there will Never Ever be another Simpsons episode like Homer's Enemy

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
  • Change the channel, Marge...
    This episode of Never Ever is brought to you by Keeps. Visit keeps.com/emplemon​ for 50% off your first order of hair-loss treatment.
    Special Thanks to TheRealJims: / therealjims
    0:00 Why are The Simpsons Green?
    1:51 Welcome to Springfield USA
    2:57 A Young Cartoonist
    4:09 This is FOX
    5:00 Generation X
    6:26 The Yellow Family
    9:23 The Golden Age
    14:24 My name is Frank Grimes
    15:08 You're what's wrong with America
    18:00 Laissez-faire
    21:59 Life is Unfair
    26:02 The Engine of America
    27:01 An American Martyr
    28:38 I'm Homer Simpson
    30:54 Realities.
    32:51 Mediocrity
    34:23 Don't Cry for Me
    38:34 Why are the Simpsons Yellow?
    Downward Merch: www.crowdmade.com/emplemon
    Patreon: / emperorlemon
    Twitter: / emperorlemon
    Music List: pastebin.com/MbFYM42n
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 11K

  • @EmperorLemon
    @EmperorLemon  Před 3 lety +9040

    I'VE HAD TO WORK HARD EVERY DAY OF MY LIFE, AND WHAT DO I HAVE TO SHOW FOR IT? This...BRIEF-case and this HAIR-loss treatment: keeps.com/emplemon​​

  • @jordonus8018
    @jordonus8018 Před 3 lety +1687

    "But Before he could do that, Matt Groening had to enter hell."
    _Shows Los Angeles._

    • @mistertagomago7974
      @mistertagomago7974 Před 3 lety +47

      Because of South Park I expected Mexico.

    • @jimthompson5844
      @jimthompson5844 Před 3 lety +71

      Yeah not sure why he would bash hell like that

    • @theactualTVB
      @theactualTVB Před 3 lety +57

      @@jimthompson5844 Because California is hell. Detroit is as well. Come to think of it, Hell seemed nicer than either the two.

    • @blackout295
      @blackout295 Před 3 lety +7

      I thought he was talking about the town in Michigan

    • @edsol399
      @edsol399 Před 3 lety +8

      Fun fact Matt Groening went on Epstein's plane

  • @whichwitch96
    @whichwitch96 Před 2 lety +19993

    Finding out Matt Groening's parents are called Homer and Marge has changed me

    • @tomkerruish2982
      @tomkerruish2982 Před 2 lety +2707

      Also, his younger sisters are named Lisa and Maggie.

    • @sven_bender
      @sven_bender Před 2 lety +4261

      Here's the topper - Matt didn't want the whole cast to be named after his family, so he let the writing staff choose Grandpa's name. They ended up choosing Abraham, which also happened to be the name of Matt's grandfather.

    • @whichwitch96
      @whichwitch96 Před 2 lety +808

      @@sven_bender that's crazy! I've been a big fan of the Simpsons since I was a kid but never looked into this sort of stuff. Thanks for sharing!

    • @E4RLIES
      @E4RLIES Před 2 lety +281

      @@sven_bender and you’re named after my favourite Futurama character!
      How crazy is that! 🤓👌🏼

    • @caseys2698
      @caseys2698 Před 2 lety +112

      They must be so honored to share names with one of the most famous families in fiction! 🥰

  • @jimmyz2684
    @jimmyz2684 Před rokem +3858

    My favorite thing about this episode is that they managed to tie the b plot into the a plot by having Grimes be jealous that Bart owns a factory

    • @dharmallars
      @dharmallars Před rokem +276

      What’s so funny about that is every time I think of this episode and try to remember what the b plot was, that’s how I remember. Oh yeah, cause frank said the thing about the factory. Never once did he question how a ten year old could own and operate a factory, he was just so blinded by rage he took it immediately at face value. Could have asked two questions and realized Homer’s family didn’t have it together any more than anyone else did.

    • @Zitro_0
      @Zitro_0 Před 8 měsíci +42

      It’s actually more brilliant when you realize it was set up that way from the start, it was the set up for the punchline.

    • @patriceaqa288
      @patriceaqa288 Před 7 měsíci +42

      @@Zitro_0 Bart limited will rise again. Jokes aside, Homer was nice to Grimes. That opinion might be unpopular but I stand by it. 'Hey you seem like a good guy if you turn the security camera around, you can sleep and no one will ever know.' He was trying to be nice, in his own way, as soon as they met

    • @Ohloveeh
      @Ohloveeh Před 17 dny +2

      @@dharmallars I always loved how absurd it was for Grimes to be bitter about a run down factory Bart bought for nothing

    • @ceu160193
      @ceu160193 Před 11 dny

      @@Ohloveeh I didn't find it absurd, since Grimes had no idea factory was run down and basically abandoned. In his eyes Bart was owning functioning factory, with workers and such, having his own business at such young age.

  • @AtomicOnionTree
    @AtomicOnionTree Před rokem +2553

    "If I had a TV show I'd run that sucker into the ground." - Bart
    Words have never been more prophetic.

    • @overdrive7349
      @overdrive7349 Před 11 měsíci +7

      By the way, which season should I stop at?

    • @AtomicOnionTree
      @AtomicOnionTree Před 11 měsíci +115

      @@overdrive7349 Whenever you stop laughing should be fine.

    • @CrowLady0_0
      @CrowLady0_0 Před 10 měsíci +10

      @@AtomicOnionTree so true

    • @bonedude1286
      @bonedude1286 Před 9 měsíci +43

      Stop after the movie, A.K.A season 18. Not only does it end at a nice even 400 episodes, but the movie is quite a final "hurrah" for the series.

    • @bonedude1286
      @bonedude1286 Před 9 měsíci +8

      That's just my opinion, though.

  • @mr.paperbag771
    @mr.paperbag771 Před 2 lety +5817

    "The Simpsons was never designed to survive the 21st century"
    Because every great story has an ending and The Simpsons missed theirs

    • @Skitdora2010
      @Skitdora2010 Před 2 lety +97

      Like the Walking Dead

    • @Bollibompa
      @Bollibompa Před 2 lety +33

      The 21st? As in surviving to 2100?

    • @heyitsyaboi8419
      @heyitsyaboi8419 Před 2 lety +459

      @@Bollibompa The 2000s are the 21st century man…

    • @InformerMaz
      @InformerMaz Před 2 lety +254

      @@heyitsyaboi8419 Sad thing is, I can’t tell if the dude was joking or serious lmao.

    • @MathsOP
      @MathsOP Před 2 lety +23

      @@InformerMaz his name is that of a swedish kids channel. He is probably joking.

  • @nado100
    @nado100 Před 3 lety +708

    "You... went into outer space? YOU!"
    " Sure. You've never been?"

  • @siriusblack1612
    @siriusblack1612 Před rokem +1618

    I love how Grimes doesn’t go against Burns for letting someone like Homer work there, but he goes against Homer

    • @otterfire4712
      @otterfire4712 Před 11 měsíci +38

      I mean, Burns is the boss while Homer is a fellow employee.

    • @TedSh
      @TedSh Před 10 měsíci +31

      So what you're saying is... he should have gone against his boss, get fired, and maybe end up with the same fate? Yeah, cool...

    • @siriusblack1612
      @siriusblack1612 Před 10 měsíci +126

      @@TedSh no, but he shouldn’t have gone against Homer like that, like is it really Homer’s fault that he is allowed to be incompetent?

    • @TedSh
      @TedSh Před 10 měsíci +41

      @siriusblack1612 No, it's not, but going insane like that is something I would probably do. He doesn't know what Homer sacrificed and did to deserve his position. In his eyes, this was another joke of life, a lucky dummie getting more then a hard-working, great person. Mental breakdown is the result of him realizing how much he didn't matter and that he can't do shit about that.
      You may say:"Well, don't you meet lucky incompetent people everyday?" No, not like Homer.

    • @siriusblack1612
      @siriusblack1612 Před 10 měsíci +35

      @@TedSh he’s just going after Homer because he is an easy target

  • @MizzzFizzz
    @MizzzFizzz Před rokem +3444

    I actually cried for Grimes, it felt like a real person being trapped in a cartoon slowly going mad.

    • @waddledoo2you13
      @waddledoo2you13 Před rokem +104

      He didn’t have toon powers

    • @PurringWonderland
      @PurringWonderland Před rokem +75

      I was glad he died. Homer snoring at his funeral was especially funny. Saying "Yeah, Grimey is right!" doesn't make sense, nobody should be jealous of Homer, a cartoon character. We didn't need him around beating down the show's lead. Anybody crying for Grimey, an angry spiteful cartoon character that had 23 minutes of screen time, needs to do some serious work with a counselor to find what their real issue is and try to work on it.

    • @MizzzFizzz
      @MizzzFizzz Před rokem +254

      @@PurringWonderland The main thing for me was he was a saftey inspector and Homer is always putting peoples lives at risk, I saw him being driven insane by being unable to stop Homer from almost murdering the town on a daily basis.

