"Women in Shorts" is the sixth episode of the thirty-sixth season of the American animated television series The Simpsons, and the 774th episode overall. It aired in the United States on Fox on November 10, 2024. The episode was written by Christine Nangle and directed by Eric Koenig.
"Women in Shorts" | |
---|---|
The Simpsons episode | |
Episode no. | Season 36 Episode 6 |
Directed by | Eric Koenig |
Written by | Christine Nangle |
Production code | 35ABF17 |
Original air date | November 10, 2024 |
Guest appearances | |
| |
Episode features | |
Chalkboard gag | "I will not get detention just to practice cursive" (written by Lisa) |
Couch gag | Marge and other women of Springfield force Kirk Van Houten off his couch so they can gather around for their book club. |
In this episode, multiple short stories are told about the women of Springfield. Kerry Washington guest starred as Rayshelle Peyton. Food writer Ruth Reichl appeared as herself. The episode received positive reviews.
Plot
editLuann Van Houten's Story
editThe women hold an intervention for Luann Van Houten. They are worried about her addiction to wine merchandise. They suggest other items, and she settles for merchandise saying she is a "proud slut".
Malibu Stacy's Story
editIn a parody of the film Barbie, Malibu Stacy leaves Malibu Stacy Land for the real world. She greets Shauna Chalmers and claims she is her doll and is here to help her. Embarrassed, Shauna assaults and decapitates her. Before kicking her head away, Shauna asks Malibu Stacy to meet her for tea after school. Her head rolls onto the road where it frightens Waylon Smithers.
Mrs. Muntz' Story
editMrs. Muntz tells Nelson a bedtime story about Princess Muntzeena who dances for men. When Princess Rylee dances to Muntzeena's song, she throws her shoe at Rylee's face. The doorman banishes Rylee to the morning shift.
Marge Simpson's Story
editAt the store checkout line, Marge asks Homer to retrieve tampons. Uncomfortable with the task, the store clerks remind Homer, in a musical number that parodies "Gee, Officer Krupke" from West Side Story, that Marge always buys products to treat Homer's ailments.
Patty and Selma's Story
editWhen Patty and Selma learn of a cigarette shortage, they agree to share their supply. They both say they have none. Suspicious, they tear apart their apartment to reveal all their hiding places.
Bernice Hibbert's Story
editBernice Hibbert and Dr. Hibbert are on a date at a restaurant where they are role-playing. Bernice becomes angry when someone starts choking and Julius wants to help.
Mrs. Risotto's Story
editLuigi Risotto has been arrested for smuggling diamonds in some cheese. In the intro that parodies the opening credits to The Nanny, his mother Mrs. Risotto becomes a lawyer after his arrest. She successfully defends him at a trial overseen by Judge Roy Snyder where she gave the jury some of her food and he is freed.
Lunchlady Dora's Story
editLunchlady Dora shops for ingredients for school lunches. With a limited budget, she finds the cheapest items and uses them to cook the same meal under different names.
Lisa Simpson's Story
editLisa dreams of being a queen in The Chronicles of Narnia. She decrees improvements to the kingdom, but her subjects do not want an increase in taxes to pay for them with some of them offensive towards mermaids and witches. Her subjects then attack her with a centaur version of Homer accidentally getting beheaded. Lisa wakes up stating that she even can't have fun in her dreams.
Agnes Skinner's Story
editAgnes Skinner opens a social media app on her phone to record a video. She is lonely after her long-time enemy died and is looking for a new one.
Helen Lovejoy's Story
editHelen Lovejoy hears on the radio that a tsunami is imminent. Fulfilling her wishes, she punches Ned Flanders, kisses Moe Szyslak, and destroys Reverend Lovejoy's model trains. The broadcast clarifies the alert is for a department store sale. Embarrassed by her actions, Helen tells Reverend Lovejoy that he has a good hobby.
Rayshelle Payton's Story
editAt Springfield Elementary School, Superintendent Chalmers, Dewey Largo, Brunella Pommelhorst, Coach Krupt, and Lunchlady Dora bets on bad things happening to the students. Although Ms. Peyton discourages their behavior, she wins the bet of Lisa giving the finger according to Groundskeeper Willie's surveillance. She gives a share of the winnings to Lisa, who uses it to buy a jazz album. She passes different people and dodges a mermaid as it shows Homer dancing in a chorus line.
Credits
editTwenty-one months earlier in the style of a movie trailer as the credits roll, a television commercial arouses Marge leading to the conception of Maggie Simpson.
Production
editThe episode was written by Christine Nangle, who had a background in sketch comedy. Executive producer Matt Selman encouraged the writers to take more risks, so she wrote an episode that felt like a sketch show featuring the women of Springfield, which is why Lisa is shown performing the chalkboard gag instead of Bart. Nangle compared the episode to the thirty-fourth season episode "Lisa the Boy Scout". The vignette style of the episode was also featured in the seventh season episode "22 Short Films About Springfield". This is the first episode of the series directed by Eric Koenig. Producer Brian Kelley served as co-showrunner.[1]
The musical number "Incompetent Husband" was written by series composer Kara Talve and featured Dawnn Lewis and Tony Rodriguez as store clerks.[1]
Kerry Washington reprised her role as Rayshelle Peyton.[2] She first appeared in this role in the thirty-third season episode "My Octopus and a Teacher".[3] Food writer Ruth Reichl appeared as herself.[2]
This episode was originally called "Ladies Night".
Reception
editViewing figures
editThe episode earned a 0.22 rating and was watched by 0.83 million viewers, which was the most-watched show on Fox that night.[4]
Critical response
editJohn Schwarz of Bubbleblabber gave the episode a 7.5 out of 10. He liked the stories for Mama Risotto and Lunchlady Dora and highlighted the detailed animation during Agnes' selfie video. Although he liked the break from regular episodes, he also thought there was nothing that stood out like other format breaking episodes.[5]
Mike Celestino of Laughing Place was surprised the series did not follow up on "22 Short Films About Springfield" until now. He thought it "was a sharp, spry, energetic episode that pleasantly hearkened back to one the series' highest points" and wanted the format to appear more often.[6]
References
edit- ^ a b Schneider, Michael (November 8, 2024). "'The Simpsons' Sings Musical Number About Homer Not Wanting to Buy Marge Tampons (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on November 11, 2024. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
- ^ a b "(SI-3517) "Women in Shorts"". The Futon Critic. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
- ^ Snierson, Dan (April 21, 2022). "Kerry Washington joins The Simpsons cast as Bart's new teacher — get a first look". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on April 29, 2022. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
- ^ Pucci, Douglas (November 12, 2024). "Sunday Ratings: 'Yellowstone' Delivers Largest Multi-Network Premiere Night Audience To-Date". Programming Insider. Archived from the original on November 13, 2024. Retrieved November 12, 2024.
- ^ Schwarz, John (November 11, 2024). "Review: The Simpsons "Women in Shorts"". Bubbleblabber. Archived from the original on November 11, 2024. Retrieved November 11, 2024.
- ^ Celestino, Mike (November 10, 2024). "TV Recap / Review: "22 Short Films About Springfield" Gets an All-Female Sequel in "The Simpsons" – "Women In Shorts"". Laughing Place. Archived from the original on November 11, 2024. Retrieved November 11, 2024.