Banksy's Bleak Dickensian Indictment Of Corporatism On The Simpsons
Credit where credit is due, I'm amazed that Fox didn't actually censor this from airing. There are few bleaker indictments on corporatism with a rather pointed finger specifically at Fox than this. How did “The Simpsons” manage to track
Credit where credit is due, I'm amazed that Fox didn't actually censor this from airing. There are few bleaker indictments on corporatism with a rather pointed finger specifically at Fox than this.
How did “The Simpsons” manage to track down Banksy, the pseudonymous British artist, and get him to create the powerful opening-credit sequence from Sunday’s episode, which seems to reveal the torturous sweatshop responsible for the show’s creation? And how, after all that mockery, have the producers behind that Fox animated series been able to retain their jobs? Al Jean, an executive producer and the longtime show runner of “The Simpsons,” pulled back another layer of the curtain and explained the stunt to ArtsBeat on Monday afternoon.[..] Q. Were you concerned that what he sent you could get the show into hot water?
A. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t think about it for a little bit. Certainly, Fox has been very gracious about us biting the hand that feeds us, but I showed it to Matt Groening, and he said, no, we should go for it and try to do it pretty much as close as we can to his original intention. So we did. Like we always do, every show is submitted to broadcast standards, and they had a couple of [changes] which I agreed with, for taste. But 95 percent of it is just the way he wanted.[..]
Q. And even that closing shot of the 20th Century Fox logo surrounded in barbed wire?
A. Approved by them. Obviously, the animation to do this was pricey. I couldn’t have just snuck it by Fox. I’ll just say it’s a place where edgy comedy can really thrive, as long as it’s funny, which I think this was. None of it’s personal. This is what made “The Simpsons” what it is.
I'm curious what C&Lers thought about this sequence. The longer I live, the more damage I see all around me from rampant corporatism. I know in my house, this segment was pointed enough to have my kids ask me about it and it sparked an interesting conversation about merchandising and the conditions that our dollars support. I'd like to think that this will stay with them and raise their consciousness a little.