Broadcast and rereleases "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington" originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on September 26, 1991. The episode finished 36th in the ratings for the week of September 23–29, 1991, with a
Nielsen rating of 12.9, equivalent to approximately 11.9 million viewing households.
The Simpsons was the third highest-rated show on Fox that week, following
Married... with Children and
In Living Color. "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington" and the episode "
When Flanders Failed" were released on videocassette in 1999, entitled
The Best of the Simpsons. The episode was later included on the
Simpsons season three DVD set that was released on August 26, 2003. Wes Archer, David Silverman, Matt Groening, Al Jean, Mike Reiss, and Julie Kavner participated in the DVD's
audio commentary of the episode.
Critical reviews Since airing, the episode has received mostly positive reviews from television critics. The authors of the book ''I Can't Believe It's a Bigger and Better Updated Unofficial Simpsons Guide'',
Gary Russell and
Gareth Roberts, praised the episode for being one of the best Lisa-centric episodes, and called Lisa's talk with
Thomas Jefferson and her nightmare vision of politicians as pigs "especially worthy of note". Nate Meyers of Digitally Obsessed gave the episode a 4.5 rating and said it is one of the best episodes featuring Lisa, "complete with poignant observations about politics". The
Austin American-Statesman's Steven Stein said this was the first episode of
The Simpsons he saw. Even though he did not understand half the pop culture references, by the end of the episode he was a "
Simpsons convert". The episode was praised for its political satire. Bill Gibron of DVD Verdict called the episode a "biting political satire in the guise of a children's oratory contest [which] signifies that this season of the series will be all over the map, both emotionally and logically". Bryce Wilson of Cinema Blend said the episode solidified the series' politically satirical voice as it "bitch slapped the Bush administration" that
would later badmouth The Simpsons. DVD Movie Guide's Colin Jacobson, however, gave the episode a more negative review, stating that it "has its moments but never seems like one of the series' better programs. Part of that stems from its somewhat icky ending. The show exhibits a tone that feels more appropriate to a less biting and cynical series. It starts well with Homer's obsession with
Reading Digest. After that, the show seems more erratic, and it remains pretty average overall." Nathan Rabin writes that "It’s a testament to the respect
The Simpsons has for its audience’s intelligence and frame of reference that it includes dead-on parodies of
Reader’s Digest and Mark Russell in the same episode...Like James Stewart in
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Lisa learns that Washington, D.C., is a lovely town with a rich, honorable history that’s also a seething cesspool of corruption after stumbling upon rank corruption in her midst. Like Capra, 'Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington' is able to ultimately play it both ways: It’s cynical and sincere, idealistic and jaded, filled with affection for our country’s virtues and constitution but filled with contempt for flag-waving, jingoism and empty bromides about our nation’s glory... 'Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington' ultimately delivers a viciously sarcastic happy ending. In order for the system to work, everyone becomes a saint. A Senator stops what he’s doing to deal with a matter of utmost urgency, a little girl losing her faith in the American system... It’s a happy ending in air quotes, a tribute to the American can-do spirit so ridiculously over-the-top that it’s impossible to take seriously. The show can’t deliver a happy ending without sneering just a little bit."
Response from the timber industry According to
The Plain Dealer's Rodney Ferguson, the
timber industry was insulted by the scene in which a timber industry lobbyist offers a bribe to the corrupt congressman so that he can demolish Springfield Forest. The Oregon Lands Coalition, a pro-timber group in
Salem, Oregon, "bombarded" the producers of the show with phone calls and mail protesting the episode. In an open letter to
The Simpsons executive producer
James L. Brooks, the coalition wrote: "Rather than approach this issue with genuine concern for Mother Earth, you took an easy shot at hard-working people whose only crime is [having been] born in a timber town." , creator of
The Simpsons, responded to the criticism of the episode. |alt=A man in glasses and a plaid shirt sits in front of a microphone.
The Simpsons creator Matt Groening responded to the criticism in an interview with
TV Guide, in which he said he did "research on the ecological damage caused by clear-cutting and over-logging [and] it's really appalling". David Reinhard of
The Oregonian commented on the criticism: "Hollywood sharpsters can always make a group from the great American hinterland look ridiculous when it zeroes in on one show, particularly if that show is a cartoon. And the Oregon Lands Coalition's protest was a bit of an overreaction. But the environmental sloganeering of
The Simpsons as well as Groening's cartoon commentary are symptomatic of a Hollywood and a popular culture that are hostile to the concerns and values of most Americans." After the episode aired, media researchers Robert Lichter and Linda S. Lichter found in a study of prime-time television that when shows dealt with business themes, 89 percent portrayed businessmen as swindlers or liars. The same day Groening released his second statement,
The Simpsons publicist Antonia Coffman was invited by Wayne Giesy, sales manager of Hull-Oakes Lumber Co. in
Bellfountain, Oregon, to visit Oregon and see "responsible timber management". Giesy said they wanted to show the producers "how we log, how we manufacture, what goods we produce for everyone and how we replant for future generations. What most timber companies are interested in is a balanced program." ==References==