
Title | : | Nuclear Powered Baseball: Articles Inspired by The Simpsons episode "Homer At the Bat" |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1943816107 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781943816101 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Kindle Edition |
Number of Pages | : | 209 |
Publication | : | Published February 26, 2016 |
The series has a long history with baseball and in Season Three, the episode “Homer at the Bat” aired, on February 20, 1992. Co-editor Emily Hawks writes in her Introduction, “To see so many of the biggest MLB stars of the day in Simpsonian animated form — Ken Griffey, Jr., Ozzie Smith, and Jose Canseco, just to name a few — seemed the most exciting thing in the world to this ’90s kid. And the fact that they all lent their own voices to the parts seemed even cooler. It may have also been one of my first glimpses into baseball’s early days. As a kid, I had no idea that Mr. Burns’ dream squad — comprised of colorful names like Shoeless Joe Jackson, Pie Traynor, and Napoleon Lajoie—actually referenced real players. Those seemed like decidedly fabricated names to me!”
They weren’t. They were real ballplayers. And, one way or another, Simpsons writers have worked the names of 68 major-league ballplayers into one episode or another. Football’s Joe Namath, Warren Sapp, and Johnny Unitas have appeared in shows. So have basketballers Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson, Yao Ming, and Dennis Rodman. Without doing exhaustive research, we believe there may be more baseball players than the other pro sports combined.
Some 27 members of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) have collaborated in Nuclear Powered Baseball to tell the stories of each player—past and present—featured in the classic Simpsons episode. The biographies compiled here take the players well beyond their two-dimensional caricatures, and present a well-rounded view of their lives in baseball. We’ve also included a few very entertaining takes on the now-famous “Homer at the Bat” episode from prominent baseball writers Jonah Keri, Erik Malinowski, and Bradley Woodrum. As an added bonus, we’ve also included Joe Posnanski’s piece on the Season 22 sabermetric-themed episode, “MoneyBart.”
TOC:
Introduction by Emily Hawks
The Making of “Homer at the Bat” by Erik Malinowski
The Burns-Smithers Question by Bradley Woodrum
Wade Boggs by Steve West
Jose Canseco by Geoffrey Dunn
Roger Clemens by Frederick C. Bush
Ken Griffey Jr. by Emily Hawks
Don Mattingly by James Lincoln Ray
Steve Sax by Alan Cohen
Mike Scioscia by Susan Lantz
Ozzie Smith by Charles F. Faber
Darryl Strawberry by Shawn Morris
Cap Anson by David Fleitz
Mordecai “Three Finger” Brown by Cindy Thomson
Jim Creighton by John Thorn
Honus Wagner by Jan Finkel
Pie Traynor by James Forr
Harry Hooper by Paul Zingg and E. A. Reed
Nap Lajoie by David Jones and Stephen Constantelos
Gabby Street by Joseph Wancho
Joe Jackson by David Fleitz
Homer Simpson by Bill Nowlin
“Homer at the Bat” — the game by Bill Nowlin
Ryan Tosses No-Hitter; Cash Wields Table Leg by Gregory H. Wolf
The New Springfield Nine by Jonah Keri
The Simpsons Baseball Edition by Joe Posnanski
Baseball People Mentioned in The Simpsons
Nuclear Powered Baseball: Articles Inspired by The Simpsons episode "Homer At the Bat" Reviews
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Well Mr. Burns had done it.
The power plan had won it.
With Roger Clemens clucking all the while...
We're talking softball...
In the 1992 Softball season, Mr. Burns made a million dollar bet to win the City Championship. Homer Simpson and his bat: "Wonder Bat" took the team to the City Championship Game. But then Mr. Burns decides to bring in some ringers. He lists several top ball players - Mordecai Brown, Cap Anson, Pie Trainer, just to name a few - that he wants for his team. However, Smithers points out they are all long retired (and his catcher has been dead for 130 years). Instead Smithers stocks the team with the All Stars of 1992: Mattingly, Sax, Ozzie Smith, Boggs, Griffey, Strawberry, Canseco, Clemens and Scioscia. However, by game day all but Strawberry are unavailable because of freak accidents: Ozzie Smith jumped into the Springfield Mystery Spot, Wade Boggs got knocked out in a fight with Barney over whether Lord Palmerston or Pitt the Elder was the greatest Prime Minister in British History. In the end, Homer comes off the bench to win the game by getting hit by a pitch.
This volume is a collection of essays. A few are the great Simpsons' episode. And there are 18 biographical essays of each Burns' dream team from the turn of the 19th/20th century and the 9 All Stars that are eventually recruited. Then it finishes with two essays from this century: one on the Simpsons episode on SABRmetrics during which Bill James says: "I made baseball as fun as doing your taxes"; and one on which players would be the 2009 Springfield Nine.
The volume is a lot of fun. Any Baseball and/or Simpsons fan would LOVE it.
We're talking HO-mer; Ozzie and the Straw.... -
I'm writing a review and posting it over on my site. Feel free to read it there.
https://www.thehanshintigers.com/2021...
It's a really good book. If you like the Simpsons (this episode in particular) and 1992 MLB and ancient baseball history, then you will read this one a lot faster than I did.