
"There's No Disgrace Like Home" (7G04) is a Simpsons episode
of multiple paradoxes - not least, that it provides such an honest and
illuminating glimpse into the central family's dynamics while presenting
a version of the family that might have come from a parallel universe,
in which a number of the key roles associated with each member have been rearranged. Writer Mike Reiss sums it up neatly on the
DVD commentary: "Virtually
everything in this episode is wrong in the perspective of the show as
it became. Lisa's a brat and Marge is a drunk and Homer's the most
concerned family member." Watching the episode, only the fourth in the
series' gargantuan run, it is certainly evident how loosely defined most
of the characters still were following on from their origins in a
collection of skits from The Tracey Ullman Show. The Ullman
shorts had overwhelmingly tended to favour Bart's brash young
perspective, with Lisa seldom receiving much development beyond her
status as a middle child for Bart to bounce off of, while Marge's name
was never spoken. Homer's personality was a bit better
formed, but he was, in the beginning, defined largely by how Bart saw
him, which was as a buffoonish would-be authority figure who endeavored
to maintain order within the family but rarely succeeded. Coming out of The Tracey Ullman Show,
the premise of Homer being willing to part ways with the household
television in order to fund a family therapy session with a
dubious-looking shrink really wasn't all that strange, although that's
immaterial to a chunk of the fanbase. Like all of Season 1, "There's No
Disgrace Like Home" is undervalued by modern viewers, but it attracts a particular flak, from fans who regard its more rudimentary
interpretation of the characters as insurmountable. Even those who
appreciate that character development isn't always a smooth process tend
to dismiss it as a weird and redundant relic of another era, a view
that I personally consider short-sighted. Having laid out its
peculiarities at the start of the commentary, Reiss closes by concording
with co-writer Al Jean and series creator Matt Groening that the
episode itself still holds up well, and I agree. Even if "Disgrace"
doesn't nail down everything about the Simpsons as we'd come to know
them, it's earned its flowers as one of those quintessential episodes that took massive leaps in solidifying the series' heart and soul.
The
paradoxical nature of "Disgrace" is further exemplified through its
particular significance to the series' UK broadcast
history, it being the first episode to air on BBC One, on 23rd November
1996. This ended a six-year period in which
The Simpsons had been
retained as an
exclusive perk for Sky subscribers, and for mainstream UK audiences
would have been their first real opportunity to get acquainted with the
likes of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie. It's fair to say that
the Beeb's ordering of the series was, to begin with, aggressively
scattershot. The enlarged gap between the show's satellite and
terrestrial premieres meant that there was already an extensive backlog
to get through, and rather than adhere to the original US order, or any
kind of logical order at all, they were quite happy to jump about
between the early seasons - the next few episodes to air across the
remainder of 1996 were
"Bart The Daredevil" (Season 2), "The Call of The Simpsons" (Season 1),
"Lisa's Substitute" (Season 2),
"Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire"
(Season 1) and "A Streetcar Named Marge" (Season 4). It isn't
hard to comprehend why they'd wanted to defer the Christmas
episode, which launched the show in the US, until later in December,
but can we make sense of any of the other choices here? Were they just
pulling episodes at random out of a hat, or was somebody making a
conscious decision about which of these installments went out when?
Looking at that line-up, I do wonder if there was perhaps a deliberate
effort to get the series off to the strongest possible start by
prioritising episodes that might be considered "fan favourites", hence
the likes of "Bart The Daredevil" and "Lisa's Substitute" being bumped
to the front of the queue. The former has that indelible ending sequence
where Homer takes a tumble down a gorge, while the latter has a
reputation as one of the show's most emotionally searing entries. "The
Call of The Simpsons", meanwhile, sticks out as arguably the most purely
farcical of the early episodes, while "A Streetcar Named Marge" boasted
one of the series' biggest and most ambitious finales to date, in which the characters enact a musical rendition of
A Streetcar Named Desire.
It does feel like a carefully-curated portfolio of everything the show
could do, ensuring that BBC viewers got a compact snapshot of how
effectively it functioned as both an anarchic comedy and as a
heart-rending drama. If true, then the implication would be that
"Disgrace" was hand-picked as the ideal introduction to the series, the
episode that best encapsulated who the Simpsons were and what their
adventures had to offer - a bitterly ironic move, given how everyone who views this episode nowadays invariably complains about how
unrepresentative it is of the characters we've since come to know and love? Or were the BBC in fact onto a good wicket?
