Skip to main content

14 Times The Simpsons Accurately Predicted the Future

With 28 seasons and counting on the air, The Simpsons is undeniably a television phenomenon. Both the longest-running American sitcom and animated program, the critically acclaimed cartoon is widely recognized as one of, if not the, best shows of all time for its humorous satire of everything from politics and pop culture to everyday family life.
In fact, throughout its more than 600 episodes, creator Matt Groening and his team have been so on top of the country’s cultural pulse, they’ve even managed to predict several major historical events — along with a few less momentous happenings.
Here are 14 times The Simpsons made eerily accurate predictions about the future.

Siegfried and Roy's Tiger Attack

Season 5, Episode 10: $pringfield (Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Legalized Gambling)
Predicted: 1993
Came true: 2003
After Springfield decides to legalize gambling, Mr. Burns opens a casino where German magicians Gunter and Ernst perform a routine, seeming to spoof the long-running Las Vegas Siegfried and Roy show. Tragically, a bit in which the animated duo is attacked by their tiger came to fruition 10 years later when Roy Horn was mauled on stage by a white Bengal tiger, leaving him partially paralyzed and ending the long-running production.


Autocorrect Fails

Season 6, Episode 8: Lisa on Ice
Predicted: 1994
Came true: 2007
During a Springfield Elementary School assembly, Kearney asks fellow bully Dolph to take a memo to “Beat up Martin” on his “Newton” — Apple’s early attempt at a personal digital assistant. However, the machine translates the message into “Eat up Martha” instead, foreshadowing the common messaging errors people blame on iPhone’s autocorrect technology.
In fact, Nitin Ganatra, Apple’s former director of engineering for iOS applications, revealed in 2013 that the Simpsons‘ gag served as a rallying cry while developing the software for the iPhone’s keyboard. “If you heard people talking and they used the words ‘Eat up Martha,’ it was basically a reference to the fact that we needed to nail the keyboard. We needed to make sure the text input works on this thing, otherwise, ‘Here comes the Eat up Marthas,'” he told Fast Company.

FaceTime

Season 6, Episode 19: Lisa’s Wedding
Predicted: 1995
Came true: 2010
In this futuristic installment, Lisa talks with Marge using her phone’s video chat capabilities, predating the popular FaceTime feature of today’s iPhones by 15 years.

Faulty Voter Machines

Season 20, Episode 4: Treehouse of Horror XIX
Predicted: 2008
Came true: 2012
In a bit inspired by the 2008 presidential election, Homer tries to vote for Barack Obama only to have a voting machine record his selection as John McCain several times. Coincidentally, when it came time for Obama to run for a second term in 2012, video footage emerged of a Pennsylvania machine switching a vote from Obama to one for his Republican opponent, Mitt Romney. The machine was reportedly taken out of commission.


The God Particle

Season 10, Episode 2: The Wizard of Evergreen Terrace
Predicted: 1998
Came true: 2012
The existence of the Higgs boson or “God particle” — a breakthrough that helps explain how everything in the universe has mass — wasn’t confirmed by physicists until 2012. But according to Dr. Simon Singh, the author of The Simpsons and their Mathematical Secrets, after Homer decided to become an inventor in “The Wizard of Evergreen Terrace,” he was pictured standing in front of a blackboard with an equation that predicted the mass of the yet-to-be-discovered particle.
“If you work it out, you get the mass of a Higgs boson that’s only a bit larger than the nano-mass of a Higgs boson actually is,” he told the Independent. “It’s kind of amazing as Homer makes this prediction 14 years before it was discovered.”

NSA Spying Scandal

The Simpsons Movie
Predicted: 2007
Came true: 2013
When the Simpson family is forced to go into hiding following their escape from the EPA biodome enclosing Springfield, the NSA locates Marge and the kids by listening in on one of their conversations. However, it wasn’t until six years after The Simpsons Movie hit theaters that Edward Snowden first blew the whistle on the government mass surveillance of Americans’ phone and Internet records.

Smartwatches

Season 6, Episode 19: Lisa’s Wedding
Predicted:1995
Came true: 2014
When Lisa visits a fortune-teller at a renaissance fair, viewers are transported 15 years into the future to 2010 — a time when wristwatch communication technology exists. However, even the Simpsons’ future society was a little ahead of its time, as modern voice recognition-enabled smartwatches weren’t rolled out until 2014.

America's Ebola Outbreak

Season 9, Episode 3: Lisa’s Sax
Predicted: 1997
Came true: 2014
This installment saw Marge offer to read a depressed Bart a book titled Curious George and the Ebola Virus. This moment was widely circulated during the 2014 American Ebola outbreak when YouTube user Thecontroversy7 created a video laying out a theory revolving around The Simpsons‘ predictive tendencies.

FIFA's Corruption Scandal

Season 25, Episode 16: You Don’t Have to Live Like a Referee
Predicted: 2014
Came true: 2015
Although the world football federation representative who asks Homer for help repairing the organization’s image isn’t explicitly named as a member of FIFA, his arrest turned out to be uncannily similar to those of the real-life FIFA officials who were arrested on corruption charges about a year later. Not to mention that the episode also correctly predicted Germany’s defeat of Brazil in the 2014 World Cup.

