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Wikipedia

Bart Simpson

Bartholomew Jojo "Bart" Simpson[1] is a fictional character in the American animated television series The Simpsons and part of the Simpson family. He is voiced by Nancy Cartwright and first appeared on television in The Tracey Ullman Show short "Good Night" on April 19, 1987. Cartoonist Matt Groening created and designed Bart while waiting in the lobby of James L. Brooks' office. Groening had been called to pitch a series of shorts based on his comic strip, Life in Hell, but instead decided to create a new set of characters. While the rest of the characters were named after Groening's family members, Bart's name is an anagram of the word brat. After appearing on The Tracey Ullman Show for two years, the Simpson family received its own series on Fox, which debuted December 17, 1989. Bart has appeared in every Simpsons episode except "Four Great Women and a Manicure".

Bart Simpson
The Simpsons character
Bart with his hands in his pockets
First appearance
Created byMatt Groening
Designed byMatt Groening
Voiced byNancy Cartwright
In-universe information
Full nameBartholomew JoJo Simpson
Occupation4th grade student at Springfield Elementary School
Family
Home742 Evergreen Terrace, Springfield, United States
NationalityAmerican

At ten years old, Bart is the eldest child and only son of Homer and Marge, and the brother of Lisa and Maggie. Bart's most prominent and popular character traits are his mischievousness, rebelliousness and disrespect for authority. Hallmarks of the character include his chalkboard gags in the opening sequence; his prank calls to Moe; and his catchphrases "Eat my shorts", "¡Ay, caramba!", "Don't have a cow, man!", and "I'm Bart Simpson. Who the hell are you?" However, with the exception of "¡Ay, caramba!", these hallmarks have been retired or are not often used. Bart has appeared in other media relating to The Simpsons – including video games, The Simpsons Movie, The Simpsons Ride, commercials, and comic books – and inspired an entire line of merchandise.

In casting, Cartwright originally planned to audition for the role of Lisa, while Yeardley Smith tried out for Bart. Smith's voice was considered too high for a boy, so she was given the role of Lisa. Cartwright found Lisa uninteresting, so she instead auditioned for Bart, which she thought was a better role.[2]

During the first two seasons of The Simpsons, Bart was the show's protagonist and "Bartmania" ensued, spawning Bart Simpson-themed merchandise touting his rebellious attitude and pride at underachieving, which caused many parents and educators to cast him as a bad role model for children.[3] Around the third season, the role of the protagonist was taken over by his father, and series started to focus more on the family as a whole, though Bart still remains a prominent breakout character. Time named Bart one of the 100 most important people of the 20th century, and he was named "entertainer of the year" in 1990 by Entertainment Weekly. Cartwright has won several awards for voicing Bart, including a Primetime Emmy Award in 1992 and an Annie Award in 1995. In 2000, Bart, along with the rest of his family, was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Role in The Simpsons

The Simpsons uses a floating timeline in which the characters do not age or age very little, and as such, the show is always assumed to be set in the current year. In several episodes, events have been linked to specific times, though sometimes this timeline has been contradicted in subsequent episodes. Bart's year of birth was stated in "I Married Marge" (season three, 1991) as being in the early 1980s.[4] In "Simpsorama" (season 26, 2014) Bart states his birthday as February 23.[5] He lived with his parents in the Lower East Side of Springfield until the Simpsons bought their first house. When Lisa was born, Bart was at first jealous of the attention she received, but he soon warmed to her when he discovered that "Bart" was her first word.[6] Bart's first day of school was in the early 1990s. His initial enthusiasm was crushed by an uncaring teacher and Marge became worried that something was truly wrong with Bart. One day during recess, Bart met Milhouse and started entertaining him and other students with various gestures and rude words. Principal Skinner told him "you've just started school, and the path you choose now may be the one you follow for the rest of your life! Now, what do you say?" In his moment of truth, Bart responded, "eat my shorts".[7] The episode "That '90s Show" (season nineteen, 2008) contradicted much of the backstory's time frame; for example, it was revealed that Homer and Marge were childless in the early 1990s.[8]

Bart's hobbies include skateboarding, watching television (especially The Krusty the Clown Show which includes The Itchy & Scratchy Show), reading comic books (especially Radioactive Man), playing video games and generally causing mischief.[9] His favorite movies are Jaws and the Star Wars Trilogy. For the duration of the series, Bart has attended Springfield Elementary School and has been in Edna Krabappel's fourth grade class. While he is too young to hold a full-time job, he has had occasional part-time jobs. He works as a bartender at Fat Tony's social club in "Bart the Murderer" (season three, 1991);[10] as Krusty the Clown's assistant in "Bart Gets Famous" (season five, 1994);[11] as a doorman in Springfield's burlesque house, the Maison Derrière, in "Bart After Dark" (season eight, 1996);[12] and briefly owns his own factory in "Homer's Enemy" (season eight, 1997).[13]

Character

Creation

 
Matt Groening created Bart while waiting in James L. Brooks' office.

Matt Groening first conceived of Bart and the rest of the Simpson family in 1987, while waiting in the lobby of producer James L. Brooks' office. Groening had been called in to pitch a series of animated shorts for The Tracey Ullman Show, and had intended to present an adaptation of his Life in Hell comic strip. When he realized that animating Life in Hell would require him to rescind publication rights, Groening decided to go in another direction.[14] He hurriedly sketched out his version of a dysfunctional family, naming the characters after members of his own family. For the rebellious son, he substituted "Bart", an anagram of the word brat, for his own name,[14] as he decided it would have been too obvious for him to have named the character 'Matt'.[15] Bart's middle initial J is a "tribute" to animated characters such as Bullwinkle J. Moose and Rocket J. Squirrel from The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show, who received their middle initial from Jay Ward.[16][17] According to the book Bart Simpson's Guide to Life, Bart's full middle name is "JoJo".[18]

Bart had originally been envisioned as "a much milder, troubled youth given to existential angst who talks to himself", but the character was changed based on Cartwright's voice acting.[19] Groening has credited several different figures with providing inspiration for Bart: Matt Groening's older brother Mark provided much of the motivation for Bart's attitude.[20][21][22] Bart was conceived as an extreme version of the typical misbehaving child character, merging all of the extreme traits of characters such as Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn into one person.[15] Groening describes Bart as "what would happen if the son of Eddie Haskell [from Leave It to Beaver] got his own show".[23] Groening has also said that he found the premise of Dennis the Menace disappointing and was inspired to create a character who was actually a menace.[24]

Bart made his debut with the rest of the Simpson family on April 19, 1987, in The Tracey Ullman Show short "Good Night".[25] In 1989, the shorts were adapted into The Simpsons, a half-hour series airing on the Fox Broadcasting Company. Bart and the Simpson family remained the main characters on this new show.[26]

Design

 
Bart in his first televised appearance in "Good Night".

The entire Simpson family was designed so that they would be recognizable in silhouette.[27] The family was crudely drawn, because Groening had submitted basic sketches to the animators, assuming they would clean them up; instead, they just traced over his drawings.[14] Bart's original design, which appeared in the first shorts, had spikier hair, and the spikes were of different lengths. The number was later limited to nine spikes, all of the same size.[28] At the time Groening was primarily drawing in black and "not thinking that [Bart] would eventually be drawn in color" gave him spikes which appear to be an extension of his head.[29] The features of Bart's character design are generally not used in other characters; for example, no other characters in current episodes have Bart's spiky hairline, although several background characters in the first few seasons shared the trait.[30]

The basic rectangular shape of Bart's head is described by director Mark Kirkland as a coffee can. Homer's head is also rectangular (with a dome on top), while spheres are used for Marge, Lisa, and Maggie.[31] Different animators have different methods of drawing Bart. Former director Jeffrey Lynch starts off with a box, then adds the eyes, then the mouth, then the hair spikes, ear, and then the rest of the body. Matt Groening normally starts with the eyes, then the nose, and the rest of the outline of Bart's head. Many of the animators have trouble drawing Bart's spikes evenly; one trick they use is to draw one on the right, one on the left, one in the middle, then continue to add one in the middle of the blank space until there are nine. Originally, whenever Bart was to be drawn from an angle looking down so the top of his head was seen, Groening wanted there to be spikes along the outline of his head, and in the middle as well. Instead, Wes Archer and David Silverman drew him so that there was an outline of the spikes, then just a smooth patch in the middle because "it worked graphically".[32] In "The Blue and the Gray", Bart (along with Lisa and Maggie) finally questions why his hair has no visible border to separate head from hair.

In the season seven (1995) episode "Treehouse of Horror VI", Bart (along with Homer) was computer animated into a three-dimensional character for the first time for the "Homer3" segment of the episode. The computer animation was provided by Pacific Data Images.[33] While designing the 3D model of the character, the animators did not know how they would show Bart's hair. They realized that there were vinyl Bart dolls in production and purchased one to use as a model.[33]

Voice

 
Nancy Cartwright is the voice of Bart Simpson.

Bart's voice is provided by Nancy Cartwright, who voices several other child characters on The Simpsons, including Nelson Muntz, Ralph Wiggum, Todd Flanders, and Kearney.[34] While the roles of Homer and Marge were given to Dan Castellaneta and Julie Kavner because they were already a part of The Tracey Ullman Show cast,[35] the producers decided to hold casting for the roles of Bart and Lisa. Yeardley Smith had initially been asked to audition for the role of Bart, but casting director Bonita Pietila believed her voice was too high. Smith later recalled, "I always sounded too much like a girl. I read two lines as Bart and they said, 'Thanks for coming!'"[36] Smith was given the role of Lisa instead.[37] On March 13, 1987, Nancy Cartwright went in to audition for the role of Lisa. After arriving at the audition, she found that Lisa was simply described as the "middle child" and at the time did not have much personality. Cartwright became more interested in the role of Bart, who was described as "devious, underachieving, school-hating, irreverent, [and] clever".[38] Matt Groening let her try out for the part instead, and upon hearing her read, gave her the job on the spot.[39] Cartwright is the only one of the six main Simpsons cast members who had been professionally trained in voice acting prior to working on the show.[40]

Cartwright's normal speaking voice is said to have "no obvious traces of Bart".[41] The voice came naturally to Cartwright; prior to The Tracey Ullman Show, she had used elements of it in shows such as My Little Pony, Snorks, and Pound Puppies.[41] Cartwright describes Bart's voice as easy to perform, saying, "Some characters take a little bit more effort, upper respiratory control, whatever it is technically. But Bart is easy to do. I can just slip into that without difficulty."[41] She usually does five or six readings of every line in order to give the producers more to work with.[39] In flashforward episodes, Cartwright still provides the voice of Bart. For "Lisa's Wedding" (season six, 1995), Bart's voice was electronically lowered.[42]

Despite Bart's fame, Cartwright is rarely recognized in public. When she is recognized and asked to perform Bart's voice in front of children, Cartwright refuses as it "freaks [them] out".[41] During the first season of The Simpsons, the Fox Network did not allow Cartwright to give interviews because they did not want to publicize that Bart was voiced by a woman.[43]