The
more I think about it, the more convinced I am that "There's No
Disgrace Like Home" really was the perfect episode with which to
kick-start the series. "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" did the job
just fine, but an obvious limitation that episode had as an introduction
is that it is predominantly a Bart and Homer show, with the Simpson
women having to sit around the living room for the bulk of the duration. By contrast, the producers' original choice for the premiere,
"Some Enchanted Evening",
feels like it was consciously designed to be an ensemble episode, with
every member of the family (Maggie included) getting to do something to
further the narrative, but as a hypothetical pilot always had two key
factors working against it. It
gets a bit uncharacteristically dark and threatening in its second half,
once Ms Botz enters the scene, and as for the first half, I'd
question of the wisdom of launching the series with such a close and
uncomfortable look at the problems underpinning Homer and Marge's union. It was also fundamentally a tale of
the family divided, with the kids being left to fend for themselves
against a dangerous home invader while Homer and Marge are off
resolving a conflict of a different nature - whereas "Disgrace" has the
honor of being the first Simpsons episode interested
foremost in exploring what makes the family work as a unit. That is
its major strength, and why ultimately it doesn't matter if the family,
as individuals, aren't entirely in line with their subsequent
characterisations. "Disgrace" is more concerned with what makes them collectively the
Simpsons, the unified front weathering the judgements of the external
world and undercutting its various hypocrisies. It exemplifies the
anarchic spirit that differentiated the show from its contemporaries,
for what could be more subversive than a climax where the family are
seen administering electric shocks to one another with wild abandon? But
it's also a redemption narrative, ending on a note of genuine if wryly
unconventional triumph, emphasising why this endlessly imperfect clan
should speak so sincerely to our innermost psyches.
"Disgrace" also
stands out as the installment most conspicuously informed by one of the
original Tracey Ullman shorts, in that it is a loose sort of remake of
the "Family Therapy"
short where Homer tricks his family into attending a session with a
psychologist named B.F. Sherwood, seeking to remedy the fact that they
don't laugh any more. In both adventures, the solution to the family's
problem is to come together against a common adversary, exposing the
weaknesses of the hapless authority tasked with guiding them to a better
standard of behaviour and confirming that, actually, the rest of the
world is every bit as screwed up and chaotic as them. "Family Therapy"
emphasised this point by making Sherwood yet another doppelganger of
Homer's (being a slimmer, more successful Homer makes him the
precursor to Herb Powell, who, as we've discussed, was the precursor to Frank Grimes, in a perfect chain of increasingly bitter self-loathing). Wearing a suit and tie and occupying his own office didn't preclude the fact that there was a raging simian in him looking for an outlet, and he was able to call Homer out so bluntly on his bullying of his children because deep down inside he was no better than him. "Disgrace" refines the premise in a way that makes the Simpsons themselves less antagonistic - other than being whacked by Bart with a de-foamed rod, Dr Marvin Monroe isn't placed so directly on the receiving end of their vindictive anguish. Rather than be provoked into behaving in the same unruly manner as his patients, he's exposed as a huckster peddling a facile vision of bliss, and the family one-up him by discovering that there is plenty of joy and unity to be had in embracing their imperfect selves.
Truth
be told, I think a lot of the charges about the family being out of
character in this episode are superficial at best. The only one that
stands out as particularly egregious is the plot point of Homer wanting to
sell the television set for therapy money, a development the story at least manages to justify thematically. But is there anything else in here worth getting overly hung up upon? Sure, we get two or three
instances of Lisa bickering childishly with Bart,
something that would all but die out as her personality matured and their
sibling relationship mellowed, but she isn't completely unrecognisable either. "Disgrace" sees her taking
distinct steps toward becoming her own character, touching briefly on
her college ambitions and her melancholic realisation that the odds were
always stacked against her ("There
go my young girl dreams of Vassar"[1]). As for Marge getting drunk, let's
be fair - that much is explicitly framed as being an out of
character occurrence within context. Marge states that she generally isn't much of a drinker, and judging by the outcome here it's not hard to
see why. She really can't take her fruit punch (much like how she can't keep her gambling impulses in check once she's crossed that most treacherous of lines). But even then, it's not like she
does anything especially untoward while intoxicated, just lead the other
women in a sing-song and clap too enthusiastically during a round of
applause. It isn't on a par with, say, Homer's drunken behaviour at the party in "The
War of The Simpsons", which overshadowed the whole occasion and
made
it an uncomfortable experience for everybody present. Here, the other
families look a little perturbed during Marge's protracted clapping, but
I guarantee they immediately forgot about it.

