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Showing posts with label The Simpsons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Simpsons. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

It’s 1989. The Simpsons creator Matt Groening is drawing for Apple Computer.


There’s a history lesson that I bet you didn’t know. Years ago, The Simspons’ Matt Groening used to sketch away his days working with Apple Computer for its advertising campaigns. Groening created this rather stunning piece which we found over on Reddit and thought we’d share with you.

The funny thing is, we’re not exactly sure which party ended up with the better end of the deal…

Thursday, October 21, 2010

'I'm going to get high, dude!': 105 TONS of marijuana seized with colour-coded packaging and Homer Simpson labels

By Daily Mail Reporter
From: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/

Some 105 tonnes of marijuana has been seized in Mexico, in what is expected to become the country’s biggest ever drug bust.

Eleven people were arrested yesterday in the city of Tijuana after a pre-dawn gun
battle between members of the drug cartel and police and soldiers - two people were injured.


The marijuana was found in six cargo containers in a warehouse, wrapped in 10,000 packages and has a street value of
£215million.


Scroll down for video report

Biggest bust: Police recovered 10,000 packages containing 105 tonnes of cannabis in Tijuana
Biggest bust: Police recovered 10,000 packages containing 105 tonnes of cannabis in Tijuana
Inscriptions: The parcels were colour coded and some included a picture of cartoon character Homer Simpson accompanied with the writing: 'I'm going to get high, dude!'
Inscriptions: The parcels were colour coded and some included a picture of cartoon character Homer Simpson accompanied with the writing: 'I'm going to get high, dude!'
Busted: Eleven men were arrested by the Mexican authorities after a pre-dawn shootout on Monday

Busted: Eleven men were arrested by the Mexican authorities after a pre-dawn shootout on Monday




It was discovered after police on a routine patrol intercepted a
convoy of vehicles escorting a tractor-trailer that had left the warehouse,
officials said.


A shootout ensued before the 11 arrests in the city, which is across the U.S. border from San Diego, California.


Police and soldiers, acting on information from the suspects, raided the warehouse and two homes, where smaller amounts of marijuana were found.
Border: The city of Tijuana is located at the north of Mexico - across the border is San Diego
Border: The city of Tijuana is located at the north of Mexico - across the border is San Diego

The neatly packaged cannabis - guarded by masked, heavily armed soldiers - was later displayed for the media at Morelos Army Base in Tijuana. 


General Alfonso Duarte Mugica, the military’s top commander in Baja California, said the drugs had an estimated street value of 4.2billion Mexican pesos - about £215million.
General Duate said that the marijuana was destined for America, and that authorities were still counting and weighing the packages, meaning the amount could increase.

Colour coded: The cannabis was destined for America, General Alfonso Duarte Mugica - the man leading the bust - said
Colour coded: The cannabis was destined for America, General Alfonso Duarte Mugica - the man leading the bust - said
Seized: Alfonso Duarte Mujica, the military¿s top commander in Baja California, said the drugs had an estimated street value of 4.2billion Mexican pesos, or about £215million
Seized: Alfonso Duarte Mujica, the military's top commander in Baja California, said the drugs had an estimated street value of 4.2billion Mexican pesos, or about £215million
Gun battle: Two people were injured - one police man and one member of the cartel - in the pre-dawn shootout
Gun battle: Two people were injured - one police man and one member of the cartel - in the pre-dawn shootout

The drugs, he said, were wrapped in different colours and labelled with apparently coded phrases and pictures that included cartoon character Homer Simpson.
The inscription on that particular package - 'Voy de mojarra, que wey!' - is roughly translated as 'I'm going to get high, dude!'

On other drug parcel there were the names of animals, such as bulls and wolves, and on some there were symbols, including arrows.
The colours and the symbols are thought to be indicators as to where the parcels were destined.

Rounded up: The suspects are shown standing before the cannabis wrapped in 10,000 brown and silver packages at a military base in Tijuana
Rounded up: The suspects are shown standing before the cannabis wrapped in 10,000 brown and silver packages, which had been hidden in six cargo containers
Symbols: The parcels had symbols and words on them - believed to indicate where the drug were to be shipped to
Symbols: The parcels had symbols and words on them - believed to indicate where the drug were to be shipped to
Coded: Here smiley faces are shown on the parcels. The drugs were destined for America, officials believe
Coded: Here smiley faces are shown on the parcels. The drugs were destined for America, officials believe

Although Mexican drug cartels smuggle marijuana from South America, the drug is increasingly produced in Mexico.

Cannabis production in Mexico increased 35 per cent to 12,000 hectares
(29,652 acres) in 2009, from 8,900 hectares (21,991 acres) the previous
year, according to the U.S. State Department's 2010 International
Narcotics Control report.


The report attributed the increase to drug cartel efforts to 'diminish reliance on foreign suppliers'.