    • @twigtwig3110
      @twigtwig3110 Před rokem +90

      @@MizzzFizzz The thing I never liked about the "Grimes feels like a real person" argument is that it simply isn't true. At every turn in the episode Grimes puts up with some truly insane things, probably the first being the incident with the dog. Grimes doesn't actually act like a human would to try and fix this problem, like by contacting authorities - and yes, we know the Springfield authorities are incompetent, but the point is that when presented with this situation Grimes still doesn't act like a human, he puts up with it and just becomes angry. This trend continues with pretty much every incident, Grimes doesn't report Mr Burns or Homer to any authority no matter what they do. Skirting safety regulations? Dangerous chemicals all over the place? Nope, just lets it ride. If anything, he's just as complicit through his inaction. Sure, he's aware of the problems caused by Homer - but he allows those extremely severe problems to continue.
      If anything, I think Grimes shows us why we shouldn't feel bad for him. Grimes is an angry, petty man who takes everything personally and does nothing to solve problems. He recognizes that there are insane things going on around him, but instead of acting on that knowledge, he just lets it anger him. He takes everything in the worst possible way, and as soon as he sees an opportunity to get back at Homer, he jumps on it - becoming a direct part of the problems around him. I mean, really? Grimes thinks it's a worthwhile use of his time to humiliate Homer by making him enter a children's contest?
      The truth is that no one wants to be around a Grimes. He's the anti-Homer. Grimes might be "smarter" than homer when it comes to having a straight up education, but he's socially unintelligent. Homer is a jerk, but he tries to do right by people, even when his lazy nature gets the better of him. I think the best examples are in situations where Homer will even "help" out Ned (even if the help ends up causing more harm than good) despite Ned being the person that Homer despises more than anyone else. It took only a single interaction for Grimes to entirely right off Homer, and when Homer opened up to Grimes, Grimes only took it as an insult.
      Now, I know the interviews where they talk about why they made Homer's Enemy - but somewhere in production, I think the result changed. Because Grimes absolutely doesn't act anything like "a real, somewhat humorless human" (taken from an interview) during the episode, and mainly serves to highlight the positive traits in Homer.

    • @MizzzFizzz
      @MizzzFizzz Před rokem +47

      @@twigtwig3110 Wow i woke up some simpsons demon in you lol, really interesting points though and i agree. I get what you mean and i guess i have seen many people who treat life that way which is why i might have sympathised lol.

  • @PlaylistGeneral
    @PlaylistGeneral Před 3 lety +2374

    God i remember watching this episode when I was like 11 and just feeling really...cold in the pit of my stomach. Its such a crushingly dark ending because the implications of it all are solely in your head, meanwhile the episode ends with everyone laughing at the funeral, giving no solace to anything that just happened. Frank not only killed himself, he also left no impact on any character in the show, any lasting memories of him are heavily slanted and short term. It upsets me more than any horror movie because it's a level of....cosmic indifference that just feels crushingly lonely and real.

    • @fylm-frankieyounglovesmovi2215
      @fylm-frankieyounglovesmovi2215 Před 3 lety +205

      I did too when I was a kid! It felt so mean spirited for no reason. But now I understand it more. Grimes' spite towards Homer who only ever wanted to befriend him even if obnoxious, hits different for me now. Homer was envious of Grimes too, adorably so, but never malicious. Still feels mean spirited, but I kinda get what the writers were going for.

    • @cookiecakeeater6340
      @cookiecakeeater6340 Před 2 lety +57

      @@fylm-frankieyounglovesmovi2215 nah Grimes saved Homer’s life and then Homer proceeded to tell Mr. Burns he destroyed the wall. Homer probably would’ve gotten a warning while Grimes actually faces serious consequences.

    • @Gtasplayer
      @Gtasplayer Před 2 lety +18

      Sounds like the death of the common man

    • @PedroHenrique-gr4zr
      @PedroHenrique-gr4zr Před 2 lety +59

      this is the greatest lesson. Grimes was nothing but materialistic, what else could happen to him? If he never gave anything else in his life meaning, how could people actually care or remember him? If you're materialistic, if you care about nothing but what you have, instead of who you and the people you love are, then how could you want people to remember or even like you?

    • @PedroHenrique-gr4zr
      @PedroHenrique-gr4zr Před 2 lety +38

      the idea that hard work has value in itself its long prove wrong. but that's just a small part of the deal. Grimes not only based his concept of justice and fairness on his own hard work and himself, but he forgot that to live in society is about how you can provide for it. Grimes never seemed like he ever wanted to be unique, or even develop his own personality... He cared only about materialistic success.

  • @PadChennington
    @PadChennington Před 3 lety +9076

    New emplemon wake da whole house up

    • @doctorvladandhisbluejaysd2802
      @doctorvladandhisbluejaysd2802 Před 3 lety +66

      Yay, another veri-
      You know what, I don't know if you guys think you're quirky or funny when you make these comments, but if you do, just remember:
      YOURE NOT.

    • @Sonimod
      @Sonimod Před 3 lety +39

      Shut up verified accounts nobody cares who you say

    • @MrZZ-py4pq
      @MrZZ-py4pq Před 3 lety +12

      shut up

    • @Sonimod
      @Sonimod Před 3 lety +12

      @@doctorvladandhisbluejaysd2802 fr I don't give a rat's ass about verified accounts they just commenting for attention

    • @ciswhitememe
      @ciswhitememe Před 3 lety +29

      Hey Vaporwave enthusiast.

  • @sutherlandA1
    @sutherlandA1 Před rokem +2322

    It's so refreshing to see a video on the peak and decline of the Simpsons that's doesn't revolve around the principal and the pauper, thankyou

    • @imAsh21
      @imAsh21 Před rokem +192

      The Principal And The Pauper is kinda like the Jar Jar Binks of The Simpsons. It's gotten to the point now where making fun of it in itself is a tired cliche.

    • @jacksonallen5667
      @jacksonallen5667 Před rokem +89

      @@imAsh21 Exactly. And, also like Jar Jar Binks, it has little to do with the actual problem.

    • @KyleHerrera106
      @KyleHerrera106 Před rokem +6

      @@jacksonallen5667 and what is the actual problem?

    • @TaRAAASHBAGS
      @TaRAAASHBAGS Před rokem +94

      ​@@KyleHerrera106 Forsaking the consistency of the world and complexity of the characters for a one-episode gag

    • @KyleHerrera106
      @KyleHerrera106 Před rokem +3

      @Desperado and that relates to Jar Jar Binks in what way? I guess what I should have said originally is, 'expand on that'.

  • @geminiguy6032
    @geminiguy6032 Před rokem +1139

    I remember watching this episode years ago and the message of "Don't hate the player, hate the game" really clicked in my brain. It taught me that everyone is dealt a different hand and resenting others for their upbringings toxic for everyone, especially the person being salty in the first place.

    • @dharmallars
      @dharmallars Před rokem +47

      As intelligent as grimes is supposed to be, he lacks a fundamental understanding of the philosophical concept that “if it sux hit da bricks, you can just leave.” He survived on his own for decades without the job at Burns’s plant, you’d think a well adjusted person would quit and find a new one before, you know, killing themselves on their second day.

    • @billymarino4452
      @billymarino4452 Před 11 měsíci +14

      I agree. Any normal person would of said "no thanks" to the job offer and walk out of the plant once they realized the job they were promised by the boss was replaced by a dog they saw on TV.

    • @otterfire4712
      @otterfire4712 Před 11 měsíci +12

      ​@@dharmallarslate comment, but I'd guess that Burns's plant was the first big break for a job that he wanted. When he encountered Homer's general lackadaisical manner of work and safety, not to mention several blows Burns levied against Grimes through coincidence and misunderstanding. These likely took a sledgehammer to Grimes's psyche to the point where he childishly baits Homer into a children's model plant fair.

    • @christaltaylor473
      @christaltaylor473 Před 10 měsíci +1

      So that’s when the geometry dash quote is from, ohhh

    • @Icetea-2000
      @Icetea-2000 Před 9 měsíci +12

      "Don’t hate the player hate the game" except you wouldn’t have accepted this excuse in the 1946 Nuremberg trials

  • @KNOTTYBUDS
    @KNOTTYBUDS Před 3 lety +3522

    The main thing I took from this video was that Matt Groening's parents are Marge and Homer. I never knew that.

    • @starkillersneed
      @starkillersneed Před 3 lety +183

      Also, never realized that the street the Simpsons live in, Evergreen Terrace, was named after his college.

    • @cowboyluigi5275
      @cowboyluigi5275 Před 3 lety +158

      Margaret Groening’s maiden name before she was married was Wiggum, too. The show incorporated so many real life elements that you would sometimes forget it was even animated in the first place.

    • @gerardoa9179
      @gerardoa9179 Před 3 lety +11

      So basically nothing. That thing you mentioned is in the first 3 minutes of this video

    • @KNOTTYBUDS
      @KNOTTYBUDS Před 3 lety +65

      @@gerardoa9179 Jeez. Its just something I never knew that interested me the most at the time of hearing it. No big deal.

    • @AR-zq9hq
      @AR-zq9hq Před 2 lety +17

      @@gerardoa9179 maybe he's such a die hard Simpsons fan (with selective memory) that he knows the rest?

  • @SaltpeterTaffy
    @SaltpeterTaffy Před 3 lety +2275

    The line in Homer's Enemy that always hit me the hardest was "Frank Grimes, or 'Grimey' as he liked to be called..." A final insult, to be diametrically misrepresented in death. As someone who is frequently misunderstood in life, that line hurts my soul.

    • @misterdewott8766
      @misterdewott8766 Před 3 lety +143

      Change the Channel, Marge

    • @PatchCornAdams723
      @PatchCornAdams723 Před 3 lety +256

      My favorite is when Frank Grimes says "Oh, I'm better than okay. I'm Homer Simpson!" and then Homer says "Ha! You Wish!".
      He can see that this man is having a horrible mental breakdown, but he is STILL extremely rude and casual.

