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COMIC-CON: 'The Simpsons' get 'Glee'-ful for upcoming season

Simpsons_09_V2F The cast of “Glee” has checked in everywhere from the White House to the set of "Oprah," and now the McKinley High crew is headed to the land of Springfield.

“The Simpsons” showrunner Al Jean let the the news slip during a panel for the animated favorite Saturday afternoon.

In a panel that also included creator Matt Groening, executive producer Matt Selman and supervising director Mike Anderson, Jean announced that in an episode in the show's upcoming record-breaking 22nd season this fall, the town of Springfield will be greeted by the animated likenesses of our favorite “Glee” club. There was no word on if they are going to sketch up a yellow-hued version of Sue Sylvester.

Other guest stars slated for the season are Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg, Cheech and Chong, Hugh Lourie and Wallace and Gromit.

Fans who packed the convention hall were treated to a sneak peek of the upcoming “Treehouse of Horror” episode, which showed board games coming to life and wreaking havoc on the town. The short teaser was met with thunderous applause.  There was a bit of confusion about another teaser, the Christmas episode, which Groening said shows the Simpson family in a way they haven’t been done before -- as puppets.

With the show recently celebrating its 20th anniversary and Homer scoring the title of the greatest character of the past 20 years, it’s no surprise many of the burning questions from fans were about the show’s staying power.

“As long as families keep having problems, we have stories,” Jean said. “The hardest thing at this point is thinking of plots we haven’t done. I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t hard.”

Groening said the crew owes much of the show’s longevity to the rich vault of supporting players.

“I don’t think there is a problem with ideas. We have so many characters -- what is there, like 50?” he asked his colleagues. “One of the great things about animation is it creates a dream world. That’s fun for me as an animator.”

Jean had a simpler answer.

“Really, there is no end in sight,” Jean said.

As for talks of a spin-off show (like “The Cleveland Show” the emerged from "Family Guy") or another feature film, the crew didn’t rule it out. They also took the opportunity to take a jab at their Sunday night competition.

“Come on, Seth MacFarlane does one show three times,” Selman joked before later adding, “Those shows are all really funny -- they deserve to exist … why can’t I be genuine?”

-- Gerrick D. Kennedy

twitter.com/gerrickkennedy

Photo credit: Fox

 
Comments () | Archives (4)

The Simpsons has become Saturday Night Live, not funny, never in danger of being cancelled despite lack of quality and frequent celebrity gueststars.

Who is Hugh Lourie?

@ Yarden

I have to disagree. Though the Simpsons were growing stale at one point, this past season has been very funny. I now have a renewed interest in watching the show. On the other hand, it's Family Guy which seems to be in decline. American Dad is now the funniest show on Sunday Night.

I never thought "Family Guy" got its humour anywhere else than in the LA sewer, where Seth MacFarlane and Co. are regular guests. It seems as if they probably go there whenever they're starting to work on a new season and only have to pay 8¢ for a season's worth.

I am a HUGE fan of "The Simpsons," though.

Season 4>3>8>7>5>2>1>6>9>13>15>10>20>21>18>16>19>17>12>14>11


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