Where
you most feel the roughness of the show in "Disgrace" is less in the
characterisation of the main family than in the wider world-building,
which within the more limited scope of the Ullman shorts was even
vaguer and more undefined. "Homer's Odyssey"
before it had done much in establishing the kind of place that
Springfield was as a community, giving us a glimpse into its
pollutant-belching power plant, its incompetent police department and
its neighbourhoods of unconcerned bystanders, but we still had a way to
go in cementing who was who within the town. Mr Burns is present (albeit still more of a Ronald Reagan caricature than he would later
become), as is Smithers, but Lenny, Carl and Charlie weren't introduced
until much later in the season, so for now we have to make do with a
bunch of random nobodies at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant's
company family picnic. The Flanders likewise didn't exist at this point -
viewers had previously met Ned and Todd in "Simpsons Roasting on an
Open Fire", but only because that episode was shown out of its intended
order - necessitating the creation of a one-off "perfect" family who
could put the Simpsons in the shade with their impeccable harmony (this
family are never explicitly named, but according to the commentary
they're the Gammills, after Reiss and Jean's friend Tom Gammill who later became a writer on the show). Even
some of the familiar faces don't seem entirely on model, in
particular Barney, who is here a surprisingly mean character (he's not
usually one to look down his nose at Homer for his domestic failings,
much less get physically violent with him). On the flip side, this
episode marks the introduction of Lou and Eddie, Chief Wiggum's underlings, and while Lou is wrongly depicted as
Caucasian, their personalities are nailed straight off the bat. Both are
more preoccupied with downing beers than with their duties as police
officers,
and their German shepherd Bobo (who sadly didn't stick around) clearly
has more brains than either of them.
From my perspective, the
moment in "Disgrace" that aged the least elegantly would be our first
ever reference to Mona Simpson, Homer's absent and (at the time)
presumed deceased mother. Homer makes a comment that's meant to give us
some insight into the kind of upbringing he had, and from the sounds of
it, they were possibly envisioning her as more of a female Abe -
apparently, she once told Homer that he was "a big disappointment". We
don't know how old Reiss and Jean envisioned the disparaged young Homer
as having been when they wrote that particular piece of dialogue, but
"Mother Simpson" of Season 7 would later establish that Mona was out of
Homer's life when he was still a small child, so...that's a harsh thing
to have to contemplate retroactively. With hindsight, it would
have been more in keeping with Abe's parenting approach for that
assessment to have come from him, but it's also clear that Homer
attaches a certain reverence to his mother's words that he wouldn't
necessarily do with Abe.
Regardless of who planted the initial
seed, Homer's deep-rooted feelings of inadequacy are the driving force
behind the drama of "Disgrace", as they were in "Simpsons Roasting
on an Open Fire" and "Homer's Odyssey". In those episodes, it was his
failure to be a first-rate breadwinner for his family that fuelled his
desperation, whereas in "Disgrace" it's the family themselves who've
become the impediment, holding him back from achieving his full
potential as a breadwinner and upstanding member of society. He feels
the weight of that judgement at the company picnic, where Burns
alternately chooses to fire or promote his employees based how good
impression their children make (again, a preoccupation that seems out of
sync with his later characterisation, in which he's completely detached
from the lives of the common people, but it works within the context of
this particular conflict). After an afternoon of chasing two
over-stimulated kids around Burns' estate and trying to keep his
intoxicated wife from attracting too much attention, Homer is struck by
the respect and devotion paid to Mr Gammill by his ultra-polite son. As
they head toward their cars, Homer confides in Mr Gammill what a relief
it is to be leaving the picnic so that they can get back to being
themselves, and is met with only contempt and confusion in return;
Gammill is offended by the insinuation that his family's spotless
behaviour was nothing more than a performance to get into Burns' good
graces. We know that Homer wasn't being malicious in proposing as such, but was rather reaching out for the reassurance that he isn't
doing things so spectacularly wrong and that all families, no matter how
well-scrubbed on the surface, are cursed with the same challenges as
his own. Gammill offers him no such solidarity, and instead seems to
confirm his worst fears - that the kind of brood he's raising is a
reflection of his own merits as a patriarch, and that if his family
aren't up to snuff in the eyes of society, he'll be condemned along with
them. This anxiety is sublimely illustrated in a fantasy sequence where
the Simpsons are transformed into cackling demons, beckoning Homer into
their Hell-bound vehicle on the insistence that he is assuredly one of
them, while the Gammills, ever the precursors to the Flanders (and so unbearably wholesome that they sing "B-I-N-G-O" as they drive away, a stark contrast to the Simpsons' Freaks-inspired chanting), acquire
angelic wings and halos and ascend into a heavenly light. Homer is inspired to try and teach his family better manners, but ironically causes them to degenerate further. His solution is to take them out spying on other families in the neighbourhood, hoping to give them a first-hand glimpse into the natural bliss most other households are able to attain within their natural habitats, prompting the community to raise alerts about a gaggle of peeping toms in the vicinity. Their ill-fated tour of the neighbourhood ends with an inevitable return to where they started - they approach their own house, where Homer gets to express further self-loathing by joking about having trampled the residing sucker's flower bed before realising where he is. The reality that all roads lead back to the disorder exemplified by the Simpsons is entirely inescapable.
