We're just days away from
completing “THE POP CULTURE ADDICT'S
ADVENT CALENDAR” for
another year! Kind of makes you feel a lot of emotions, doesn't it?
You may feel sad that the holiday entries are drawing to a close for
another year, or you may feel happy because the holiday entries are
drawing to a close, or you might feel anxious and nervous because
Christmas Eve is next week and you still haven't made any
preparations for the event.
In
which case, I must ask “WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR?!?”
Regardless,
welcome to Day #17 of the calendar. And in this Tuesday Timeline, I
plan on doing a blog topic on a television holiday episode that was
very special. It also happens to be the very first episode of a
long-running television series!
Imagine
that, a television series that kicked off as a Christmas special!
Not too many television series can boast that claim to fame, can
they?
Of
course, before we get into the holiday discussion of a classic
Christmas television show, we should probably take a look at what
else happened in the world on December 17.
497
BC – The first
Saturnalia festival was celebrated in ancient Rome
942
– William I of Normandy is assassinated
1538
– Henry VIII of England is excommunicated by Pope Paul III
1718
– Great Britain declares war on Spain
1837
– A fire in the Winter Palace of Saint Petersburg kills over thirty
guards
1892
– The first issue of Vogue Magazine is published
1903
– The Wright Brothers make their first powered, heavier-than-air
flight in the “Wright Flyer” at Kitty Hawk
1938
– Otto Hahn discovers the nuclear fission of uranium
1944
– The Malmedy Massacre during the Battle of the Bulge occurs, which
leaves eighty POW's dead at the hands of their German captors
1951
– The Civil Rights Congress delivers “We Charge Genocide” to
the United Nations
1961
– The world's largest circus tragedy occurs as fire sweeps through
the Gran Circus American circus grounds in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
1967
– Harold Holt, then Prime Minister of Australia, disappears while
swimming near Victoria and is presumed drowned
1969
– The United States Air Force closes its study on UFO's
1981
– Brigadier General James L. Dozier is abducted by the Red Brigades
in Verona, Italy
1997
– The United Kingdom commences its Firearms Act 1997, which
extended the ban on firearms to include all handguns with the
exception of antique and show pieces
1999
– American jazz singer Grover Washington Jr. (b. 1943) dies at the
age of 56
2009
– Actress Jennifer Jones (b. 1919) passes away in Malibu,
California at age 90
2010
– Mohamed Bouazizi set himself of fire, marking the catalyst of the
Tunisian Revolution
2011
– Controversial North Korean leader Kim-Jong-il dies at the age of
70
We've
also got a long list of famous birthdays for you today, and turning
one year older are Dave
Madden, Pope Francis, Tommy Steele, Bernard Hill, Ernie Hudson, Chris
Matthews, Eugene Levy, Barry Livingston, Bill Pullman, Peter
Farrelly, Mike Mills (R.E.M.), Sara Dallin (Bananarama), Craig
Berube, Gigi D'Agostino, Chuck Liddell, Mick Quinn (Supergrass), Sean
Patrick Thomas, Duff Goldman, Sarah Paulson, Giovanni Ribisi, Marissa
Ribisi, Nick Dinsmore, Milla Jovovich, Jaimee Foxworth, Craig
Kielburger, and Emma
Bell.
All
right. Now that we have all that out of the way, why don't we go
ahead with today's Tuesday Timeline date.
How
about going back in time twenty-four years to December
17, 1989?
Now,
December 17, 1989 was a huge day for the world of television,
particularly for the fairly new television network known as FOX. As
we counted down the final days of the 1980s, FOX had only been on the
air for a total of three years. And, while the network did have
success stories in the television sitcom “Married...With Children”,
and the sketch comedy show “The Tracey Ullman Show”, it really
wasn't performing as well as other networks. Comparing FOX to NBC,
CBS, and ABC, FOX placed a distant last place in the ratings. But,
by the time 1989 rolled around, FOX decided to try something brand
new. And that something would be inspired by one of the most popular
features from “The Tracey Ullman” Show.
Now,
“The Tracey Ullman Show” debuted on air in 1987, and the star of
the show was British comedienne Tracey Ullman. She performed as
several characters on the show, and even had a brief singing career
in the early 1980s, with the song below being her biggest hit.
Well,
in 1987, Ullman came up with the idea to create a show that was quite
similar in style to “Saturday Night Live” and “SCTV”. And
the show itself did quite well. People tuned in and watched the
program during its four season run (it ran from April 1987 until May
1990), and it even won three Emmy Awards between 1989 and 1990.
