

Homer, thinking it's a "laughter house", due to the restricted view from the 'eye' of the suit, goes into the slaughterhouse, and almost gets killed, but Marge saves him just in time.

In the mean time, Homer, still dressed as a cow is brought to a slaughter house. Lou is put on the plane where Apu promises he will be "treated like a god" and receive "the kind of medical care that in America would go to humans". Marge, Bart and Lisa then go to Springfield Airport where they are greated by Apu who is aboard a cargo plane to India. After breaking up the wedding Marge tells Bart that she had a trick up her sleeve - instead of sending Lou back to the compound, she sends Homer in a cow suit. So, Homer and Marge must break the two up. However it doesn't work, and instead she helps him steal Lou from the compound.īecause Bart can't take care of Lou, he gives Lou to Mary, but her father tells Bart that to them, a cow it is a token of marriage. Once Lou is sent off to be slaughtered, Lisa becomes to see Bart's affection for Lou, and tries to trick him into being a vegetarian by playing mooing sounds on a CD. Eventually Lou wins the contest, but Bart doesn't realize all that means is he'll get slaughtered first.
#Apocalypse cow the simpsons how to#
Bart is left with the runt, while Ralph gets a cardboard cutout, and is totally unaware of how to raise a cow, but with the help of Mary, one of Cletus's kids, they name him Lou, and raise him to be very big. When Bart joins 4-H, there is a contest to raise a cow, and at the end of the summer the best cow wins a ribbon. When Homer realizes no parent participation is involved he immediately signs Bart up. Homer and Bart go out to Shelbyville to refill their bean bag chairs, and they see Martin plowing fields for the 4-H club. It guest stars Zooey Deschanel as Mary Spuckler. The episode was written by Jeff Westbrook and directed by Nancy Kruse. " Apocalypse Cow" is the seventeenth episode of season 19 of The Simpsons and the four-hundred and seventeenth episode overall. This is an allusion to the Bayeux Tapestry, a 50 cm by 70 m embroidered cloth which explains the events leading up to the 1066 Norman invasion of England. The family rests triumphantly on their couch as Ned Flanders lays dismembered on the floor before them. A story is told through pictures on a medieval style scroll: The Flanders clan captures the Simpsons' couch and the Simpson clan crosses the open waters to do battle with the Flanders and take back their couch.
