- The President Wore Pearls
Infobox Simpsons episode
episode_name = The President Wore Pearls
episode_no = 316
prod_code = EABF20
airdate =November 16 ,2003
writer =Dana Gould
director =Mike B. Anderson
blackboard = None| couch_gag = The shutter click of a camera can be heard as an undeveloped Polaroid photo floats to the couch and develops into the Simpsons family.
guest_star =Michael Moore as himself
image_caption = Lisa as the new Student Body President.
season = 15"The President Wore Pearls" is the third episode of the "The Simpsons'" fifteenth season, first broadcast on November 16, 2003. The episode was nominated for an
Emmy for Outstanding Music (byAlf Clausen ) And Lyrics (byDana Gould ).Plot
Springfield Elementary holds a
casino night as a fundraiser, the brainchild of student body presidentMartin Prince (elected such in "Lisa's Substitute "). Homer wins big, but when Martin points out that his winnings can only be redeemed forprize s and not real money, the angry casino patronsriot . After the chaos has cleared, Principal Skinner tells Martin he must resign as president. An election for a new president is announced, and Lisa signs up. However, initially popularNelson Muntz is favored to win. During a debate in the school auditorium, she sings a song about how she will fight for student rights, winning them over.Lisa easily wins the election. Worried by her determination and popularity, the faculty discusses how to control her. Following Mrs. Krabappel's suggestion that a woman's weakness is vanity, the school faculty tells Lisa that as President, she deserves a more glamorous look. Another song is sung (a spoof of "Rainbow High") as the teachers give Lisa a makeover into a fashionable
Eva Perón lookalike. She is initially resistant, but gives in since she reasons she'll still be able to fight for the kids. The students love the new Lisa more than ever, but the faculty use her as ascapegoat for dropping music, gym, and art from the curriculum to save on the budget. Facing an outraged student body, Lisa realizes that she has been used by the teaching staff and had been seduced by glamor and power. After resigning as president, Lisa goes back to her old red dress and spiky hair, and leads the students in a strike.The students leave school in protest and
Michael Moore (voicing himself) shows up to take their side. Thepolice arrive at the school to handle the students with child-size batons, but Lisa soon convinces the police to take their side too. Several otherlabor unions , including goat milkers, newsroom cue card holders and theme parkzombies join the strike. EvenGroundskeeper Willie refuses Skinner's order to turn his hose on the students. Realizing there is no other way out of the crippling strike other than disposing of Lisa, Skinner has her transferred to a school for the "Academically Gifted and Troublesome". She waves goodbye to her classmates singing another parody song ("Don't Cry For Me, Argentina ").Just as Lisa arrives at her new school, Homer pulls up and refuses to allow her to attend, complaining that he won't drive 45 minutes each day to take her to school. He suggests she take up an activity like
ice skating instead, but when she eagerly asks to do that, he refuses once again, complaining that he doesn't want get up early each morning.At the end of the episode, subtitles state that Springfield Elementary was eventually able to restore music, art and gym by cancelling
flu shots and selling loosecigarettes . The subtitle then states that the producers of the show, "based on the advice of theirlawyer s, have never heard of a musical based on the life ofEva Perón ".Cultural references
*The name could be a parody of
The Devil Wears Prada orThe Computer Wore Tennis Shoes .
*Martin claims he got the idea for the casino fundraiser from an episode of sitcom "Saved By The Bell ", but no such episode exists.
*Martin's resignation as student body president mirrors that ofRichard Nixon .
*The episode is a parody of theAndrew Lloyd Webber musical "Evita". It is a musical episode with five songs, most of them parodies of numbers from "Evita". Also, the poster Lisa uses in her election campaign is the cover of the original Broadway recording, with Lisa's face instead of Eva Perón's.
*The episode also pays homage to the student-initiated strike of May 1968 inFrance .
* Lenny says "But I break just like a little girl," a reference to theBob Dylan song "Just Like a Woman", which says "but she breaks just like a little girl".
* After Lisa walks off carried by the crowd in the auditorium, Nelson sings "I am Iron Man! Do do do do do do do vote for me!", a reference to theBlack Sabbath song "Iron Man".
*Lisa lists her email address as "smartgirl63_@yahoo.com" (which is deliberately invalid sinceYahoo does not allow "" as a character in their email addresses).
*The way in which the teaching staff and Principal Skinner divert Lisa from her program by introducing several "public appearances", and the way in which they trick her to sign a document mirrors the ways of government secretaries in the British sitcomYes Minister .
*After winning big at the school's casino, Homer promises Marge that tomorrow, they'll buy a PlayStation 1. (The original PlayStation was outdated when the episode aired, as thePlayStation 2 was already released)Reception
In 2007, "Vanity Fair" called "The President Wore Pearls" the tenth best episode of "The Simpsons", the most recent episode on the list. John Orvted said, "It may seem ludicrous to include anything later than Season 8 in this list, but this one is brilliant. The musical numbers are astoundingly good, and Lisa's comeuppance is so well constructed it harkens back to the golden years of the show (Seasons 3 through 8)." [cite news | author = John Orvted | title = Springfield's Best | publisher =
Vanity Fair | date =2007-07-05 | url = http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2007/08/top10simpsons200708 | accessdate=2007-07-13]References
External links
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