Lenny and Carl

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Lenny Leonard and Carl Carlson
The Simpsons characters
Lennyandcarl.png
Lenny (left) with Carl
Information
Voiced by
Gender Male
First appearance
The Simpsons

Lenford "Lenny" Leonard and Carlton "Carl" Carlson are two supporting characters in the Fox animated series The Simpsons, voiced by Harry Shearer and Hank Azaria, respectively. They are best friends of Homer Simpson and work with him at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant. Lenny and Carl are rarely seen apart and have a close relationship. Each possesses a master's degree in nuclear physics, but are often portrayed as blue-collar working men.

Lenny Leonard[edit]

Lenny is voiced by Harry Shearer. He is friends with Carl, Moe Szyslak, Barney Gumble and Homer Simpson. He works at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant and possesses a master's degree in nuclear physics, but he is often portrayed as a blue-collar working man.

Personality[edit]

Despite being shown in the First Church of Springfield, Lenny is a Buddhist — making him, Carl, and Lisa the only three Buddhists in Springfield.[1] Born in Chicago, he is also a war hero and a three-time juror. His grandmother spent 20 years in a Soviet labor camp, hinting that Lenny may have ancestors from the former Soviet Union, or have ancestors who were POWs.[2] During one episode, he is shown to be an adept guitar player.[3] "Homer the Great" reveals Lenny was member number 12 of the Springfield chapter of the Stonecutters secret society. In the episode "Half-Decent Proposal", Lenny is shown to have little regard for his own life: "Quick and pointless, that's the death for me." Another example of his apathy towards salvation is that he shrugs after being pulled from a ladder which would have seen him and Homer to safety. Excluding unnamed background characters, Lenny is one of the few Springfield residents to persistently resist the lure of the Movementarians. Lenny is a member of the Republican Party, as indicated in "Bart-Mangled Banner" (2004) when he reveals his Dole/Kemp '96 American flag tattoo. He is also shown to be a member of the NRA as seen in "The Cartridge Family", although in the episode Sideshow Bob Roberts expresses disdain for conservative talk show host Birch Barlow, proclaiming himself politically correct. His weapon of choice appears to be an AR-15 rifle, which he says "are manufactured for a reason: to take out today's modern super animals like the flying squirrel and the electric eel." [4]

He had plastic surgery when a sudden upswing in the price of power plant stock led to most of the employees (with the exception of Homer) to have a big profit ("Burns Verkaufen der Kraftwerk"). Following his plastic surgery Lenny had a diamond placed on one of his teeth, paid for by the Plant's dental plan.[5] In "Burns' Heir", both Mr. Burns and Waylon Smithers refer to him as "Leonard", the same way they refer to Homer as "Simpson", though in The Frying Game, Homer refers to him as "Lenford". Lenny's vices include alcohol (specifically Duff Beer, which he is often seen drinking at Moe's) and dressing up like a baby. He is also depicted as a cigarette smoker in early seasons.[6] In "Homerazzi" Lenny is hinted to be a transvestite when he dresses up like Seven of Nine from Star Trek: Voyager.[7] Lenny drives a green two-door hatch back, whose license plate reads "DUI GUY".[2] Lenny has a terrible relationship with his mother, who likes Carl and Moe more.[8] Vance Connor donated Lenny a kidney.[9] Lenny has a mysterious medical problem with his left eye, as he has been told (presumably by the doctor) that he cannot place various objects in it, like puzzle jiggs and pudding. When he gets hurt he often yells "Ow my eye! I'm not supposed to get (object) in it!". Lenny has stated that his father died in a war, although he does not seem to know which war it was. Six instances of his death are Treehouse of Horror XI, Treehouse of Horror XII, Treehouse of Horror XVI, The Wettest Stories Ever Told, Tales from the Public Domain, and Revenge Is a Dish Best Served Three Times (as "Poison Lenny").

Lenny appears to be well liked by the Simpson family – on one occasion, Marge and the kids build a prayer shrine for him when learning he was taken to the hospital. In "Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder", Homer goes bowling but tells Marge that Lenny was hospitalized; when Marge informs the kids, they respond the same way she did and shout, "Not Lenny!". In "Sleeping with the Enemy", the Simpson family has a cake inscribed "Happy Labor Day Lenny".[10] In "Pranksta Rap", it is revealed Marge has a picture of Lenny in her hair.[11]

Love life[edit]

