The body swap, when it comes, is voluntary—a conspiratorial lark. Bart wants the mansion; Simon wants the freedom of the Simpsons’ chaotic, loving poverty. And this is where the episode’s dark heart beats. Simon, now living in the Simpson house, is thrilled by the lack of supervision, the expired food, the couch with a visible spring. He treats poverty as a theme park. Meanwhile, Bart, dressed in a cashmere sweater, discovers that wealth is not liberation but a gilded cage: his “parents” barely notice him, the other rich children are sociopaths-in-training, and the family’s ancient rival is plotting to blow up a ski lodge.
The Simpsons may have been a cartoon, but Season 20, Episode 3 understood a very adult truth: luck is the only real superpower. And most of us are born without it. Os Simpsons- 20-3 20-- Temporada - Episodio 3 As...
The episode opens with a classic Simpsons reversal of fortune. After accidentally helping a fugitive (who turns out to be a wealthy philanthropist), Bart is invited to a lavish party at the Woosterfield estate. There, he meets Simon—a boy who looks exactly like him, down to the spiky hair and devilish smirk, but who lives in a world of butlers, private jets, and ancestral portraits. The visual doubling is clever: both are ten-year-old hell-raisers. But where Bart’s rebellion is born of neglect and the suffocating smallness of Springfield, Simon’s is born of suffocating excess . His family has so much security, so many rules, that the only thrill left is self-sabotage. The body swap, when it comes, is voluntary—a