Los Simpson Temporada 35 Episodio 14 [verified]

Here is the story for a fictional episode of The Simpsons, Season 35, Episode 14.

Episode Title: "The Gaze of Future's Past" Original Air Date: (Fictional) March 17, 2025 Synopsis: When Springfield gets a cutting-edge "Smart City" upgrade, Homer becomes a viral sensation for all the wrong reasons, while Lisa discovers that digital nostalgia might be erasing real memories.


Cold Open: The Simpsons' living room. A package arrives via drone. Marge opens it to reveal a sleek, silver device.

Marge: "Oh, Homie, the new 'Flamingo Flipper 9000'! The thing that toasts, blends, and judges your life choices!"

Homer grabs it. A holographic AI (voiced by Cate Blanchett) appears.

AI: "Greetings, Homer Simpson. Your body fat percentage is dangerously high. Also, you forgot Mother's Day."

Homer: (Shoves it in the junk drawer) "Lousy future."

ACT ONE: The Smartification of Springfield

Mayor Quimby announces that Springfield has won a dubious grant from "NexusCorp" to become a "Smart City." Everyone gets free "SmartBand" wristbands that track health, location, and "vibe alignment." The town is thrilled—except for Lisa.

Lisa: "Dad, this is mass surveillance with a candy-coating of gamification!"

Homer: "Ooh, candy-coating!"

He immediately uses his SmartBand to order a 64-ounce Squishee. The band vibrates angrily.

AI Voice: "Denied. You have achieved your 'Saturated Fat Quota' for the decade. Please proceed to a kale distribution center."

The entire town bends to the algorithm. Moe’s Tavern now serves only "electrolyte broths." Barney is forcibly enrolled in a spin class. Even Comic Book Guy’s store is replaced with a "curated nostalgia AI" that just plays ads.

ACT TWO: The Homer Glitch

Homer, desperate for a donut, tries to hack his SmartBand by sticking it in a microwave. Instead of breaking, it creates a bizarre feedback loop. The band projects a holographic doppelgänger of Homer—but it’s a "debug mode" version: transparent, glitching, and constantly screaming "WHY NOT BEER?"

This "Glitch-Homer" is hilarious. Bart films it. Within hours, #GlitchHomer trends worldwide. NexusCorp sees an opportunity. los simpson temporada 35 episodio 14

CEO of NexusCorp (voiced by Tim Cook in a turtleneck): "Mr. Simpson, you’ve discovered our 'Chaos Algorithm.' We want to license your face as the official error mascot for all smart devices."

Homer: "Will I get donuts?"

CEO: "Unlimited virtual donuts."

Homer: (Pause) "Sold."

Meanwhile, Lisa visits Grandpa at the Springfield Retirement Castle. He’s staring at a blank wall, smiling.

Lisa: "Grandpa, are you okay?"

Grandpa: "Shh. I’m replaying the 1967 World Series. The band puts it right in my brain. No need to actually remember anything anymore."

Lisa: "But that game was rained out. You told me you went fishing that day."

Grandpa’s smile fades. He blinks. "Then… what’s real?"

ACT THREE: The Unplugging

Lisa realizes the SmartBands are overwriting citizens’ actual memories with optimized, algorithm-friendly versions. Her memory of learning the saxophone? The band replaced it with a "more efficient" memory of her learning Excel.

She rallies Professor Frink and a reluctant Bart.

Frink: "The bands run on a centralized 'Gleep-Glorp' server in the NexusCorp tower. If we unplug it—glaven!—everyone’s real memories might come back scrambled like eggs."

Bart: "Scrambled eggs are delicious. Let’s do it."

The climax takes place at the NexusCorp Tower. Homer is on a jumbotron as "GlitchHomer," being broadcast to every screen in Springfield. The real Homer is sitting in a VR pod, eating virtual donuts that taste like sadness.

Lisa sneaks in. She pleads with the CEO. Here is the story for a fictional episode

Lisa: "You’re stealing our past to sell us a fake future!"

CEO: "Sweetie, nostalgia is just a bug in human software. We’re patching it."

Lisa hacks the system—not with code, but with a raw, unoptimized jazz solo on her saxophone. The chaotic, unfiltered sound overloads the "Chaos Algorithm." GlitchHomer merges with the real Homer, giving him a moment of clarity.

Homer: (Waking up) "Virtual donuts have no soul. And Marge… Marge’s hair isn’t just blue. It’s the blue of a summer sky after a power plant leak."

He rips out the main server cable.

Final Scene: Springfield wakes up groggy. Memories are jumbled—Ned Flanders briefly thinks he’s a sea captain, and Mr. Burns believes he’s a loving father. But slowly, real memories return. Marge remembers her and Homer’s first kiss (it was awkward, not algorithm-perfect). Grandpa remembers the rainout and the fish.

Homer returns home. The Flamingo Flipper 9000 beeps.

AI: "Welcome back, Homer. You have lost 0.2 pounds. Also, you still forgot Mother’s Day."

Homer smiles, picks it up, and gently places it in the junk drawer next to the old Tamagotchi and a copy of BONESTORM.

Homer: "Some things are better forgotten."

End credits: Scrolling text of "Optimized Memories" vs. "Real Memories." Real wins. A final post-credits scene shows GlitchHomer now living in the family’s toaster, popping up to scream "WHY NOT BEER?" every time someone makes toast.

