Bart-Mangled Banner

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The Simpsons episode
"Bart-Mangled Banner"
Episode no. 334
Prod. code FABF17
Orig. airdate May 16, 2004
Written by John Frink
Directed by Steven Dean Moore
Chalkboard None
Couch gag The couch is replaced by a giant microwave. Someone puts a tray inside and presses a button. The Simpsons rise from the tray as it cooks.
Season 15
November 2, 2003May 23, 2004
  1. Treehouse of Horror XIV
  2. My Mother the Carjacker
  3. The President Wore Pearls
  4. The Regina Monologues
  5. The Fat and the Furriest
  6. Today I Am a Clown
  7. 'Tis the Fifteenth Season
  8. Marge vs. Singles, Seniors, Childless Couples and Teens, and Gays
  9. I, (Annoyed Grunt)-Bot
  10. Diatribe of a Mad Housewife
  11. Margical History Tour
  12. Milhouse Doesn't Live Here Anymore
  13. Smart and Smarter
  14. The Ziff Who Came to Dinner
  15. Co-Dependent's Day
  16. The Wandering Juvie
  17. My Big Fat Geek Wedding
  18. Catch 'Em if You Can
  19. Simple Simpson
  20. The Way We Weren't
  21. Bart-Mangled Banner
  22. Fraudcast News
List of all The Simpsons episodes
Seasons
1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10
11 · 12 · 13 · 14 · 15 · 16 · 17 · 18 · 19

"Bart-Mangled Banner" is the twenty-first episode from The Simpsons' fifteenth season.

Homer and Marge take the kids to get their shots. Just before Dr. Hibbert is about to inject Bart, he escapes. After a chase through town, Hibbert finally outsmarts Bart and injects him. The shot, however, causes Bart's earholes to swell shut, making him temporarily deaf. Hibbert also tricks Homer into signing a malpractice waiver.

While at the Springfield Elementary School "donkey basketball game", Bart taunts a donkey with a carrot. After he places it in his shorts, the donkey takes it and rips off Bart's shorts (just like his famous line "Eat my shorts"). While Bart is bent over, the US flag is put up behind him and a photo is taken, which results in the crowd assuming that Bart is mooning the US flag. Shortly afterwards, the Springfield Shopper takes the story and completely turns it around, making it seem as if Bart had deliberately mooned the flag. He and his family soon are hated by all of Springfield. Homer and Marge tried to clear up this misunderstanding, knowing that it was an accident, but everybody refuses to listen, mistrusting Bart and his family.

The Simpsons are later asked to appear on a talk show and tell their side of the story. However, the host asks, instead, "What part of America do you hate most?" (an example of the fallacy of many questions). Marge says that, if this is how things are, she does hate the Americas, even though she did not mean that she actually hated all countries of the Americas. She also said that she is well-liked in Springfield, prompting the host to say that Springfield hates the Americas. The US then turns their back on Springfield, so Mayor Quimby frantically decides to change the name of Springfield to "Libertyville." Everything in town is quickly patriotized; the traffic light colors are changed to red, white, and blue (red means go now), and everything costs $17.76. While at church, Lisa speaks her opinion about patriotism, and the Simpsons are taken into custody, in violation of the "Government Knows Best Act."

The Simpsons are taken to the "Ronald Reagan Reeducation Center", which houses Michael Moore, the Dixie Chicks, Elmo (who accidentally went to the wrong fundraiser), and Bill Clinton. With some help from the last-registered Democrat, the Simpsons escape the prison, but realize that the re-education center is actually Alcatraz Prison. While they are swimming to land, they are picked up by a French freighter and are brought to France. They are well adjusted, but still miss America, mainly because it is where all their stuff is. They then move back to the US dressed as 19th century immigrants from Europe where Homer speaks of plans of integration into America.

  • Elmo hangs himself in prison.
  • The title is taken from a phrase Bart used in "Bart vs. Lisa vs. The Third Grade", regarding the sabotage of Lisa's flag prototype.
  • In France, Marge wears the same Chanel suit she wore in episode 3F11 "Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield"
  • When Bart & Lisa believe that they will be used as crash test dummies, Lisa closes her eyes and quietly says to herself "Please be Volvo". This is a reference to Volvo's excellent safety record, even though Volvos had been portrayed negatively in My Sister, My Sitter and I, D'oh-bot.
  • Apu renames his octuplets Freedom, Lincoln, Manifest Destiny, Coke, Pepsi, Condoleezza, Apple Pie, and Superman.
  • The Schoolhouse Rock parody is from the episode "The Day the Violence Died".
  • Though Superman was one of Apu's Liberty names, Superman was co-created by a Canadian.
  • This is the first episode to show New York City after the September 11, 2001 attacks. As the immigration boat heads into Manhattan, one can see the World Trade Center has now been removed.
  • Moe says he is Dutch in this episode, but Szyslak is not a name often heard in the Netherlands; most likely his mother is Dutch and his father is Polish.
  • For a brief moment while in France, Ugolin and César (from the episode "The Crepes of Wrath", in which Bart goes on exchange to France) are visible.
  • San Francisco and Oakland are geographically placed incorrectly. Facing south after leaving Alcatraz, San Francisco should be on the right (west) while Oakland should be on the left (east).
  • Libertyville is also the name of a Chicago, IL, suburb.

  • American Revolution - Everything costing $17.76 is a reference to the historical event, involving the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776.
  • Guinness World Records - President Clinton's "attempt" to smoke 100 cigarettes at once is a satirical look at records documented in the compedium of human achievements.
  • Inmates at the "re-education center" (housed at Alcatraz):
  • North by Northwest - The scene where Dr. Hibbert chases Bart in a cropduster is patterned after a scene in the 1959 Alfred Hitchcock thriller.
  • The O'Reilly Factor - The talk show in which the Simpsons go on to defend themselves, and the host's mannerisms, are inspired by the talk show.
  • Patriot Act – The "Government Knows Best" act is a spoof of the controversial 2001 legislation aimed at fighting terrorism in the United States and abroad.
  • Condoleezza Rice - Apu re-names one of his children "Condoleezza," after the United States Secretary of State, during the wave of dis-sentiment with the Simpson family.
  • The Sound of Music - The Simpsons' escape method from the "re-education center" and the Nazi solider alerting fellow troops as to their escape are similar to scenes from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical (and subsequent movie adaptation).
  • "The Star-Spangled Banner" - The episode title is a play to the title of the National Anthem.
  • Volvo - Lisa's response to Bart's comment - wherein he fears that his parents will make them become crash test dummies - is a nod toward the automaker's reputation of crashworthiness of the automobiles.


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