The Brother from Another Series Written by Ken Keeler Directed by Pete Michels ============================================================================== Production code: 4F14 Original Airdate on FOX: 23-Feb-97 Capsule revision A, 07-Mar-98 ============================================================================== > "TV Guide" Synopsis ============================================================================== Murderous convict Sideshow Bob is released to work for his brother Cecil, whom Bob bested at the Krusty-sidekick auditions. ============================================================================== > Title sequence ============================================================================== Couch: The room is upside-down. OFF run in on the ceiling and sit down on the couch, until they fall to the "real" ground. ============================================================================== > Did You Notice... ============================================================================== ... the prison chapel has bars over the stained-glass windows? ... after Bart says "It's him or me, O Lord", Marge pulls Bart's hands apart? ... Sideshow Bob for the first time seems generally irritated at Lisa? Dale G. Abersold: ... this is the first episode directed by Pete Michels? Stephan Bonneville: ... The convicts are enjoying Krusty's lousy singing? ... Cecil's nose curves up, as opposed to Bob, who's nose curves down? ... The pictures of Birch Barlow and George C. Scott on the wall at the restaurant? ... Bart can jump surprisingly far and accurately? ... The dam burst didn't seem to hurt the city at all? (At least not Evergreen Terrace?) ... Springfield now has least FOUR prisons? (See below) Don Del Grande: ... in the Prison Special opening screen, "Krusty the Clown" has "Clown" spelled with a C rather than a K? ... Krusty isn't actually playing the guitar in his song? ... Reverend Lovejoy finds time to lead church services at Springfield Prison? ... Sideshow Bob didn't laugh maniacally in this episode? ... Bart says his prayers at 9:55 (or was that 10:50)? ... when Bart prays, he says "Dad" instead of "Homer"? ... the caption on the audition is "TEN YEARS AGO", rather than a specific year? ... Cecil left a briefcase full of money in a trailer with an open window? ... the dam's turbines are in operation despite the dam still being under construction? ... when Marge says "Someone should really go up there and talk to him", Maggie quickly falls asleep? Jason Hancock: ... Springfield Prison now has a church? ... the piano in Cecil's apartment? ... one of Krusty's employees in the flashback looks like Dean Peterson from Springfield University (as seen in 1F02)? ... the Pimento Grove has different celebrity photos? ... the baseball and potted plant on the end table? ... the falling money looks like a green swarm of bees? ... Sideshow Bob cuts off the rope with pliers? Diego Kontarovsky: ... Bob and Cecil are apparently right-handed, as told from the table settings? ... During Krusty's Prison Special, the clock in Bart's room reads about 7:55 AM? ... Lionel Hutz in the Visiting Room? ... Sideshow Bob crossing his eyes when emphasizing the CLOWN in Clown College (Princeton)? ... Cecil's arms are cuffed behind him and Bob's are cuffed from the front? Dallas Pesola: ... Edna Krabappel was wearing a sleeveless shirt? ... Sideshow Bob wears his shirt collars turned up? ... everyone but Sideshow Bob pronounces his brother's name as "see-sill" instead of "ses-sill"? Mark Aaron Richey: ... you can see Bob in the opening shot of the big open area? ... The Springfield Shopper still costs 35 cents? ... Cecil's feet are as big as Bob's (proving that he is evil, too)? ... Bob seems to have aquired an expensive watch? ... Bart is reading from the children's menu and has milk on ice? ... Edna and Bob are eating steaks? ... there's a baseball by the vase in the upstairs hall? ... it's 12:10 AM when Bart and Lisa breaks into Bob's office? Benjamin J. Robinson: ... Cecil's hair looks like Bart's when he's combed it for church? ... Cecil drives a Volvo sedan of some sort? Liam J. Scanlan: ... Cecil's house house looks like Smither's house from 3F23? ... Sideshow Cecil looks identical to the clown's in Homer's dream from 2F12? ... this is only Ralph's second line this season? (the other was from 3F24) Marge Starbrod-Simpson: ... Cecil's outfit looks almost like the one Smithers wore in 1F12 and 3F14? ... Homer, Marge, and Maggie were hardly in this episode? ... children are allowed at Pimento Grove (didn't think so, there were none there in 3F15)? ... this long-lost relative thing will never end until (so it looks) ALL the characters are reunited with some long-lost relative of theirs? ============================================================================== > Voice Credits ============================================================================== - Starring - Dan Castellaneta (Homer, Krusty, Quimby) - Julie Kavner (Marge) - Nancy Cartwright (Bart, Ralph) - Yeardley Smith (Lisa) - Hank Azaria (Moe, Wiggum, "Probably!", Cletus, Lou) - Harry Shearer (Krusty Special announcer, Fat prisoner, Lovejoy, Cousin Merl) - Special Guest Voice - Kelsey Grammer (Sideshow Bob) - David Hyde Pierce (Cecil Terwilliger) - Marcia Wallace (Edna Krabappel) - Also Starring - Pamela Hayden (Milhouse) ============================================================================== > Movie (and other) references ============================================================================== + "Brother from Another Planet" {dga} - title (see also "Brother from the Same Planet" [9F12]) + "Frasier" [Now who said, "Well, Duh"?] - Cecil and Bob are voiced by David Hyde Pierce and Kelsey Grammar respectively, who play brothers Niles and Frasier Crane on the show - in "Frasier," the Crane brothers both have upper-crust mannerisms; the same is true of the Terwilliger brothers in this episode - a brief "title card" is used to introduce the second act, much like on "Frasier" (the music is the same, as well) - Cecil's upbeat apartment with the cityscape in the window is similar to Frasier's {dk} - the David Hyde Pierce character refers to Maris, the unseen wife of Niles Crane - the promotional advertisement for this series features Bob and Cecil, with Bob saying, "Mother had hopes of us becoming prominent psychologists, you know."; on "Frasier," Grammer and Pierce play psychologists {mar} - "Jailhouse Rock" {bjr} - Krusty plays rockabilly tunes while in the slammer, like Elvis in this movie - Johnny Cash {dc} - Krusty is wearing all black a la Johnny Cash; - He's doing a prison benefit, and Johnny Cash does a lot of prison benefits (or used to, anyway) - He's singing in a range that's closer to Johnny Cash's than Elvis' (or what I assume would be Krusty's natural range, for that matter). - He's sitting in a chair, not doing "moves" like the comeback special- era Elvis would have. + "Amazing Grace" - Sideshow Bob sings this in the prison chapel + "Ban the Bomb" {ddg} - "Ban the Bob" + "Batman" - While