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Springfield (The Simpsons)

Springfield is the primary fictional setting of the American animated sitcom The Simpsons and related media. It is an average-sized, fictional city within an unknown state in the United States. The fictional city's geography, surroundings, and layout are flexible, often changing to accommodate the plot of any given episode.[1]

Springfield
The Simpsons location
A panoramic view of Springfield, as seen in The Simpsons Movie (2007).
First appearance"Good Night" (1987)
Created byMatt Groening
GenreAnimated sitcom
In-universe information
RulerJoe Quimby (Mayor)
LocationSpringfield County, United States (fictional)
Locations742 Evergreen Terrace
Kwik-E-Mart
DemonymSpringfieldianite

According to the creator of the series, Oregon native Matt Groening, Springfield was inspired by a number of real-life locations (including Springfield, Oregon and Springfield, Massachusetts).[2][3] However, in order to emphasize it as an example of "Anytown, USA", the location of the fictional Springfield remains a mystery,[2][3] with various contradictory "clues" being found in numerous episodes of the series.[3][4]

Creation

The fictional city of Springfield was intended to represent "Anytown, USA" and not be derived from any specific real-life location.[1][5] However, the producers acknowledge deriving inspiration from numerous locations including The Simpsons creator Matt Groening's hometown of Portland, Oregon, and Mike Scully's hometown, Springfield, Massachusetts.[6][2]

Springfield was named after Springfield, Oregon, which, as a child, Groening had believed to be the fictitious Springfield featured in the 1950s sitcom Father Knows Best. Groening did not intend to place the fictional Springfield in Oregon, contrary to a 2012 interview with him in Smithsonian magazine; he instead adopted the name for the setting of The Simpsons in the hope that "everyone will think it's their Springfield".[7] Al Jean explained that the magazine "misinterpreted something I've heard him say for at least 10 or 20 years. He was inspired by growing up in Portland, but it's really an every town".[5]

Groening liked Second City Television's setting of Melonville, a town with a large cast of recurring characters, and used it as inspiration for The Simpsons.[8] He said, "I also figured out that Springfield was one of the most common names for a city in the U.S. In anticipation of the success of the show, I thought, 'This will be cool; everyone will think it's their Springfield.' And they do".[3][9]

Location

"The true location of Springfield is in any state but yours"

Chalkboard gag, "Beware My Cheating Bart"[5]

Because of the many contradictory statements regarding Springfield in the show, it is impossible for the town to exist in a specific state. In The Simpsons Movie, Ned Flanders tells Bart that the state where Springfield is located is bordered by the states of Ohio, Nevada, Maine, and Kentucky – only Ohio and Kentucky are neighboring states in reality, and Nevada and Maine are at opposite sides of the US.[5][4]

The fictional city's unknown geography is a recurring joke in the series; the Dayton Daily News called it the "riddle wrapped in an enigma that is Springfield's location".[10] Episodes frequently make fun of the fact that Springfield's state is unidentifiable, by adding further conflicting descriptions, obscuring onscreen map representations, and interrupting conversational references.[notes 1]

David Silverman, who directed the movie and various episodes of the series, joked that Springfield is located in the fictional state of "North Takoma".[11][12] This is substantiated by the state abbreviations NT and TA used within the show.[12][13] The telephone area codes for Springfield are 636 (St. Charles County and Western St. Louis County, Missouri)[14] and 939 (Puerto Rico).

To promote The Simpsons Movie, various actual towns and cities across the U.S. called Springfield competed to hold the premiere.[15] The promotion was, whichever state sent in the most votes would be the winner and would officially be which state The Simpsons takes place in. Despite the smaller size of Vermont compared to other states, the town of Springfield, Vermont, was chosen.[16][17] In 2016, a New York Times study of the 50 TV shows with the most Facebook Likes found that "of all the Springfields in America, [The Simpsons] is most popular in Springfields in Virginia, Minnesota and New Jersey, and least popular in Springfields in Louisiana, Arkansas and Georgia".[18]

Fictional history

The episode "Lisa the Iconoclast" revealed that Springfield was founded by a group led by Jebediah Springfield (a cover identity for notorious pirate Hans Sprungfeld) who, after misinterpreting a passage in the Bible, left Maryland trying to find "New Sodom."[19] After he refuses to found a town where men are free to marry their cousins, half of the group leave. The dissenters found the nearby town of Shelbyville, named after fellow pioneer Shelbyville Manhattan, and the two cities have remained rivals ever since.[20]

Springfield reaches its pinnacle in the mid-20th century, when it became the home of the world's first Aquacar factory; one half of the U.S. was said to wear Springfield galoshes and the city's streets were literally paved with gold.[21] However, the town's prosperity was short-lived, and, in a 1992 episode, a fictional Time cover story on Springfield is titled "America's Worst City",[22] and in a 1996 episode, Newsweek called the town "America's Crud Bucket".[23]

Topography

Springfield's fictional geography is shown to be comically varied, and includes forests, meadows, mountain ranges, a desert, a glacier, beaches, badlands, canyons, swamps, a harbor, waterholes, and waterways. Major named geographical features include the Springfield Gorge, Springfield National Forest, the volcanic Mt. Springfield, the West Springfield Desert ("three times the size of Texas!"),[24] the Springfield Badlands (also known as the Alkali Flats),[25] the gigantic Murderhorn Mountain, Springfield Glacier, Mt. Useful National Park, Springfield Mesa, Springfield Monument Park, and Springfield National Park.

The town's climate is usually depicted as dry and sunny, with a bright blue sky. However, in various episodes, it has been subject to many natural disasters, including heatwaves, blizzards, avalanches, earthquakes, acid rain, floods, hurricanes, lightning strikes, tornadoes, and volcanic eruptions.

Springfield's environment is shown as unusually polluted. Overflowing garbage forces the whole town – both population and structures — to move five miles (8 km) away from the massive dump that the old town of Springfield had become.[26] Springfield is also home to the state's largest self-sustaining tire fire, which has been burning continuously for many decades.[27] Lake Springfield's pollution almost leads to the town's destruction by an Environmental Protection Agency bomb in The Simpsons Movie,[28] and pollution from the nuclear power plant has mutated the fish in the river, and the Nuclear Power Plant's mascot is Blinky, an orange-colored fish with three eyes.[29] Its atmosphere is so polluted that, in one 1995 episode, it reduces a comet to a tiny rock.[30]

Springfield is shown to feature a large numbered grid plan, ranging from streets at least as low as 3rd Street and at least as high as 257th Street.[31]

Politics, religion, and media

The fictional mayor of Springfield is Joe Quimby. In the episode "Sideshow Bob Roberts", Sideshow Bob runs for Mayor of Springfield and defeats Mayor Quimby, but Bob is later discovered to have committed electoral fraud.

Previous representatives include Horace Wilcox, who dies of a heart attack while in office in "Mr. Spritz Goes to Washington", and Bob Arnold, who is forced to resign after Lisa exposes his corruption in "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington".

Mary Bailey is the fictional governor of Springfield's state.[29]

Sports

The town is home to a number of fictional sporting teams, including the Springfield Isotopes, a minor league baseball team which plays its home games at Duff Stadium;[32] the Springfield Atoms football team at Springfield Stadium;[33] the NBA's Springfield Excitement (formerly the Austin Celtics);[34] and the Springfield Ice-O-Topes hockey team.

Businesses

Springfield Nuclear Power Plant

The Springfield Nuclear Power Plant is a fictional representation of a two-unit pressurized water reactor nuclear power plant in Springfield owned by Charles Montgomery Burns. Among the plant's employees are Homer Simpson, Lenny Leonard, and Carl Carlson, and Burns' assistant Waylon Smithers. The plant is shown to be the key supplier of the city of Springfield's energy, and the carelessness of Mr. Burns and the plant's employees often endangers the residents and natural environment of Springfield. Mutated fish with more than two eyes are often shown in the lake behind the power plant, which has a large pipe pumping nuclear waste into it. There is a crow or raven shown living near the Power Plant, which caws whenever an establishing shot of the Power Plant is on screen. A running gag in earlier seasons was the poor security of the plant, with the outside security booth often going unmanned.

The design of Springfield Nuclear Power Plant is often rumored to be based on the troubled Trojan Nuclear Power Plant (closed in 1993 due to defects) near Matt Groening's home town of Portland, Oregon, or the Hanford Site in southeastern Washington. However, Antonia Coffman, Groening's publicist, has said that the Springfield plant's design is generic and that "the Springfield Nuclear Power plant was not based on the Trojan Plant or any other power plant in the country."[35][36]

Kwik-E-Mart

 
A Seattle 7-Eleven store transformed into a Kwik-E-Mart.

Kwik-E-Mart is a fictional convenience store run by Apu Nahasapeemapetilon. The Kwik-E-Mart first appeared in the first-season episode "The Telltale Head" (although mentioned in "Bart the General" as the "Quick-e-Mart"). In "Stark Raving Dad", a street sign reading "Highland" is seen outside one of the front windows, in the same blue color as is used for signs for Highland Avenue in Los Angeles. Likewise, three buildings are visible that are similar to some of those that might be seen on that street: two low buildings with bars over the windows, and a third, also with barred windows, which has a mission-style roof and a sign reading "Smog Center."[37]

The episode "Homer and Apu" suggests that Apu is an employee of the Kwik-E-Mart and after losing his job there had to travel to India, where the Kwik-E-Mart head office is located, in the Himalayas. However, Apu mentions at a bachelor auction that he runs his own business in "The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons".