Until 1998, Cartwright was paid $30,000 per episode. During a pay dispute in 1998, Fox threatened to replace the six main voice actors with new actors, going as far as preparing for casting of new voices.[44] The dispute was resolved and Cartwright received $125,000 per episode until 2004, when the voice actors demanded that they be paid $360,000 an episode.[44] The dispute was resolved a month later,[45] and Cartwright's pay rose to $250,000 per episode.[46] After salary renegotiations in 2008, the voice actors received approximately $400,000 per episode.[47] Three years later, with Fox threatening to cancel the series unless production costs were cut, Cartwright and the other cast members accepted a 30 percent pay cut to just over $300,000 per episode.[48]

Hallmarks

In the opening sequence of many Simpsons episodes, the camera zooms in on Springfield Elementary School, where Bart can be seen writing lines on the chalkboard. The sentences, which changes from episode to episode, has become known as the "chalkboard gag".[49] Chalkboard messages may involve political humor such as "The First Amendment does not cover burping",[50] pop culture references such as "I can't see dead people",[51] and meta-references such as "I am not a 32-year-old woman" and "Nobody reads these anymore".[49] The animators are able to produce the chalkboard gags quickly and in some cases have changed them to fit current events. For example, the chalkboard gag for "Homer the Heretic" (season four, 1992) read, "I will not defame New Orleans." The gag had been written as an apology to the city for a controversial song in the previous week's episode, "A Streetcar Named Marge", which called the city a "home of pirates, drunks and whores".[52][53] Many episodes do not feature a chalkboard gag because a shorter opening title sequence, where the chalkboard gags are cut, is used to make more room for story and plot development.

One of Bart's early hallmarks were his prank calls to Moe's Tavern owner Moe Szyslak in which Bart calls Moe and asks for a gag name. Moe tries to find that person in the bar, but rapidly realizes it is a prank call and (despite not knowing who actually made the call) angrily threatens Bart. These calls were based on a series of prank calls known as the Tube Bar recordings. Moe was based partly on Tube Bar owner Louis "Red" Deutsch, whose often profane responses inspired Moe's violent side.[54] The prank calls debuted in "Homer's Odyssey" (season one, 1990), the third episode to air, but were included in "Some Enchanted Evening", the first episode of the series that was produced.[55] As the series progressed, it became more difficult for the writers to come up with a fake name and to write Moe's angry response, so the pranks were dropped as a regular joke during the fourth season[55][56] but they have occasionally resurfaced on the show.[57]

The catchphrase "Eat My Shorts" was an ad-lib by Cartwright in one of the original table readings, harking back to an incident when she was in high school. Cartwright was in the marching band at Fairmont High School, and one day while performing, the band chanted "Eat my shorts" rather than the usual "Fairmont West! Fairmont West!"[36][58] It could also be an homage to The Breakfast Club, as John Bender says the phrase to Principal Vernon. John Bender would become the inspiration for another Matt Groening creation, Bender from Futurama.[59] Bart's other catchphrases, "¡Ay, caramba!" came from a Portuguese flamenco dancer[58] and "Don't have a cow!" had been around since the 1950s which derived from the British phrase "Don't have kittens";[58] both were featured on T-shirts manufactured during the production of the early seasons of The Simpsons.[60][61] "Cowabunga" is also commonly associated with Bart, although it was mostly used on the show after it had been used as a slogan on the T-shirts.[62] Reiss also stated the writers took the phrase from Chief Thunderthud on The Howdy Doody Show. The use of catchphrase-based humor was mocked in the episode "Bart Gets Famous" (season five, 1994) in which Bart lands a popular role on Krusty the Clown's show for saying the line "I didn't do it."[63] The writers chose the phrase "I didn't do it" because they wanted a "lousy" phrase "to point out how really crummy things can become really popular".[64]

 
Bart's nude scene in The Simpsons Movie.

Bart commonly appears nude in the show, although in every case only his buttocks are visible.[65] In The Simpsons Movie (2007), Bart appears in a sequence where he is skateboarding while fully nude; several different items cover his genitalia, but for a brief moment his penis can be seen. The scene was one of the first worked on for the film, but the producers were nervous about the segment because they thought it would earn the movie an R rating.[66] Despite this, the film was rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for "Irreverent Humor Throughout".[67] The scene was later included by Entertainment Weekly in their list of "30 Unforgettable Nude Scenes".[68]

Personality

Like any good punk rocker, Bart had the nihilism thing down from the very beginning. Though not so much pissed off as extremely undisciplined, the Bart Simpson of the Ullman shorts is either fighting with his sister, inciting his father into murderous levels of rage, executing dangerous stunts that end in cartoonish levels of disaster, or simply spitting snarky one-liners at whatever authority figures cross his path. This appetite for destruction continued to be the defining feature of the smart-assed boy who dominated many episodes of the first few seasons of The Simpsons–the version that spawned Bart-mania–though his methods and motivations show considerably more nuance than the white-trash Bart of the Ullman era.

— Chris Turner, author[69]

Bart's character traits of rebelliousness and disrespect for authority have been compared to that of America's founding fathers, and he has been described as an updated version of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, rolled into one.[70] In his book Planet Simpson, Chris Turner describes Bart as a nihilist, a philosophical position that argues that existence is without objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic value.[69]

Bart's rebellious attitude has made him a disruptive student at Springfield Elementary School, where he is an underachiever and proud of it.[71] He is constantly at odds with his teacher Ms. Krabappel, Principal Skinner, and occasionally Groundskeeper Willie.[72] Bart does poorly in school and is well aware of it, having once declared, "I am dumb, okay? Dumb as a post! Think I'm happy about it?"[71] On one occasion, Lisa successfully proves that Bart is dumber than a hamster, although Bart ultimately outsmarts her.[73] Bart's thoughts are often illogical; he once thought if he died and reincarnated as a butterfly, he would be able to burn the school down without being suspected, thinking that he would be able to hold a gas can as a butterfly.[74] He has also thought if he wrote his name in wet cement, people who see it after it dries will wonder how he managed to write his name in solid cement.[75] In "Separate Vocations" (season three, 1992), Bart becomes hall monitor and his grades go up, suggesting that he struggles mainly because he does not pay attention, not because he is stupid.[76] This idea is reinforced in "Brother's Little Helper" (season eleven, 1999), in which it is revealed that Bart has attention deficit disorder.[77] His lack of smarts can also be attributed to the hereditary "Simpson Gene", which affects the intelligence of most male members of the Simpson family.[78] Although he gets into endless trouble and can be sadistic, shallow and selfish, Bart also exhibits many qualities of high integrity. He has, on a few occasions, helped Principal Skinner and Mrs. Krabappel:[79] In "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song" (season five, 1994), Bart accidentally got Skinner fired and befriended him outside the school environment. Bart missed having Skinner as an adversary and got him rehired, knowing that this would mean that the two could no longer be friends.[80]

Due to Bart's mischievousness and Homer's often uncaring and incompetent behavior, the two have a turbulent, jaded, violent, and at times borderline sadistic relationship. Bart regularly addresses Homer by his first name instead of "Dad", while Homer in turn often refers to him as "the boy".[81] Homer has a short temper and when enraged by Bart will strangle him on impulse in a cartoonishly violent manner.[82] One of the original ideas for the show was that Homer would be "very angry" and oppressive toward Bart, but these characteristics were toned down somewhat as their characters were explored.[83] Marge is a much more caring, understanding and nurturing parent than Homer, but she also refers to Bart as "a handful" and is often embarrassed by his antics.[84] In "Marge Be Not Proud" (season seven, 1995), she felt she was mothering Bart too much and began acting more distant towards him after he was caught shoplifting. At the beginning of the episode, Bart protested at her over-mothering but as her attitude changed, he felt bad and made it up to her.[85] Despite his attitude, Bart is sometimes willing to experience humiliation if it means pleasing his mom.[86] Marge has expressed an understanding for her "special little guy" and has defended him on many occasions. She once said "I know Bart can be a handful, but I also know what he's like inside. He's got a spark. It's not a bad thing ... Of course, it makes him do bad things."[84]

Bart is a really good boy. He's just mischievous. He's not bad, like characters who followed him such as [Eric] Cartman (South Park) or Beavis and Butthead. Bart can do some nasty things, but they seem so tame, by today's standards. What was shocking 19 years ago, when the show started, isn't the least bit shocking today. Bart hasn't changed.

— Nancy Cartwright[87]

Bart shares a sibling rivalry with his younger sister, Lisa, but has a buddy-like relationship with his youngest sister Maggie, due to her infant state. While Bart has often hurt Lisa, and even fought her physically, the two are often very close.[73][81] Bart cares for Lisa deeply and has always apologized for going too far.[88] He also believes Lisa to be his superior when it comes to solving problems and frequently goes to her for advice.[76] Bart is also highly protective of Lisa: When a bully destroys her box of cupcakes in "Bart the General" (season one, 1990), Bart immediately stands up for her.[89]

Bart is portrayed as a popular cool boy[90] and has many friends at school. Out of all of them his best friend is Milhouse Van Houten, although Bart has at times shown embarrassment about their friendship.[90] Bart is a bad influence on Milhouse, and the two have been involved in a lot of mischief together. Because of this behavior, Milhouse's mother forbids Milhouse from playing with Bart in "Homer Defined" (season three, 1991). While at first he pretended that he did not care, Bart eventually realizes that he needs Milhouse, and Marge manages to convince Mrs. Van Houten to reconsider.[84] Milhouse is a frequent target for local bullies Nelson Muntz and his friends Jimbo, Dolph, and Kearney. At times, Bart also finds himself at the hands of their abuse. Despite being the more socially powerful of the two, Bart's social popularity has temporarily subsided various episodes either due to extreme embarrassment caused by his family or other people (or even himself) or an unfortunate coincidence. Milhouse describes their social standing as "Three and a half. We get beat up, but we get an explanation."[79] While Bart and the bullies have been adversaries at times, with Bart once declaring war on Nelson,[89] the school bullies actually like Bart for his ways and hang out with him at times, especially Nelson who eventually becomes close friends with him.[91]

