Thursdays with Abie/References
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Cultural references
- The Hollywood stars seen departing the train are Jimmy Durante, Shirley Temple, W. C. Fields, Laurel & Hardy, James Cagney and Boris Karloff as Frankestein's Monster.
- A young Abe was cleaning American film actor Clark Gable's shoes.
- Gable mentions he worked as an extra in the 1930 film Du Barry, Woman of Passion.
- Abe read Gone with the Wind, a book by Margaret Mitchell that Grampa gave to Clark Gable, who later starred in a a film adaptation as Rhett Butler.
- Nelson sings a different version of "Mary Had a Little Lamb".
- Mr. Burns tells Homer a story about how he won the Opium War. Burns also mentions the Yangtze river.
- Marshall Goldman filled an application for a Pulitzer Prize.
- The play Out of the Mouth of Abe was created by "Jim Henson's Creature Shop". Jim Henson was an American puppeteer, best known for creating The Muppets.
- The classic railroad bulls sing "Old Dan Tucker", an American popular song.
- The failing banks Abe saw through the window included the IndyMac and the Washington Mutual. Both of these failed in 2008 due to insolvency. Abe compared the scene to the 1930s, when the Great Depression took place.
- Abe mentions he once was on the set of a Warner Brothers cartoon and Jack L. Warner approached him.
- Marshall Goldman sings a modified version of the "Bridal Chorus" when he is about to murder Abe.
- Homer mixes several things in his story, including Godzilla, Colonel Tom Parker, The Rolling Stones, the British Museum and Gracie Films.
Trivia
- The license plate Marge takes a photo of is "MABF02", which is the production code for the episode.
- When Flanders shows Homer the Newspaper, The picture of Abe resembles the Internet Meme 'Awesome face'.
- Marshall Goldman's laptop is a Mapple computer, a company which has been seen before in a few other episodes.
Goofs
- In the scene where Carl and Lenny lowered Homer onto the train, Lenny is shown without his five-o-clock shadow.
- Oliver Hardy's moustache disappears in one frame