The Marge-ian Chronicles

"The Marge-ian Chronicles"
The Simpsons episode
Episode no. 590
Directed by Chris Clements
Written by Brian Kelley
Showrunner(s) Matt Selman
Al Jean
Production code VABF09
Original air date March 13, 2016 (2016-03-13)
Guest appearance(s)
Seasons

"The Marge-ian Chronicles" is the sixteenth episode of the twenty-seventh season of the animated television series The Simpsons, and the 590th episode of the series overall. It aired in the United States on Fox on March 13, 2016.

Plot

Homer becomes obsessed with stealing the eggs from chickens being raised in Ned Flanders' backyard coop, but after listening to Lisa and putting together his own chicken coop with Bart, he realizes that what he really loved was the rush of stealing from Flanders. The family finds out a company called Exploration Incorporated will take in the chickens, and after visiting their facilities and seeing a video about making a Mars colony by the year 2026, Lisa becomes interested in the project and decides to sign up. The family is highly against Lisa's choice, but Homer convinces Marge to pretend they support Lisa, so this way she will lose interest in going to Mars. However, this proves to be inefficient, so the whole family signs up on the project to force Lisa to give up.

The tests in a habitat that is modeled after that in The Martian reveal that Marge is superb at space-based tasks (she compares it with being a mom in being ready for any obscure crisis) and that the male participants are terrible, so Marge and Lisa are named mission finalists and have an ugly confrontation over Lisa not wanting her mom around and Marge being angry Lisa isn't respecting her abilities. Bart and Homer provide general support to Lisa and Marge and reflect on their own history of abuse. The project's ideologists, Paul and Barry, announce that a rival project is nearing completion so, instead of 2026, the launch would be on Thursday. Most of the participants give up immediately, but Marge and Lisa decide to stay on the project much to Homer and Bart's dismay.

During the launch, Marge and Lisa reconcile and decide that they do not want to go to Mars anymore, but they make their decision too late as the countdown has already started. However, when the countdown reaches zero, the rocket doesn't move an inch. Paul and Barry reveal that their spaceship was fake and they did this only to inspire the next generation and to provide a distraction for them to abandon the project.

At home, Lisa comments to Marge that they almost went to Mars out of sheer stubbornness, to which Marge explains that this is what a mother-daughter relationship is. A fast-forward 35 years into the future in the year 2051 is shown with Marge and Lisa living on Mars. Lisa then says that she wants to leave Mars and move to Venus. During the credits, Paul and Barry are driving away from the fake launch site, planning their future business.

Reception

"The Marge-ian Chronicles" scored a 1.3 rating and was watched by 3.07 million viewers, making it Fox's highest rated show of the night.[1]

Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club gave the episode a B- stating, "'The Marge-ian Chronicles' references one of the craziest, while appearing prepared to go that one one crazier. As it turns out, the episode’s promise of Marge and Lisa being shot into space (Mars, as it happens) is something of a bait-and-switch, a fact that leaves it in the mushy middle. Not daring enough to go for broke (and not hilarious enough to pull that off), it, instead, settles for a human story with a couple of lousy lessons...'The Marge-ian Chronicles' dances around the possibility of tossing Marge and Lisa up into space too, then backs away, then seems prepared to go for it, before the anticlimactic rug-pulling that the corporate-funded private space exploration concern Exploration Incorporated never had the knowhow to send people to Mars in the first place."[2]

See also

References

  1. Porter, Rick (March 15, 2016). "Sunday final ratings: '60 Minutes' adjusts up, 'Carmichael Show' and 'Hollywood Game Night' adjust down". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved March 15, 2016.
  2. Perkins, Dennis (March 13, 2016). "The Simpsons sees Marge and Lisa wonder about life on Mars". The A.V. Club. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
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