Bart is one of the biggest fans of children's television host Krusty the Clown. He once declared, "I've based my whole life on Krusty's teachings", and sleeps in a room filled with Krusty merchandise. He has helped the clown on many occasions, for example, foiling Sideshow Bob's attempt to frame Krusty for armed robbery in "Krusty Gets Busted" (season one, 1990), reuniting Krusty with his estranged father in "Like Father, Like Clown".[92] and helping Krusty return to the air with a comeback special and reignite his career in "Krusty Gets Kancelled".[93] For his part, Krusty has remained largely ignorant of Bart's help and treats Bart with disinterest.[92] One summer, Bart enthusiastically attended Kamp Krusty, which turned out to be a disaster, with Krusty nowhere to be seen. Bart keeps his hopes up by believing that Krusty would show up, but is soon pushed over the edge, and finally decides that he is sick of Krusty's shoddy merchandise and takes over the camp. Krusty immediately visits the camp in hopes of ending the conflict and manages to appease Bart.[94][95] One of the original ideas for the series was that Bart worshiped a television clown but had no respect for his father, although this was never directly explored.[96][97] Because of this original plan, Krusty's design is basically Homer in clown make-up.[36] When Bart foiled Sideshow Bob's plans in "Krusty Gets Busted", it sparked a long-standing feud between the two. The writers decided to have Bob repeatedly return to get revenge on Bart. They took the idea of the Coyote chasing the Road Runner and depicted Bob as an intelligent person obsessed with catching a bratty boy.[98] Bob has appeared in fourteen episodes, generally plotting various evil schemes which often have to do with getting revenge on Bart (and sometimes the entire Simpson family by proxy), but is always foiled in the end.[99]

Reception and cultural influence

Bartmania

In 1990, Bart quickly became one of the most popular characters on television in what was termed "Bartmania".[100][101][102][103] He became the most prevalent Simpsons character on memorabilia, such as T-shirts. In the early 1990s, millions of T-shirts featuring Bart were sold;[104] as many as one million were sold on some days.[105] Believing Bart to be a bad role model, several American public schools banned T-shirts featuring Bart next to captions such as "I'm Bart Simpson. Who the hell are you?" and "Underachiever ('And proud of it, man!')".[106][107][108] The Simpsons merchandise sold well and generated $2 billion in revenue during the first 14 months of sales.[106] The success of Bart Simpson merchandise inspired an entire line of black market counterfeit items, especially T-shirts. Some featured Bart announcing various slogans, others depicted redesigns of the character, including "Teenage Mutant Ninja Bart, Air Simpson Bart, [and] RastaBart".[109] Matt Groening generally did not object to bootleg merchandise, but took exception to a series of "Nazi Bart" shirts which depicted Bart in Nazi uniform or as a white power skinhead.[110] 20th Century Fox sued the creator of the shirts, who eventually agreed to stop making them.[111]

 
Michael Jackson, who was a fan of Bart, provided back up vocals for "Do the Bartman".

Bart became so associated with Fox that, when bidding in 1993 to show pro football, the network had to assure the NFL and reporters that the character would not announce games.[112] Due to the show's success, over the summer of 1990 Fox decided to switch The Simpsons' timeslot so that it would move from 8:00 p.m. ET on Sunday night to the same time on Thursday, where it would compete with The Cosby Show on NBC, the number one show at the time.[62][113] Through the summer, several news outlets published stories about the supposed "Bill vs. Bart" rivalry.[62][105] The August 31, 1990 issue of Entertainment Weekly featured a picture of Bill Cosby wearing a Bart Simpson T-shirt.[114] "Bart Gets an 'F'" (season two, 1990) was the first episode to air against The Cosby Show, and it received a lower Nielsen rating, tying for eighth behind The Cosby Show, which had an 18.5 rating. The rating is based on the number of household televisions that were tuned into the show, but Nielsen Media Research estimated that 33.6 million viewers watched the episode, making it the number one show in terms of actual viewers that week. At the time, it was the most watched episode in the history of the Fox Network,[115] and it is still the highest rated episode in the history of The Simpsons.[116] Because of his popularity, Bart was often the most promoted member of the Simpson family in advertisements for the show, even for episodes in which he was not involved in the main plot.[117]

Bart was described as "television's king of 1990",[118] "television's brightest new star"[119] and an "undiminished smash".[105] Entertainment Weekly named Bart the "entertainer of the year" for 1990, writing that "Bart has proved to be a rebel who's also a good kid, a terror who's easily terrorized, and a flake who astonishes us, and himself, with serious displays of fortitude."[120] In the United States congressional, senatorial and gubernatorial elections of 1990, Bart was one of the most popular write-in candidates, and in many areas was second only to Mickey Mouse amongst fictional characters.[121][122] In the 1990 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, Bart made his debut as one of the giant helium-filled balloons for which the parade is known. The Bart Simpson balloon has appeared at every parade since.[123] This was referenced in The Simpsons in the episode "Bart vs. Thanksgiving", which aired the same day as the parade, where Homer tells Bart, "If you start building a balloon for every flash-in-the-pan cartoon character, you turn the parade into a farce!" Meanwhile, behind and unbeknownst to him, the television briefly shows a Bart Simpson balloon.[88][124]

The album The Simpsons Sing the Blues was released in September 1990 and was a success, peaking at No. 3 on the Billboard 200[125] and becoming certified 2× platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.[126] The first single from the album was the pop rap song "Do the Bartman", performed by Nancy Cartwright and released on November 20, 1990. The song was written by Bryan Loren, a friend of Michael Jackson.[127] Jackson was a fan of The Simpsons, especially Bart,[128] and had called the producers one night offering to write Bart a number one single and do a guest spot on the show.[129] Jackson eventually guest starred in the episode "Stark Raving Dad" (season three, 1991) under the pseudonym John Jay Smith.[130] While the song was never officially released as a single in the United States, it was successful in the United Kingdom. In 1991 it was the number one song in the UK for three weeks from February 16 to March 9 and was the seventh best-selling song of the year.[131] It sold half a million copies and was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry on February 1, 1991.[132]

Bart as a role model

I now have a 7-year-old boy and a 9-year-old boy, so all I can say is, I apologize. Now I know what you guys were talking about. My standard comment is, If you don't want your kids to be like Bart Simpson, don't act like Homer Simpson.

— Matt Groening, in a 1998 interview when asked, "How do you respond to critics who consider Bart Simpson a dreadful role model for children?"[133]

Bart's rebellious nature, which frequently resulted in no punishment for his misbehavior, led some parents and conservatives to characterize him as a poor role model for children.[134][135] Robert Bianco of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote that "[Bart] outwits his parents and outtalks his teachers; in short, he's the child we wish we'd been, and fear our children will become."[136] In schools, educators claimed that Bart was a "threat to learning" because of his "underachiever and proud of it" attitude and negative attitude regarding his education.[137] Others described him as "egotistical, aggressive and mean-spirited."[138] In response to the criticism, James L. Brooks said, "I'm very wary of television where everybody is supposed to be a role model, you don't run across that many role models in real life. Why should television be full of them?"[139]

In 1990 William Bennett, who at the time was drug czar of the United States, visited a drug treatment center in Pittsburgh and upon noticing a poster of Bart remarked, "You guys aren't watching The Simpsons, are you? That's not going to help you any."[140] When a backlash over the comment ensued, Bennett apologized, claiming he "was just kidding"[141] and saying "I'll sit down with the little spike head. We'll straighten this thing out."[142] In a 1991 interview, Bill Cosby described Bart as a bad role model for children, calling him "angry, confused, frustrated". In response, Matt Groening said, "That sums up Bart, all right. Most people are in a struggle to be normal. He thinks normal is very boring, and does things that others just wished they dare do."[143] On January 27, 1992, then-President George H. W. Bush said, "We are going to keep on trying to strengthen the American family, to make American families a lot more like the Waltons and a lot less like the Simpsons."[106] The writers rushed out a tongue-in-cheek reply in the form of a short segment which aired three days later before a rerun of "Stark Raving Dad" in which Bart replied, "Hey, we're just like the Waltons. We're praying for an end to the Depression, too."[144][145]

Although there were many critics of the character, favorable comments came from several quarters. Columnist Erma Bombeck wrote, "Kids need to know that somewhere in this world is a contemporary who can pull off all the things they can only fantasize about, someone who can stick it to their parents once in a while and still be permitted to live."[137] In 2003, Bart placed first in a poll of parents in the United Kingdom who were asked "which made-up character had the most influence" on children under 12 years old.[146]

Commendations

 
In 2000, Bart, along with the rest of the Simpson family, were awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

In 1998, Time named Bart one of the 100 most important people of the 20th century. He was the only fictional character to make the list.[61] He had previously appeared on the cover of the edition of December 31, 1990.[147] He was also ranked No. 48 in TV Guide's "50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time" in 1996[148] and both he and Lisa ranked No. 11 in TV Guide's "Top 50 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Time" in 2002.[149] In 2022, Paste writers claimed that Bart is the 26th best cartoon character of all time.[150]

At the 44th Primetime Emmy Awards in 1992, Cartwright won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance for voicing Bart in the season three episode "Separate Vocations". She shared the award with five other voice actors from The Simpsons.[151] Various episodes in which Bart is strongly featured have been nominated for Emmy Awards for Outstanding Animated Program, including "Radio Bart" in 1992, "Future-Drama" in 2005, "The Haw-Hawed Couple" in 2006 and "Homer's Phobia", which won the award in 1997.[152] In 1995, Cartwright won an Annie Award for "Voice Acting in the Field of Animation" for her portrayal of Bart in an episode.[153] In 2000, Bart and the rest of the Simpson family were awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 7021 Hollywood Boulevard.[154]

In 2014 Bart Simpson became the second mascot of Russian football club FC Zenit Saint Petersburg, wearing number 87 on his back (referring to the character's debut in 1987; the club's first mascot is a blue-maned lion).[155]

Merchandising

Alongside T-shirts, Bart has been included in various other The Simpsons-related merchandise, including air fresheners, baseball caps, bumper stickers,[105] cardboard standups, refrigerator magnets, key rings, buttons, dolls, posters, figurines, clocks, soapstone carvings, Chia Pets, bowling balls and boxer shorts.[156][157] The Bart Book, a book about Bart's personality and attributes, was released in 2004.[158][159] Other books include Bart Simpson's Guide to Life. The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer, which is not an official publication, includes a chapter analyzing Bart's character and comparing him to the "Nietzschean ideal".[160]

Bart has appeared in other media relating to The Simpsons. He has appeared in every one of The Simpsons video games, including Bart vs. the World, Bart Simpson's Escape from Camp Deadly, Bart vs. the Space Mutants, Bart's House of Weirdness, Bart vs. The Juggernauts, Bartman Meets Radioactive Man, Bart's Nightmare, Bart & the Beanstalk and The Simpsons Game, released in 2007.[161] Alongside the television series, Bart regularly appears in issues of Simpsons Comics, which were first published on November 29, 1993, and are still issued monthly, and also has his own series called Bart Simpson Comics which have been released since 2000.[162][163] Bart also plays a role in The Simpsons Ride, launched in 2008 at Universal Studios Florida and Hollywood.[164] Bart appears as a playable character in the toys-to-life video game Lego Dimensions, released via a "Fun Pack" packaged with a Gravity Sprinter accessory in November 2015.[165]