    • @blastoiseddr
      @blastoiseddr Před 3 lety +102

      The whole episode made me uncomfortably angry, but that's how I know it's brilliant.

    • @okay1582
      @okay1582 Před 3 lety +243

      @@PatchCornAdams723 Thing is, he probably didn't see him having a breakdown. Same way he didn't see that Grimes didn't like him and was annoyed by him. He probably thought that Grimes was just being Grimes, maybe making a joke he couldn't understand.

    • @deadliestvice5356
      @deadliestvice5356 Před 3 lety +14

      I, too, am not like other girls.

  • @owen-yl1uq
    @owen-yl1uq Před 11 měsíci +252

    I think the real message of this episode isn’t that hard work doesn’t matter, it’s that putting it in the wrong place does. Grimes worked hard for a career that wasn’t necessary for a company or society that didn’t care about him. Homer does work hard in a sense when it comes to those he cares about and the things he loves. If someone has a problem, he’ll do anything to fix it. Look at the episode when he sacrificed his work life and career just to keep Maggie’s toy against Mr Burns wishes. He was lazy but only towards the things that were lazy to him. This makes the ending not a tragedy, but bittersweet. If Grimes worked just as hard for human connection he’d be far more rewarded.

    • @ceddavis7441
      @ceddavis7441 Před měsícem +13

      reject the system, embrace family, a powerful message.

    • @thehoodedteddy1335
      @thehoodedteddy1335 Před 23 dny +3

      I mean if it were made nowadays, the message would need to actually be that hard work doesn’t matter in that sort of big business job to be accurate to real life. It’s crazy how the problem that this episode shows has only gotten worse, to the point where Grimes is struggling *less* than most americans

    • @MCArt25
      @MCArt25 Před 20 dny +1

      I think the real message is that the system will shit on you most of the time so don't bother

  • @radomiami
    @radomiami Před rokem +305

    19:24 "Is true freedom even attainable if its unaltered state inevitably resurrects tyranny?"
    One of the best sentences I've ever heard.

    • @LiveFreeOrDie2A
      @LiveFreeOrDie2A Před rokem +1

      Without evil there would be no good, and without tyrants there would be no freedom. This is a natural and necessary counter balancing in a never ending cycle. Some winters are longer are colder than others, but Spring eventually arrives, and now we’ve gained the experience and wisdom to see us through the next extra brutal winter when it eventually occurs again. Without tyrants and periods of incomprehensible cruelty and suffering- the human conscience and soul could never develop as it has specifically to defeat it. Freedom is only the sweetest gift from God because we have tasted the alternative of bondage

    • @Drekromancer
      @Drekromancer Před rokem +6

      I came here to say this.

    • @MCArt25
      @MCArt25 Před 20 dny

      really makes you think

  • @johnharris6655
    @johnharris6655 Před 2 lety +3580

    As we found out in "HOMR" when Homer did do his job as Safety Engineer, he got the plant shut down. I think Burns tolerates Homer because Homer turns a blind eye to all the safety violations and keeps the plant open.

    • @neutralamity
      @neutralamity Před 2 lety +280

      or because burns has no clue who homer is lmao

    • @lg6884
      @lg6884 Před 2 lety +412

      @@neutralamity can’t it be both? He doesn’t know who he is, but knows that he’ll get shut down if Homer/that guy actually does his job.

    • @neutralamity
      @neutralamity Před 2 lety +51

      @@lg6884 that’s true

    • @Hulk2k6
      @Hulk2k6 Před 2 lety +160

      Homer has to work at a level just competent enough not to kill anybody

    • @axelpatrickb.pingol3228
      @axelpatrickb.pingol3228 Před 2 lety +122

      Remember that one episode where Homer is reading a Reader's Digest and Mr. Burns caught him on CCTV? Mr. Burns commented about the qualification of safety inspector in his plant is being an illiterate...

  • @thenerdbeast7375
    @thenerdbeast7375 Před 3 lety +4035

    Funnily enough the Simpsons has outlived its relevancy by so long, it almost represents an ideal life. Homer has job security in a well paying job and a huge house, things the average family would kill for now. Before the Simpsons were supposed to represent dysfunction and barely able to scrape by, now they practically live in luxury.

    • @TheReaverOfDarkness
      @TheReaverOfDarkness Před 3 lety +396

      Honestly by today we should be at the point they keep previewing in future episodes, except most portrayals of Lisa being successful are probably highly inaccurate. Their first portrayal of her future self might be the most accurate one of all. And Maggie wouldn't be a famous rock star, she would be a CZcams vlogger with a silver play button.

    • @iamsearchingforthefiletmignon
      @iamsearchingforthefiletmignon Před 3 lety +196

      That’s true. Back in the day that wouldn’t be an ideal life. But I guess the quality of life has gotten worse, so now it is lol 😂

    • @drivethrupoet
      @drivethrupoet Před 3 lety +305

      As a GenX'er I will say that this was ideal life then and now - Parents married, mom's cooking breakfast, bills get paid, family has 2 cars, some pets... It was just the personalities and situations that pushed the envelope back then. They weren't the Cosby's. But none of us were.

    • @emilianozamora399
      @emilianozamora399 Před 3 lety +67

      I've seen many people comment on how the simpsons house is very nice looking back at it and it really makes you think

    • @DIEGhostfish
      @DIEGhostfish Před 3 lety +154

      @@emilianozamora399 I mean even this whole episode admits "The Simpsons have it pretty good." Early on they didn't have much discretionary income but their house was nice and the neighborhood seemed safe. Possibly because there's only like eight criminals in the whole town.

  • @jeffn9952
    @jeffn9952 Před 8 měsíci +73

    Frank Grimes is like the struggling actor / writer / producer who can't seem to catch his big break. The cast and crew on The Simpsons - for all their talent and dedication - were enjoying cartoonish success, eight seasons into this miraculous series. "Homer's Enemy" could be interpreted as a coming to terms with the success guilt they must have felt -- and what the humbler among all of us feel when our most modest expectations are exceeded.

  • @atrothe
    @atrothe Před rokem +679

    Homer is a hero, he always comes to the rescue despite his fatal flaws. He has a conscience.

    • @randomcenturion7264
      @randomcenturion7264 Před rokem +65

      Homer isn’t a bad man. He’s
      More like a really destructive dog that once he realises he messed up he will go to insane lengths to try and fix it

    • @elmaionesosexo
      @elmaionesosexo Před rokem +11

      ​@@randomcenturion7264 Spot on

    • @dharmallars
      @dharmallars Před rokem +16

      @@randomcenturion7264 exactly lmao and like a dog, the formula of every episode requires him to forget everything he just learned in 30 minutes.

    •  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Had.

    • @duffman18
      @duffman18 Před 9 měsíci +12

      ​@@randomcenturion7264 he is a bad man. He's a domestic abuser of his wife and kids, he constantly puts people's lives in danger every day, he knows that he's not supposed to do all this and has the intelligence enough to avoid doing these things and potentially kill people and yet he refuses to and does these dangerous things anyway.
      He has got Flanderized quite a lot over the modern recent seasons as being monumentally stupid. But in the golden age of the Simpsons, he was dumb, but more just a kind of average dumb, he wasn't spectacularly cartoonishly dumb, his main character flaws came from selfishness and disregard for other people's lives and well being. I guess they retconned him into being cartoonishly dumb instead because otherwise people would hate him too much, when you're supposed to love Homer despite knowing his major character flaws as a person.

  • @jacksongibbs8998
    @jacksongibbs8998 Před 2 lety +3022

    The fall of the Simpsons is the epitome of “You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.” In this case, it’s “you either die fighting the institution or live long enough to see yourself become the institution.”

    • @Bollibompa
      @Bollibompa Před 2 lety +113

      Nah, "Transform the medium so much that you become that which you sought to usurp."

    • @AndrewThoesen
      @AndrewThoesen Před 2 lety +8

      Real Stalin hours

    • @FelipeJaquez
      @FelipeJaquez Před 2 lety +26

      "I use to be with it, then they change what it was."

    • @g.benoit5114
      @g.benoit5114 Před 2 lety +32

      How about Nietzsche's "To look into the abyss, is to have the abyss look back into you....," and "To hunt monsters is to become a monster..."
      Paraphrased from my memory.

    • @ji6664
      @ji6664 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Bollibompa permission to steal this quote. It’s much more concise

  • @dontaskwhoiam4847
    @dontaskwhoiam4847 Před 3 lety +2975

    growing up, Homer's Enemy scared me much more then any of the Tree house of Terrors. Grimes' meltdown is honestly still terrifying today.

    • @iFACEPLANTalot1
      @iFACEPLANTalot1 Před 3 lety +49

      Who are you

    • @spartanq7781
      @spartanq7781 Před 3 lety +170

      @@iFACEPLANTalot1 We're not supposed to ask about that.

    • @AatiNiiranen
      @AatiNiiranen Před 3 lety +3

      Who are you?

    • @loopyloon5401
      @loopyloon5401 Před 2 lety +61

      What could be more terrifying than the unpredictability of apoplectic rage? Maybe the idea of being insane yourself, would you know if you saw the world differently from everyone else? Who am I?

