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Matt Groening was born in Portland, Oregon on 15th February 1954. His father, a cartoonist himself, encouraged his son’s primitive doodlings. Matt enjoyed drawing from an early age, but felt a strong loathing for coloring books, mainly because he was not able to stay inside the lines. In primary school, little left-handed Matt drew cartoons when he should have been paying attention, which left strange gaps in his education. To this day, he does not know his state capitals, and do not bother asking him to multiply any numbers between 7 and 13. He’ll just stare at wewe blankly.

In high school, Matt continued his frivolous ways. He drew cartoons in every class, even Physical Education, injuring himself severely while doodling on the parallel bars. Until he was kicked off the staff, Matt drew cartoons for the school newspaper. Feeling the revolutionary enthusiasm of the time, Matt and his hippie pals formed their own political party, the Teens for Decency. Responding to the campaign slogan, "If You’re Against Decency, Then What Are wewe For?” his confused classmates elected Matt Student Body President and immediately regretted it.

Matt attended the Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, taking full advantage of the school’s no-grade, no-required-courses policies. There he met fellow cartoonist Lynda Barry, who inspired Matt to keep plugging away at doing cartoons when he was unsure of himself. He graduated in 1977 and drove to Los Angeles to become a writer, where his car broke down in the fast lane of the Hollywood Freeway just above the Vine mitaani, mtaa exit at 2 am, later inspiring "Life in Hell", Matt’s first cartoon series.

However, things did not happen quite as he planned. Instead of uandishi newspaper au magazine articles, he worked as a chauffeur and "biographer" for an 88-year-old director of bad movies. Groening drove the man around and listened to his stories. In the evening, he typed up notes about the stories. This was not a very good start for a hopeful writer.

He lived in a small apartment. The guy downstairs liked to play loud rock ‘n’ roll in the middle of the night. At first, Matt tried to get back at him kwa blasting reggae music. He finally got his point across kwa dropping a cinder block on the floor, which knocked out his noisy neighbor's ceiling light. But this small victory didn’t make up for his other disappointments. Matt could not stand the Los Angeles smog and unattractive vistas. In addition, his lack of professional progress was a big letdown.

So, for relief, he decided to send a message to his Marafiki back home. It wasn’t a boring letter telling about his unhappiness. Instead, it was a comic book about life in Los Angeles. He called it "Life in Hell". The comic strip starred Binky, the lonely buck-toothed rabbit (In 1985, he told Los Angeles magazine that Binky was the "stupidest" name he could think of) and it soon became an underground success in L.A. Matt found himself making 500 copies instead of 20. In 1980, the strip started to appear in the Los Angeles Reader, a weekly paper where Matt worked as an editor/delivery man.

But many readers were annoyed kwa Binky’s habit of yelling about hip slang like "boogie" and ambience." To stir zaidi interest in the strip, Matt changed the rabbit from a grump to a victim. "The sekunde my characters began to be tortured and alienated, the popularity began," he told Newsweek in 1987. "The zaidi I tortured them, the zaidi the readers loved me." The adventures of Binky - and his girlfriend Sheba and one-eared son Bongo - struck a chord. The strip is not the best drawn in the world. That’s OK. The words are the real attraction. Groening often crams every spare bit of space around his drawings with text.

The comic strip is still running and currently appears in about 250 newspapers around the world, much to Matt’s amazement. There have also been eight "Life in Hell" vitabu published, all but one with the word "hell" in the title. The book Matt was recently working on in the series is titled "Binky’s Guide To Love", a cynical view of upendo and human relations, which is basically what the entire series is about.

In 1985, renowned film and televisheni producer James L. Brooks, who also founded Gracie Films, showed interest in Matt’s work and asked him if he would be interested in working on some animated projects in the future for his comedy series The Tracey Ullman Show. Matt accepted the offer, and a meeting was set to discuss it further. 15 dakika before the meeting took place, he was told he had to come up with something new and original. As the legend goes, while waiting in Brook’s foyer he hurriedly sketched a quirky looking family consisting of one father, one mother, two girls and one boy - and named them each after his own family members (with the exception of Bart).

In the meeting, the executives liked what they saw, but they wanted to know a little more. Groening recalls: "They asked me: ‘What does the father do?’ and I answered, ‘He works at a nuclear plant.’ They laughed, and then I knew we were in."

Matt currently lives in Los Angeles with his radiant wife, Deborah Caplan; his sons Homer and Abe; and zaidi pet ducks than wewe can shake a stick at.
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Part one: link
Part two:
link
Thought wewe guys might enjoy watching this since it's around the holidays. wewe may have already seen these pictures, but if wewe have it never hurts to see them again. Let me know how wewe think of the video that I made using animoto. I am kind of stalling as wewe can probably tell since for some reason the foramu au ukuta isn't working out for me and I need to type a certain number of characters before it'll allow me to publish this.
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I have even zaidi ideas. Hope wewe like them!

The Kids Are Always Right

When an motivational speaker convinces Principal Skinner and Superintendent Chambers to do a expeirment for the school and allow the parents to let the kids have one week and listen to whatever they want. Some of the parents gets outraged because of it, but Marge feels that no matter what the kids still need the parents. When the week begins, the parents must listen to their kids and do not argue with them. However, when Bart goes overbaord with this experiment, it casues the other kids to go overboard which leads to Marge...
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Source: fox, mbweha
added by jlhfan624
Source: fox, mbweha
added by jlhfan624
Source: fox, mbweha
added by jlhfan624
Source: fox, mbweha
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Source: fox, mbweha
added by jlhfan624
Source: fox, mbweha
added by jlhfan624
Source: fox, mbweha