confronting Sideshow Bob, Bart says to Lisa "Get 'em Lis'". The ensuing few seconds of music is the same as from many Batman fight scenes. + "Top Of The World" by the Carpenters - Cecil sings a bit of this while preparing to blow up the dam ~ "Catch-22" {ce} - The part where Chief Wiggum tells Lou he'd promote him to sergeant is pretty much a direct quote from this book. ============================================================================== > Previous episode references ============================================================================== - The Many Crimes of Sideshow Bob - [7G12] "After I tried to frame you [Krusty] for armed robbery... - [8F20] ...I tried to murder Selma Bouvier - [9F22] And whenever I could find a spare moment, I've tried to murder Bart Simpson." - [2F02] I rigged the mayoral elections. - [3F08] I tried to blow up Springfield with a nuclear device, and I tried to kill you [Krusty]. - [7G08], [4F01] "Touche!" {mss} - [7F03] Bart prays {ljs} - [7F16], [1F01] Someone is revealed to have a brother {mss} - [8F05] "You have brought shame on our family" is said {ljs} - [8F20] Krusty and SSB get together after SSB is no longer part of Krusty's show {mss} - [8F21] A Trash-Co Waste Disposal Unit appears - [9F12] Title also based on "Brother from Another Planet" {dga} - [9F22] the music from "Cape Feare" is heard {bjr} - [1F04] Bed wetting is mentioned (cf. Bart: "I hope this is sweat!") {mss} - [2F02] Sideshow Bob hates Princeton {dga} - [2F08] The other series starring Kelsey Grammer is featured {ljs} - [2F11], [3F23] Bridge destroyed {ljs} - [3F08] SSB involved with explosives {mss} - [3F11] Dairy Queen is mentioned - [3F12] Advertisement of NBC show {ljs} - [3F15] Springfield's choice restaurant for pitching woo, The Pimento Grove, appears - [3F16] someone enumerates the various crimes of Sideshow Bob {bjr} - [3F18] The jazzy Simpsons theme is used {ljs} - [3F23] President of a company threatens to destroy town {ljs} ============================================================================== > Freeze frame fun ============================================================================== - Sign inside visiting room {dk} Please Visit Only YOUR Convict - Newspaper headline MANIAC TO LIVE AT BROTHER'S APARTMENT - Protest signs at Bob's release {bjr} Keep Bob You're BAN Crime Yes! Locked Up Making A THE Criminals No! --------- Mistakes BOB - Protestors outside Springfield Prison - Front shot: Sam, Carl, Barney, Smithers, Charlie, Ruth Powers, Lenny, Mrs. Glick, Moe, Ned Flanders, Lisa, Homer, Skinner, Willy, Ms. Hoover, Bart, Marge, Kirk Van Houten, Martin's dad, Dr. Hibbert, (later) Dr. Nick Riviera {jh} - Other shots: Maude, Sideshow Mel, Otto, Barney, Jasper {mar} - Sign while driving into Springfield {bjr} Welcome to S P R I N G F I E L D PROUD HOME OF SIDESHOW BOB - Leading into the second act {bjr} "FRASIER" IS A HIT SHOW ON THE NBC TELEVISION NETWORK - Overseas Animation: Rough Draft {ddg} ============================================================================== > Animation, continuity, and other goofs ============================================================================== = In the opening shot of Krusty's special, there is an aisle right in front of Krusty, that disappears in the closeup shots. {mar} + Up until 3F08 (3F07 in production order), Springfield's prisoners wore blue. In 3F08 and all subsequent eps, they wore orange. Now they're in blue again. {mss} = Everyone in the Visiting Room dissappears after Bob sits down. {dk} + Springfield Prison was called "Springfield State Penitentiary" in previous episodes. {jh} = Wiggum's badge switches sides after Bob's release. {dk} = In the first shot of the back of the protesters, Sideshow Mel and Otto are seen, but they aren't in the front shots. And in the closeup of Bob getting into Cecil's car, Barney and Jasper can be seen, but they aren't in the long shots of the car driving up and pulling away. {mar} = During Bob's speech, Rev. Lovejoy moves from behind Bob to stand with the protesters, to back behind Bob. {mar} = When Bob and Cecil are eating dinner, their glasses keep changing between champagne and wine glasses. {ljs} * Why would Springfield need both a hydro dam and nuclear plant? (If the hydro power is a replacement, since when does Springfield care about the environment? Besides which, Mr. Burns would probably put a stop to it...) {sb} = At the Pimento Grove, Bob's fork moves from his right to his left without him touching it. {dk} = When Bart tells Bob he'll be watching his every move at the Pimento Grove, Bart's wine glass mysteriously has red wine in it where milk was previously. {sf} = The first time we see Bob's office, a clock appears, and a light switch dissappears. {dk} = Bob is wearing a watch when he discovers Bart and Lisa in the trash bin, but it's gone when he drops the children off at their house. {mar} * Even if the cement was hollow, hitting it still shouldn't have caused it to collapse. {sb} = After Bob slaps the concrete wall, most of the rubble disappears. {sf} = The wooden board Bob used to plug the turbine doesn't show up until Bob runs to the stairs; it then is on the left side of the guardrail in one shot, and changes sides when Bob picks it up. {ljs} = When SSB yells "Come on, quickly now!" to Bart and Lisa at the dam, the stopped turbine behind him temporarily restarts. {dj} = At first glance, the hole Bob and the kids use to try to escape from the Turbine Room isn't as wide as it should be in order to hold all three of them, but from inside the tunnel, there's room to spare. {dk} = The number of dynamite sticks changes; originally there were ten, then eight as Cecil is about to blow up the dam, then seven after SSB grabs Bart. {jh} * Why didn't Bob just cut off the dynamite when Bart was attacking Cecil? [But then, Bart would be dead, so I guess it was the right thing to do... - -ed] {sb} = When preparing to throw Bart from the cliff, Cecil's shoes are peeking from the edge, but from Bart's point of view, he's standing on a fenced balcony. {ljs} = When Bart is thrown over the edge of the gorge, he's a lot farther from the dam than when Bob catches him. {ddg} * In the long shot of Bob falling while hanging onto the end of the dynamite, he shouldn't be able to reach Bart. {ddg} + Milhouse managed a fall from the top of a dam in 1F17 without getting hurt. {ddg} * Bart and Bob would have been flying at such a high speed when they collided in midair, they would have been killed. Furthermore, they would have smashed back into the concrete wall -- a common occurence among bungee jumpers. {sb} * Cecil, the clever mastermind that he is, planned to blow up the dam while standing right on top of it, just before Bob snipped the wire. {dk} = As Bob and Bart are hanging, you see a pipe just below them. [Actually, it's not *right* under them, so I guess they missed it and hit another pipe further down --ed] {sf} * The second time Bob and Bart fall, they fall for about 10 seconds, so they should be travelling fast enough to be killed by the