    • @RubyBlueUwU
      @RubyBlueUwU Před 2 lety +67

      I’m glad it’s not just me lmao…it’s so unsettling in far too real a way, the fact that it happens mid-sentence, in a way that wouldn’t have killed any other character, it really got to me

  • @crimsomnia1415
    @crimsomnia1415 Před rokem +22

    "All I've wanted is for you to lead a happy life" is a thing I've heard my parents tell me more than just a few times, but only once I paused to consider the meaning of it, did the gravity of it click in me. Being driven by a similar ambition that drove Grimes does not exclude the laissez-faire outlook on things that homer has - it only does so if you rank the value of things through lenses colored by your ambitions. I've made it my task to live my life a happy person. That is not and never was a merit of my success - my success is the merit of my happiness. A passion driving me exactly where I want to go with no strings attached.

  • @tiarnanwoods8441
    @tiarnanwoods8441 Před rokem +104

    This video made me appreciate Simpsons so much more, grew up watching Simpsons in the early to late 00s but always stuck with the golden years and it will forever be my most cherished tv show. Seeing how it was such a cultural shift for tv and American audiences in general is so impressive

  • @TheShuckmeister
    @TheShuckmeister Před 3 lety +10097

    Frank Grimes, or Grimey as he liked to be called, taught us that a man can triumph over adversity.

    • @the_original_Bilb_Ono
      @the_original_Bilb_Ono Před 3 lety +146

      Also known as Elon Musk's father-in-law.

    • @teddyfurstman1997
      @teddyfurstman1997 Před 3 lety +79

      Indeed. Frank Grimes is the best one-off Simpsons character.

    • @MC-Phillips
      @MC-Phillips Před 3 lety +227

      Grimey actually felt like the only sane man in the simpson universe. Until he had his breaking point, reminds me of the main character from the movie Falling down. Also remember Frank grimes Jr?

    • @maruquiturus7652
      @maruquiturus7652 Před 3 lety +70

      Wtf why is the jojo guy here

    • @philly_sports1558
      @philly_sports1558 Před 3 lety +30

      Grimey was one of the best one time Simpsons characters ever.

  • @mikethemike4313
    @mikethemike4313 Před 3 lety +689

    I think another example of Frank Grimes being a completely normal person in the Simpsons world would be his voice. In the series, everyone has completely different and weird voices, with either different accents, tones, or pitches. Frank Grimes’ voice in all honesty is just Hank Azaria’s normal voice. That to me shows how he both stands out and fades in with all the other characters

  • @harrisondansie9542
    @harrisondansie9542 Před rokem +190

    34:05 "At this point Homer Simpson has been relegated to a figurehead akin to the likes of Mickey Mouse and the Queen of England."
    I chose a heck of a day to watch this Never Ever now that one of those figureheads is dead.

    • @Deley18
      @Deley18 Před rokem +7

      To me, this video came to mind when I've found out about the news of the passing.

    • @nikkoa.3639
      @nikkoa.3639 Před rokem +14

      I was wondering how did Mickey Mouse die and the I realized Walt Disney was Mickey's original voice

    • @sheehan3204
      @sheehan3204 Před rokem +4

      ​@@nikkoa.3639 I think he's talking about the queen lol

    • @liammcnicholas918
      @liammcnicholas918 Před 2 měsíci

      Marilyn Monroe died in 1962, and she’s considered a cultural icon to this day.

  • @elizabethmayer9786
    @elizabethmayer9786 Před rokem +494

    Regarding the 'laissez-faire' attitude as being the ideal/what is admirable in Homer - as Grimes said, Homer can only enjoy his easy, consequence-free life because others are forced to deal with the consequences instead. While Homer gets to live another day because a vigilant Grimes knocked acid out of his hands, Grimes is the one being punished for the acid damage; Homer is thriving at the expense of others, and to empathize with *that* position is easy (how nice! I want to be as unburdened as Homer!), but for any of us who've grown up with Homers around, it's the short end of the stick, because those consequences do land - just on someone else.
    Similarly, Homer's relationship with his family is painful to observe through the lens of, you know, not being Homer. For Homer to be Homer, Marge has to devote her life to taking care of the consequences of Homer's actions; financially, societally, personally, there are many episodes where Marge has her expressed her sadness that her life is limited, that while Homer gets to go out and have adventures, she has to take care of the practicalities (and during their separations, Homer has to face consequences and can't bear it, so the 'happy ending' is them getting back together and him being able to go back to doing whatever he wants while Marge cleans up). The later seasons are harder to watch because the early warmth of the show has worn off, and Homer and Marge are still in marriage counselling with Marge bitterly grinding her teeth while Homer cheerfully ignores every need she has. It's remarked many times throughout the show that Homer is extremely selfish; the only reason he's redeemed is because of those brief moments where he puts his selfish instincts aside to do the right thing for someone else (and even then, often after letting them down; like Lisa needing a saxophone reed before her recital, and Homer decides to get a beer instead). We forgive him because at the end of the day he does the right thing, sometimes, eventually. The flip-side to people who do whatever they want, are people who are forced to clean up after them (often, sadly, out of love, integrity, sense of duty, or coercion/force). Lisa (and even Maggie, surreally enough) also fill these roles to an extent, taking on the stress of cleaning up after another person's mistakes (Homer's, and also Bart's - revealing a layer of misogyny to this issue as well).
    There's an episode in the early seasons where Bart's 'I do what I want' (laissez-faire) attitude is embraced by the whole town, and everything falls apart because everyone's only doing what they 'feel' like doing. To Grimes' point - it comes at a cost, and that cost lands on the caring, compassionate people who are impelled to help others, to their own detriment. Coulda just let him drink the acid, but there's that niggling integrity saying, 'if you can prevent a senseless death, you must!' If there was another Homer around, Homer'd be dead.
    It's curious reading some of the comments about embracing Homer's 'bare minimum' lifestyle, because obviously working hard didn't pay off for ol' Grimey (and is representative of societal lies about success) - but it's curious that the accepted solution is 'just don't care as much!' instead of, you know, fighting injustice, striving for social change, making the world a better place. Turning a blind eye just lets the Mr. Burns of the world keep doing what they're doing. My heart aches for Grimes, who did everything you're 'supposed' to - worked hard, looked out for others, did the honest thing, with integrity, manners, and patience - and died a villain. (And hey - if he'd not worked hard every day of his life, he'd be considered a lazy bum who deserved his lack of success, 'cos he just should've worked harder!)
    TL;DR - it's easy to enjoy doing whatever you want if others are cleaning up after you, but it's a deeply uncompassionate way to live.

    • @twerptwerp9064
      @twerptwerp9064 Před rokem +28

      I'm impressed

    • @sonic40001
      @sonic40001 Před rokem +58

      This comment is _severely_ underrated and should be more popular.

    • @loopyloon5401
      @loopyloon5401 Před rokem +73

      ​@@sonic40001No, it's not. This person is another Grimes failing to acknowledge the point of the episode. When Homer recognized that he'd angered Grimes, he acted to rectify the situation, only for Grimes to not only dismiss him, but attempt to engineer his humiliation. Grimes is every bit the envious, spiteful peon that every modern college student seems to be, while Homer only needed a nudge to at least try to better himself. OP said that turning a blind eye empowers people like Burns, yet Grimes was working for Burns while he focused his rage at Homer, who do you think added more to Burns' wealth during that episode?

    • @sonic40001
      @sonic40001 Před rokem +24

      @@loopyloon5401 that's actually fair, I got too focused on OP's remark on Homer's laissez-fair atitude.
      Well, I do believe that Grimes' (and so many others'!) tendency to blame others for his own misfortunes should benefit of at least a bit of self-awareness.
      It's similar to the situation where one, as a single person, gets angry over other people in a relationship, which may or not be their friends. Sure, it's valid to be sad _to a point_ because of your situation and happy for them, but from here to actually blaming others and be angry at them is a long, dangerous way. A lot of that energy that can be taken to point fingers can be put into actually searching elsewhere, take care of yourself and really, being decent. While none of that guarantees you a relationship, it does help to not do what Grimes did in society.

    • @applejhon8308
      @applejhon8308 Před rokem +22

      While this is certainly a valid point I think it overlooks elements of the show to agree with grimes here. And bringing up later seasons is just pointless as you're comparing apples to oranges at that point. To keep things short, at the end of the day they all live in a silly world with it's own set of rules and it's entirely on Grimes for falling to adapt to that and then taking out his rage on a dim but good man who, dispite all his problems has always supported his family.

  • @TheJeffMan01
    @TheJeffMan01 Před 2 lety +3212

    “The Simpsons made everyone stop to adjust their tv sets, but the picture within was never broken. Everything else around it was.” One of the most thought provoking quotes I have heard in a very long time.

    • @dons1932
      @dons1932 Před 2 lety +149

      He had me at "What was once the epitome of media counter-culture is now owned by the epitome of the media establishment. In all honesty The Simpsons was never designed to survive until the 21st century. The big media conglomerates just keep it around as a ceremonial token to evoke nostalgia for better times. At this point Homer Simpson has been relegated to a figurehead akin to the like of Mickey Mouse and the Queen of England. "

    • @MarioMaster02
      @MarioMaster02 Před 2 lety +18

      pick up a book every now and then

    • @TheJeffMan01
      @TheJeffMan01 Před 2 lety +101

      @@MarioMaster02 nah, video essays about the yellow people are more interesting to me

    • @dons1932
      @dons1932 Před 2 lety +65

      @@MarioMaster02 I don't even know what that comment is meant to infer or evoke, or even mean? Books were the new parchments. As are videos the new books. Times change. There's nothing wrong with taking a philosophical look at a show that quite literally shaped minds and created personalities and traits in people based on a unique appreciation of comedy. A lot of people are who they are today, because of this show.

