One of my favorite scenes in the picture-book annals is the wild rumpus, from Where the Wild Things Are. Sendak needed to invent faces for the beasts, so he used the images of his various uncles and aunts, who had frightened him in his childhood. They would visit and say, "I'm going to eat you up."
This seems to inspire a crucial scene in "The Simpsons," during which Patty and Selma visit Bart. It's Bart's birthday ("Radio Bart").
Adult life is brutal; it can crush you. Then there is the task of gift-giving; you have to try to worm your way into the imaginative life of a little child and choose a perfect object to add to the child's world. Patty and Selma forget to make an effort. Bart's gifts are the following: a cactus, a suit, and a label maker.
(The oddest gift I ever received was a memoir, Christ Stopped at Eboli, about Italian fascism. I had never expressed interest in Italian fascism or in Christ. Receiving this book was a weirdly lonely experience.)
Bart is irritated on his birthday--but he has a brain, and he manipulates events to work in his favor. Homer has given him a microphone connected to an AM radio--which can be enlisted in various pranks. Bart becomes the voice of God, tormenting his super-religious neighbors. He also "becomes" Edna K's lower intestine--making fart noises in the middle of class.
We might object to Bart's cruelty, but we know where he's coming from. As his inventiveness grows, we're in the queasy position of both (a) understanding his choices and (b) hoping, hoping, hoping he will stop.
Then the writers "go into orbit." Bart's moral journey is fascinating and plausible. He has to learn by making mistakes.
I think this is an oddly moving TV segment--and certainly it earns its spot on the list of "greatest pop culture moments" in American history.
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