sudden stop caused by Bob hitting the pipe. {ddg} = When the dam bursts, it is beige; before that, it was always gray. {ddg} * When the wave approaches Evergreen Terrace, it is more than wide enough to hit the houses on each side, yet no houses are affected. {ddg} * The water is enough to wash Ralph's bed down the street, yet not a drop leaks into OFF's house. {sb} * Why is Ralph in bed in what is presumably the middle of the day? {dp2} ============================================================================== > Reviews ============================================================================== Dale G. Abersold: If this is the final Sideshow Bob episode, then at least the series went out with great panache. Though it seems impossible to imagine a non-evil Sideshow Bob, the bickering between Bob and Cecil was priceless. The usual cockamamie plot and hilarious situations make this the season's single funniest episode. (A) Greg Bigoni: I liked the way that the show opened by recounting SSB's previous escapades without resorting to those same tired flashbacks again, while also giving some light parody to those impersonal celebrity "interviews" that can be seen on just about any talk show. From there, though, the storyline became lost. SSB reached such a peak of insanity in last year's (much better) appearance, bringing him back to sanity so quickly came off as awkward to me. David Hyde Pierce did a fine job, but unfortunately, the character of Sideshow Bob has started to get a tad uninteresting. If they do bring him back again, I hope it's in a completely manic storyline, because this one just didn't do it for me. (B-) Stephan Bonneville: I have a strong objection to this whole disgraceful episode. Firstly, the writers stripped Sideshow Bob of his appropriate character and turned him into some kind of heroic figure. When we finally started to feel pity for him, they banished him back to prison in a totally humourless ending. Cecil was an empty and boring character for a poor appearance, and besides the good scene with the slack-jawed yokels there was little to laugh about. The plotline was sketchy and mediocre at best, compounding the general frustration that the writers have hit a dead end with Bob. (D-) Richard Bunnell: I was told 3 hours early by someone in the Eastern time zone that this episode would suck, but I was wrong, IMHO. I enjoyed the episode like I have any other Sideshow Bob one, with many good lines- "I think I wet my bed!" "I hope Bob fed you because I ate both your dinners" and such. I liked the way they got Bob back in jail at the end, even though I expected it to happen. However, it wasn't CONSISTENTLY funny the whole time, since a bunch of it was the same joke about Bart stalking Bob. (A-) Jesse Burgheimer: The annual Simpsons tradition of another Sideshow Bob episode is probably not the best one featuring SSB, but it certainly is a decent one. Cecil, Bob's brother and voice of David Hyde Pierce (of NBC's overrated "Frasier") is the best part of this episode, but only because Kelsy Grammer did a rather mediocre job playing Bart's other mortal enemy. He wasn't the polite but sinister mastermind that is continually thwarted by Bart and Lisa, but instead a bitter, unentertaining jerk. But while SSB wasn't very entertaining, the episode was. From Homer's poor attempt at comforting Bart to Bob and Cecil's "diabolical scheme," 4F14 was worth the wait. (B+) Don Del Grande: It was your typical "average" episode (which I usually rate a B), but there was just something about that "Bob saves Bart from plunging to his death" ending that didn't sit right. (B-) Steve Frayne: Wow Sideshow Bob sure makes for a great episode. I really liked the introduction of Cecil for this episode as he provided a real change of pace, but hopefully the two won't cook up a scheme together for next season but rather Bob will be back to his evil antics by himself. Bob being moralistic this time really threw me as it was very late in the show before I realized Bob was actually legitimate. I kept waiting for him to turn on Bart but it never came to pass. As far as this ranks among other Bob episodes, I still like the original the best. I also prefer the nuclear bomb scheme and the run for mayor, but every Bob episode is well above average and I just can't wait until next year's perfomance. (A-) Timothy Goddard: It was great to see David Hyde Pierce and Kelsey Grammer together in a Simpsons episode, and I enjoyed the role reversal (Sideshow Bob as a homicidal maniac was beginning to get tiresome). The couple of Frasier references were good, as was Ralph's only line. The show was engaging and effective for the third time in as many weeks. (B+) Jason Hancock: This was probably the worst of the Sideshow Bob episodes. Much of the story -- especially the third act was slow -- although the show improved toward the end with Ralph's cameo. I also liked Bart's line, "Please, God, kill Sideshow Bob." (C+) Ryan Johnson: This frasier crossover turned action adventure, was not the worst episode ever, but it was pretty close. The good, kind bob didn't work, and his brother playing a sinister mastermind out to destroy the town didn't work either. The writers need to save these action episodes for a spinoff series. I don't want to see Bart and Lisa look through dumpsters, sneak through offices, run around a hydroelectric dam and then save a city. The show can sink much lower after the "America's Funniest Home Videos" Bob saves Bart ending. (F) Diego Kontarovsky: Excellent episode. Great lines, such as "Oh, great. Whenever a woman passes by, I suppose it will be my job to lead the hooting. 'Oh, yeah! Shake it, madam. Capital knockers!'" and "_Especially_ Lisa. But _ESPECIALLY_ Bart." The similarity to the Crane brothers' bickering whenever the Terwiligers fought was hilarious; we need more episodes like this one. (A+) Matthew Kurth: Cute, but it wasn't that funny. A little of the Frasier parody went a long way. (C+) Jeff Miller: Though I still agree with the many on this newsgroup who say "Cape Feare" was the best in the SSB series, I have to say I thought tonight's was the second best. When the episode started, I looked for the writing credit, and when I saw it was Ken Keeler I thought, "Oh, no, this isn't going to be funny." (I still haven't forgiven him for that George Bush crapola) But luckily, I sat back, watched, and enjoyed a great episode chock full of the stuff that makes Simpsons the funniest show on television. I plan to watch this one on my tape again in a few weeks just to make sure I didn't see this one as so good just because it was redemption for last week's unwatchable "Homerphobia", but honestly, I think this one will stand the test of time. (B+) Blaine Moller: Any episode with side show Bob is usually pretty good and this was no exception, great episode. It was surprising to see Bob as the good guy this time around. I think we'll be seeing more of Side show Bob and Cecil in the next season or so. The possibilities are endless. Good story line and a good cast of