In addition to the sale of items offered at a typical convenience store, gasoline pumps have been shown in front of the store on two occasions. The Springfield Shopper also sells there, and it is where Principal Seymour Skinner purchases his tabloids. In the episode "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song", Apu installs 16 new gas pumps to compete with a rival convenience store, the Gas 'N Gulp. However, they, along with the Kwik-E-Mart, are destroyed when Bart accidentally interrupts a live mortar exercise at Fort Springfield, forcing the soldiers to redirect the mortar fire into the town. The episode "Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield" also shows the pumps.

In July 2007, convenience store chain 7-Eleven converted 11 of its stores in the United States and one in Canada into Kwik-E-Marts to promote the release of The Simpsons Movie.[38] The locations of the renovated Kwik-E-Marts were: Bladensburg, Maryland/Washington, D.C.; Burbank, California; Chicago; Dallas; Denver; Henderson/Las Vegas; Los Angeles; Mountain View/San Francisco; New York City; Orlando/Lake Buena Vista, Florida; Seattle;[39] and Vancouver/Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada.[40] These 12 locations, as well as the majority of other North American 7-Elevens, sold products found in The Simpsons, such as "Buzz Cola", "Krusty-O's", "Squishees", pink frosted "Sprinklicious doughnuts", and other Simpsons-themed merchandise. The Squishes were Slurpees that are sold in special collector cups and the Krusty-O's were made by Malt-O-Meal.[39] The promotion resulted in a 30% increase in profits for the changed 7-Eleven stores. This can be seen during the opening of The Simpsons Movie.[41]

The Android's Dungeon & Baseball Card Shop

 
The Android's Dungeon & Baseball Card Shop, as seen in the Springfield section of Universal Studios Hollywood

The Android's Dungeon is a fictional comic book store owned by Comic Book Guy. The comic book store and its owner first appeared in the episode "Three Men and a Comic Book", when Bart sees a copy of the first issue of the Radioactive Man comic on sale for $100.

In the episode "Worst Episode Ever", Bart and Milhouse are given the job of running the comic book store after Comic Book Guy suffers from a stress-induced heart attack and is instructed to try and gain a social life. During their brief tenure at the store, Bart and Milhouse discover a secret room filled with bootleg videotapes of various extremely rare or illegal subjects. These tapes are later confiscated during a police raid on the store.

Barney's Bowl-A-Rama

Barney's Bowl-A-Rama is a fictional bowling alley in Springfield. It is owned by Barney Gumble's Uncle Al. In the episode "And Maggie Makes Three", Homer tells the family the story of Maggie's birth. In this story, Homer explains how he quit his job at Springfield Nuclear Power Plant to work at the Bowl-A-Rama, which was Homer's dream job.

The Leftorium

The Leftorium is a fictional store in the Springfield Mall specializing in products for left-handed people. The store is owned by Ned Flanders, who first started the Leftorium in the episode "When Flanders Failed".[42] At first, business at the store went very poorly. Irritated with Flanders, Homer wishes that the store would go out of business after receiving the larger half of a wishbone. Homer gets his wish, and the Flanders family are forced to sell many of their possessions, much of which Homer purchases at a meager price of $75. The bank repossesses the Flanders' home and the Leftorium is to be the next asset repossessed. Homer then regrets making this wish and the fact that he never told any of his friends who needed left-handed items about the Leftorium. As a result, he manages to get everyone he knows in town to shop at Ned's store, saving it from closure.

The Leftorium continues to thrive over the following years. However, Flanders mentions in several episodes that the store does not do that well, such as in the season 10 episode "Thirty Minutes over Tokyo", where Ned mentions that the business now has a competitor "Leftopolis" next door to it. In the episode "Home Away from Homer", Ned mentions that a recently opened, left-hand megastore, called "Left-Mart" (a parody of Wal-Mart) is threatening his business. The season 25 episode "White Christmas Blues" reveals that competition from the Southpaw Superstore forced Flanders to downsize the business to a mall cart, the "Leftorium Express", which he splits with a cosmetic saleswoman. In the season 29 episode "Left Behind", the Leftorium closes for good, leaving Flanders unemployed until he finds a new job as Bart Simpson's new teacher.[43][44]

The writers had wanted to have Flanders own a failing business and the idea for the store was suggested by George Meyer.[45] He got the idea from a friend whose family had owned a left-handed specialty store which had failed.[46]

Springfield Mall

The Springfield Mall is a fictional shopping mall that features comical fictional stores and pastiches, such as the Happy Market, Cost-Mo, Girdles N' Such, Eye Caramba, The Ear Piercery, Happy Sailor Tattoo Parlor, Love Your Computer, Gum4Less, Popular Books, the Leftorium, Nick's Bowling Shop, Stoner's Pot Palace, Bookacchino's, Moe's Express (a mini version of Moe's Tavern), a Mapple Store (a parody of the Apple Store), numerous knockoff Starbucks coffee shops, and several Krusty Burgers.

Bars and restaurants

Moe's Tavern

 
Moe's Bar in Concepción, Chile, closely based on images from The Simpsons.

Moe's Tavern is a fictional local bar in Springfield frequented by Homer Simpson, Carl Carlson, Lenny Leonard, Barney Gumble and barflies Sam and Larry, but is seemingly unpopular with the rest of the city's residents. The tavern is named after and run by Moe Szyslak. Moe's Tavern first appeared in the episode "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire". In the first season of The Simpsons, the entrance appears to be a saloon door.

The bar sells mostly Duff Beer, although other beverages are served. A recurring gag is the dirty and dilapidated state of the bar. In "Mommie Beerest", it is revealed that Moe was long able to avoid several enormous health code violations as he is friends with the health inspector. Another episode reveals that the bar's liquor license has expired, is only valid in Rhode Island, and is signed by Moe himself.

Moe's Tavern undergoes several makeovers in various episodes of The Simpsons, but always reverts to its original dark, squalid state. In the episode "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" Moe's Tavern is named Moe's Cavern as a reference to the world-famous Cavern Club in Liverpool, where The Beatles played. Other notable makeovers are in the episode "Bart Sells His Soul", where Moe turns his tavern into a family restaurant called Uncle Moe's Family Feed Bag, and in "Homer the Moe" where Moe turns his tavern into a yuppie bar called "m". In the episode "Mommie Beerest", it is turned into an English pub named Nag and Weasel. In "Flaming Moe", Moe enlists the help of Waylon Smithers to transform the bar into a gay bar called Mo's, although he changes it back again at the end of the episode.

Moe and his tavern are the victim of Bart's ongoing prank calls in earlier seasons, when Bart would call looking for nonexistent people with names that would get Moe laughed at by his customers.

Universal Studios Florida includes a Moe's Tavern in the Springfield section of the park.

Krusty Burger

Krusty Burger is a fictional fast food restaurant chain owned by Krusty the Clown as one of his many branded products and services which appears in many episodes of the series. Krusty Burger is seen as a parody of a typical fast-food chain, like McDonald's, Burger King and Wendy's. Krusty Burger is located across the entire United States; in the episode "Boy-Scoutz 'n the Hood", Homer uses a map of the entire United States with locations of Krusty Burger restaurants. In the episode "The Mook, the Chef, the Wife and Her Homer", Krusty Burger is one of the few burger places open in Springfield, because Krusty has been paying mobster Fat Tony to keep McDonald's and Burger King from establishing local franchises.

A common gag, especially in the later seasons of the show, is the extremely low quality of the food served at the restaurants, a parody of common beliefs and urban legends surrounding American fast food. Documentary filmmaker Declan Desmond has made several exposes on the chain, revealing practices such as stapling together half-eaten burgers and serving them to new customers, and substituting all manner of cheap filler as meat. Krusty also reveals that the Ribwich was made of an unspecified animal with more than four legs, presumably some sort of insect or spider, that was driven into extinction by its production.

Universal Studios Florida includes a Krusty Burger in the Springfield section of the park.

Lard Lad Donuts

Lard Lad Donuts is a fictional donut store in Springfield. Its mascot is an (estimated) 8-meter-tall (26 ft) statue of a rather chubby boy proudly holding a donut over his head. The name and the statue of the eponymous boy are likely references to Big Boy Restaurants. In "Treehouse of Horror VI", the Lard Lad statue is brought to life by a mysterious atmospheric disturbance, enraged by Homer Simpson having stolen his giant donut. Universal Studios Florida includes a Lard Lad Donuts in the Springfield section of the park.

Luigi's

Luigi's is a fictional Springfield Italian restaurant owned by Luigi Risotto, who is a parody of the "Italian pasta/pizza chef" stereotype, but seems to be aware of his status as a stock character. Luigi is polite to his customers and treats them with respect when they order, and then loudly insults and belittles them to his cook Salvatore, fully aware that they can hear him from the kitchen. The restaurant also employs an old Italian saucier, who in "Take My Life, Please", claims they can tell what someone's life could have been like by stirring tomato sauce in a certain way. By using his magical tomato sauce, the saucier helps Homer see what his life would have been like if he had won his high school election. Fat Tony and his mob frequently use the restaurant for their meetings.