Lenny is apparently divorced – in "Bart of War", Carl says that he sang "The Best Is Yet to Come" at Lenny's wedding,[10] although in another episode Lenny punches Carl for giving a bad speech at his wedding. Lenny is a persistent bachelor who has poor luck with women. In "Marge on the Lam", Lenny shaves the legs of a woman who calls him an idiot for not shaving in an upward direction.[12] In "Team Homer", Homer mentions to Moe that both Lenny and Carl are with their mistresses. In "Homer the Smithers" he is seen in the opening scene with his arm around a woman who appears to be his girlfriend.[13] In "Homer Simpson, This Is Your Wife", it's revealed that he had dated a woman in a Woody Woodpecker outfit at a fairground for three months until she left him for the man who cleans the vomit on the roller coaster.[14] Lenny had told Carl that he was married to a beauty queen, and as of the 8th season, Carl had yet to meet Lenny's wife. The episode "In Marge We Trust", it is revealed that Lenny made his Beauty-Queen wife up, and is unmarried.

Name[edit]

Lenny's full name has not been treated with consistency. After years of being identified only as "Lenny", Homer addressed him as "Lenford" in the season 13 episode "The Frying Game", and Lisa addressed him as "Mr. Leonard" in the season 15 episode "The Ziff Who Came To Dinner". This would appear to make his full name "Lenford Leonard" -- but Bart addresses him as "Lenny Lenford" in the season 23 episode "At Long Last Leave".

Carl Carlson[edit]

"Carl Carlson" redirects here. For the character from the television series Eureka, see List of Eureka episodes § ep5.

Carl is voiced by Hank Azaria. Along with Lenny, Carl is Homer's friend and co-worker (sometimes identified as his supervisor) at the Nuclear Power Plant. He likes to call himself "an urban Lenny." He attended Springfield A&M University.

Carl is an Icelandic-African American, with a master's degree in nuclear physics, fond of bowling and drinking at Moe's Tavern. Carl is frequently said to be among the most attractive men in Springfield; in "Principal Charming", Homer concludes that Carl is too attractive for Selma. According to "They Saved Lisa's Brain", he might be diabetic. According to "'Scuse Me While I Miss the Sky", Carl spent at least part of his boyhood in Iceland.

Character origins[edit]

In the early seasons, Carl was rarely seen with Lenny and did not have a consistent voice – on some occasions, he can be heard with Lenny's voice and vice versa. One example of Carl having Lenny's voice is in "Brush with Greatness". In an early 1991 episode, "Principal Charming", Carl's name is spelled "Karl", the same spelling seen for an unrelated character of the same season.

Personality[edit]

In the fourteenth season episode 'Scuse Me While I Miss the Sky, Carl made reference to his childhood in Iceland which hinted that he may have Icelandic ancestry. In the twenty-fourth season episode The Saga of Carl it was in fact revealed that he was adopted by a couple in Iceland. Carl often serves as a taciturn straight man to Homer and company, because of his harsh opinions of others,[citation needed] as seen in "Pygmoelian" when he makes everyone in Moe's Tavern cry and, breaking the fourth wall, explains: "See, this is why I don't talk much." He is offended when people stereotype him even though their stereotypes are usually correct. In "The Great Wife Hope", Homer asks Carl if he knows African-American boxer Dredrick Tatum; Carl takes offense, saying that just because he is African American, he doesn't know all the other African-American citizens in Springfield. However he then says that he indeed met Dredrick Tatum while he was at a party with Dr. Hibbert at Bleeding Gums Murphy's house (both of those characters are also African-American). In Children of a Lesser Clod, during a basketball game, Carl voices his irritation when everybody makes high expectations of his performance, and he remarks that he isn't a good player only because he is an African American, but proves himself, however, to be an amazing basketball player. Despite being against racism, Carl has some sort of dislike of Muslims, visible in Mypods and Boomsticks. He is the intellectual one, but apparently, Lenny, his best friend, dumbs him down for his own sake. In the episode "The Girl Who Slept Too Little", he tells Lenny to shut up as he was tired of "dumbing [him]self down for [Lenny].". Despite being a good friend, Carl can be very self-centered and workaholic at times – in The Devil Wears Nada, Carl becomes the new supervisor of Homer's sector (for being the most competent of them), and starts to abuse his position by forcing Homer to become his assistant, making him do even the mostly simple and unnecessary tasks (much to Homer's dismay).

Love life[edit]

During a conversation in the Springfield Hub, Carl and Bernice Hibbert are hinted to have had a past relationship, that Carl wants to rekindle. It is implied, however, that he has a wife in "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday", when he says he will give a ring to his wife for their anniversary. Also, he is shown with a woman (presumably his wife) attending Homer's marriage class in "Secrets of a Successful Marriage". He also mentions having a family in "HOMR". In "Lisa the Drama Queen", he appears in a car with Lenny and two women, possibly one is his wife.

