• Re: "Simpsons" Episode Featuring Michael Jackson's Voice to Be Pulled

    From anim8rfsk@1:229/2 to atropos@mac.com on Friday, March 08, 2019 10:32:26
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: anim8rfsk@cox.net

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 08:59:52 -0700 BTR1701<atropos@mac.com> wrote:

    In article<0001HW.2232C09E057364D37000025D12CF@NEWS.EASYNEWS.COM>,
    anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr. Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    I wonder if people who have downloaded the episodes through services
    like iTunes will have the file deleted from their hard drives whether
    they want it or not.

    Probably not iTunes, but Amazon seems likely.

    --
    Join your old RAT friends at
    https://www.facebook.com/groups/1688985234647266/

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    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Ubiquitous@1:229/2 to All on Friday, March 08, 2019 05:48:28
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.music.michael-jackson, alt.simpsons
    XPost: alt.censorship
    From: weberm@polaris.net

    A classic episode of "The Simpsons" featuring Michael Jackson's
    voice will be removed from circulation, the show's longtime
    executive producer, James L. Brooks, said.

    "It feels clearly the only choice to make," Mr. Brooks said of the
    1991 episode in which Mr. Jackson voiced the character of a patient
    in a mental hospital who believes he is the pop star.

    Mr. Brooks said he, along with Matt Groening and Al Jean, the other
    two masterminds of the long-running Fox cartoon, came to the
    conclusion after watching the HBO documentary "Leaving Neverland."
    In the documentary, which premiered earlier this week, two men
    allege in graphic and compelling detail that Mr. Jackson molested
    them over several years when they were children.

    "The guys I work with-where we spend our lives arguing over jokes-
    were of one mind on this," Mr. Brooks said in an interview, speaking
    on behalf of the production team behind "The Simpsons."

    A spokesman for Twentieth Century Fox Television, which handles
    distribution of the show, referred to Mr. Brooks for comment.
    Twentieth Century Fox parent 21st Century Fox and Wall Street
    Journal parent News Corp share common ownership.

    Mr. Jackson, who died in 2009, steadfastly denied he had molested or
    harmed any children. The The Michael Jackson Estate last month
    attempted to block HBO from airing the documentary by suing the
    network in Los Angeles Superior Court charging among other things
    that it "falsely claims Michael Jackson was abusing children."

    Mr. Brooks said he found "Leaving Neverland" convincing and
    heartbreaking.

    "The documentary gave evidence of monstrous behavior, he said,
    adding that he went into it wanting to "believe the thing that we
    believe," which was that Mr. Jackson was falsely accused.

    In the episode, Homer Simpson meets a man in a mental institution
    who claims to be Michael Jackson. The character was voiced by Mr. Jackson.Photo: NO CREDIT

    In "The Simpsons" episode titled "Stark Raving Dad," Homer Simpson
    briefly ends up in a mental institution, where he meets a man who
    claims to be Michael Jackson. The character, Leon Kompowsky, was
    voiced by Mr. Jackson. Mr. Brooks said the episode had been one of
    his all-time favorites.

    "This was a treasured episode. There are a lot of great memories we
    have wrapped up in that one, and this certainly doesn't allow them
    to remain," Mr. Brooks said.

    Mr. Brooks said pulling the episode was important because of the
    need to show compassion for Mr. Jackson's alleged victims.

    Asked why Mr. Jackson's previous run-ins with the law over
    allegations of child abuse weren't enough to pull the episode
    earlier, Mr. Brooks cited his acquittal in 2005. But the
    documentary, in his mind, made the case beyond argument.

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box
    sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr.
    Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    --
    Trump: A president so great that Democrats who said they would leave
    America if he won decided to stay!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From anim8rfsk@1:229/2 to weberm@polaris.net on Friday, March 08, 2019 09:24:14
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: anim8rfsk@cox.net

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    A classic episode of "The Simpsons" featuring Michael Jackson's
    voice will be removed from circulation, the show's longtime
    executive producer, James L. Brooks, said.

    "It feels clearly the only choice to make," Mr. Brooks said of the
    1991 episode in which Mr. Jackson voiced the character of a patient
    in a mental hospital who believes he is the pop star.

    Mr. Brooks said he, along with Matt Groening and Al Jean, the other
    two masterminds of the long-running Fox cartoon, came to the
    conclusion after watching the HBO documentary "Leaving Neverland."
    In the documentary, which premiered earlier this week, two men
    allege in graphic and compelling detail that Mr. Jackson molested
    them over several years when they were children.

