When a plant version of Comic Book Guy says "pad", Milhouse and Bart get scared and run away.
Comic Book Guy states this is a homage to the movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers while the movie itself was a ripoff of The Thing. In Springfield, everybody transforms into plant versions, including a plant Otto with a marijuana leaf for a head. Now on the plant planet, they shoot spores to Earth (going right next to the Planet Express ship with a cloth saying "BRING BACK FUTURAMA" and then getting blown up by The Orville). When everyone is on their phone, the unfunny Steve is revealed to be a plant alien on a mission. In a parody of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, which had previously been parodied in an issue of Bongo Comics, the segment starts off with an underwater base of Mapple where the late Steve Mobbs (on screen) tells the new Myphone and the new unfunny version of him to a hyper audience. "Intrusion of the Pod-y Switchers" title card. He Pokes it so hard it explodes, revealing the Title. Homer is poking Cthulhu (who is in a cooking pot) and notices an Ink Sac. As a reward, the family decides to eat Cthulhu. However, Homer states that he was promised an oyster eating contest against Cthulhu, and Homer wins. However, it was revealed to be a trap and that they will be devoured by Cthulhu.
The Simpsons arrive there because a book stated it's a place to visit before they die. Lovecraft's horror novella ''The shadow over Innsmouth''. The episode starts in Fogburyport, New England, the birthplace of Green Clam Chowder, a parody of the town of Innsmouth from H.P. There, they inject all of the senior citizens with dinosaur DNA. Burns opens a retirement home with some Jurassic upgrades. Lisa finally snaps, and Bart is her target. Springfield is overrun by plant body-snatchers, as previewed at Comic-Con 2018. Segments Intrusion of the Pod-y Switchers In that episode, one of the characters ends up in a Chinese labour camp and much of the show lampoons the willingness of American brands to adhere to Chinese censorship rules to make money.Homer wins an eating contest against the mythical Cthulhu, Springfield is overrun by plant body-snatchers, Lisa finally snaps, and Mr.
Netflix's Hong Kong channel is still showing "Band in China", an episode of the cartoon series "South Park". Her comments added to concerns that China's "Great Firewall" - a sprawling internet and news censorship regime - could be extended to Hong Kong.Ĭontent that satirises China is still available on other streaming platforms in Hong Kong.
Last week, Hong Kong's Beijing-appointed leader Carrie Lam vowed to "proactively plug loopholes" in the city's internet and introduce "fake news" regulations. Those rules do not currently cover streaming services but authorities have warned that online platforms fall under other rules, including the new national security law. But authorities are currently transforming the city in the wake of huge and often violent democracy protests two years ago.Īmong the slew of measures are new censorship laws introduced this summer that forbid any broadcasts that might breach a broad national security law that China imposed on the city last year.Ĭensors have since ordered directors to make cuts and refused permission for some films to be shown to the public. Until recently, semi-autonomous Hong Kong boasted significant artistic and political freedoms compared with mainland China. When AFP checked Disney+'s Hong Kong channel on Monday episodes 11 and 13 of season 16 were available but not 12. The entertainment giant has not responded to requests for comment, nor has Hong Kong's government. It is not clear whether Disney+ removed the episode, was ordered to by authorities or if it was offered in Hong Kong to begin with. The episode also contains pointed comments about Tibet - where Beijing has been accused of religious oppression - and the Cultural Revolution, a devastating period of upheaval in the last decade of Mao Zedong's rule. It then shows Marge's sister standing before a tank, referencing the famous photo from the Tiananmen crackdown of a lone man standing in front of a tank. The cartoon shows a sign there that reads "On this site, in 1989, nothing happened" - a satirical nod to China's campaign to purge memories of what happened. In one scene, the Simpsons are at Beijing's Tiananmen Square, the site of a deadly 1989 crackdown against democracy protesters. The Hong Kong version started streaming earlier this month and eagle-eyed customers soon noticed the conspicuous absence of "The Simpsons" episode 12 of season 16.įirst airing in 2005, the episode features the family's trip to China in which matriarch Marge Simpson's sister tries to adopt a baby.