Relationship with each other[edit]

Lenny and Carl are best friends, as they are rarely seen apart; their other friends are Homer, and regulars at Moe's including Barney Gumble and Moe Szyslak.[15] Homer repeatedly confuses Lenny and Carl, and is shocked to learn on one occasion that Lenny is white, and Carl is black. To guide himself, Homer has "Lenny = White, Carl = Black" on his hand. He once muttered to himself, "Is that right?" while reading it.[16] In "Helter Shelter", Homer exclaims, "That's Lenny? I wanted the black one!" When Mr. Burns appears on a radio show in an attempt to boost his popularity in "Monty Can't Buy Me Love", Homer tells him that he has a list of jokes explaining the differences between white and black people; Homer later states, "White guys have names like Lenny, whereas black guys have names like Carl."

There are occasional homosexual overtones in Lenny's and Carl's relationship. In another episode, "'Scuse Me While I Miss the Sky", various characters look at the stars to "see into their souls". Lenny sees Carl's face in the sky, who also sees his own face.[17] At times, Carl gets annoyed at Lenny. In "Mountain of Madness", when Carl learns that he is paired with Lenny in a team-building exercise on a power plant retreat, his irritated response is, "Aw, nuts. I mean... aw, nuts."

In the non-canon episode "Behind the Laughter", Lenny and Carl are constant companions, and Bart had apparently paid the two to kiss one another.[18] A running gag through the series is the possibility of a sexual relationship between Lenny and Carl. When Marge's Popsicle stick sculptures of Lenny and Carl are destroyed and mashed together, Lenny states, "I don't know where Carl ends and I begin!", to which Carl replies, "See, statements like that are why people think we're gay".[19]

Carl tells Seymour Skinner that "Marriage is gonna be great. Now you'll have someone who'll rub your back – without being asked" while glaring at Lenny, who sighs "Oh, not this again." Carl then responds "Yes, this again."[20] In one episode, Homer runs out of gay couples to marry; he speculates that Lenny and Carl might be interested, and Marge responds with "Don't you push them – they've gotta work that out for themselves."[21] In "Treehouse of Horror XVI", Lenny dies and sees the angels in Heaven take the form of Carl (although they're saying, "Hurry up or we'll be late for work at the plant!").[22] Once, Chief Wiggum remarks that Lenny's relationship with Carl is on the rocks.[23] In "Fat Man and Little Boy", Homer quotes to Lisa "You and science go together like Lenny and Carl – the science is Carl".[24] In "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play", Lenny and Carl see Homer and Marge kiss, prompting Lenny to remark, "Remember when we used to kiss like that . . . with our respective girlfriends?" [25]

Lenny's hero worship of Carl has reached a mounting point. In "Half-Decent Proposal", it's shown he carved Carl's face on a mountain, and called it Mount Carlmore. He later leaves a burning oil field, only because Carl arrived.[26] Lenny publishes a newspaper called The Lenny-Saver with the headline: "The Truth About Carl: He's Great." After displaying this, he sheds a tear and states that "it had to be told."[27] In the episode "Lisa the Drama Queen", Lenny and Carl are pictured driving a sports car through the woods with their two dates in the back of contrasting background.

During "Whiskey Business" in the 24th season Carl and Lenny hold hands together for a long moment and then release while standing together through a limo moonroof.[28]

Jobs[edit]

Lenny and Carl work at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant alongside Homer Simpson.[29] Despite his steady job, Lenny has been featured with several other jobs. On one occasion, he is promoted to head of the power plant when Mr. Burns goes bankrupt; which Smithers later describes to Homer Simpson as a "reign of terror". Homer considers Lenny to be the second richest man he knows.[30] However, Lenny is once shown living in a dilapidated house, and asks Marge to not tell anyone how he lives.[31] In one episode, he also works at a call center for the power company in Springfield. In another episode, he is shown living in a fancy, well-furnished modern apartment that happens to share a wall with a jai-alai court. In a "future episode", it's shown Lenny is once again in charge of the power plant.[32] On one occasion, it is implied he is an undercover agent whose target is Homer.[33] At the Adult Education Annex, Lenny teaches a class on "How To Chew Tobacco".[34] In one of Homer's daydreams, it's shown that Lenny is the President of the United States.[35] Lenny is also a successful writer who wrote a series of mystery novels, one of them entitled The Murderer Did It, which are called "scary good fun" by Stephen King. Lenny has a short career as an actor in which he has a minor role in a horror movie that Homer takes Bart and Lisa to. His acting is shown to be a parody towards bad acting in horror movies.

