‘The Simpsons' Upcoming Guests Include Kieran Culkin, Viola Davis, Idris Elba; Matt Groening on How to Liberate Parents from MAGA: ‘Delete Fox News'
Also on board: Danny Pudi ('Community'), Adam Pally, and Brendan and Domhnall Gleeson, together at last!
More from Variety
Sterling K. Brown and Dan Fogelman Preview 'Paradise' Season 2 With Shailene Woodley as a Tour Guide at Elvis Presley's Graceland
Hulu Orders Two More Exclusive 'Family Guy' Holiday Episodes, Including Halloween Special This Fall
'American Dad' Producers on No Longer Getting to Swear as They Return to Fox; Upcoming Guest Stars Include RuPaul, Chris Pine
Also during the panel, 'Simpsons' producers shared a sneak preview of one of this year's 'Treehouse of Horror' Halloween segments. Idris Elba, Michael Keaton and Viola Davis will be guest starring on that episode, which will feature an opening from guest animator Stan Kelly (from The Onion).
Among those on stage: creator Matt Groening, executive producers Matt Selman and Mike Price, director Matt Faughnan and consulting producer/director David Silverman.
'I honestly thought 36 was where we were going to end it,' Groening joked. 'No, there's no end in sight. We're going to keep going. We're going to go until somebody dies. When you-know-who dies, 'The Simpsons' predicts the there will be dancing in the streets. Except President Vance will ban dancing.'
What's coming up next is the show's landmark 800th episode, which will air on Fox in February 2026. 'It's a big deal to do 800 shows, and so we're going to be doing two brand new original episodes that night,' Selman said. 'They're top secret for now, but I promise you, they'll be the best 800th episode of anything you've ever seen.'
After the recent 'Coldplay' incident, in which the Astronomer CEO and its HR head were caught in a tryst, a deep fake claimed that 'The Simpsons' predicted it. Selman warned fans not to fall for these 'Simpsons predicts the future' memes.
'Who could be so dumb?' he said. 'Of all our 800 episodes we did, that those two dumb white folks — I don't what to call, the takes are done — like, who could think, who has such little reactive intelligence that this is in 'The Simpsons'? And of course, the answer is hundreds and hundreds of millions of people! But when you see something that claims to be a 'Simpsons' prediction, just think for one second. Could that have possibly been on the show? That's all, just think one second and then comment on the thing 'they are magic, they're wizards, they did it again.'
Groening joking said he had the counterpoint: 'We are time travelers.' Here were some of his upcoming predictions: ''The Simpsons' predicts Elon Musk will be the first man to land on Mars. Amazingly, he will crash land on Mars. But he will radio back that he is marooned there forever. And most emotionally of all, he will be able to hear the cheering all the way.'
Also: 'America will return the Statue of Liberty to France and North America remembers what the word Liberty means.' And most importantly: ''The Simpsons' predicts kids across America will liberate their Republican parents from the cult of MAGA. And here's how you do it. Grab the TV remote, go to menu, go to controls, vertical controls, look for channel list and delete Fox News.'
As part of the event, the 'Simpsons' team attempted to play a game that Selman dubbed 'Simpsons Comic-Con Pictionary,' but the technology was not cooperating. Nonetheless, during that segment, guest animators/writers Michael Cusack ('Smiling Friends') and Mike McMahan ('Solar Opposites') came on stage to also talk and ask about 'The Simpsons.'
And of course, addressed was the recent surprising uptick in online hot takes about Marge Simpson dying in the show's Season 36 finale. As Selman recently told Variety, she had done no such thing and that what happened in the recent season finale of the series was not canon, since 'there is no canon,' he said at the time. ''The Simpsons' doesn't even have canon!'
'She's like in every episode,' Selman said at the panel. 'There's a new economy of headlines that try to trick you. I call it 'trick bait.' The million headlines saying 'Simpsons' kills Marge, and then even those articles admit it, of course, 'they didn't do we just wanted you to read our headline.' So again, just a little ounce of thinking after you read something make your lives a little better.'
