Viva Ned Flanders

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The Simpsons episode
"Viva Ned Flanders"
Episode no. 213
Prod. code AABF06
Orig. Airdate January 10, 1999
Show Runner(s) Mike Scully
Written by David M. Stern
Directed by Neil Affleck
Chalkboard "My mother is not dating Jerry Seinfeld"
Couch gag A live-action hand spins a picture of the family, and the ink splatters.
Guest star The Moody Blues as themselves
Season 10
August 23, 1998May 16, 1999
  1. Lard of the Dance
  2. The Wizard of Evergreen Terrace
  3. Bart the Mother
  4. Treehouse of Horror IX
  5. When You Dish upon a Star
  6. D'oh-in in the Wind
  7. Lisa Gets an "A"
  8. Homer Simpson in: "Kidney Trouble"
  9. Mayored to the Mob
  10. Viva Ned Flanders
  11. Wild Barts Can't Be Broken
  12. Sunday, Cruddy Sunday
  13. Homer to the Max
  14. I'm with Cupid
  15. Marge Simpson in: "Screaming Yellow Honkers"
  16. Make Room for Lisa
  17. Maximum Homerdrive
  18. Simpsons Bible Stories
  19. Mom and Pop Art
  20. The Old Man and the "C" Student
  21. Monty Can't Buy Me Love
  22. They Saved Lisa's Brain
  23. Thirty Minutes over Tokyo
List of all Simpsons episodes...

"Viva Ned Flanders" is the tenth episode of The Simpsons' tenth season. It first aired on January 10, 1999.

This episode had an indirect sequel, like Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?, and Who shot Mr. Burns?, which is the only episode to have two parts.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Springfield is without a casino when Mr. Burns' Casino (see "$pringfield") is demolished. Unfortunately, a mixup over whether demolitions are supposed to involve implosions or explosions results in the Casino being blasted into a huge dust cloud. The family goes to the car wash to get rid of the dust, and when Homer is there, he sees that Ned Flanders gets a senior discount. At church, Flanders admits to Homer that he is sixty years old. He says that he follows the three "c"s of success: clean living, chewing thoroughly, and "a daily dose of vitamin Church!" However, he also has never lived impulsively, and never really had any fun in life. The rest of the town stops admiring Ned for living so well, and begins to pity him for having never truly lived at all.

Ned reluctantly agrees with this and asks Homer to teach him the secret to his lust for life, leading Homer to take him on a gambling trip to Las Vegas. Homer is confident about going there, but Flanders is nervous. They see Captain Lance Murdoch (from "Bart the Daredevil") doing one of his stunts, and Homer chooses to volunteer, and survives. They wander into a casino "Nero's Palace" and begin to play roulette. Ned protests based on Deuteronomy 7 but Homer ignores the protest and takes the reference as a lucky number and they win. They then immediately lose it all. They then go to the casino's bar and get drunk, waking up the next morning in their hotel room.

Later on, Homer and Ned realize that they have married two cocktail waitresses: Homer's new wife is named Amber, and Ned's new wife is Ginger. The waitresses say that they are married to them, and prove it through a video tape. Homer and Ned try to escape from the waitresses, and go on a wild rampage through the casino, until they are confronted by casino security, Ernst and Gunter (also from "$pringfield"), Drederick Tatum, and the Moody Blues. They escape the casino, but are booted out of the casino, and say that they are not welcome to Las Vegas again. Homer and Ned head back to their real wives in Springfield by hitchhiking. Meanwhile, two vultures flew by to attack Homer and Ned, and while they were screaming, Homer tells Ned to cover his own eyes.

The episode would later have a sequel, which is rare for the Simpsons. In the episode "Brawl in the Family" the Vegas wives would return for their spouses, causing more problems for Ned and Homer.

  • First appearance of the Vegas wives: Amber and Ginger.
  • Homer correctly states Adolf Hitler's birthday as April 20 and identifies it with Barney's which is the same day in the scene where Flanders and Homer are at the roulette table. Because the Columbine High School Shootings were intentionally executed on that date, the line was changed in the third Fox network airing (September 19, 1999) to July 15, same as Lassie's (the line about Lassie's birthday was in the closed captions of the original version and the syndicated versions). The syndicated versions have the original line about Hitler's birthday.
  • The episode "Jazzy and the Pussycats" would reveal that Homer's Las Vegas wife, Amber, had died after overdosing while standing in front of a rollercoaster. Thus, a funeral was held for her at the beginning of the episode.


  • The episode title is an obvious spoof on the Elvis Presley song Viva Las Vegas, which even plays during the episode and during the ending credits.
  • When Ned and Homer drive down the road to Las Vegas they pass two guys in a red convertible who bear a strong resemblance to Raoul Duke and Dr. Gonzo from Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
  • The poem quoted by Graeme Edge and Justin Hayward is a re-worked version of "Late Lament", the poem that follows "Nights in White Satin" on their Days of Future Passed album.
  • Homer sings a botched version of Deep Purple's song Highway Star replacing the word "car" with "Ned"
  • Ned says "When I want to laugh, I'll take Bob Saget." Ned likes him presumably because of the wholesome image Saget earned while starring on the family shows Full House and America's Funniest Home Videos. The irony is that Bob Saget is actually a stand-up comedian whose material is considered risque and contains foul language.
  • Ned wonders what his wife will think about his Vegas marriage by yelling out "And then there's Maude! And then there's Maude!" These were the lyrics to the theme song from the '70s TV series Maude starring Bea Arthur.

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