News

Giancarlo Stanton crushes a 432-foot home run to left field, scoring Cody Bellinger and giving the Yankees a 3-0 lead in the ...
The Simpsons showrunner chose an unexpected episode as a personal favorite of his, even though the outing comes from one of ...
Dive into the surprising depth of "Homer the Heretic," a Simpsons episode that tackles faith, worship, and community with nuance and humor.
Disney+ launched a 24/7 streaming channel of The Simpsons, which plays every episode of the show in order, allowing fans to ...
Homer Simpson might have some pretty problematic moments as a father, but "Lisa the Beauty Queen" showed the love he's always ...
How did the Iliad, attributed to Homer and composed in the seventh century BC, quickly become famous among the Greeks?
It’s often said that “Every generation needs a new translation.” Less often asked, however, is whether this claim is actually ...
Homer Simpson says “D’oh” a lot. Probably eleventy-billion times, considering that "The Simpsons" has run for 25 years this December. You know what else he says a lot? Yeah, you do.
Margites, an early ancient Greek comedy, features an archetypal fool whose hilarious ineptitude influenced Greek comedy significantly.
When Homer goes to shake hands with Thayer, the man comments on his firm grip. “See, Marge, strangling the boy paid off,” Homer jokes, before quickly clarifying that he no longer does that.
Homer softens this message in a black-on-black nocturne that follows, “Cape Trinity, Saguenay River, Moonlight” (1904) which has not been seen in New York since the 1996 retrospective.