Best of Variety
New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week
'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts?
Final Emmy Predictions: Talk Series and Scripted Variety - New Blood Looks to Tackle Late Night Staples
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
"If This Happens To You, Run As Fast As You Can": 29 Women Share The Subtle But Important "Red Flags" That Revealed That Their Partner Was Misogynistic
I asked women of the BuzzFeed Community to share the subtle red flags they didn't notice at first, but — in hindsight — hinted at just how misogynistic their significant others ended up being. These "girls' girls" shared their raw, honest experiences, so here are 29 subtle but significant red flags they shared: Note: Submissions have also been sourced from a previous installment of this post, which curated answers from Reddit as well. a man is in his thirties and still uses 'girls' instead of 'women' when referring to dating. 'I've dated some great girls, but haven't found the one yet,' as opposed to 'I've been dating some great women but haven't found the one yet.'" —ruemclanahan 2."When all their favorite content creators (writers, journalists, influencers, etc.) are white men. And they don't even notice until you mention it — but then once they realize it, they quickly find a way to rationalize it to you and continue ignoring women and BIPOC creators." —madkz 3."In addition to 'nice guy,' any man who describes himself as 'chivalrous' or 'a gentleman' on a dating app is an immediate left swipe. You don't have to say these things; your actions should show them." —doofenshmirtzevilinc 4."When they're super quick to put down media/books/music that is mostly enjoyed, created, and consumed by women. AKA, they think all rom-coms are trash and not 'intellectually stimulating,' but will happily sit through a three-hour, lowly rated action movie with no plot, just lots of gun shooting. You don't have to love Taylor Swift, but I'm gonna raise an eyebrow if you turn her off in the car because 'all she does is write break-up songs.' —u/Ok-Wait-8281 5."A seriously overlooked red flag: saying he is looking for a woman 'capable of an intellectual conversation' on his dating profile. The thing he's not saying is that he doesn't think that is a given for women…" —hereforthedramz 6."When they preface things with, 'You might not get this,' or, 'You might not understand this.' Yes, I am a girl. No, I am not an idiot." —u/This_Silent_Tragedy "Especially when it's an extremely simple concept that he's trying to explain. A guy that I work with was trying to explain his views on Roe v. Wade getting overturned and began it with, 'You probably aren't going to understand this...' I'm a software programmer; I'm clearly not dense." —u/lilimac416 7."When men think you need to be told how to do something just because you do it differently than they do. He once said to me, 'Here, let me cut that for you because you're not doing it right.' Uh, no…I want to cut it this way, and if I wanted help, I'd ask. It's degrading after years and years of it. Just because I do something differently than you does not make me wrong." —Anonymous 8."When they strongly identify with fictional characters who treat women poorly, because they think they're badass or cool." —fanosaurusrex 9."My ex used to jokingly say, 'Girls don't poop.' I didn't think much of it at first, but then I realized that he was placing me on a pedestal, and when I didn't live up to these unrealistic expectations of being this perfect, hot all the time, poopless fartless, sex machine, I was 'too much' or 'not enough' or a mess or whatever else." —u/ExistentialHousecat "My grandmother used to tell this story about a distant male relative of hers who divorced his wife because he 'caught' her removing sock lint from between her toes. This was such a disgusting act to him that he couldn't stand to be married to her any longer. My grandmother always told this as a cautionary tale about how a woman always has to make sure to act properly or her husband would leave her. My mother didn't quite agree." —u/brutalbeast 10."When they interrupt or talk over their partner, repeatedly." —u/Noah_Pinyin "I once dated a man that interrupted me constantly. I, assuming it was unintentional, told him what he was doing, and he stopped. Then, he replaced doing that by saying, 'You talk a lot.' In reality, he talked fucking constantly, and any of my part of the conversation was maybe one-third of the time of his. Eventually he started using the phrase 'equal rights, equal lefts.' I can't believe I stayed so long." —u/Dorkadoodle men pretend to care about women's rights, but only engage with them in an abstract way, while continuing to embody the same problematic dynamics that they claim to hate in