Simpsons Skater Dog

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Aug 04, 2001  This product is fun for Simpsons fans from the get-go. Switch on the 'Krusty Approved' remote, and he immediately says 'Hey hey!' , letting you know you're in for a treat. This is meant as a childrens' toy, but it also great fun (plus it's a great display piece) for. Simpsons Premium is a natural, complete dog and cat food range, with our pet food providing a healthy and natural diet. For dogs, we have flavours of sensitive, grain-free, organic and high-meat dog and puppy food. For cats, we have wet and dry cat food that will give your feline a balanced, natural diet.

363 The Simpsons HD Wallpapers and Background Images. Download for free on all your devices - Computer, Smartphone, or Tablet. Wallpaper Abyss.

The Simpsons Skateboarding

Developer: The Code Monkeys
Publisher: Electronic Arts
Platform: PlayStation 2
Released in US: November 11, 2002
Released in EU: December 6, 2002

This game has a hidden developer message.
This game has hidden development-related text.
This game has unused graphics.
This game has unused text.

The Simpsons Skateboarding is basically Simpsons' Tony Hawk's Pro Skater ripoff. It was critically panned upon release, and at the time considered one of the worst games ever made to mankind.

Skateboarding
  • 1Unused Graphics
  • 2Unused Text

Unused Graphics

E3 Leftovers

Leftovers from an E3 demo.

The Simpsons Cheap Skater

An early loading screen, with the game's original name, The Simpsons Cheap Skater.

Dog

No Level.dat

A screen that says 'No Level.dat'.

Unused Text

EA.FP

A seemingly random chain of numbers and letters. This is in fact the copy-protection string, which can be seen in other games including The Sims 2 and Freedom Fighters.

Unknown Tune

Text for an unknown music track.

Save Error

An error for when the file structure of a saved game changes. This was likely included for QA testers, when trying to use old saves on newer builds.

Error Messages

There are lots of humorous error messages in the executable. These are the most interesting ones.

The Simpsons series
ArcadeThe Simpsons • The Simpsons Bowling
DOSThe Simpsons • Bart's House of Weirdness
NESBart vs. the Space Mutants • Bart vs. the World • Krusty's Fun House • Bartman Meets Radioactive Man (Prototype)
Sega Master SystemKrusty's Fun House
Game Boy (Color)Bart Simpson's Escape from Camp Deadly • Bart & the Beanstalk • Itchy & Scratchy in Miniature Golf Madness • Night of the Living Treehouse of Horror
GenesisBart vs. the Space Mutants • Virtual Bart • The Itchy and Scratchy Game
SNESKrusty's Super Fun House • Bart's Nightmare • Virtual Bart (Prototype) • The Itchy & Scratchy Game
Game GearBartman Meets Radioactive Man
PlayStationWrestling
WindowsCartoon Studio • Hit & Run
Game Boy AdvanceRoad Rage
GameCubeRoad Rage (Prototypes) • Hit & Run
PlayStation 2Road Rage (Prototypes) • Skateboarding • Hit & Run (Prototype)
XboxRoad Rage (Prototypes) • Hit & Run
PlayStation PortableThe Simpsons Game
Nintendo DSThe Simpsons Game
AndroidTapped Out
iOSTapped Out
Retrieved from 'https://tcrf.net/index.php?title=The_Simpsons_Skateboarding&oldid=707166'
'The Canine Mutiny'
The Simpsons episode
Episode no.Season 8
Episode 20
Directed byDominic Polcino
Written byRon Hauge
Production code4F16
Original air dateApril 13, 1997
Guest appearance(s)

Frank Welker as Laddie

Episode features
Chalkboard gag'A fire drill does not demand a fire'[1]
Couch gagThe couch is folded out into a bed with Grampa asleep on it. Grampa can only utter a cry of “Huh?” before The Simpsons fold him into the couch as they sit down as normal.[2]
CommentaryJosh Weinstein
Dominic Polcino
George Meyer
Episode chronology
Previous
'Grade School Confidential'
Next
'The Old Man and the Lisa'
The Simpsons (season 8)
List of The Simpsons episodes

'The Canine Mutiny' is the twentieth episode of The Simpsons' eighth season. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on April 13, 1997.[1] It was written by Ron Hauge and directed by Dominic Polcino.[1] Bart fraudulently applies for a credit card and uses it to buy an expensive trained dog called Laddie. It guest stars voice actor Frank Welker as Laddie,[2] a parody of Lassie. The episode's title references the novel The Caine Mutiny.

Plot[edit]

When Bart complains he never gets any mail, Marge gives him the family's junk mail. He completes a credit card application under the name of the family dog, Santa's Little Helper. Bart receives a credit card issued to 'Santos L. Halper' after the company misreads his application. He goes on a spending spree, buying the family expensive gifts from a mail-order catalog: smoked salmon and a radio-frying pan for Marge, a golf shirt for Homer, pep pills for Lisa and several things for himself. Undeterred by its US$1,200 price, Bart orders a purebredcollie. When the dog arrives, Bart learns his name is Laddie and he is trained to perform several tasks. The Simpsons fall in love with the new dog and neglect Santa's Little Helper.

When he fails to pay his credit card bill, Bart gets a call from a debt collection agency demanding payment. When the calls and collection letters persist, he enlists Laddie's help to bury the ill-gotten card. Soon repo men arrive to confiscate his purchases. When a repossessor asks for the $1,200 dog to be returned, Bart identifies Santa's Little Helper as the dog. The greyhound is herded into the truck and he watches sadly as it drives away.

