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Difference between revisions of "Goo Goo Gai Pan"

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{{episode
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{{Tab}}
|image=Goo_Goo_Gai_Pan.jpg
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{{EpisodePrevNext|On a Clear Day I Can't See My Sister|Mobile Homer}}
|Episode Number=347
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{{Quote|Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on Wu!|[[Madam Wu]]}}
|productionCode=GABF06
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{{Episode
|originalAirdate=March 13, 2005
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|image=Goo Goo Gai Pan promo.png
|blackboardText=
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|number=347
|couchGag=The family is surprised by the townspeople and Homer collapses of a heart attack
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|season=16
|specialGuestVoices=[[Robert Wagner]], and [[Lucy Liu]] as [[Madam Wu]]
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|snumber=12
|Written By=[[Lawrence Talbot]] (pseudonym for [[Dana Gould]])
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|prodcode=GABF06
|Directed By=[[Lance Kramer]]
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|airdate=March 13, [[2005]]
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|couchgag=The family is surprised by the townspeople and Homer collapses of a heart attack
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|guests=[[Robert Wagner]] as {{Ch|Robert Wagner|himself}}<br>[[Lucy Liu]] as [[Madam Wu]]
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|showrunner1= Al Jean
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|writer=[[Dana Gould]]
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|director=[[Lance Kramer]]
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Goo Goo Gai Pan''' is the twelfth episode of [[Season 16]]. It aired on March 13, 2005 and was written by [[Lawrence Talbot]] and directed by [[Lance Kramer]]. It guest starred [[Robert Wagner]], and [[Lucy Liu]] as [[Madam Wu]]. It was the first appearance of [[Ling Bouvier]].
+
"'''Goo Goo Gai Pan'''" is the twelfth episode of [[season 16]] of ''[[The Simpsons]]'' and the three-hundred and forty-seventh episode overall. It originally aired on March 13, [[2005]]. The episode was written by [[Lawrence Talbot]] and directed by [[Lance Kramer]]. It guest stars [[Robert Wagner]] as {{Ch|Robert Wagner|himself}} and [[Lucy Liu]] as [[Madam Wu]].
 +
 
 +
== Synopsis ==
 +
{{Desc|[[Selma]] has a severe hot flash while giving [[Mr. Burns]] his driving test. [[Dr. Hibbert]] explains (with help from a video starring {{Ch|Robert Wagner}}) that Selma is experiencing the onset of menopause. Selma, decides she wants a baby rather than grow old alone. Adoption is suggested, but the [[Springfield Orphanage|Springfield orphanage]] is empty. [[Lisa]] suggests adopting a baby girl from [[China]]. One problem: the Chinese government only allows married couples to adopt. No problem; Selma writes down a name for her husband - Homer's - and "The Simpsons are going to China!" (with [[Marge]] acting as [[Bart]] and Lisa's nanny) so Selma and Homer can pick up the baby together.}}
  
 
== Plot ==
 
== Plot ==
[[Patty and Selma Bouvier|Selma]] gives [[Montgomery Burns|Mr. Burns]] his driving test to replace his old license, which expired in 1909. During the test, she experiences a hot flash and is later taken to the hospital. She learns that she is experiencing menopause (which is explained in a video with Robert Wagner). She is saddened that now she can't have children. Lisa suggests that she adopt a child. However, after her first choice, one of Cletus' children, is taken back, Selma decides to adopt a child from China. Although her forms are in order, Selma learns that she has to be married to legally get a child. She puts down the second name she thinks of, after asking the agency if they knew who [[MacGyver]] was, and being told yes, she puts down [[Homer Simpson]].
+
[[File:Goo Goo Gai Pan Homer Buddha.png|thumb|left|Homer as a Buddha statue]]
 +
[[Selma]] gives [[Mr. Burns]] a driving test to renew his license. During the test, Selma starts to experience hot flashes and ends up going to hospital due to these. In the hospital, [[Dr. Hibbert]] tells Selma that she's going through menopause and shows her a video, starring {{Ch|Robert Wagner}}, about it. Selma then realizes that she's lost her chance to have a baby and wants one. She goes to the [[Springfield Orphanage]] to adopt, only for the birth father, [[Cletus]], to come along and take his baby back because he misheard what [[Brandine]] wanted. Disheartened by this, Selma is told by [[Lisa]] that she could adopt a baby from [[China]] as they have a lot of babies up for adoption there.
 +
 
