The Simpsons Season 36's Returning Character Death After 27-Year Absence Explained

The Simpsons Season 36's Returning Character Death After 27-Year Absence Explained

While The Simpsons season 36, episode 2 did technically kill off an existing character, a lot of viewers would be hard-pressed to remember the unfortunate guest star. The world of The Simpsons is a complicated one. While it sometimes seems like the chaotic cartoon is constantly changing the reality that its heroes live in, The Simpsons almost always reinstates the show’s status quo by the end of each episode. The Simpsons season 37 might change this but currently, no matter how bizarre the events of a given outing are, the show snaps back to normality in the next episode.

Related The Simpsons Pays Off A Mr. Burns Threat 29 Years After Iconic Golden Age Episode The Simpsons season 36 episode 1 paid off an infamous threat to Mr. Burns that the show originally made way back in 1995, but with a surreal twist.

The Simpsons season 36 saw the series take advantage of this with its premiere, “Bart’s Birthday.” The Simpsons season 36 episode 1’s show-shaking twists were all undone at the end of the episode when, instead of turning 11, Bart turned 10 again and the rest of Springfield remained the same along with him. However, the very next episode featured the seemingly permanent death of a Simpsons supporting character. This was a minor, long-forgotten character whose earlier role viewers might have missed altogether, but the twist still came as a surprise given the show’s love of its status quo.

Nick The Realtor's Previous Appearance In The Simpsons & How He's Different In Season 36

Nick The Realtor Looks Visibly Younger In His Season 9 Introduction

In a parody of The White Lotus, season 36, episode 2, “The Yellow Lotus,” killed off Nick the Realtor. Even among superfans, this character was an obscure one. A visibly younger Nick appeared once before in season 9, episode 9, “Realty Bites,” where he was one of the real estate agents Marge worked among. Marge’s other co-workers from the outing, Gil Gunderson and Cookie Kwan, became fan-favorite supporting characters who appeared in dozens of episodes. In contrast, Nick never appeared again until his death. He looks older in “The Yellow Lotus,” and this change seems intentional on the part of the show’s creators.

The Simpsons producer Al Jean called Nick the Realtor “Somebody that’s okay to lose.”

Since The Simpsons never age, the show is slow to kill off recurring characters who could eventually be central to a future episode. Speaking to ScreenRant, The Simpsons producer Al Jean called Nick the Realtor “Somebody that’s okay to lose.” He noted that the character hadn’t appeared in the series for 27 years before his return, meaning he clearly wasn’t as pivotal to the show’s fictional world as Sideshow Bob or Dr. Hibbert. Even more minor characters like Duffman have had entire episodes dedicated to their stories, so The Simpsons needed a truly forgotten character for “The Yellow Lotus.”

How & Why Nick The Realtor Was Killed In The Simpsons Season 36, Episode 2

Nick’s Bad Karma Caught Up With Him At The Yellow Lotus

Close

Throughout “The Yellow Lotus,” Marge and Homer cursed the day they signed up for a timeshare thanks to Nick’s shady manipulation. The Simpson family warned Nick the Realtor that karma would catch up with him, but the real estate agent was unfazed and the family was mostly distracted by the rest of the resort’s drama. One such dramatic subplot was Dr. Hibbert’s struggles with his wife Bernice, who hid an addiction to prescription pills from him. While The Simpsons brought back obscure supporting characters in its premiere to set up a meta punchline, Bernice’s subplot had a practical purpose.

Your browser does not support the video tag.

Hibbert eventually got Bernice alone in a hot air balloon, where he dumped her supply of pills in the sea and told her she was going cold turkey no matter what. The couple embraced and reconciled while, far beneath them, an otter consumed a range of psychoactive drugs and immediately became extremely intoxicated. Unbothered by the years of bad karma he earned before the episode began, Nick the Realtor enjoyed a relaxing swim in the ocean before he encountered this otter. The marine mammal attacked him, gnawing him to death and setting the event’s central mystery in motion.

Nick's Death Continues A New Simpsons Trend

Nick Is The Second Minor Simpsons Character To Die In Two Seasons

Close

In season 35, episode 15, “Cremains of the Day,” The Simpsons killed off Larry the Barfly, a recurring background character who appeared throughout the series since its pilot episode in 1989. While Nick’s death was more comedic and served as the center of a murder mystery, Larry the Barfly’s demise was more poignant and set up a soul-searching road trip among the gang from Moe’s Tavern. Despite this, the two deaths form a surprising pattern for a show that is usually slow to kill off supporting characters.

Deceased Simpsons Character Episode Title Season and Episode Number Frank Grimes "Homer's Enemy" Season 8, Episode 23 Mona Simpson "Mona Leaves-a" Season 19, Episode 19 Bleeding Gums Murphy "Round Springfield" Season 6, Episode 22 Professor Huntington "Homer the Moe" Season 13, Episode 3, Red Barclay “Maximum Homerdrive”" Season 10, Episode 17 Beatrice "Old Money" Season 2, Episode 17 Maude Flanders "Alone Again, Natura-Diddily" Season 11, Episode 14

The Simpsons has killed off over a dozen characters over the years, but almost all of them died in the same episode that contained their first appearance. Larry the Barfly and Nick the Realtor, although the latter was scarcely recognizable even to seasoned viewers, represent a change in that trend. The Simpsons may continue to kill off minor characters as the show progresses through season 36 and onwards, especially as its cast of thousands makes this achievable with minimal narrative disruption.

Source: ScreenRant

Related Articles
COMMENTS