"It's a funny show. The characters are surprisingly likable, given how ugly they are. We've got this huge cast of characters that we can move around. And over the last few seasons, we've explored some of the secondary characters' personal lives a bit more"
About this Quote
Groening’s genius is how casually he admits the magic trick: make an audience bond with drawings that are, by any conventional metric, kind of hideous. The “ugly” here isn’t self-loathing so much as a flex. The Simpsons’ blunt overbite-and-bulb-eyes design rejects the glossy, aspirational prettiness that usually sells animation. It’s a declaration that the show’s currency is not beauty but personality - and that likability can be engineered through voice, timing, and recognizable human flaws.
The line “we can move around” frames Springfield like a writer’s sandbox, a modular town built for narrative agility. Groening is describing a machine: a huge ensemble that lets the show pivot from domestic sitcom to workplace farce to civic satire without breaking its own rules. That’s why the series could run long enough to become both a time capsule of late-20th-century American life and a running commentary on the decades that followed.
The most revealing piece is the quiet shift toward “secondary characters’ personal lives.” That’s the long-series survival strategy. When the nuclear family premise starts to loop, you deepen the bench: you give the townies interiority, backstories, private wounds. It’s also a subtle cultural move, acknowledging that audiences don’t just want punchlines; they want the illusion of a lived-in world. Groening’s offhand tone keeps it light, but the subtext is ruthlessly professional: longevity comes from turning a cartoon population into a community.
The line “we can move around” frames Springfield like a writer’s sandbox, a modular town built for narrative agility. Groening is describing a machine: a huge ensemble that lets the show pivot from domestic sitcom to workplace farce to civic satire without breaking its own rules. That’s why the series could run long enough to become both a time capsule of late-20th-century American life and a running commentary on the decades that followed.
The most revealing piece is the quiet shift toward “secondary characters’ personal lives.” That’s the long-series survival strategy. When the nuclear family premise starts to loop, you deepen the bench: you give the townies interiority, backstories, private wounds. It’s also a subtle cultural move, acknowledging that audiences don’t just want punchlines; they want the illusion of a lived-in world. Groening’s offhand tone keeps it light, but the subtext is ruthlessly professional: longevity comes from turning a cartoon population into a community.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
|---|
More Quotes by Matt
Add to List