 +
Selma then goes to the [[Consulate of China]] where she speaks to [[Mr. Zhao]]. Zhao tells Selma that her adoption request is all fine except she hasn't filled in a husband on the form, which she is required to have to adopt. After asking if he knew who [[Angus MacGyver]] was, Selma filled in [[Homer]]'s name, causing a chill to go through Homer. The Simpsons then decide to go to China with Selma to adopt a baby. On the plane, Selma tells Homer that she wants him to pretend to be her husband after Homer takes some medicine and starts to hallucinate, seeing three dragons. The [[White Dragon]] offers to take Homer to China on his back in return for peanuts, but Homer only offered him one.
 +
 
 +
In China, the family goes to meet [[Madam Wu]] to adopt a baby. After handing over the money, Wu tells Homer and Selma that she has to make sure they're a happy married couple and they have to wait a few days before they get the baby. Wu then goes around with the family as they explore the sights in China, including a Shaolin temple, [[Mao Zedong]]'s tomb, the [[Great Wall of China]] and a Chinese version of ''[[Death of a Salesman]]''. Madam Wu then asks Homer what his job is, and he tells her that he's a Chinese acrobat. At a [[Krusty Fried Chicken]], Madam Wu manages to offend both Lisa and [[Marge]] before they all go to the [[Chinese Acrobatic Theater]] to see a show. When the lead acrobat is unable to take part in the final stunt of the show, due to being dead, Madam Wu sends Homer to take part, as he had claimed to be an acrobat. Homer gets injured in the stunt and was taken to hospital.
 +
 
 +
In the hospital, Selma shows off baby [[Ling Bouvier|Ling]], and thanks Homer for helping her to get her. She then leaves Homer and Marge in the hospital for some snuggling. However, Madam Wu sees this as she was spying on the family at the time and takes Ling away from Selma again because she needs to be married to have her. Upset at this, the family comes up with a plan to get Ling back and Homer goes undercover as a [[Buddha]] statue into the [[Beijing Orphanage]]. He gets Ling back and escapes and meets back up with the family in [[Tiananmen Square]]. However, Madam Wu catches up with them in a tank and demands they hand Ling back. Selma has a heart to heart conversation with Madam Wu, who then decides to let Selma keep Ling as she (Wu) was also brought up by a single mother after her father died.
 +
 
 +
Madam Wu then goes with the family to the dock to say goodbye to them as they head off back home. However, Bart has been replaced by a [[Chinese spy]], which Homer claims is close enough. The three dragons then appear again and the [[Red Dragon]] starts to sing. During the end credits, [[David Silverman]] teaches the viewer how to draw Bart.
 +
 
 +
== Production ==
 +
The episode's writer, [[Dana Gould]], was adopting a child from China at the time the episode was being aired so he went under a pseudonym of Lawrence Talbot in case the episode was seen by the orphanage workers in China and they got offended by the episode. Dana Gould's daughter Lulu was the design of baby Ling. Gould chose the name {{W|Larry Talbot|Lawrence Talbot}} because that's the alter-ego of the Wolf Man.<ref name="DanaGould">{{Com|Gould, Dana|Goo Goo Gai Pan|Sixteenth|(2013).}}</ref> [[Tim Long]] directed [[Robert Wagner]]'s scenes in the episode.<ref>{{Com|Jean, Al|Goo Goo Gai Pan|Sixteenth|(2013).}}</ref> Homer pretending to be Selma's husband is a reference to something Dana Gould saw when adopting a baby, where a lesbian had a fake husband so she could adopt. Gould also mentioned that this was his favorite episode because it's so close to home for him.<ref name="DanaGould"/>
 +
 
 +
During the credits of the episode, [[David Silverman]] teaches the viewers how to draw Bart. However, the way he taught you was not actually how he draws Bart in reality. [[Erick Tran]] directed the live action Silverman segment.<ref>{{Com|Silverman, David|Goo Goo Gai Pan|Sixteenth|(2013).}}</ref>
 +
 
