enthalpy

Friday, July 16, 2004


I'm all for worship of The Simpson's, but this may be overdoing it by just a tad.
Savage and many scholars increasingly see "The Simpsons" as a top-notch social and political satire. No one is exempt from its zingers, whether it's environmentalists or religious conservatives. He says its up-to-the-minute cultural allusions, from "Survivor" to medicinal marijuana, make it just as effective in working on multiple levels as the classic novel "Gulliver's Travels" was almost three centuries ago.
Well, duh, but let's not confuse great satire with great literature, and this is a far cry from glassy-eyed undergrads that need an easy humanities credit and want to take "The History of Pop-Culture." That one does service to no one. Now or the finally bit of hyperbole:
"The only thing that's keeping them from being a piece of art like 'Don Quixote' or 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' is a couple hundred years," he said.
That's a definite stretch. The Simpson's writers have, without a doubt, churned out a heck of a lot more stinkers than Shakespeare did.



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