Difference between revisions of "Extreme Makeover: Homer Edition"
Solar Dragon (talk | contribs) m |
|||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Tab}} | {{Tab}} | ||
| − | {{EpisodePrevNext|Homer? A Cracker Bro?|}} | + | {{EpisodePrevNext|Homer? A Cracker Bro?|Simpsley}} |
{{Episode | {{Episode | ||
|name= Extreme Makeover: Homer Edition | |name= Extreme Makeover: Homer Edition | ||
Revision as of 13:59, June 17, 2026
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
"Extreme Makeover: Homer Edition"
| ||||||||||||||||||
Episode Information
|
"Extreme Makeover: Homer Edition" is the 5th Disney+ exclusive episode of The Simpsons and the eight hundred sixth and eight hundred seventh episode overall. It originally released on Disney+ on June 17, 2026. The episode was written by Michael Price and Nick Dahan and directed by Matthew Nastuk and Timothy Bailey.
Synopsis
- Homer and Marge's fun couples' date night goes off the rails when Marge learns Homer left the kids unsupervised with only the doorbell camera as a babysitter. Frustrated with her imperfect husband, a tipsy Marge stirs up a trilogy of fantasies of a different Homer.
Pre-release information
The title is a pun on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition that involves the plot of the episode.
It's a double and a trilogy episode. Each segment is 8 minutes long, with a wrap-around episode with a story too, and will be around 46 minutes long.
It has big pop culture mashups.
There's a pan across a retro nostalgia arcade, with old and new video games full of references, Easter Eggs, visual gags and jokes. One of them is called Nefertiti's Ale.
It'll have a big couch gag with a special collaboration.
It'll have a scene where Homer and Marge eat at a Dave & Buster's type place with a poster for Good-Time Slim, Uncle Doobie, and the Great "Frisco Freak-Out" on the wall.
Production
The couch gag was made by arts and entertainment company Meow Wolf and includes references to their art installation Omega Mart. Showrunner Matt Selman has been a fan of Meow Wolf since he visited Omega Mart and "dreamed of trying to steal some of their artist-driven conceptual genius for The Simpsons." Selman referred to the couch gag as a "dream collaboration."[1]
References