Difference between revisions of "I Love Lucy"
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{{TB|"[[I Love Lisa]]"}} | {{TB|"[[I Love Lisa]]"}} | ||
{{TB|The series is punned in the episode title.}} | {{TB|The series is punned in the episode title.}} | ||
+ | {{TBT|[[File:Homer Draws a Line.png|200px]]}} | ||
+ | {{TB|[[Season 6|6]]}} | ||
+ | {{TB|126}} | ||
+ | {{TB|"[[The Springfield Connection]]"}} | ||
+ | {{TB|During [[Marge]]'s brief tenure as a [[Springfield Police Department|Springfield Police]] officer, she arrests [[Homer]] for parking across three handicapped spaces and refusing to move his car. Afterwards, she tries to apologize, but Homer refuses to accept the apology and announces he's drawing a line down the center of the house, ''a. la.'' ''I Love Lucy''. In the episode "Men Are Messy", [[Lucy McGillicuddy Ricardo Carmichael|Lucy]] gets fed up with [[Ricky Ricardo|Ricky]]'s sloppy habits, draws a line down the middle of the apartment, and announces that from now on she's only cleaning her half.}} | ||
{{TBT|[[File:Lucy McGillicuddy.png|200px]]<br>[[File:Scratchy Clones.png|200px]]}} | {{TBT|[[File:Lucy McGillicuddy.png|200px]]<br>[[File:Scratchy Clones.png|200px]]}} | ||
{{TB|[[Season 11|11]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 11|11]]}} | ||
{{TB|236}} | {{TB|236}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Little Big Mom]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Little Big Mom]]"}} | ||
− | {{TB|Exhausted from doing all of the housework (due to | + | {{TB|Exhausted from doing all of the housework (due to Marge being in hospital and Homer and [[Bart]] doing no work at all), [[Lisa]] meets the ghost of [[Lucy McGillicuddy Ricardo Carmichael]], who gives her an idea for getting even with Homer and Bart. Ghost Lucy's surnames are a {{w|pastiche}} of Lucille Ball's sitcom characters: On ''I Love Lucy'' and ''The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour'', McGillicuddy was Lucy's character's maiden name and Ricardo was her married name. On ''The Lucy Show'', Lucy's character's last name was Carmichael. Also, after telling Lisa her name, Ghost Lucy says, "And I think there's some more", an offhand reference to Lucy Barker, Ball's character on ''{{w|Life with Lucy}}''.<br><br>Additionally, Homer and Bart watch ''I Love Lucy'' on TV; and the ''[[The Itchy & Scratchy Show|Itchy & Scratchy]]'' cartoon ("[[The Tears of a Clone]]") shown during the episode contains a sight gag on Lucy's and Ethel's classic candy wrapping scene from the ''I Love Lucy'' episode "Job Switching".}} |
{{TBT|[[File:Bart Playing Drums.jpg|200px]]}} | {{TBT|[[File:Bart Playing Drums.jpg|200px]]}} | ||
{{TB|[[Season 18|18]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 18|18]]}} |
Revision as of 21:15, July 20, 2017
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I Love Lucy is a landmark American television sitcom that aired in the 1950s. It starred Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz as Lucy and Ricky Ricardo, a couple living in an apartment in New York City; and William Frawley and Vivian Vance as Fred and Ethel Mertz, their best friends, neighbors and landlords.
The series first aired as a half-hour show for six television seasons, from 1951 to 1957. After it ended, a modified version consisting of 13 one-hour specials was aired over the next three television seasons, from 1957 to 1960. The one-hour special series was titled The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show when it first aired; later, in reruns, it was titled The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour. In general usage, however, the two shows are often referred to collectively as I Love Lucy.
Following the end of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour (and her divorce from Arnaz), Lucille Ball starred in three additional sitcoms, portraying different characters named Lucy: The Lucy Show (1962-1968), Here's Lucy (1968-1974), and Life with Lucy (1986).
I Love Lucy is noteworthy for being the first scripted television program to be filmed in front of a live studio audience. It was the most-watched show in the United States for four of its six seasons and finished its run at the top of the Nielsen ratings. The show has been syndicated in dozens of languages worldwide and remains popular in the USA, attracting tens of millions of viewers each year.
I Love Lucy has been referred to several times on The Simpsons: in the Ullman shorts, in television episodes, and in comic stories.
References
Ullman Shorts
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Episodes
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Comics
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External links