their personal lives. This is exactly why I roll my eyes at men who say, 'Not all men,' 'There's good men out there,' or, 'I would never do this and that.'" "My good friend is married to a guy who is extremely involved in social justice movements. You would think he'd be more socially aware, but he talks over her constantly and openly patronizes her if he thinks she's said something wrong. It's so uncomfortable to watch." —u/bucky_list 12."When we watched movies and there was a scene with all women, my ex would always feel the need to comment, 'Here is the obligatory female scene to get the chicks to watch.' He said this emphatically during Endgame when the women had a fight scene. He made a similar comment with the latest Ghostbusters about how stupid the movie was going to be because of the female cast. As if women don't or can't contribute to a plot in any realistic way — we are just filler until the men can carry the plot forward." —Anonymous 13."When they correct you on literally EVERYTHING. My ex corrected me about the name of a certain muscle. I have a degree in health science, which involved no less than six anatomy or physiology courses, and I got 98% in all of them. He worked in finance. He would also 'test' me on things typically feminine like knowledge of makeup products or names of clothing styles." —jess_is_a_babe91 14."When they're skeptical of educated women or women that make good money." —u/productofoctober "I make a good living. I worked so hard to get where I am, and I can't tell you how many MEN daily are like, 'What guy do you sleep with to get these things?' Like, no, women don't need men to have nice things!!!!" —u/lmc152 15."When their opinion always matters more than yours. Ex: It's your birthday, and you love sushi, but your BF hates it. He refused to take you to a sushi restaurant, even though they offer options other than sushi. Or he will drag you to whatever movie he pleases, knowing that you don't want to see it. But he's unwilling to sit through a movie that you picked but he isn't interested in." —identicalsnowflakes 16."My ex said he couldn't vote for a woman because women are too emotional and can't make decisions that aren't based on emotion." —Anonymous 17."We were married for 30 years, and over the years I achieved a much higher level of success and made three times his salary. Nonetheless, he was constantly reminding me that I was still less intelligent than him and just lucky because I am an attractive woman. I think we all know who was really smarter." —Anonymous 18."When your S.O. complains about women in sports. Female athletes and sporting leagues should be seen as their own thing that operates in their own competition, rather than an extension of the men's league." —u/little_cranberry5 19."I find it odd when men never let you pay for anything. If I have a career and I'm making a decent income, then I want to pick up the tab sometimes. It feels infantilizing if they insist on paying each and every time. It's almost as though they don't think I'm self-sufficient enough." —u/starskyandbutch "It's not just the patronizing attitude. It's also setting a tone of being indebted to them, financially or morally. I've yet to see a man who insists on paying for absolutely every single thing in a relationship, who doesn't bring it up when shit hits the fan." —u/petronia1 "When they order for you on a date. I went out with a guy who insisted on buying me expensive cocktails when I said I wanted beer and was paying for it myself. He kept ordering the cocktails for me thinking I'd be impressed. I was not!" —jexxls 20."Every time a celebrity announced a pregnancy, my ex would go off on a rant about how they weren't going to be hot anymore and that pregnant women were 'damaged goods.' I asked him once if he'd see me as damaged good if I was pregnant, and he said that he would and that pregnancy was apparently a 'hall pass for men to cheat,' because it made women so unattractive. Then, he said I'd have a maximum of six weeks to get back in shape before he'd dump me." "Fifteen years later, I'm married to an amazing husband and about to give birth to baby number three. I can't even begin to tell you how badly my ex's comments have fucked up my mental health. Each pregnancy has been plagued by insecurity, doubt, body issues, anxiety, and feelings of inadequacy." —u/Kimmbley 21."Making fun of you and then saying, 'Don't be so sensitive, I'm just joking' when you let them know you don't appreciate it. Blaming you for their garbage behavior is gaslighting at its finest. If this happens to you, run as fast as you can in the other direction." —Anonymous 22."Never taking accountability for his actions. He was always faultless; everything was deflected, always turned back on me. His domineering statements always, ALWAYS