Bart, and other The Simpsons characters, have appeared in numerous television commercials for Nestlé's Butterfinger candy bars from 1990 to 2001, with the slogan "Nobody better lay a finger on my Butterfinger!"[166] Lisa would occasionally advertise it too. Matt Groening would later say that the Butterfinger advertising campaign was a large part of the reason why Fox decided to pick up the half-hour show.[167] The campaign was discontinued in 2001, much to the disappointment of Cartwright.[168] Bart has also appeared in commercials for Burger King and Ramada Inn.[168] In 2001, Kellogg's launched a brand of cereal called "Bart Simpson Peanut Butter Chocolate Crunch", which was available for a limited time.[169][170] Before the half-hour series went on the air, Matt Groening pitched Bart as a spokesperson for Jell-O. He wanted Bart to sing "J-E-L-L-O", then burp the letter O. His belief was that kids would try to do it the next day, but he was rejected.[171]

On April 9, 2009, the United States Postal Service unveiled a series of five 44-cent stamps featuring Bart and the four other members of the Simpson family. They are the first characters, other than Sesame Street characters, to receive this accolade while the show is still in production. The stamps, designed by Matt Groening, were made available for purchase on May 7, 2009.[172][173]

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bart, simpson, this, article, about, cartoon, character, filmmaker, filmmaker, sailor, nicknamed, andrew, simpson, sailor, bartholomew, jojo, bart, simpson, fictional, character, american, animated, television, series, simpsons, part, simpson, family, voiced, . This article is about the cartoon character For the filmmaker see Bart Simpson filmmaker For the sailor nicknamed Bart Simpson see Andrew Simpson sailor Bartholomew Jojo Bart Simpson 1 is a fictional character in the American animated television series The Simpsons and part of the Simpson family He is voiced by Nancy Cartwright and first appeared on television in The Tracey Ullman Show short Good Night on April 19 1987 Cartoonist Matt Groening created and designed Bart while waiting in the lobby of James L Brooks office Groening had been called to pitch a series of shorts based on his comic strip Life in Hell but instead decided to create a new set of characters While the rest of the characters were named after Groening s family members Bart s name is an anagram of the word brat After appearing on The Tracey Ullman Show for two years the Simpson family received its own series on Fox which debuted December 17 1989 Bart has appeared in every Simpsons episode except Four Great Women and a Manicure Bart SimpsonThe Simpsons characterBart with his hands in his pocketsFirst appearance Good Night The Tracey Ullman Show 1987 Created byMatt GroeningDesigned byMatt GroeningVoiced byNancy CartwrightIn universe informationFull nameBartholomew JoJo SimpsonOccupation4th grade student at Springfield Elementary SchoolFamilyHomer father Marge mother Lisa sister Maggie sister Patty and Selma Bouvier aunts Abe Simpson Mona Simpson Jacqueline Bouvier and Clancy Bouvier grandparents Home742 Evergreen Terrace Springfield United StatesNationalityAmericanAt ten years old Bart is the eldest child and only son of Homer and Marge and the brother of Lisa and Maggie Bart s most prominent and popular character traits are his mischievousness rebelliousness and disrespect for authority Hallmarks of the character include his chalkboard gags in the opening sequence his prank calls to Moe and his catchphrases Eat my shorts Ay caramba Don t have a cow man and I m Bart Simpson Who the hell are you However with the exception of Ay caramba these hallmarks have been retired or are not often used Bart has appeared in other media relating to The Simpsons including video games The Simpsons Movie The Simpsons Ride commercials and comic books and inspired an entire line of merchandise In casting Cartwright originally planned to audition for the role of Lisa while Yeardley Smith tried out for Bart Smith s voice was considered too high for a boy so she was given the role of Lisa Cartwright found Lisa uninteresting so she instead auditioned for Bart which she thought was a better role 2 During the first two seasons of The Simpsons Bart was the show s protagonist and Bartmania ensued spawning Bart Simpson themed merchandise touting his rebellious attitude and pride at underachieving which caused many parents and educators to cast him as a bad role model for children 3 Around the third season the role of the protagonist was taken over by his father and series started to focus more on the family as a whole though Bart still remains a prominent breakout character Time named Bart one of the 100 most important people of the 20th century and he was named entertainer of the year in 1990 by Entertainment Weekly Cartwright has won several awards for voicing Bart including a Primetime Emmy Award in 1992 and an Annie Award in 1995 In 2000 Bart along with the rest of his family was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame Contents 1 Role in The Simpsons 2 Character 2 1 Creation 2 2 Design 2 3 Voice 2 4 Hallmarks 2 5 Personality 3 Reception and cultural influence 3 1 Bartmania 3 2 Bart as a role model 3 3 Commendations 3 4 Merchandising 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksRole in The SimpsonsThe Simpsons uses a floating timeline in which the characters do not age or age very little and as such the show is always assumed to be set in the current year In several episodes events have been linked to specific times though sometimes this timeline has been contradicted in subsequent episodes Bart s year of birth was stated in I Married Marge season three 1991 as being in the early 1980s 4 In Simpsorama season 26 2014 Bart states his birthday as February 23 5 He lived with his parents in the Lower East Side of Springfield until the Simpsons bought their first house When Lisa was born Bart was at first jealous of the attention she received but he soon warmed to her when he discovered that Bart was her first word 6 Bart s first day of school was in the early 1990s His initial enthusiasm was crushed by an uncaring teacher and Marge became worried that something was truly wrong with Bart One day during recess Bart met Milhouse and started entertaining him and other students with various gestures and rude words Principal Skinner told him you ve just started school and the path you choose now may be the one you follow for the rest of your life Now what do you say In his moment of truth Bart responded eat my shorts 7 The episode That 90s Show season nineteen 2008 contradicted much of the backstory s time frame for example it was revealed that Homer and Marge were childless in the early 1990s 8 Bart s hobbies include skateboarding watching television especially The Krusty the Clown Show which includes The Itchy amp Scratchy Show reading comic books especially Radioactive Man playing video games and generally causing mischief 9 His favorite movies are Jaws and the Star Wars Trilogy For the duration of the series Bart has attended Springfield Elementary School and has been in Edna Krabappel s fourth grade class While he is too young to hold a full time job he has had occasional part time jobs He works as a bartender at Fat Tony s social club in Bart the Murderer season three 1991 10 as Krusty the Clown s assistant in Bart Gets Famous season five 1994 11 as a doorman in Springfield s burlesque house the Maison Derriere in Bart After Dark season eight 1996 12 and briefly owns his own factory in Homer s Enemy season eight 1997 13 CharacterCreation Matt Groening created Bart while waiting in James L Brooks office Matt Groening first conceived of Bart and the rest of the Simpson family in 1987 while waiting in the lobby of producer James L Brooks office Groening had been called in to pitch a series of animated shorts for The Tracey Ullman Show and had intended to present an adaptation of his Life in Hell comic strip When he realized that animating Life in Hell would require him to rescind publication rights Groening decided to go in another direction 14 He hurriedly sketched out his version of a dysfunctional family naming the characters after members of his own family For the rebellious son he substituted Bart an anagram of the word brat for his own name 14 as he decided it would have been too obvious for him to have named the character Matt 15 Bart s middle initial J is a tribute to animated characters such as Bullwinkle J Moose and Rocket J Squirrel from The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show who received their middle initial from Jay Ward 16 17 According to the book Bart Simpson s Guide to Life Bart s full middle name is JoJo 18 Bart had originally been envisioned as a much milder troubled youth given to existential angst who talks to himself but the character was changed based on Cartwright s voice acting 19 Groening has credited several different figures with providing inspiration for Bart Matt Groening s older brother Mark provided much of the motivation for Bart s attitude 20 21 22 Bart was conceived as an extreme version of the typical misbehaving child character merging all of the extreme traits of characters such as Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn into one person 15 Groening describes Bart as what would happen if the son of Eddie Haskell from Leave It to Beaver got his own show 23 Groening has also said that he found the premise of Dennis the Menace disappointing and was inspired to create a character who was actually a menace 24 Bart made his debut with the rest of the Simpson family on April 19 1987 in The Tracey Ullman Show short Good Night 25 In 1989 the shorts were adapted into The Simpsons a half hour series airing on the Fox Broadcasting Company Bart and the Simpson family remained the main characters on this new show 26 Design Bart in his first televised appearance in Good Night The entire Simpson family was designed so that they would be recognizable in silhouette 27 The family was crudely drawn because Groening had submitted basic sketches to the animators assuming they would clean them up instead they just traced over his drawings 14 Bart s original design which appeared in the first shorts had spikier hair and the spikes were of different lengths The number was later limited to nine spikes all of the same size 28 At the time Groening was primarily drawing in black and not thinking that Bart would eventually be drawn in color gave him spikes which appear to be an extension of his head 29 The features of Bart s character design are generally not used in other characters for example no other characters in current episodes have Bart s spiky hairline although several background characters in the first few seasons shared the trait 30 The basic rectangular shape of Bart s head is described by director Mark Kirkland as a coffee can Homer s head is also rectangular with a dome on top while spheres are used for Marge Lisa and Maggie 31 Different animators have different methods of drawing Bart Former director Jeffrey Lynch starts off with a box then adds the eyes then the mouth then the hair spikes ear and then the rest of the body Matt Groening normally starts with the eyes then the nose and the rest of the outline of Bart s head Many of the animators have trouble drawing Bart s spikes evenly one trick they use is to draw one on the right one on the left one in the middle then continue to add one in the middle of the blank space until there are nine Originally whenever Bart was to be drawn from an angle looking down so the top of his head was seen Groening wanted there to be spikes along the outline of his head and in the middle as well Instead Wes Archer and David Silverman drew him so that there was an outline of the spikes then just a smooth patch in the middle because it worked graphically 32 In The Blue and the Gray Bart along with Lisa and Maggie finally questions why his hair has no visible border to separate head from hair In the season seven 1995 episode Treehouse of Horror VI Bart along with Homer was computer animated into a three dimensional character for the first time for the Homer3 segment of the episode The computer