characters. Also the first time I've seen ralph wiggum in awhile. (B+) Nate Patrin: Now this is strange... very, very strange. I tried hard to laugh at various points in this ep, but I didn't. Yet when it ended, the first thing I thought wasn't "Gee, that sucked" but rather "Hm. Interesting". This show succeeded because the story and character development caught me and actually made me interested in seeing how it ended. The Frasier/Niles to Bob/Cyril bit was, while far too evident, amusing when dropped into such a bizarre context. As for Bart and Lisa's roles, they were their usual Sideshow Bob-ep selves- i.e. a bit too Scooby-Doo-ish. Not like I care _too_ much... (B-) Werner Peeters: When I first read what this episode was about, I thought: 'Oh no, another Sideshow Bob episode'. Somehow, the SB episodes all have the same story (Bob goed after either Bart, either Krusty or both), but somehow the forced temporal Bob/Bart partnership *worked*! Nevertheless, the Bob formula is wearing off, and the makers should maybe consider to give Bob the same treatment as Poochie! I mean, this is the sixth or seventh Bob- episode, right? That's enough! (B) Abhi Ray: Yes! This episode was worlds better than "Sideshow Bob's Last Gleaming" but can't beat "Cape Feare". It was the first great episode in a while. There were a lot of great scenes and quotes: (Ralph wets his bed, Bob dating Krabbapell, Cletus, Homer's failed attempt to comfort Bart, Millhouse, the sigh in between screaming) The story worked well enough for me, although I liked Bob better as an evil maniac. Maybe next year, he'll become himself. (A-) Mark Aaron Richey: Great. The producers go to all that trouble to get David Hyde Pierce to play Sideshow Bob's brother, and then what? They turn Bob good? Who saves Bart's life?? By turning into Indiana Jones?!!? I guess the writers were so busy in thinking of good deeds for Bob that they forgot to put in many jokes. Ho-hum. Maybe next year, Bob will be evil again. Bring back Cecil, too (both Pierce and Kelsey Grammer were quite good, considering), and have them team up to do something evil and funny, like this episode should have done in the first place. No wonder Fox scheduled it opposite the broadcast premiere of the best and most important movie of the 1990's (which I was smart enough to stick with, leaving this disappointment to 10:30 PM) (C-) Benjamin J. Robinson: Just when you thought the Sideshow Bob series had nowhere to go, they come up with a few new twists. In addition, this new entry features nice interactions between Sideshow Bob and his brother Cecil, and between Bart and Lisa. The resolution isn't as satisfying as I'd hoped it would be, but otherwise this is a good entry in the Sideshow Bob series. (B) Matt Rose: All in all a pretty good episode. I was laughing at a few things (most notably Ralph) and I really liked the new twist to an old story (i.e. Bart vs. Sideshow Bob). I bet a lot of recent detractors find the 'Bob as the good guy' story as a total paradox but it doesn't bother me. It's funny, watching this I almost *felt sorry* for Sideshow Bob at the end which gives me a feeling that the episode was a little incomplete. Maybe if the show goes another year we may see what happens. At least they made Chief Wiggum look stupid in the process which I found somewhat funny. (A-) Donni Saphire-Bernstein: I thought this was another great episode. Geez, I'm an easy judge- I haven't disliked a single episode this season, apart from Homer's championship bout and Ned going crazy. Still, this was a hilarious episode. I am SO HAPPY that they finally let Sideshow Bob stay good. Cecil was hilarious. The scene with Quimby arguing with Leroy was hilarious. I found Bart's continuous persecution of SB to be irritating; yeah, yeah, we get the joke. For the most part, the episode flowed quite well. In my humble opinion, well done! It's always funny to see Cletus, no matter what they have him doing or saying. Sideshow Bob, as always, is a hoot as he rants and raves against Springfield's denizens. Chief Wiggum had me rolling at "crazy Lisa Simpson". The plot was good; at the very least, the writers didn't trot out that tired old "SSB tries to destroy Springfield or kill someone" shtick. Instead, they turned it on its ear and seemed to be making fun of the whole "evil SSB" thing. (B+) Liam J. Scanlan: Up high with 4F05 and 4F11, but not the best of the season. Grammer is still his usual best and DHP was excellent and the Frasier refs were good too. I wonder what would've happened to Bob if he got of free. And what will become of Bob and Cecil? Will the next Sideshow Bob episode feature Cecil? Lord knows. (A) Sloan Schang: Well, it's finally come (at least for me). The very first episode of this season which had me literally laughing well into the commercials. The jokes were fast and furious, for a switch, exemplified by the scene beginning with Cletus saying that there's trouble "down to tha ceeement truck" and ending with Bob spinning the pipe segment to reveal a glimpse of Bart, crouched on hands and knees, as he rotates agin out of sight. Even the home scenes were as they used to be (the exchange between Homer, Marge and Lisa after Bart runs screaming up the stairs). Also good to see again were some subtle and not-so-subtle literary references - which is always a given when Kelsey Grammar is guesting. (A+) Marge Starbrod-Simpson: I think I'm alone on this, but I loved tonight's episode. It sure was a pick-me-up from last week's disturbing excuse for a Simpsons episode (the second worst ever, BTW). SSB episodes are usually pretty good, and this was no excepton. The ending could've been better, though. (B+) Yours Truly: I'm rather glad Sideshow Bob gets to leave the spotlight (he *is* leaving, right?) in something more glimmering than 3F08. Unfortunately, his days of glory are long gone, and I had a hard time recognizing our genius mastermind in some parts of this episode. Too bad, as he and Cecil really made a good pair, both having many good lines to their credit. One could feel the chemestry between Grammer and Hyde Pierce, and that alone made this episode enjoyable. (B-) AVERAGE GRADE: B (2.92) Std Dev.: 0.9871 (28 reviews computed) NIELSEN RATING: 15.26 (Ranked 26th out of 107) {ol} ============================================================================== > Comments and other observations ============================================================================== >> Brother From Another Planet Mark_Aaron Richey: 1984 comedy from writer-director John Sayles (an Oscar nominee this year for his brilliant screenplay for "Lone Star") about an alien who looks exactly like an African-American man who crashes into New York City. Apprently, the staff really likes this movie, since it's the second time they've ripped off its title for an episode title (the first was [9F12] "Brother From the Same Planet"). >> Writer Watch Dale G. Abersold: Ken Keeler's Simpsons career has included the episodes "A Star is Burns" [2F31], "Two Bad Neighbors" [3F09], "The Thing and I" from