    • @MarioMaster02
      @MarioMaster02 Před 2 lety +15

      ​@@dons1932 Not wading into that debate but the quote is objectively corny and about as deep as a puddle. no disrespect to the jeffman but if this is as good as it gets for him then he's missing out and might benefit from broadening his horizons

  • @daltooinewestwood6380
    @daltooinewestwood6380 Před 3 lety +2256

    “Strong moral role models” showing bill cosby. Man, that hits hard every time I’m reminded of it. How heroes fall

    • @richardarriaga6271
      @richardarriaga6271 Před 3 lety +197

      Really how villains are exposed.

    • @adrenjones9301
      @adrenjones9301 Před 3 lety +37

      He didnt fall, he was assassinated.

    • @nickname8619
      @nickname8619 Před 3 lety +91

      He was always fucking creepy dont kid yourself

    • @stephenelder3162
      @stephenelder3162 Před 3 lety +3

      I laughed

    • @valinor5397
      @valinor5397 Před 3 lety +22

      Was he ever proven guilty beyond a shadow of a doubt or was he just raked over the coals by the media?

  • @splitman1129
    @splitman1129 Před rokem +46

    The studio originally wanted life in hell, but Matt didn't want to give it to them and then they chop it up. It was HIS. A few minutes before his pitch to the studio, he drew the Simpsons and choose his own family's names.

  • @vonsopas
    @vonsopas Před rokem +214

    The Simpsons are the best example of something staying around long enough to become the very thing it revolted against

    • @BTLAGS
      @BTLAGS Před rokem +19

      Can you either die a hero or you live long enough to become the villain.

    • @Terence.McKenna
      @Terence.McKenna Před 5 měsíci +1

      America

    • @Grant-gq7in
      @Grant-gq7in Před 5 měsíci

      Well, it is a show about America

    • @kamenkhamen8340
      @kamenkhamen8340 Před 4 měsíci

      Well that's the funny thing about counter culture.

  • @mr.moviemafia
    @mr.moviemafia Před 2 lety +3557

    Your interpretation of the “Bowling Alley” moment is honestly amazing and makes that small moment so much more impactful to me. Homer WOULD be impressed by that because that’s the dream he gave up for the good of his family.

    • @telescopia_
      @telescopia_ Před 2 lety +65

      Yeah my heart just broke :(

    • @Corndog52
      @Corndog52 Před 2 lety +104

      he would also be impressed by it for the sake of bowling, just because he’s homer

    • @Alkatross
      @Alkatross Před 2 lety +35

      24:00 in case anyone needs it!

    • @LaurLoVideo
      @LaurLoVideo Před 2 lety +12

      RIGHT?! Such a fantastic connection!

    • @clockworkNate
      @clockworkNate Před 2 lety +2

      Yup that's what he said in the video lol

  • @Intelligent_Turtle
    @Intelligent_Turtle Před 3 lety +993

    "It is possible to commit zero mistakes and still lose."

    • @driotari
      @driotari Před 3 lety +115

      "That is not weakness, that is life"

    • @TheReaverOfDarkness
      @TheReaverOfDarkness Před 3 lety +11

      Me taking tests in school.

    • @jullienricot930
      @jullienricot930 Před 3 lety +4

      NO thats the whole point of making no mistakes you are guaranteed to win 100% of the time.

    • @TheReaverOfDarkness
      @TheReaverOfDarkness Před 3 lety +33

      @@jullienricot930 Flawless is not the same as perfect, in fact in most cases there is no significant overlap between them. I was an adult by the time I realized the first part of that sentence to be true, and I was close to thirty by the time I fully embraced the second part. But it is one of the most fundamental aspects of our world you will ever encounter.

    • @Jwlar
      @Jwlar Před 3 lety +21

      @@jullienricot930 Simply untrue. Welcome to the real world.

  • @MrMike855
    @MrMike855 Před rokem +368

    This episode is fascinating because how each person feels about Frank Grimes seems to be based on how they view the world. If you are an ambitious workaholic dedicated to getting ahead while being unsatisfied with your life, it would be very easy to hate Homer's guts after this episode. If you are a chill guy, more interested in making friends and enjoying life, at the expense of getting significant success, you'd walk away from this episode thinking Grimes was a jerkass who should've befriended Homer. That's why the episode is so divisive, it directly forces you to decide if you're like Frank Grimes, or like Homer Simpson, or who you're more like.

    • @LizLuvsCupcakes
      @LizLuvsCupcakes Před 11 měsíci +68

      More than anything, I felt bad for grimes. Poor guy let himself get so consumed with hustle culture, he forgot to take care of himself. He assumed Homer was the problem because… how can someone be happy and lazy and still have Stuff?

    • @Chewychaca
      @Chewychaca Před 8 měsíci +7

      Underrated comment, I identify with Grimes 😬 just watched the episode on D+. Kinda shocked me and made me upset.

    • @YourAverageSoftmodder
      @YourAverageSoftmodder Před 6 měsíci +2

      so more sophisticated zoey or zelda

    • @YourAverageSoftmodder
      @YourAverageSoftmodder Před 6 měsíci

      in bojack horseman there is a joke that everyone is either a zoey or a zelda, go watch bojack horseman now if you havent seen it@@MrMike855

    • @daniellysohirka4258
      @daniellysohirka4258 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I grew up watching The Simpsons as a kid so I never really took that kind of stuff at face value, and now that older, especially with cartoons I've just seen this show way too much I was younger. I would come home some days and watch 3 or 4 episodes before going outside after school. We had Star Choice and it was on back to back all night on the week days in the late 90's early 2000's.

  • @mermaidman1985
    @mermaidman1985 Před rokem +69

    Although Grimes is thoroughly sympathetic, he was unable to accept that life can be unfair sometimes and that there will be people much better off due to being extremely lucky. My outlook completely changed on this episode. It's not just an allegory for Americans but humans in general.

    • @sierra1513
      @sierra1513 Před 8 měsíci +10

      He was unable to accept that he has far far more in common with Homer than the parasite leaching of his labour known as Mr Burns

  • @meowtherainbowx4163
    @meowtherainbowx4163 Před 3 lety +3072

    Wow, he actually turned “Why are the Simpsons green?” into a profound statement about the show and society. What a legend. This is why I’m subscribed.

    • @seanimo8579
      @seanimo8579 Před 3 lety +50

      I have to sit down and rethink everything after watching an episode of this series.

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 3 lety +29

      im colorblind, never noticed the green unless someone points it out, still dont see it, just am aware of it.

    • @shaha9
      @shaha9 Před 3 lety +6

      Legend.

    • @noobednatherium4082
      @noobednatherium4082 Před 3 lety +1

      There should be, there will never ever be an F1 driver like Gilles Villeneuve.

    • @BBWahoo
      @BBWahoo Před 3 lety +3

      pretty fantastic re-contextualization

  • @LSMark
    @LSMark Před 3 lety +3102

    hard agree

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu Před rokem +190

    I'm not sure what's more amazing--that the show is still running, or that some people still watch the newest episodes of the show!
    But seriously, great vid. I had no idea how deep the episode "Homer's Enemy" actually went, or how it could be used to illustrate the overall values of the show in general.

  • @acroissant3721
    @acroissant3721 Před 11 měsíci +18

    "Our value as individuals is dictated by how we act in our most challenging moments". That genuinely got me. I keep measuring my worth with talents and achievements, and I keep feeling like I'm not enough. I didn’t think a video about The Simpsons would make me re-evaluate my own self-worth, but I welcome the unexpected clarity I gained from this.

  • @SuperWiiBros08
    @SuperWiiBros08 Před 3 lety +3704

    So that's why you used green

  • @Zyphon
    @Zyphon Před 3 lety +8977

    When the video is almost twice as long as the episode itself

  • @magnusm4
    @magnusm4 Před rokem +19

    I love the polar similarities from this shot 27:50
    Frank has straight flat hair and square glasses, white shirt and tie.
    While Smithers has straight flat, yet curved hair at the top, a coat and colored tie.
    Frank is the straight honest worker who takes work and ethic above all else.
    While Smithers is straight and honest, yet he knows it's not an honest world and is exploiting it with a straight face.
    His bow tie showing his goofier and funny side that Frank doesn't have.
    Smithers is Frank but less uptight and open while Frank is consumed by his delusion of right and not at all open to compromises.
    Love how their fashion choices show so much about them, especially when paired together.

    • @MorrisonsMan
      @MorrisonsMan Před 3 měsíci +1

      Ain’t that deep

    • @Immopimmo
      @Immopimmo Před 2 měsíci +2

      Smithers, straight? 🤣

    • @icedlava7063
      @icedlava7063 Před měsícem +2

      @@MorrisonsMan not everything in the world appeals to you. some things are only deep for some people, and you're allowed to move on without making a rude comment to someone

  • @autonomouscollective2599
    @autonomouscollective2599 Před rokem +32

    I once was in a group discussion about Theodore Dreiser’s novel _Sister Carrie_ and brought up parallels between the novel and this episode. The novel is like this episode but told from Frank Grimes’s point of view. The protagonist keeps trying to improve his life but it just keeps getting worse, and Carrie blissfully drifts through life without a care but keeps moving up in wealth and popularity.

  • @cartoonhigh9990
    @cartoonhigh9990 Před 2 lety +3169

    The amazing thing about The Simpsons is that even if it has 30 years of garbage, that 10 years of high quality will be what most remember for coming generations.

    • @PlahaKumar
      @PlahaKumar Před 2 lety +130

      It's a shame it couldn't end in it's golden age, and instead lived to become a shell of what it was.