    "The guys I work with-where we spend our lives arguing over jokes-
    were of one mind on this," Mr. Brooks said in an interview, speaking
    on behalf of the production team behind "The Simpsons."

    A spokesman for Twentieth Century Fox Television, which handles
    distribution of the show, referred to Mr. Brooks for comment.
    Twentieth Century Fox parent 21st Century Fox and Wall Street
    Journal parent News Corp share common ownership.

    Mr. Jackson, who died in 2009, steadfastly denied he had molested or
    harmed any children. The The Michael Jackson Estate last month
    attempted to block HBO from airing the documentary by suing the
    network in Los Angeles Superior Court charging among other things
    that it "falsely claims Michael Jackson was abusing children."

    Mr. Brooks said he found "Leaving Neverland" convincing and
    heartbreaking.

    "The documentary gave evidence of monstrous behavior, he said,
    adding that he went into it wanting to "believe the thing that we
    believe," which was that Mr. Jackson was falsely accused.

    In the episode, Homer Simpson meets a man in a mental institution
    who claims to be Michael Jackson. The character was voiced by Mr. Jackson.Photo: NO CREDIT

    In "The Simpsons" episode titled "Stark Raving Dad," Homer Simpson
    briefly ends up in a mental institution, where he meets a man who
    claims to be Michael Jackson. The character, Leon Kompowsky, was
    voiced by Mr. Jackson. Mr. Brooks said the episode had been one of
    his all-time favorites.

    "This was a treasured episode. There are a lot of great memories we
    have wrapped up in that one, and this certainly doesn't allow them
    to remain," Mr. Brooks said.

    Mr. Brooks said pulling the episode was important because of the
    need to show compassion for Mr. Jackson's alleged victims.

    Asked why Mr. Jackson's previous run-ins with the law over
    allegations of child abuse weren't enough to pull the episode
    earlier, Mr. Brooks cited his acquittal in 2005. But the
    documentary, in his mind, made the case beyond argument.

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box
    sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr.
    Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    --
    Join your old RAT friends at
    https://www.facebook.com/groups/1688985234647266/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From BTR1701@1:229/2 to anim8rfsk@cox.net on Friday, March 08, 2019 08:59:52
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: atropos@mac.com

    In article <0001HW.2232C09E057364D37000025D12CF@NEWS.EASYNEWS.COM>,
    anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr. Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    I wonder if people who have downloaded the episodes through services
    like iTunes will have the file deleted from their hard drives whether
    they want it or not.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From moviePig@1:229/2 to All on Friday, March 08, 2019 13:12:39
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: pwallace@moviepig.com

    On 3/8/2019 10:59 AM, BTR1701 wrote:
    In article <0001HW.2232C09E057364D37000025D12CF@NEWS.EASYNEWS.COM>,
    anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the
    show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box
    sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr.
    Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    I wonder if people who have downloaded the episodes through services
    like iTunes will have the file deleted from their hard drives whether
    they want it or not.

    Not that it matters, of course. Merely making the gesture is the point.
    (No sarcasm.)

    --

    - - - - - - - -
    YOUR taste at work...
    http://www.moviepig.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Max@1:229/2 to Ubiquitous on Friday, March 08, 2019 16:24:52
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.music.michael-jackson, alt.simpsons
    XPost: alt.censorship
    From: max@not.home

    Ubiquitous <weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    A classic episode of "The Simpsons" featuring Michael Jackson's
    voice will be removed from circulation, the show's longtime
    executive producer, James L. Brooks, said.

    The Southpark episode is better anyway.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Rhino@1:229/2 to Neill Massello on Friday, March 08, 2019 15:47:55
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: no_offline_contact@example.com

    On 2019-03-08 1:25 PM, Neill Massello wrote:
    moviePig <pwallace@moviepig.com> wrote:

    Not that it matters, of course. Merely making the gesture is the point.
    (No sarcasm.)

    Yes. In the Soviet Union, perhaps the most mendacious regime in history,
    they merely airbrushed the unpersoned out of photos, without talking
    about it.

    Airbrushing was just one of the techniques they used. They also:
    - used black ink to completely obliterate the person from each physical
    copy of the picture
    - cut out the offending picture with scissors
    - expropriated every copy of the book that they could find from libraries
    - etc. etc.

    David King's book, The Commissar Vanishes, gives illustrations of many
    of their techniques from King's *immense* collection of these photos (a
    quarter million the last time I heard).

