- Wikisimpsons needs more Featured Article, Picture, Quote, Episode and Comprehensive article nominations!
- Wikisimpsons has a Discord server! Click here for your invite! Join to talk about the wiki, Simpsons and Tapped Out news, or just to talk to other users.
- Make an account! It's easy, free, and your work on the wiki can be attributed to you.
Like Father, Like Clown/References
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
|
|
|
|
041 "Like Father, Like Clown"
|
|
|
Cultural references
- The pictures at Lois Pennycandy's office include:
- Krusty says he hates missing "Schnapps Night" at the Friars' Club, a famous private club in New York City.
- Just before having dinner, Krusty starts a Jewish blessing, more specifically the bracha. According to Lisa, Lauren Bacall, Dinah Shore, William Shatner and Mel Brooks are all Jewish.
- In Krusty's flashback, he and his father Hyman Krustofsky walk down the street with the style of the "Death of Don Fanucci" scene from The Godfather II.
- One of the Jewish men that was asking for advice asks Hyman whether he should buy a Chrysler car. The Rabbi answers positively and also mentions the "Dyna-Flo suspension", possibly a play-on to General Motors' Dynaflow automatic transmissions that competed against Chrysler's.
- Krusty's Jewish heritage, his relationship with his father, and desire to be an entertainer rather than follow in his Rabbi father's footsteps, parallel Al Jolson in the 1927 film The Jazz Singer.
- The phrase "I have no son!" later said by Hyman Krustofsky is a reference to that phrase said by Laurence Olivier portraying Cantor Rabinovitch in the fourth adaptation of The Jazz Singer.
- Krusty attended Yeshiva.
- At the Simpsons' house, Krusty finds The Concert for Bangladesh album. This is album was credited to "George Harrison & Friends" and it followed two concerts of the same name.
The films being played at Springfield-X adult movie theatre are parodies of real-world ones
- The films being played at Springfield-X adult movie theatre include:
- Krusty watches the Academy Awards Playhouse.
- The scenes of Krusty calling up his father then staring into space is a reference to the 1980 film Raging Bull.
- The The Itchy & Scratchy Show episode "Field of Screams" is a reference to the 1989 baseball-related film Field of Dreams.
- Lisa and Bart call Hyman and fake Saul Bellow's voice so that Krusty can meet his father. Saul Bellow was a Jewish Canadian-American writer who was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, the Nobel Prize for Literature, and the National Medal of Arts.
- The kids also fool Krusty by telling him that the French government wants to give him the Legion of Honour, the highest French order of merit.
- The food on the Izzy's Deli menu is called after Jewish American personalities, including entertainer Joey Bishop and stand-up comedian Jackie Mason (who voiced Hyman). Bruce Willis is also mentioned, although he does not practice any kind of religion
- Krusty hums "La Marseillaise", the national anthem of France, when he is at Izzy's Deli.
- Krusty also asks the waiter to direct him to President François Mitterrand, who was in office when this episode aired.
- Lisa mentions the Judaica. She also reads about Simeon ben Eleazar in one of the Springfield Library books.
- Hyman mentions Hillel the Elder (Rabbi Hillel), Judah the Pious, Maimonides and the Dead Sea Scrolls while trying to come up with the person Bart quoted. At the end, Bart says the quote was by American entertainer Sammy Davis, Jr. from his book Yes I Can: The Story of Sammy Davis, Jr. Hyman also mentions "The Candy Man", Davis's career hit.
- When Krusty reunites with Hyman, he sings "O mein Papa", a nostalgic German song originally as related by a young woman remembering her beloved, once-famous clown father.
Trivia
Goofs
- When Krusty pulls Mr. Teeny out of his bag he tells the chimp to go wait in the car, but when Krusty leaves there is no car outside and in the next scene he is also walking home. (The bag has also disappeared.)
- After Krusty starts crying at the dinner table, Homer asks if he will finish his meatloaf, but there is no meatloaf on his plate.
|