Because here's the thing. Homer was right about the Gammills. Their presentation as the happiest, most perfect of families is
a facade. This is confirmed in a subtle but extremely telling visual gag, when we later see them in the waiting room of Monroe's clinic, all wearing distinctly sour expressions on their faces and all refusing to look one
another in the eye. We can only speculate as to what's really going on
behind closed doors with this clan (perhaps, much like the Lovejoys, the pressure of having to maintain their public facade is precisely what's causing them to crack). As it turns out, Homer has spent the narrative in pursuit of a mythical vision of the family that never existed, bearing out Lisa's assertion that "The sad truth is all families are like us." The final arrangement with the Gammills is not something the script explicitly highlights, leaving the viewer to take note and to draw their
own conclusions, but it encapsulates the core message of "Disgrace", in having us contemplate why our sympathies should be so firmly with those ragtag Simpsons, and why it brings us such smug
satisfaction to see the Gammills brought down to Earth. It is, naturally, so easy to see ourselves in the Simpsons' fallibility - the chant of "One of us! One of us!" that dominates Homer's hellacious fantasy is directed not just at Homer, but the audience as well, and by the end we can see that it's no bad thing. Monroe cannot fix the Simpsons, even after subjecting them to the most unorthodox, B. F. Skinner-inspired aversion therapy techniques designed to teach them gentler behaviour
through operant conditioning ("I'll have plenty of time to explain while I warm up the electric generator"). Finding them uniformly prepared to shock one another without inhibition, and with no sign of slowing down, he's eventually forced to (literally) pull the plug and ask them to leave. Unbeknownst to Monroe, his efforts have failed not because the Simpsons are the
worst of the worst and beyond all help, but because they never needed
fixing the first place - even if this was something Homer jeopardised by depriving them of their beloved TV.
The moral of "Disgrace" is that the Simpsons were always basically fine. They might not be perfect, but as the the outcome at Monroe's clinic demonstrates, accepting imperfection is often a healthier and more fulfilling option than endeavoring to keep it buried. It's the family's ability to accommodate imperfection that makes them feel so real, and the episode's grasp on that fundamental point that causes it to hold up as such a quintessential Simpsons installment, with the quibbles about the family's individual characterisations all being small potatoes by comparison. The laws of nature say that we should expect families to have their share of messiness mixed in with the tireless devotion (just look at those bald eaglets the Simpsons watch on their television, who are entirely dependent on their mother regurgitating the food their father has worked so hard to bring to them) and, whatever their failings, there is an innate warmth and honesty in how the Simpsons are depicted. While they might not express it as performatively as the Gammills, there is also clearly a love and understanding where it most counts. They certainly come off better than the odious mother at the punch bowl who openly brags about how she plays her two children
off one another for her affections: "I don't know who to love more - my
son Joshua, who's captain of the football team, or my daughter Amber,
who got the lead in the school play. Usually I'd use their grades as a
tiebreaker, but they both got straight As this term, so what's a mother
to do?" Well, for starters you're supposed to love your children equally and
unconditionally, and that's something that Homer and Marge absolutely do
(the subsequent running gag where Homer will intermittently fail to
acknowledge Maggie's existence notwithstanding). We never meet Joshua or
Amber, but you can tell that those poor kids are being set up for a wad of therapy as they enter adulthood. Even the Simpsons doppelgangers seen emerging from a session with Monroe,
supposedly cured of their domestic strife, don't seem entirely genuine,
talking in a way that seems more informed by Monroe's jargon than any actual connection with each other.

