The Fat and the Furriest
"The Fat and the Furriest" is the fifth episode of The Simpsons' fifteenth season, which originally aired November 30, 2003. The episode is about Homer fighting a bear.
Plot
Homer goes to Sprawl-Mart, and he buys Marge a "Kitchen Carnival", a machine that produces cotton candy, caramel and deep fried things. Eventually Homer uses it to make a giant ball of deep-fried, caramel-covered, cotton candy. He is confronted by a large, grizzly bear, from which he cowers. The bear eventually wanders off without attacking, annoyed by Homer's tearful cowering. The incident becomes well known due to a nearby hunter with a camera.
Homer becomes a nervous wreck, hallucinating and seeing bears like Winnie the Pooh, Baloo, Paddington Bear, Smokey Bear, the Snuggle Bear, Rupert Bear, Teddy Grahams, Fozzie Bear, Chicago Bears Yogi Bear and a scary Care Bear. To make things worse, the hunter's tape is shown on the news, Homer is mocked by many. Homer hires a hunter named Grant to assist in confronting the animal. Homer makes a near-useless suit of armor: joined by Bart, Lenny and Carl they start on their quest.
The four of them make camp in the woods. As his homemade armor is hot, Homer eventually takes it off and bathes in a stream, where he is again attacked by the bear. With Bart, Lenny and Carl dancing to the radio and paying no attention, the bear drags Homer to his cave. Deciding to die facing the bear as a man, Homer later discovers that the bear is only angry and hostile because of the painful electrical prod that Grant attached to its ear. To make sure of it, Homer takes the tag off the bear and tries it on himself, resulting in lot of pain before taking it off. Because of being freed from the electrical prod, the bear reverts to its friendly state, licking Homer and giving him a bear hug as a thanks.
Realizing this, Homer become friends with the bear. In the meantime, Marge and Lisa have discovered Homer, Bart, and the suit of armor missing, and Marge hires Grant to help track Homer down, though Lisa disapproves of Grant's methods to take down the bear. Homer decides to take the bear to a nearby wildlife refuge, but on the way, they are attacked by Grant and other hunters. To ensure the bear's survival, Homer dresses the bear up in the homemade armor, which surprisingly resists the gunfire and allows the bear to reach the wildlife refuge where it is promptly attacked by Stampy the elephant, but then fights back against him for good. It is then the whole family declares to be proud of Homer for his efforts of saving the bear from the hunters, to which he responds that he loves nature.
Cultural references
The name title is a parody of the movie The Fast and the Furious as well as the 2001 film of the same name.
In the articles with bears can be seen a Snuggle bottle, Gummi bears bag, Teddy Grahams box, Winnie the Pooh, super sugar crisp boxes and in Maggie's books she has The Bear Went Over the Mountain, The Berenstain Bears and Goldilocks and the Three Bears.
The song in radio is "Jarabe tapatio".
Also whilst sitting in the corner frightened, Homer is confronted by many Bear characters, such as Gummi Bears, Paddington Bear, a Care Bear and two bears wearing the Chicago Bears jersey and helmet.
In the scene where Homer makes his bear-fighting suit, the Survivor song "Eye of the Tiger" is heard.
The song that Lenny, Carl and Bart are singing and dancing to is "Afternoon Delight" by Starland Vocal Band.
In the shopping mall, they were showing a spoof of VeggieTales on TV with King Rameses depicted as a yam and Moses depicted as a pickle pleading "Let my pickles go".
In one scene, Grandpa shows Homer his own website - Oldcoot.com. The domain name is a real-life website owned by Samuel L. Bowman. Some fans of oldcoot.com suggested that Bowman sue The Simpsons, though Bowman ultimately decided not to pursue legal action, as it wasn't the "character of the company".
The creation of bear-proof armor after surviving a bear attack (but not Homer's public cowardice) was inspired by Troy Hurtubise, whose story was told in the documentary Project Grizzly.[1]
References
- ↑ "North Bay News and Weather on BayToday.ca". Baytoday.ca. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
External links
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