| "Moe Letter Blues" | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| The Simpsons episode | |||
| Episodeno. | Season 21 Episode 21 | ||
| Directed by | Matthew Nastuk | ||
| Written by | Stephanie Gillis | ||
| Production code | MABF13[1] | ||
| Original air date | May 9, 2010 (2010-05-09) | ||
| Guest appearance | |||
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| Episode features | |||
| Chalkboard gag | "Eating my vegetables is not a Mother's Day present" | ||
| Couch gag | The family is a model constructed and subsequently destroyed byNelson Muntz. | ||
| Episode chronology | |||
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| The Simpsonsseason 21 | |||
| List of episodes | |||
"Moe Letter Blues" is the twenty-first episode of thetwenty-first season of the American animated television seriesThe Simpsons. It originally aired on theFox network in the United States on May 9, 2010. In this episode,Homer,Reverend Lovejoy, andApu Nahasapeemapetilon receive a letter fromMoe stating that he will steal one of their wives. The three get together and try to remember intimate moments between Moe and their wives.
The episode was written byStephanie Gillis and directed byMatthew Nastuk and guest starsDon Pardo as himself. The main plot of the episode is a parody ofA Letter to Three Wives. It is the third episode after season 19's "Mona Leaves-a" and season 20's "Four Great Women and a Manicure" to air on Mother's Day and be centered on mothers and women.
"Moe Letter Blues" received positive reviews from critics and was viewed by 5.66 million households according to theNielsen Media Research.
Moe notices tension in the marriages ofHomer,Apu, andReverend Lovejoy.Mother's Day is approaching, andMarge, needing a break, suggests Homer take the children to Weasel Island afterKrusty promotes it. Homer is enthusiastic but becomes concerned when Marge mentions his leaving will allow her to take care of an errand. As the ferry to the island departs, the three men receive a letter from Moe saying he is running off with one of their wives.
At Weasel Island, Homer, Apu and Lovejoy agonize over their situation. Each insists their marriage is fine. Homer, however, remembers his mother-in-law's 80th birthday, where Moe was the bartender. Homer, who was angry at Marge for only serving non-alcoholic beer, got into an argument withPatty and Selma. Disgusted, Homer drove them out, and Marge told him that he ruins every event she plans. Apu notices cracks in his marriage, recollecting an incident where he andManjula forgot their son at Moe's after using the bar's bathroom. Manjula went to retrieve their son and did not return for hours. Homer recalls seeing Manjula playing a video game with Moe that night. Lovejoy remembers advice given to him that he ignored his wifeHelen's needs, and Apu recounts how he witnessed Moe confiding in Helen that he was in love with a married woman.
When the ferry returns to the mainland, they realize they are equally likely to have lost their wives to Moe. At home, Homer thinks Marge is packing a suitcase and tries to convince her to stay. He realizes that she has painted a portrait of her mother.Jacqueline assures Homer that he was not responsible for the birthday incident. She admits that it was Patty and Selma's fault. When Lovejoy arrives home, he too thinks Helen is leaving, but she surprises him with tickets toIstanbul on board theOrient Express. Apu arrives home to find Moe sitting with Manjula, but she tells Apu that he convinced her to salvage their marriage.
Moe reveals he saw how troubling the relationships were, so he organized Marge's portrait, the Lovejoys' trip, and the Nahasapeemapetilons' marriage rescue. He wrote the letter to teach the men a lesson about taking their wives for granted, saying that they need to value them more. Upon learning this, Homer thanks Moe. In the end, Moe implores viewers to value their wives and mothers this Mother's Day.
"Moe Letter Blues" served as a parody of thefeature film,A Letter to Three Wives.[2][3] Moe, while narrating the episode, makes a reference toSNL announcerDon Pardo (who then appears in the narration).[4] The title of the episode is a reference to the filmMo' Better Blues, the second one after "Moe Baby Blues," as well as the blues song "Death Letter Blues."
TheItchy and Scratchy cartoon in the episode is a reference to the black and white French filmA Trip to the Moon, and includes the song "Maple Leaf Rag" by ragtime composerScott Joplin.
Moe's voice-over claims he moved to Springfield because thezip code spelled "BOOBS" on a calculator, which would make it "80085," a zip code that, according to the US postal service, is not assigned to any existing town. The music played during the interactive dance video session wasLady Gaga's "Just Dance." The song played during the Wagon scene is "O Mere Sona Re," aBollywood song written byR.D. Burman and performed byAsha Bhosle, from the 1966Hindi film soundtrackTeesri Manzil. When Rev. Lovejoy's spiritual adviser sang a song, he mentioned 'Krakatoa, East of Java'.
Otto's state ofhallucination makes him see, during the drive from Weasel Island back to Springfield, characters from theDisneyPixaranimated filmCars. Apu and Manjula's minivan has an upside downVolkswagen logo. It also bears strong resemblance to theVolkswagen T25. Shortly after the beginning of the episode, Moe advertises his bar by stating that "everybody comes to Moe's," which mirrors the introduction of Rick's Café inCasablanca.
In its original American broadcast, "Moe Letter Blues" was viewed by an estimated 5.660 million households, received a 2.7 rating/9 share in the 18-49 demographic tying with last week, coming second in its time slot losing to theseason finale ofThe Amazing Race and becoming the third highest rated show on "Animation Domination."[5]
The episode received mainly positive reviews.
TV Fanatic gave the episode 3.5/5 and stated "The flashbacks definitely had some hilarious moments including a thousand devils d'ohing on Homer's shoulder. Moe was fantastic as a narrator and even better when he took advantage of his omniscient point of view."[6]
Robert Canning ofIGN gave the episode 8.4/10 and remarked "One issue I did have with the episode was Moe's, 'I'm leaving town forever and taking one of your wives' statement in his letter. You know there's no way Moe would ever be leaving the series or running off with any of these women, so the claim never held any drama. It might have worked better if Moe had simply said he was going to sleep with one of the women. This would have been a little more believable in the realm of the series and certainly would have been more in line with Moe's character. That aside, however, the storytelling and humor delivered yet another great episode."[4]
Sharon Knolle ofTV Squad said that "The Mother's Day-themedSimpsons episode can't compare to last week's — one of the best in years — but it was a pleasant enough outing," he also said Apu had some of the best lines in the episode.[3]
Emily VanDerWerff ofThe A.V. Club gave the episode a B, stating that "the core of the episode is solid, and Moe makes a very funny narrator."[2]
Hank Azaria was nominated forPrimetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance at the62nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards for voicingApu Nahasapeemapetilon andMoe Szyslak in the episode.[7]
Additionally,Stephanie Gillis was nominated for aWriters Guild of America Award for Outstanding Writing in Animation at the63rd Writers Guild of America Awards for her script to this episode.[8]