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With Bart and Dr Nick's help, Homer eventually increases his weight to 315 pounds (143 kg) and Mr. Burns installs a stay-at-home work terminal in the Simpson house. Marge admits that she finds herself less attracted to Homer physically because of his weight gain, but he vows to prove he can be a better worker because of it.
At an abandoned water park (a parody of Action Park), Bart and Lisa contract a bizarre infection, requiring treatment from steroids that cause temporary weight gain. Before they go back to school, Marge calls Lisa "chunky" with affection, which causes her to be insecure about her weight. Marge takes Lisa to the mall, shopping for back-to-school ...
Both 'Large Marge' and 'Strong Arms of the Ma' prove that writing good episodes about Marge seem to be out of the question by this point." [5] Cinema.com describes the premise as "Marge becomes agoraphobic (yes, only for one episode) after being mugged on the street and rather strangely decides that the best thing to do is take up weight lifting.
The writing staff had to find a new angle for Homer's weight problems, as the idea had been used several times before. This was emphasized in this episode when Marge does not seem to care that Homer is going to try to lose weight again. [3] In the scenes where the Sherpas were speaking, the show staff went to great lengths to find translations.
As a mother of three, Simpson knows a thing or two about the impact pregnancy can have on a woman's body. "I’ve lost 100 pounds three times. I definitely gain a lot of weight in my pregnancies.
Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club gave the episode a B−, saying "The careless construction of latter-day Simpsons episodes is never more pronounced than in ‘Walking Big & Tall,’ a slapdash amalgam of two marginally promising plots which would have benefitted from some room to breathe. Even more than the usual resulting thinness of main and ...
Jessica Simpson is no stranger to body-shaming comments — she's been famous for 25 years, after all — but "it hurts." The 42-year-old entrepreneur spoke with Bustle about scrutiny over her ...
The episode features a minor uncredited cameo from The Simpsons creator Matt Groening. The episode, titled "Holidays of Future Passed", was written by J. Stewart Burns and directed by Rob Oliver. [2] [3] It was first announced to the press at San Diego Comic-Con on July 23, 2011, during a panel with the producers of The Simpsons. [4] "