The seize marks a big break through against the cartels in the ongoing drug war in Mexico that has claimed 28,000 lives since 2006.

Battle: Some 28,000 people involved in the drug war have died since Mexican President Felipe Calderon announced the crackdown in 2006
Battle: Some 28,000 people involved in the drug war have died since Mexican President Felipe Calderon announced the crackdown in 2006

President Felipe Calderon, who recently visited Tijuana, launched the nationwide crackdown four years ago, deploying some 50,000 troops.

Last year, Mexican security forces confiscated a total of 2,105 tonnes of marijuana, according to government figures.

Mexico's border regions, especially the major towns directly on the U.S. frontier, have witnessed the brunt of the conflict with notable spikes in particularly gruesome violence in Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez, which borders Texas further to the east.

Violence peaked in Tijuana in 2008 amid a showdown between two crime bosses - Fernando 'The Engineer' Sanchez Arellano and Teodoro 'El Teo' Garcia Simental, a renegade lieutenant who rose through the ranks by dissolving bodies in vats of lye.
Garcia was arrested last January. While killings have continued, the most gruesome displays of cartel violence - decapitations, hangings and daylight shootouts - subsided.

Last week, in the wake of President Calderon's visit, several bodies were found beheaded and hanging from bridges in Tijuana, leading to fears that the cartels were resuming brutal tactics to send a message that the government is not in control.

In Ciudad Juarez, gunmen burst into a private party on Sunday and shot
dead nine people, including six members of one family, security
officials said.


Four people died on the spot, two others died in hospital, and the remaining two
were hunted down by the gunmen and shot dead near the airport.


Nine others were killed in separate attacks in the past 24 hours in Mexico's
most violent city, across the Rio Grande from El Paso, Texas, according
to police.





Thursday, May 6, 2010

The Simpsons "Tik Tok" Opening

Ke$ha did it!


Tuesday, March 2, 2010

'Lost' + 'Simpsons' (pic)

From the fandom files, here's the cast of "Lost" given "Simpsons" treatment ...

Definitely click for full-sized version, this was very cleverly done ...

The Losties

Credit: The Springfield Punx site, which does fan art in "Simpsons" style

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Top 25 Simpsons Peripheral Characters - TV feature - at IGN

Click here for the whole feature and gallery Top 25 Simpsons Peripheral Characters 

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

'The Simpsons' set to celebrate the big 4-5-0

From: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/

Fox airing 450th episode Sunday, followed by doc special

Associated Press

NEW YORK -- To speak of the latest milestone by "The Simpsons" seems to restate the obvious.

Long before now, enduring life for "The Simpsons" and its brightly jaundiced folk was simply assumed. What began 20 years ago as a fluke then erupted into a pop-culture juggernaut has continued to spin yarns, spawn characters and lampoon society, with no end in sight.

On Sunday at 8 p.m. ET on Fox, "The Simpsons" is airing its 450th episode. "Once Upon a Time in Springfield" will be followed by an hourlong documentary from Morgan Spurlock ("30 Days," "Super Size Me"), fancifully titled "The Simpsons 20th Anniversary Special in 3-D on Ice."

During this season, when NBC's "Law & Order" boasts of having tied "Gunsmoke" as TV's longest-running prime-time drama, "The Simpsons" has seized the mantle as TV's longest-running scripted nighttime series -- period. Ay, caramba!

"I think we could do it for another 20 years, actually," Matt Groening, "Simpsons" uber-creator, told the Associated Press at a recent "Simpsons" tribute by Los Angeles' Paley Center for Media. Then he dissolved into giggles.

"Omigod! Another 20? We'll TRY," he chortled. "We'll do our BEST!"

Here's hoping the spectacular ensemble of voice talent keeps talking to the end. After 20 years, Dan Castellaneta remains full-throated as portly, dimwitted dad Homer, Julie Kavner is tower-tressed mom Marge, Nancy Cartwright is lippy first-born Bart and Yeardley Smith is oversmart daughter Lisa.

Of course, these offscreen stars of "The Simpsons" are well served by visual artistry that, among things, keeps them shielded from the passage of time.

The show's writers play a huge role, too, with fastidiously crafted scripts that, by comparison, leave most sitcoms in the dust. (Granted, some fans may complain "The Simpsons" isn't as sharply realized as in earlier years, but still.)

"What I love about 'The Simpsons' is, it's so collaborative," Smith said. "The actors do a third, the animators do a third and the writers do a third. That's how I see it."

Also part of the acting troupe is Hank Azaria, a go-to guy for numerous characters including police Chief Wiggum, Comic Book Guy and convenience-store owner Apu Nahasapeemapetilon.