Greece’s Debt Default

Season 23, Episode 10: Politically Inept, with Homer Simpson
Predicted: 2012
Came true: 2015
When Homer appears as a guest commentator on cable news show Head Butt, a ticker runs across the bottom of the screen that reads, “Europe puts Greece on eBay.”
Of course, this was three years before Greece became the first developed country to default to the International Monetary Fund, plunging the country deeper into economic crisis.

The Nobel Prize

Season 22, Episode 1: Elementary School Musical
Predicted: 2010
Came true: 2016
Bengt Holmström may not have won the Nobel Prize in Economics until 2016, but one Simpsons character was betting on him six years prior. In a scene from the season 22 premiere in which Martin holds up a scorecard depicting his Nobel Prize betting pool with Lisa, Milhouse and Database, the MIT professor is clearly marked in one of Milhouse’s squares.

Donald Trump's Presidency

Season 11, Episode 17: Bart to the Future
Predicted: 2000
Came true: 2016
When Bart flashes forward into adulthood, viewers learn that Lisa not only becomes president, but inherits “quite a budget crunch” from her predecessor, Donald Trump. “The country is broke?,” she asks her aides in one scene. “How can that be?”
At the time, the real Trump presidency was still 16 years away. However, in a 2016 interview with The Hollywood Reporter, writer Dan Greaney explained the joke was meant as a warning to the country. “That just seemed like the logical last stop before hitting bottom,” he said. “It was pitched because it was consistent with the vision of America going insane.

Lady Gaga's Halftime Show

Season 23, Episode 22: Lisa Goes Gaga
Predicted: 2012
Came true: 2017
Nearly five years before Lady Gaga descended from the roof of Houston’s NRG Stadium for the halftime show of Super Bowl LI, her Simpsons doppelgänger performed a songfor the residents of Springfield while suspended in the air. The two Mother Monsters even wore similar silver ensembles for their shows.


Disney's Fox Takeover

Season 10, Episode 5: When You Dish Upon A Star
Predicted: 1998
Came true: 2017
After a trip to Springfield, director Ron Howard pitches a screenplay that Homer wrote to producer Brian Glazer of 20th Century Fox. At the beginning of the scene, a sign can be seen at the Fox studio lot that reveals the company is now “A Division of Walt DisneyCo.”
Cut to nearly 20 years later and this sale is officially underway, with the news breaking that Disney has reached a deal to acquire $66.1 billion-worth of Fox on Dec. 14, 2017.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

9 things you didn't know about Freemasonry

The back of a U.S. dollar bill, featuring the obverse of the Great Seal of the United States - an all-seeing eye atop an uncompleted pyramid.    AP PHOTO Share     Tweet    Reddit    Flipboard    Email (CBS News) "Sunday Morning" looks at the rumors, fears and conspiracy theories sparked by the Freemasons' fraternal order, its secrets and rituals. <script async src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-9153021861778831"      crossorigin="anonymous"></script> 1. When meeting, Masons do not discuss religion or politics. "There are certain subjects which are prevented or we simply proscribe from discussing within the lodge," Piers Vaughan, master of St. John's Lodge #1 in New York, told Mo Rocca. "And religion is one. Politics is another." One of the world's leading experts on Freemasonry confirms. "Do they discuss forms of politics and event...

What is ISLAM

This article is about the religion. For the history of Islamic civilization, see  History of Islam . For other uses, see  Islamds(disambiguation) . Part of  a series  on Islam Beliefs [hide] Oneness   of   God Prophets Revealed books Angels Predestination Day of Resurrection Practices [hide] Profession of faith Prayer Fasting Alms-giving Pilgrimage Texts  and  laws [hide] Quran Tafsir Sunnah  ( Hadith ,  Sirah ) Sharia   (law) Fiqh   (jurisprudence) Kalam   (dialectic) History [hide] Timeline Muhammad Ahl al-Bayt Sahabah Rashidun Imamate Caliphate Spread of Islam Culture  and  society [hide] Academics Animals Art Calendar Children Demographics Denominations Economics Education Feminism Festivals Finance LGBT Madrasa Moral teachings Mosque Philosophy Poetry Politics Proselytizing Science Social welfare Women...

Ancient Egypt

Egypt is a country in North Africa, on the Mediterranean Sea, and is home to one of the oldest civilizations on earth. The name 'Egypt' comes from the  Greek   Aegyptos which was the Greek pronunciation of the Egyptian name 'Hwt-Ka-Ptah' ("Mansion of the Spirit of Ptah"), originally the name of the  city  of  Memphis . Memphis was the first capital of Egypt and a famous religious and trade centre; its high status is attested to by the Greeks alluding to the entire country by that name. To the Egyptians themselves, their country was simply known as  Kemet  which means 'Black Land' so named for the rich, dark soil along the  Nile  River where the first settlements began. Later, the country was known as  Misr  which means 'country', a name still in use by Egyptians for their nation in the present day. Egypt thrived for thousands of years (from c. 8000 BCE to c. 30 BCE) as an independent nation whose culture was famous for great c...