Saturday, 5 November 2016

The Simpsons breaks record for longest running US show after it's renewed for two more seasons

Matt Groening (C), creator of The Simpsons, poses with characters from the show

The Simpsons has just been renewed for two more seasons, meaning it will break the record for most episodes of any scripted television show in US history.

Twenty First Century Fox Inc's Fox Broadcasting announced on Friday the show will run until 2019.
The Simpsons is currently in its 28th season, with just over 600 episodes aired.
By 2019, it will have outpaced western TV drama Gunsmoke, which concluded after 635 episodes in 1975.
"Take that 'Gunsmoke!' You lost a race you didn't even know you were running!," Homer Simpson said in a statement from Fox
Since its 1989 premiere, The Simpsons - bumbling patriarch Homer, long-suffering wife Marge, prankster Bart, prodigy Lisa and baby Maggie - have become globally recognized figures.
The show, which has won 32 Emmy awards and was nominated for an Oscar in the animated short category in 2012, often playfully and poignantly satirizes American culture.
The Simpsons
Homer's catchphrase "D'oh" and Bart's "Ay Caramba" are part of the zeitgeist and the fictional family from Springfield even have a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame.
The show is syndicated in more than 100 countries and is already the longest-running sitcom and primetime scripted series in U.S. history.
The most recent season, which featured a virtual reality episode and guest stars including comedians Amy Schumer and Sarah Silverman, has averaged around 7.2 million total viewers across multiple platforms.

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