In its original broadcast, "Life on the Fast Lane" finished 11th in ratings for the week of March 12–19, 1990, with a
Nielsen rating of 17.5, equivalent to approximately 16.1 million viewing households. It was the highest-rated show on Fox that week, beating
Married... with Children. Since airing, the episode has received mostly positive reviews from television critics.
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 "a very good, very assured episode that has seen some viewers (particularly female ones) tearing out their hair at the conclusion". IGN'' named Albert Brooks' guest performance in this episode, along with his four other appearances, the best guest appearance in the show's history. In a DVD review of the first season David B. Grelck rated this episode a 4(of 5), placing it along with "
Homer's Night Out" as his favorites of the season. Colin Jacobson at DVD Movie Guide said in a review that it was "another good but not great episode" and added that "Albert Brooks seriously enlivened 'Life [on the Fast Lane]'... Jacques becomes funny not so much due to the lines themselves; it's Brooks' readings that make them work." Another DVD review from The Digital Bits called it "one of the first season's best loved episodes". In a 2000
Entertainment Weekly article,
Matt Groening ranked this episode as his second favorite episode of all time, behind "
Bart the Daredevil". The
Orlando Sentinels Gregory Hardy named it the fifteenth best episode of the show with a sports theme. The episode's reference to
An Officer and a Gentleman was named the 23rd greatest film reference in the history of the show by
Total Film's Nathan Ditum.
Simpsons co-developer
Sam Simon named it his favorite episode of all time in 2009.
Legacy The March 15, 2004 edition of the
Dear Abby column was pulled, as it had emerged that one of the letters was a fake. A newspaper editor noticed that the problem cited in the letter was identical to the plot of "Life on the Fast Lane". Kathie Kerr, a spokeswoman for the
Universal Press Syndicate, said "it did sound too similar not to be a hoax". ==References==