
Watch S15, EP11: Margical History Tour with Fubo for $0 Today
When the library runs short of books, Marge regales the kids with yarns about King Henry VIII, Sacagawea and Mozart.
When the library runs short of books, Marge regales the kids with yarns about King Henry VIII, Sacagawea and Mozart.
More episodes
The Simpsons
S15, EP12 "Milhouse Doesn't Live Here Anymore"Milhouse moves away, leaving Bart to find a new best friend in Lisa; Bart visits reinvented Milhouse in Capitol City.
The Simpsons
S15, EP13 "Smart and Smarter"The interviewer at a gifted preschool insults Maggie, then jealous Lisa leads her astray after she gets accepted.
The Simpsons
S15, EP14 "The Ziff Who Came to Dinner"Marge's old flame Artie Ziff moves in after losing his dot-com fortune; after Homer wins the remaining shares of Artie's company, he becomes the subject of an investigation.
The Simpsons
S15, EP15 "Co-Dependent's Day"After a bender Homer frames Marge for his DUI, and as a result Marge must check into rehab.
The Simpsons
S37, EP14 "Irrational Treasure"Marge enters Santa's Little Helper into the national dog show in Philadelphia.
The Simpsons
S37, EP13 "Seperance"Homer's enthusiasm skills land him a job at a secretive company with a mind-altering agenda.
The Simpsons
S37, EP12 "¡The Fall Guy-Yi-Yi!"Homer revitalizes Bumblebee Man's career when he becomes his secret stuntman.
More sitcom shows
See allThe Big Bang Theory
Mensa-fied best friends and roommates Leonard and Sheldon, physicists who work at the California Institute of Technology, may be able to tell everybody more than they want to know about quantum physics, but getting through most basic social situations, especially ones involving women, totally baffles them. How lucky, then, that babe-alicious waitress/aspiring actress Penny moves in next door. Frequently seen hanging out with Leonard and Sheldon are friends and fellow Caltech scientists Wolowitz and Koothrappali. Will worlds collide? Does Einstein theorize in the woods?
Seinfeld
Four single friends -- comic Jerry Seinfeld, bungling George Costanza, frustrated working gal Elaine Benes and eccentric neighbor Cosmo Kramer -- deal with the absurdities of everyday life in New York City.
Family Guy
This animated series features the adventures of the Griffin family. Endearingly ignorant Peter and his stay-at-home wife, Lois, reside in Quahog, R.I., and have three kids. Meg, the eldest child, is a social outcast, and teenage Chris is awkward and clueless when it comes to the opposite sex. The youngest, Stewie, is a genius baby who is bent on killing his mother and destroying the world. Brian, the talking dog, keeps Stewie in check while sipping martinis and sorting through his own issues.
The Office
This U.S. adaptation -- set at a paper company based in Scranton, Pa. -- has a similar documentary style to that of the Ricky Gervais-led British original. It features the Dunder-Mifflin staff, which includes characters based on roles in the British show -- and, quite possibly, people with whom you work in your office. There's Jim, the likable employee who's a bit of an every man. Jim has a thing for receptionist-turned-sales-rep Pam -- because office romances are always a good idea! There's also Dwight, the co-worker who is successful but devoid of social skills and common sense.