Here’s a short feature story on the year The Simpsons began—1989—and what that moment meant for television and culture. D’oh! The Year America Met Its First Family
It was the end of a decade that had given America big hair, shoulder pads, Wall Street greed, and the fall of the Berlin Wall. But on this chilly Sunday evening, something far stranger—and far more lasting—was about to happen. Families across the United States settled in front of their bulky CRT televisions, remote controls fresh with batteries, and flipped to Fox. At 8:30 PM Eastern, a yellow-skinned, four-fingered, chronically underachieving nine-year-old in a red shirt uttered a single word: “Ay caramba!” year the simpsons started
Groening had been summoned by producer James L. Brooks, the genius behind The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Terms of Endearment . Brooks wanted Groening to pitch an animated short for The Tracey Ullman Show . Groening panicked—he didn’t want to lose the rights to his Life in Hell comic strip characters. So, in the lobby before the meeting, he scribbled a family named after his own parents and sisters: Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, and Maggie. Here’s a short feature story on the year
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