TwitterFacebookDiscord

Difference between revisions of "Template:Featured Episode"

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
 
(205 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
"'''When You Wish Upon a Weinstein'''" is the 22nd and final episode of the [[Season 3|third season]] of ''[[The Simpsons|Family Guy]]'' that would have first aired in [[2002]], but due to concerns about its content it was not aired until November 9, [[2003]], when it was broadcast on Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim. It was later aired on Fox on December 10, [[2004]].
+
[[File:Inmargewetrust.png|220px|right|link=In Marge We Trust]]
  
[[Homer|Peter]] gives [[Marge|Lois]]' "rainy-day fund" to a scam artist selling volcano insurance. That night, [[Maggie|Stewie]] breaks [[Lisa|Meg's]] glasses because he hates being watched while he sleeps. Lois tells Peter that he needs to recover the money to buy their daughter a new pair of glasses. After hearing [[Lenny|Quagmire]] and [[Carl|Cleveland]] talk about how men with Jewish-sounding names have helped them achieve financial success, Peter decides that he needs a Jew to handle his money in an elaborate musical number based on "When You Wish upon a Star". When a Jewish man named [[Old Jewish man|Max Weinstein]] has car trouble outside the Griffin house, Peter takes it as a sign. After a foot chase, Peter pressures Max into helping him get the emergency money back.
+
"'''In Marge We Trust'''" is the twenty-second episode of [[Season 8|broadcast season 8]] of ''[[The Simpsons]]'' and the one hundred seventy-fifth episode overall. It originally aired on April 27, [[1997]]. The episode was written by [[Donick Cary]] and directed by [[Steven Dean Moore]]. It guest stars [[Sab Shimono]] as [[Mr. Sparkle]], the [[Japanese businessman]], and the announcer, [[Gedde Watanabe]] as the [[factory foreman]], [[factory worker]], [[Japanese tourist]], and {{ap|reporter|In Marge We Trust}}, and [[Frank Welker]] as the baboons.
  
After inviting Max to dinner and accompanying him to a reform synagogue, Peter comes to the conclusion that [[Bart|Chris]] would get smarter if he converted to Judaism. He secretly drives Chris to [[Las Vegas]] for a quickie Bar Mitzvah, Lois finds out about this from [[Santa's Little Helper|Brian]] and, borrowing Quagmire's car, arrives just in time to stop the ceremony. The congregants, angry that Lois is apparently insulting their religion, chase the Griffins until they escape onto a bus full of nuns who, displeased that he strayed from Catholicism, attack Peter with rulers.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_You_Wish_Upon_a_Weinstein [src<nowiki>]</nowiki>]
+
[[Marge]] volunteers as an over-the-phone counselor for the church, and the congregation starts turning to Marge more than [[Reverend Lovejoy]]. Meanwhile, [[Homer]] goes on a quest to find out why his likeness is the logo for a Japanese detergent company.
  
[[At Long Last Leave|Read more of this episode]] | [[Wikisimpsons:Previous Featured episode|More featured episodes]] | [[Wikisimpsons:Featured episode|Vote for featured episode]]
+
[[In Marge We Trust|Read more of this episode]] | [[Wikisimpsons:Previous Featured episode|More featured episodes]] | [[Wikisimpsons:Featured episode|Vote for featured episode]]
 
<noinclude>[[Category:Templates]][[sv:Mall:Utvalt Avsnitt]]</noinclude>
 
<noinclude>[[Category:Templates]][[sv:Mall:Utvalt Avsnitt]]</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 08:02, May 1, 2026

Inmargewetrust.png

"In Marge We Trust" is the twenty-second episode of broadcast season 8 of The Simpsons and the one hundred seventy-fifth episode overall. It originally aired on April 27, 1997. The episode was written by Donick Cary and directed by Steven Dean Moore. It guest stars Sab Shimono as Mr. Sparkle, the Japanese businessman, and the announcer, Gedde Watanabe as the factory foreman, factory worker, Japanese tourist, and reporter, and Frank Welker as the baboons.

Marge volunteers as an over-the-phone counselor for the church, and the congregation starts turning to Marge more than Reverend Lovejoy. Meanwhile, Homer goes on a quest to find out why his likeness is the logo for a Japanese detergent company.

Read more of this episode | More featured episodes | Vote for featured episode