Situational irony is a moment when certain details are the exact opposite of what we would expect. "The cobbler's child has no shoes." "The teacher fails her own test."
It's something "The Simpsons (Season Six)" handles extraordinarily well, in "Bart of Darkness," a classic summer episode. A stranger comes to town; the stranger is extreme heat. Shockingly, Homer has an idea: He builds a tent that leeches cool air from the refrigerator, and he has his family take shelter in the tent. ("I developed this idea when I realized that the refrigerator.....is cold....")
No one could anticipate what happens next. The Simpsons (crushed by the death of their fridge) decide to build a swimming pool--and it upends two lives. Lisa--perennial outcast--becomes the toast of the town. And Bart--felled by a twisted ankle--becomes a nerdy, reclusive playwright, staring crazily from his second-floor window.
These two subplots grow and grow in surprising ways; Lisa takes part in an Esther Williams musical, and Bart sinks into a loony Rear Window melodrama (a story that happens almost entirely in his own head).
I'd nominate this script for the "TV Writing Hall of Fame." It's great for an August afternoon.
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