Stupid TV, be more funny : how the golden era of the Simpsons changed television--and America--forever
(2025)

Nonfiction

Book

Call Numbers:
NEW POP CULTURE

0 Holds on 1 Copy

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
New & Popular Pop Culture NEW POP CULTURE Due: 2/7/2026

Details

PUBLISHED
New York : Grand Central Publishing, 2025
EDITION
First edition
DESCRIPTION

viii, 289 pages, 8 pages unnumbered plates : color illustrations ; 23 cm

ISBN/ISSN
9781538742846, 1538742845 :, 1538742845, 9781538742846 CIPO000224613
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Includes index

Smashing the snow globe -- Breaking through the clouds -- The American family in all its horror -- So stupid it was kind of smart -- Limitless, limitless, limitless -- Bart vs. commerce -- Bart vs. Bill -- Bush v. Bart -- Beyond Bart -- How not to screw up The Simpsons -- Worst episode ever -- The Simpsons diaspora -- Simpsons world

"This comprehensive account of the meteoric rise of The Simpsons combines incisive pop culture criticism and interviews with the show's creative team that take readers inside the making of an American phenomenon during its most influential decade, the 1990s. The Simpsons is an American institution. But its status as an occasionally sharp yet ultimately safe sitcom that's still going after 33 years on the air undercuts its revolutionary origins. The early years of the animated series didn't just impact Hollywood, they changed popular culture. It wasn't a watercooler show; it was a show that altered the way we talked around the watercooler, in school hallways, and on the campaign trail, by bridging generations with its comedic sensibility and prescient cultural commentary. In Stupid TV, Be More Funny, writer Alan Siegel reveals how the first decade of the show laid the groundwork for the series' true influence. He explores how the show's rise from 1990 to 1998 intertwined with the supposedly ascendent post-Cold War America, turning Fox into the juggernaut we know today, simultaneously shaking its head at America's culture wars while finding itself in the middle of them. By packing the book with anecdotes from icons like Conan O'Brien and Yeardley Smith, Siegel also provides readers with an unparalleled look inside the making of the show. Through interviews with the show's legendary staff and whip-smart analysis, Siegel charts how The Simpsons developed its singular sensibility throughout the '90s, one that was at once groundbreakingly subversive for a primetime cartoon and shocking wholesome. The result is a definitive history of The Simpsons' most essential decade"--

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