After giving us a season that managed to tackle topics such as faking your death, the meaning of having a soul, and babies shooting evil elderly men, Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein were now going into their second season as showrunners with a stellar track record.
However, if you've been following these posts of mine, you already know that things are (for me) all downhill from here.
I have to stress that season 8 of The Simpsons is certainly not bad. In fact, I stand by my opinion that it has far more successes than it does misses.
I think the biggest thing about season 8 is that after tackling more relationship/character driven storyline in season 7, Oakley & Weinstein opted to go more into plot-driven material here that would put the characters into rather bizarre scenarios...and sure, they were mostly entertaining, but there is a definitely a feeling of the tide changing at times.
I have a few more thoughts about the season, but I will save them for after the top 10.
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THE TOP 10:
#10 - Lisa's Date with Density
Written by Mike Scully
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#9 - Treehouse of Horror VII
Written by Ken Keeler, Dan Greaney, and David X. Cohen
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#8 - In Marge We Trust
Written by Donick Cary
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#7 - Hurricane Neddy
Written by Steve Young
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#6 - The Mysterious Voyage of Homer
Written by Ken Keeler
Despite not being to the level of season 7 as I have stated before, I do have to admire that Oakley & Weinstein were willing to experiment.
"The Mysterious Voyage of Homer" was originally an idea pitched by George Meyer in season 3 but a lot of the staff felt it was too odd for the show and it was scrapped. While Oakley & Weinstein truly adored that era of the show, they were looking to find ways to imbue some new dynamics and dusted off the template for this episode.
The family attends a chili cook-off, much to Marge's dismay, and while eating several hot chili peppers (thanks to the rather dangerous method of coating his mouth with scalding candle wax), Homer hallucinates and thus we get one of the first truly surreal sequences in the show's history.
Not to mention the guest appearance of Johnny Cash as Homer's cayote spirt guide in one of the best guest star coups the show managed to net.
I also credit this episode for developing my love of Janis Ian's song At Seventeen. You hear it sung in a cheesy ironic way by a bunch of beauty queens way back in Season 4's A Streetcar Named Marge, but here, we get an actual snippet of the real song.
And then to also tie back to a season 4 moment, the episode ends with the song "Who Wears Short Shorts?" but in a moment where Homer and Marge have yet another sweet reconcillation.
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#5 - Bart After Dark
Written by Richard Appel
The idea of having Bart work in a burlesque house is slight tip in the direction of showing viewers that the show might be going for more bombastic ideas...but nevertheless, the episode works rather well.
A lot of it has to do with the setup: a classic example of what appears to be a kid losing a toy on someone else's property that seems truly scary, but instead of going for something sweeter and more sentimental, they trick you into having the secluded house actually being a burlesque venue that is quite popular with the men of Springfield.
The madame of Maison Derrière, Belle, has Bart start working there as a way to make up for destroying one of her stone gargoyles. Marge is rather upset by the fact that this venue even exists and in true Marge fasion, seeks for it to close down.
The episode ends with Belle and the citizens of Springfield being won over by a big song-and-dance number, We Put the Spring in Springfield...which ended up winning an Emmy for Best Original Song.
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#4 - Homer's Phobia
Written by Ron Hauge
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#3 - Supercalafragalisticexpiala(annoyed grunt)cious
Written by Al Jean & Mike Reiss
Considering how much I adore Mary Poppins, I can't help but love this episode, too.
I actually considered this my favorite (or at least top 3) episode back around the time it first aired. While I certainly wouldn't rank it anywhere near that level anymore, I still greatly enjoy the episode and each of the beats taken from the plot of Mary Poppins.
Voice actor Maggie Roswell (who worked on the show doing such characters like Maude Flanders) was tasked with voicing Sherry Bobbins, the Mary Poppins counterpart. She excels in the role by imbuing it with a true Julie Andrews style. It was said that Julie Andrews was lined up to actually perform the role, but scheduling with her run in Victor/Victoria and her infamous surgery that cost her the upper range of her singing voice made her step aside.
Despite it being an unrealistic idea borne out of a fantasy film, this is one of the times (thanks to it being on the earlier side of the shift) that the show nailed it and gave us an episode that is just simply nostalgic and fun.
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#2 - Grade School Confidential
Written by Rachel Pulido
As Sideshow Bob once said, "You only get one shot with Edna Krabappel".
Throughout the last 8 seasons, Edna Krabappel has been a common fixture within the show, but mainly confined to the world of Springfield Elementary where she is Bart's 4th grade teacher.