Luigi takes customer service very seriously.

Universal Studios Florida includes a Luigi's in the Springfield section of the park.

The Frying Dutchman

The Frying Dutchman is a fictional maritime-themed restaurant operated by Sea Captain Horatio McCallister. Its cuisine specializes in seafood (to which Marge is allergic), and even the bread has fish in it. Homer sued them for their refusal to honor the 'all you can eat' promise in the episode "New Kid on the Block", and was given a job as a freak attraction "more stomach than man" (to Marge's great embarrassment).

Universal Studios Florida includes a Frying Dutchman in the Springfield section of the park.

The Singing Sirloin

The Singing Sirloin is a fictional restaurant where waiters sing everything they say. It is first featured in the Season 1 episode "Life on the Fast Lane"; Marge celebrates her birthday there. Bart also celebrated here after getting an A, however after Homer was unable to pay them for the food, they had to sing on stage to pay for the bill (in the episode "Homer vs. Dignity").

The Happy Sumo

The Happy Sumo is a fictional representation of a Japanese restaurant. Among the restaurant's menu offerings are all kinds of sushi, including fugu, which can be fatally poisonous if not properly prepared. The Master Sushi Chef is the only person at the restaurant qualified to prepare fugu. The restaurant also offers karaoke. Akira works as a waiter and translates on occasion for the Simpson family.

The Gilded Truffle

The Gilded Truffle is a fictional representation of an upscale restaurant. It features a place where adult couples without children can go, while Homer and Marge look on wistfully from another restaurant. It also features the scene of Bart's prank towards Edna, when he pretends to be a man interested in meeting her in person from a personal advertisement and then watches her be stiffed by the fictional date. The Simpsons are able to eat at the restaurant from Lisa and Homer's gambling proceeds following their bonding time of Homer betting on Lisa's football picks.

Schools

Springfield Elementary School

Springfield Elementary School is a fictional local school attended by Bart Simpson, Lisa Simpson, and most other Springfield children. It teaches children from kindergarten through to sixth grade. Springfield Elementary is depicted as a grossly underfunded school that suffers from the incompetence and apathy of its administration, teachers, staff, and students. It is portrayed within the show as a satire of publicly funded schools and education in the United States, an illustrative example and parody of the lengths undertaken by some schools to overcome underfunding.

Edna Krabappel was Bart Simpson's 4th-grade teacher, and from season 23 onwards also neighbor due to marrying Ned Flanders until Krabappel's death in season 25. In "Left Behind", the Leftorium closes, leaving Flanders unemployed, and he returns to Springfield Elementary School, where he finds a new job as Bart Simpson's new teacher, substituting the void left following by his deceased second wife Edna Krabappel.[43][44]

In 1994, the naming of a new, real-life elementary school in Greenwood, South Carolina, was left up to the students, and the name Springfield Elementary was chosen. The school board was unaware of the connection to The Simpsons until a protest by one group of parents, who argued that the character of Bart Simpson was a poor role model. The name stood, and the school opened in August 1994.[47][48]

Colleges/universities

The fictional Springfield University is a large college which Homer attended in "Homer Goes to College". It teaches several different courses, including nuclear physics, arts management, and the meaning of cartoons. Springfield University also has a fierce rivalry with Springfield A&M University. In the episode "Faith Off", the nickname of the Springfield University football team is revealed to be the Nittany Tide—a reference to the Penn State Nittany Lions and Alabama Crimson Tide.

Springfield Agricultural and Mechanical (A&M) University is a rival institution of Springfield University. Carl Carlson is an A&M alumnus. Springfield A&M's mascot is a pig named Sir Oinks-A-Lot, who was kidnapped by Homer and his three student tutors as a prank in "Homer Goes to College".

Springfield Heights Institute of Technology focuses on the engineering sciences. Professor Frink is a college professor at the university, and it is from where Apu Nahasapeemapetilon earned his doctorate.

Residential

Spinster City Apartments

Spinster City Apartments, also announced as Spinster Arms Apartments, is a fictional apartment building. Patty and Selma Bouvier, along with Selma's daughter Ling and their pet iguana Jub-Jub, live at number 1599.

Springfield Retirement Castle

The fictional Springfield Retirement Castle is Springfield's retirement home for the elderly. Some noted residents of the Castle include Abraham "Grampa" J. Simpson and his neighbors, Jasper Beardley, and the Crazy Old Man.

For Grampa Simpson, the Retirement Castle is a lonely place to be. He often gets mad when his family does not come and visit him. The door features a sign reading 'Thank you for not discussing the outside world'. The most interesting way to pass time at the home is to "stake yourself out a good spot at the starin' window",[49] which overlooks nothing but a barren tree, and bingo (the prize being a banana). The staff of the home has little to no respect for the residents, doing things like vacuuming their hair during "nap time", or switching their IV bags with their catheter bags when the former is empty, and the latter is full. In the episode "Old Money", Grampa inherits $106,000 from his girlfriend Beatrice "Bea" Simmons. He uses both this money and his winnings from a gambling junket to refurbish and redecorate the home and has the dining hall renamed in Bea's honor.

Government

Springfield City Hall

The fictional City Hall of Springfield serves as the workplace of Mayor Quimby and the City Government. Often it is the site of town meetings regarding an issue facing the city, where the citizens vote to approve a proposal that generally causes havoc (most of the time proposed by Homer) and causes more problems. The building is based on the Chelmsford, Massachusetts public library due to longtime The Simpsons background designer Lance Wilder, being a former Chelmsford resident.[50]

Landmarks

Five Corners

Five Corners is a fictional location, imagined as "the only geographic location in the US where five states meet". A boundary marker indicates the exact spot. While on their road trip to Itchy & Scratchy Land, the Simpsons visit Five Corners, where they each "stand in five different states while holding hands". The location is visited again in "The Bob Next Door", where Sideshow Bob plots to kill Bart at the marker where the location's unique property would result in a lack of extraterritorial jurisdiction, explaining it as: "I can stand in one state, fire a gun in a second state, the bullet will travel through the third, hitting you in the fourth, so you fall dead in the fifth. No single act is against any law, but their sum total is the greatest murder..."[51] In reality, no such place exists in the US; the location is a spoof of Four Corners.

Other towns

Shelbyville

The fictional city of Shelbyville is Springfield's neighbor and rival. It was founded in 1796 by Shelbyville Manhattan, who advocated cousin marriage among his followers, causing a split between himself and Jebediah Springfield. An intense rivalry between the two cities continues today, especially in the sixth-season episode "Lemon of Troy", in which Shelbyville residents steal a prized lemon tree from Springfield. In several episodes, "Lemon of Troy" in particular, it is suggested that Shelbyville is to an extent a parallel version of Springfield. Shelbyville is also the city where Luann van Houten grew up. It also has at least one McDonald's restaurant, a Speed-E-Mart, Joe's Tavern, and a school. Per "Last Exit to Springfield", Shelbyville was at least briefly called "Morganville" during Abe Simpson's youth. According to The Simpsons Movie, Shelbyville is west of Springfield. It is the home of the button fly.

Shelbyville was ranked 10th in "The 10 Best Dystopias" in the December 2005 issue of Wired.[52]

Capital City

Capital City (often spelled Capitol City in early episodes) is the fictional capital and largest city in the state in which the show is set. It is represented as a major urban center, hosting major sports events, conventions, and United Nations conferences. Its nickname is The Windy Apple (a joke by the show's writers, combining the nicknames of New York City's "The Big Apple" and Chicago's "The Windy City"). Landmarks include a Duff brewery, possibly mimicking the Anheuser-Busch brewery in St. Louis, the Cross-town suspension bridge resembling San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, the Capital City Stadium, the Capital City Amphitheatre (featuring Krusty the clown), and the intersection of 4th Street and Avenue D. The Simpsons Movie places Capital City just to the north of Springfield.

Brockway

The fictional town of Brockway is mentioned by Lyle Lanley (voiced by Phil Hartman) as the municipality to which he has sold monorail systems ("Marge vs. the Monorail").

Brockway, Ogdenville, and North Haverbrook are also mentioned in Episode 18 of the TV series Supernatural by Sam Winchester, as locations of past Shtriga activity.

Ogdenville

The fictional city of Ogdenville was first mentioned in "Marge vs. the Monorail", when Lyle Lanley claimed to have sold a monorail to Ogdenville. Ogdenville has also been mentioned in other episodes such as "Saddlesore Galactica", "Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield" and "To Surveil with Love". In "Eeny Teeny Maya Moe", Maya is from Ogdenville. Ogdenville has an outlet mall and is separated from Springfield by a rocky desert. In "Coming to Homerica", Ogdenville is a town of barley producing farms that are shut down due to tainted barley being used in a new, vegetarian Krusty Burger. Ogdenvillians are composed of Norwegian immigrants with thick Norwegian accents. They also are big fans of the Minnesota Vikings due to the heavy incidence of Norwegian immigrants in the state of Minnesota. As a small easter egg, during a flu outbreak in Springfield, the hospital only received schemas in Norwegian, which was later confirmed via close-up. Series creator Matt Groening's background is Norwegian and German, which he has described as "two of the unfunniest ethnic groups in the history of the world".