began with 'You need to...' or 'You should...' or 'I told you not to...', or my absolute favourite, 'The problem with you is...'" "Five years of gaslighting before some amazing and on-the-ball maternity staff when I was having his baby helped me to finally get clued into how toxic and misogynistic he was, and that his behaviour toward me (and the baby) was not okay!" —Anonymous 23."They're only affectionate when they're getting intimate before sex. Any other time they're asked for a back rub or foot massage before going to bed, they insist they're tired and just flip over to go to sleep because they know you're not in the mood for sex. Like, they think a massage or touch is a prelude to sex every time. This gets annoying and erodes the relationship." —Anonymous 24."When your partner always defends his mates' bad behavior(s) and makes up excuses. For example, I have a history of sexual abuse and rape that my BF knows about. My BF's friend makes a rape joke. I call him out and tell him it's not funny. Regardless of how he reacts, my BF immediately jumps in and tells me I'm sensitive and need to take a joke. I tell him he knows my past and that he is being extremely disrespectful. Now I'm the bad guy. But now, I can't trust my BF or his friends." —Anonymous 25."Pay very close attention to how a man treats his mother. I missed so many obvious signs between my ex-husband and his mom. He was rude, dismissive, controlling, and cruel — all traits that (eventually) spilled over into our relationship. I just thought he didn't like his mom. Turns out he didn't like women, at all." —Anonymous 26."When he has applied different expectations to you than to himself. Though it has always been there, I wasn't staring at it so blatantly until we had a child, and now I can't unsee it. He can take off to play golf or go to the gym when he wants, but I need to find ways to get my hair done or nails done during my work hours." "If our child is sick, I'm the one taking off work. There is never even a thought that he should do it. When pushed, his response was, 'Well, you are the mother.' And if I were to recall these moments, he would swear they weren't sexist. 🙄" —Anonymous 27."When he is shocked that you know anything about a stereotypically male topic." "For example, I once went on a date with a guy that drove a DS Automobile. He thought that it was amazing that 1) I recognized the brand, and 2) I knew that DS is a premium model for Citroen, 'cause 'girls don't know cars.' SMH." —u/HappyHermitLife "I used to have a friend in high school who would constantly ask for help, but would always ignore my advice. The best part was that if any of his guy friends offered the same advice, he would be more than happy to do it. But that dude always came to me for any 'physical' help, like completing projects or assignments. He was a typical 'wanna be computer nerd', but only discussed the topic with his guy friends, even though I was equally interested, if not more than them." I guess it wasn't a surprise that he called me a whore in front of our grade anonymously out of spite and jealousy, but I was smart enough to find out it was him, and guess who got suspended?" —Anonymous 28."When he tries to control things like where you go for dates and what you eat at a restaurant. He always has a reason, too, saying things like it's 'because he knows food better than I do.' He gives presents HE wants me to have, regardless of what I want/like." —u/boo-pspps "I knew a guy who had a bad habit of responding, 'Women shouldn't' or 'Women shouldn't be allowed to' in conversations about certain subjects. I don't talk to him anymore." —Anonymous finally, "He didn't believe women's struggles were real because 'he never experienced them.' I tried talking to my ex about some issues that we face as women that men don't (not walking alone at night, wage gap, being treated as less than in the workplace, being sexually harassed at work, mansplaining, lol), and he explained to me that none of that could be real because he never experienced it. I looked at him and asked if he understood what he just said, and he was genuinely confused." —thetinyelephant BuzzFeeders, now it's your turn. What are some subtle but significant signs of misogyny you've noticed in relationships or even in friendships? Tell us about them in the comments below or via this anonymous form. Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Finance Meets Fashion: Dan Ives and Snow Milk Drop Streetwear Collab