    In modern America, what counts is announcing your shameful
    acts.



    --
    Rhino

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Ant@1:229/2 to Ubiquitous on Friday, March 08, 2019 15:22:05
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.music.michael-jackson, alt.simpsons
    XPost: alt.censorship
    From: ant@zimage.comANT

    Lame. :(

    In alt.tv.simpsons Ubiquitous <weberm@polaris.net> wrote:
    A classic episode of "The Simpsons" featuring Michael Jackson's
    voice will be removed from circulation, the show's longtime
    executive producer, James L. Brooks, said.

    "It feels clearly the only choice to make," Mr. Brooks said of the
    1991 episode in which Mr. Jackson voiced the character of a patient
    in a mental hospital who believes he is the pop star.

    Mr. Brooks said he, along with Matt Groening and Al Jean, the other
    two masterminds of the long-running Fox cartoon, came to the
    conclusion after watching the HBO documentary "Leaving Neverland."
    In the documentary, which premiered earlier this week, two men
    allege in graphic and compelling detail that Mr. Jackson molested
    them over several years when they were children.

    "The guys I work with-where we spend our lives arguing over jokes-
    were of one mind on this," Mr. Brooks said in an interview, speaking
    on behalf of the production team behind "The Simpsons."

    A spokesman for Twentieth Century Fox Television, which handles
    distribution of the show, referred to Mr. Brooks for comment.
    Twentieth Century Fox parent 21st Century Fox and Wall Street
    Journal parent News Corp share common ownership.

    Mr. Jackson, who died in 2009, steadfastly denied he had molested or
    harmed any children. The The Michael Jackson Estate last month
    attempted to block HBO from airing the documentary by suing the
    network in Los Angeles Superior Court charging among other things
    that it "falsely claims Michael Jackson was abusing children."

    Mr. Brooks said he found "Leaving Neverland" convincing and
    heartbreaking.

    "The documentary gave evidence of monstrous behavior, he said,
    adding that he went into it wanting to "believe the thing that we
    believe," which was that Mr. Jackson was falsely accused.

    In the episode, Homer Simpson meets a man in a mental institution
    who claims to be Michael Jackson. The character was voiced by Mr. Jackson.Photo: NO CREDIT

    In "The Simpsons" episode titled "Stark Raving Dad," Homer Simpson
    briefly ends up in a mental institution, where he meets a man who
    claims to be Michael Jackson. The character, Leon Kompowsky, was
    voiced by Mr. Jackson. Mr. Brooks said the episode had been one of
    his all-time favorites.

    "This was a treasured episode. There are a lot of great memories we
    have wrapped up in that one, and this certainly doesn't allow them
    to remain," Mr. Brooks said.

    Mr. Brooks said pulling the episode was important because of the
    need to show compassion for Mr. Jackson's alleged victims.

    Asked why Mr. Jackson's previous run-ins with the law over
    allegations of child abuse weren't enough to pull the episode
    earlier, Mr. Brooks cited his acquittal in 2005. But the
    documentary, in his mind, made the case beyond argument.

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box
    sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr.
    Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.


    --
    Quote of the Week: "I could crush him like an ant. But it would be too
    easy. No, revenge is a dish best served cold. I'll bide my time until...
    Oh, what the hell, I'll just crush him like an ant." --Mr. Burns, The
    Simpsons ("Blood Feud" Episode 7F22)
    Note: A fixed width font (Courier, Monospace, etc.) is required to see this signature correctly.
    /\___/\ Ant(Dude) @ http://aqfl.net & http://antfarm.home.dhs.org /
    / /\ /\ \ http://antfarm.ma.cx. Please nuke ANT if replying by e-mail.
    | |o o| |
    \ _ /
    ( )

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Neill Massello@1:229/2 to moviePig on Friday, March 08, 2019 12:25:07
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: nmassello@yahoo.com

    moviePig <pwallace@moviepig.com> wrote:

    Not that it matters, of course. Merely making the gesture is the point.
    (No sarcasm.)

    Yes. In the Soviet Union, perhaps the most mendacious regime in history,
    they merely airbrushed the unpersoned out of photos, without talking
    about it. In modern America, what counts is announcing your shameful
    acts.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From FPP@1:229/2 to All on Friday, March 08, 2019 20:04:14
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: fredp151@gmail.com

    On 3/8/19 10:59 AM, BTR1701 wrote:
    In article <0001HW.2232C09E057364D37000025D12CF@NEWS.EASYNEWS.COM>,
    anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the
    show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box
    sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr.
    Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    I wonder if people who have downloaded the episodes through services
    like iTunes will have the file deleted from their hard drives whether
    they want it or not.