North Haverbrook

The imagined North Haverbrook was first mentioned by Lyle Lanley in "Marge vs. the Monorail". Marge arrives in North Haverbrook and finds a desolate ghost town, where the faulty monorail derailed, causing a disaster, chasing away most of their residents and scaring away investors. The remaining North Haverbrook locals have since denied the monorail's existence, presumably blaming Lanley for the whole thing that ruined their town's reputation. Marge is met with hostility by the locals, including a woman who works at the 'Monorail Cafe'. She orders Marge to leave her town at once and never speak of the monorail anymore. A resident scientist from Germany, Sebastian Cobb, was the only one willing to help Marge out and save the passengers on the Springfield Monorail from suffering the same fate as North Haverbrook. Lanley is later attacked by the citizens of the town after his plane makes an unscheduled stop there.

North Haverbrook also appeared in "Little Big Girl". After Bart is awarded a driver's license, he gets sick of countless errands and goes for a drive and eventually finds North Haverbrook, and falls in love with a girl named Darcy. In this episode, the town appears to have recovered well from the monorail disaster, as it is now changed from a ghost town to a thriving community with multiple businesses that Bart enjoys. It has a romantic reputation. All signs of the monorail have also disappeared.

It also appears on a road sign as Snake drives towards Mexico with the Kwik-E-Mart on a flatbed trailer during "Marge in Chains".

Cypress Creek

In the world of the Simpsons, Cypress Creek is a model town created for the workers of the Globex Corporation. It appears in the episode "You Only Move Twice". It is an affluent town and is home to many wildflowers (to which Lisa is allergic). The city is an obvious parody of Silicon Valley or the master-planned communities often built by major corporations.

Guidopolis

In the episode "Midnight Towboy", Homer initially goes for a bottle of milk in a little town near Springfield named Guidopolis, where he then subsequently becomes a tow truck driver and is introduced to the vehicle recovery sector. The town is primarily inhabited by Italian-American greasers.

Little Pwagmattasquarmsettport

Little Pwagmattasquarmsettport is a fictional seaside town close to Springfield's State, where the Simpsons went for the Fourth of July in the Flanders's holiday home; the town appears in the episode "Summer of 4 Ft. 2". Nicknamed "Little Pwag", the town contains many beaches and a large boardwalk section, and a fun fair open every summer.

References

Informational notes

  1. ^ One of the conflicting identifications takes place in Lisa the Iconoclast (season 7, episode 16) in which the grave of Democratic Presidential candidate and later UN ambassador under President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Adlai Stevenson II, is shown to be located in Springfield's cemetery. The actual grave is in Evergreen Cemetery in Bloomington, Illinois. Like his father, Vice President Adlai Stevenson I, and his son, Senator Adlai Stevenson III, Stevenson was strongly connected to Illinois, having been Governor of the state from 1949 to 1953. The Stevenson grave is thus a "clue" pointing to Springfield being in Illinois.

Citations

  1. ^ a b Turner 2004, p. 30.
  2. ^ a b c Kalkstein, Meghan (2007-07-27). . KVAL-TV. CBS. Archived from the original on 2007-10-05. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  3. ^ a b c d De La Roca, Claudia (May 2012). "Matt Groening Reveals the Location of the Real Springfield". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  4. ^ a b Richmond, Ray (2007-05-11). . The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 2007-05-16. Retrieved 2007-06-13.
  5. ^ a b c d Potts, Kimberly (2012-04-16). "'The Simpsons' Reveals Where Springfield Isn't". The Wrap. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
  6. ^ Hamilton, Don (July 19, 2002). . Portland Tribune. Archived from the original on October 16, 2015. Retrieved April 24, 2013.
  7. ^ De La Roca, Claudia (May 2012). "Matt Groening Reveals the Location of the Real Springfield". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 23 September 2020. Moe's Tavern is actually based on 'Max's Tavern' in the neighboring town, Eugene. It is iconic for its pickled eggs on its counters and the television in the top right corner of the room.
  8. ^ Groening, Matt (2006). The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode "Homer vs. The Eighteenth Amendment" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  9. ^ Simpsons launch hits Springfield BBC News. Retrieved July 21, 2007.
  10. ^ Stewart, D.L. (2007-06-12). "Maybe this Springfield is just a state of mind". Dayton Daily News. Retrieved 2008-04-28.
  11. ^ Laura Lee Davies (1996-09-25). "Bill Oakley & David Silverman". Time Out. Retrieved 2008-04-28.
  12. ^ a b Silverman, David (2003). The Simpsons The Complete Third Season DVD commentary for the episode "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  13. ^ Meyer, George; Archer, Wes (1991-09-26). "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington". The Simpsons. Season 03. Episode 02. Fox.
  14. ^ Simpsons Episode: Papa's Got a Brand New Badge (2002), First aired May 22, 2002
  15. ^ . Lansing State Journal. Associated Press. 2007-06-08. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-06-13.
  16. ^ Cindy, Clark (2007-07-10). "'The Simpsons Movie' Hometown Premiere Contest". USA Today. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
  17. ^ McGourty, Carry; Jared Weiner (2007-07-10). "Peace, Granola and Now 'The Simpsons'". ABC News. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
  18. ^ Katz, Josh (2016-12-27). "'Duck Dynasty' vs. 'Modern Family': 50 Maps of the U.S. Cultural Divide". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Collier, Jonathan; Anderson, Mike B. (1996-02-18). "Lisa the Iconoclast". The Simpsons. Season 7. Episode 16. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  20. ^ Forrester, Brent; Reardon, Jim (1995-05-14). "Lemon of Troy". The Simpsons. Season 6. Episode 12. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  21. ^ Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein; Wes Archer (1993-12-16). "$pringfield". The Simpsons. Season 5. Episode 10. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  22. ^ Archer, Wes; O'Brien, Conan (1992-11-12). "New Kid on the Block". The Simpsons. Season 4. Episode 8. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  23. ^ Greaney, Dan; Kirkland, Mark (1996-05-19). "Summer of 4 Ft. 2". The Simpsons. Season 7. Episode 25. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  24. ^ "Half-Decent Proposal". The Simpsons. Season 13. Episode 279. February 10, 2002. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  25. ^ Feresten, Spike; Polcino, Dominic (1995-11-26). "Sideshow Bob's Last Gleaming". The Simpsons. Season 7. Episode 9. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  26. ^ Maxtone-Graham, Ian; Reardon, Jim (1998-05-26). "Trash of the Titans". The Simpsons. Season 9. Episode 22. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  27. ^ Anderson, Mike. B; Cohen, Joel H. (2006-01-08). "Homer's Paternity Coot". The Simpsons. Season 17. Episode 10. Fox Broadcasting Company.
  28. ^ The Simpsons Movie
  29. ^ a b "Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish"
  30. ^ Bart's Comet
  31. ^ Bart Sells His Soul
  32. ^ "Hungry, Hungry Homer"
  33. ^ "Love Is a Many Strangled Thing"
  34. ^ "The Burns and the Bees"
  35. ^ LaBoe, Barbara (2006-05-14). "'Simpsons' keeps Trojan tower legacy alive ... or does it?". The Daily News. p. A1. Retrieved 2006-05-28.
  36. ^ "Tower of Oregon's only nuclear plant goes down".[dead link]
  37. ^ Jean, Al; Reiss, Mike (1991-09-19). "Stark Raving Dad". The Simpsons. Season 03. Episode 02. Fox.
  38. ^ Josh Grossberg (2007-07-02). "Cowabunga! 7-Elevens Get Kwik-E Makeover". E! News. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
  39. ^ a b . Fox News. 2007-07-01. Archived from the original on 2007-07-04. Retrieved 2007-07-03.
  40. ^ "Oh Canada, D'oh Homer". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2007-10-30. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
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  42. ^ Jean, Al (2003). The Simpsons season 3 DVD commentary for the episode "When Flanders Failed" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  43. ^ a b Perkins, Dennis (7 May 2018). "Flanders loses his faith and an inconsequential Simpsons tests ours".
  44. ^ a b "The Simpsons Season 29 Episode 19 Review: Left Behind". 7 May 2018.
  45. ^ Reiss, Mike (2003). The Simpsons season 3 DVD commentary for the episode "When Flanders Failed" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  46. ^ Vitti, Jon (2003). The Simpsons season 3 DVD commentary for the episode "When Flanders Failed" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  47. ^ Lawson, Carol (1994-03-17). "Chronicle". The New York Times.
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  49. ^ Writer: John Swartzwelder; Director: Mark Kirkland (April 20, 1997). "The Old Man and the Lisa". The Simpsons. Season 8. Episode 174. Fox Broadcasting Company. "[Best bet is to] stake yourself out a good spot at the starin' window."
  50. ^ Barrett, Heather (2007-07-03). . Chelmsford Independent. Archived from the original on 2013-10-12. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  51. ^ Writer: John Frink; Director: Nancy Kruse (May 16, 2010). "The Bob Next Door". The Simpsons. Season 21. Episode 463. Fox Broadcasting Company. I can stand in one state, fire a gun in a second state, the bullet will travel through the third, hitting you in the fourth, so you fall dead in the fifth. No single act is against any law, but their sum total is the greatest murder...
  52. ^ Smith, Jeremy Adam (December 2005). "The 10 Best Dystopias". Wired. Retrieved 2007-12-12.