    • @PremiumCheeses
      @PremiumCheeses Před 2 lety +79

      @@PlahaKumar Sure, but that doesn't mean you can't appreciate it for what it *was*. In my opinion, people too easily let sequels, remakes, or far-too-long runtimes ruin their enjoyment of what they loved originally.

    • @betorockmetal
      @betorockmetal Před 2 lety +9

      ​@@PlahaKumar An empty hollow shell is what the Simpsons are now.
      Even the movie sucked and that was very long ago.
      They should have ended before the movie.

    • @johnb5057
      @johnb5057 Před 2 lety +5

      @@PlahaKumar it would have been rebooted by now, and even worse.

    • @Vihara2
      @Vihara2 Před 2 lety +38

      @@betorockmetal i liked the film, but i couldn't believe they kept the show going afterwards

  • @GARYtheCANNIBAL
    @GARYtheCANNIBAL Před 3 lety +1961

    "There will never ever be another Simpsons episode--"
    Finally. It's over.

    • @umbreonben
      @umbreonben Před 3 lety +7

      haha xd

    • @ShiddyKong
      @ShiddyKong Před 3 lety +41

      If only

    • @philly_sports1558
      @philly_sports1558 Před 3 lety +69

      The Simpsons were dead to me the second they made that Trump West Side Story video. I hadn’t watched them for years but that killed any interest I had in watching them ever again. And I absolutely HATED Trump as president. That video was just so unbelievably cringe-inducing that it ruined the show for me.

    • @symbiote3220
      @symbiote3220 Před 3 lety +44

      @@philly_sports1558 comparison wise Biden is doing much worse and taking credit for things not his...the show is only precedent in events.

    • @aceman0000099
      @aceman0000099 Před 3 lety +15

      @@philly_sports1558 i didn't even know about it till now and yet it didn't surprise me at all. Fortunately we don't have Fox where i live so they dont show recent episodes on tv anyway

  • @BH-vh3iu
    @BH-vh3iu Před rokem +50

    I think it kinda portrays a generational clash, between boomers who started early on, in the 60s, 70s, 80s, when there wasn't as much competition in the job market, vs a gen x'er starting a career in the late 90s, in a highly competitive environment where getting a position that pays well required huge efforts and also in an economical reality in which a nice suburban house like Homer's wasn't as affordable. That's how the American dream died, in fact.

  • @GregoryAlanBaileygamereviews

    This episode was based off of the movie "Falling Down" with Michael Douglas. One of the best movies ever made.

  • @ryeinc
    @ryeinc Před 3 lety +511

    “EmpLemon, or Empey, as he like to be called...”

  • @isaacamor1238
    @isaacamor1238 Před 3 lety +730

    "Lisa, if you don't like your job, you don't strike! You just go in every day and do it really half-assed. That's the American way."

    • @locomadman
      @locomadman Před 3 lety +41

      I’m not kidding you whatsoever; this quote literally made me shoot HOT DOG out of my nose!
      (I don’t know about anyone else, but, but that was a first for me!)

    • @anarkxi
      @anarkxi Před 3 lety +30

      @@locomadman bro what the fuck

    • @locomadman
      @locomadman Před 3 lety +19

      @@anarkxi I know, right??! That’s kind what went through my head at that moment! (Other than, you know, hot dog). I was eating supper when I read the comment, never laughed so hard solid matter passed through my nasal cavity before, of course I had to share. (Definitely not my finest moment, for sure!)

    • @anarkxi
      @anarkxi Před 3 lety +14

      @@locomadman a whole ass hotdog (or half eaten?) that just shoots up your fuckin' nasal cavity, shit chief you might wanna get that checked out

    • @locomadman
      @locomadman Před 3 lety +13

      @@anarkxi no, not the whole damn thing (obviously) bwahahaha. Just a regular sized, decently chewed bite.
      But lemme tell ya, there is no way to chew *quite* enough for hot dog to pass easily through the nose comfortably; trust, man!

  • @AMHarbinger
    @AMHarbinger Před měsícem +3

    Ultimate lesson I've taken as an adult after viewing Homer's Enemy after seeing it again is to just let go. Getting angry at someone's fortunate situation will only consume you, as it did Grimes. Even consuming his son.

  • @ignorant1126
    @ignorant1126 Před rokem +24

    As a kid, I was told this was the best episode of the show. I didn't think the plot was special, in fact it was kind of weird and mean-spirited, so I just thought people meant the comedy. But on rewatch? Christ... 'you're what's wrong with America, Simpson' hit me like a truck.
    Homer's Enemy is the most subversive episode simply because it paints Homer in another light. In other episodes, he'd be depicted as a funny goofball, or someone in the wrong who'd fix the mistakes by the end. But this is the first time his 'flaw' is not something he can ever change. It's his life. His life and everything he has is ludicrous to the outsider looking in. And we start to feel for Grimes, to see Homer as someone unfairly commended by society.
    But that ending hit me the hardest.
    We finish with a shot of Homer falling asleep a group laughing. In any other episode, this would be a fun gag. But here it's not. Here, we witness a man tortured by society, die, be remembered by a name he hated, and then have a funeral full of celebrating his enemy. In a way, that scene of Homer sleeping perfectly represents what drove Grimes crazy, and what killed him. The act of putting sloth on a pedestal.
    Brilliant episode

  • @remyclio8661
    @remyclio8661 Před 3 lety +1899

    fun fact: my mom owned a restaurant in LA that Matt Groening went to almost daily while he was a struggling cartoonist in the 80s

    • @Immadeus
      @Immadeus Před 3 lety +13

      what is it called?

    • @Pusfilth
      @Pusfilth Před 3 lety +11

      That’s not true

    • @remyclio8661
      @remyclio8661 Před 3 lety +96

      @@Pusfilth you don't have to believe it if you don't want to

    • @remyclio8661
      @remyclio8661 Před 3 lety +137

      @@Immadeus it's called Millies, it's in Silverlake CA but my mom hasn't been the owner in decades. this was back before the Simpsons was created

    • @Pusfilth
      @Pusfilth Před 3 lety +4

      @@remyclio8661 don’t

  • @BigaloMax
    @BigaloMax Před 2 lety +3282

    In a way Homer and grimes are also a nice depiction of how much the economy has changed from the Gen X to the millennial generation. Both working in the same place but one being able to afford to BUY a house and a stay at home wife and kids while the other can't even afford to rent appartment for him self .

    • @TWhiteTiger
      @TWhiteTiger Před 2 lety +354

      I worked with a baby boomer when I graduated from college, at the same position and salary. He once told to me that since the 90's he had not gained any real wealth, only maintained his acquisitive power. I did not get it at the time, but 10 years later I see he was right. At that point, it would take me over 20 years to own a house and car, what the what he was able to buy in his first 5. Even so, probably I would not be able to afford maintenance.

    • @chrisramsey6725
      @chrisramsey6725 Před 2 lety +20

      The severing of the last ties of the dollar to gold by Nixon, which made the Federal Reserve the arbiter of the value of the dollar is the reason why the standard of living has plummeted. As long as Central bankers and moneyed interests control interest rates and the control of monetary value, this trend will never ever be reversed. When the dollar has no value aside from fiat, the elitists will always get more value out of an ever expanding (i.e. inflationary) dollar because they will have these dollars before they lose value by the time they reach us, the plebs. And it is the same reason why elites laugh off the current inflation (the worst in 40 years) while normal people see it (rightfully so) as an existential threat. Ron Paul was 100% right on his diagnosis of why we are where we are as a country.

    • @ddsjgvk
      @ddsjgvk Před 2 lety +2

      But he got a hooker those are not cheap

    • @BigaloMax
      @BigaloMax Před 2 lety +25

      @@ddsjgvk i mean it might cost a hundred or two but thats cheap compared to a house... or a stay at home wife whit 3 kids xD

    • @HollieMoodie
      @HollieMoodie Před 2 lety +1

      NO wonder millennials gave up on life, decide to live in mommy's basement while hitting hard on 40, all while working an entry level job while smoking obscene quantities of weed.

  • @defaultkoala2922
    @defaultkoala2922 Před rokem +17

    My mom bought a box set of seasons 7&8 and my family watched together. I was only about 10 years old and this was long after the original episodes had aired and yet those memories stick with me to this day. It was impactful. Great tv.

  • @flatscan1978
    @flatscan1978 Před rokem +216

    Society needs many people like Grimey, in order to be able to afford people like Homer.
    Slackers can only exist as long as other pick up their workload on top of their own.

    • @BokBarber
      @BokBarber Před rokem +21

      You tell 'em, Grimey!

    • @waddledoo2you13
      @waddledoo2you13 Před rokem +10

      @@BokBarber BAHAHAHA ironic isn’t it? Considering homer has more expirence then grimy? I mean fine by me, work your self to death with pride. I’m on brake.

    • @NautilusSSN571
      @NautilusSSN571 Před rokem +10

      ​@@waddledoo2you13 ok meiocre

    • @stuffjuststuff6067
      @stuffjuststuff6067 Před rokem +1

      @@NautilusSSN571 what

    • @dharmallars
      @dharmallars Před rokem +21

      The bottom line though is that grimes eventually reveals that he’s jealous of Homer’s family. Homer doesn’t care at all about his job, yeah, we know that. But Homer does care about his family, and his family isn’t something he never worked for. Above all the simpsons is not a show about a man who works in a nuclear power plant, it’s a show about a family. Think of where Frank Grimes came from. He’s a great worker sure, but he was abandoned as a child by his parents. We need people like Homer to provide loving homes for the children who will eventually run the world. No matter how many great workers they might be able to produce, we don’t need more people like Grimes’s parents.

