Edmonton Journal

Family Guy, The Simpsons to join forces

Homer, Peter Griffin will share the screen in hour-long crossover

- ALEX STRACHAN

BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. — Once upon a time, a crossover episode between Family Guy and The Simpsons would have been unthinkabl­e — if only because The Simpsons is 25 years old and Family Guy is only 15.

Even now, though both programs are animated and they appeal to a wide audience every week, they’re so different in tone and style, a crossover sounds like a potential calamity in the making — something Krusty the Clown might dream up after a particular­ly feverish nightmare.

But after more than 550 episodes, (a pair of them 3-D) and 25 seasons, executive producer Al Jean says there’s not much that can sully The Simpsons’ reputation now, except perhaps the Simpson family themselves.

The Simpsons will return in late September with two appearance­s on the same night — the hour-long Simpsons-Family Guy crossover and a stand-alone Simpsons episode in which, Jean teases, a major character will die.

In an animated comedy where the characters don’t look as if they’ve aged a day in 25 years, the death of a major character has the potential to rattle Simpsons believers to their core. After all, the whole world — or so it seemed — obsessed over the 1995 mystery Who Shot Mr. Burns?

The only certainty is a character will die, and if you’ve watched The Simpsons for any length of time, you will know who it is. Killing off a major character proved to be a much bigger deal than The Simpsons’ makers expected, Jean admitted.

“The actor who plays the character won an Emmy for that portrayal, and it doesn’t mean you won’t see a flashback in future with the character, or as a ghost or something.”

Jean refused to give any more clues away.

“If I gave one more clue away, then it’s over. The title of the episode is Clown in the Dumps.”

Jean paused. “Audible gasp,” he said, cheerfully.

The Simpsons was passed over for an Emmy nomination earlier this month, for the first time in as long as Jean can remember.

“As an obsessive-compulsive, it was 19 years in a row that we’d been nominated, and I was thinking, why not 24?”

The Simpsons is in no danger of disappeari­ng yet.

“We’ve been so lucky to have such a great run,” Jean said. “I think it’s going to go on for a while. The ratings are good. We still enjoy doing the show very much. The cast are still on board. So I don’t know when it will end.

“I love The Simpsons. I’ve worked there for 25 years. It means more to me than just a job. It’s been part of my life.”

As for the Family Guy crossover, Jean said, the script has been written and the voice actors — from both series — have already recorded their lines.

Jean asked for some minor tweaks but, other than that, he was fine with what the Family Guy writers came up with.

The episode, in which the Griffins visit Springfiel­d and interact with the Simpsons, was written entirely by Family Guy’s writing staff

“We said, ‘Can you cut just one rape joke?’” Jean recalled, straight-faced. “They said, ‘No,’ and we said, ‘OK.’”

The Simpsons won’t end the crossover experiment there, either. A November episode will feature a crossover between The Simpsons and the now-retired Futurama, also created by Matt Groening.

The Simpsons returns Sept. 28 on Fox and Global TV.

 ?? FOX ?? The Simpsons has already done a Lego episode — so maybe a Family Guy crossover isn’t so far-fetched after all.
FOX The Simpsons has already done a Lego episode — so maybe a Family Guy crossover isn’t so far-fetched after all.

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