"One Fish, Two Fish, Blowfish, Blue Fish" is about randomness. You make a plan, then life intervenes.
Homer--convinced that he is living out his last day on Earth--gets into an argument with some cops. "I pay your salary," he says impatiently. "I'm not afraid of you. Just write a ticket and move on." The cops respond by throwing Homer in jail.
Barney--who lives directly behind the jail--finds fifty dollars "in rusty coins"; this can be bail money. But Homer fails to make good use of his freedom; he finds a cassette tape of Larry King reading from the Bible, then falls asleep during an especially boring passage about genealogy.
Oddly, this makes me think of "Bagman" from "Better Call Saul." Like "Blowfish," "Bagman" asks how closely anyone, in any situation, can "stick to a plan." Like "Blowfish," "Bagman" profits from high stakes. Both Saul and Homer also have great loves (though Kim Wexler is perhaps more complicated than Marge Simpson).
My own favorite moment is centered on Homer's marriage; Homer can't recall the euphemism that Marge uses for sex. "Be intimate," she says. And this is what Homer writes on his to-do list, though "intimate" becomes "intamit."
Great episode.
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