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Harvey Fierstein, Dan Castellaneta, and Harry Shearer in The Simpsons (1989)

Plot

Simpson and Delilah

The Simpsons

Edit

Summaries

  • Homer lies on a medical insurance form in order to obtain a miracle hair restoring drug.
  • Prematurely bald Homer sees an opportunity to restore his hair with Dimoxinil but it is very expensive and he obtains it via an insurance scam. Seeing him with a full head of hair Burns promotes him to an executive position with an adoring male secretary, Karl,who encourages Homer to bring out his strengths. But when the jealous Smithers discovers the fraud,the effects of the Dimoxinil wear off and Bart breaks the bottle,spilling the rest,it's back to normal for Homer.—don @ minifie-1
  • Homer learns of a new hair growth formula, called Dimoxinil, and is eager to try it as he has come to resent being bald. Unable to afford the Dimoxinil, Homer cheats on his medical insurance forms to obtain it. The forumula works, and a no-longer-bald Homer is promoted to executive and gets a male secretary named Karl.

Synopsis

  • Homer sees an ad for Dimoxinil, a new "miracle breakthrough" for baldness. He visits a store which sells Dimoxinil, but at $1,000 it is far out of Homer's price range. At work, Lenny suggests Homer pay for Dimoxinil through the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant medical insurance plan. The druggist yells that Dimoxinil is a frivolous product that is not covered by any medical insurance, but whispers to Homer that he will arrange an under the table trade. Homer successfully applies the drug, and after using it, he wakes up the next day to the thrill of having a full head of hair and runs throughout the town blissfully.

    At work, Mr. Burns surveys the security monitors to find a new person to promote to an executive position. He claims none of the others have exceutive potential and refuses to promote them, even though Smithers told him he had to. That is until he sees Homer with brown hair and mistakes him for a young go-getter by asking his assistant who the young go-getter is. Smithers informs him that's Homer Simpson and he works as the safety inspector at the bottom with his peon friends Lenny and Carl. Mr Burns chooses Homer for the job and his assistant reluctantly announces him promoted to being an excutive at the plant.

    As he is about to become an executive, Homer tries to look for a good secretary, but all the applicants fail until Homer finds a man named Karl, who earnestly persuades Homer to tell himself that he deserves everything he has and is the finest creature God ever created. Homer eventually picks Karl, and they go shopping for a suit. At an executive board meeting, Homer is singled out by an impressed Burns to give a suggestion to increase worker productivity, and Homer meekly suggests that he give more tartar sauce in the lunch room, which Mr. Burns does. Following the increase in tartar sauce distribution, Mr. Burns is glad to hear that workplace safety is on the up-and-up and accidents are down. Smithers remarks that all the past accidents were either caused by Homer or believed to be traced to him. However, Burns tells Smithers to stop being negative and goes as far as accusing him of harboring jealousy towards Homer.

    Homer forgets his wedding anniversary, but Marge forgives him due to his new demanding schedule. Karl covers for Homer by hiring a singing telegram service to serenade Marge with "You are So Beautiful", which Marge loves. When Homer becomes successful and receives the honor of being given the key to the executive washroom. Smithers begins to feel jealous of Homer for his high standing with Mr. Burns and searches in his file, finding the damaging information he seeks in the case of insurance fraud that gave Homer hair in the first place.

    Smithers gleefully prepares to fire Homer for the fraud, but Karl takes the blame for Homer and writes the $1,000 check to repay the company. Frustrated, Smithers is instead forced to fire Karl, who has sacrificed his own job to save Homer's. Homer is deeply saddened to see Karl go after all Karl had done for him, including lending Homer his umbrella before finally leaving in the rain. Homer is invited to give a speech at the next meeting, and Smithers does his best to ruin Homer's confidence. Homer is nervous about giving the speech without Karl, but reasons that as long as he has hair, everything will be fine.

    Meanwhile, at home, Bart uses some of the Dimoxinil in a misguided attempt to grow a beard. When Homer enters and catches him, Bart accidentally drops the Dimoxinil, spilling it all onto the floor. By the next day, Homer has lost all his hair and, bald again, arrives at the meeting. His fears are alleviated when Karl appears with a pre-written speech for him, but Homer is still convinced he is incapable of accomplishing anything without his hair. Karl impatiently tells Homer what he had been trying teach him all alongthat all of Homer's achievements had been the result of his own will and effort, not of his hair. Karl urges Homer to think higher of himself and give the speech, even kissing him on the lips to prove his point. Reassured, Homer presents a brilliant speech on the Japanese art of self-management, but the audience is unable to take him seriously because he has no hair and everyone leaves, leaving Homer greatly disappointed. Burns angrily summons Homer threatening to fire him, but reveals photographs of him with blond curly hair in his younger years when girls flocked to him until he went bald, and as a fellow sufferer of male pattern baldness, sympathizes with Homer's situation and demotes him back to his old position.

    At home later at night, Homer confesses to Marge he is afraid that his life has returned to a dead-end job, that his kids will be disappointed because he can no longer buy the things for them he promised he would, and most of all that Marge will no longer love him as much. However, Marge reminds Homer that his safety inspector job has always brought food to the table, and that the kids will get over not being spoiled. Marge then reaffirms her love for Homer as they sing "You Are So Beautiful" together into the night.

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Harvey Fierstein, Dan Castellaneta, and Harry Shearer in The Simpsons (1989)
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