Thank God It's Doomsday/References
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
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354 "Thank God It's Doomsday"
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Cultural references
- The title is a reference to the popular saying, Thank God It's Friday.
- The movie Left Below is a parody of Left Behind: The Movie.
- The song playing when Homer is throwing away his books on the Rapture is Three Dog Night's version of "Easy To Be Hard" from the musical Hair.
- God's chair is an Aeron chair manufactured by Herman Miller, except that God's chair floats and does not have a base.
- In heaven, Leonardo da Vinci is shown drawing, with his left hand, a portrait of Dean Martin in the style of the Mona Lisa.
- Among the changing art pictures displayed above the bed in heaven are:
- The song played as Homer enters heaven is "The Flower Duet" from the opera Lakmé by Léo Delibes.
- The clock labelled Heaven is on UTC or UTC+12 relative to the other clocks labelled London, New York and Tokyo.
- God tells Homer that his son, Jesus Christ, went down to Earth and he doesn't know what happened to him, but his son hasn't been the same since. This is a reference to the Crucifixion of Jesus.
- When God turns back time, he exclaims "Deus ex machina", a plot device meaning "God from the machine". It is used ironically since this was the act of the real God to solve an otherwise unsolvable problem, not the god from the mechanical contrivance that ancient Greek dramatists used for the same purpose.
- In the scene at Moe's at the end of the episode, Homer and his pals are posed to resemble the Last Supper fresco by Leonardo da Vinci, with Homer in the center as Jesus.
- The skeleton of the crashed Duff blimp, with flames, is a reference to the Hindenburg Disaster.
- Moe's sushi bar, "Tokyo Roe's", is a parody of Tokyo Rose, a voice broadcasting Japanese propaganda to Allied soldiers during World War II.
Trivia
- God is drawn with 5 fingers on each hand and 5 toes on each foot.
- Homer knows the meaning of "eponymous."
- The cart of wind chimes that Bart and Lisa back into at the mall carries the sign, "Tinkle in the Wind".
Continuity