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The Simpsons showrunner Matt Selman recently opened up about how the show will potentially end, and revealed that he felt like the show will “never” have a series finale. The series won’t have a final episode where they address the fact that it truly is the final one, and that might sound like a good idea on paper. But after going on for such a long time, and going through multiple eras of different creators, The Simpsons deserves a proper finale just to further cement its place within television history.
Why The Simpsons Needs a Series Finale

The Simpsons Season 36 already made fun of the idea of what a series finale would look like in the episode “Bart’s Birthday.” This saw A.I. combing through famous TV finales and the show itself for a proper way to “wrap up” the series’ long running stories. Characters were getting new jobs and moving away, having babies, and more that signified that The Simpsons was coming to an end. But it was all just a parody meant to call out how ridiculous some TV finales actually are and how those vibes don’t mesh with The Simpsons itself.
The Simpsons ending with such an episode seems like it doesn’t gel with the animated world because of the way it was angled, and its status as a sitcom does likely mean that it will just have a regular episode be the final one. It’s likely just going to be a small episode with a few characters, and will just happen to be the last one aired. But that only can work with the older view of the show. The Simpsons has grown to such a massive scale over the decades that this approach just will not work anymore. It’s too big to just “stop” without an episode addressing the ending.
The Simpsons team has looked at many different phases of the animated series as a potential finale. It could have ended with a Christmas episode bringing it spiritually full circle in “Holidays of Future Passed,” it could have ended with a time loop wrapping it back in with the premiere like previous showrunner Al Jean suggested to fans years ago, and there just seemed to be natural ending points that have since disappeared in the rearview. But when The Simpsons does end, it needs to have a proper goodbye to those fans who have been watching all this time.