animation was provided by Pacific Data Images 33 While designing the 3D model of the character the animators did not know how they would show Bart s hair They realized that there were vinyl Bart dolls in production and purchased one to use as a model 33 Voice Nancy Cartwright is the voice of Bart Simpson Bart s voice is provided by Nancy Cartwright who voices several other child characters on The Simpsons including Nelson Muntz Ralph Wiggum Todd Flanders and Kearney 34 While the roles of Homer and Marge were given to Dan Castellaneta and Julie Kavner because they were already a part of The Tracey Ullman Show cast 35 the producers decided to hold casting for the roles of Bart and Lisa Yeardley Smith had initially been asked to audition for the role of Bart but casting director Bonita Pietila believed her voice was too high Smith later recalled I always sounded too much like a girl I read two lines as Bart and they said Thanks for coming 36 Smith was given the role of Lisa instead 37 On March 13 1987 Nancy Cartwright went in to audition for the role of Lisa After arriving at the audition she found that Lisa was simply described as the middle child and at the time did not have much personality Cartwright became more interested in the role of Bart who was described as devious underachieving school hating irreverent and clever 38 Matt Groening let her try out for the part instead and upon hearing her read gave her the job on the spot 39 Cartwright is the only one of the six main Simpsons cast members who had been professionally trained in voice acting prior to working on the show 40 Cartwright s normal speaking voice is said to have no obvious traces of Bart 41 The voice came naturally to Cartwright prior to The Tracey Ullman Show she had used elements of it in shows such as My Little Pony Snorks and Pound Puppies 41 Cartwright describes Bart s voice as easy to perform saying Some characters take a little bit more effort upper respiratory control whatever it is technically But Bart is easy to do I can just slip into that without difficulty 41 She usually does five or six readings of every line in order to give the producers more to work with 39 In flashforward episodes Cartwright still provides the voice of Bart For Lisa s Wedding season six 1995 Bart s voice was electronically lowered 42 Despite Bart s fame Cartwright is rarely recognized in public When she is recognized and asked to perform Bart s voice in front of children Cartwright refuses as it freaks them out 41 During the first season of The Simpsons the Fox Network did not allow Cartwright to give interviews because they did not want to publicize that Bart was voiced by a woman 43 Until 1998 Cartwright was paid 30 000 per episode During a pay dispute in 1998 Fox threatened to replace the six main voice actors with new actors going as far as preparing for casting of new voices 44 The dispute was resolved and Cartwright received 125 000 per episode until 2004 when the voice actors demanded that they be paid 360 000 an episode 44 The dispute was resolved a month later 45 and Cartwright s pay rose to 250 000 per episode 46 After salary renegotiations in 2008 the voice actors received approximately 400 000 per episode 47 Three years later with Fox threatening to cancel the series unless production costs were cut Cartwright and the other cast members accepted a 30 percent pay cut to just over 300 000 per episode 48 Hallmarks In the opening sequence of many Simpsons episodes the camera zooms in on Springfield Elementary School where Bart can be seen writing lines on the chalkboard The sentences which changes from episode to episode has become known as the chalkboard gag 49 Chalkboard messages may involve political humor such as The First Amendment does not cover burping 50 pop culture references such as I can t see dead people 51 and meta references such as I am not a 32 year old woman and Nobody reads these anymore 49 The animators are able to produce the chalkboard gags quickly and in some cases have changed them to fit current events For example the chalkboard gag for Homer the Heretic season four 1992 read I will not defame New Orleans The gag had been written as an apology to the city for a controversial song in the previous week s episode A Streetcar Named Marge which called the city a home of pirates drunks and whores 52 53 Many episodes do not feature a chalkboard gag because a shorter opening title sequence where the chalkboard gags are cut is used to make more room for story and plot development One of Bart s early hallmarks were his prank calls to Moe s Tavern owner Moe Szyslak in which Bart calls Moe and asks for a gag name Moe tries to find that person in the bar but rapidly realizes it is a prank call and despite not knowing who actually made the call angrily threatens Bart These calls were based on a series of prank calls known as the Tube Bar recordings Moe was based partly on Tube Bar owner Louis Red Deutsch whose often profane responses inspired Moe s violent side 54 The prank calls debuted in Homer s Odyssey season one 1990 the third episode to air but were included in Some Enchanted Evening the first episode of the series that was produced 55 As the series progressed it became more difficult for the writers to come up with a fake name and to write Moe s angry response so the pranks were dropped as a regular joke during the fourth season 55 56 but they have occasionally resurfaced on the show 57 The catchphrase Eat My Shorts was an ad lib by Cartwright in one of the original table readings harking back to an incident when she was in high school Cartwright was in the marching band at Fairmont High School and one day while performing the band chanted Eat my shorts rather than the usual Fairmont West Fairmont West 36 58 It could also be an homage to The Breakfast Club as John Bender says the phrase to Principal Vernon John Bender would become the inspiration for another Matt Groening creation Bender from Futurama 59 Bart s other catchphrases Ay caramba came from a Portuguese flamenco dancer 58 and Don t have a cow had been around since the 1950s which derived from the British phrase Don t have kittens 58 both were featured on T shirts manufactured during the production of the early seasons of The Simpsons 60 61 Cowabunga is also commonly associated with Bart although it was mostly used on the show after it had been used as a slogan on the T shirts 62 Reiss also stated the writers took the phrase from Chief Thunderthud on The Howdy Doody Show The use of catchphrase based humor was mocked in the episode Bart Gets Famous season five 1994 in which Bart lands a popular role on Krusty the Clown s show for saying the line I didn t do it 63 The writers chose the phrase I didn t do it because they wanted a lousy phrase to point out how really crummy things can become really popular 64 Bart s nude scene in The Simpsons Movie Bart commonly appears nude in the show although in every case only his buttocks are visible 65 In The Simpsons Movie 2007 Bart appears in a sequence where he is skateboarding while fully nude several different items cover his genitalia but for a brief moment his penis can be seen The scene was one of the first worked on for the film but the producers were nervous about the segment because they thought it would earn the movie an R rating 66 Despite this the film was rated PG 13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for Irreverent Humor Throughout 67 The scene was later included by Entertainment Weekly in their list of 30 Unforgettable Nude Scenes 68 Personality Like any good punk rocker Bart had the nihilism thing down from the very beginning Though not so much pissed off as extremely undisciplined the Bart Simpson of the Ullman shorts is either fighting with his sister inciting his father into murderous levels of rage executing dangerous stunts that end in cartoonish levels of disaster or simply spitting snarky one liners at whatever authority figures cross his path This appetite for destruction continued to be the defining feature of the smart assed boy who dominated many episodes of the first few seasons of The Simpsons the version that spawned Bart mania though his methods and motivations show considerably more nuance than the white trash Bart of the Ullman era Chris Turner author 69 Bart s character traits of rebelliousness and disrespect for authority have been compared to that of America s founding fathers and he has been described as an updated version of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn rolled into one 70 In his book Planet Simpson Chris Turner describes Bart as a nihilist a philosophical position that argues that existence is without objective meaning purpose or intrinsic value 69 Bart s rebellious attitude has made him a disruptive student at Springfield Elementary School where he is an underachiever and proud of it 71 He is constantly at odds with his teacher Ms Krabappel Principal Skinner and occasionally Groundskeeper Willie 72 Bart does poorly in school and is well aware of it having once declared I am dumb okay Dumb as a post Think I m happy about it 71 On one occasion Lisa successfully proves that Bart is dumber than a hamster although Bart ultimately outsmarts her 73 Bart s thoughts are often illogical he once thought if he died and reincarnated as a butterfly he would be able to burn the school down without being suspected thinking that he would be able to hold a gas can as a butterfly 74 He has also thought if he wrote his name in wet cement people who see it after it dries will wonder how he managed to write his name in solid cement 75 In Separate Vocations season three 1992 Bart becomes hall monitor and his grades go up suggesting that he struggles mainly because he does not pay attention not because he is stupid 76 This idea is reinforced in Brother s Little Helper season eleven 1999 in which it is revealed that Bart has attention deficit disorder 77 His lack of smarts can also be attributed to the hereditary Simpson Gene which affects the intelligence of most male members of the Simpson family 78 Although he gets into endless trouble and can be sadistic shallow and selfish Bart also exhibits many qualities of high integrity He has on a few occasions helped Principal Skinner and Mrs Krabappel 79 In Sweet Seymour Skinner s Baadasssss Song season five 1994 Bart accidentally got Skinner fired and befriended him outside the school environment Bart missed having Skinner as an adversary and got him rehired knowing that this would mean that the two could no longer be friends 80 Due to Bart s mischievousness and Homer s often uncaring and incompetent behavior the two have a turbulent jaded violent and at times borderline sadistic relationship Bart regularly addresses Homer by his first name instead of Dad while Homer in turn often refers to him as the boy 81 Homer has a short temper and when enraged by Bart will strangle him on impulse in a cartoonishly violent manner 82 One of the original ideas for the show was that Homer would be very angry and oppressive toward Bart but these characteristics were toned down somewhat as their characters were explored 83 Marge is a much more caring understanding and nurturing parent than Homer but she also refers to Bart as a handful and is often embarrassed by his antics 84 In Marge Be Not Proud season seven 1995 she felt she was mothering Bart too much and began acting more distant towards him after he was caught shoplifting At the beginning of the episode Bart protested at her over mothering but as her attitude changed he felt bad and made it up to her 85 Despite his attitude Bart is sometimes willing to experience humiliation if it means pleasing his mom 86 Marge has expressed an understanding for her special little guy and has defended him on many occasions She once said I know Bart can be a handful but I also know what he s like inside He s got a spark It s not a bad thing Of course it makes him do bad things 84 Bart is a really good boy He s just mischievous He s not bad like characters who followed him such as Eric Cartman South Park or Beavis and Butthead Bart can do some nasty things but they seem so tame by today s standards What was shocking 19 years ago when the show started isn t the least bit shocking today Bart hasn