Last modified: 2017-11-03 by peter hans van den muijzenberg
Keywords: simpsons | northern kentucky | not just another state | star: 5 points (blue on stripes) | star: 5 yellow (blue on stripes) | confederate jack | sunrise | humans: 2 | to fraternal love | learn to fart | graffiti |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
See also:
External:
The Simpsons is an animated show set in the US in the city of Springfield.
Josh Fruhlinger, 24 October 1996
One of the show's running gags is that you never know precisely what
state Springfield is in – often characters will be about to say the
name when, say, a passing train obscures their words.
Josh Fruhlinger, 24 October 1996
There have also been indications in the show that make people believe they
are out west, desert just outside of town, etc. They have driven in one day
to both Chicago and New York City. So there is no way of knowing where they
actually are supposed to be, and that is what the producers want.
Michael P. Smuda, 2 April 2003
approximation by Josh Fruhlinger, 24 October 1996 |
modified version, 1 April 2003 |
In one episode, evil nuclear power plant owner Monty Burns runs
for governor. During a campaign commercial, Mr. Burns stands before a
giant state flag. This is it.
1 April 2003
and Josh Fruhlinger, 24 October 1996,
Except for the motto in the bottom stripe, I'd actually
prefer this design to many seal-on-a-monocolored-background designs of
actual US state flags.
Josh Fruhlinger, 24 October 1996
Even in spite of the lettering at the bottom, I find it much nicer
vexillologically than most US state flags.
Santiago Dotor, 2 April 2003
Perhaps the legend was only added for Mr. Burns' campaign – I haven't
seen the episode, but was that his slogan? And did the star overlap
the stripes or not in the original?
Nathan Lamm, 2 April 2003
The flag of Springfield, MO could very well be
a major inspiration for this flag.
Ole Andersen, 2 April 2004
This flag looks suspiciously
derived from the old Yugoslav flag, with the colors changed.
Al Kirsch, 2 April 2003
Several times in the past ten years, The Simpsons have shown the flag of the mythical state
Springfield is located in. It's mostly white, with a red border on
one side, and some design I can't quite make out, and has the
state motto "Not Just Another State" written on the bottom.
23 June 2000
image by Eugene Ipavec, 11 December 2007
In The Simpsons third-season episode Bart the Murderer, a flag appears on the other side of a judges' podium from the S&S – horizontal white-red-white, with a yellow star in the central stripe.
This could have been an early concept for a flag of Springfield, an unplanned improvisation, or possibly the storyboards called for a flag of the unnamed state the series is set in (the design is identical) but left out the specified colors, leaving the animation studio to pick them at random.
Either way, simple, one-off flags are quite commonly employed by the
series in official settings.
Eugene Ipavec, 11 & 13 December 2007
For me as a foreigner, it does look like the logical place to show a state
flag. If this was a mistake – some very good stories have come from
accepting a mistake into a story line's universe and writing an
explanation for it.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 13 December 2007
Well, the show could use some consistency in this department; every
time a non-national flag is called for to stand in a corner in an
official setting, a simple new ad-hoc design is thrown together. There
must be half a dozen nominal flags of Springfield alone.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 December 2007
And no indication this is intended as a running gag? Well, maybe you could turn it into one, by offering the next few designs to be used? Suggest they have a flags design competition?
Then again, maybe some people in that universe are deliberately swapping
the Springfield or State flag,
to steal them in a way people won't notice as quickly – "as no-one ever
looks at a state flag anyway". Of course, that must mean there's something
stealworthy about the original flags. Maybe it's just the oldest flags, made
at the time Springfield became a city – off we go into the treasure
puzzle story line with meaningful variations in what appeared to be badly
made flags. I expect they find out in the end that those really are badly
made flags and that the rumour of the treasure was spread by the manufacturer
to make people buy them anyway.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 15 December 2007
(Lacking the putative star:)
image by António Martins, 5 August 2010
A variant of the green-white-red "unnamed state" flag is shown in episode #15 of season #18, Rome-old and Juli-eh (see English Wikipedia article), hoisted limp on an indoors pole at the meeting room of Springfield D.M.V. in a scene when Selma is presenting lame proposals due to her troubles at home.
It is an inequal horizontal triband of red, green, and white, the green
stripe noticeably more narrow, about half the other two. The hoisting position
prevents discerning if the star is shown in the flag's center,
but the motto seems to be absent.
António Martins, 5 August 2010
approximation by Eugene Ipavec, 12 March 2005 |
approximation by Juan Manuel Gabino Villascán, 13 September 2005 |
This flag appears in the episode of 17 November 2002 (it looked like
a Second Confederate Naval Jack sinking into the ocean).
It is part of a gag wherein the State Legislature is debating changing the flag,
one deputy rising to point out that it is embarrasing "especially as we're a Northern State."
Nathan Lamm, 17 November 2002,
and Eugene Ipavec, 13 March 2005
I found the way the Confederate jack was presented — a sunset-lit beauty shot,
for (presumably) maximum objectionability — particularly amusing.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 March 2005
Fictional flags similar to the Confederate States of America's battle flag
The design looked like Arizona's flag with the Confederate Battle Flag in place of the star.
Al Kirsch, 17 November 2002
image by Juan Manuel Gabino Villascán, 13 September 2005
In the episode that shows the 'Confederate' state flag, the controversy encourages
the governor to suggest the children of the visiting Springfield Elementary design a new flag.
