LoughNeagh2017 wrote: » I stopped taking following it when they made a jab about Northern Ireland saying "the Northern Irish are parading as well" something like that on a St Patricks Day episode maybe 10 years ago and they showed a load of orangemen, they assumed that all people from Northern Ireland were orangemen and Protestant. You know what some of us northerners are like, we don't forget little jabs like that. I didn't understand the joke, why wouldn't they be parading? St. Patrick is the patron saint of Northern Ireland isn't he?
PTH2009 wrote: » Will always watch the Simpsons no matter how ****e it gets. It will be a sad day when the last episode airs (it has to come someday) Some classic moments which will never go out of date Timelines are confusing as one min Marge and homer grew up in the 70s, then there's episodes where homer and marge were teens in the 90s
PTH2009 wrote: » Timelines are confusing as one min Marge and homer grew up in the 70s, then there's episodes where homer and marge were teens in the 90s
Mrcaramelchoc wrote: » When the hell are they going to stop it falling.cancel it and put it out of its misery.its like flogging a dead horse making any more episodes.
McLoughlin wrote: » Well it keeps making money so why stop ?
valoren wrote: » The Prohibition episode had a deleted scene where everyone is getting pissed at the Parade and it cuts to "John Bulls Fish & Chip Shop" emblazoned with the Union Jack which then promptly explodes and to which everyone cheers. It was cut when shown here and in the UK.
DyldeBrill wrote: » The show went downhill ever since Conan O'Brien left as a writer. God, that man is funny... The Simpsons of today is pure and utter trash.
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » Apparently there’s a huge controversy in the US about the Apu character. Racist etc. Whites are treated well, apparently, if you ignore the laziness of homer, the dysfunction of most of the town, and all the ethnic jokes against ethnic whites.
Mutant z wrote: » I still watch it from time to time but not to the extent i used to and the classic episodes will always be there for us to enjoy but the fact remains it has dragged on for far too long and needs to come to its natural conclusion its had its time to shine but like most things the shine eventually starts to burn out.
riffmongous wrote: » If you don't like it fine, but there is absolutely zero tangible benefit to it being shut down, every one episode that is good justifies it's existence.
Go Harvey Go wrote: » Its natural conclusion was in the late '90s. Season 8's "The Old Man and the Lisa" could have been a good final episode - ending with Homer suffering one final heart attack and dying.
Royale with Cheese wrote: » Funny how you don't see any prominent Scottish-American immigrants complaining about the portrayal of groundskeeper Willy. Why do these things only draw outrage when skin colour is involved?
lorcand1990 wrote: » If you ended the Simpsons there, you would have missed out on one of the best episodes ever- Homer's Enemy. Definitely worth sticking around a bit longer to get that episode in!
Go Harvey Go wrote: » Might have to agree to disagree with you on that one. A 22-episode series, with one good episode and the other 21 all being poor at best, doesn't really justify its existence IMHO.
Deleted User wrote: » Yeah it's not always cut.