this year's Hallowe'en episode [4F02], and "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Homer" [3F24]. Forthcoming from Keeler: next season's "The Principal and the Pauper" [4F23]. Keeler was also a writer for "The Critic." >> "Frasier" is a hit show on the NBC television network Benjamin J. Robinson: One of the best series on the air (aside from "The Simpsons," of course) is "Frasier." A spin-off of the popular series "Cheers," the series focuses on the life of Dr. Frasier Crane, played by Kelsey Grammer. (Yes, that's right, the psychologist guy from "Cheers.") The premise is that Frasier has moved from Boston to his hometown of Seattle. There, he lives with his father, a brusque ex-cop with a bad hip who couldn't be less like his son if he tried. A slightly dotty live-in therapist helps Frasier care for his dad. One of the principal characters on the show is Frasier's brother, Dr. Niles Crane, played by David Hyde Pierce. Like the Terwilliger brothers in this episode, the Crane boys are kind of uppity (Frasier less so than Niles), and life provides plenty of humbling experiences for them. Critics were initially skeptical that this would work, but the show's witty writing and actors' excellent performances quickly won them over. "Frasier" is now one of NBC's more popular shows, and airs (in the United States) Tuesdays at 9:00pm Eastern time, 8:00pm Central. Mark_Aaron Richey: Bob and Cecil are how Frasier and Niles would be if they decided to get wacky hair styles and become homicidal maniacs. The title card that began Act II is similar to the cards that flash up during "Frasier" episodes, giving titles to individual segments. And Maris is the name of Niles estranged, never-seen, very wierd wife. >> Gimmicky Guest Voices Dale G. Abersold: David Hyde-Pierce was an obscure character actor (see him in such films as "Sleepless in Seattle" and "Nixon") until he was cast as younger brother Niles Crane on the hit NBC series "Frasier" in 1993. His interpretation of the upper-class twit have won him the lion's share of good reviews, as well as two best supporting-actor Emmys. Perhaps it was inevitable that he be cast as the brother of Kelsey Grammer's Simpsons character. >> Those hydrological and hydrodynamical Cappadocians Benjamin Ball: Cappadocia is a region of central Turkey that was the site of an ancient kingdom that rose from the ashes of the Hittite empire. It was later a Roman province, and is mentioned in the bible several times. Cities in Cappadocia are popular tourist sites because the ancient residents carved them out of the tufa, or sandstone. There are also several elaborate underground cities in Cappadocia, founded by Christians who wished to escape the persecuctions of the Roman empire and later the Byzantine empire. Having been there myself, I never heard anything really special about the Cappadocian's committment to water. The region is fairly arid, with only a few streams to irrigate the dusty soil. I believe that most of the present-day farmland is irrigated by the Turkish government from far- away rivers and reservoirs. >> Arthur Fielder Tom Restivo: Maestro Arthur Fielder of the Boston Pops died in July of 1979, after serving as conductor for 50 years. He did much to bring classical music appreciation to the common folk, including free concerts at the Hatch Shell on the Charles River Esplanade (rhymes with 'promanade', not 'lemonade' ) and orchestral renditions of 'modern' music from Big BAnd to the Beatles. His most famous concert was on July 4th, 1976, for the Bicentennial, where a record 250,000 fans heard Fiedler and the Pops play the '1812 Overture', complete with howitzers, bells, and fireworks. For a tribute a week after his death, the Pops replayed the music from that 1976 concert, led by interim conductor Harry Ellis Dickson. The orchestra played the final piece, the signature 'Stars & Stripes Forever', without Dickerson and somewhat somberly ("The Missing Conductor Formation?") in tribute to Fiedler. There is a metal, six-foot bust of Fielder near the Hatch Shell. >> Those Immortal Threads - Will the kids ever age? (aka. What year is this?) Matt Rose: When Bob and Cecil audition for the Krusty show, it says "ten years ago". By all logic, does this mean that (considering the original Sideshow Bob episode [7G12] was 7 years ago) Sideshow Bob only was on the show for three years? By that logic this means Sideshow Mel has been Krusty's sidekick for more than twice as long as Bob was. Perhaps we are supposed to go by the "characters do not age" theory for this one and assume Bob was on the Krusty show for the full 10 years. Since Sideshow Bob has been shown to be with Krusty during the 1984 olympics (9F08) and the Falkland Islands invasion (1F16), one might assume we're still in 1989... >> Loose Ends Mark_Aaron Richey: For some reason, various singers and comics have decided to stage specials in prisons, I guess figuring that risking their lives would increase their popularity and ratings. Stephan Bonneville: Springfield has a surprisingly high number of prisons for it's size. The number is now up to 4, consisting of: Springfield State Prison (9F22), Springfield Minimum Security Prison, (2F02) Springfield Women's Prison, (9F20) Springfield Medium Security Prison If you remember your Physics 101, a fall of 11 seconds is about 2000 feet; add the length of the cord and the height of the pipe, and you get a *very* high dam. :) Of course, this doesn't take air resistance into account. Kelly M. Pellerin notes that the terminal velocity of a human being is about 120 miles/hour (176 ft/s), and computes the fall to about 200 feet. ============================================================================== > Quotes and Scene Summary {dga} ============================================================================== % As (nearly) always, the Simpson family is watching TV. Tonight's % fare? The "Krusty the Klown Prison Special". Krusty: I slugged some jerk in Tahoe. They gave me one to three. My high-priced lawyer sprung me On a technicality. I'm just visiting Springfield Prison, I get to sleep at home tonight. -- Springfield Prison Blues? "The Brother From Another Series" % Krusty's song does not seem to amuse the inmates however, as they % mutter angrily. Krusty wins them back, however, telling them he's % kidding. I kid, 'cause I love. I'm telling you the best folk in the world are prison folk. -- Krusty sucks up, "The Brother From Another Series" % The prisoners fall for this shameless brown-nosing with cheers. Bart % notes that the prisoners love Krusty. Bart: Inside every hardened criminal beats the heart of a ten-year-old boy. Lisa: And vice-versa. