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・ Theresa Goh
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・ There's No Business Like Show Business (film)
There's No Disgrace Like Home
・ There's No Gettin' Over Me (album)
・ There's No Going Back (song)
・ There's No Home for You Here
・ There's No I in America
・ There's No Leaving Now
・ There's No Limit
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・ There's No Place I'd Rather Be


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There's No Disgrace Like Home : ウィキペディア英語版
There's No Disgrace Like Home
.〕
|couch_gag=The family hurries on to the couch. Homer is squeezed off it and says, "D'oh!".〔
|commentary=Matt Groening
Al Jean
Mike Reiss
|season=1
}}
"There's No Disgrace Like Home" is the fourth episode of ''The Simpsons''' first season. It first aired on the Fox network in the United States on January 28, 1990. In the episode, Homer becomes ashamed of his family after a catastrophic company picnic and decides to enroll them in therapy. The therapist struggles to solve their problems but eventually gives up and refunds their payment.
It was an early episode, showing early designs for a few recurring characters. The episode is inspired by the comedy of Laurel and Hardy and features cultural references to films such as ''Citizen Kane'' and ''Freaks'' as well as the ''Batman'' and ''Twilight Zone'' television series. Critics noted that the characters acted differently from the way they would in later seasons. In November 1996, The BBC chose it as the first episode to be aired, when they started showing the series, later being beat in the ratings by ''Sabrina''.〔
==Plot==
Homer takes his family to a company picnic given by his boss, Mr. Burns, and hopes they will not embarrass him. After Bart, Lisa and Marge all misbehave, Homer is embarrassed by their behavior. Later on, he notices that Burns is drawn to a "normal" family that treats one another with respect and shows his blatant disgust for his own family. Homer wonders why he is cursed with a troubled family who misbehave and disrespects anyone, especially after the man from the normal perfect family admits he pities Homer.
Determined to improve his family's behavior, Homer attempts to get them to sit at the table properly, which goes awry as the family prefers to eat while watching TV. When Marge, Bart and Lisa claim there's nothing wrong with them, he decides to prove to them that there is something wrong. He takes them on a tour of the neighborhood, peeking through living room windows to observe how happy families spend time together. The rest of the Simpsons are unnerved by Homer's sudden rash behavior along with unnecessarily spying on their neighbors and retreat quickly back to the safety of their own home. Depressed by the outing, he stops by Moe's Tavern for a drink. After getting into a fight with Barney, Homer later sees a commercial for Dr. Marvin Monroe's Family Therapy Center. Dr. Monroe guarantees "family bliss or double your money back." This gives Homer an idea to improve his family's behavior.
Homer makes an appointment at the clinic and pays for it by pawning their television. This only frustrates the rest of the Simpsons as he takes them to the scheduled appointment. In the waiting room, they claim the family doesn't have a problem and are silenced by Homer. Dr. Monroe encourages them to express their unhappiness with a series of exercises. The first is a drawing exercise, which he encourages them to draw out the source of their problems. Most the Simpsons vent out their anger by drawing Homer as they see him. When Dr. Monroe observes it, he realizes that Homer is likely the source of their issues in the family. This is evident when he proves his own inattentive nature in being lost in the exercise and having the family view him as such, including being too strict as a disciplinarian.
The other methods in getting the family to talk to each other in a normal matter fails. Dr. Monroe finally takes matters into his own hands and sends them all to a generator room, allowing them to deliver electric shocks to each other. The family shocks one another to the point of causing a power drain on the city and driving the doctor's other patients away. Unable to help them, Dr. Monroe gives the Simpsons double their money back. With a fresh sense of family unity, they use the money to buy a new television set.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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