Rounding out the core cast is Harry Shearer, whose stable of roles includes Mr. Burns, Waylon Smithers, Ned Flanders, Reverend Lovejoy, Kent Brockman, Dr. Hibbert and Principal Skinner.

Besides "The Simpsons," Shearer, 66, is best-known from his role as bassist Derek Smalls in the 1984 mock musical documentary "This Is Spinal Tap," and subsequently in the real-life group that film inspired.

But Shearer, who began his career as a child actor on such early TV series as Jack Benny's weekly show, keeps a multiplicity of projects under way. These currently include a new DVD, "Unwigged & Unplugged," reteaming him musically with Tap bandmates Michael McKean and Christopher Guest. He hosts his own signature channel on the "My Damn Channel" comedy Web site.


The first "Simpsons" episode

And for a quarter-century, he has churned out "Le Show," a mostly solo act of wry humor, satirical sketches and blistering commentary, plus music (some performed by his singer-songwriter wife, Judith Owen).

"Le Show" is available through numerous radio and Web outlets, and by podcast. It's a weekly passion project that Shearer has always done gratis -- which means he's free from any vexing business entanglements.

"I never have a meeting, I never see a memo," he says. "It's between me and my audience."

Sipping an early morning orange juice during a Manhattan stopover a couple of weeks ago, Shearer describes "Le Show" as a place for him to give voice to whatever's on his mind.

"I'm an insatiable news junkie," he says, "so the reading that I do, I would do anyway. The show just gives me a way to answer back."

The sensibility of "Le Show," and much of Shearer's creative output, is conveniently echoed by "The Simpsons," even though he plays no part in its writing.



"Matt has a satirical, anti-authority streak," says Shearer. "From the beginning, 'The Simpsons' was taking the side of the family against all the authority figures and institutions that buffeted them in the modern world. Certainly, that resonated for me."

Shearer recalls the show's first script, whose characters assigned to him were highlighted in yellow. In the next script, other characters' dialogue would be highlighted for him.

Much of the time, he didn't see drawings of the new characters until months after he had created their voices, when the episode was finished: "Oh, THAT'S what he looks like!"

How many different voices has Shearer done on "The Simpsons" in all?

"The one real influence that Bob Dylan has had on my life is that, every time I'm asked that question, I give a different answer," says Shearer. "So: hundreds," he replies in a raspy Dylan-esque voice.

As the years passed, Shearer's many voices were part of the emerging world of Springfield, an oblivious community that seemed satisfied to settle for less in nearly everything: public education; organized religion; TV news and kids programming; government, law enforcement, business, and food and drink intake; and certainly environmental issues, such as the nuclear power plant that employs Homer Simpson, of all people, as a safety inspector.

What's the message of "The Simpsons"? That people, for all their highfalutin talk, are willing to settle for less if it's easier or saves them a buck?

Has "The Simpsons" taken on a new, unexpected relevance thanks to the current economic downturn, when standards for everything seem under threat?

"You look around and the only person who ostentatiously and repeatedly proclaims his pursuit of excellence is Rush Limbaugh," says Shearer, then does a perfect imitation of Limbaugh: "I'm presenting broadcast excellence."

"That's got to tell you something," Shearer says. "Everybody ELSE is just getting by."

But he, unlike most people taking stock of "The Simpsons" at this moment in its run, resists any grandiose claims for its legacy.

"Together with NFL football, 'The Simpsons' put the Fox network on the map -- whatever you think of that," he hedges. "And Fox has changed the face of network television -- you got to decide for better or worse.

"I wish I could say that we inspired an awful lot of funny, smart, irreverent, acerbic shows that took a lacerating view of the institutions of society. But I don't think we have."

Nor does he think the show -- or any contemporary satire -- really changes anything it lampoons.

"For instance, after 20 years and 450 episodes," Shearer sums up, "I don't really think 'The Simpsons' has increased the country's skepticism about nuclear power."

Thursday, December 24, 2009

20 years of awesome musical “the simpsons” guests

Posted by gary tijuana

From: http://sneakmove.com/


all through 2009, the simpsons have been celebrating an amazing run of 20 years on tv. as the party winds down, here’s a look at some of the amazing (and often surprising) musical guests that the show has lined up through two decades of hilarity.

landing musical guests like yo la tengo, sonic youth, and smashing pumpkins (at their peak) is no small feat. neither is an uncredited guest spot by none other than michael jackson. but the top spot goes to a true legend who you’d never expect on this show. although he didn’t provide music, the episode where a johnny cash-voiced coyote takes homer simpson on a hallucinogenic journey to find his soul mate is truly one of the most amazing moments in animated television.

now… can you remember all the others?

fox is famously stringent with keeping user-submitted clips of the show off youtube and other online sites, but has they’ve placed a sizeable selection of snippets on hulu. if you get anxious for more (or need a can’t-miss present for someone), amazon’s got the hookup.