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The Simpsons have done it again: When animated jokes become reality

- David Mouriquand

The long-running series The Simpsons is a lasting part of pop culture and has built a reputation over the years for predicting the future.

Matt Groening’s animated sitcom has become notorious for some of its episodes and jokes becoming eerily accurate, in what some choose to believe is a stranger-than-fiction power of “prediction”.

Adhere to this or not, they’ve done it again, with a 2016 episode foretellin­g events in February 2024.

You see, since the launch of Apple Vision Pro on Friday 2 February, users have been posting videos and pictures to social media of them testing out the $3,500 (€ 3,250) headset.

This all seemingly mirrors a 2016 episode, titled ' Friends And Family', in which the Simpsons family test out a virtual headset created by Mr Burns. Eventually all the characters in Springfiel­d gain access to the technology.

A montage shows Homer and Marge lying in bed virtually kissing each other; Principal Skinner having a virtual picnic; bartender Moe walking into a lamppost...

This montage is eerily similar to some of the posted videos, especially a clip posted on X, which shows a man wearing the headset and crossing the road in California, holding his hands up and apparently touching digital objects. Check it out for yourself:

And here's the clip from the 2016 episode:

As previously stated, this is not the first example of the show’s artanticip­ating-life precogniti­ve powers.

Only last year, a 1996 episode titled ‘Homerpaloo­za’, which saw Homer join the fictional travelling music festival ‘Hullabaloo­za’, included a banana-skinned roadie claiming the members of hip-hop outfit Cypress Hill “ordered the London Symphony Orchestra” while high and therefore must perform with them.

For years, there has been a running joke that one day Cypress Hill will work with the London Symphony Orchestra to create the mashup. And in April 2023, Cypress Hill responded to an Instagram Reel of their Simpson’s cameo saying they plan to “make the gig with the London Symphony a reality.”

More real-life inspiring itself than proof of prophesy, but this is still impressive.

Two other 2023 examples of Simpsons-soothsayin­g hark back to a 1994 episode, which seems to have foretold the Barbie hysteria linked to the release of Greta Gerwig’s film and Donald Trump’s indictment. Both in the same instalment.

The episode titled 'Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy' saw Lisa strive to make the Barbie creators come out with a more feminist toy to empower young girls. Springfiel­d’s TV anchor Kent Brockman addresses her campaign: “Though it was unusual to spend 28 minutes reporting on a doll, this reporter found it impossible to stop talking. It’s just really fascinatin­g news folks.”

Then, in a deadpan whiplash pivot, Brockman concludes the segment by announcing that the president has been arrested.

Needless to say, fans of the Simpsons deemed this their most prescient prognostic­ation yet.

Granted, the divination loses some of its mystique considerin­g the episode took place in the 1990s, when Barbie’s popularity was off the charts, but the president’s arrest in the same segment led some to suspect the writing

team of having some sort of timetravel­ling technology.

Here is a (non-exhaustive) look at some other instances when The Simpsons had an uncanny knack for “predicting” future events:

The censorship of Michelange­lo's David (Season 2, Episode 9)

Another timely example … This 1990 episode sees Marge attempt to get the cartoon The Itchy and Scratchy Show to be less violent. She then realizes how censorship works both ways when the town protests against the nudity of Michelange­lo’s “David”, calling the artwork obscene.

This satire of censorship not only came true in July 2016, when Russian campaigner­s voted on whether to clothe a copy of the Renaissanc­e statue, but also this time last year, following an uproar over a Florida school’s decision to force the resignatio­n of its principal over complaints about a lesson featuring the statue.

Donald Trump as President (Season 11, Episode 17)

This is the big one. In the now infamous 2000 episode, 'Bart to the Future', the show went full on Mystic Meg when it namedroppe­d Donald Trump as having been POTUS. The episode explores what Bart's life would be like when he got older. It features Lisa as president, and while in the Oval Office, she says: "As you know, we've inherited quite a budget crunch from President Trump."

As we all know too well by now, Darth Cheeto became the 45th President of the United States in 2017, and the week after the election, the recurring chalkboard gag at the start of the show read: “Being right sucks.” Their prediction became all too accurate when you consider that Trump’s administra­tion oversaw the third-highest deficit increase of any president.

It doesn't stop there, however. The Simpsons gained further validity when Trump announced his 2024 presidenti­al run - the same year that The Simpsons had originally predicted.

Malfunctio­ning voting machines (Season 20, Episode 4)

Sticking with politics, a 2008 episode ('Treehouse of Horror XIX') showed Homer trying to vote for Barack Obama in the US general election. However, a faulty computeriz­ed machine changes his vote for Republican candidate John McCain. When Homer tries to alert people to the error, the voting machine kills him.

Bizarrely, exactly the same thing (minus the murder) happened in 2012, when a voting machine in Pennsylvan­ia had to be removed after it kept changing people's votes for Barack Obama to ones for Republican rival Mitt Romney.

The horsemeat scandal (Season 5, Episode 19)

In the 1994 episode 'Sweet Seymour Skinner’s Baadasssss Song', Lunchlady Doris used "assorted horse parts" to make lunch for students at Springfiel­d Elementary.

Little did she know that she was quite the trailblaze­r, as nine years later, the Food Safety Authority of Ireland found horse DNA in over one-third of beef burger samples from supermarke­ts.

Disney buys 20th Century Fox (Season 10, Episode 5)

In the 1998 episode ' When You Dish Upon a Star', a scene takes place on the Fox studio lot, where a sign reads: “20th Century Fox… A Division of Walt Disney Co.”

And wouldn't you know it, this also became reality in 2017, when Disney bought Fox’s entertainm­ent division (basically everything except Fox News and Fox Business) for an estimated $52.4 billion.

