TV

Thirty Years Later, the First "Simpsons” Episode Remains a Christmas Classic

The seeds of the cartoon’s genius were there from the start

The Simpsons

Thirty years ago, "The Simpsons" debuted with a Christmas episode

By Kirk Miller

“If TV has taught me anything, it’s that miracles always happen to poor kids at Christmas. It happened to Tiny Tim, it happened to Charlie Brown, it happened to the Smurfs and it’s gonna happen to us!” — Bart Simpson

“Who’s Tiny Tim?” — Homer Simpson

Thirty years ago today (Dec. 17, 1989), The Simpsons debuted its first full-length episode on Fox. 

Rewatching it three decades later, I’m happy to say that not only does the episode successfully establish a series that’s now celebrating its 672nd episode, it’s also a worthy holiday television classic on par with Charlie Brown, the stop-motion Rudolph and … well, I’m gonna go with “A Very Sunny Christmas.”


Related:


The basics of the Simpsons family had been established during a series of shorts on the sketch series The Tracey Ullman Show, but series episode 1, “Simpsons Roasting On An Open Fire,” established Mr. Burns, Smithers, Principal Skinner, Milhouse, Moe, Ned and Todd Flanders, Barney and Marge’s sisters Patty and Selma, among many others. All the more impressive since the show was supposed to debut with what would later become episode 13, “Some Enchanted Evening,” but animation delays forced a programming switch.

As the official description for “Roasting” notes, Homer’s Christmas bonus is canceled and the rainy-day funds are needed for Bart’s tattoo removal. The episode was the only one written by Mimi Pond, and it was nominated for two Emmys. 

Stray observations:

Best lines:

The episode ends on a surprisingly sentimental note, and as Lisa’s speech points out, the family displays a real love toward Homer that’s sometimes lost in later episodes (never by Marge, but sometimes by the kids). 

And, as Homer — spoiler alert — agrees to take home Santa’s Little Helper, the pup that came in last place during the Christmas Eve dog races (which is dark), we are left with a rather heartwarming line that defines the series. 

“He’s a loser, he’s pathetic … he’s a Simpson.”

You can watch the full episode of “Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire” on Disney Plus.

Exit mobile version