t changed Nancy Cartwright 87 Bart shares a sibling rivalry with his younger sister Lisa but has a buddy like relationship with his youngest sister Maggie due to her infant state While Bart has often hurt Lisa and even fought her physically the two are often very close 73 81 Bart cares for Lisa deeply and has always apologized for going too far 88 He also believes Lisa to be his superior when it comes to solving problems and frequently goes to her for advice 76 Bart is also highly protective of Lisa When a bully destroys her box of cupcakes in Bart the General season one 1990 Bart immediately stands up for her 89 Bart is portrayed as a popular cool boy 90 and has many friends at school Out of all of them his best friend is Milhouse Van Houten although Bart has at times shown embarrassment about their friendship 90 Bart is a bad influence on Milhouse and the two have been involved in a lot of mischief together Because of this behavior Milhouse s mother forbids Milhouse from playing with Bart in Homer Defined season three 1991 While at first he pretended that he did not care Bart eventually realizes that he needs Milhouse and Marge manages to convince Mrs Van Houten to reconsider 84 Milhouse is a frequent target for local bullies Nelson Muntz and his friends Jimbo Dolph and Kearney At times Bart also finds himself at the hands of their abuse Despite being the more socially powerful of the two Bart s social popularity has temporarily subsided various episodes either due to extreme embarrassment caused by his family or other people or even himself or an unfortunate coincidence Milhouse describes their social standing as Three and a half We get beat up but we get an explanation 79 While Bart and the bullies have been adversaries at times with Bart once declaring war on Nelson 89 the school bullies actually like Bart for his ways and hang out with him at times especially Nelson who eventually becomes close friends with him 91 Bart is one of the biggest fans of children s television host Krusty the Clown He once declared I ve based my whole life on Krusty s teachings and sleeps in a room filled with Krusty merchandise He has helped the clown on many occasions for example foiling Sideshow Bob s attempt to frame Krusty for armed robbery in Krusty Gets Busted season one 1990 reuniting Krusty with his estranged father in Like Father Like Clown 92 and helping Krusty return to the air with a comeback special and reignite his career in Krusty Gets Kancelled 93 For his part Krusty has remained largely ignorant of Bart s help and treats Bart with disinterest 92 One summer Bart enthusiastically attended Kamp Krusty which turned out to be a disaster with Krusty nowhere to be seen Bart keeps his hopes up by believing that Krusty would show up but is soon pushed over the edge and finally decides that he is sick of Krusty s shoddy merchandise and takes over the camp Krusty immediately visits the camp in hopes of ending the conflict and manages to appease Bart 94 95 One of the original ideas for the series was that Bart worshiped a television clown but had no respect for his father although this was never directly explored 96 97 Because of this original plan Krusty s design is basically Homer in clown make up 36 When Bart foiled Sideshow Bob s plans in Krusty Gets Busted it sparked a long standing feud between the two The writers decided to have Bob repeatedly return to get revenge on Bart They took the idea of the Coyote chasing the Road Runner and depicted Bob as an intelligent person obsessed with catching a bratty boy 98 Bob has appeared in fourteen episodes generally plotting various evil schemes which often have to do with getting revenge on Bart and sometimes the entire Simpson family by proxy but is always foiled in the end 99 Reception and cultural influenceBartmania In 1990 Bart quickly became one of the most popular characters on television in what was termed Bartmania 100 101 102 103 He became the most prevalent Simpsons character on memorabilia such as T shirts In the early 1990s millions of T shirts featuring Bart were sold 104 as many as one million were sold on some days 105 Believing Bart to be a bad role model several American public schools banned T shirts featuring Bart next to captions such as I m Bart Simpson Who the hell are you and Underachiever And proud of it man 106 107 108 The Simpsons merchandise sold well and generated 2 billion in revenue during the first 14 months of sales 106 The success of Bart Simpson merchandise inspired an entire line of black market counterfeit items especially T shirts Some featured Bart announcing various slogans others depicted redesigns of the character including Teenage Mutant Ninja Bart Air Simpson Bart and RastaBart 109 Matt Groening generally did not object to bootleg merchandise but took exception to a series of Nazi Bart shirts which depicted Bart in Nazi uniform or as a white power skinhead 110 20th Century Fox sued the creator of the shirts who eventually agreed to stop making them 111 Michael Jackson who was a fan of Bart provided back up vocals for Do the Bartman Bart became so associated with Fox that when bidding in 1993 to show pro football the network had to assure the NFL and reporters that the character would not announce games 112 Due to the show s success over the summer of 1990 Fox decided to switch The Simpsons timeslot so that it would move from 8 00 p m ET on Sunday night to the same time on Thursday where it would compete with The Cosby Show on NBC the number one show at the time 62 113 Through the summer several news outlets published stories about the supposed Bill vs Bart rivalry 62 105 The August 31 1990 issue of Entertainment Weekly featured a picture of Bill Cosby wearing a Bart Simpson T shirt 114 Bart Gets an F season two 1990 was the first episode to air against The Cosby Show and it received a lower Nielsen rating tying for eighth behind The Cosby Show which had an 18 5 rating The rating is based on the number of household televisions that were tuned into the show but Nielsen Media Research estimated that 33 6 million viewers watched the episode making it the number one show in terms of actual viewers that week At the time it was the most watched episode in the history of the Fox Network 115 and it is still the highest rated episode in the history of The Simpsons 116 Because of his popularity Bart was often the most promoted member of the Simpson family in advertisements for the show even for episodes in which he was not involved in the main plot 117 Bart was described as television s king of 1990 118 television s brightest new star 119 and an undiminished smash 105 Entertainment Weekly named Bart the entertainer of the year for 1990 writing that Bart has proved to be a rebel who s also a good kid a terror who s easily terrorized and a flake who astonishes us and himself with serious displays of fortitude 120 In the United States congressional senatorial and gubernatorial elections of 1990 Bart was one of the most popular write in candidates and in many areas was second only to Mickey Mouse amongst fictional characters 121 122 In the 1990 Macy s Thanksgiving Day Parade Bart made his debut as one of the giant helium filled balloons for which the parade is known The Bart Simpson balloon has appeared at every parade since 123 This was referenced in The Simpsons in the episode Bart vs Thanksgiving which aired the same day as the parade where Homer tells Bart If you start building a balloon for every flash in the pan cartoon character you turn the parade into a farce Meanwhile behind and unbeknownst to him the television briefly shows a Bart Simpson balloon 88 124 The album The Simpsons Sing the Blues was released in September 1990 and was a success peaking at No 3 on the Billboard 200 125 and becoming certified 2 platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America 126 The first single from the album was the pop rap song Do the Bartman performed by Nancy Cartwright and released on November 20 1990 The song was written by Bryan Loren a friend of Michael Jackson 127 Jackson was a fan of The Simpsons especially Bart 128 and had called the producers one night offering to write Bart a number one single and do a guest spot on the show 129 Jackson eventually guest starred in the episode Stark Raving Dad season three 1991 under the pseudonym John Jay Smith 130 While the song was never officially released as a single in the United States it was successful in the United Kingdom In 1991 it was the number one song in the UK for three weeks from February 16 to March 9 and was the seventh best selling song of the year 131 It sold half a million copies and was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry on February 1 1991 132 Bart as a role model I now have a 7 year old boy and a 9 year old boy so all I can say is I apologize Now I know what you guys were talking about My standard comment is If you don t want your kids to be like Bart Simpson don t act like Homer Simpson Matt Groening in a 1998 interview when asked How do you respond to critics who consider Bart Simpson a dreadful role model for children 133 Bart s rebellious nature which frequently resulted in no punishment for his misbehavior led some parents and conservatives to characterize him as a poor role model for children 134 135 Robert Bianco of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette wrote that Bart outwits his parents and outtalks his teachers in short he s the child we wish we d been and fear our children will become 136 In schools educators claimed that Bart was a threat to learning because of his underachiever and proud of it attitude and negative attitude regarding his education 137 Others described him as egotistical aggressive and mean spirited 138 In response to the criticism James L Brooks said I m very wary of television where everybody is supposed to be a role model you don t run across that many role models in real life Why should television be full of them 139 In 1990 William Bennett who at the time was drug czar of the United States visited a drug treatment center in Pittsburgh and upon noticing a poster of Bart remarked You guys aren t watching The Simpsons are you That s not going to help you any 140 When a backlash over the comment ensued Bennett apologized claiming he was just kidding 141 and saying I ll sit down with the little spike head We ll straighten this thing out 142 In a 1991 interview Bill Cosby described Bart as a bad role model for children calling him angry confused frustrated In response Matt Groening said That sums up Bart all right Most people are in a struggle to be normal He thinks normal is very boring and does things that others just wished they dare do 143 On January 27 1992 then President George H W Bush said We are going to keep on trying to strengthen the American family to make American families a lot more like the Waltons and a lot less like the Simpsons 106 The writers rushed out a tongue in cheek reply in the form of a short segment which aired three days later before a rerun of Stark Raving Dad in which Bart replied Hey we re just like the Waltons We re praying for an end to the Depression too 144 145 Although there were many critics of the character favorable comments came from several quarters Columnist Erma Bombeck wrote Kids need to know that somewhere in this world is a contemporary who can pull off all the things they can only fantasize about someone who can stick it to their parents once in a while and still be permitted to live 137 In 2003 Bart placed first in a poll of parents in the United Kingdom who were asked which made up character had the most influence on children under 12 years old 146 Commendations In 2000 Bart along with the rest of the Simpson family were awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame In 1998 Time named Bart one of the 100 most important people of the 20th century He was the only fictional character to make the list 61 He had previously appeared on the cover of the edition of December 31 1990 147 He was also ranked No 48 in TV Guide s 50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time in 1996 148 and both he and Lisa ranked No 11 in TV Guide s Top 50 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Time in 2002 149 In 2022 Paste