Black Eyed, Please
"Black Eyed, Please" is the fifteenth episode of the 24th season of The Simpsons, and the 523rd episode overall. It first aired on the Fox network in the United States on March 10, 2013.[1] The name is a pun on black-eyed peas and the band, The Black Eyed Peas.
"Black Eyed, Please" | |
---|---|
The Simpsons episode | |
Episode no. | Season 24 Episode 15 |
Directed by | Matthew Schofield |
Written by | John Frink |
Production code | RABF09 |
Original air date | March 10, 2013 |
Guest appearance(s) | |
Richard Dawkins as Devil Version of Himself | |
Episode features | |
Chalkboard gag | I'm sorry I broke the blackboard (written on a whiteboard in marker)". Later in the episode, he causes chaos in the classroom and writes on the blackboard "I will make your life a living hell." |
Couch gag | In another Bill Plympton-animated opening, Homer, Marge, Bart, and Lisa are in a 1930s gangster story, armed with weapons and ready to attack. When Maggie turns on the lights, everyone is in the present day, holding common objects. Maggie then fires off a Tommy gun as they sit on the couch to watch TV. |
The couch segment of this episode's intro was animated by Bill Plympton in a film noir style. He also animated one for 2012 and one for 2014.[2]
Plot
Homer invites himself to Ned Flanders's house for breakfast and finds Ned's beatnik parents there. Ned begins to feel uneasy when his parents begin to take a liking to Homer rather than him. After a morning jog, Ned comes home to find Homer and his parents smoking "medicinal" marijuana and watching TV. Ned becomes so enraged he punches Homer in the face, giving him a black eye. Homer is furious at Ned, who does not know what he has to do in order to be excused. Ned eventually finds a solution in the Bible ("an eye for an eye"), and encourages Homer to punch him in order to make them even. However, Homer refuses to punch him, citing that he is the bigger man by not punching Ned and brags about it, causing Ned to punch Homer's other uninjured eye.
Meanwhile, Lisa learns that Ms. Hoover has taken leave due to a bout of severe depression, and the class gets another teacher, Mrs. Cantwell. Cantwell takes a liking to everyone in the class except for Lisa, whom she bullies by giving her lower grades and taking the paper cutout joeys off the kangaroo-themed "good behavior" board. Homer and Marge try to get Principal Skinner to do something, but the bullying worsens and Lisa is sent to detention, where the bullies are shocked to learn that Cantwell as a teacher is such a bully to a student like Lisa.
Homer eventually finds a solution to Lisa's dilemma and Ned's own: he will accept Ned's apology if his wife Edna Krabappel gives advice on how to get rid of the bullying teacher. Edna says the only way is the "nuclear option" - which means putting Bart in Cantwell's class. When Cantwell leaves to go to the bathroom, Bart brings chaos to the classroom and then shows Cantwell a compromising video of herself in the bathroom cursing Lisa and tells her he posted it online. The plan works in getting Cantwell to leave, but it does not get Cantwell to be nice to Lisa. When Lisa tries to catch up to Cantwell before she drives off, Cantwell admits that she was only jealous because Lisa is pretty, and that pretty girls like Lisa have it easier than girls like Cantwell, who have to use their brains to get by in life. This is an idea that Lisa happily accepts — even after Cantwell splatters mud on her as she drives off.
The story ends with Homer having a barbecue with Ned and his parents, and Ned's father revealing to Marge that he got Homer and Ned to be nice to each other by slipping marijuana in their food.
Reception
Critical reception
Robert David Sullivan of The A.V. Club gave the episode a C, saying that although the stories were "not bad", the script was filled out with "an unforgivable number of hacky jokes."[3] Rob H. Dawson of TV Equals praised the "long, absurd riff on sports announcers" and wished that its silly tone could have been present throughout the episode.[4]
Ratings
The episode received a 2.2 in the 18-49 demographic and was watched by a total of 4.85 million viewers. This made it the second most-watched show on Fox's Animation Domination line up that night, beating American Dad!, The Cleveland Show and Bob's Burgers but losing out to Family Guy with 5.27 million.[5]
References
- "The Simpsons Episode Guide 2013 Season 24 - Black-eyed Please, Episode 15". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
- Film Noir, The Simpsons Couch Gag Opening by Bill Plympton
Artist Bill Plympton has animated a couch gag opening sequence titled “Film Noir” for the March 10th, 2013 episode of The Simpsons, “Black-eyed Please." Plympton previously animated a couch gag for the episode “Beware My Cheating Bart." - David, Robert. ""Black-eyed Please" | The Simpsons | TV Club | TV". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
- "The Simpsons Season 24 Review "Black-eyed Please"". TV Equals. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
- Kondolojy, Amanda (March 12, 2013). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'Once Upon a Time', 'Family Guy', 'Celebrity Apprentice' & 'The Mentalist' Adjusted Up; 'Red Widow' Adjusted Down". Zap2it. TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 14, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
External links
- "Black Eyed, Please" at IMDb
- "Black Eyed, Please" at TV.com
- "Black Eyed, Please" at theSimpsons.com