Photo: EW
The Simpsons has been on television for as long as our childhood, with the season 33 finale airing this Sunday. So naturally, therefore, some aspects of its premise do not entirely reflect the reality of the modern economy.
In the upcoming episode, we will find out how Homer (Dan Castellaneta) could afford a house and car with just a single income.
X-Men star Hugh Jackman will make an appearance in the upcoming season finale to spell out the history of the American was middle class, in a song number, of course.
We get our first look at Jackman flaunting his singing chops in a recent EW exclusive preview from The Simpsons. It is the actor’s first appearance in the animated series after rejecting a previous offer due to a scheduling conflict.
“My understanding is that we offered him a part a few years ago, and he wanted to do it but was swamped for time,” says Tim Long, an episode writer, in an interview with EW.
“This time, he was available and gave us an enthusiastic yes! He also loved the part and the song we wrote for him, which I think really play to his enormous talents.”
The episode follows Jackman voicing a janitor at the nuclear power plant where Homer works. Bart (Nancy Cartwright) went with his father to the workplace, where the janitor spells out how the era after World War II offered prosperity to the American middle class that enabled individuals such as Homer to thrive even with their failings.
But then “gradually, it all went to hell,” as Jackman sings.
“We were intrigued and amused by an article in The Atlantic titled, ‘The Life in the Simpsons Is No Longer Attainable,'” says Long.
“At first, we thought it was pretty funny. The Simpsons is a cartoon, after all, and the show’s relationship with money is very fungible. Homer once got his hands on a trillion-dollar bill and immediately tried to use it in a soda machine.”
Long adds, “but the more we thought about it, the more we thought The Atlantic had a point. Homer really does belong to the last generation of people who can hold a good, middle-class job with benefits for life without some sort of higher degree.
“There’s no way Bart will have that. And then, after ruminating about that for a few days, we came to the inevitable conclusion: It’s got to be a musical! And we gotta get both Hugh Jackman and former Labor Secretary Robert Reich! From there, it all kinda came together.”
Long is telling the truth. While he isn’t seen in the EW exclusive preview, Reich, who was the US Labor Secretary during President Bill Clinton’s term, does appear in the episode as himself to aid in elaborating the history of the American middle-class recession.