Lisa comes up with one, depicting people, and a rainbow (I think).
Andrew Cheatle, 1 July 2004
Unfortunately, Lisa's winning design had writing on it (a vexi-no-
no), but that was necessary considering what Bart did to it.
Al Kirsch, 17 November 2002
image by Juan Manuel Gabino Villascán, 13 September 2005
Bart messes up Lisa's proposal so that it shows a 'stink
line' instead. Apparently it ends up being accepted as the new flag, for
Homer remarks later that his state is 'the stinky state' as if
that were the official state motto, much as California is 'the golden
state'.
Andrew Cheatle, 1 July 2004
image by Eugene Ipavec, 14 September 2006
After the preschoolers of Springfield embarrass the town by rioting at a concert,
Kabul responds by ending its sister-city partnership with Springfield.
In this scene,
the representative of Kabul tears up the flag of Springfield.
It is a typical American city flag, blue with the coat of arms and the words
"CITY OF SPRINGFIELD".
J. Patrick Fischer, 7 November 2004,
and Eugene Ipavec, 14 September 2006
The flag is medium blue, with the words "CITY OF SPRINGFIELD" near its top and a shield quartered in red and light-blue taking up the bottom 2/3, the quarters containing:
There are also two golden boughs flanking the shield, and another
smaller pair crossed above it.
Eugene Ipavec, 24 March & 14 September 2006
The lemon tree plays a part in the city's history, and the children of Springfield
for generations have been taking the fruit from the lemon tree to make lemonade.
J. Patrick Fischer, 7 November 2004,
and Nathan Lamm, 7 November 2004
In the episode "Dark Knight Court" from 24th season of the Simpsons,
the flag of Springfield Elementary Youth Court can be seen. (See screenshot.)
Aleksandar Nemet, 2 January 2014
image by Eugene Ipavec, 5 September 2006
The flag of the fictional Florida town of Palm Corners
appears in season 11 (episode Kill The Alligator And Run).
The town was meant to be a parody of Fort Lauderdale during Spring Break
(something many might consider a redundancy). (Screenshot of flag)
Eugene Ipavec, 5 September 2006
That being said, the joke in the episode was that Palm Corners' flag was designed by
(or sewn by, I forget which) the town's mascot, "Cactus Jack" (the titular alligator).
Hence the look like it was put together by an alligator.
David Kendall, 5 September 2006
image by Eugene Ipavec, 1 May 2006
In episode 1, season 4, Kamp Krusty, Bart and Lisa are sent to a summer camp
licensed by their hero, Krusty the Clown. The camp turns out to be a
run-down hellhole where the campers are forced to subsist on gruel and
stitch wallets for export.
(Screenshot of flag)
Eugene Ipavec, 1 May 2006
image by Eugene Ipavec, 1 May 2006
Eventually Bart leads a sucessful revolt, expels the counselors
and renames the camp after himself. There is a scene of the old camp flag being lowered,
and a new one being raised.
(Screenshot of flag)
Eugene Ipavec, 1 May 2006
The episode in which this flag was seen involved Bart being sent to Australia to apologise for a long distance phone bill — or he'll be given the boot! (The episode was a parody of the Michael Fay incident, in which an American was caned for a crime in Singapore.)
It contains a Union Jack in the canton, a
constellation, and a boot kicking a bare bottom. In the episode, it flew over
the Australian Parliament.
2 April 2003
image by Vincent Morley and Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 15 September 2005
In one episode, Marge Simpson tells her children the story of Henry VIII of
England. Henry VIII looks very much like Homer Simpson in this joke version of
history, and the flags flying over his castle look like
the English flag but with other colours – they
are blue with a white cross.
Elias Granqvist, 2 November 2004
image by Edward Mooney, Jr. and Eugene Ipavec, 29 June 2009
Lisa the Iconoclast is the 16th episode of the 7th season, originally airing on February 18, 1996: As Springfield's bicentennial approaches, Lisa finds a secret confession written by town founder Jebediah Springfield, revealing that he had actually been a murderous pirate in hiding. Relevant quote (from a flashback to 1796):
Betsy Ross: (enters room, plaintively) I got the white stars you wanted, but I couldn't find any red hearts, yellow moons, or green clovers.
George Washington: (annoyed) …I'll take it. But I'm not paying for it!
The reference is to the long-running jingle for the "Lucky Charms" brand of
leprechaun-themed children's cereal, describing the differently-shaped
marshmallows it contains.
Eugene Ipavec, 27 May 2006 & 29 June 2009
image by Željko Heimer, 15 January 2003
In an episode a few seasons ago, the flag of Sierra
Leone was inexplicably present in the offices of the Teacher Of The Year
Commitee.
Eugene Ipavec, 11 December 2007
image by Eugene Ipavec, 27 May 2006
Yet another state or city flag
appears, alongside a US flag, behind mayor Quimby in the episode Lisa
the Iconoclast. It is a red-white-blue tricolor, with thin gold stripes
in between.
Eugene Ipavec, 27 May 2006
In the episode Exit Through the Kwik-E-Mart, after
Homer gets mad at Bart and locks him in the rabbit's cage, he decides
to insult him by painting graffiti of Homer's face all over Springfield.
In one scene, it can be seen that he also puts Homer's face on a red
flag, which is raised by the sign of the United States Coast Guard,
as shown in this screenshot and this one.
Aleksandar Nemet, 19 July 2013