I'm retired <a href=" https://www.searchjobsincanada.com/younglustcc-7a5d.pdf#wardrobe ">155chan org</a> Aside from having a reasonable claim to being, at its peak, the greatest sitcom of all time, The Simpsons sparked a revolution in animated comedy. Suddenly, self-respecting grown-ups took cartoons seriously. Matt Groening's creation paved the way for Family Guy, South Park, King of the Hill, Beavis & Butt-head, Groening's own Futurama and more. It would take an encyclopaedia to catalogue The Simpsons' brilliance (and indeed one exists online at www.snpp.com) but I think its single defining quality is elasticity. As Groening and others have observed, animated characters are more flexible than real-life actors. Homer Simpson is at one level an utterly convincing and rounded portrayal of the average middle-aged white American male. Yet he has also been into space, climbed Mount Springfield, played guitar with the Rolling Stones, met the Queen and had 1,001 other fantastic and surreal experiences without that ever denting his essential realism. Plus, chin-stroking comedy analysis aside, series 4-8 of The Simpsons came about as close to perfection as sitcom scripts have come (though Fawlty Towers and The Office seldom put a foot wrong). As my Latin teacher once said, "Everything after Homer is just a footnote."