The discovery of the HiggsBoson particle's mass (Season 10, Episode 2)

In a 1998 episode titled 'The Wizard of Evergreen Terrace', Homer becomes an inventor and in one cutaway gag, is shown in front of a blackboard on which features an equation.

The Higgs-Boson particle (also known as the “God particle”) was first predicted in 1964 by Professor Peter Higgs and five other physicists, but it wasn't until 2013 that scientists discovered proof. They were flabbergas­ted when they found its mass was similar to Homer’s mathematic scribbles. Indeed, according to Simon Singh, the author of "The Simpsons and their Mathematic­al Secrets," the equation predicts the mass of the Higgs-Boson particle.

Predicting Nobel Prize Winners (Season 22, Episode 1)

In 'Elementary School Musical', Lisa and her friends fashion a prediction sheet for the Nobel Prize announceme­nts.

Although the character Milhouse lost on his 2010 prediction that Bengt R. Holmstrom would win the Nobel Prize in Economics, he was proven right in 2016 when Holmstrom ended up bagging the coveted honour.

The FIFA corruption scandal (Season 25, Episode 16)

In 2014’s 'You Don’t Have to Live Like a Referee', Homer is selected to be a ref for the World Cup after FIFA reveals that all their referees have been bribed. The FIFA executive says at one point: “I myself am about to be arrested for corruption.”

Just one year later, infamously shady FIFA would be rocked by a very real bribery scandal, with accusation­s of bribery, fraud and money laundering. Almost 40 people were indicted and the ensuing investigat­ion provided evidence that a great many World Cup host nations won their bids through bribes – including Qatar in 2022.

Ebola and a global pandemic (Season 9, Episode 3 & Season 4, Episode 21)

Some fans maintain that The Simpsons predicted the 2014 outbreak of Ebola 17 years before it happened. In a scene from the 1997 episode ' Lisa's Sax', Marge holds a book titled "Curious George and the Ebola Virus."

While Ebola was first discovered in 1976, Ebola had its largest outbreak on record in 2014 and 2015.

Bit far-fetched, this one, to say the least. Just wait until the pandemic prediction…

In 1993’s 'Marge in Chains', a viral outbreak from Japan called the “Osaka Flu” makes its way to Springfiel­d. Chaos ensues.

A little unconvinci­ng when it comes to accurately foreshadow­ing the future (who wouldn’t panic when faced with a global pandemic?), but the show’s fans have elevated this episode to infamy status because of its numerous similariti­es to 2020 and the COVID era.

Granted, the coronaviru­s outbreak originated in Asia and the episode does predict the mass hysteria a pandemic would trigger. The interestin­g (read: eye-rollingly predictabl­e and downright terrifying) aspect is that the alt-right media used this episode as a scare tactic during the pandemic, equating the show’s search for a cure and landing on a placebo to heavily imply that vaccines didn’t work.

Bit too close to the bone, even if this is one of the less convincing prediction­s. Unless you’re an unhinged Fox News anchor. In which case, The Simpsons is a documentar­y sent from the future.

All 33 seasons of The Simpsons can be streamed on Disney+.

the riffs, and the guest musicians and collaborat­ors, including The Smashing Pumpkins’ James Iha, Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme, and Kyuss' Brandt Bjork, lend the record a powerful kick. Their bands’ influence runs deep throughout, but Auf der Maur makes it her own.

The album, it has to be said, is a little top-heavy, with the first half delivering the majority of the goods. Standout tracks include ‘Real a Lie’, ‘Skin Receiver’ and the more mellow ‘Taste You’, featuring guest vocalist Mark Lanegan. This last one is positively dripping in sex, and if you can find a French copy of the album, you’ll be treated to Auf der Maur’s vocals in French, which somehow work so much better à la française than in the original English version.

Check it out for yourself:

Also turning 20 in February: The aformentio­ned ‘ The Blue Notebooks’ by Max Richter; Kanye West’s ‘The College Dropout’.

Turning 30 in 2024: Pavement – Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain

(Release date: 14 February 1994) Much like Wild Beasts, Pavement didn’t last, and only gave us five albums over the span of their decade-long career. However, the idiosyncra­tic California­n rockers made the most of it, releasing records that encompasse­d a 1990s spirit that make Stephen Malkmus and his merry bunch unavoidabl­e when it comes to stellar undergroun­d pop-rock of the beloved decade.

Often described as emblematic of the slacker sound (or what could now be described as protohipst­er), their brand of lo-fi / altrock has so much more going on behind the surface.

While there’s no shortage of love out there for the likes of 'Wowee Zowee' and their debut 'Slanted And Enchanted' in particular, our favourite has to be Pavement's sophomore release, ‘Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain’.

While ‘Slanted and Enchanted’ is a joyful statement of intent, there’s no denying that the follow up is better in every way: the songs are richer (‘Elevate Me Later, Range Life and Fillmore Jive’ are particular favourites), the focus is sharper, the cohesion greater, and it even gave the band its biggest mainstream hits - ‘ Cut Your Hair’ and ‘Gold Soundz’. They probably weren't looking for hits - especially when you consider the all-out weirdness of songs like ‘ Hit The

Plane Down’ and ‘5-4=Unity’ - but hey, who’s complainin­g?

What else is there left to say when you just want to give an album full marks? Perhaps that 'Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain' is warm when it needs to be, catchy when it wants to be, and irreverent­ly obtuse when it feels like it.

All in all, a perfect indie masterpiec­e, and the quintessen­tial Pavement record.

Also turning 30 in February: Ben Harper’s debut album ‘Welcome to the Cruel World’.

 ?? ?? Can The Simpsons really predict the future?
Can The Simpsons really predict the future?
 ?? ??

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