Bibliography

External links

  • Where Is The Simpsons' Springfield? from the fan-maintained "The Simpsons Archive"

springfield, simpsons, springfield, redirects, here, other, uses, springfield, this, article, describes, work, element, fiction, primarily, universe, style, please, help, rewrite, explain, fiction, more, clearly, provide, fictional, perspective, february, 2020. Springfield USA redirects here For other uses see Springfield This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in universe style Please help rewrite it to explain the fiction more clearly and provide non fictional perspective February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Springfield is the primary fictional setting of the American animated sitcom The Simpsons and related media It is an average sized fictional city within an unknown state in the United States The fictional city s geography surroundings and layout are flexible often changing to accommodate the plot of any given episode 1 SpringfieldThe Simpsons locationA panoramic view of Springfield as seen in The Simpsons Movie 2007 First appearance Good Night 1987 Created byMatt GroeningGenreAnimated sitcomIn universe informationRulerJoe Quimby Mayor LocationSpringfield County United States fictional Locations742 Evergreen TerraceKwik E MartDemonymSpringfieldianiteAccording to the creator of the series Oregon native Matt Groening Springfield was inspired by a number of real life locations including Springfield Oregon and Springfield Massachusetts 2 3 However in order to emphasize it as an example of Anytown USA the location of the fictional Springfield remains a mystery 2 3 with various contradictory clues being found in numerous episodes of the series 3 4 Contents 1 Creation 1 1 Location 1 2 Fictional history 1 3 Topography 1 4 Politics religion and media 1 5 Sports 2 Businesses 2 1 Springfield Nuclear Power Plant 2 2 Kwik E Mart 2 3 The Android s Dungeon amp Baseball Card Shop 2 4 Barney s Bowl A Rama 2 5 The Leftorium 2 6 Springfield Mall 3 Bars and restaurants 3 1 Moe s Tavern 3 2 Krusty Burger 3 3 Lard Lad Donuts 3 4 Luigi s 3 5 The Frying Dutchman 3 6 The Singing Sirloin 3 7 The Happy Sumo 3 8 The Gilded Truffle 4 Schools 4 1 Springfield Elementary School 4 2 Colleges universities 5 Residential 5 1 Spinster City Apartments 5 2 Springfield Retirement Castle 6 Government 6 1 Springfield City Hall 7 Landmarks 7 1 Five Corners 8 Other towns 8 1 Shelbyville 8 2 Capital City 8 3 Brockway 8 4 Ogdenville 8 5 North Haverbrook 8 6 Cypress Creek 8 7 Guidopolis 8 8 Little Pwagmattasquarmsettport 9 References 10 External linksCreation EditThe fictional city of Springfield was intended to represent Anytown USA and not be derived from any specific real life location 1 5 However the producers acknowledge deriving inspiration from numerous locations including The Simpsons creator Matt Groening s hometown of Portland Oregon and Mike Scully s hometown Springfield Massachusetts 6 2 Springfield was named after Springfield Oregon which as a child Groening had believed to be the fictitious Springfield featured in the 1950s sitcom Father Knows Best Groening did not intend to place the fictional Springfield in Oregon contrary to a 2012 interview with him in Smithsonian magazine he instead adopted the name for the setting of The Simpsons in the hope that everyone will think it s their Springfield 7 Al Jean explained that the magazine misinterpreted something I ve heard him say for at least 10 or 20 years He was inspired by growing up in Portland but it s really an every town 5 Groening liked Second City Television s setting of Melonville a town with a large cast of recurring characters and used it as inspiration for The Simpsons 8 He said I also figured out that Springfield was one of the most common names for a city in the U S In anticipation of the success of the show I thought This will be cool everyone will think it s their Springfield And they do 3 9 Location Edit The true location of Springfield is in any state but yours Chalkboard gag Beware My Cheating Bart 5 Because of the many contradictory statements regarding Springfield in the show it is impossible for the town to exist in a specific state In The Simpsons Movie Ned Flanders tells Bart that the state where Springfield is located is bordered by the states of Ohio Nevada Maine and Kentucky only Ohio and Kentucky are neighboring states in reality and Nevada and Maine are at opposite sides of the US 5 4 The fictional city s unknown geography is a recurring joke in the series the Dayton Daily News called it the riddle wrapped in an enigma that is Springfield s location 10 Episodes frequently make fun of the fact that Springfield s state is unidentifiable by adding further conflicting descriptions obscuring onscreen map representations and interrupting conversational references notes 1 David Silverman who directed the movie and various episodes of the series joked that Springfield is located in the fictional state of North Takoma 11 12 This is substantiated by the state abbreviations NT and TA used within the show 12 13 The telephone area codes for Springfield are 636 St Charles County and Western St Louis County Missouri 14 and 939 Puerto Rico To promote The Simpsons Movie various actual towns and cities across the U S called Springfield competed to hold the premiere 15 The promotion was whichever state sent in the most votes would be the winner and would officially be which state The Simpsons takes place in Despite the smaller size of Vermont compared to other states the town of Springfield Vermont was chosen 16 17 In 2016 a New York Times study of the 50 TV shows with the most Facebook Likes found that of all the Springfields in America The Simpsons is most popular in Springfields in Virginia Minnesota and New Jersey and least popular in Springfields in Louisiana Arkansas and Georgia 18 Fictional history Edit The episode Lisa the Iconoclast revealed that Springfield was founded by a group led by Jebediah Springfield a cover identity for notorious pirate Hans Sprungfeld who after misinterpreting a passage in the Bible left Maryland trying to find New Sodom 19 After he refuses to found a town where men are free to marry their cousins half of the group leave The dissenters found the nearby town of Shelbyville named after fellow pioneer Shelbyville Manhattan and the two cities have remained rivals ever since 20 Springfield reaches its pinnacle in the mid 20th century when it became the home of the world s first Aquacar factory one half of the U S was said to wear Springfield galoshes and the city s streets were literally paved with gold 21 However the town s prosperity was short lived and in a 1992 episode a fictional Time cover story on Springfield is titled America s Worst City 22 and in a 1996 episode Newsweek called the town America s Crud Bucket 23 Topography Edit Springfield s fictional geography is shown to be comically varied and includes forests meadows mountain ranges a desert a glacier beaches badlands canyons swamps a harbor waterholes and waterways Major named geographical features include the Springfield Gorge Springfield National Forest the volcanic Mt Springfield the West Springfield Desert three times the size of Texas 24 the Springfield Badlands also known as the Alkali Flats 25 the gigantic Murderhorn Mountain Springfield Glacier Mt Useful National Park Springfield Mesa Springfield Monument Park and Springfield National Park The town s climate is usually depicted as dry and sunny with a bright blue sky However in various episodes it has been subject to many natural disasters including heatwaves blizzards avalanches earthquakes acid rain floods hurricanes lightning strikes tornadoes and volcanic eruptions Springfield s environment is shown as unusually polluted Overflowing garbage forces the whole town both population and structures to move five miles 8 km away from the massive dump that the old town of Springfield had become 26 Springfield is also home to the state s largest self sustaining tire fire which has been burning continuously for many decades 27 Lake Springfield s pollution almost leads to the town s destruction by an Environmental Protection Agency bomb in The Simpsons Movie 28 and pollution from the nuclear power plant has mutated the fish in the river and the Nuclear Power Plant s mascot is Blinky an orange colored fish with three eyes 29 Its atmosphere is so polluted that in one 1995 episode it reduces a comet to a tiny rock 30 Springfield is shown to feature a large numbered grid plan ranging from streets at least as low as 3rd Street and at least as high as 257th Street 31 Politics religion and media Edit The fictional mayor of Springfield is Joe Quimby In the episode Sideshow Bob Roberts Sideshow Bob runs for Mayor of Springfield and defeats Mayor Quimby but Bob is later discovered to have committed electoral fraud Previous representatives include Horace Wilcox who dies of a heart attack while in office in Mr Spritz Goes to Washington and Bob Arnold who is forced to resign after Lisa exposes his corruption in Mr Lisa Goes to Washington Mary Bailey is the fictional governor of Springfield s state 29 Sports Edit The town is home to a number of fictional sporting teams including the Springfield Isotopes a minor league baseball team which plays its home games at Duff Stadium 32 the Springfield Atoms football team at Springfield Stadium 33 the NBA s Springfield Excitement formerly the Austin Celtics 34 and the Springfield Ice O Topes hockey team Businesses EditSpringfield Nuclear Power Plant Edit The Springfield Nuclear Power Plant is a fictional representation of a two unit pressurized water reactor nuclear power plant in Springfield owned by Charles Montgomery Burns Among the plant s employees are Homer Simpson Lenny Leonard and Carl Carlson and Burns assistant Waylon Smithers The plant is shown to be the key supplier of the city of Springfield s energy and the carelessness of Mr Burns and the plant s employees often endangers the residents and natural environment of Springfield Mutated fish with more than two eyes are often shown in the lake behind the power plant which has a large pipe pumping nuclear waste into it There is a crow or raven shown living near the Power Plant which caws whenever an establishing shot of the Power Plant is on screen A running gag in earlier seasons was the poor security of the plant with the outside security booth often going unmanned The design of