♪ The Simpsooons, ♪ a TV show featuring America’s favorite yellow family, aired in 1989 and has released 768 episodes across 36 seasons, making it one of the longest-running cartoons in US history. Its secret? The people behind it constantly do their best to modernize the show by incorporating fresh pop culture references and keeping its comedy relatable and up-to-date.
This also makes it a great source for the creation of memes, undeniably adding to its success. To feed (or perhaps rekindle) your love for the show even more, our team at Bored Panda has compiled a list of some of the freshest Simpsons memes there are. Scroll down to find them, and don’t forget to upvote the ones that made you say “excellent.”
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Even though The Simpsons originated before the creation of the first meme, the show is responsible for some of the most iconic and beloved memes in internet history.
One of the netizen's all-time favorites is the snapshot of Homer Simpson disappearing backward into a hedge, his eyes wide open and his lips in a straight line. Borrowed from an episode in 1994, it’s generally used to express the desire to vanish from an awkward social interaction so seamlessly as though you never were there in the first place.
Non-alcoholic "hard" seltzer. White Claw has a NA line now. Can somebody make that make sense?
But before it became a meme, hedge travel was the idea of David Mirkin, who was the showrunner when the episode aired and still works on the show today. The Vulture Magazine team was lucky enough to speak with him about the inspiration behind it.
That’s me. Years ago while my husband and I were house hunting the realtor asked him (they were in the living room) who was I talking to. My husband said, “I think she’s talking to the cat.” Indeed, I was talking to the cat who joined me while I was looking at the bedrooms.
“Him coming through the hedges was based on my childhood behavior of walking through hedges in my neighborhood. I would pretend that I was dimension-hopping,” Mirkin says. “You can only do it a few times before you leave a hole, and so I did tens of thousands of dollars of damage to people’s hedges I’m sure.” This idea stayed with him until it made it onto The Simpsons season five, episode 16, “Homer Loves Flanders.”
Yeah got into it with a Reich wing a-hole the other day. Can't even remember what about but he responded with a link to a site i'd never heard of and after a bit of digging it turns out it was just another mouthpiece for the Heritage Foundation. To quote Indiana Jones, "NAZIs, I hate these guys".
He says he was nagging the animation director's team to make Homer’s motion as smooth and slow as possible for maximum eeriness. He largely contributes its popularity to the fantastic work the team did. “I’m really proud of it because I had to have the animators do that motion — both coming out and going back in — about five times to get it slow enough and detailed enough so that it felt right to me, because I wanted it to be a kind of a magical, creepy thing,” he shares.
Musk really needs to lay off the K. He's getting crazier by the day.
This version is funny, but the original joke is IMO one of the funniest Simpsons scenes, and the entire episode is one of the best.
The meme apparently caught fire in 2012 when a Tumblr blog posted the GIF with a blank background, which allowed users to swap the image of a hedge for literally anything else, like a wall of pizza or the galaxy.
Something that really surprised Mirkin about the meme is that it was completely taken out of context and used to express a totally different emotion. “What’s really interesting is the meme really has nothing to do with the way it was used in the show, because it’s not a retreat or an embarrassment, as it’s used — it was really just an ominous, threatening look and a very weird backing up while never breaking eye contact with Flanders,” he says. “So it’s great the way it’s been changed, but it’s not the original intention.”
The meme, at this point, has become so popular that it was even referenced on the show itself, making it a full-circle moment. It was the idea of the youngest writer, Cesar Mazariegos, who pitched the joke for the season 30 episode “The Girl on the Bus.”
“I was brand new. It was literally my first week,” he says. The internet went crazy for the reference-within-a-reference. “I’m showing it to my wife like, ‘Yo check this out, I pitched this like my first week there!’” he remembers, calling the experience “a pretty fun, cool way to get welcomed into the Simpsons fold.”