  • @Onering80
    @Onering80 Před 3 lety +500

    The Simpsons have lived long enough to see themselves become the villain.

    • @mutsuhanma7807
      @mutsuhanma7807 Před 3 lety +8

      You only become the villain if the people change their minds about you. The people are deflecting responsibility and blame and need a scapegoat...think about it.

    • @quagmiretoiletgaming
      @quagmiretoiletgaming Před 3 lety +10

      @@mutsuhanma7807 no

    • @cbalan777
      @cbalan777 Před 3 lety +8

      @@mutsuhanma7807 If you have to end your own argument with "think about it" then you didn't make a compelling argument.

    • @peterparker5810
      @peterparker5810 Před 3 lety +4

      "You either die a hero, or live long enough to see yourself become the villain."

    • @kennethlavallee7597
      @kennethlavallee7597 Před 3 lety +3

      @@mutsuhanma7807 Did you know that there's a direct correlation between the decline of Spirograph and the rise in gang activity? Think about it.

  • @frohawkmaster
    @frohawkmaster Před 3 lety +621

    You know who else had a dictomy where one was mature and miserable, another idiotic and happy, despite both of them being in technically simillar places?
    Squidward and Spongebob.

  • @iannordin5250
    @iannordin5250 Před rokem +39

    The reason this episode works is because the writers and lead writer of the episode greatly disagreed on who was actually sympathetic, so both Homer and Grimes end up being played completely ernestly.

  • @oliverthompson9922
    @oliverthompson9922 Před 7 měsíci +3

    This was a great watch.
    Surprised there was no mention of Michael Douglas in Falling down though, he clearly had some influence on the Grimes character.

  • @ConnorPugs
    @ConnorPugs Před 3 lety +2489

    the life in hell series is super underrated

    • @mariapalma3518
      @mariapalma3518 Před 3 lety +13

      it’s conor man

    • @rubenlopez8591
      @rubenlopez8591 Před 3 lety +5

      the connorman

    • @TCArk_
      @TCArk_ Před 3 lety +8

      Okay why do you watch every CZcamsr I also watch, first I saw your comment on an Omni video, then an iNabber video, and then an EmpLemon video. I'm seriously starting to think my entire life on YT revolves around what you watch. Istg next I'm going to see you on a Summoning Salt video or something.

    • @tombstonejones9581
      @tombstonejones9581 Před 3 lety

      Okay hipster

    • @joemere1346
      @joemere1346 Před 3 lety +1

      Door

  • @Ryan-sw6jx
    @Ryan-sw6jx Před 3 lety +512

    "responsible, virtuous role models"
    *zooms on Pill Cosby*

  • @thebread9186
    @thebread9186 Před rokem +7

    Fun fact: Matt groening overslept once when he was supposed to go on a plane. Luckily enough for him this oversleep saved his life becuase that plane was one of the planes hijacked on 9/11.

    • @twigwigsoso
      @twigwigsoso Před 5 měsíci +1

      i think you are mixing Matt groening up with Seth MacFarlane

    • @thebread9186
      @thebread9186 Před 5 měsíci

      @@twigwigsoso Nuh uh

  • @captainquagmire859
    @captainquagmire859 Před 7 měsíci +10

    I don't know why but this video somehow is one of the only thing in years that brought a warm feeling of hapiness to my chest

  • @djgadget6122
    @djgadget6122 Před 3 lety +824

    The sign is a subtle joke. The shop is called "Sneed's Feed & Seed", where feed and seed both end in the sound "-eed", thus rhyming with the name of the owner, Sneed. The sign says that the shop was "Formerly Chuck's", implying that the two words beginning with "F" and "S" would have ended with "-uck", rhyming with "Chuck". So, when Chuck owned the shop, it would have been called "Chuck's Feeduck and Seeduck".

    • @the-letter_s
      @the-letter_s Před 3 lety +131

      keyed and lockpilled

    • @helios1_
      @helios1_ Před 3 lety +67

      “Head on down to Chuck’s-“
      “NO!”

    • @germanhipster6391
      @germanhipster6391 Před 3 lety +91

      Based and sneedpilled

    • @buck_mar2319
      @buck_mar2319 Před 3 lety +32

      I'm very glad I read this whole comment

    • @milla8632
      @milla8632 Před 3 lety +27

      @@the-letter_s stop saying keyed fucker. It'll never catch on

  • @bisxkitvixxn
    @bisxkitvixxn Před 3 lety +549

    I honestly thought the simpsons were green to avoid a copyright claim.

    • @JimmehRulez
      @JimmehRulez Před 3 lety +4

      Me 2

    • @maymay5600
      @maymay5600 Před 3 lety +2

      me too lol

    • @soni-switch5270
      @soni-switch5270 Před 3 lety +3

      Me too

    • @clownmoshpit2778
      @clownmoshpit2778 Před 3 lety +8

      I bet there's something philosophical you could make of this comment tied to the video but I'm too simple to come up with it

    • @shuenshuen
      @shuenshuen Před 3 lety

      @@clownmoshpit2778 most definitely though im in the same simpleton boat.

  • @mercster
    @mercster Před rokem +3

    I remember, before the Simpsons were even a thing... somehow, improbably, I had this "Big Book of Hell", a large tome of a lot (most? all?) of the Life In Hell comics. During the summer, my dad mandated that us kids (me, a sister, two step-brothers, and two step-sisters) had to spend an hour a day reading. The Big Book of Hell counted.

    • @mercster
      @mercster Před rokem

      Also... just clicked off because you think wholesome, "sanitized" entertainment is lame. You're lame.

    • @georgeliquor1236
      @georgeliquor1236 Před rokem

      @@mercster It is lame, it's boring and bland. It pandering to the lowest of low and doesn't challenge people to think. I'm not saying it shouldn't exist, but it shouldn't be what people strive for.

    • @autoteleology
      @autoteleology Před měsícem

      @@georgeliquor1236If this is your interpretation of Life in Hell, you have a poverty of character.

  • @oneofthoseyoutubeusers
    @oneofthoseyoutubeusers Před 8 měsíci +4

    god, reagan really was the devil given human flesh
    that 300 times multiple between minimum wage and ceo pay is sure hittin'

  • @JustinWhangYt
    @JustinWhangYt Před 3 lety +4070

    I think you mixed up capitalism and alcohol.

  • @vsaucenou323
    @vsaucenou323 Před 3 lety +925

    "But before that, he had to go to hell"
    *Casually zooms in on Los Angeles.*

    • @Xandr1114
      @Xandr1114 Před 3 lety

      Lol

    • @stephenkissane4268
      @stephenkissane4268 Před 3 lety +1

      LA used to be the finest place

    • @Diwasho
      @Diwasho Před 3 lety +5

      At that part I thought he would zoom in on Michigan. Because that's where a town called Hell actually exists.

    • @jimmymcgill2961
      @jimmymcgill2961 Před 3 lety +22

      Thanks for explaining the joke

    • @Diwasho
      @Diwasho Před 3 lety +1

      Every time I don't explain the joke people ask what's the joke so I have to explain it anyway.

  • @warsmith1294
    @warsmith1294 Před rokem +8

    “Sometimes the best way to fight the system is to not to rebel against the system, but to exploit the system”
    20:40

  • @nieveangeletti1271
    @nieveangeletti1271 Před rokem +6

    I have watched this video probably about 10 times, and for some reason I just keep coming back to it.

  • @calenhoover1124
    @calenhoover1124 Před 3 lety +359

    "responsible and virtuous role models" accompanied by a closeup of Bill Cosby's face fucking sent me to the moon.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 3 lety +13

      Yeah that joke was a knockout

    • @karltanner3953
      @karltanner3953 Před 3 lety +14

      @@googiegress7459 You know what else knocks you out?
      A drink offered by Bill Cosby.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před 3 lety +2

      @@karltanner3953 That was the point. Thanks!

    • @herrforehead3745
      @herrforehead3745 Před 3 lety +1

      @@karltanner3953 and in some cases it might even knock you *up*

  • @ihavetowait90daystochangem67

    Since Emplemon is green on this episode, it’s canonically proven that Emplemon is a Simpson character

    • @geraldj.thomas8312
      @geraldj.thomas8312 Před 3 lety +16

      The Simpsons predicted CZcams poops

    • @AxxLAfriku
      @AxxLAfriku Před 3 lety +2

      I am the funniest CZcamsr of all time I watched my latest video and laughed for 69 minutes straight I am extremely funny I am dangerously funny and I have two girlfriends who think I am extremely dangerously funny and they watch all of my videos thanks for listening dear ihabe

    • @laboon344
      @laboon344 Před 3 lety +8

      @@AxxLAfriku no f you

    • @davestew5135
      @davestew5135 Před 3 lety

      What day are you on and how much more days to change your name do you have left?

    • @davestew5135
      @davestew5135 Před 3 lety +1

      @T teg Egg ok

  • @M1lkTheF1rst
    @M1lkTheF1rst Před rokem +3

    This video is fantastic, every few monthes i randomly think of it and rewatch the entire thing. My favorite kind of video essay, one longer than the source material.

  • @Jordan-df6ps
    @Jordan-df6ps Před 9 měsíci +4

    Episode summary: Chad Simpson vs. beta Grimes.

  • @Thiccline
    @Thiccline Před 3 lety +410

    "Do not argue with a fool. He will drag you down to his level and beat you with experience."

