Homer Simpson will no longer strangle son Bart

After 34 years on air and more than 750 episodes produced, The Simpsons could be expected to be stuck in its ways.

Yet, a new edition of the much-loved cartoon has shown its willingness to keep moving with the culture that surrounds it, as patriarch Homer Simpson has revealed he no longer strangles his son, Bart.

A running joke in the animated series has involved Homer reprimanding his mischievous eldest child by squeezing his neck tightly, to the extent that Bartā€™s eyes bulge and his tongue sticks out.

Despite being one of the most recognisable features of Homer and Bartā€™s father-son dynamic, the action has been frequently criticised for its brutality.

But in the third episode of season 35, titled ā€œMcMansion & Wifeā€, Homer declares that heā€™s changed his ways when he and his wife Marge pay a visit to their new neighbour, Thayer.

When Homer introduces himself with a handshake, the new character remarks how firm Homerā€™s grip is. ā€œSee, Marge, strangling the boy paid off,ā€ Homer remarks, before adding: ā€œJust kidding, I donā€™t do that anymore. Times have changed.ā€

The episode first aired late last month (22 October), but the remark from Homer generated online conversation when the scene was posted by a viewer on X, formerly Twitter, on Thursday (2 November).

Homer noting that he no longer strangles son Bart on ‘The Simpsons’ (Fox/The Simpsons)
Homer noting that he no longer strangles son Bart on ā€˜The Simpsonsā€™ (Fox/The Simpsons)

ā€œTook them long enough lmao,ā€ the user, BabyLamb5, added as a caption.

In response, other fans of the show commended Homer acknowledging his disturbing actions towards Bart. One comment reads: ā€œI knew my man Homer was gonna learn.ā€

The last time Homer was depicted strangling Bart was in season 31 (2019-2020). However, the topic of parent-child violence had been covered on several occasions before that.

In the season 22 episode ā€œLove is a Many Strangled Thingā€, Homer attends a ā€œfathering enrichment classā€ after encouragement from Marge. During the class, a towering basketball player (played by real-life former NBA star Kareem Abdul Jabbar) teaches Homer what it feels like ā€œto be young, small, and terrifiedā€ by strangling him, and inviting others to do the same.

Traumatised by his experience, Homer later finds that he is unable to strangle Bart.

Bart and Homer in ‘The Simpsons' (Fox)
Bart and Homer in ā€˜The Simpsons' (Fox)

However, in season 24ā€™s ā€œLove is a Many-Splintered Thingā€, Homer resumes his punishment method, and is shown choking Bart in front of his friend, Milhouse, who finds the ordeal frightening.

Although The Simpsons has been praised for acknowledging the end of this running joke, the programme has previously come under fire for its handling of the controversial character, Apu.

Shop owner Apu was an Indian character who was voiced by white actor Hank Azaria. Over the years, the programme was criticised for this casting choice and for its stereotypical characterisation, most notably in Hari Kondaboluā€™s 2017 documentary, The Problem with Apu.

From 2018, the character was quietly phased out, with Azaria noting that he no longer wanted to voice the character.

ā€œThrough my role in Apu and what I created in Hollywood messaging ā€“ which is a big deal in this country and around the world ā€“ I helped to create a pretty marginalising, dehumanising stereotype,ā€ Azaria told filmmaker Kondabolu in 2023.