The Mook, the Chef, the Wife and Her Homer
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"The Mook, the Chef, the Wife and Her Homer" is the first episode of The Simpsons' eighteenth season, which originally aired September 10, 2006. It was written by Bill Odenkirk and directed by Michael Marcantel. The title of this episode is a take on the 1989 film The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover
While driving the bus, Otto sees Metallica, whose tour bus appears to have broken down. Initially he puts it down to an hallucination due to his drug use, but then a little dragon appears and tells him that it is for real, so he stops to pick them up. Bart hijacks the bus and drives to school, and he misses his chance to rock with Metallica when the band hitches a ride with Hans Moleman. Moleman declares he used to sleep with Lars's grandmother. A fuming Otto arrives to school and spanks Bart. Principal Skinner notices this act of corporal punishment and suspends Otto from driving the school bus. Because of this, the parents have to carpool the kids to school, now including an introverted kid named Michael. Michael is clearly an outcast and Nelson (who is in the car) picks on him. However, when Marge drives back to Michael's house, who forgot his math book, it is revealed his father is Fat Tony, the Don of the Springfield Mafia. After Fat Tony gives Michael the book, Nelson pleads Michael not to tell his father or to have him whacked.
News of Michael's "family" spreads, and everyone tries to keep their distance from him. Lisa joins a lonely Michael at lunch, and they become friends. She comes to find Michael is a talented cook, which he claims to be his dream, rather than go into the family business. After school, Fat Tony drives the kids home, but on the way, goons working for the Calabresi family, Fat Tony's rivals, attack them. He manages to slip them, and when they arrive at the Simpson house, Michael invites the family over for dinner. At Fat Tony's mansion, the Calabresis show up unexpectedly for a sit-down during dinner. Fat Tony advises the Calabresis against killing him as his son, Michael, would then take his place and exact a brutal vengeance. Michael, meanwhile, serves souffles to the Simpsons. He then serves them to the mobsters, who love it, but are surprised when they find out he made them. The Calabresis laugh at Tony and leave. Fat Tony admonishes Michael for making him look weak in front of his enemies. Suddenly, an attack helicopter (piloted by the Calabresis) appears at the window and guns Fat Tony down.
At the hospital, Fat Tony lies unconscious, and Johnny Tightlips explains to the other mobsters that, with the boss down, the Calabresis would be trying to finish the job. He tells Michael that he should step up, but when he resists, Homer volunteers to take his place as mob boss. He and Bart proceed to do Mafia dirty work, shaking down money from Moe and Krusty. However, Michael notices how this amount of power is turning the two more maniacal (Homer steals a Truck, Bart steals a Truck Truck, and Homer and Bart think of ways to kill Flanders) , and seeks to put an end to it. One night, he invites the Calabresis to the Simpsons' for dinner, where he informs them that they have won and that he is out of the family business. They applaud his decision, but end up choking and dying over their own meals. Marge discovers the food had been poisoned, and although Michael appears remorseful, Lisa finds out it was intentional. At Fat Tony's mansion, Fat Tony congratulates Michael for defeating their enemies. Outside, Lisa asks Michael why he did not tell Fat Tony it was all an accident, though she suspects it was not quite so. Michael tells her, à la Michael Corleone, never to question his business. He walks into the next room and is joined by Jimbo Jones, Dolph and Kearney, who shut the door on Lisa a la Godfather. Lisa opens up again to reveal Michael playing with his toy cars.
- In another Simpsons episode, "The Seven-Beer Snitch", Fat Tony says Marge sometimes drives his son home from school and Marge says he must be Michael's dad.
- Otto's exclamation "Real songs are about deals with the devil, far-off lands, and where you'd find smoke in relation to water." is an allusion to the song "Smoke on the Water" by Deep Purple.
- The song Metallica plays as they ride away in the back of Hans Moleman's truck is the title track from their 1986 album "Master of Puppets".
- Krusty the Clown, owner of the chain of Krusty Burger restaurants, pays the mafia to keep McDonalds and Burger King out of Springfield.
- The piece the school band plays is the second movement from Dvořák's Ninth Symphony.
- When Fat Tony is driving the carpool, "Woke Up This Morning", The Sopranos theme song is heard. Additionally, several Sopranos actors (including Joe Pantoliano and Michael Imperioli) voice mob characters in this episode; note that they had their real faces in this episode.
- Nelson says in this episode that "There is no Mafia" which is another reference to The Sopranos, where Anthony Soprano Sr. says this to his daughter Meadow.
- Fat Tony works, as he says, in "waste management", which is the official job of Anthony Soprano Sr.
- Fat Tony asks Milhouse for one of his loose leaf binders to use as a trap. Fat Tony chooses the Garfield binder rather than the Love Is... binder. "I prefer the cat. He hates Mondays, and we can all relate."
- The house of Fat Tony also strongly resembles that of Tony Montana from the movie Scarface.
- Fat Tony's son, Michael, is named in honor of Michael Corleone, son of Don Vito Corleone, in Mario Puzo's The Godfather Trilogy. His hairstyle is also extremely similar to Al Pacino's around the time of the film.
- At the end of the episode Michael says to Lisa: "Don't ever ask me about my business", a quotation from The Godfather. The room where this takes place is very similar to the location in the original movie.
- Homer claims Shark Tale to be the best gangster movie ever.
- Fat Tony asks "Who wants to sleep with the fishes? ...Because I brought this Finding Nemo bedspread!"
- Before he dies, Michael Imperioli's character says "I wanna be buried with my wife, under that bridge in Jersey." This is possibly a reference to his character in The Sopranos causing his girlfriend's death because she was a informant.