Here’s a nice lil hair-raising one for ya.
Last Friday, on the 9th of April, Prince Philip, AKA Prince Harry and Wills’ granddad passed away.
The British Royal Family confirmed the news later that evening, but in a spooky aside, fans of The Simpsons had a hunch of his tragic passing long before it happened – even down to the date.
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According to a Simpsons fansite called In The News, an old episode of the hit cartoon show may have wildly predicted the death and date of Prince Philip.
Yes, the exact date guys. What the actual fresh hell.
In season seven, episode three, Home Sweet Homediddly-Dum-Doodily, the Simpsons’ neighbours, the Flanders, temporarily take the children in after a lice outbreak – after Ned finds out they aren’t baptised.
According to the Simpsons fansite, when they’re all in the car driving to church, baby Maggie Simpson creepily turns her head 180 degrees towards Bart and Lisa in the backseat and says, “Prince Philip will die on April 9, 2021.”
The footage (and Bart and Lisa’s faces) is a big ‘ol mood RN.
While the line has been replaced in recent versions, the site claims that the line was in the original broadcast in 1995, which is 26 years before his tragic passing. Weeeeeird.
And, adding more weight to the rumour, it isn’t all that surprising when you think about how The Simpsons has a long history of mysteriously predicting historic events, rising tech and new discoveries.
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In the same year as the supposed Prince Philip prediction, the showrunners predicted smartwatches in season six, episode 19, Lisa’s Wedding, three years before one was first invented and twenty years before the first generation of the Apple Watch.
Still following? Yeh, we’re also alarmed.
According to Forbes, in 1993, the episode Marge In Chains featured a COVID-like pandemic hitting Springfield, while another episode in 2000, Bart To The Future, predicted the Donald Trump presidency.
But, while these predictions seemed likely, nothing was more spelt out than their eerie prediction of the late partner to Queen Elizabeth II. Neither the British Royal Family nor Simpsons creator Matt Groening has commented on the story.
This article originally appeared on our sister site, Who.
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