TwitterFacebookDiscord

Difference between revisions of "Template:Comprehensive article"

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
m
 
(165 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Larry The Lamb.png|left|150px|link=Larry the Lamb]]
+
[[File:Mr. Sparkle (product).png|160px|left|link=Mr. Sparkle (product)]]
  
'''Larry the Lamb''' is the fourth grade's toy to take home for the weekend.
+
'''Mr. Sparkle''' is a Japanese brand of dish washing and laundry detergent. It is a joint venture between [[Matsumura Fishworks]] and [[Tamaribuchi Heavy Manufacturing Concern]].
  
Each person that takes Larry home writes in his journal, ''[[The Adventures of Larry the Lamb]]''. The person who takes him home is decided by a name drawn out of a box. [[Nelson]] also implies that he is rather attached to Larry the Lamb as it is "the only thing that keeps him sane".  
+
While at the [[Springfield City Dump]], [[Bart]] found a box of Mr. Sparkle detergent. He called over [[Homer]] and [[Lisa]] to look at the box, and they were all shocked that it had a picture of Homer on the front. Homer took the box to [[Akira]] at [[The Happy Sumo]], who told Homer that it was Mr. Sparkle, and was surprised to find that the mascot looked like Homer. Homer later called the [[Mr. Sparkle Factory]] in [[Japan]] to ask why they were using his likeness on the box. He later received a videotape for American investors with a commercial for Mr. Sparkle included. The end of the commercial revealed the truth behind Mr. Sparkle: it was a merger of the companies [[Matsumura Fishworks]], which had a fish logo, and [[Tamaribuchi Heavy Manufacturing Concern]], which had a lightbulb logo. The two logos together made Mr. Sparkle, meaning the resemblance to Homer was a coincidence...
  
Whenever one of the kids shouts Larry's name, [[Agnes Skinner]] thinks that the children are talking about a sexual partner, such as when Lisa lost Larry in the sewer and was calling out Larry's name, Agnes tells her that she's "getting desperate", and after Bart lamenting Larry's destruction, she even asks for his number.
+
<p style="font-size: small; text-align: right;">[[Mr. Sparkle (product)|Read more of this article]] | [[Wikisimpsons:Comprehensive article nominations|Vote for a comprehensive article]]</p>
 
 
When Larry went home with Martin, they go skydiving and a picture is taken and put in Larry's Journal.
 
 
 
Larry once went home with Bart. But Bart doesn't want it; so he gives it to Lisa. Then later on, Lisa takes Larry for a walk but the buggy (which Larry is in) crashes into a car and Larry shoots out of the buggy and into the sewer...
 
 
 
<p style="font-size: small; text-align: right;">[[Larry the Lamb|Read more of this article]] | [[Wikisimpsons:Comprehensive article nominations|Vote for a comprehensive article]]</p>
 
 
<noinclude>[[Category:Templates]]
 
<noinclude>[[Category:Templates]]
 
[[sv:Mall:Sammanfattad artikel]]</noinclude>
 
[[sv:Mall:Sammanfattad artikel]]</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 08:04, May 1, 2026

Mr. Sparkle (product).png

Mr. Sparkle is a Japanese brand of dish washing and laundry detergent. It is a joint venture between Matsumura Fishworks and Tamaribuchi Heavy Manufacturing Concern.

While at the Springfield City Dump, Bart found a box of Mr. Sparkle detergent. He called over Homer and Lisa to look at the box, and they were all shocked that it had a picture of Homer on the front. Homer took the box to Akira at The Happy Sumo, who told Homer that it was Mr. Sparkle, and was surprised to find that the mascot looked like Homer. Homer later called the Mr. Sparkle Factory in Japan to ask why they were using his likeness on the box. He later received a videotape for American investors with a commercial for Mr. Sparkle included. The end of the commercial revealed the truth behind Mr. Sparkle: it was a merger of the companies Matsumura Fishworks, which had a fish logo, and Tamaribuchi Heavy Manufacturing Concern, which had a lightbulb logo. The two logos together made Mr. Sparkle, meaning the resemblance to Homer was a coincidence...

Read more of this article | Vote for a comprehensive article