writers claimed that Bart is the 26th best cartoon character of all time 150 At the 44th Primetime Emmy Awards in 1992 Cartwright won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice Over Performance for voicing Bart in the season three episode Separate Vocations She shared the award with five other voice actors from The Simpsons 151 Various episodes in which Bart is strongly featured have been nominated for Emmy Awards for Outstanding Animated Program including Radio Bart in 1992 Future Drama in 2005 The Haw Hawed Couple in 2006 and Homer s Phobia which won the award in 1997 152 In 1995 Cartwright won an Annie Award for Voice Acting in the Field of Animation for her portrayal of Bart in an episode 153 In 2000 Bart and the rest of the Simpson family were awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 7021 Hollywood Boulevard 154 In 2014 Bart Simpson became the second mascot of Russian football club FC Zenit Saint Petersburg wearing number 87 on his back referring to the character s debut in 1987 the club s first mascot is a blue maned lion 155 Merchandising Alongside T shirts Bart has been included in various other The Simpsons related merchandise including air fresheners baseball caps bumper stickers 105 cardboard standups refrigerator magnets key rings buttons dolls posters figurines clocks soapstone carvings Chia Pets bowling balls and boxer shorts 156 157 The Bart Book a book about Bart s personality and attributes was released in 2004 158 159 Other books include Bart Simpson s Guide to Life The Simpsons and Philosophy The D oh of Homer which is not an official publication includes a chapter analyzing Bart s character and comparing him to the Nietzschean ideal 160 Bart has appeared in other media relating to The Simpsons He has appeared in every one of The Simpsons video games including Bart vs the World Bart Simpson s Escape from Camp Deadly Bart vs the Space Mutants Bart s House of Weirdness Bart vs The Juggernauts Bartman Meets Radioactive Man Bart s Nightmare Bart amp the Beanstalk and The Simpsons Game released in 2007 161 Alongside the television series Bart regularly appears in issues of Simpsons Comics which were first published on November 29 1993 and are still issued monthly and also has his own series called Bart Simpson Comics which have been released since 2000 162 163 Bart also plays a role in The Simpsons Ride launched in 2008 at Universal Studios Florida and Hollywood 164 Bart appears as a playable character in the toys to life video game Lego Dimensions released via a Fun Pack packaged with a Gravity Sprinter accessory in November 2015 165 Bart and other The Simpsons characters have appeared in numerous television commercials for Nestle s Butterfinger candy bars from 1990 to 2001 with the slogan Nobody better lay a finger on my Butterfinger 166 Lisa would occasionally advertise it too Matt Groening would later say that the Butterfinger advertising campaign was a large part of the reason why Fox decided to pick up the half hour show 167 The campaign was discontinued in 2001 much to the disappointment of Cartwright 168 Bart has also appeared in commercials for Burger King and Ramada Inn 168 In 2001 Kellogg s launched a brand of cereal called Bart Simpson Peanut Butter Chocolate Crunch which was available for a limited time 169 170 Before the half hour series went on the air Matt Groening pitched Bart as a spokesperson for Jell O He wanted Bart to sing J E L L O then burp the letter O His belief was that kids would try to do it the next day but he was rejected 171 On April 9 2009 the United States Postal Service unveiled a series of five 44 cent stamps featuring Bart and the four other members of the Simpson family They are the first characters other than Sesame Street characters to receive this accolade while the show is still in production The stamps designed by Matt Groening were made available for purchase on May 7 2009 172 173 References Top 10 facts about the Simpsons Daily Express April 19 2017 Retrieved April 3 2019 Hajek Daniel February 28 2015 Whoa Mama A Voice Actress s Road To Fame As A 10 Year Old Boy NPR Retrieved April 22 2016 Ferguson Murray November 23 2021 Why Homer Replaced Bart As The Simpsons Main Character amp When ScreenRant Retrieved September 14 2022 Martin Jeff Lynch Jeffrey December 26 1991 I Married Marge The Simpsons Season 03 Episode 12 Fox J Stewart Burns November 9 2014 Simpsorama The Simpsons Season 26 Episode 6 Fox Prove it When is your birthday February 23rd Ha February has no 23rd Yes it does Martin Jeff Kirkland Mark December 3 1992 Lisa s First Word The Simpsons Season 04 Episode 10 Fox Jean Al Polcino Dominic October 19 1997 Lisa s Sax The Simpsons Season 09 Episode 03 Fox Selman Matt Kirkland Mark January 27 2008 That 90s Show The Simpsons Season 19 Episode 11 Fox Turner 2004 p 122 Swartzwelder John Moore Rich October 10 1991 Bart the Murderer The Simpsons Season 03 Episode 04 Fox Swartzwelder John Dietter Susie February 3 1994 Bart Gets Famous The Simpsons Season 05 Episode 12 Fox Appel Richard Weinstein Josh November 4 1996 Bart After Dark The Simpsons Season 08 Episode 05 Fox Swartzwelder John Reardon Jim May 4 1997 Homer s Enemy The Simpsons Season 08 Episode 23 Fox a b c BBC 2000 The Simpsons America s First Family 6 minute edit for the season 1 DVD DVD UK 20th Century Fox a b Groening Matt Jean Al 2007 The Simpsons Movie A Look Behind the Scenes DVD distributed by The Sun J is for Jay BBC Retrieved September 21 2008 Groening Matt 2007 Commentary for D oh in in the Wind in The Simpsons The Complete Tenth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Groening Matt 2001 Bart Simpson s Guide to Life Harper Perennial ISBN 978 5 558 68551 0 Farrell Peter December 17 1989 Christmans is Life in Hell for The Simpsons The Oregonian Groening Matt 2006 Commentary for My Sister My Sitter in The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Paul Alan September 30 1995 Life in Hell Flux Groening Matt 2006 Commentary for Bart Carny in The Simpsons The Complete Ninth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Kolbert Elizabeth March 11 1993 With spirit of youthful rebellion Simpsons creator takes on success Orlando Sentinel Groening Matt 2005 Commentary for Two Bad Neighbors in The Simpsons The Complete Seventh Season DVD 20th Century Fox Richmond amp Coffman 1997 p 14 Kuipers Dean April 15 2004 3rd Degree Harry Shearer Los Angeles City Beat Archived from the original on June 5 2008 Retrieved September 21 2008 Groening Matt 2005 Commentary for Fear of Flying in The Simpsons The Complete Sixth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Silverman David Archer Wes 2004 Illustrated commentary for Treehouse of Horror IV in The Simpsons The Complete Fifth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Anderson Mike B Groening Matt Michels Pete Smith Yeardley 2006 A Bit From the Animators Illustrated Commentary for All Singing All Dancing in The Simpsons The Complete Ninth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Groening Matt Reiss Mike Kirkland Mark 2002 Commentary for Principal Charming in The Simpsons The Complete Second Season DVD 20th Century Fox Archer Wes Groening Matt Kirkland Mark 2005 A Bit From the Animators Illustrated Commentary for Summer of 4 Ft 2 in The Simpsons The Complete Seventh Season DVD 20th Century Fox Groening Matt Lynch Jeffrey Reardon Jim Silverman David 2005 Illustrated Commentary for Who Shot Mr Burns Part One in The Simpsons The Complete Sixth Season DVD 20th Century Fox a b Oakley Bill Weinstein Josh Johnson Tim Silverman David Mirkin David Cohen David X Homer in the Third Dimension 2005 in The Simpsons The Complete Seventh Season DVD 20th Century Fox Richmond amp Coffman 1997 pp 178 179 Lee Luaine February 27 2003 D oh you re the voice The Age Melbourne Retrieved August 18 2007 a b c Carroll Larry July 26 2007 Simpsons Trivia From Swearing Lisa To Burns Sexual Smithers MTV Archived from the original on December 20 2007 Retrieved July 29 2007 Miranda Charles December 8 2007 She who laughs last The Daily Telegraph p 8E Cartwright pp 35 40 a b Bart s voice tells all BBC News November 10 2000 Retrieved May 16 2007 Turner 2004 p 21 a b c d Brockes Emma August 2 2004 That s my boy The Guardian London Archived from the original on December 5 2007 Retrieved October 22 2008 Mirkin David 2005 Commentary for Lisa s Wedding in The Simpsons The Complete Sixth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Bark Ed July 15 1990 Bart Simpson s secret he s a woman Ottawa Citizen a b Glaister Dan April 3 2004 Simpsons actors demand bigger share The Age Melbourne Archived from the original on December 2 2008 Retrieved October 26 2008 Simpsons Cast Goes Back To Work CBS News May 1 2004 Archived from the original on September 13 2008 Retrieved September 21 2008 Sheridan Peter May 6 2004 Meet the Simpsons Daily Express Simpsons cast sign new pay deal BBC News June 3 2008 Archived from the original on September 14 2008 Retrieved October 26 2008 Block Alex Ben October 7 2011 The Simpsons Renewed for Two More Seasons The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved October 15 2011 a b Turner 2004 p 71 Forrester Brent Reardon Jim May 14 1995 Lemon of Troy The Simpsons Season 06 Episode 24 Fox Swartzwelder John Affleck Neil November 28 1999 Take My Wife Sleaze The Simpsons Season 11 Episode 08 Fox Martin Jeff 2004 The Cajun Controversy in The Simpsons The Complete Fourth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Lorando Mark October 8 1992 Bart chalks up apology for New Orleans song The Times Picayune p A1 Kaulessar Ricardo August 10 2005 Joke on Simpsons started in JC Jersey City Reporter Archived from the original on September 25 2008 Retrieved October 30 2008 a b Brooks James L Groening Matt Jean Al 2001 Commentary for Some Enchanted Evening in The Simpsons The Complete First Season DVD 20th Century Fox Reiss Mike 2001 Commentary for Moaning Lisa in The Simpsons The Complete First Season DVD 20th Century Fox Canning Robert October 6 2005 The Simpsons Lost Verizon Review IGN Archived from the original on October 9 2008 Retrieved November 3 2008 a b c Reiss Mike Klickstein Mathew 2018 Springfield confidential jokes secrets and outright lies from a lifetime writing for the Simpsons New York City Dey Street Books p 108 ISBN 978 0062748034 The Surprising Origins of TV Character Names www mentalfloss com May 30 2014 Retrieved July 21 2020 Turner 2004 p 25 a b Bart Simpson Time June 8 1998 Archived from the original on May 25 2009 Retrieved May 16 2007 a b c Brooks James L Groening Matt Jean Al Reiss Mike Silverman David 2002 Commentary for Bart Gets an F in The Simpsons The Complete Second Season DVD 20th Century Fox Turner 2004 p 61 Mirkin David 2004 Commentary for Bart Gets Famous in The Simpsons The Complete Fifth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Bart Simpson goes nude News24 South Africa April 30 2007 Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved October 30 2008 Brooks James L Groening Matt Jean Al Scully Mike Silverman David Castellaneta Dan Smith Yeardley 2007 Commentary for The Simpsons Movie DVD 20th Century Fox Simpsons Movie The rating listing FilmRatings com Archived from the original on October 12 2013 Retrieved September 19 2012 Raphael Lisa 2008 Bodies of Work 30 Unforgettable Nude Scenes Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on October 27 2008 Retrieved October 30 2008 a b Turner 2004 p 124 Cantor P December 1999 The Simpsons Atomistic Politics and the Nuclear Family Political Theory 27 6 734 749 doi 10 1177 0090591799027006002 JSTOR 192244 S2CID 143998133 a b Stern David M Silverman David October 11 1990 Bart Gets an F The Simpsons Season 02 Episode 01 Fox Doyle Larry Kirkland Mark April 19 1998 Girly Edition The Simpsons Season 09 Episode 21 Fox a b Stern David M Reardon Jim February 18 1993 Duffless The Simpsons Season 04 Episode 16 Fox Stern Joshua Ventimilia Jeffrey April 30 1995 Round Springfield The Simpsons Season 6 Episode 22 Fox Forrester Brent May 14 1995 Lemon of Troy The Simpsons Season 6 Episode 24 Fox a b Meyer George Lynch Jeffrey February 27 1992 Separate Vocations The Simpsons Season 03 Episode 18 Fox Meyer George Kirkland Mark October 3 1999 Brother s Little Helper The Simpsons