She is a snarky and surly and often crabby woman...but she also has a wicked and sly sense of humor and tends to be unlucky in love...or she just hasn't found the right man and she won't settle.
Pairing Edna with the ultimate Mama's boy this side of Norman Bates almost seems as right as it does wrong.
Principal Seymour Skinner's squarish tendencies and Edna's penchant for mocking him always made for great laughs, and it was clear that the writers saw immense potential in pairing them.
In fact, there were talks in the writers' room of doing so as early as season 3. Even in an episode from that season, "Bart the Lover", they reference Edna possibly dating Seymour to which she refuses because "his mommy won't let him out to play".
Bart discovering their affair is not surprising, nor is his becoming their gofer so they can exchange messages secretly throughout the school day.
Even after he ends up exposing them eventually which leads to their temporary firing, he pushes for them to get their jobs back. In the end, despite the antagonistic nature this triangle shares, it is truly amazing the hidden warmth they have for one another.
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#1 - Homer's Enemy
Written by John Swartzwelder
Yeah, I know...this is a pretty typical choice. Also, it used to be (not sure if it still is) the highest rated episode of The Simpsons on IMDB.
When it comes to the concept of meta-commentary, there is a lot to unpack with an episode like "Homer's Enemy".
It acts as such a strong attack on the show's lead character and with rather morbid results at the end that when it aired, it divided people intensely.
At the time it aired, I was about to turn 9 but was an avid viewer of the show. I can recall the old Simpsons online forums blowing up because many people considered this the end of the show. Others considered it a bold masterpiece.
I obviously wasn't as astute as a lot of the people on the forum at my age, but I always loved this episode. It doesn't surprise me in the least that it has since gone on to be a classic and also the final masterful episode of the Golden Age as season 8 would come to a close just two episodes after this one.
"Homer's Enemy" is that of Frank Grimes, a character developed just for this episode (which is normally a motif I hate on other shows but leave it to this writing staff to make it work) who grew up having a hard life. Despite many obstacles, he persists. He takes a job at the Springfield Nuclear Plant and is placed in Sector 7G with Homer, Carl, and Lenny.
Almost instantly, Frank takes an instant dislike to Homer and is baffled by his laziness and incompetent behavior...especially considering he is the head of Safety for the plant.
The concept of having an outsider come into this world and instantly call out all of the great things that Homer has around him that he honestly didn't truly earn was a very bold move. The show had never been so blatant in calling attention to itself.
In many ways, it was a critique on themselves just as much as you could view it as being a metaphor for the American Dream and how no matter how hard you may work at it, some others may just grab more for doing a lot less out of pure luck.
The death of Frank Grimes at the end is easily one of the darkest places The Simpsons goes towards, but I still think it was a brilliant place to go.
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Final Thoughts:
Season 8 is one that I have waffled on. For many years, I stated that the Golden Age ended on a high note with Season 7 and then we were left with a whimper in season 8.
Time has been far more kind to season 8 than I ever anticipated. Sure, there were a few episodes I absolutely loved from this season even back when it first aired (a few of them are on this list), but I didn't respond as strongly to the rather abstract and surreal choices after really loving the whimsical and character driven nature of season 7 and the dark and slick season 6.
I would say that while there is a noticeable drop in quality compared to seasons 6-7, I would still consider season 8 to be a part of the Golden Age...and it would be the season that officially ends it.
Season 8 does try to change the formula a little bit in the same vein that David Mirkin tried to do in season 5, but I think the big difference between these two seasons are that Oakley & Weinstein just had a more innate understanding of how to blend in a certain warmth and whimsy along with the snark and cynicism...or at the very least, they were able to maintain a stronger consistency level.
Maybe it is unfair to necessarily say it played a factor, but while Mirkin came in as an outside hire for season 5, Oakley & Weinstein were hired as writers prior to Season 4 by then-headwriting duo Al Jean & Mike Reiss, who had been with the show since day one. Not to mention, the original team of Brooks, Groening, and Simon were still strongly present in the writers room at that time.
Even if Mirkin did eventually find his groove and create some truly iconic moments, I just think Oakley and Weinstein were the better fit and they managed to turn out a slightly more successful spin at revitalizing the show than the final results of Mirkin's Season 5.
Sadly though, Oakley & Weinstein step down here and the reins are turned over to Mike Scully.
Scully has written a couple of great episodes (with a couple already being mentioned on my lists so far), but Simpsons fans have some strong feelings about him. In many ways, he is the man who set the show down the path that still has many bemoaning to this day that it should've been cancelled 20 years ago.
But I will go more into that when discussing season 9...
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