ESPN executive vice president (league programming and acquisitions) Ros Durant said this started with an idea from vice-president (programming) Tim Reed and went into intense planning in early 2024. It was officially announced in October but has been in the works for almost a full year.
“One of the filters we use in terms of thinking about which IPs to take a look at, the fact this game was in prime time was a big driver of that,” he said. “Last year we did Toy Story at 9:30 in the morning. I think part of that filter was knowing we were in prime time, we’d go a little bit older.”
Reed also thinks The Simpsons is interesting to a wide range of demographics. “Clearly it’s multi-generational. I’m a perfect example. I’m a die-hard Simpsons fan. I have been that way my whole life. I have 13- and 15-year-old boys who have been binge-watching all 35 episodes — 35 years of The Simpsons on Disney+. Granted, they’re a focus group of two, but again, this is something we’re definitely going to enjoy together. So, again, I think that’s part of how we landed on The Simpsons and why this can work this time.”
“We are incredibly excited about Monday night and the opportunity we have collectively with all the parties that have come together here to create the Simpsons Funday Football,” Schroeder said. “For us at the NFL, we’re very focused about how we continue to innovate and create new experiences for our fans. New experiences that extend across screens and across new platforms, areas like Disney+ here. Opportunities to create more expansion globally in the number of 100-plus countries we’ll be in around the world, as we bring this type of opportunity to engage with the NFL in a different way to our fans everywhere that they are and in new ways, are incredibly exciting to us. And then in a new content format, using The Simpsons in an animated way. And all the iconic history, all the fandom that The Simpsons have, certainly here in the U.S. but also globally. They’re truly a global franchise.”
“The fact that we have all the actual Simpsons voices to create original animation and content, Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner, Nancy Cartwright, Yeardley Smith, and Hank Azaria — to have them on board to give this Simpsons reality and Simpsons authenticity, we couldn’t have done it without them,” he said. “Our voice talent is always excited to do these fun, new projects. Whether it’s a theme park ride or an NFL alt-cast, they know that the lifeblood of The Simpsons is replicating itself in whatever new technology comes along.”
“We didn’t go maximum edgy for this, right? It’s not maximum edge, but there is a sense of playfulness and spoofiness of the NFL—that the NFL was unbelievably cool with—where we’re having fun with the tropes of football and the cliches of football and making fun of the family-watching football experience in a way that these other shows wouldn’t really be able to do because they’re not— they don’t have satirical DNA.”
“We got to give a shout out, Spike, to Joel Cohen, the long-time Simpsons writer and super sports fan who did so much of the writing for this thing. And really — you know, if Spike sent Joel an e-mail in the middle of the night saying we need 50 questions that Marge can ask to football players that won’t offend the NFL, Joel would write 100. It was really great.”
“From our view, this is one of the sort of the real big tentpole games on the Monday Night Football calendar, with where the Bengals and Joe Burrow have been, and with Dallas and the franchise that they have,” he said. “I think the creative talent in here would tell a story about—no matter what two teams played, would find great stories and narratives to play. But this year, particularly this matchup and sort of how it translated back to The Simpsons and being such a tentpole game on the overall Monday night calendar, was one I think we circled as having a lot of excitement around it.”
Selman said this matchup was a natural fit for Homer and Bart Simpson as well.“We were so lucky to be given the Cowboys versus the Bengals, who are just two iconic teams with great identities and great fan bases,” he said. “We were just so lucky also that the Cowboys are sort of like a Homer Simpson-type team, American team. And [Dallas head coach] Mike McCarthy might be a Homer-type guy, one might imagine. And then you have Joe Burrow on the other side who is a cool young, spiky-haired, blonde bad boy — he’s like Bart. And that fits our character archetypes so perfectly. If Homer is mad at Bart and has a hot dog dream while watching Monday Night Football, and then it’s basically McCarthy versus Burrow, Homer versus Bart, and that’s the simple father versus son strangling, Homer strangling Bart, dynamic that has been part of the show for 35 years. I don’t know if that would have worked as well if it was like Titans versus Jacksonville. We would have found something. We would have made it work.”
The NFL and ESPN and Spike and everyone has allowed this crazy hot dog fever dream to happen, and all the ESPN talent that gave themselves, their time, including one very special spoiler guy that I will not mention — or girl. I just can’t wait to see people’s reaction.