And,
here's an interesting fact that I didn't even know at the time.
Apparently all of the choreography done on “The Tracey Ullman Show”
was organized by then up and coming pop starlet Paula Abdul!
Anyway,
what was interesting about the show was that the series only had six
regular actors and actresses that appeared in the opening credits of
the show. There was Ullman, Sam McMurray, Joseph Malone, Anna
Levine, Julie Kavner, and Dan Castellaneta.
You
might be wondering why I've bolded those last two names. Some of you
may have figured out what the topic is by this alone, but I'll
explain. You see, Kavner and Castellaneta were regular fixtures on
the program. They acted in almost every other sketch and you could
tell that they both had great chemistry together. Don't believe me?
Click HERE, and you can watch Dan and Julie acting out a sketch from
“The Tracey Ullman Show” right around the time it debuted in
April 1987.
Oh,
yeah...did I mention that in addition to the live-action sketches
that Dan and Julie also worked on some animated sketches too? You
see, one of the most popular sketches to be shown on “The Tracey
Ullman Show” featured a suburban couple trying to raise their three
young children in a household filled with chaos. Castellaneta and
Kavner played the parents. As for the kids, the roles were filled in
by voice actresses Nancy Cartwright and Yeardley Smith. Now, the
animated shorts only appeared in one-minute vignettes, but people
seemed to love them. I actually admit to being a seven year old boy
and only watching “The Tracey Ullman Show” to watch these cartoon
shorts. They were incredibly crude and loud and the weirdest
cartoons that I had ever watched, but I knew that I had to watch them
because for some reason, they mesmerized me, and I couldn't get
enough.
Leave
it to creator Matt Groening to make a cartoon that drew people in.
Little
did Matt know just how successful the cartoon shorts would become.
The shorts became so popular that it was decided that the family
would create a holiday special to air during the Christmas season of
1989 to air exclusively on FOX. It would be the first full length
half-hour program to star this cartoon family, and it would be a
Christmas episode at that. Little did anybody know that twenty-four
years later that the holiday special would be the beginning of a
brand new television series...and that the series would STILL be on
the air twenty-four years later!
Yes,
on December 17, 1989, the episode “Simpsons Roasting on an Open
Fire” debuted on FOX. It would also serve as the pilot episode for
the long running series “The Simpsons”, which has aired a total
of 538 episodes and counting as of December 17, 2013!
So,
for this edition of the Tuesday Timeline, let's take a look at how
this juggernaut began. A time before the video games, the comic
books, the DVD box sets, and the 2007 film came out.
Now,
I can't seem to recall any other pilot episode that was Christmas
themed. I really can't. And, a part of me wonders if “Simpsons
Roasting on an Open Fire” was meant to just be a one-off Christmas
special, and that it was such a ratings winner that it spawned a
13-episode season in early 1990. I imagine that a full season was
planned regardless, but it's interesting that they started the show
with a Christmas episode...especially given that the show has aired
almost twenty-five Halloween episodes!
Now,
of course, everyone knows that “The Simpsons” was never going to
be a show that was sugary-sweet like “The Cosby Show” or “Full
House”. And, it was fairly risky for FOX to try their hand at an
animated sitcom at the time “The Simpsons” first debuted. Prior
to “The Simpsons” premiere episode, the last animated prime-time
sitcom to air was “The Flintstones”, which ended its run 23 years
earlier. But the network took a gamble, and it seemingly paid off.
And, of course, the show did have its critics – some of which
complained that the show was sending bad messages to the youth of the
nation. But, compare “The Simpsons” to the likes of “South
Park” and “Family Guy”, and it's actually quite tame. In fact,
the very first full-length episode of “The Simpsons” had a lovely
story behind it.
In
this episode, the opening scenes take place at Springfield
Elementary, in which we are first introduced to the Simpson family.
We have the boorish Homer (Castellaneta), overprotective Marge
(Kavner), bratty Bart (Cartwright), intelligent Lisa (Smith), and the
silent Maggie, who has basically been sucking her pacifier for almost
two and a half decades. Think of the dental bills that baby's going
to have!
Anyway,
we peer into the kids' Christmas pageant, where Lisa entertains us
with a tribal dance from the South Seas, and where Bart gets yanked
off the stage by Principal Skinner (Harry Shearer) after he
bastardizes the Christmas carol “Jingle Bells”.