The fourteenth episode of The Simpsons Season 35 is titled " Night of the Living Wage " (in Spanish, " La noche de los sueldos vivientes La noche de los salarios mínimos "). It first aired on April 7, 2024. Episode Summary

The Conflict: The story begins when Lisa's cat, Snowball II, attacks an "emotional support chicken". To pay off the massive $60,000 veterinary bill, Marge takes a night job at a high-pressure "ghost kitchen" for a delivery app called Gimme Chow.

The Struggle: Marge finds herself exploited by the company's CEO, Finn Bon Idée. The workers are paid minimum wage, denied overtime, and forced to wear electronic ankle tags to track their efficiency.

The Betrayal: While Marge works herself to exhaustion, she believes the family is cooking at home to save money. In reality, Homer and the kids are secretly ordering huge meals from the very app Marge works for.

The Resolution: Encouraged by Lisa, Marge tries to form a union. As retaliation, management "promotes" her to a delivery driver with an impossible quota: 40 deliveries in one hour. She fails the final delivery—which happens to be at her own house—and is fired. This leads to a general strike by the delivery workers. Key Details Director: Chris Clements Writer: Cesar Mazariegos Cold Open: The Simpsons' living room

Satirical Themes: The episode parodies the "gig economy," labor exploitation, and features visual riffs on the TV show The Bear.

For a closer look at Marge's chaotic experience in the ghost kitchen parody:

Here’s a feature-style breakdown of Season 35, Episode 14 of The Simpsons, titled “The Tipping Point” (originally aired April 21, 2024, on Fox).


Las 3 mejores escenas del capítulo 14

Si buscas por "los simpson temporada 35 episodio 14" en redes sociales, estas son las escenas que se han vuelto virales:

  1. La parodia de "Titanic" en la planta nuclear: Homero intenta impresionar a Sasha mostrándole su "piscina de residuos radioactivos". Él se para en la proa de un barrle de desechos mientras suena una versión de "My Heart Will Go On" interpretada por un coro de Duffman y los empleados de la planta. El momento se interrumpe cuando el barril explota.

  2. El monólogo de Marge en el supermercado: Marge, devastada porque Homero olvidó su aniversario para ir a ver mareas vivas, destroza un expositor de purificadores de agua mientras grita: "¡Yo también puedo ser profunda, Homero! ¡Mi océano emocional tiene fosas más oscuras que las tuyas!". Es un momento icónico que recuerda a los mejores discursos de Lois Griffin en Family Guy.

  3. La decisión final en el acantilado: Sin spoilers extremos, la resolución no es la esperada. Homero no elige a ninguna de las dos mujeres. En su lugar, elige a su familia de una forma absurdamente conmovedora: escribe en la arena con un palo la palabra "ROSQUILLA", pero el agua borra todo menos la "O". Sasha interpreta esto como una señal de que el amor de Homero es demasiado abstracto para la ciencia, y se despide con un respetuoso apretón de manos.

Conclusión: ¿Merece la pena verlo?

Respuesta corta: Sí, absolutamente.

Respuesta larga: "Los Simpson temporada 35 episodio 14" es un brillante recordatorio de que, incluso después de 35 años, la serie puede ser relevante, divertida y conmovedora. Si bien no alcanza las cotas de genialidad de la temporada 4 u 8, se sitúa cómodamente entre lo mejor de las temporadas modernas (30 a 36).

Es un episodio imprescindible si:

  • Eres fan de Marge Simpson y sus momentos de protagonismo.
  • Te interesa la crítica social al mundo de las aplicaciones de reparto.
  • Crees que Los Simpson aún tienen mucho que decir sobre la clase trabajadora.

Si eres de los que dejaron de ver la serie hace años por considerarla "mala", este episodio (junto con "A Mid-Childhood Night's Dream" y "Cremains of the Day") te demostrará que Springfield sigue viva y coleando.

¿Dónde Ver "Los Simpson Temporada 35 Episodio 14"?

Si deseas disfrutar de este episodio, aquí están todas las plataformas donde está disponible:

  • Disney+ (Latinoamérica y España): La temporada 35 completa está disponible, incluyendo este episodio. Tienes la opción de verlo con doblaje latino (con las voces históricas de Claudia Motta, Humberto Vélez, etc.) o con doblaje castellano.
  • FOX (Estados Unidos): Los episodios recientes están disponibles en la app de FOX con autenticación de cable.
  • Prime Video (México, Argentina, Chile): A través del canal de suscripción "FOX+", aunque la opción más estable es Disney+.
  • Apple TV: Se puede comprar el episodio suelto por aproximadamente $2.99 USD.

Nota importante: En plataformas como Hulu (solo para EE. UU.) también está disponible. Si vives en una región donde Disney+ no tiene el acuerdo de transmisión, verifica Star+ (en Sudamérica, el contenido migró a Disney+ a mediados de 2024).

Plot Summary

The episode opens at Moe’s Tavern, where a new tablet checkout system forces patrons to choose from 20%, 25%, or 30% tip options — even for a single beer. Homer, already frustrated, accidentally hits 30% and snaps. His outburst inspires a town-wide revolt against “tipflation.” But when the service industry grinds to a halt, Homer is hailed as the leader of a movement he never intended to start.

Meanwhile, Lisa takes a more academic approach, writing a school paper on the psychology of obligatory tipping, only to discover that Principal Skinner has been skimming custodial tips. The B-plot follows Marge, who becomes a “tip coach” — teaching people how to navigate guilt-tipping screens — only to face an existential crisis when she realizes her advice helps no one.