    Of course! Streaming... it's the future!
    (It's also why I continue to buy blu-rays.)

    --
    "An immigrant who achieves the American Dream didn’t steal anything from
    you or your family. They just wanted it more than you and worked harder
    than you. And they did it with all the odds stacked against them. If
    your life sucks lemons, a wall isn’t going to turn it to lemonade."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From FPP@1:229/2 to Rhino on Friday, March 08, 2019 20:06:57
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: fredp151@gmail.com

    On 3/8/19 2:47 PM, Rhino wrote:
    On 2019-03-08 1:25 PM, Neill Massello wrote:
    moviePig <pwallace@moviepig.com> wrote:

    Not that it matters, of course.  Merely making the gesture is the point. >>>    (No sarcasm.)

    Yes. In the Soviet Union, perhaps the most mendacious regime in history,
    they merely airbrushed the unpersoned out of photos, without talking
    about it.

    Airbrushing was just one of the techniques they used. They also:
    - used black ink to completely obliterate the person from each physical
    copy of the picture
    - cut out the offending picture with scissors
    - expropriated every copy of the book that they could find from libraries
    - etc. etc.

    David King's book, The Commissar Vanishes, gives illustrations of many
    of their techniques from King's *immense* collection of these photos (a quarter million the last time I heard).

    In modern America, what counts is announcing your shameful
    acts.

    The ancient Egyptians chiseled their persona non-grata right out of the
    stone.
    6,000 years, and still going strong!
    --
    "An immigrant who achieves the American Dream didn’t steal anything from
    you or your family. They just wanted it more than you and worked harder
    than you. And they did it with all the odds stacked against them. If
    your life sucks lemons, a wall isn’t going to turn it to lemonade."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Vidcapper@1:229/2 to FPP on Saturday, March 09, 2019 08:18:05
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: vidcapper1@yahoo.co.uk

    On 09/03/2019 00:04, FPP wrote:

    On 3/8/19 10:59 AM, BTR1701 wrote:
    In article <0001HW.2232C09E057364D37000025D12CF@NEWS.EASYNEWS.COM>,
    anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the
    show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box
    sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr.
    Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    I wonder if people who have downloaded the episodes through services
    like iTunes will have the file deleted from their hard drives whether
    they want it or not.

    Of course! Streaming... it's the future!
    (It's also why I continue to buy blu-rays.)

    I still buy DVD's, but same difference...



    --

    Paul Hyett, Cheltenham

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From FPP@1:229/2 to Vidcapper on Saturday, March 09, 2019 08:32:00
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.simpsons, alt.censorship
    From: fredp151@gmail.com

    On 3/9/19 2:18 AM, Vidcapper wrote:
    On 09/03/2019 00:04, FPP wrote:

    On 3/8/19 10:59 AM, BTR1701 wrote:
    In article <0001HW.2232C09E057364D37000025D12CF@NEWS.EASYNEWS.COM>,
      anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net>  wrote:

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the >>>>> show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box
    sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr. >>>>> Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    I wonder if people who have downloaded the episodes through services
    like iTunes will have the file deleted from their hard drives whether
    they want it or not.

    Of course!  Streaming... it's the future!
    (It's also why I continue to buy blu-rays.)

    I still buy DVD's, but same difference...


    I prefer blu-rays because they're more scratch resistant... or that's
    what I tell people.

    Really, I prefer the blu's mostly because that they come in a smaller
    case. They're thinner and shorter, allowing for a smaller footprint and
    more storage space.

    For me, it means I can store about 15% more discs in the same space
    --
    "An immigrant who achieves the American Dream didn’t steal anything from
    you or your family. They just wanted it more than you and worked harder
    than you. And they did it with all the odds stacked against them. If
    your life sucks lemons, a wall isn’t going to turn it to lemonade."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From tmc1982@gmail.com@1:229/2 to All on Monday, March 11, 2019 23:31:30
    On Friday, March 8, 2019 at 8:32:27 AM UTC-8, anim8rfsk wrote:
    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 08:59:52 -0700 BTR1701<atropos@mac.com> wrote:

    In article<0001HW.2232C09E057364D37000025D12CF@NEWS.EASYNEWS.COM>, anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:

    Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:48:28 -0700 Ubiquitous<weberm@polaris.net> wrote:

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr. Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    So then you're for book burning.