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Marge does her best to remind Bart that convicts aren't "cool", % they're bad. % % Meanwhile, Krusty goes into the crowd and banters with a few % convicts. And wouldn't you know it? One of them is...Sideshow Bob! Krusty: What have you been doing with yourself, Bob? Bob: Well, Krusty, as you may remember, after I tried to frame you for armed robbery, I tried to murder Selma Bouvier. Let's see...I rigged the mayoral elections, I tried to blow up Springfield with a nuclear device, and I tried to kill you. Krusty: Oh, yeah. Bob: And, whenever I could find a spare moment, I've tried to murder Bart Simpson. -- Thank you, exposition boy! "The Brother From Another Series" % Bart panics, running up to his bedroom. Marge thinks that someone % should go up and talk to him. Nobody moves for a few seconds. % Grudgingly, Lisa is the first to get up. Homer sighs in relief, % earning a scolding from his wife. % % Marge's attempts to comfort Bart (lying in a fetal position on his % bed) are undermined by Homer. Marge: Oh, you have _nothing_ to worry about, honey. Homer: Your mother's right, Bart. Sure, you're the one who _ruined_ all of Sideshow Bob's criminal schemes... Marge: We're _very_ proud of you, by the way. Homer: ...and sure, he's probably so insane with rage that he'd butcher you horribly if he could. Marge: But, he's safely locked away. Homer: In a medium-security prison. Marge: For life! Homer: Unless he gets out somehow. Marge: Which is impossible. Homer: Or so you'd think! Except he's done it _so_ many times before. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Bart thanks them for trying to cheer him up, but he remains % inconsolable. "Sideshow Bob wants me dead! And Sideshow Bob is an % unstoppable killing machine." % % Cut to the chapel of Springfield Prison, where Sideshow Bob, model % prisoner, is singing "Amazing Grace." Lovejoy: Oh, that was lovely, Robert. You other cons could benefit from his example. [Inmates mutter angrily] Bob: Really, Reverend, your praise is going to get me beaten up. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Lovejoy is inspired by Bob's transformation, and tells him that he's % been recommended for the work-release program. Bob doubts that % anyone would be willing to hire him, but Lovejoy tells him they've % already got someone. % % In the visiting room, Bob sees that it's Cecil, his brother. Bob: It's been ten years! We haven't spoken since the... unpleasantness. Cecil: You mean Arthur Fiedler's wake? Bob: No, no, no, I mean our falling out. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Cecil suggests they make a fresh start, with Bob coming to work for % him. Bob: You do know I used to have a...problem with trying to kill people. Cecil: Goodness! I had no idea! For you see, I have been on Mars for the past decade, in a cave with my eyes shut, and my fingers in my ears. Bob: Touche, Cecil. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Despite everything, Cecil is willing to hire him out of fraternal % affection. You don't have to worry about me, brother. I'm all murdered out. -- Sideshow Bob, "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob and Cecil embrace. Shortly afterwards, Bob is released, as a mob % of protesters, uh, protests. Mayor Quimby unsuccessfully tries to % quiet them. Then, Bob himself makes a heartfelt appeal. Bob: Isn't our system of justice based on the idea that a man can change? Wiggum: Uh, have the boys check into that. Bob: I know I don't deserve a second chance, but this _is_ America, and as an American, aren't I entitled to one? Man: Probably! -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob begs for forgiveness, which the crowd now readily gives. % % Bart protests to the authorities that Bob hasn't changed at all. "If % only you knew what he was thinking!" Bob: I hope they still make that shampoo I like. -- That evil criminal genius! "The Brother From Another Series" % The brothers drive past a sign: "Welcome to Springfield, Proud Home % of Sideshow Bob." % % [End of Act I. Time: 5:36] % % After a "Frasier"-like opening title, we enter Cecil's nicely- % appointed apartment. He offers his brother a glass of Bordeaux. Cecil: I have the '82 Chateau Latour and a rather indifferent Rausan- Segle. Bob: I've been in prison, Cecil. I'll be happy just as long it doesn't taste like orange drink fermented under a radiator. Cecil: That would be the Latour, then. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Homer and Marge watch on as Bart says his prayers. Bart: And God bless Mom and Dad and Lisa and Maggie. And please, God, kill Sideshow Bob. [Homer and Marge react with alarm] Marge: Bart, no! Bart: It's him or me, O Lord. [Marge struggles to unclasp Bart's hands] Marge: You can't ask God to kill someone. Homer: Yeah. You do your own dirty work. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Later, Cecil and Bob dine together. Bob: Well, I suppose I should ask you what you do if I'm to be working with you. Cecil: _For_ me, Bob. _For_ me. I am Springfield's chief hydrological and hydrodynamical engineer. Bob: Hydrological and hydrodynamical? Talk about running the gamut. Cecil: Snigger all you like, Bob. Bob: Thank you. I believe I shall. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Cecil opines that one gets more respect as a civil servant than as a % homicidal maniac. "Or a clown's sidekick." Bob believes this % confirms his theory: Cecil still resents the fact that Krusty chose % Bob, not him, as his sidekick years before. Bob: You wanted to be Krusty's sidekick since you were five! What about the buffoon lessons, the four years at clown college. Cecil: I'll thank you not to refer to Princeton that way. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob believes that Cecil blames him for what happened at the auditions % so many years ago. % % Flashback to ten years before. Cecil is in full clown regalia, while % Bob is dressed in a conservative suit and hat. Krusty: Number 73, you're next. Make with the laugh-laugh. Cecil: [clears throat] [meekly] Hey, children. Meet me, Sideshow Cecil. Krusty: [makes buzzer noise] Next! Cecil: Uh, I have prepared a pie-in-the-face take. Krusty: [groans] All right, knock yourself out, kid. Hal? Cecil: [the pie plasters him] Ooh. [he grins half-heartedly] -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Krusty tells him that the pie gag is only funny if "the sap's got % dignity." He sees Bob, and has Hal toss one his way, in way of % demonstration. The pie hits the unsuspecting Bob, his hat flies off, % and his hair springs up with a boinging sound. Bob: "Oh dear." % Everyone laughs, and gradually, Bob smiles at the recognition he's % receiving. That guy's a genius! He's gonna change the way we think about getting hit by pies. -- Krusty on Sideshow Bob, "The Brother From Another Series" % Krusty hires Bob on the spot. % % Back to the present. Cecil: When that pie hit your face, I saw my dreams explode in a burst of cream and crust. But I suppose I should thank you. After all, it lead me to my true calling. Bob: Cecil, no civilization in history has ever considered chief hydrological engineer a calling. [Cecil clears his throat meaningfully] Yes, yes, the Cappadocians, fine. