the big gazebo ♪ ♪ That fell down one breezy June Sunday ♪ ♪ The mayor, it's said ♪ ♪ Had rocks in his head ♪ ♪ And he went by the name of Van Houten ♪ ♪ The pitching of woo ♪ ♪ Was heartfelt and true ♪ ♪ And it raised all the fair ladies' ardor ♪ ♪ But the braces gave way ♪ ♪ And the corpses, they say ♪ ♪ Stretched out to Lake Gobedygooby ♪ ♪ This song of wrecked steel and human ordeal ♪ ♪ Will go on for 20 more verses ♪ ♪ Gazebos are.
♪ Shh.