Realizing Santa's Little Helper is gone, the family bonds with Laddie, except for Bart, who fears for Santa's Little Helper's fate. When an exhausted Bart takes Laddie on one of his frequent walks, the collie saves the life of Baby Gerald. At the ceremony honoring Laddie's heroism, Chief Wiggum decides that he would make the perfect police dog. Bart gives him to the Springfield police force and breaks down crying while explaining to his family why they no longer have any dog at all. Homer instructs him to find Santa's Little Helper. Bart eventually learns from Reverend Lovejoy that the dog was given to a parishioner, Mr. Mitchell.

Bart visits Mitchell to beg for his dog back, but he sees that the man is blind because he fails to notice his parrot has died. When Bart hears how the man and Santa's Little Helper have bonded, he grows heartsick and leaves. Later Bart makes a late-night visit to the man's home and retrieves Santa's Little Helper. While trying to escape, he traps himself in a closet after mistaking it for an outside door. Thinking Bart is a burglar, Mitchell gloats that he has called the police. Bart explains that he is just a child and the dog was originally his. Bart and Mitchell call to Santa's Little Helper so he can decide which owner he prefers. After briefly getting distracted by chasing his own tail, Santa's Little Helper chooses Bart. Chief Wiggum arrives with Laddie, who immediately sniffs out a bag of marijuana in Mitchell's pocket. As Bart and Santa's Little Helper head home, more police officers arrive to enjoy the confiscated cannabis.

Production[edit]

Simpsons skater dog in chicago

The episode uses the full opening sequence because the story ran short.[3] A long sequence was cut from the middle of the episode,[3] with half of the episode being re-written after the animatic had been finished.[4] The main plot of the episode came from an original idea that the family would be issued a credit card in the name 'Hobart Simpson' which Bart would use.[3] An original subplot was that Lisa would become addicted to 'Trucker's Choice' pep pills.[4] Originally, instead of going to the dog park, the family took Laddie to a waterfall, where he performed a series of dives.[4] This idea was scrapped since the script already proved that Laddie was a form of 'superdog'.[5] Likewise, the scene where Laddie rescues Baby Gerald was originally more complicted, but it was cut; the finished episode shows only the aftermath of Laddie's rescue.[3]

Laddie was designed to resemble a real dog.[3] The catalog Bart uses is a combination of the Lillian Vernon catalog and The Sharper Image store.[3] The opening stemmed from the fact that the show had not had a sequence where the family received mail, and the writers wanted to create a joke about the different types of mail addressed to each family member.[3] After Bart's 'dog burning' fantasy, when he hears a ship's horn in the distance, there was originally going to be a faint cry of 'more dogs', but it was deemed taking the joke too far.[3]Hank Azaria ad-libbed the entire sequence during the closing credits in which Chief Wiggum and Lou sing along to 'Jammin'.[3]

Cultural references[edit]

The title is a reference to the novel and filmThe Caine Mutiny. The dog Laddie is a riff on Lassie's name, appearance and uncanny intelligence.[2][3] Marge listens to the song 'You Really Got Me' by The Kinks on her frying pan radio.[2] At the end of the episode, the song 'Jamming' by Bob Marley is played.[2] The design of the Repo Depot is based very loosely on the repossession agency from Repo Man.[3] The address of Mr. Mitchell's house, 57 Mt. Auburn Street, is one of addresses of The Harvard Lampoon.[3] Mr. Mitchell belief's that his dead parrot is still alive is a reference to the 'Dead Parrot' Monty Python sketch.[5]

Reception[edit]

Simpsons Skater Dog In Spanish

In its original broadcast, 'The Canine Mutiny' finished 43rd in ratings for the week of April 7–13, 1997, with a Nielsen rating of 8.1, equivalent to approximately 7.9 million viewing households. It was the fourth highest-rated show on the Fox network that week, following The X-Files, King of the Hill, and Beverly Hills, 90210.[6]

The episode's ending with Chief Wiggum and Lou singing along to 'Jamming' by Bob Marley is often cited as one of the best endings in the history of the show.[3] The authors of the book I Can't Believe It's a Bigger and Better Updated Unofficial Simpsons Guide, Warren Martyn and Adrian Wood, called it 'A sweet episode'.[2] Homer's line 'There, there, shut up boy' is one of Josh Weinstein's favorites.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcGroening, Matt (1997). Richmond, Ray; Coffman, Antonia (eds.). The Simpsons: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family (1st ed.). New York: HarperPerennial. p. 233. ISBN978-0-06-095252-5. LCCN98141857. OCLC37796735. OL433519M..
  2. ^ abcdefMartyn, Warren; Wood, Adrian (2000). 'The Canine Mutiny'. BBC. Retrieved 2007-03-30.
  3. ^ abcdefghijklmnWeinstein, Josh (2006). The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode 'The Canine Mutiny' (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  4. ^ abcPolcino, Dominic (2006). The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode 'The Canine Mutiny' (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  5. ^ abMeyer, George (2006). The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode 'The Canine Mutiny' (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  6. ^Associated Press (April 17, 1997). 'ABC ratings take a record nose dive'. Sun-Sentinel. p. 4E.

External links[edit]

Wikiquote has quotations related to: 'The Canine Mutiny'
  • 'The Canine Mutiny' at The Simpsons.com
  • 'The Canine Mutiny episode capsule'. The Simpsons Archive.
  • 'The Canine Mutiny' at TV.com
  • 'The Canine Mutiny' on IMDb

Simpsons Skater Dog Food

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Canine_Mutiny&oldid=946536107'