Reception[edit]

Lenny and Carl together rank sixth on IGN's Top 25 Simpsons Peripheral Characters.[36]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Bill Frielberger (writer) (2001-12-16). "She of Little Faith". The Simpsons. Season 8. Episode 23. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  2. ^ a b Ian Maxtone-Graham (writer) (2007-10-07). "Midnight Towboy". The Simpsons. Season 19. Episode 03. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  3. ^ Mike Scully (writer) (2002-11-02). "How I Spent My Strummer Vacation". The Simpsons. Season 14. Episode 2. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  4. ^ Michael Price (writer) (2007-04-29). "The Boys of Bummer". The Simpsons. Season 18. Episode 18. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  5. ^ Jay Kogen and Wallace Wolodarsky (writer) (1993-03-11). "Last Exit to Springfield". The Simpsons. Season 4. Episode 17. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  6. ^ Ian Maxtone-Graham (writer) (2006-03-12). "The Seemingly Never-Ending Story". The Simpsons. Season 17. Episode 13. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  7. ^ J. Stewart Burns (writer) (2007-03-25). "Homerazzi". The Simpsons. Season 18. Episode 16. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  8. ^ Joel H. Cohen (writer) (2007-05-11). "Mona Leaves-a". The Simpsons. Season 19. Episode 11. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  9. ^ "Take My Life, Please". The Simpsons. 2009-02-17. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  10. ^ a b Jon Vitti (writer) (2004-11-21). "Sleeping with the Enemy". The Simpsons. Season 16. Episode 03. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  11. ^ Matt Selman (writer) (2005-02-13). "Pranksta Rap". The Simpsons. Season 16. Episode 09. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  12. ^ Bill Canterbury (writer) (1993-11-04). "Marge on the Lam". The Simpsons. Season 5. Episode 06. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  13. ^ "SNPP; Homer the Smithers". Snpp.com. 1996-02-21. Retrieved 2014-04-16. 
  14. ^ "BBC; Homer Simpson, This Is Your Wife". BBC News. 2004-12-23. Retrieved 2014-04-16. 
  15. ^ Kevin Curran (writer) (2005-05-01). "Don't Fear the Roofer". The Simpsons. Season 16. Episode 16. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  16. ^ "SNPP: Lenny = White, Carl = Black". Retrieved 2014-04-16. 
  17. ^ The Simpsons "'Scuse Me While I Miss the Sky" March 30, 2003
  18. ^ The Simpsons "Behind the Laughter" May 21, 2000
  19. ^ The Simpsons "Ice Cream of Margie (with the Light Blue Hair)" November 26, 2006
  20. ^ The Simpsons "My Big Fat Geek Wedding" April 18, 2004
  21. ^ The Simpsons "There's Something About Marrying" February 20, 2005
  22. ^ The Simpsons "Treehouse of Horror XVI" November 6, 2005
  23. ^ The Simpsons "Thank God It's Doomsday" May 8, 2005
  24. ^ The Simpsons "Fat Man and Little Boy" November 12, 2004
  25. ^ The Simpsons "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play" May 21, 2006
  26. ^ The Simpsons "Half-Decent Proposal" February 10, 2002
  27. ^ The Simpsons "Fraudcast News" May 23, 2004
  28. ^ The Simpsons "Whiskey Business" May 05, 2013
  29. ^ John Swartzwelder (writer) (1990-03-18). "Life on the Fast Lane". The Simpsons. Season 1. Episode 09. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  30. ^ John Swartzwelder (writer) (1997-02-02). "Mountain of Madness". The Simpsons. Season 8. Episode 12. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  31. ^ Dan Greaney (writer) (1997-12-07). "Realty Bites". The Simpsons. Season 9. Episode 9. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  32. ^ Greg Daniels (writer) (1995-03-19). "Lisa's Wedding". The Simpsons. Season 6. Episode 19. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  33. ^ John Frink, Don Payne (writers) (2004-03-28). "The Wandering Juvie". The Simpsons. Season 15. Episode 16. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  34. ^ Greg Daniels (writer) (1994-05-19). "Secrets of a Successful Marriage". The Simpsons. Season 5. Episode 22. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  35. ^ John Swartzwelder (writer) (1998-10-20). "The Wizard of Evergreen Terrace". The Simpsons. Season 10. Episode 02. Fox Broadcasting Company. 
  36. ^ "The Simpsons: Top 25 Peripheral Characters". IGN. 2012-02-16. Retrieved 2014-04-16. 

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