“..I was a man who had outgrown cartoons.
A man who generally failed to see the humour in American cartoons ..
.. and who had begun to believe that the United States was a country bereft of political wit .. and devoid of irony.
My daughter used to watch the Simpsons, and while I was too liberal to actually stop her ..
.. I used to hope that she would soon grow out of the cartoon watching habit.
Then I saw an episode for myself.
It just came on the television before I could reach out of my chair for the remote to turn it off.
Something made me watch it.
I saw a new reality.
I saw politicisation of the (fictitious) inhabitants of Springfield.
I saw well-observed humour.
I saw satire and wonderful social comment.
Just when I thought it couldn’t get any better I saw visual irony (a shop front with the name of the store and underneath the words “Twenty Years without a Slogan”)..
.. That was the day I gave my soul to The Simpsons, unconditionally and wholeheartedly.
I was truly born again that day.
After years of solitary atheism, here I was worshipping at the shrine of the Holy Matt Groening, creator of all that is bold, witty and ironic.
I told my wife.
I told my friends.
I told my work colleagues.
I told everyone and anyone who would listen how wonderful was that cartoon world known as The Simpsons.
I had become a true evangelist .. and I wanted the world to know!
So, my friends, if you value your sanity .. and are in no hurry to change your life ..
.. and offer your very being to the all-powerful world of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, Maggie and the rest ..
.. here is what you must do..”
go to source/story>>How The Simpsons Changed My Life – Colin Morley – Open Salon