Season 11 Episode 02 Fox Goldreyer Ned Dietter Susie March 8 1998 Lisa the Simpson The Simpsons Season 09 Episode 17 Fox a b Pulido Rachel Dietter Susie April 6 1997 Grade School Confidential The Simpsons Season 08 Episode 19 Fox Oakley Bill Weinstein Josh Anderson Bob April 28 1994 Sweet Seymour Skinner s Baadasssss Song The Simpsons Season 05 Episode 19 Fox a b Martin Jeff Kirkland Mark December 3 1992 Lisa s First Word The Simpsons Season 04 Episode 10 Fox Groening Matt 2002 Commentary for Simpson and Delilah in The Simpsons The Complete Second Season DVD 20th Century Fox Groening Matt 2004 Commentary for Marge on the Lam in The Simpsons The Complete Fifth Season DVD 20th Century Fox a b c Gewirtz Howard Kirkland Mark October 17 1991 Homer Defined The Simpsons Season 03 Episode 05 Fox Scully Mike Moore Steven Dean December 17 1995 Marge Be Not Proud The Simpsons Season 07 Episode 11 Fox Chun Daniel Anderson Mike B November 13 2005 Marge s Son Poisoning The Simpsons Season 17 Episode 05 Fox Moore Roger July 25 2007 Nancy Cartwright voice of Bart Simpson has personal theme Simpsons Forever Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on October 15 2008 Retrieved September 13 2008 a b Meyer George Silverman David November 22 1990 Bart vs Thanksgiving The Simpsons Season 02 Episode 07 Fox a b Swartzwelder John Silverman David February 4 1990 Bart the General The Simpsons Season 01 Episode 05 Fox a b Greaney Dan Kirkland Mark May 19 1996 Summer of 4 Ft 2 The Simpsons Season 07 Episode 25 Fox Selman Matt Clements Chris February 4 1990 The Haw Hawed Couple The Simpsons Season 18 Episode 08 Fox a b Kogen Jay Wolodarsky Wallace Bird Brad Lynch Jeffrey October 4 1991 Like Father Like Clown The Simpsons Season 3 Episode 6 Fox Swartzwelder John Silverman David May 13 1993 Krusty Gets Kancelled The Simpsons Season 04 Episode 22 Fox Stern David M Kirkland Mark September 24 1992 Kamp Krusty The Simpsons Season 04 Episode 01 Fox Turner 2004 pp 128 129 Groening Matt October 23 2003 Fresh Air Interview Interviewed by Terry Gross Philadelphia NPR Retrieved October 29 2008 Talking about The Simpsons Entertainment Weekly July 20 2007 Archived from the original on September 30 2008 Retrieved October 29 2008 Jean Al 2003 Commentary for Black Widower in The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD 20th Century Fox Keller Richard November 25 2007 The Simpsons Funeral for a Fiend TV Squad Archived from the original on October 20 2008 Retrieved October 29 2008 Turner 2004 pp 120 121 Cassidy John July 8 1990 Cartoon leads a revolt against apple pie family Simpsons The Sunday Times Simpsons set for big screen The Daily Telegraph July 15 2007 Retrieved October 27 2008 Kleinfield N R April 29 1990 Cashing in on a Hot New Brand Name The New York Times Retrieved October 27 2008 Barmash Isador October 7 1990 The T Shirt Industry Sweats It Out The New York Times Retrieved September 18 2008 a b c d Bart Simpson Defiant Saw Topped and Cheeky the Brat Terrible Gave Underachievers a Good Name People 34 26 December 31 1990 Retrieved September 18 2008 a b c Griffiths Nick April 15 2000 America s First Family The Times Magazine pp 25 27 28 Archived from the original on August 11 2014 Rohter Larry December 30 1990 Overacheiver and Learning to Deal With It Man The New York Times Retrieved September 18 2008 Burey Chris 1990 ABC News report about the Bart Simpson T shirt controversy included as an Easter Egg in The Simpsons The Complete First Season 2001 DVD 20th Century Fox Svetkey Benjamin July 27 1990 But is it Bart Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on October 3 2008 Retrieved October 28 2008 Kelly Kevin 1999 One Eyed Aliens Suicide Booths Mom s Old Fashioned Robot Oil Wired Archived from the original on October 4 2008 Retrieved October 30 2008 Metzger stops Nazi Bart T shirt sales Houston Chronicle Associated Press June 4 1991 Curtis Bryan December 13 2018 The Great NFL Heist How Fox Paid for and Changed Football Forever The Ringer Retrieved December 13 2018 Cerone Daniel May 9 1991 Simpsons steals away Cosby viewers Los Angeles Times p 4 Appelo Tim August 31 1990 Cosby s Brood vs The Radical Dood Entertainment Weekly Retrieved September 3 2008 Pierce Scott D October 18 1990 Don t have a cow man More viewers watch The Simpsons than Cosby Deseret News p C5 Potts Kimberly 2006 The Simpsons Best Episodes No 15 11 AOL Archived from the original on October 15 2008 Retrieved September 3 2008 Groening Matt Jean Reiss Moore Rich Reiss Mike Vitti Jon 2002 Commentary for Lisa s Substitute in The Simpsons The Complete Second Season DVD 20th Century Fox McDaniel Mike December 30 1990 Television in 1990 Among bright spots Civil War CBS Simpsons The Sunday Times Boone Mike December 30 1990 Bart Simpson was ray of hope in a year of generally drab television The Gazette Harris Mark December 28 1990 1 Bart Simpson Entertainment Weekly Retrieved September 15 2008 Potter Bruce December 30 1990 Write ins Galore Cast of Ballot Characters Widens Richmond Times Dispatch Stromberg Amy November 9 1990 Mickey Bart fit write in at ballot box South Florida Sun Sentinel Stromberg Amy November 23 1990 Bart Simpson Falloon floats debut at Macy s N Y Thanksgiving Parade The Press of Atlantic City Martyn Warren Wood Adrian 2000 Bart vs Thanksgiving BBC Retrieved October 30 2008 Artist Chart History The Simpsons Billboard charts Archived from the original on March 1 2009 Retrieved October 28 2008 RIAA Searchable database Gold and Platinum Recording Industry Association of America Archived from the original on November 3 2015 Retrieved November 5 2008 Michael Jackson Didn t Write Do The Bartman After All Fact July 22 2015 Retrieved July 22 2015 Cartwright pp 115 117 Brooks James L 2003 Commentary for Stark Raving Dad in The Simpsons The Complete Third Season DVD 20th Century Fox Martyn Warren Wood Adrian 2000 Stark Raving Dad BBC Retrieved October 28 2008 All the Number 1 Singles 1990s Official Charts Company Archived from the original on December 17 2008 Retrieved December 1 2008 Certified awards British Phonographic Industry Archived from the original on May 25 2008 Retrieved October 28 2008 Questions for Matt Groening The New York Times Magazine December 27 1998 Retrieved October 28 2008 Turner 2004 p 131 Rosenbaum Martin June 29 2007 Is The Simpsons still subversive BBC News Archived from the original on August 25 2007 Retrieved August 6 2007 Bianco Robert June 28 1990 Weekend TV Beer N Bart giving parents prime time hangover Pittsburgh Post Gazette a b Freedman Donna June 2 1990 Is Bart a brat Popular cartoon kid as annoying to some as he is funny to others Anchorage Daily News Dunne Mike June 1 1990 Bart Simpson Cool dude or smart aleck menace The Sacramento Bee Shales Tom October 15 1990 About Bart No need to have a Cow Man The Roanoke Times Goldberg Jonah May 1 2000 Homer Never Nods National Review Archived from the original on October 12 2008 Retrieved October 28 2008 Drug czar just kidding Edmonton Journal Associated Press May 26 1990 Berke Richard L May 23 1992 The 1992 Campaign Political Memo In Capital and on Coast Lines Drawn on Quayle The New York Times Retrieved October 28 2008 A Badder Bart The Record September 25 1991 Turner 2004 p 230 231 Ortved John August 2007 Simpson Family Values Vanity Fair Archived from the original on August 27 2008 Retrieved August 26 2008 Bart Simpson is your top role model CBBC Newsround April 24 2003 Retrieved October 28 2008 Bart Simpson Time December 31 1990 Archived from the original on June 21 2007 Retrieved May 16 2007 TV Guide s 50 Greatest TV Stars of All Time TV Guide December 14 1996 CNN TV Guide s 50 Greatest Cartoon Characters CNN July 30 2002 Archived from the original on March 20 2007 Retrieved March 14 2007 The 50 Best Cartoon Characters of All Time May 10 2010 Briefing Simpsons score big in Prime Time Emmys Daily News of Los Angeles August 3 1992 p L20 Primetime Emmy Awards Advanced Search Emmys org Archived from the original on September 14 2008 Retrieved September 13 2008 Legacy 23rd Annual Annie Award Nominees and Winners 1995 Annie Awards Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved October 16 2007 Hollywood Icons Hollywood Chamber of Commerce Retrieved September 4 2008 Bart Simpson stal talismanom futbolnogo kluba Zenit in Russian ITAR TASS September 1 2014 Retrieved September 1 2014 Bart Simpson items big sellers Ottawa Citizen July 7 1990 Search Results for Bart Fox Shop Archived from the original on November 5 2016 Retrieved April 3 2012 Groening Matt Morrison Bill 2005 The Bart Book HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 111660 5 Bedard Paul Parker Suzi Kaplan David E November 8 2004 Publishing war begins over Tenet s CIA book U S News amp World Report Vol 137 no 16 p 6 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Blair Jayson September 9 2001 Word for Word Deconstructing The Simpsons The Aristotelian Logic of Bart And Homer Or Is It Platonic The New York Times Retrieved October 29 2008 Walk Gary Eng November 5 2007 Work of Bart Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on October 17 2008 Retrieved October 29 2008 Radford Bill November 19 2000 Groening launches Futurama comics The Gazette Shutt Craig Sundays with the Simpsons MSNBC Archived from the original on July 8 2007 Retrieved October 29 2008 MacDonald Brady April 9 2008 Simpsons ride features 29 characters original voices Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on September 14 2008 Retrieved October 29 2008 Robertson Andy Lego Dimensions Wave 2 Adds Doctor Who World And Hire able Minifigures Forbes Don t lay a finger on his Butterfinger Prepared Foods Vol 167 no 6 June 1998 p 37 A Portrait of the Bartist The Simpsons Matt Groening has fulfilled his dream of invading mainstream U S pop culture Star Tribune May 13 1995 a b Nancy Cartwright on the Spot Adweek November 21 2005 Retrieved October 29 2008 D Oh Eat Homer for breakfast CNN September 10 2001 Archived from the original on April 30 2008 Retrieved September 3 2008 Fonseca Nicholas November 15 2001 Cereal Numbers Entertainment Weekly Retrieved October 28 2008 Groening Matt 2001 Commentary for There s No Disgrace Like Home in The Simpsons The Complete First Season DVD 20th Century Fox The Simpsons stamps launched in US Newslite May 8 2009 Archived from the original on August 28 2009 Retrieved May 8 2009 The Simpsons Get Stamping Ovation To Tune of 1 Billion Stamps United States Postal Service May 7 2009 Archived from the original on June 6 2011 Retrieved May 24 2009 Bibliography Cartwright Nancy 2000 My Life as a 10 Year Old Boy New York City Hyperion Books ISBN 978 0 7868 8600 5 Groening Matt 1997 Richmond Ray Coffman Antonia eds The Simpsons A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family 1st ed New York HarperPerennial ISBN 978 0 06 095252 5 LCCN 98141857 OCLC 37796735 OL 433519M Turner Chris 2004 Planet Simpson How a Cartoon Masterpiece Documented an Era and Defined a Generation Foreword by Douglas Coupland 1st ed Toronto Random House Canada ISBN 978 0 679 31318 2 OCLC 55682258 Further readingAlberti John ed 2003 Leaving Springfield The Simpsons and the Possibility of Oppositional Culture Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 2849 1 Brown Alan Logan Chris 2006 The Psychology of The Simpsons BenBella Books ISBN 978 1 932100 70 9 Conard Mark T 1999 Thus Spake Bart On Nietzsche and the Virtues of Being Bad In Irwin William Skoble Aeon eds The Simpsons and Philosophy The D oh of Homer Chicago Open Court ISBN 978 0 8126 9433 8 Groening Matt Morrison Bill 2005 The Bart Book HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 111660 5 Groening Matt 2001 Bart Simpson s Guide to Life Harper Perennia ISBN 978 5 558 68551 0 Groening Matt 1991 The Simpsons Uncensored Family Album HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 096582 2 Pinsky Mark I 2004 The Gospel According to The Simpsons The Spiritual Life of the World s Most Animated Family Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22419 6 External linksBart Simpson on IMDb Portals The Simpsons Animation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bart Simpson amp oldid 1141458316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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