Difference between revisions of "Catastrophe in Substitute Springfields!/References"
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
(→Cultural references: Bizarro and Kandor references added) |
|||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
== Cultural references == | == Cultural references == | ||
*The story's title is a reference to the "{{w|Crisis on Infinite Earths}}" storyline from {{w|DC Comics}}. | *The story's title is a reference to the "{{w|Crisis on Infinite Earths}}" storyline from {{w|DC Comics}}. | ||
− | *On the last page, when the panel displays all of the substitute Springfieldians, a substitute that looks remarkably similar to Fry from Futurama, Groening's other television series. | + | *In the story's opening text, the imperfect duplicates are referred to as "Berzerkos", which is a play on {{w|Bizarro}}, a DC Comics villain who is an imperfect clone of Superman and who often speaks in opposites. Bizarro also appears briefly as the Homer clone begins mutating. |
+ | *On the last page, when the panel displays all of the substitute Springfieldians, a substitute appears that looks remarkably similar to Fry from Futurama, Groening's other television series. | ||
+ | *Kang and Kodos' miniature city in a bottle is a reference to {{w|Kandor}} from the Superman comics, a Kryptonian city best known for being shrunk and captured by the supervillain Brainiac. | ||
[[Category:Cultural references]] | [[Category:Cultural references]] |
Revision as of 20:25, May 5, 2017
Cultural references
- The story's title is a reference to the "Crisis on Infinite Earths" storyline from DC Comics.
- In the story's opening text, the imperfect duplicates are referred to as "Berzerkos", which is a play on Bizarro, a DC Comics villain who is an imperfect clone of Superman and who often speaks in opposites. Bizarro also appears briefly as the Homer clone begins mutating.
- On the last page, when the panel displays all of the substitute Springfieldians, a substitute appears that looks remarkably similar to Fry from Futurama, Groening's other television series.
- Kang and Kodos' miniature city in a bottle is a reference to Kandor from the Superman comics, a Kryptonian city best known for being shrunk and captured by the supervillain Brainiac.