Homer Defined/References
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< Homer Defined
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Contents
Cultural references
- Homer is reading the newspaper US of A Today, a parody of the real-world newspaper USA Today.
- Lisa mentions famous American author and radio and television host Larry King.
- Otto is humming Edgar Winter's "Frankenstein" right before stopping at the Kwik-E-Mart.
- Mr. Burns mentions Hungarian-American silent film actress Vilma Bánky when referring to the movies from the old days he enjoyed.
- Homer was hired under the fictional "Project Bootstrap", formulated by former president Gerald Ford.
- The residents of Springfield Retirement Castle switch from live news coverage of the crisis at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant to the game show Wheel of Fortune.
- A contestant incorrectly guesses the puzzle to be "Three Loins in the Fountain", a reference to the 1954 film Three Coins in the Fountain.
- Homer was solving a Rubik's Cube during his training as Safety Inspector. He later blames the cube for the potential meltdown.
- When Homer stops the meltdown, he silently looks at the timer which was stopped at 007. This is a reference to when an atomic bomb was stopped with seven seconds to spare and the timer showed 007, the number of James Bond, done by Sean Connery in Goldfinger.
- Smithers placed a 5% ceiling on the Keogh plan at the nuclear power plant.
- The Itchy & Scratchy Show episode "My Dinner with Itchy" is a reference to the American comedy-drama film My Dinner with Andre. Scratchy is wearing the same suit that Wallace Shawn was wearing in the film.
- Aristotle Amadopolis to famous Greek magnate Aristotle Onassis.
- Bart is playing Monopoly with Maggie.
- Earvin "Magic" Johnson makes a shot at the end of the episode and remarks "I pulled a Homer" before several attractive cheerleaders. Ironically, two weeks after this episode aired, Johnson publicly announced that he had the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, the precursor to Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, and stated that he had contracted it as a result of unprotected sex with multiple women.
Trivia
- After the nuclear crisis in Japan, several nuclear-themed episodes, including "Homer Defined" were banned or censored from airing in countries like Germany and Austria.
- Mr. Burns wears a toupee in the photograph that is superimposed when he is communicating with Kent Brockman via speaker phone.
Continuity
- A picture of the "Babysitter bandit" Ms. Botz is seen on the issue of US of A Today that Homer is reading. "Some Enchanted Evening"
- Aristotle Amadopolis reappears. "Homer at the Bat"
Goofs
- In Mr Burns' surveillance cameras, the workers are identical.
- During Laugh and a Half, the surveillance camera says 15:07, but the clock says about 7 o'clock.
- When Bart looks at the pictures of himself and Milhouse, all of the pictures of Milhouse have his glasses with black rims instead of red ones.