 +
<gallery>
 +
File:GABF06 Script.jpg|Production Script for the Episode
 +
</gallery>
 +
 
 +
== Reception ==
 +
Several of the jokes in the episode were taken poorly by China, with the episode being banned. These include jokes about the {{W|Tiananmen Square protests of 1989}}, [[Mao Zedong]] (who Homer calls "a little angel who killed 50 million people") and Homer portraying a [[Buddha]] statue.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-35398932 BBC News - "China's on-off relationship with The Simpsons"]</ref>
 +
 
 +
Robert Canning of {{W|IGN}} said that a majority of the jokes in the episode fall flat. He also felt that the actual storyline would take about 10 minutes if not for all the China filler. However, he did enjoy Robert Wagner's segment and the dragons. He gave the episode a 6.5 rating overall.<ref>[http://uk.ign.com/articles/2008/09/22/the-simpsons-flashback-goo-goo-gai-pan-review IGN - "The Simpsons Flashback: "Goo Goo Gai Pan" Review"]</ref>
  
While on the plane to China, Selma informs Homer that he must pretend to be her husband. Shocked, he later decides to do it for Marge. When they arrive, Selma claims that Bart and Lisa are their own children and Marge is their nanny. The Chinese adoption agent, Madam Wu (voiced by [[Lucy Liu]]), tells them that they will get a baby in a few days. Reasoning that he has no chance of being outed, Homer claims he is an acrobat when asked and is later called to perform a stunt when the main performer in a show suffers a "bullet-related death" from questioning the Communist Party; Homer is told to perform to forestall a riot brought on by the audience's realisation that the CCP is not infallible. Homer himself gets severely hurt performing and is treated in a hospital. There, Selma gets her daughter, whom she names [[Ling Bouvier|Ling]] and who is fond of grabbing Homer's eyes. When everyone leaves, Homer and Marge snuggle and are caught by Wu, who takes back Selma's baby.
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"Goo Goo Gai Pan" was nominated for a [[2005]] {{W|Environmental Media Award}} Turner Award, but it lost to "Prescription for Trouble" from ''{{W2|George Lopez|TV series}}''.<ref name="EMA2005">[https://web.archive.org/web/20071014120640/http://ema-online.org/awards_15th_annual.php Environmental Media Association - "15th Annual Environmental Media Awards"] (archived on {{W|Wayback Machine}})</ref>
  
The Simpsons decide to bring back Ling. At the nursery, they dress and spray paint Homer as a golden [[Buddha]] statue. The Chinese guards bring him in, although Homer can hardly keep in the pain they are causing trying to move him by inserting a hook into his nostril. He is able to find Ling and get her out. In Tiananmen Square, they are confronted by Madam Wu in a tank and Selma is able to convince her that she should keep Ling, although she needs to sign a form just to talk to her, from bureaucrat to bureaucrat. Wu says that she herself had to be raised by her mother, as her father choked to death the day before the Heimlich maneuver was invented. The Simpsons, Selma, and Ling then depart China via junk.
+
As of May 2022, the episode has a 7.0 rating on {{W|IMDb}}.<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0701100/ IMDb - "Goo Goo Gai Pan"]</ref>
  
{{Season 16}}
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== In other languages ==
 +
{{LanguageBox
 +
|de=yes
 +
|deName=Der lächelnde Buddha
 +
|deTrans=The smiling Buddha
 +
|es=yes
 +
|esName=Gu Gu Gai Pan
 +
|esTrans=Goo Goo Gai Pan
 +
|la=yes
 +
|laName=Aventura en China
 +
|laTrans=Adventure in China
 +
|fr=yes
 +
|frName=Bébé Nem
 +
|frTrans=Baby Nem
 +
|qu=yes
 +
|quName=Un numéro un pour emporter
 +
|quTrans=A number one takeaway
 +
|it=yes
 +
|itName=Adozione made in Cina (bimba in adozione, marito in prestito)
 +
|itTrans=Adoption made in China (baby girl for adoption, husband on loan)
 +
}}
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 +
== References ==
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{{Reflist}}
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{{Images|ep=yes}}
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{{season 16}}
  