Springfield Nuclear Power Plant is often rumored to be based on the troubled Trojan Nuclear Power Plant closed in 1993 due to defects near Matt Groening s home town of Portland Oregon or the Hanford Site in southeastern Washington However Antonia Coffman Groening s publicist has said that the Springfield plant s design is generic and that the Springfield Nuclear Power plant was not based on the Trojan Plant or any other power plant in the country 35 36 Kwik E Mart Edit Main article Kwik E Mart A Seattle 7 Eleven store transformed into a Kwik E Mart Kwik E Mart is a fictional convenience store run by Apu Nahasapeemapetilon The Kwik E Mart first appeared in the first season episode The Telltale Head although mentioned in Bart the General as the Quick e Mart In Stark Raving Dad a street sign reading Highland is seen outside one of the front windows in the same blue color as is used for signs for Highland Avenue in Los Angeles Likewise three buildings are visible that are similar to some of those that might be seen on that street two low buildings with bars over the windows and a third also with barred windows which has a mission style roof and a sign reading Smog Center 37 The episode Homer and Apu suggests that Apu is an employee of the Kwik E Mart and after losing his job there had to travel to India where the Kwik E Mart head office is located in the Himalayas However Apu mentions at a bachelor auction that he runs his own business in The Two Mrs Nahasapeemapetilons In addition to the sale of items offered at a typical convenience store gasoline pumps have been shown in front of the store on two occasions The Springfield Shopper also sells there and it is where Principal Seymour Skinner purchases his tabloids In the episode Sweet Seymour Skinner s Baadasssss Song Apu installs 16 new gas pumps to compete with a rival convenience store the Gas N Gulp However they along with the Kwik E Mart are destroyed when Bart accidentally interrupts a live mortar exercise at Fort Springfield forcing the soldiers to redirect the mortar fire into the town The episode Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield also shows the pumps In July 2007 convenience store chain 7 Eleven converted 11 of its stores in the United States and one in Canada into Kwik E Marts to promote the release of The Simpsons Movie 38 The locations of the renovated Kwik E Marts were Bladensburg Maryland Washington D C Burbank California Chicago Dallas Denver Henderson Las Vegas Los Angeles Mountain View San Francisco New York City Orlando Lake Buena Vista Florida Seattle 39 and Vancouver Coquitlam British Columbia Canada 40 These 12 locations as well as the majority of other North American 7 Elevens sold products found in The Simpsons such as Buzz Cola Krusty O s Squishees pink frosted Sprinklicious doughnuts and other Simpsons themed merchandise The Squishes were Slurpees that are sold in special collector cups and the Krusty O s were made by Malt O Meal 39 The promotion resulted in a 30 increase in profits for the changed 7 Eleven stores This can be seen during the opening of The Simpsons Movie 41 The Android s Dungeon amp Baseball Card Shop Edit The Android s Dungeon amp Baseball Card Shop as seen in the Springfield section of Universal Studios HollywoodThe Android s Dungeon is a fictional comic book store owned by Comic Book Guy The comic book store and its owner first appeared in the episode Three Men and a Comic Book when Bart sees a copy of the first issue of the Radioactive Man comic on sale for 100 In the episode Worst Episode Ever Bart and Milhouse are given the job of running the comic book store after Comic Book Guy suffers from a stress induced heart attack and is instructed to try and gain a social life During their brief tenure at the store Bart and Milhouse discover a secret room filled with bootleg videotapes of various extremely rare or illegal subjects These tapes are later confiscated during a police raid on the store Barney s Bowl A Rama Edit Barney s Bowl A Rama is a fictional bowling alley in Springfield It is owned by Barney Gumble s Uncle Al In the episode And Maggie Makes Three Homer tells the family the story of Maggie s birth In this story Homer explains how he quit his job at Springfield Nuclear Power Plant to work at the Bowl A Rama which was Homer s dream job The Leftorium Edit The Leftorium is a fictional store in the Springfield Mall specializing in products for left handed people The store is owned by Ned Flanders who first started the Leftorium in the episode When Flanders Failed 42 At first business at the store went very poorly Irritated with Flanders Homer wishes that the store would go out of business after receiving the larger half of a wishbone Homer gets his wish and the Flanders family are forced to sell many of their possessions much of which Homer purchases at a meager price of 75 The bank repossesses the Flanders home and the Leftorium is to be the next asset repossessed Homer then regrets making this wish and the fact that he never told any of his friends who needed left handed items about the Leftorium As a result he manages to get everyone he knows in town to shop at Ned s store saving it from closure The Leftorium continues to thrive over the following years However Flanders mentions in several episodes that the store does not do that well such as in the season 10 episode Thirty Minutes over Tokyo where Ned mentions that the business now has a competitor Leftopolis next door to it In the episode Home Away from Homer Ned mentions that a recently opened left hand megastore called Left Mart a parody of Wal Mart is threatening his business The season 25 episode White Christmas Blues reveals that competition from the Southpaw Superstore forced Flanders to downsize the business to a mall cart the Leftorium Express which he splits with a cosmetic saleswoman In the season 29 episode Left Behind the Leftorium closes for good leaving Flanders unemployed until he finds a new job as Bart Simpson s new teacher 43 44 The writers had wanted to have Flanders own a failing business and the idea for the store was suggested by George Meyer 45 He got the idea from a friend whose family had owned a left handed specialty store which had failed 46 Springfield Mall Edit The Springfield Mall is a fictional shopping mall that features comical fictional stores and pastiches such as the Happy Market Cost Mo Girdles N Such Eye Caramba The Ear Piercery Happy Sailor Tattoo Parlor Love Your Computer Gum4Less Popular Books the Leftorium Nick s Bowling Shop Stoner s Pot Palace Bookacchino s Moe s Express a mini version of Moe s Tavern a Mapple Store a parody of the Apple Store numerous knockoff Starbucks coffee shops and several Krusty Burgers Bars and restaurants EditMoe s Tavern Edit Moe s Bar in Concepcion Chile closely based on images from The Simpsons Moe s Tavern is a fictional local bar in Springfield frequented by Homer Simpson Carl Carlson Lenny Leonard Barney Gumble and barflies Sam and Larry but is seemingly unpopular with the rest of the city s residents The tavern is named after and run by Moe Szyslak Moe s Tavern first appeared in the episode Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire In the first season of The Simpsons the entrance appears to be a saloon door The bar sells mostly Duff Beer although other beverages are served A recurring gag is the dirty and dilapidated state of the bar In Mommie Beerest it is revealed that Moe was long able to avoid several enormous health code violations as he is friends with the health inspector Another episode reveals that the bar s liquor license has expired is only valid in Rhode Island and is signed by Moe himself Moe s Tavern undergoes several makeovers in various episodes of The Simpsons but always reverts to its original dark squalid state In the episode Homer s Barbershop Quartet Moe s Tavern is named Moe s Cavern as a reference to the world famous Cavern Club in Liverpool where The Beatles played Other notable makeovers are in the episode Bart Sells His Soul where Moe turns his tavern into a family restaurant called Uncle Moe s Family Feed Bag and in Homer the Moe where Moe turns his tavern into a yuppie bar called m In the episode Mommie Beerest it is turned into an English pub named Nag and Weasel In Flaming Moe Moe enlists the help of Waylon Smithers to transform the bar into a gay bar called Mo s although he changes it back again at the end of the episode Moe and his tavern are the victim of Bart s ongoing prank calls in earlier seasons when Bart would call looking for nonexistent people with names that would get Moe laughed at by his customers Universal Studios Florida includes a Moe s Tavern in the Springfield section of the park Krusty Burger Edit Krusty Burger is a fictional fast food restaurant chain owned by Krusty the Clown as one of his many branded products and services which appears in many episodes of the series Krusty Burger is seen as a parody of a typical fast food chain like McDonald s Burger King and Wendy s Krusty Burger is located across the entire United States in the episode Boy Scoutz n the Hood Homer uses a map of the entire United States with locations of Krusty Burger restaurants In the episode The Mook the Chef the Wife and Her Homer Krusty Burger is one of the few burger places open in Springfield because Krusty has been paying mobster Fat Tony to keep McDonald s and Burger King from establishing local franchises A common gag especially in the later seasons of the show is the extremely low quality of the food served at the restaurants a parody of common beliefs and urban legends surrounding American fast food Documentary filmmaker Declan Desmond has made several exposes on the chain revealing practices such as stapling together half eaten burgers and serving them to new customers and substituting all manner of cheap filler as meat Krusty also reveals that the Ribwich was made of an unspecified animal with more than four legs presumably some sort of insect or spider that was driven into extinction by its production Universal Studios Florida includes a Krusty Burger in the Springfield section of the park Lard Lad Donuts Edit Lard Lad Donuts is a fictional donut store in Springfield Its mascot is an estimated 8 meter tall 26 ft statue of a rather chubby boy proudly holding a donut over his head The name and the statue of the eponymous boy are likely references to Big Boy Restaurants In Treehouse of Horror VI the Lard Lad