Hmmm...maybe
THAT'S where I got my inspiration from!
Anyway,
one of the constant complaints that I have about the holiday is the
fact that Christmas has become too materialistic and commercial these
days. It frosts my britches to see people only think about what they
will be getting for Christmas and not focusing on what they can give.
Of course, in the Simpson family, it seemingly starts out as just
another money obsessed Christmas. And for the Simpsons, Christmas
1989 is looking like it will be the best Christmas ever. With Homer
expecting a big fat Christmas bonus from his boss at the nuclear
power plant where he works, and Marge stashing away a huge jar of
money in her towering beehive hairdo, there's no way that Christmas
could be ruined, right?
Well,
let's just say that a couple of instances happen in which the
family's Christmas fund is all but wiped out.
Here's
a tip for all of you reading this. If you're taking your
ten-year-old son out to the shopping mall to do some Christmas
shopping, make sure that there are no tattoo parlors located within
the mall, and make sure that you never leave your son unattended near
said tattoo parlor. Because then your son might have the dumb idea
that the best gift that they could possibly give to their mother is a
tattoo that shows just how much he loves her. Of course, Marge
discovers Bart's little scheme just before the tattoo gets finished,
and Bart is left with a tattoo that says “MOTH”.
What
is interesting is that Springfield happens to have a clinic in town
that specializes in tattoo removal. The unfortunate thing is that
tattoo removal in 1989 was a costly procedure...and it emptied out
all of the money that Marge had saved all year long. But, while
Marge was furious with Bart for having to use the Christmas money to
get a tattoo removed, Marge was still relieved that Homer would be
getting a bonus at work. They could use that instead of the jar.
So, you can imagine the disappointment when Marge explained what happened with the jar of money, it left Homer very crestfallen. Of course, Homer didn't want to make Marge and the kids worry too much about Christmas by telling him that he didn't get his Christmas bonus, so he didn't tell them. But seeing the following image below, we get an idea as to how devastated Homer really is.
Say what you want about his parenting skills, Homer really loves his family and is upset when there's nothing that he can do to make sure that his kids have a fantastic Christmas.
Homer does attempt to put a positive spin on things. He buys all the gifts at a dollar store, he chops down a Christmas tree from some man's land - nearly getting caught in the process, and he even takes on a job as a department store Santa Claus in hopes of making enough money to even salvage Christmas for the year. But when a bratty Bart pulls off Homer's beard, and Homer's pay is heavily garnished by taxes, Homer is forced to explain the situation to Bart, who actually takes it a lot better than I probably would have at age ten.
Still, Homer is praying for a Christmas miracle, and when Barney Gumble (Homer's alcoholic best friend from school) informs him of a Christmas Eve dog race which could see Homer's twelve dollar takehome pay turn into twelve hundred dollars, Homer doesn't hesitate to take part. But even though Barney has basically told him which dog will win the race, Homer notices that one of the dogs has a rather festive name, and he tells Bart that it must be fate. Homer bets everything he has on Dog #8 in the race, even though the odds of #8 winning are abnormally high.
And, well...Homer's instincts did not pan out. Dog #8 came in last place, and now Homer had zero dollars for Christmas. However would he tell his family?
But then Bart notices that dog #8 is being chased out of the park by its now former owner. The dog is visibly scared, and it's assumed that the owner of the dog was not happy with him losing again. But as fate would have it, the dog leaps into Homer's arms and decides that Homer and Bart would be able to provide him with a more domesticated life than that of racetrack underdog. And with a little encouragement from Bart, Homer decides to take in the homeless pooch...still wondering how he was going to tell his family that Christmas was ruined.
Little did Homer know that bringing home the dog would turn out to be the best Christmas present ever! Lisa and Maggie adored the dog at first sight, and even Marge was impressed that Homer brought home such a wonderful gift! And as the episode ends, the entire family gathers around the piano to sing Christmas carols, along with their brand new family member.
Oh, one more thing. The dog's name that Homer bet on? "Santa's Little Helper". And, I think we all can agree that the dog definitely lived up to its name that Christmas Day.
It's hard to believe that episode aired twenty-four years ago today! I watched it when it first debuted, and I was only eight then! But I think it also happens to be the Simpsons' best Christmas themed episode (though the one in which Bart shoplifts a video game was also very well done).
And, that is our look back on December 17, 1989, as well as Day #17 of the advent calendar. Tune in tomorrow for the eighteenth day of the calendar, as well as the Whatever Wednesday for today!
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