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[[File:The Haunted House - Treehouse of Horror I.png|left|175px|link=Evil House]]
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[[File:Mr. Sparkle (product).png|160px|left|link=Mr. Sparkle (product)]]
  
'''The Evil House''' is a house built on an Indian burial ground that the Simpsons family moved into.
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'''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]].
  
[[Homer]] bought the house from Mr. Ploot, a real estate agent, because the house was huge and cheap. When negotiating for the house, Mr. Ploot repeatedly told Homer that the house was built on an ancient Indian burial ground. Homer decided to buy it anyway, not telling his family about the burial ground and forgetting about it himself. The family then moved into the house, with the [[removalist]] helping them.
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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...
  
The family were happy at first due to the house being so big and inexpensive. They then began to find mysterious problems with the house. The house said "get out", which Homer thought was just the house settling. A book was then flung at [[Lisa]], which she thought was [[Bart]]. When [[Marge]] entered the kitchen, she found the cupboards and walls bleeding and a mysterious vortex into another dimension in the kitchen wall. In the living room, Bart was being strangled by a lamp cord, with [[Maggie]] and objects flying around. Lisa mentioned that she could feel an evil presence in the house and Marge decided that it was time for them to leave...
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<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>
 
 
<p style="font-size: small; text-align: right;">[[Evil House|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