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The Other Memory-Holed Episode of ‘The Simpsons’ — the One With Michael Jackson

Small bit of follow-up regarding yesterday’s item about Disney+ blocking an episode of The Simpsons in Hong Kong because it contained a joke about Tiananmen Square. The article I linked to at The Wrap claimed “Disney+ users in the U.S. may be able to stream every episode of ‘The Simpsons’ ever made,” but that’s not true. Here’s Isaac Butler, writing for Slate two years ago:

One unexpected fallout from our cultural reckoning with the life
and work of Michael Jackson is the erasure of a Simpsons
episode
. “Stark Raving Dad,” the premiere of the show’s
third season, tells the story of Homer being committed to an
insane asylum, where he meets a patient named Leon Kompowsky, who
claims to be Michael Jackson. Homer, not knowing who Michael
Jackson is, believes him. Antics ensue. The central joke is that
Leon is actually voiced by Michael Jackson, a joke extended
further by his use of a pseudonym in the end credits. Following
the renewed allegations of child sexual abuse against
Jackson, executive producer James L. Brooks announced last week
that The Simpsons will no longer include the episode in
syndication packages, streaming, or even future DVD releases of
the show. It’s gone. But don’t call it a book burning, he
cautions. “This is our book,” he told the Wall Street Journal,
“and we’re allowed to take out a chapter.” […]

“Stark Raving Dad” is not the golden age’s best episode, but it is
the shot across the bow. In its absurd plotting and metatextual
japery, its alchemical mixture of cynicism and heartwarming
sentiment — to say nothing of the way it reckons with its guest
celebrity’s public image — it establishes the formula that the
show was to follow for years. The episode belongs in a museum — preserved forever, not swept into the memory hole.

There was also a years-long stretch after 9/11 where the season premiere of season 9 — “The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson” — was held from syndication because a segment takes place at the World Trade Center. It’s been back in syndication and streaming since 2006, though. They should do the same with “Stark Raving Dad”.

Read more at Daring Fireball.

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