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Revision as of 02:23, July 22, 2010

References/Trivia


Season 4 Episode References
059 "Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?"
060
"Kamp Krusty"
"A Streetcar Named Marge" 061


Cultural References

  • When the kids, teachers, and staff wreck Springfield Elementary School in Bart's dream, the song playing is "School's Out by Alice Cooper.
  • Some of the depictions of conditions at Kamp Krusty are taken from the Allan Sherman song "Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah."
  • Ben-Hur: When Kearney beats a drum to make the kids in the sweatshop work harder, it's a reference to the slave galley scene from the movie.
  • The French Lieutenant's Woman: Referenced in the scene where Lisa gives a bottle of whiskey to a man on horseback as payment for delivering a letter. Lisa is also dressed much like Meryl Streep's character was in the film scene.
  • The sequence where Bart leads a revolt and the kids take over the camp is reminiscent of Lord of the Flies.
  • The 1991 fall of the Soviet Union is referenced when the rebelling campers uproot a totem pole of Krusty, parodying rioting Russians tearing down statues of Lenin, Stalin, and other Soviet dictators.
    • Note for Star Wars fans: The scene cannot be a reference to the Emperor's statue being torn down at the end of Return of the Jedi. The episode aired in 1992, but the scene with the Emperor's statue occurs in the Special Edition, which wasn't released until 1997.
  • The post-revolt Kamp Krusty (where Bart is in charge and the camp has been renamed to "Camp Bart") strongly resembles Colonel Kurtz's camp in Apocalypse Now.
  • The song played over the closing credits is "South of the Border." However, the singer is not Frank Sinatra, but a sound-a-like.

Trivia

  • When Dolph serves the "Krusty Brand Imitation Gruel" to the kids, he is wearing a hairnet, making it one of the few times both his eyes are visible.
  • Bart's remark of "No way would I lend my name to a crummy product" is an ironic one; a likely reference to the Butterfinger commercials Bart has starred in.
  • When Kent Brockman comments that he has reported on Afghanistan and Iraq, he was referring to the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the 1991 U.S. invasion of Iraq (the first Gulf War), not the current conflicts, where the U.S. invaded Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003.
  • According to the DVD commentary, Frank Sinatra did not sing the song "South of the Border" during the closing credits. A sound-alike sang the song.
  • The episode was inspired by a staff member who worked as a teenager as a counselor in a summer camp and saw exposed live wires and other hazards. The producers said this episode was meant to relate to those who went to summer camps or took jobs in one.

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