The War of the Simpsons/References
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< The War of the Simpsons
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Trivia
- The family from Mr. Burns' picnic in "There's No Disgrace Like Home" is seen again in church in front of Marge. Also, Maude makes sure her blouse is fully buttoned the next time she sees Homer, after his rude leering at her during the party.
- Marge urges Homer to go easy on the "al-key-hol". The last time she used that term she was halfway in the bag herself, and performed similar embarrassing drunken revelry at Mr. Burns' picnic in There's No Disgrace Like Home.
- Gloria and John are voiced by Julie Kavner and Dan Castellaneta, making it a rare time where they voiced a couple other than Homer and Marge. Also, Kavner's role of Gloria is one of the few times she has voiced a character other than Marge or one of the women of the Bouvier family.
- Grandpa sings "Over There", a popular song during the First World War, when getting out of the shower.
Cultural References
- The title is based on the 1989 film The War of the Roses.
- When Ned Flanders is making drinks at the Simpsons' party, much of the flashy ways he is seen preparing the cocktails is similar to Tom Cruise's bartending stunts in the 1988 film Cocktail.
- The music in the scene where an infant Bart chases his teenage babysitter with the car is similar to the score from The Omen.
- Homer's false memory of the party is a reference to the Algonquin Round Table, a group of New York City writers, critics, actors and wits. The guests and the party and the way they are drawn resemble Al Hirschfeld's caricature of the group. As Hirschfeld's drawings were always in black and white, the colour scheme is borrowed from the covers for The New Yorker.
- John and Gloria bear a strong resemblance to George and Martha from Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf??
- Homer's marathon attempt at catching General Sherman, his bludgeoning of the fish and the line "I love you but I have to kill you" are all based on Santiago's fight with the marlin in Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea.
- Homer sings "We Are the Champions" by Queen after he finally catches General Sherman, although he butchers the lyrics by singing "I Am the Champions", in which he fails to singularize the lyrics in order to describe only himself.
- The Picture of General Sherman, in the service station, is a reference to the famous hoax picture of the Loch Ness Monster.