Running parallel to the episode's observations on the expectations and realities of family living is a witty critique of modern culture's dependence on and worship of the television. We see signs of this at the company picnic, when Marge is persuaded to leave Maggie in the designated nursery with the other babies, and with a screen playing episodes of The Happy Little Elves in lieu of human supervision. Later on, Homer finds himself competing with the television for command of his family, twice interrupting their viewing for his fruitless attempts at modifying their behaviour, and eventually resolving to pawn the television so that they can attend Monroe's therapy, much against their impassioned protests. On one level, this makes sense, for Homer recognises that the television has effectively supplanted him as the household patriarch. It maintains the equilibrium in a way that he couldn't hope to, and not only would his children sooner listen to it than to him, Marge even proposes that they pawn her engagement ring in its place, symbolically suggesting that the television takes precedent over their relationship. Furthermore, there's the implication that the television has gone so far as to assume the place in day to day life that might once traditionally have been occupied by a deity, with the ritual of sitting devotedly before the television with a dinner tray in hand having replaced the bygone practice of eating at the table after saying grace. The slight paradox in Homer's crusade is that he is shown to partake in this same idolatry, being as dependent upon the television's teachings as everybody else around him. In one scene, he implores the omnivorous man upstairs for an answer to his personal crisis and is met with only silence. He sees a promotion for Monroe's clinic on the television at Moe's bar and enthusiastically declares that the answers to life's problems are invariably to be found on TV. When presenting his family with his decided course of action, he claims to have researched the matter thoroughly, and that he has confidence in Monroe because of all the therapist commercials he's perused, his was the best. By sacrificing the television, Homer believes that he is reasserting control over his wayward family, but he's also throwing away a vital lifeline, a move bound to end in trouble. Marge accuses him of driving a stake through the hearts of those who love him, and during Monroe's session the rest of the family are unanimous in identifying Homer as the disturber of their previously-balanced peace.
Homer's paradoxical reverence and disregard for the television is compounded by the implication that the answers it's providing might not necessarily be the most trustworthy. We can tell that Monroe is not, in all odds, the solution to the family's problems, and not just because of the company he keeps (Lisa is mortified that Homer would put any stock in a therapist who advertises on pro-wrestling, prompting Homer to counter with the correction that he actually advertises on boxing, which is a more upmarket sport) but because of the glibness of what he's selling. In his ad, there is an unconvincing tonal dissonance between the grim and only partially exaggerated depiction of the struggles of a family where the father is visibly suffering from clinical depression and Monroe's upbeat promises of easy bliss and hugs. But even as Monroe expectedly transpires to have been full of hot air, the television itself does indeed provide. Homer is able to step up and become the dependable patriarch his family requires by holding Monroe accountable to his ad's guarantee of family bliss or double their money back, thus leaving the doctor hoisted by his own glibness. As they exit the clinic, the family are delighted that their supposed dysfunctionality, the sword that has up until now been wielded against them, has paid off so handsomely. As Lisa puts it, "It's not so much the money as the feeling we earned it". Marge suggests that they head straight to the pawn shop to retrieve their television, but Homer has an even better idea - they can use the money to upgrade to a bigger and better television, one with a 21-inch screen, realistic flesh tones (ha ha, I see what you did there) and a little cart so that they can wheel it in to the dining room on holidays. He has evidently abandoned his stance that the family's dining and television-watching should be kept separate, with the television now being extended a formal position at the table (if only on holidays). Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie are in total accord with the proposal. Homer has earned his family's respect, not by competing with the television, but by aligning with it, becoming the provider who improves his family's lived experiences by taking their TV-viewing to the next level. The final image of "Disgrace" shows the family walking off into the night in unison, their arms all stretched out around each other in a picture of perfect harmony. All it takes is a healthy consideration for every member's place within the household, the chattering cyclops included.
Finally, being such a germinal episode, from the point when The Simpsons was still transitioning from the original Ullman shorts and redefining itself as a stand-alone series, "There's No Disgrace Like Home" has ample of examples of those weird, wonderful and ever-rotating background pictures that used to adorn the walls of each interior shot. Until they settled on that rather nondescript boat painting you used to see so many oddities hanging over the Simpsons' couch. On this occasion it's a tropical island scene, similar to the one they later had up in "Moaning Lisa", although not exactly the same. These paintings are specifically singled out on the DVD commentary as one of those "tragic flaws" the producers were eager to be done with, but I personally like how much life and colour they lent the backgrounds in the early days. I miss the times when you could spot something as quirkily disconcerting as that painting in Monroe's waiting room of the lady sitting with the banjo and the cat, and it was all just part of the broader milieu.

[1] I've seen fans cite another later contradiction, in "The PTA Disbands" of Season 6, when Lisa had graduated to being a Vassar basher, but to that I say that she's allowed to change her mind.