The Last of the Red Hat Mamas/References
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< The Last of the Red Hat Mamas
Revision as of 06:08, June 7, 2019 by Solar Dragon (talk | contribs) (Undo revision 862463 by ClockwerkSamurai12 (talk) That seems like too much of a stretch.)
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Trivia
- The very next episode ("The Italian Bob"), the Simpson family goes to Italy. Lisa speaks some Italian in that episode.
- It's revealed in this episode that Luigi can't speak Italian, only "fractured English" (with Italian accent) what his parents spoke at home.
- When Lisa kisses Milhouse, he says "I'm the luckiest boy in the world" similar to Doremi Harukaze from the Ojamajo Doremi which she says "I'm the unluckiest girl in the world".
Cultural references
- Homer's line, "Game over man ... game over" (when the police arrive at Burns' mansion) is taken from the movie Aliens
- Eddie's animated style of traffic direction is likely a reference to Tony Lepore, the "Dancing Cop" of Providence, Rhode Island.
- When Lisa and Milhouse go to Little Italy, Milhouse acts like Don Fanucci from The Godfather Part II. His clothes in that scene are similar, too.
- Hugs Bunny, the referee of the Springfield Easter Celebration, is an obvious pun on Bugs Bunny. Mrs. Quimby also mimics Elmer Fudd's speech impediment in introducing Hugs. Later, Homer mentions the Road Runner, surprised to learn there is an actual bird by that name.
- Mayor Quimby's office is styled after the White House Oval Office. Mrs. Quimby's trip around the mayor's office is vaguely reminiscent of a spoken word track on the record, The First Family, wherein Mrs. Kennedy led the paparazzi around the White House, leaving everything "just the way it is."
- Red Hat Society - The Cheery Red Tomatoes organization is a spoof of the women's group, focusing on fun and companionship.
- "Rigoletto" - Lisa sings new lyrics to the aria "La donna è mobile" from Verdi's opera.
- The episode title is a play on the movie title Sophie Tucker - The Last of the Red Hot Mamas, about the life of the Vaudeville entertainer.
- During his fight with Hugs Bunny, Homer remarks, "Silly rabbit. Kicks are for ribs!" This is a play on the catchphrase for the children's breakfast cereal Trix.