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % To the Springfield River. Bob and Cecil walk to an overlook. Cecil: There it is, the future site of the Springfield hydroelectric dam. Bob: Just the thought of all that raw power makes me wonder why the hell I should care. Cecil: Because _you'll_ be supervising the construction crew. Bob: Oh, great. I supposed that when a woman passes by, it will be my job to lead in the hooting. `Oh, yeah! Shake it, madam. Capital knockers!' -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Cecil tries to sell him on the idea: it's Bob's big chance to redeem % himself in the eyes of Springfield. % % Meanwhile, we see that the Terwilliger brothers are being spied upon % from across the river by Bart and Milhouse. Bart: He's planning something evil, I know it. It must have something to do with the town's water supply. Milhouse: Maybe he's gonna pee in the river! Bart: Mmm, nah, that's not his style. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob spies the two boys hiding in the bushes. Bob: Who is that? Why, it's Bart Simpson! [calling] Hello, Bart! [Bart ducks] He's just a little shy because I've tried to kill him so many times. Cecil: Ah. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % At "The Pimento Grove", Bob dines with Ms. Krabappel. Edna: It's so exciting to be dating a killer. Bob: To be fair, I never successfully killed anyone. Edna: [disappointed] Oh, I see. [at another table, we see Bart spying on the pair] Bob: I did once try to kill the world's greatest lover, [slyly] but then I realized that there are laws against suicide. [Edna chuckles playfully] You get my drift? [they move towards each other, ready to kiss] Bart: Mrs. Krabappel, no! That's Sideshow Bob! Edna: Ah, well that's the last time I announce my dinner plans in class. [leaves angrily] -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob angrily berates Bart for breaking up his date with the great Edna % K., but Bart is far from apologetic. Bob: _That_ was Edna Krabappel. You only get one chance with Edna Krabappel, I hope you're happy. Bart: I won't be happy until I find out what you're up to. Wherever you go and whatever you do, I'll be there watching and waiting. Wiggum: He says that, but I bet he gives up pretty quickly. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Some time later, the dam construction is well underway. Cecil enters % a trailer where Bob is examining some blueprints. Cecil: Hello, brother. All's well, I trust? Bob: It most certainly is _not_. The workmen you've given me don't know their asses from the hole in the ground they blew up yesterday. Cecil: Come now, you speak as if they were nothing but a gaggle of slack-jawed yokels. Cletus: Mister Terwillidjer, come quick. There's trouble down to the See-Ment mixer, sir! -- "The Brother From Another Series" Cletus: See, cousin Merl and me, we were playing with Geech. That's our old smell-hound. And... [said dog has become one big cement dog statue] Merl: Geech gone to heaven, Mister Terwillidjer. Bob: Oh, cousin Merl, really! Cecil: Temper, temper. You know cousin Merl `ain't been quite right' lately. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob is irritated to the point of distraction, both at his rustic % workers and at Bart, who is constantly spying on him (he reveals Bart % hiding in a pipe). "Sometimes I wish this dam would burst and bury % this cursed town", he says ominously. % % That evening, Bart and Lisa walk along a street in downtown % Springfield. As they pass by a dumpster (whoops, I mean "Trash-co % Waste Disposal Unit[tm]"), Bart jumps in an rummages around. Lisa: Hey, you said we were going to Dairy Queen. Bart: I lied. Now help me rummage through Bob's trash for clues. Then I promise we'll go to the waterslide. Lisa: Okay. [she hops in] -- Gullible Lisa, "The Brother From Another Series" % While they dig around, Sideshow Bob happens upon them. They scream. Bob: [Angrily] You again! Well, that's it. [ominously] I'm going to do what I should have done a long time ago. [at the Simpson home, there is a knock at the door. Marge opens it to reveal Bob]. Madam, your children are no more... [pause] ...than a pair of ill-bred troublemakers. Homer: Lisa too? Bob: _Especially_ Lisa. But, _especially_ Bart. -- Isn't that especial? "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob warns (need I say, warns ominously?) that if they cross him one % more time, he won't be responsible for his actions. Well, I hope Bob fed you, cause I ate your dinners. -- Homer the caregiver, "The Brother From Another Series" % Lisa tells Bart that, though it is hard for him to accept, Bob really % has changed. Bart refuses to believe this however. Bart: He's more the same than ever. And I know where the evidence is. There's only one place where it could possibly be. Lisa: Bob's trailer at the construction site? Bart: [pause] That's even better! Let's go there. [both walk off] Lisa: What were you thinking? Bart: The haunted mine. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % That evening, the two children climb into an open window in the % trailer and look around. Bart finds blueprints, invoices, schedules. % Lisa notes, sarcastically, "If I didn't know better, I'd swear Bob % was building a dam." Then, Bart finds a briefcase stuffed with cash. % Just at that moment, they hear Bob trying to get in. When the door % won't open, he breaks through the glass. Bart and Lisa scream. % % [End of Act II.] % % Bob looks suspiciously around his trailer. Bob: Who left the lights on. Who's in here? Cletus? Cousin Merl? Big Hungry Joe? [behind the watercooler, he sees Bart's distinctive hairline] Bart: [muffled] I think he may have spotted us. -- No kidding, "The Brother From Another Series" % They run out of the trailer, and into the bowels of the dam. Be careful! There's hydroelectricity in there! -- Sideshow Bob, "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob chases the children through an Escheresque maze of stairways and % catwalks. % % Finally, he confronts them in a large room filled with turbines. He % begs them to stop tormenting him, claiming he's done nothing wrong. % Bart, however, reveals the briefcase they found. Bob seems to be % shocked at the discovery. Bob: I've never seen that money before in my life! Lisa: Then you must have had your eyes closed when you embezzled it. -- Lisa's specious reasoning, "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob still maintains his innocence. He points to the dam as evidence % of his recent activities. When he pounds on the wall for emphasis, % however, it collapses to reveal that the dam is hollow. Then the % money must have come from cutbacks in building materials. But if Bob % isn't guilty, then who is? % % Cecil, of course. He reveals that he's going to blow up the dam, % destroying all evidence, and letting the soon-to-be-dead Bob take the % blame. Cecil: I'm framing you and I'm doing a really excellent job, too. Bob: Wait a minute. This is all because I got to be Krusty's sidekick instead of you, isn't it? Cecil: Off the record, yes. But officially, I did it for the money! -- "The Brother From Another Series" % "Speaking of which, hand it