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Planet Simpson by Chris Turner — book cover

Planet Simpson

by Chris Turner
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Overview

A smart, accessible and funny cultural analysis of The Simpsons, its inside stories and the world it reflects.

From Bart Simpson to Monty Burns, the Internet boom to the slow drowning of Tuvalu, Planet Simpson explores how one of the most popular shows in television history has changed the way we look at our bewildering times. Award-winning journalist Chris Turner delves into the most esoteric of Simpsons fansites and on-line subcultures, the show’s inside jokes, its sharpest parodies and its ongoing love-hate relationship with celebrity to reveal a rarity of literary accomplishment and pop-cultural import — something never before achieved by a cartoon.

Complementing its satirical brilliance, The Simpsons boasts a beloved cast of characters, examined here in playful and scrupulous detail: Homer, selfish, tyrannical and not too bright, but always contentedly beholden to his family; Bart, pre-teen nihilist and punk icon; Lisa, junior feminist crusader; and Marge, archetypical middle-American mother, perpetually dragging her family kicking and screaming to higher moral ground. And while the voice actors behind the regular cast have eschewed celebrity, Turner considers why a stunning host of guests — Hollywood icons and has-beens, politicians, professional athletes, poets and pop stars — have submitted themselves to the parodic whims of the Simpsons’ writers.

Intelligent and rambunctious, absorbing and comic, Planet Simpson mines this modern cultural institution for its imaginative, hilarious, but always dead-on, reflections on our world.

Excerpt from Planet Simpson

Three Fun Facts About “D’oh!”
1. The Oxford English Dictionary defines “d’oh” as “Expressing frustration at the realization that things have turned out badly or not as planned, or that one has just said or done something foolish.”

2. The origins of “D’oh!” A Tracey Ullman–era Simpsons script called for Homer to respond to an unfortunate turn of events thus: “[annoyed grunt].” Dan Castellaneta, the voice-actor who plays Homer, improvised the exclamation, “D’oh!” It stuck.

3. The godfather of “D’oh!” Dan Castellaneta freely admits that he lifted Homer’s famous yelp from James Finlayson, a Scottish actor who played a bald, cross-eyed villain in a number of Laurel & Hardy films in the 1930s. Finlayson’s annoyed grunt was a more drawn-out groan — Doooohhh! Castellaneta sped it up to create Homer’s trademark.

About the Author, Chris Turner

Chris Turner’s pop-culture and technology reporting for Shift earned him six National Magazine Awards in three years, including the President’s Medal for General Excellence in 2001, the highest honour in Canadian magazine writing. His acclaimed Shift essay “The Simpsons Generation” was reprinted in newspapers across North America. His writing has also appeared regularly in Time, The Globe and Mail and the National Post Business magazine. Turner lives in Calgary.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Although this unauthorized book "was not prepared, licensed, approved, or endorsed by any entity involved in creating or producing" The Simpsons, Canadian journalist Turner embarks on an encyclopedic exposition of the show's episodes, catchphrases, characters, cultural impact, social commentary, themes and influences. In 1987, 33-year-old cartoonist Matt Groening devised the dysfunctional family during a 15-minute wait before pitching the concept to producer James L. Brooks. Short segments on Fox's Tracey Ullman Show escalated into the full series in 1989-1990, with accolades and awards piling up during the following 15 years. Turner flavors his straightforward Simpsons study with footnotes and facts on everything from Ayn Rand and Columbine to Y2K and Yeats. Unraveling and analyzing plot threads, he views the series as "more anti-authoritarian by far than almost anything else that's ever aired in prime time," and he praises it as a "cultural institution" comparable to the Beatles. Turner's fannish enthusiasm and tsunami of trivia will appeal mainly to devotees, though cultural historians may value it for its vision of Springfield as a satirical mirror reflecting the trials and tribulations of contemporary life. (Nov. 1) Forecast: Although the show is past its heyday, diehard fans will gravitate to this like Homer to donuts. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

For the past 15 years, the longest-running sitcom in television history has also been the most influential and culturally subversive instrument in the entertainment industry. That it also happens to be a cartoon is wickedly ironic and appropriate. This in-depth cultural analysis of The Simpsons is what happens when the eggheads deconstruct pop culture and put it in their postmodern Veg-O-Matic. Turner, an award-winning Canadian journalist, devotes entire chapters to the show's main characters and the explication of the societal facets that they both represent and refract. He offers detailed and trenchant analysis befitting academic geekdom, but he also freely and enthusiastically flys his fan-boy colors with favorite bits, episodes, and anecdotes. More for the chi-chi American studies crowd, this one belongs in the Simpsonian next to Malibu Stacy's lunar rover.-Barry X. Miller, Austin P.L., TX Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
October 24, 2004
Publisher
Cambridge, Mass. : Da Capo Press, 2004.
Pages
464
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780306813412

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