statue is brought to life by a mysterious atmospheric disturbance enraged by Homer Simpson having stolen his giant donut Universal Studios Florida includes a Lard Lad Donuts in the Springfield section of the park Luigi s Edit Luigi s is a fictional Springfield Italian restaurant owned by Luigi Risotto who is a parody of the Italian pasta pizza chef stereotype but seems to be aware of his status as a stock character Luigi is polite to his customers and treats them with respect when they order and then loudly insults and belittles them to his cook Salvatore fully aware that they can hear him from the kitchen The restaurant also employs an old Italian saucier who in Take My Life Please claims they can tell what someone s life could have been like by stirring tomato sauce in a certain way By using his magical tomato sauce the saucier helps Homer see what his life would have been like if he had won his high school election Fat Tony and his mob frequently use the restaurant for their meetings Luigi takes customer service very seriously Universal Studios Florida includes a Luigi s in the Springfield section of the park The Frying Dutchman Edit The Frying Dutchman is a fictional maritime themed restaurant operated by Sea Captain Horatio McCallister Its cuisine specializes in seafood to which Marge is allergic and even the bread has fish in it Homer sued them for their refusal to honor the all you can eat promise in the episode New Kid on the Block and was given a job as a freak attraction more stomach than man to Marge s great embarrassment Universal Studios Florida includes a Frying Dutchman in the Springfield section of the park The Singing Sirloin Edit The Singing Sirloin is a fictional restaurant where waiters sing everything they say It is first featured in the Season 1 episode Life on the Fast Lane Marge celebrates her birthday there Bart also celebrated here after getting an A however after Homer was unable to pay them for the food they had to sing on stage to pay for the bill in the episode Homer vs Dignity The Happy Sumo Edit The Happy Sumo is a fictional representation of a Japanese restaurant Among the restaurant s menu offerings are all kinds of sushi including fugu which can be fatally poisonous if not properly prepared The Master Sushi Chef is the only person at the restaurant qualified to prepare fugu The restaurant also offers karaoke Akira works as a waiter and translates on occasion for the Simpson family The Gilded Truffle Edit The Gilded Truffle is a fictional representation of an upscale restaurant It features a place where adult couples without children can go while Homer and Marge look on wistfully from another restaurant It also features the scene of Bart s prank towards Edna when he pretends to be a man interested in meeting her in person from a personal advertisement and then watches her be stiffed by the fictional date The Simpsons are able to eat at the restaurant from Lisa and Homer s gambling proceeds following their bonding time of Homer betting on Lisa s football picks Schools EditSpringfield Elementary School Edit Springfield Elementary School is a fictional local school attended by Bart Simpson Lisa Simpson and most other Springfield children It teaches children from kindergarten through to sixth grade Springfield Elementary is depicted as a grossly underfunded school that suffers from the incompetence and apathy of its administration teachers staff and students It is portrayed within the show as a satire of publicly funded schools and education in the United States an illustrative example and parody of the lengths undertaken by some schools to overcome underfunding Edna Krabappel was Bart Simpson s 4th grade teacher and from season 23 onwards also neighbor due to marrying Ned Flanders until Krabappel s death in season 25 In Left Behind the Leftorium closes leaving Flanders unemployed and he returns to Springfield Elementary School where he finds a new job as Bart Simpson s new teacher substituting the void left following by his deceased second wife Edna Krabappel 43 44 In 1994 the naming of a new real life elementary school in Greenwood South Carolina was left up to the students and the name Springfield Elementary was chosen The school board was unaware of the connection to The Simpsons until a protest by one group of parents who argued that the character of Bart Simpson was a poor role model The name stood and the school opened in August 1994 47 48 Colleges universities Edit The fictional Springfield University is a large college which Homer attended in Homer Goes to College It teaches several different courses including nuclear physics arts management and the meaning of cartoons Springfield University also has a fierce rivalry with Springfield A amp M University In the episode Faith Off the nickname of the Springfield University football team is revealed to be the Nittany Tide a reference to the Penn State Nittany Lions and Alabama Crimson Tide Springfield Agricultural and Mechanical A amp M University is a rival institution of Springfield University Carl Carlson is an A amp M alumnus Springfield A amp M s mascot is a pig named Sir Oinks A Lot who was kidnapped by Homer and his three student tutors as a prank in Homer Goes to College Springfield Heights Institute of Technology focuses on the engineering sciences Professor Frink is a college professor at the university and it is from where Apu Nahasapeemapetilon earned his doctorate Residential EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Spinster City Apartments Edit Spinster City Apartments also announced as Spinster Arms Apartments is a fictional apartment building Patty and Selma Bouvier along with Selma s daughter Ling and their pet iguana Jub Jub live at number 1599 Springfield Retirement Castle Edit The fictional Springfield Retirement Castle is Springfield s retirement home for the elderly Some noted residents of the Castle include Abraham Grampa J Simpson and his neighbors Jasper Beardley and the Crazy Old Man For Grampa Simpson the Retirement Castle is a lonely place to be He often gets mad when his family does not come and visit him The door features a sign reading Thank you for not discussing the outside world The most interesting way to pass time at the home is to stake yourself out a good spot at the starin window 49 which overlooks nothing but a barren tree and bingo the prize being a banana The staff of the home has little to no respect for the residents doing things like vacuuming their hair during nap time or switching their IV bags with their catheter bags when the former is empty and the latter is full In the episode Old Money Grampa inherits 106 000 from his girlfriend Beatrice Bea Simmons He uses both this money and his winnings from a gambling junket to refurbish and redecorate the home and has the dining hall renamed in Bea s honor Government EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Springfield City Hall Edit The fictional City Hall of Springfield serves as the workplace of Mayor Quimby and the City Government Often it is the site of town meetings regarding an issue facing the city where the citizens vote to approve a proposal that generally causes havoc most of the time proposed by Homer and causes more problems The building is based on the Chelmsford Massachusetts public library due to longtime The Simpsons background designer Lance Wilder being a former Chelmsford resident 50 Landmarks EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Five Corners Edit Five Corners is a fictional location imagined as the only geographic location in the US where five states meet A boundary marker indicates the exact spot While on their road trip to Itchy amp Scratchy Land the Simpsons visit Five Corners where they each stand in five different states while holding hands The location is visited again in The Bob Next Door where Sideshow Bob plots to kill Bart at the marker where the location s unique property would result in a lack of extraterritorial jurisdiction explaining it as I can stand in one state fire a gun in a second state the bullet will travel through the third hitting you in the fourth so you fall dead in the fifth No single act is against any law but their sum total is the greatest murder 51 In reality no such place exists in the US the location is a spoof of Four Corners Other towns EditShelbyville Edit The fictional city of Shelbyville is Springfield s neighbor and rival It was founded in 1796 by Shelbyville Manhattan who advocated cousin marriage among his followers causing a split between himself and Jebediah Springfield An intense rivalry between the two cities continues today especially in the sixth season episode Lemon of Troy in which Shelbyville residents steal a prized lemon tree from Springfield In several episodes Lemon of Troy in particular it is suggested that Shelbyville is to an extent a parallel version of Springfield Shelbyville is also the city where Luann van Houten grew up It also has at least one McDonald s restaurant a Speed E Mart Joe s Tavern and a school Per Last Exit to Springfield Shelbyville was at least briefly called Morganville during Abe Simpson s youth According to The Simpsons Movie Shelbyville is west of Springfield It is the home of the button fly Shelbyville was ranked 10th in The 10 Best Dystopias in the December 2005 issue of Wired 52 Capital City Edit Capital City often spelled Capitol City in early episodes is the fictional capital and largest city in the state in which the show is set It is represented as a major urban center hosting major sports events conventions and United Nations conferences Its nickname is The Windy Apple a joke by the show s writers combining the nicknames of New York City s The Big Apple and Chicago s The Windy City Landmarks include a Duff brewery possibly mimicking the Anheuser Busch brewery in St Louis the Cross town suspension bridge resembling San Francisco s Golden Gate Bridge the Capital City Stadium the Capital City Amphitheatre featuring Krusty the clown and the intersection of 4th Street and Avenue D The Simpsons Movie places Capital City just to the north of Springfield Brockway Edit The fictional town of Brockway is mentioned by Lyle Lanley voiced by Phil Hartman as the municipality to which he has sold monorail systems Marge vs the Monorail Brockway Ogdenville and North Haverbrook are also mentioned in Episode 18 of the TV series Supernatural by Sam Winchester as locations of past Shtriga activity