There are two places where we've ever seen the stairs in the show. It's like they drew the whole layout then realized you couldn't tell where the basement stairs were so they quickly added them into the one location where no architect worth his salt would ever put them. The stairs would be more logically under the normal upstairs part, basically in that image they'd be the half of the closet that's behind the upstairs basically coming off the kitchen. Those stairs are inside the garage and it pisses me off that this layout was ever taken seriously. If the stairs weren't actually covering part of the garage layout the garage door wouldn't start until further from the right side. If you opened that garage door, a sizable chunk of wall would be blocking the right side. This was revisited in this episode, during a flashback to shortly after Willie's birth.Click to shrink.They are in the garage.
The wager that Jimbo makes with Kearney is a reference to Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne.In fact, the entire scene is modeled after a similar scene in the film, from camera angles to Bart's facial expression.
#Simpson rumpus room full#
Coach Krupt's saying "What is your major malfunction, Simpson?" is a reference to Full Metal Jacket.The episode also features songs similar to the style of the musical.The musical is referenced throughout the episode, with Lisa in the position of Professor Higgins and Groundskeeper Willie as Eliza Doolittle.There will be a Season 26 episode called " My Fare Lady". The episode title is a pun on the 1964 musical film, My Fair Lady.Al Jean sweared during the audio commentary of the episode when one of the other commentators was talking about being In plays when he was growing up, he said "Look at me now motherfuckers".In the Italian dub Coach Krupt was voiced by former AC Milan player, winner of two Champion's leagues, Gennaro Gattuso.This is another one of the rare episodes to feature the rumpus room.It is unknown if the two coaches are related. The last time a Simpson was tormented by a coach occurred in " Home Away from Homer".Starting with this episode, Anke Engelke took over as the German voice of Marge after the death of her predecessor Elisabeth Volkmann.The man in the commercial sits down and the music stops, but when Homer and Eli Stern VI have stopped talking, he is up again and the music is playing.In this episode's end credits, instead of the normal music there was a medley of the songs heard.The episode was rated TV-PG for drug references, violence, coarse language and sexual references.In the gym teacher's datebook, "Double Bombardment" is listed on Christmas."My Fair Lady" is also a retelling of Pygmalion. Connections: This episode covers the same topic as "My Fair Lady." This episode is also somewhat similar to the season 11 episode " Pygmoelian", in the sense that it features another secondary character getting a 'makeover' or 'new look', last time it was Moe Szyslak.He also played very important roles to the plots of the episodes " Homer Badman" and " Bye Bye Nerdie", albeit in shorter appearances.
He was however, the central character in "Nightmare on Evergreen Terrace", one of the three segments of " Treehouse of Horror VI", and had a large amount of screentime devoted to him in " Girly Edition"-in which his shack was also destroyed by Bart's shenanigans and left him temporarily homeless. In the show's entire 17-year run, this is the very first full-length episode centered around Groundskeeper Willie.Presumably, she chose not to go through with the operation. Pommelhorst is still seen as a woman in later episodes, including the recent episode " Blazed and Confused". Despite being mentioned that she was going through a sex-change operation, Mrs.