    I wonder if people who have downloaded the episodes through services
    like iTunes will have the file deleted from their hard drives whether
    they want it or not.

    Probably not iTunes, but Amazon seems likely.

    --
    Join your old RAT friends at https://www.facebook.com/groups/1688985234647266/

    https://www9.0123movies.com/movies-the-simpsons-season-3-1991-0123movies.html?p=1&s=4

    http://www.goojara.ch/eEwyAx

    https://putlocker.fyi/show/the-simpsons/season-3/episode-1/

    https://www6.fmovies.to/film/the-simpsons-03.vvzz2/m3o46v

    http://m4ufree.tv/watch-thesimpson-23898-tvshow-online-free-m4ufree.html

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    http://123free.net/movie/d7lLWkpv-the-simpsons-season-3/episode-1.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From tmc1982@gmail.com@1:229/2 to Ubiquitous on Monday, March 11, 2019 23:19:15
    On Friday, March 8, 2019 at 4:48:54 AM UTC-8, Ubiquitous wrote:
    A classic episode of "The Simpsons" featuring Michael Jackson's
    voice will be removed from circulation, the show's longtime
    executive producer, James L. Brooks, said.

    "It feels clearly the only choice to make," Mr. Brooks said of the
    1991 episode in which Mr. Jackson voiced the character of a patient
    in a mental hospital who believes he is the pop star.

    Mr. Brooks said he, along with Matt Groening and Al Jean, the other
    two masterminds of the long-running Fox cartoon, came to the
    conclusion after watching the HBO documentary "Leaving Neverland."
    In the documentary, which premiered earlier this week, two men
    allege in graphic and compelling detail that Mr. Jackson molested
    them over several years when they were children.

    "The guys I work with-where we spend our lives arguing over jokes-
    were of one mind on this," Mr. Brooks said in an interview, speaking
    on behalf of the production team behind "The Simpsons."

    A spokesman for Twentieth Century Fox Television, which handles
    distribution of the show, referred to Mr. Brooks for comment.
    Twentieth Century Fox parent 21st Century Fox and Wall Street
    Journal parent News Corp share common ownership.

    Mr. Jackson, who died in 2009, steadfastly denied he had molested or
    harmed any children. The The Michael Jackson Estate last month
    attempted to block HBO from airing the documentary by suing the
    network in Los Angeles Superior Court charging among other things
    that it "falsely claims Michael Jackson was abusing children."

    Mr. Brooks said he found "Leaving Neverland" convincing and
    heartbreaking.

    "The documentary gave evidence of monstrous behavior, he said,
    adding that he went into it wanting to "believe the thing that we
    believe," which was that Mr. Jackson was falsely accused.

    In the episode, Homer Simpson meets a man in a mental institution
    who claims to be Michael Jackson. The character was voiced by Mr. Jackson.Photo: NO CREDIT

    In "The Simpsons" episode titled "Stark Raving Dad," Homer Simpson
    briefly ends up in a mental institution, where he meets a man who
    claims to be Michael Jackson. The character, Leon Kompowsky, was
    voiced by Mr. Jackson. Mr. Brooks said the episode had been one of
    his all-time favorites.

    "This was a treasured episode. There are a lot of great memories we
    have wrapped up in that one, and this certainly doesn't allow them
    to remain," Mr. Brooks said.

    Mr. Brooks said pulling the episode was important because of the
    need to show compassion for Mr. Jackson's alleged victims.

    Asked why Mr. Jackson's previous run-ins with the law over
    allegations of child abuse weren't enough to pull the episode
    earlier, Mr. Brooks cited his acquittal in 2005. But the
    documentary, in his mind, made the case beyond argument.

    Getting the episode off all the platforms and outlets that carry the show-including streaming services, TV stations and Blu-ray/DVD box sets-won't happen overnight, Mr. Brooks said, "but the process has
    started."

    Mr. Brooks acknowledged the potential for criticism from fans of Mr. Jackson, as well as from people who love that particular episode.

    "I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and
    we're allowed to take out a chapter," he said.

