Lisa's Pony

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The Simpsons episode
"Lisa's Pony"
Lisa falls in love with her pony
Episode no. 43
Prod. code 8F06
Orig. Airdate November 7, 1991
Writer(s) Al Jean & Mike Reiss
Director(s) Carlos Baeza
Chalkboard "'Bart Bucks' are not legal tender."
Couch gag Homer gets there first and lies down. The rest of the family arrive and sit on him. Homer flails his arms.
DVD commentary by Matt Groening
James L. Brooks
Al Jean
Dan Castellaneta
Julie Kavner
David Silverman
Mike Reiss (Easter Egg)
SNPP capsule
Season 3
September 19, 1991August 27, 1992
  1. Stark Raving Dad
  2. Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington
  3. When Flanders Failed
  4. Bart the Murderer
  5. Homer Defined
  6. Like Father, Like Clown
  7. Treehouse of Horror II
  8. Lisa's Pony
  9. Saturdays of Thunder
  10. Flaming Moe's
  11. Burns Verkaufen der Kraftwerk
  12. I Married Marge
  13. Radio Bart
  14. Lisa the Greek
  15. Homer Alone
  16. Bart the Lover
  17. Homer at the Bat
  18. Separate Vocations
  19. Dog of Death
  20. Colonel Homer
  21. Black Widower
  22. The Otto Show
  23. Bart's Friend Falls in Love
  24. Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?
List of all Simpsons episodes...

"Lisa's Pony" is episode eight of the The Simpsons' third season. The episode aired on November 7, 1991.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Lisa requires a reed for her saxophone because there is a talent show that evening. After calling Marge, Flanders, Reverend Lovejoy, Patty and Selma and "the nice man who caught the snake in our basement", she finally calls Homer at work. Homer agrees but goes into Moe's before the music shop, which is right next door. The shop closes in 5 minutes. Homer, thinking he has enough time to drink the beer, enters Moe's. He walks out with 15 seconds to spare but is too late as the shop is closed. Dejected, he goes back to Moe's where the shop owner is enjoying a drink. Moe helps Homer convince the man to re-open his store. Homer, who barely remembers what he is supposed to pick up for Lisa, purchases the reed and heads for the school. Unfortunately he is still late. He arrives just in time to hear Lisa humiliate herself by butchering the song she chose to play.

To make Lisa love him again, Homer takes out a shifty loan from Burns. He purchases a pony for Lisa, despite objections from Marge. In order to pay for all the care it requires, Homer takes a second job working for Apu at the Kwik-E-Mart. Homer becomes more and more exhausted after trying to work both jobs. Finally, Marge admits to the kids that their father has been working two jobs to pay for the pony. Making a heart-wrenching decision, Lisa agrees to give up the pony, allowing Homer to go back to solely working his regular job. Lisa tells Homer that there's a "big dumb animal" she loves even more than her horse, that being Homer himself.

  • Apu can be seen dating Princess Kashmir (the belly dancer from Homer's Night Out).
  • Ralph Wiggum appears in his post season 1 look but speaks with his old voice, which is highly reminiscent of Nelson Muntz. Avid viewers may find this quite humorous as this deeper, more boyish voice is a stark contrast to the high pitched tone which became the characters' standard voice after this point.
  • The woman at the horse stables is obviously modeled after Katharine Hepburn.
  • The three judges are Bleeding Gums Murphy, Lunchlady Doris (Who Makes Her First Appearance In This Episode) and Groundskeeper Willie.

  • Part of the song playing when Homer falls asleep in his car is "Golden Slumbers" from The Beatles' Abbey Road album, though much of the beginning is based on part of Bohuslav Martinu's Sonata No. 3.
  • The scene in which Lisa first awakes with the Pony in her bed is an homage to the scene in Part 1 of The Godfather, in which a movie producer awakens to discover the head of his favourite horse removed and placed in his bed. The musical chords used in the episode are the same, but shortened.
  • The episode starts off with a Dawn of Man sequence spoofing the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey.
  • Mr. Burns asks Homer if he is acquainted with the state's usury laws - state laws which limit the interest rate a lender can charge a borrower. From his reaction to Homer not knowing about them, or even knowing the meaning of the word "usury", Mr. Burns is likely charging Homer an illegal amount of interest on his loan. Although Mr. Burns has a interesting way of loansharking. When Homer asks about collateral, Burns replies that "Homer's spirit is collateral" then gives a diabolical laugh. This is likely a reference to the hellish nature of Mr. Burns and that he is trying to somehow claim Homer's soul should he not repay.
  • As he quits, Homer's line "You can take this job and restaff it" resembles the hook lyric "You can take this job and shove it" from a song by David Allen Coe.

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