over." Bart does so, at gunpoint. Cecil % backs out of the room, and closes the door. Suddenly the door opens % and he pops his head back in. Cecil: I forgot to mention, I'm planning to blow up the dam with you inside. Bob: Well, obviously. -- "The Brother From Another Series" % The door slams shut and is audibly locked. Lisa: Oh, it's hopeless, utterly, utterly hopeless. Bob: Oh, I see. When it's one of _my_ evil schemes, you can't foil it fast enough, but when _Cecil_ tries to kill you, it's [imitating her] hopeless, utterly, utterly hopeless. -- Fraternal resentment, "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob decides he's going to have to foil Cecil himself. % % To escape from the room, he blocks a turbine and prepares to dive % through with Lisa. Bart is reluctant to join them, however. Bob: Bart, for once, I'm not trying to kill you. I know it's an awkward situation, and I don't like it any more than you do, but you've got to trust me. Bart: Ah, what the hell. -- That's the spirit, "The Brother From Another Series" % Their dive through the pipes is brief but spectacular. They climb % out through a hatchway elsewhere in the dam. Bart: Let's go again, let's go again! Lisa: No! -- "The Brother From Another Series" % "Let's go thwart my brother!" Said brother is preparing to blow up % the dam on a beautiful Springfield morning. % % Bob and Lisa creep towards the dynamite. Bob prepares to cut the % wires to it, but Lisa has a question. Lisa: Um, do you know what you're doing? Bob: Lisa, you don't spend ten years as a homicidal maniac without learning a few things about dynamite. -- Or icepicks, "The Brother From Another Series" % Cecil is about to push down the plunger, when suddenly Bart jumps % onto him from behind. Bart: [holding Cecil's eyes closed from behind] Guess who? Cecil: Maris? -- Metahumor, "The Brother From Another Series" % Bart hits Cecil with his hard hat, while Cecil attempts to retaliate % with the briefcase. This proves to be a mistake, as the case flies % open, and the money and gun fly away. Cecil quickly subdues the ten- % year-old, and holds him over the canyon. Cecil: At last I'm going to do what Bob never could. Kill Bart Simpson! Bart: Throwing me off a dam? Isn't that a little crude for a genius like you. Cecil: Ooh, I suppose it is. Eh, if anyone asks, I'll lie. [throws him off] -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Bart plunges, screaming. Lisa gasps and screams as well, while Bob % takes action. Holding onto the dynamite, he jumps off the dam, % swinging over to catch the boy, which he does, miraculously. % Unfortunately, Cecil is able to get over to the plunger, where he % prepares to dispatch the two. And now, to kill you. There may be a slight ringing in your ears. Fortunately, you'll be nowhere near them. -- Cecil, "The Brother From Another Series" % Bob notes that they could save the town by cutting the wires, causing % them to fall to their deaths. "Do we have to?" "Yes." Bob cuts the % wires a split second before Cecil plunges. They fall endlessly, % until Bob manages to catch onto a pipe...between his legs. Ouch. % % Bob slides around, allowing Bart to climb to safety. Bart then pulls % Bob up. Bob: You...you saved my life. Bart: Yeah. I guess that means you can't ever try to kill me again! Bob: [sinister music] Oh, I don't know about that. [music stops] Joking, joking! -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Springfield's finest take the younger Terwilliger into custody. You've brought shame to this family, Cecil. Oh, I don't relish having to write the Christmas letter this year. -- Sideshow Bob, "The Brother From Another Series" % Cecil notes that destroying Springfield is actually surprisingly % difficult. % % Chief Wiggum pulls up, and Lou presents the perpetrator. Lou: Here's your man, chief. Wiggum: Cecil? I think not. This looks like the work of crazy old Sideshow Bob. Lisa: No, Chief, Bob's innocent, it's the truth! Wiggum: Truth, hah? That sounds like the testimony of crazy old Lisa Simpson. Lou: Cecil just voluntarily confessed, Chief. Wiggum: That's some good work, Lou. You'll make sergeant for this. Lou: Uh, I already am sergeant, Chief. -- The flabby arm of the law, "The Brother From Another Series" % Wiggum continues to insist that Bob is responsible, so both brothers % are hauled off in a squad car. % % Bart notes that it's funny how the citizens of Springfield never knew % how close they came to complete destruction. Or so he thinks: at % that moment, the weakened dam breaks up, sending a wall of water % towards the city. Homer, setting out to look for his children runs % back inside to escape from it. As the water subsides, he sees a bed % with an eight-year-old boy on his lawn. I think I wet my bed. -- Ralph, "The Brother From Another Series" % Back to the dam. Bob: You can't do this! I saved the children's lives, I'm a hero! Cecil: [craftily] Tell them they'll live to regret this. Bob: You'll live to regret this! [realizing] Oh, thanks a lot, now I look crazy. [Cecil smiles smugly] -- "The Brother From Another Series" % Wiggum wonders what schemes such a pair of criminal geniuses, locked % away together, might concoct. % % Cut to a cell at Springfield Prison. The cell doors slam shut over % the brothers Terwilliger. Then, both jump towards the bed, fighting % each other. Bob: I, I'm older, I get the top bunk. Cecil: Oh, poppycock, I called it at the arraignment. [Bob is victorious.] [Cecil brushes himself off] So, when do they bring us the menus? -- Sharp learning curve ahead, "The Brother From Another Series" % [End of Act III.] ============================================================================== > Contributors ============================================================================== {bjr} Benjamin J. Robinson {ce} Charley Eiseman {dc} Donna Coyne {ddg} Don Del Grande {dga} Dale G. Abersold {dj} Darrel Jones {dk} Diego Kontarovsky {dp2} Dallas Pesola {jh} Jason Hancock {ljs} Liam J. Scanlan {mar} Mark Aaron Richey {mss} Marge Starbrod-Simpson {ol} Ondre Lombard {sb} Stephan Bonneville {sf} Sean Florin ============================================================================== > Legal Mumbo Jumbo ============================================================================== This episode capsule is Copyright 1997 Frederic Briere. It is not to be redistributed in a public forum without consent from its author or current maintainer (capsules@snpp.com). All quoted material, episode summaries and whoever put this episode against "Schindler's List" remain property of The Simpsons, Copyright of Twentieth Century Fox. The transcript itself is Copyright 1997 Dale G. Abersold. Breaking seal constitutes acceptance of agreement. This work is dedicated to Raymond Chen, James A. Cherry, Ricardo Lafaurie, and all of those who made episode capsules what they are today. Many well-deserved cheers and thanks to Dave "Grampa" Hall, who provided me with alt.tv.simpsons archives when needed. This capsule wouldn't be nearly as complete without his invaluable help.