Ogdenville Edit The fictional city of Ogdenville was first mentioned in Marge vs the Monorail when Lyle Lanley claimed to have sold a monorail to Ogdenville Ogdenville has also been mentioned in other episodes such as Saddlesore Galactica Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield and To Surveil with Love In Eeny Teeny Maya Moe Maya is from Ogdenville Ogdenville has an outlet mall and is separated from Springfield by a rocky desert In Coming to Homerica Ogdenville is a town of barley producing farms that are shut down due to tainted barley being used in a new vegetarian Krusty Burger Ogdenvillians are composed of Norwegian immigrants with thick Norwegian accents They also are big fans of the Minnesota Vikings due to the heavy incidence of Norwegian immigrants in the state of Minnesota As a small easter egg during a flu outbreak in Springfield the hospital only received schemas in Norwegian which was later confirmed via close up Series creator Matt Groening s background is Norwegian and German which he has described as two of the unfunniest ethnic groups in the history of the world North Haverbrook Edit The imagined North Haverbrook was first mentioned by Lyle Lanley in Marge vs the Monorail Marge arrives in North Haverbrook and finds a desolate ghost town where the faulty monorail derailed causing a disaster chasing away most of their residents and scaring away investors The remaining North Haverbrook locals have since denied the monorail s existence presumably blaming Lanley for the whole thing that ruined their town s reputation Marge is met with hostility by the locals including a woman who works at the Monorail Cafe She orders Marge to leave her town at once and never speak of the monorail anymore A resident scientist from Germany Sebastian Cobb was the only one willing to help Marge out and save the passengers on the Springfield Monorail from suffering the same fate as North Haverbrook Lanley is later attacked by the citizens of the town after his plane makes an unscheduled stop there North Haverbrook also appeared in Little Big Girl After Bart is awarded a driver s license he gets sick of countless errands and goes for a drive and eventually finds North Haverbrook and falls in love with a girl named Darcy In this episode the town appears to have recovered well from the monorail disaster as it is now changed from a ghost town to a thriving community with multiple businesses that Bart enjoys It has a romantic reputation All signs of the monorail have also disappeared It also appears on a road sign as Snake drives towards Mexico with the Kwik E Mart on a flatbed trailer during Marge in Chains Cypress Creek Edit In the world of the Simpsons Cypress Creek is a model town created for the workers of the Globex Corporation It appears in the episode You Only Move Twice It is an affluent town and is home to many wildflowers to which Lisa is allergic The city is an obvious parody of Silicon Valley or the master planned communities often built by major corporations Guidopolis Edit In the episode Midnight Towboy Homer initially goes for a bottle of milk in a little town near Springfield named Guidopolis where he then subsequently becomes a tow truck driver and is introduced to the vehicle recovery sector The town is primarily inhabited by Italian American greasers Little Pwagmattasquarmsettport Edit Little Pwagmattasquarmsettport is a fictional seaside town close to Springfield s State where the Simpsons went for the Fourth of July in the Flanders s holiday home the town appears in the episode Summer of 4 Ft 2 Nicknamed Little Pwag the town contains many beaches and a large boardwalk section and a fun fair open every summer References EditInformational notes One of the conflicting identifications takes place in Lisa the Iconoclast season 7 episode 16 in which the grave of Democratic Presidential candidate and later UN ambassador under President John Fitzgerald Kennedy Adlai Stevenson II is shown to be located in Springfield s cemetery The actual grave is in Evergreen Cemetery in Bloomington Illinois Like his father Vice President Adlai Stevenson I and his son Senator Adlai Stevenson III Stevenson was strongly connected to Illinois having been Governor of the state from 1949 to 1953 The Stevenson grave is thus a clue pointing to Springfield being in Illinois Citations a b Turner 2004 p 30 a b c Kalkstein Meghan 2007 07 27 Groening Springfield is the real deal KVAL TV CBS Archived from the original on 2007 10 05 Retrieved 2007 11 19 a b c d De La Roca Claudia May 2012 Matt Groening Reveals the Location of the Real Springfield Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 6 December 2021 a b Richmond Ray 2007 05 11 Springfield of dreams The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on 2007 05 16 Retrieved 2007 06 13 a b c d Potts Kimberly 2012 04 16 The Simpsons Reveals Where Springfield Isn t The Wrap Retrieved 2020 06 23 Hamilton Don July 19 2002 Matt Groening s Portland Portland Tribune Archived from the original on October 16 2015 Retrieved April 24 2013 De La Roca Claudia May 2012 Matt Groening Reveals the Location of the Real Springfield Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 23 September 2020 Moe s Tavern is actually based on Max s Tavern in the neighboring town Eugene It is iconic for its pickled eggs on its counters and the television in the top right corner of the room Groening Matt 2006 The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode Homer vs The Eighteenth Amendment DVD 20th Century Fox Simpsons launch hits Springfield BBC News Retrieved July 21 2007 Stewart D L 2007 06 12 Maybe this Springfield is just a state of mind Dayton Daily News Retrieved 2008 04 28 Laura Lee Davies 1996 09 25 Bill Oakley amp David Silverman Time Out Retrieved 2008 04 28 a b Silverman David 2003 The Simpsons The Complete Third Season DVD commentary for the episode Mr Lisa Goes to Washington DVD 20th Century Fox Meyer George Archer Wes 1991 09 26 Mr Lisa Goes to Washington The Simpsons Season 03 Episode 02 Fox Simpsons Episode Papa s Got a Brand New Badge 2002 First aired May 22 2002 Springfield hopes to host Simpsons premiere Lansing State Journal Associated Press 2007 06 08 Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2007 06 13 Cindy Clark 2007 07 10 The Simpsons Movie Hometown Premiere Contest USA Today Retrieved 2007 07 10 McGourty Carry Jared Weiner 2007 07 10 Peace Granola and Now The Simpsons ABC News Retrieved 2007 07 10 Katz Josh 2016 12 27 Duck Dynasty vs Modern Family 50 Maps of the U S Cultural Divide The New York Times Collier Jonathan Anderson Mike B 1996 02 18 Lisa the Iconoclast The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 16 Fox Broadcasting Company Forrester Brent Reardon Jim 1995 05 14 Lemon of Troy The Simpsons Season 6 Episode 12 Fox Broadcasting Company Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein Wes Archer 1993 12 16 pringfield The Simpsons Season 5 Episode 10 Fox Broadcasting Company Archer Wes O Brien Conan 1992 11 12 New Kid on the Block The Simpsons Season 4 Episode 8 Fox Broadcasting Company Greaney Dan Kirkland Mark 1996 05 19 Summer of 4 Ft 2 The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 25 Fox Broadcasting Company Half Decent Proposal The Simpsons Season 13 Episode 279 February 10 2002 Fox Broadcasting Company Feresten Spike Polcino Dominic 1995 11 26 Sideshow Bob s Last Gleaming The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 9 Fox Broadcasting Company Maxtone Graham Ian Reardon Jim 1998 05 26 Trash of the Titans The Simpsons Season 9 Episode 22 Fox Broadcasting Company Anderson Mike B Cohen Joel H 2006 01 08 Homer s Paternity Coot The Simpsons Season 17 Episode 10 Fox Broadcasting Company The Simpsons Movie a b Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish Bart s Comet Bart Sells His Soul Hungry Hungry Homer Love Is a Many Strangled Thing The Burns and the Bees LaBoe Barbara 2006 05 14 Simpsons keeps Trojan tower legacy alive or does it The Daily News p A1 Retrieved 2006 05 28 Tower of Oregon s only nuclear plant goes down dead link Jean Al Reiss Mike 1991 09 19 Stark Raving Dad The Simpsons Season 03 Episode 02 Fox Josh Grossberg 2007 07 02 Cowabunga 7 Elevens Get Kwik E Makeover E News Retrieved 2008 02 24 a b 7 Eleven Becomes Kwik E Mart for Simpsons Movie Promotion Fox News 2007 07 01 Archived from the original on 2007 07 04 Retrieved 2007 07 03 Oh Canada D oh Homer Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 2007 10 30 Retrieved 2007 07 04 Gail Schiller 2007 07 06 D oh Simpsons limits tie in partners The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on 2007 07 08 Retrieved 2007 07 06 Jean Al 2003 The Simpsons season 3 DVD commentary for the episode When Flanders Failed DVD 20th Century Fox a b Perkins Dennis 7 May 2018 Flanders loses his faith and an inconsequential Simpsons tests ours a b The Simpsons Season 29 Episode 19 Review Left Behind 7 May 2018 Reiss Mike 2003 The Simpsons season 3 DVD commentary for the episode When Flanders Failed DVD 20th Century Fox Vitti Jon 2003 The Simpsons season 3 DVD commentary for the episode When Flanders Failed DVD 20th Century Fox Lawson Carol 1994 03 17 Chronicle The New York Times The Simpsons Archive A Brief History of The Simpsons simpsonsarchive com Writer John Swartzwelder Director Mark Kirkland April 20 1997 The Old Man and the Lisa The Simpsons Season 8 Episode 174 Fox Broadcasting Company Best bet is to stake yourself out a good spot at the starin window Barrett Heather 2007 07 03 Meet the man behind The Simpsons Chelmsford Independent Archived from the original on 2013 10 12 Retrieved 2011 01 03 Writer John Frink Director Nancy Kruse May 16 2010 The Bob Next Door The Simpsons Season 21 Episode 463 Fox Broadcasting Company I can stand in one state fire a gun in a second state the bullet will travel through the third hitting you in the fourth so you fall dead in the fifth No single act is against any law but their sum total is the greatest murder Smith Jeremy Adam December 2005 The 10 Best Dystopias Wired Retrieved 2007 12 12 Bibliography 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 External links EditWhere Is The Simpsons Springfield from the fan maintained The Simpsons Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Springfield The Simpsons amp oldid 1171520783 Springfield Retirement Castle, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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