  • @Apandah
    @Apandah Před 3 lety +3072

    another amazing video

  • @shotthebot
    @shotthebot Před rokem +8

    Rip queen

  • @Potatotenkopf
    @Potatotenkopf Před rokem +8

    5:36 wow history really truly does rhyme

  • @CZsWorld
    @CZsWorld Před 3 lety +3999

    I love when two creators I already love collaborate.

    • @henrycrabs3497
      @henrycrabs3497 Před 3 lety +27

      SILENCE VERIFIED

    • @copeharder7554
      @copeharder7554 Před 3 lety +8

      EmperorLemon I know your based 25:29 to 25:34 have you ever considered its just inheritably in their being to be worse

    • @sus425
      @sus425 Před 3 lety +9

      Cope Harder fuck of racist

    • @verdragon5591
      @verdragon5591 Před 3 lety +12

      Well this comment chain took an abrupt swerve!

    • @monkakonga4305
      @monkakonga4305 Před 3 lety +7

      This, realjim is really underrated, i really like his content, even if i dont agree with all of his takes

  • @elleon677
    @elleon677 Před 3 lety +139

    The sarcasm about Bill Cosby at the beginning was just perfect.

  • @ohno5559
    @ohno5559 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I think Grimes represents a sort of false consciousness. He's someone who put in the time, played by the rules, and got screwed over by people in power. Instead of blaming those people, he blames the perceived "cheaters" like Homer-- his rage is completely misdirected. I mean, how else could he look at Homer's relatively modest wealth compared to Burns' vast fortune and come to the conclusion that Homer is the one leeching off his hard work? What about the man who literally directly profits off of it?
    I don't think he's wrong to be mad at the clear unfairness that he experiences. His problem is that he wants to fix that unfairness while preserving a fundamentally unfair system. He targets Homer because believing that the system is broken is easier to handle than believing that it's successfully fulfilling its intended purpose of exploiting his work ethic and stealing his labor.

  • @TickMaster8
    @TickMaster8 Před 8 měsíci +1

    What an amazing video Essay, probably the best I’ve ever seen. This deserves even more views

  • @ChestersonJack
    @ChestersonJack Před 3 lety +1730

    I feel like a lot of people see Grimes as being “right” in this episode. But once you realize he too is wrong, the blame is not on Homer but on the systems that created both their situations, that’s when you get it.

    • @LAZY-RUBY
      @LAZY-RUBY Před 3 lety +61

      The episode was written by a Libretarian that probably intended it to be played completely straight lmao.

    • @ChestersonJack
      @ChestersonJack Před 3 lety +155

      @@LAZY-RUBY I mean, I didn’t mean to say that the episode necessarily intended Grimes to be in the wrong. I don’t know the creators’ intentions. My comment is more about interpretation than intention.

    • @LAZY-RUBY
      @LAZY-RUBY Před 3 lety +181

      @Garfield And he'd be wrong for doing so. It's like asking why fast food workers think they deserve 15$ while EMTs barely make more instead of asking why EMTs are making that little to begin with.

    • @ChestersonJack
      @ChestersonJack Před 3 lety +41

      @Garfield That’s possible. Under that interpretation, I’d actually be more inclined to think even less of Grimes, being that his anger is not only misguided, it’s downright silly. If he falsely blamed Homer for his issues, it’d make sense that he’s taking it out ON Homer. But if he doesn’t, him being so angry at Homer all the time is just kinda mean.

    • @afqwa423
      @afqwa423 Před 3 lety +129

      Renegade Cut has an amazing video on this.
      czcams.com/video/P40sJOkxnac/video.html
      He looks at the episode more from a class struggle perspective. I think people who think Grimes is right also forget that Homer had to give up his dreams to take a job he hates, in order to support his family. And he originally got into nuclear energy to begin with because he got the message society was broadcasting: Go into STEM. Nuclear energy is the future. Homer was a musician and bowling alley owner, both jobs he'd rather be doing and has more of a motivation to do. Running a power plant is arguably more useful, but it's not what Homer was meant for. Grimes is that insufferable person that always lectures you about bootstraps.

  • @Wheres_the_money_lebowski
    @Wheres_the_money_lebowski Před 2 lety +422

    I remember when I first watched this episode, my dad was eating something and when Grimes was telling Homer that they were enemies Homer says something like "ok, do I have to do anything?" At the end. My dad, who wasn't really watching burst out laughing at that. He's dead now (my dad) but that was something I remember about it, and it turned out to be one of my best memories of him. Strange how that happens.

  • @timmy69690
    @timmy69690 Před rokem +11

    34:11 ouf too soon

  • @matt_with_a_hat8530
    @matt_with_a_hat8530 Před rokem +3

    I love this series so so much, can't wait to see what the next one will end up being, hopefully it continues.

  • @ItsStem1019
    @ItsStem1019 Před 3 lety +270

    "Often times the greatest art dosent give us all the right answers, it makes us ask the right questions"
    Never before has one line perfectly described why i love media that makes me think a little harder about what i was looking at

    • @SomeCameo
      @SomeCameo Před 3 lety +6

      I love that line so much

  • @HugoStiglitz88
    @HugoStiglitz88 Před 3 lety +712

    "A place where everyone can unite and rate everything a 7 out of 10"
    Ok that part had me dying LMFAO

    • @coltonc7832
      @coltonc7832 Před 2 lety +13

      Both films are, admittedly, 7 out of 10s.

    • @toonbat
      @toonbat Před 2 lety +5

      "Worst episode ever. 7 out of 10."

  • @aaronmurphy7394
    @aaronmurphy7394 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This is probably the best video essay I’ve watched. The way it came back around full circle at the end. Some great lines to. I’m not entirely sure about the comparison between ‘old’ Homer and ‘new’ Homer, since Homer can be placed in a different light depending on the episode, but other than that critique, this was excellent. Very critical thinking.

  • @stevesmith7839
    @stevesmith7839 Před rokem +3

    No, America doesn't thrive on turmoil. America is slowly suffocating because of turmoil. It is a testament to the tenacity of the people of America that the country has survived so much corruption, waste, incompetence, and fraud (turmoil).

  • @therealtijuanaman
    @therealtijuanaman Před 3 lety +259

    "The name of this character is..."
    Sideshow Bob!
    "Homer Simpson!"
    Oh

  • @tubeviewerX20
    @tubeviewerX20 Před 2 lety +515

    While Frank Grimes is obviously a tragic irony & dark humor, it is also the show poking fun at itself. Grimes is rightfully shocked and appalled of the fact that Homer is an incompetent, happy-go-lucky *safety inspector of a nuclear power plant* which is also poking fun at ‘The Simpsons’ world in general that would allow this to happen.

    • @ddsjgvk
      @ddsjgvk Před 2 lety +10

      Look at who runs some counties.
      Canada had a mayor who did crack

    • @rumblebird9888
      @rumblebird9888 Před 2 lety +1

      I think he’s based of the main character form the movie “Falling Down”

    • @auraguard0212
      @auraguard0212 Před 2 lety +2

      Amusingly, Homer had to work for his safety inspector gig, only getting it so that he'd stop decrying Burns's lack of standards.

  • @robertcunningham1695
    @robertcunningham1695 Před rokem +4

    Nuclear power would be a big step up from the current structure tbh, the Simpsons have it better than we do

  • @hiropon2985
    @hiropon2985 Před rokem +6

    24:23 made me literally burst into tears

  • @uniquechannelnames
    @uniquechannelnames Před 3 lety +1216

    Comparison to others is the death of joy. Homer rarely compares himself to others.
    Edit: except Flanders and see how miserable he gets lol.

    • @nepenthes9424
      @nepenthes9424 Před 3 lety +58

      Well he occasionally does. And then gets sad. Proves your point though :)

    • @Aliandrin
      @Aliandrin Před 3 lety +16

      That's right, we should all be just like Homer.

    • @garymericano
      @garymericano Před 3 lety +13

      Stupid Flanderses!

    • @Extremezotako
      @Extremezotako Před 2 lety

      Lol

  • @EmployeeAMillion
    @EmployeeAMillion Před 2 lety +525

    “People have always wondered what would happen to Frank Grimes if he survived past this episode.”
    Nickelodeon made a whole show about it 2 years later.

    • @andyblanton6570
      @andyblanton6570 Před 2 lety +80

      Is it SpongeBob or am I an idiot?

    • @charliegriswold1445
      @charliegriswold1445 Před 2 lety +228

      @@andyblanton6570 yes, it’s about squidward

    • @lummatravel
      @lummatravel Před 2 lety +17

      How is old grimey anyway?

    • @Neogears1312
      @Neogears1312 Před 2 lety +10

      @@lummatravel he had a son that was a car mechanic and tow truck driver. So probably homer’s age.

    • @jytvreal
      @jytvreal Před 2 lety +8

      Nickelodeon didn't make it, Steve made it

  • @ninetyone9191
    @ninetyone9191 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I'm struggling with a situation like this right now. I'm interning at a company, looking for a full-time spot. One of the full-times I work with has been here almost a year and I have no clue how he hasn't been fired yet. He's late every day, can't do anything at all, even slept in the supervisor's chair with his boots on the desk. Everyone else despises him, and have told me there's no opening in this department because he's taking up the space. I'm trying really hard to do some type of cognitive-behavioral type stuff about it, how I don't want the guy to get hurt in any way, but he's so incompetent, absolutely full of himself, and standing directly in the way of my goals that it's impossible for me to say I don't want him to get what I think he deserves.