Was this supposed to be a reference to the Garden of Eden or what?
Was this supposed to be a reference to the Garden of Eden or what?
Other urls found in this thread:
Why was there a fucking mick in some bumfuck town in the middle of America?
God's Gardens and Ardens
Formerly nothing
It's a reference to a hymn by I. Ron Butterfly.
Because Fox said they couldn't use Milhouse.
Why dat.
Aren't there a lot of Irish Catholics in America?
Marketing or something.
How many episodes give Lisa a boyfriend and then he never shows up ever again?
did they make yet another episode where Lisa meets a "perfect" intellectual, charming boyfriend but then he turns out to be too arrogant or moves away or some bullshit? How many of those are there again?
Despite our best efforts
Maybe if Bart and Lisa could stop fucking each other for once they'd get actual relationships
>Colin was killed by a piece of falling dome on the way back to his home planet
>replace colin with milhouse
>replace arnold schwarzenegger with ranier wolfcastle
>replace russ cargill with hank scorpio
how much does the movie improve?
That's the spirit.
Dam photo shop
And we all know why Bart keep loosing his friends that are girls.
See if Milhouse would have acted like this he would have gotton to were this fellow was.
that's not shopped
Then what episode?
Lisa goes Gaga
Doesn't improve a single bit, but it jerks off fans of the Golden Age so 10/10 give it an oscar
Only 3 times so far
Why were they kissing again?
That's just a screenshot of the movie.
It's been a while since I last heard the commentary, but I believe it was intentional. It fits with the environmental theme of the first half, along with Homer's epiphany scene where he's being smacked by trees.
Bart was called on stage to accept an award, he acted pleasantly surprised, turned to kiss Lisa, then walked out of the crowd and onto the stage. It's was just a parallel to award shows, zombie Simpsons is nothing but references to popular things, but I guess the writers didn't think too much about how it looks.