The Simpsons

1980s tv comedy series

Season 20  - The Simpsons tv comedy series episodes guide
Season 20  - The Simpsons tv comedy series episodes guide
Season 20  - The Simpsons tv comedy series episodes guide
Season 20  - The Simpsons tv comedy series episodes guide
Season 20  - The Simpsons tv comedy series episodes guide
Season 20  - The Simpsons tv comedy series episodes guide

The Simpsons - average family in an average American city of Springfield, living not at all average life.



The Simpsons Season 20 (2008)


1

Sex, Pies and Idiot Scrapes

After serving a jail sentence for starting a brawl at an alcohol-free St. Patrick’s Day parade, Homer becomes a bounty hunter and tags Flanders along for the ride. Meanwhile, an Irish man gives Marge a job at his bakery, which Marge soon discovers specializes in sexually suggestive pastries.

2

Lost Verizon

Bart feels left out after realizing he is the only kid in this day and age without a cell phone, so he tries to work in a country club as a golf ball finder to earn money for it -- and finds Denis Leary’s phone instead.

3

Double, Double, Boy in Trouble

Bart meets Simon Woosterfield, a boy who looks exactly like him and is a member of Springfield’s richest family. As a prank, the two decide to switch places, but the joke is on Bart when he discovers that Simon is being targeted for murder by his own siblings.

4

Treehouse of Horror XIX

Intro: Homer tries to vote for Barack Obama but the machine is rigged to place votes for John McCain -- and kill anyone who rats it out. Untitled Robot Parody: In this light parody of Transformers, Lisa gets a Malibu Stacy car that turns into a robot bent on fighting the mortal enemy of his race (more transforming robots). How to Get Ahead in Dead-Vertising: After accidentally killing Krusty the Clown over the destruction of a daycare mural that used his image without his express permission, Homer is hired by two ad agents who have discovered a legal loophole in using celebrity likenesses in their advertising campaigns. It’s the Grand Pumpkin, Milhouse: In this parody of It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, Milhouse summons a demon pumpkin, who goes berserk when he discovers that humans carve his brethren into jack-o-lanterns as Halloween tradition.

5

Dangerous Curves

In this latest flashback episode, Homer and Marge remember their dating years where a young Ned and Maude tries to keep them apart and their early years of marriage where Homer and Marge almost cheated on each other.

6

Homer and Lisa Exchange Cross Words

Lisa becomes obsessed with crossword puzzles and enters a contest, where Homer places bets against his daughter in order to earn money lost from his couples break-up business.

7

Mypods and Boomsticks

Bart makes friends with a Muslim boy named Bashir and his family, but Homer fears the family may be terrorists because of their religion. Meanwhile, Lisa is given a MyPod and becomes addicted to downloading songs on it.

8

The Burns and the Bees

After winning the "Austin Celtics" in a game of poker, Mr. Burns builds a new stadium in Springfield in the same place where Lisa has built a bee colony to save honeybees from extinction.

9

Lisa the Drama Queen

Lisa meets a new girl named Juliet and helps her write stories about a fantasy world called Equalia, but spending too much time with Juliet (and the story) begins to warp Lisa’s sense of reality.

10

Take My Life, Please

After an old high school rival named Vance is honored at on the Springfield Wall of Fame, Homer becomes depressed when he discovers that Principal Dondelinger rigged the student council election so Vance would win. While at an Italian restaurant, a mysterious chef shows Homer how his life would have turned out had he actually won.

11

How the Test Was Won

Bart gets a perfect score on Springfield Elementary’s latest standardized test, leaving Lisa worried that Bart may be smarter than her when Bart is rewarded with a field trip -- that turns out to be an elaborate trick into getting the low-testing students (and Principal Skinner) out of the way. Meanwhile, Homer forgets to mail off his insurance payment and must keep himself and the house accident-free until his coverage can be reinstated at 3:00pm.

12

No Loan Again, Naturally

The Simpsons get into a mortgage crisis of their own when Homer cannot afford to pay off the money he borrows from his home equity loan (so he can finance his extravagant Mardi Gras parties) and the Simpsons sell their home to Ned Flanders.

