WikiLeaks' Assange to appear on Simpsons | Bangkok Post: tech

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WikiLeaks' Assange to appear on Simpsons

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is to make a guest appearance as himself on the 500th episode of the Simpsons, the irreverent US television show's producers said Tuesday.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, pictured in 2011, is to make a guest appearance as himself on the 500th episode of the Simpsons, the irreverent US television show's producers said Tuesday.

A post on the Simpsons' Twitter feed linked to a report which "exclusively" reveals that Assange -- battling extradition to Sweden to face rape allegations -- will appear on the February 19 episode.

Playing up the cloak-and-dagger aspect, it said series creator Matt Groening "heard a rumor that the polarizing and elusive activist who runs the whistle-blowing website was interested in guest-starring on the long-running show.

"So we asked our casting director Bonnie Pietila -- who had been able to unearth Thomas Pynchon and got Tony Blair to do the show -- to find Mr. Assange. And she did," said Simpsons exec producer Al Jean.

Assange recorded his lines at a location unknown to Simpsons producers, Jean said, noting that Assange is still under house arrest in Britain, and that he directed the WikiLeaks founder remotely from Los Angeles.

"I was just given a number to call," said Jean in Entertainment Weekly, which said "We couldn't wait to leak" the news.

In the landmark episode, Homer and Marge discover that Springfield residents are holding a secret meeting to kick them out of town, for all the trouble they've caused over the years.

In a bid to clear their names, the Simpsons arrange to meet with Assange, "who's sort of their new (Ned) Flanders," the Simpsons' irritatingly pious neighbor.

Jean acknowledged that Assange, wanted on rape charges in Sweden and by US authorities over the massive leaking of sensitive diplomatic and other information, is "a controversial figure."

"There was discussion internally whether or not to have him on the show, but ultimately we went ahead and did it," said Jean, noting that "there's nothing we did that has anything to do with the legal situation that he's in.

"We wanted to make sure it was satirical, and he was willing to do that," he added.

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Writer: AFP News agency
Position: Agence France-Presse

Your comments

  • Discussion 1 : 01/02/2012 at 07:44 PM1

    This is great news, and so fitting. This whole propogandised situation belongs in the cartoons, and what better place than the Simpson's.

    With allegations of damaging national security, and breaches of diplomatic trust with Assange's making all the documents public, and transparent, they had to finally try to convict him on trumped up rape charges when there was no damage to any country's national security, or any damage for that matter, other than some good laughs.

    All the release of these documents did was give transparency to what the people pay for. It let the people know there were in fact real people in these positions that in most instances felt just the way everyone else thought. The smoke screen was removed, and the propoganda machine ended for a brief time. There was no damage to anyone's national security as everyone was made to believe, and all it did was give the people paying their wage a moment of hilarity reading the communications. This could only happen in the cartoons in real everyday life, so it is fitting he guest star on the Simpson's.

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