The Simpsons crossed a major threshold with its latest episode, but you wouldn’t know it from watching. Season 37’s “Guess Who’s Coming to Skinner” arrived with virtually no fanfare despite being the 800th full-length episode to air. That lack of acknowledgement isn’t entirely surprising — the series has reached so many milestones by this point that celebrating every round number would be unsustainable — but the quietness around this particular achievement says a lot about where the show stands today.
Rather than attempt something oversized or self-referential, the episode plays things surprisingly small. Kieran Culkin voices Hub, a student Skinner discovers living in the school library, and the story unfolds as a grounded character piece about Skinner trying, and mostly failing, to parent someone who understands him better than he understands himself. Karen Gillan and Kurtwood Smith offer supporting voice work, but the focus remains on Skinner’s tendency to overcorrect emotionally — a theme the show has returned to repeatedly across the decades, though not always with this level of restraint.
As an episode, “Guess Who’s Coming to Skinner” works because it avoids the instinct to turn every plot into commentary about the show’s age. There are no wink-at-the-camera jokes about lasting 800 episodes, no overstuffed parade of cameos, and no aggressive attempt to recreate the series’ golden-era tone. Instead, the episode sits comfortably within the current version of The Simpsons: more sentimental than sharp, more interested in small personal conflicts than broad satire. Whether that is a strength or a limitation depends on how much viewers still connect with the mellowed sensibility of the show’s recent seasons.
The decision not to label it the “official” 800th episode is also telling. The production team is holding that honor for a February 2026 double feature, meaning this episode’s placement at the milestone is more a coincidence of scheduling than intentional design. Yet the understated nature of the outing ends up functioning as a subtle nod to the show’s roots. There are faint echoes of the 1989 premiere, “Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire,” in the way this episode hinges less on jokes and more on the emotional puzzling-through of a lonely adult trying to do something meaningful.
In the broader landscape of US animation, the accomplishment still matters. The Simpsons remains in a category of its own, far outpacing Family Guy, South Park, Bob’s Burgers, and American Dad in total episodes. That dominance also makes it harder for any single installment to feel consequential. The show’s longevity is both its most impressive trait and the reason individual milestones barely ripple the surface anymore.
“Guess Who’s Coming to Skinner” won’t change anyone’s mind about the series, and it isn’t trying to. But as the 800th televised chapter in a cultural institution, it lands on an unexpectedly fitting note: modest, character-led, and unconcerned with whether it should be making a bigger deal of itself. For a show that helped define American television for decades, there’s something honest about marking a massive milestone by simply continuing on.