13

Gone Maggie Gone

Homer leaves Maggie on the doorstep of a convent, setting off a DaVinci Code-style chain of events involving The Freemasons and the hunt for a rare jewel. Meanwhile, Marge goes blind after viewing an eclipse without an eclipse shoe box viewer and Homer tries to cover up Maggie’s disappearance.

14

In the Name of the Grandfather

After neglecting his father during a wheelbarrow race, Homer makes it up to Grampa Simpson by taking him to a pub in Ireland, only to learn that pubs are not popular in Ireland anymore.

15

Wedding for Disaster

When Reverend Lovejoy reveals to Homer and Marge that they are not legally married (after discovering that his license to wed expired around the time Homer and Marge remarried on the season eight episode "A Milhouse Divided," meaning that Homer and Marge were divorced all this time and Homer’s marriage to his Vegas wife on "Viva Ned Flanders" should not have been recognized as bigamy like it was on "Brawl in the Family"), Homer and Marge decide to have another wedding to legitimize their union once and for all. But when Marge begins acting like a bridezilla and Homer mysteriously disappears, it is up to Bart and Lisa to save the day.

16

Eeny Teeny Maya Moe

Moe once again searches for love and falls for a woman named Maya over the Internet. However, when Moe meets Maya face-to-face, he discovers it is more like face-to-knee, as Maya is only three feet tall. Meanwhile, Maggie is put in a playground full of hostile babies.

17

The Good, the Sad and the Drugly

Bart sets up Milhouse to take the fall for a prank the two of them pulled, and the duo’s friendship becomes strained when Bart falls for a charitable girl named Jenny. Meanwhile, Lisa becomes insane and depressed after reading Internet articles predicting that Springfield will be a barren wasteland in fifty years, and is given anti-depressants that turn her into a mindless zombie.

18

Father Knows Worst

Marge discovers a sauna in the basement of their house and shuts herself off from the rest of the world. Meanwhile, Homer becomes a stricter parent after meeting a helicopter mom who criticizes Bart for being an academic failure and Lisa for being a social outcast.

19

Waverly Hills 9-0-2-1-D’oh

While desperately searching for a bathroom during her morning jog, Marge discovers how low-rent Springfield Elementary School really is and moves Bart and Lisa to Waverly Hills Elementary by having Homer rent an apartment there so the city inspector of Waverly Hills (who cracks down on out-of-towners who only register for a Waverly Hills address so they can send their kids to that town’s school) does not get suspicious. Meanwhile, Bart helps Lisa become popular by telling others that Lisa is friends with a teenage pop star named Alaska Nebraska.

20

Four Great Women and a Manicure

While at a nail salon, Marge and Lisa argue over whether or not a woman can be smart, beautiful, and powerful all at once, which leads to yet another Simpsons anthology show, featuring four stories of women trying to survive in a man’s world: Aunt Selma defending England as Queen Elizabeth I, Lisa in a non-copyright-infringing retelling of Snow White, Marge pushing Homer to be a great Shakespearean actor in a modern-day version of Macbeth, and Maggie fighting against conformity in a parody of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead.

21

Coming to Homerica

The citizens of Ogdenville swarm into Springfield in search of work after their local economy plummets (thanks, in no small part, to Krusty’s veggie burgers, which contain tainted Ogdenville barley), but when the Ogdenvillians’ Norwegian culture begins rubbing off on (and annoying) others, Mayor Quimby hires citizens to act as border patrol.




Seasons of The Simpsons

1989 Season 1
1990 Season 2
1991 Season 3
1992 Season 4
1993 Season 5
1994 Season 6
1995 Season 7
1996 Season 8
1997 Season 9
1998 Season 10
1999 Season 11
2000 Season 12
2001 Season 13
2002 Season 14
2003 Season 15
2004 Season 16
2005 Season 17
2006 Season 18
2007 Season 19
2008 Season 20
2009 Season 21
2010 Season 22
2011 Season 23
2012 Season 24
2013 Season 25
2014 Season 26
2015 Season 27


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