    --
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    Why pulling The Simpsons' Michael Jackson episode was a mistake

    https://slate.com/culture/2019/03/simpsons-michael-jackson-stark-raving-dad-pulled.html

    "Consigning 'Stark Raving Dad' to the dustbin of history is a mistake, an offense against art and the medium of television, and part of a growing trend of corporations using their consolidated power and the death of physical media to do damage control by
    destroying works by troublesome artists," says Isaac Butler of The Simpsons' producers' decision last week to pull Jackson's episode in wake of the sexual abuse documentary HBO's Leaving Neverland. As Butler points out, Jackson didn't
    write the episode,
    he's not physically represented in it, and doesn't have his name on it. "It’s
    an odd situation: Jackson’s involvement in the episode is minimal, but he’s
    also essential to it working," says Butler. He adds: "Removing the episode from
    syndication,
    where viewers could accidentally stumble onto it, would be an understandable decision, but actively preventing people who want to see the episode from doing
    so is a different story. The paternalism here—the belief that viewers can’t, or shouldn’t
    be able to, navigate these waters on their own—is striking. Thinking about the episode’s complicity in manufacturing Jackson’s family-friendly image might make James L. Brooks, Al Jean, and Matt Groening uncomfortable, but they have created
    something of enduring importance, and, like all great cultural works, it no longer completely belongs to its creators. It belongs, on some level, to all of
    us."

    It's a shame that a great episode of The Simpsons was pulled because it features Michael Jackson's voice

    https://www.vulture.com/2019/03/the-simpsons-michael-jackson-episode.html

    The 1991 season premiere episode that producers pulled from circulation in response to Leaving Neverland is still worth watching, says Jen Chaney. "I understand the impulse, especially given the tenor of the episode and the Jackson-focused nature of it,"
    says Chaney. "But the loss of 'Stark Raving Dad' makes me sad, not just because
    it’s a great episode of The Simpsons, one that’s funny and genuinely touching, but also because it’s especially interesting to watch in light of Leaving Neverland."
    Chaney adds: "What’s most fascinating about the episode is that Michael Jackson isn’t really playing Michael Jackson. At the end of the episode, the 'big, fat, white mental patient,' as Bart calls him, admits that he’s actually a bricklayer named
    Leon Kompowsky and reverts to his gravelly, vaguely New York–ishly accented voice provided by Simpsons regular Hank Azaria...In other words, this imposing,
    unhappy man seemed kind of scary until he started convincing himself and others
    that he was
    Michael Jackson. Because who could be afraid of Michael Jackson? And wouldn’t
    the world be a better place if everyone could be like him? The way that 'Stark Raving Dad' so casually accepts that as truth is a reflection of how Jackson was regarded at
    that point. He was considered a gentle man and an odd one, for sure, but still a hero and an icon."

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  • From dumpster4@hotmail.com@1:229/2 to All on Wednesday, March 13, 2019 10:13:30
    ‘The Simpsons’ Boss Al Jean: Michael Jackson Used the Show to ‘Groom Boys’:

    "The very first episode of Season 3, “Stark Raving Dad,” featuring the voice of
    Michael Jackson made some news recently when it was revealed that you decided to
    remove the episode after watching the Jackson documentary Leaving Neverland. That must have been a difficult decision for you, seeing as you wrote it and it

    was your first episode at the reins.

    Yes. It wasn’t something that makes me happy. It’s something I agree with completely. What saddens me is, if you watch that documentary—which I did, and
    several of us here did—and you watch that episode, honestly, it looks like the
    episode was used by Michael Jackson for something other than what we’d intended
    it. It wasn’t just a comedy to him, it was something that was used as a tool.

    And I strongly believe that. That, to me, is my belief, and it’s why I think removing it is appropriate. I lose a little bit of money financially, it’s not
    something that’s great personally to lose one of the most successful things I

    ever did, but I totally think it’s the right move. I don’t believe in going

    through and making judgments on every guest star and saying “this one was bad,
    that one was bad,” but the episode itself has a false purpose, and that’s what I
    object to about it now.

    And the false purpose was what?

    I think it was part of what he used to groom boys. I really don’t know, and I

    should be very careful because this is not something I know personally, but as far as what I think, that’s what I think. And that makes me very, very sad.

    Did Michael Jackson write the song that he and Bart sing to Lisa to cheer her up, and that includes Michael’s character singing, “And your first kiss from a
    boy…”

    He did. But I’d really not talk about it anymore because I don’t want to belabor
    it. It’s from the heart, on our part, and I think Jim [Brooks] put it really well. It’s not for any other reason that for what I just said, where if you watch the documentary and then you watch that episode, something’s amiss."

    See:

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-simpsons-boss-al-jean-michael-jackson-used-the-show-to-groom-boys?ref=home

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