Baby You Can't Drive My Car

Later, Homer sees a news item for a startup company, CarGo, where Mayor Quimby touts jobs that will benefit the city.

One day after work, Marge arrives to drive Homer home, and they enjoy the free food in the cafeteria.

To help the coders enjoy themselves, they instigate a foosball tournament, which the founders see as a team-building exercise that invigorates creativity.

To increase employee satisfaction, they make him and Marge a team to boost morale.

Meanwhile, Marge and Homer head home in a CarGo car but realize it listens to their conversations and takes them to places they talk about.

They report the problem but are told it is part of CarGo's program to sell users' data to corporations.

With their credentials, they breach the server room where Smithers works to reconfigure the deep neural network and disable the cars' fuel cells, but Marge confronts them.

After pleading with Homer not to destroy the fun she is having, she goes to report the situation, but notices CarGo's next phase to use the cars' keychain fob to eavesdrop everywhere they go.

[2] The scene where Homer binges on the free food at CarGo is framed against an instrumental of "Pure Imagination" from the 1971 film Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory.

Club gave the episode a B−, stating that "Homer is the one who gets up in arms about the data-mining, while Marge, swept up in all the good their joint venture is having on their marriage, at first decides that a company secretly stealing every scrap of Spiringfielders’ personal information is an insignificant price to pay.

But the conflict just doesn’t land, and when Marge (horrified that CarGo plans to extend the listening-in to the cars’ key fob—even in the powder room) finally decides to help Smithers, Burns, and Homer’s sabotage, it’s too thin a motivation.

"[3] Michael Vargas of The Game of Nerds liked the commentary of self-driving cars and the concept of computers listening to conversations.