[[es:Goo Goo Gai Pan]]
 
[[pt:Goo Goo Gai Pan]]
 
[[Category:Episodes]]
 
[[Category:Season 16]]
 
[[Category:Episodes Set In Other Countries ]]
 
 
[[Category:2005]]
 
[[Category:2005]]
 
[[Category:Homer episodes]]
 
[[Category:Homer episodes]]
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[[Category:Travel episodes]]
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[[Category:Environmental Media Award nominated episodes]]
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[[Category:Episodes written by Dana Gould]]
 +
[[Category:Episodes directed by Lance Kramer]]
 +
[[Category:Patty and Selma episodes]]
 +
 +
[[sv:Goo Goo Gai Pan]]

Latest revision as of 21:44, September 4, 2024

Season 16 Episode
346 "On a Clear Day I Can't See My Sister"
347
"Goo Goo Gai Pan"
"Mobile Homer" 348
"Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on Wu!"
Madam Wu
"Goo Goo Gai Pan"
Goo Goo Gai Pan promo.png
Episode Information
Episode number: 347
Season number: S16 E12
Production code: GABF06
Original airdate: March 13, 2005
Couch gag: The family is surprised by the townspeople and Homer collapses of a heart attack
Guest star(s): Robert Wagner as himself
Lucy Liu as Madam Wu
Showrunner: Al Jean
Written by: Dana Gould
Directed by: Lance Kramer


"Goo Goo Gai Pan" is the twelfth episode of season 16 of The Simpsons and the three-hundred and forty-seventh episode overall. It originally aired on March 13, 2005. The episode was written by Lawrence Talbot and directed by Lance Kramer. It guest stars Robert Wagner as himself and Lucy Liu as Madam Wu.

Synopsis[edit]

"Selma has a severe hot flash while giving Mr. Burns his driving test. Dr. Hibbert explains (with help from a video starring Robert Wagner) that Selma is experiencing the onset of menopause. Selma, decides she wants a baby rather than grow old alone. Adoption is suggested, but the Springfield orphanage is empty. Lisa suggests adopting a baby girl from China. One problem: the Chinese government only allows married couples to adopt. No problem; Selma writes down a name for her husband - Homer's - and "The Simpsons are going to China!" (with Marge acting as Bart and Lisa's nanny) so Selma and Homer can pick up the baby together."


Plot[edit]

Homer as a Buddha statue

Selma gives Mr. Burns a driving test to renew his license. During the test, Selma starts to experience hot flashes and ends up going to hospital due to these. In the hospital, Dr. Hibbert tells Selma that she's going through menopause and shows her a video, starring Robert Wagner, about it. Selma then realizes that she's lost her chance to have a baby and wants one. She goes to the Springfield Orphanage to adopt, only for the birth father, Cletus, to come along and take his baby back because he misheard what Brandine wanted. Disheartened by this, Selma is told by Lisa that she could adopt a baby from China as they have a lot of babies up for adoption there.

Selma then goes to the Consulate of China where she speaks to Mr. Zhao. Zhao tells Selma that her adoption request is all fine except she hasn't filled in a husband on the form, which she is required to have to adopt. After asking if he knew who Angus MacGyver was, Selma filled in Homer's name, causing a chill to go through Homer. The Simpsons then decide to go to China with Selma to adopt a baby. On the plane, Selma tells Homer that she wants him to pretend to be her husband after Homer takes some medicine and starts to hallucinate, seeing three dragons. The White Dragon offers to take Homer to China on his back in return for peanuts, but Homer only offered him one.

In China, the family goes to meet Madam Wu to adopt a baby. After handing over the money, Wu tells Homer and Selma that she has to make sure they're a happy married couple and they have to wait a few days before they get the baby. Wu then goes around with the family as they explore the sights in China, including a Shaolin temple, Mao Zedong's tomb, the Great Wall of China and a Chinese version of Death of a Salesman. Madam Wu then asks Homer what his job is, and he tells her that he's a Chinese acrobat. At a Krusty Fried Chicken, Madam Wu manages to offend both Lisa and Marge before they all go to the Chinese Acrobatic Theater to see a show. When the lead acrobat is unable to take part in the final stunt of the show, due to being dead, Madam Wu sends Homer to take part, as he had claimed to be an acrobat. Homer gets injured in the stunt and was taken to hospital.

