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Yet beyond the visuals, the true connective tissue here is that in both the May 2012 Simpsons episode and in her Super Bowl performance, Gaga is delivering a message of inclusion in difficult times.
In Lisa Goes Gaga, the entire town of Springfield is in an emotional funk - particularly young Lisa, who has become especially unpopular after Bart unmasks her scheme to improve her standing at school.
It just so happens, though, that Lady Gaga is traveling town to town to build tolerance and tear down those cultural walls that divide us. And so, like a silvery goddess of self-esteem uplift, Gaga is literally uplifted above the townsfolk as she sings about overcoming differences and of 'monsters' finding self-acceptance (with even an allusion to Star Wars' Jawa).
Likewise, as has been dissected, Gaga's Super Bowl performance brought a message of inclusivity amid divisive times and what for some is a politics-fuelled funk - especially in her delivery of Born This Way as a melodic celebration, The Post wrote, of "gay, straight, or bi, lesbian, transgender life". (Her singing also included a brief quoting of the protest-rooted song This Land Is Your Land, penned by legend Woody Guthrie,
In that way, The Simpsons - with that episode's message of tolerance - rings now like a dry run for Gaga's Houston extravaganza.