Wall Street's 'Best Dressed Man' Launches Apparel Line Dan Ives x Snow Milk BROOKLYN, N.Y., Aug. 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- In an unexpected fusion of finance and street fashion, acclaimed Wall Street analyst Dan Ives is partnering with Brooklyn-based designer Snow Milk to launch an exclusive, unisex capsule collection. The Snow Milk x Dan Ives Collection features fashion with graffiti-inspired graphics and various designs associated with Dan Ives' colorful and unique fashion style. 'This collaboration means a lot to me. It's with a designer I admire and wear regularly,' said Dan Ives. 'I wanted to have clothes that many people inside and outside the Wall Street world can wear and have fun with. I'm excited about this fashion line." The collection includes men's and women's staples— including a long-sleeve button-down shirt for women and a short-sleeve polo shirt for men stamped with custom artwork, including one with a sleeve portrait of Ives sporting his well-known sunglasses and a cap. Founded by musician and artist, Doobie Duke Sims, Snow Milk has fans ranging from Whoopi Goldberg to tennis legend, Novak Djokovic. This marks the brand's first collaboration with a figure from the world of finance. 'We are so excited at Snow Milk to partner with Dan Ives, who has become globally known for his stock picks and colorful fashion sense,' said Doobie Duke Sims. The Snow Milk x Dan Ives Collection will be available online at and as well as in pop-up stores in New York City and Los Angeles, among other locations. About Dan Ives Dan is a veteran tech analyst with more than two decades of experience covering software and the broader technology landscape on Wall Street. His insights are regularly featured in global publications, and he is a frequent guest on financial television networks. In 2024, the New York Post named him the 'Best Dressed Man on Wall Street' in a featured fashion profile. He holds a B.S. in Finance from Penn State University and an MBA from the University of Maryland. About Snow Milk Snow Milk is a Brooklyn-based clothing label known for its unique, new and upcycled ethically produced streetwear. The brand focuses on creating one-of-a-kind pieces by hand-printing designs onto new and upcycled clothing. Each piece is individually numbered starting from 1 in 2021 and now currently at #70,000 in 2025. Media contact: Christina Scolaro, Zito Partners cscolaro@ +1 (917) 733-9697 A photo accompanying this announcement is available at


Geek Tyrant
27 minutes ago
- Geek Tyrant
AMC Theatres is Planning to Shorten Its Pre-Show Ads Following Blowback From Studios — GeekTyrant
Everyone who frequents movie theaters these days is well aware that when the lights dim, there's still a fair amount of time before your movie begins. You have ads, trailers, and the theatre's commercial to sit through before you even get to the movie you came for, and sometimes I am left wondering what it is I came to watch after seeing all the content that came before it. But one of the country's biggest chains is looking to downsize that wait time. After blowback from some major Hollywood studios over AMC Theatres' decision to book more ads before each movie's showtime, Deadline reports that the No. 1 circuit is working to shorten its preshow. It's still early and specific details are unknown, but there's hope that a shave can be done by year's end. News leaked back in June that as of July 1, AMC had worked a deal with National CineMedia Inc. to run spots during each movie's pre-shows, specifically a platinum spot. AMC's rivals, i.e. the repsective No. 2 and 3 chains Regal and Cinemark, already were participating in this ad revenue stream. AMC didn't see any business deteriorating for the competition, and it opted into the National CineMedia pact. Execs at the major studios were upset by the move, angry that moviegoers no longer were sitting through their in-cinema trailers for future movies due to lengthy preshows — a very powerful piece of marketing as moviegoing begets more moviegoing. Adding more fuel to the fire was AMC running a notice on its ticket-buying portal: 'Please allow 25-30 extra minutes for trailers and additional content before the movie starts.' Some studio execs read that notice as, 'Hey, moviegoers, why don't you just skip the pre-show until the movie starts?' Myriad studios launched their own studies last month noticing that the preshows for the top three chains ran from 24-28 minutes before one particular new wide release that weekend in SoCal. One internal study observed that only 80% of the audience were in their seats to watch trailers a mere four minutes before a movie began. 80% sounds solid to me, and I would assume that those 20% are either running late, buying concessions, or hitting the bathroom before the movie starts. No one is truly paying attention to those ads, as people do their best these days to avoid commercials and ads wherever they come across them. But AMC shortening their intro sounds like a positive move to me, and executives can go on to pretend that the ads that remain are making a difference.