In the hospital, Selma shows off baby Ling, and thanks Homer for helping her to get her. She then leaves Homer and Marge in the hospital for some snuggling. However, Madam Wu sees this as she was spying on the family at the time and takes Ling away from Selma again because she needs to be married to have her. Upset at this, the family comes up with a plan to get Ling back and Homer goes undercover as a Buddha statue into the Beijing Orphanage. He gets Ling back and escapes and meets back up with the family in Tiananmen Square. However, Madam Wu catches up with them in a tank and demands they hand Ling back. Selma has a heart to heart conversation with Madam Wu, who then decides to let Selma keep Ling as she (Wu) was also brought up by a single mother after her father died.

Madam Wu then goes with the family to the dock to say goodbye to them as they head off back home. However, Bart has been replaced by a Chinese spy, which Homer claims is close enough. The three dragons then appear again and the Red Dragon starts to sing. During the end credits, David Silverman teaches the viewer how to draw Bart.

Production[edit]

The episode's writer, Dana Gould, was adopting a child from China at the time the episode was being aired so he went under a pseudonym of Lawrence Talbot in case the episode was seen by the orphanage workers in China and they got offended by the episode. Dana Gould's daughter Lulu was the design of baby Ling. Gould chose the name Lawrence Talbot because that's the alter-ego of the Wolf Man.[1] Tim Long directed Robert Wagner's scenes in the episode.[2] Homer pretending to be Selma's husband is a reference to something Dana Gould saw when adopting a baby, where a lesbian had a fake husband so she could adopt. Gould also mentioned that this was his favorite episode because it's so close to home for him.[1]

During the credits of the episode, David Silverman teaches the viewers how to draw Bart. However, the way he taught you was not actually how he draws Bart in reality. Erick Tran directed the live action Silverman segment.[3]

Reception[edit]

Several of the jokes in the episode were taken poorly by China, with the episode being banned. These include jokes about the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, Mao Zedong (who Homer calls "a little angel who killed 50 million people") and Homer portraying a Buddha statue.[4]

Robert Canning of IGN said that a majority of the jokes in the episode fall flat. He also felt that the actual storyline would take about 10 minutes if not for all the China filler. However, he did enjoy Robert Wagner's segment and the dragons. He gave the episode a 6.5 rating overall.[5]

"Goo Goo Gai Pan" was nominated for a 2005 Environmental Media Award Turner Award, but it lost to "Prescription for Trouble" from George Lopez.[6]

As of May 2022, the episode has a 7.0 rating on IMDb.[7]

In other languages[edit]

Language Name Translation
Germany.png Deutsch "Der lächelnde Buddha" The smiling Buddha
Spain flag.png Español "Gu Gu Gai Pan" Goo Goo Gai Pan
Hispanic America.gif Español "Aventura en China" Adventure in China
France.png Français "Bébé Nem" Baby Nem
Flag of Quebec.svg.png Français "Un numéro un pour emporter" A number one takeaway
Italy Flag.png Italiano "Adozione made in Cina (bimba in adozione, marito in prestito)" Adoption made in China (baby girl for adoption, husband on loan)

References[edit]


The Saga of Carl - title screen.png Wikisimpsons has a collection of images related to "Goo Goo Gai Pan".
Season 16 Episodes
Treehouse of Horror XV All's Fair in Oven War Sleeping with the Enemy She Used to Be My Girl Fat Man and Little Boy Midnight Rx Mommie Beerest Homer and Ned's Hail Mary Pass Pranksta Rap There's Something About Marrying On a Clear Day I Can't See My Sister Goo Goo Gai Pan Mobile Homer The Seven-Beer Snitch Future-Drama Don't Fear the Roofer The Heartbroke Kid A Star Is Torn Thank God It's Doomsday Home Away from Homer The Father, the Son and the Holy Guest Star