In "Behind The Laughter," it's northern Kentucky. In the behind-the-scenes portion of season 6 DVD, Matt says's it's mostly derived from Oregon.
It's not supposed to be in one state, they're multi-dimensional :)
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In "Behind The Laughter," it's northern Kentucky. In the behind-the-scenes portion of season 6 DVD, Matt says's it's mostly derived from Oregon.
It's not supposed to be in one state, they're multi-dimensional :)
now thats just weird :wtf:Quote:
Originally Posted by Purple Banana
no clue ,Quote:
Originally Posted by Purple Banana
I love the simpsons. Ive watched them since I was a little kid. I went to see the movie a month ago. It cracked me up. I watch it every day at 7 and again at 8
the simpsons movie TV Links
Its def Kentucky.
There is a road in Springfield, IL, called evergreen terrace.. blah to lazy to type it out
Quote:
One of the couch gags (which cannot be considered canon) zoomed out and showed the Simpsons' house in Springfield, Illinois. While Springfield, Illinois has a Shelbyville 50 miles to the southeast, and a nuclear power plant 40 miles to the northeast, there has not been any indication that it is 'the' Springfield, and could be coincidental. However, The Simpsons does make an indirect reference to the Illinois city; in the episode where Homer is in a graveyard at night digging a plot, discarded dirt covers up the grave of Adlai Stevenson (a prominent Illinois politician and two-time US presidential candidate, buried in Bloomington, Illinois, 50 miles to the northeast). In the episode "G.I. D'oh", the Squeaky-voiced Teen quits his job to go work at "Jolly Tamale" which is a small but somewhat popular Mexican restaurant in Springfield, Illinois. The Simpsons' street, Evergreen Terrace, is a notoriously poor section of Springfield, Illinois.
The couch gag sequence of The Simpsons episode entitled "The Ziff Who Came to Dinner" again left the location of Springfield something of a mystery. The sequence featured a "zooming out" from the Simpson household to a satellite view, then a solar system view, and so on in a parody of the 1977 documentary short Powers of Ten. The sequence contained plenty of cloud cover, but put Springfield somewhere in the Midwest, probably near the Mississippi River (Iowa, or maybe Missouri). The latter location is also suggested in the episode "Lisa the Tree Hugger" in which Lisa tries to protect the oldest tree in Springfield. To do so, she climbs a giant sequoia tree to prevent a team from cutting it down. When looking down on Springfield she sees a structure resembling the Gateway Arch in St. Louis, Missouri (but also the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington). A large river can also be seen.
In the episode "Marge vs. the Monorail", monorail salesman Lyle Lanley proclaims "I've sold monorail systems to Brockway, Ogdenville, and North Haverbrook! And, boy, it put them on the map!" He then holds up a map of the U.S. where Brockway, Ogdenville and North Haverbrook are the only cities shown. Marge then later drives to nearby North Haverbrook (where everybody resents there being a monorail there, despite the sign at the city limits saying "Where the Monorail is KING!"). The map shows North Haverbrook in the Midwest, approximately in Iowa.
In the episode "Scenes from the Class Struggle in Springfield", the Simpsons go to the Ogdenville outlet mall to get a new television. The sign in Springfield indicates that it is only '90 miles' to Ogdenville. When Lyle Lanley holds up the map, Ogdenville is in New Mexico (by the way, Brockway appears to be in South Carolina).
In the episode "Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington", when it is Lisa's turn to speak, it shows a map where Springfield is in "Illinois".
In the episode "The Springfield Files", Mulder tells Scully that there has been "another unsubstantiated UFO sighting in the heartland of America", referring to Homer's close encounter with an alien; so, for that episode, Springfield was presumably somewhere in the Midwest.
Homer suggests that Springfield is within a state bordering the Great Lakes. He said:
Best show ever, i wanna live there.
not texas
dont think south
i think the mid west
if you saw the movie they were located in one of the 4 corner states if that helps
i dont know which states are part of the 4 forners
Here's a list of power reactors in the U.S. ( List of nuclear reactors - encyclopedia article about List of nuclear reactors. )
NRC Region One (Northeast)
* Beaver Valley, Pennsylvania
* Calvert Cliffs, Maryland
* Connecticut Yankee, Connecticut (Decommissioned)
* FitzPatrick, New York
* Ginna, New York
* Hope Creek, New Jersey
* Indian Point, New York
* Limerick, Pennsylvania
* Maine Yankee, Maine (Decommissioned)
* Millstone, Connecticut
* Nine Mile Point, New York
* Oyster Creek, New Jersey
* Peach Bottom, Pennsylvania
* Pilgrim, Massachusetts
* Salem, New Jersey
* Saxton, Pennsylvania (Decommissioned)
* Seabrook, New Hampshire
* Shippingport, Pennsylvania (Decommissioned)
* Shoreham, New York (Decommissioned)
* Susquehanna, Pennsylvania
* Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania
* Vermont Yankee, Vermont
* Yankee Rowe, Massachusetts (Decommissioned)
NRC Region Two (South)
* Bellefonte, Alabama (Unfinished)
* Browns Ferry, Alabama
* Brunswick, North Carolina
* Carolinas-Virginia Tube Reactor, South Carolina (decommissioned)
* Catawba, South Carolina
* Crystal River 3, Florida
* Farley (Joseph M. Farley), Alabama
* Hatch (Edwin I. Hatch), Georgia
* McGuire, North Carolina
* North Anna, Virginia
* Oconee, South Carolina
* H.B. Robinson, South Carolina
* Sequoyah, Tennessee
* Shearon Harris, North Carolina
* St. Lucie, Florida
* Surry, Virginia
* Turkey Point, Florida (hit by Hurricane Andrew)
* Virgil C. Summer (Summer), South Carolina
* Vogtle, Georgia
* Watts Bar, Tennessee
NRC Region Three (Midwest)
* Big Rock Point, Michigan (Decommissioned)
* Braidwood, Illinois
* Byron, Illinois
* Clinton, Illinois
* Davis-Besse, Ohio
* Donald C. Cook, Michigan
* Dresden, Illinois
* Duane Arnold, Iowa
* Elk River, Minnesota (Decommissioned)
* Enrico Fermi, Michigan
* Kewaunee, Wisconsin
* La Crosse, Wisconsin (Decommissioned)
* LaSalle County, Illinois
* Monticello, Minnesota
* Palisades, Michigan
* Perry, Ohio
* Piqua, Ohio (Decommissioned)
* Point Beach, Wisconsin
* Prairie Island, Minnesota
* Quad Cities, Illinois
* Zion, Illinois (Decommissioned)
NRC Region Four (West)
* Arkansas Nuclear One, Arkansas
* Callaway, Missouri
* Columbia, Washington - formerly WNP-2
* Comanche Peak, Texas
* Cooper, Nebraska
* Diablo Canyon, California
* Fort Calhoun, Nebraska
* Fort Saint Vrain, Colorado (Decommissioned)
* Grand Gulf, Mississippi
* Hallam, Nebraska (Decommissioned)
* Hanford N Reactor, Washington (Retired - see Plutonium Production Reactors below)
* Humboldt Bay, California (Decommissioned)
* Palo Verde, Arizona
* Pathfinder, South Dakota (Decommissioned)
* Rancho Seco, California (Decommissioned)
* River Bend, Louisiana
* San Onofre, California
* South Texas, Texas
* Trojan, Rainier, Oregon (Decommissioned)
* Vallecitos, California (idle research center)
* Waterford, Louisiana
* Wolf Creek, Kansas