In its original broadcast, "22 Short Films About Springfield" finished tied for 73rd in the weekly ratings for the week of April 8–14, 1996, with a
Nielsen rating of 6.9. It was the seventh highest rated show from the
Fox network that week. It is
Bill Oakley's personal favorite episode, but he claimed that it is hated by two prominent (and unnamed) figures within the running of the show.
Entertainment Weekly, in 2003, placed the episode 14th on their top 25
The Simpsons episode list, praising the episode's structure and finding the
Pulp Fiction references "priceless". The episode is the favorite of British comedian
Jimmy Carr who, in 2003, called it "a brilliant pastiche of art cinema". In 2004,
Empire named the episode's
Pulp Fiction parody the seventh best film gag in the show, calling Wiggum and Snake bound and gagged with red balls in their mouths "the sickest visual gag in
Simpsons history".
Gary Russell and
Gareth Roberts, the authors of the book ''I Can't Believe It's a Bigger and Better Updated Unofficial Simpsons Guide
, called it "an untypical episode, and a very good one", naming the Skinner and Chalmers story as the best. Entertainment.ie who named it among the 10 greatest Simpsons
episodes of all time; The Guardian who named it one of the five greatest episodes in Simpsons
history; and, in early 2010, IGN named "A Fish Called Selma" the best episode of the seventh season, adding that "22 Short Films About Springfield" was "good competition" for the crown. When The Simpsons'' began streaming on
Disney+ in 2019, Oakley named this one of the best classic Simpsons episodes to watch on the service. Emily St. James praised the episode: "'22 Short Films' is fundamentally an experiment, an attempt by the series to do something different at a time when coming up with stories must have started to get exhausting. But it's also a wonderful reminder of how everybody on this show was the protagonist of some other, weirder show. The Simpsons might have been the center of the series, but they didn't need to be the only thing in it anymore. Springfield had ceased to be a solar system with them as the sun. Instead, everybody else had become stars of their own, and the show expanded into a galaxy."
Legacy Unproduced spin-off The episode sparked the idea among the staff for a spin-off series entitled
Springfield Stories or simply
Springfield. By 2006, the staff maintained that it was something that they would still be interested in doing, In 2018, Bill Oakley, the writer of the segment, posted the original draft for the segment on
Twitter. He said he believed it was the most famous thing he had written, and that it was also one of his favorites. Oakley responded immediately on Twitter, writing, "[I'm] not a fan of fairly big companies like GameSpot having famous actors perform scripts I wrote, verbatim, without giving me any sort of credit whatsoever." The video was taken down within days. In a 2021 interview with
The Hollywood Reporter, Oakley, Weinstein, animation director
Jim Reardon, voice actor
Hank Azaria and
Simpsons showrunner
Al Jean shared their thoughts about the popularity of "Steamed Hams". Azaria said he was confused about how popular the segment had become. Reardon became aware of it when his daughters pointed it out a few years prior. They shared their favorite "Steamed Hams" parodies, including one made with
Lego animation, one animating the characters in the style of the music video for the song "
Take On Me" by
A-ha, and one with the dialogue synchronized to the vocals of "
Basket Case" by
Green Day. Weinstein said that Groening also enjoyed the phenomenon. A series of short film
pastiches in 2025 recreate the scene in the style of the Soviet film
The Glass Harmonica, the German expressionist film
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and the 1981 comedy-drama film
My Dinner With Andre. ==Availability==