The old couple's address: 12645.
Why were the old woman's breasts missing from the torso tossed into the lake?
When the boys draw out their scenario, they mention acid and lye. Lye is a base, and having acids and bases mix produces salts and neutral fluids - the arms and legs would not dissolve in that solution.
Nice touch, having the fresh dollar bill get wrinkly before it's framed. But study the numbers (G04078844 A changes to J23669620 Q) and the signatures on the two bills - they are not the same. And before that, Stan shows the back of the dollar before showing the face.
The hole Cartman dug out for his "Lambs" game has been fixed.
Sky is listed among the suspects already interviewed. Storyboard followers know Sky to be Kevin, the Chinese-American boy, but if Kevin is already around, who is Sky now?
Do all girls in South Park have four-post beds? Wendy has one, and Sarah has one. Upon reviewing "Bebe's Boobs Destroy Society" the answer is "No." Bebe's bed is a normal bed.
| I | One finger up and out |
| see | Two fingers pointing to the eyes |
| two guys | Two fingers turned out |
| inside. | Thumb pointing in |
| They have | The grabbing gesture |
| Sarah | fist |
| Peterson's | thumb up |
| doll, | fist, turned out |
| you | pointing |
| stupid | finger to the temple |
| Jew! | J sign on the hat |
After Cartman tells Kyle what he was trying to sign, he moves his gun from his left hand to his right hand.
The crime scenarios seem to come from CSI, although there is a news story about a. In California, county law enforcement is handled by the Sheriff's Department and city law enforcement by the Police Department. I assume this isn't the case in other parts of the country, as Park County law enforcement is handled by the Police Department.
Note the talking/singing fish hanging on one of the pillars in the room outside the lieutenant's office.
The action seems to take place in September, if Lt. Dawson's calendar is right. Or maybe he just didn't change the month. The calendar itself shows six days a week, not seven, and 21 days total for the month instead of 30.
Three different times are shown at the county police station - 2:02 in the lieutenant's office (though the hour hand is off), 1 p.m. just outside, and 3 p.m. in the hallway. But the lieutenant's clock seems frozen, as it read the same time both times the boys are in the office. And that second time was at night, when the clock should read 8 or 9. Also, there are two clocks on the back wall of the police room outside the office the rest of the times the boys go there, but only one when the boys visit the first time.
Mala Vista is a spoof on Buena Vista, a street you might find in a few cities. There's a Buena Vista in Burbank, CA., which Matt and Trey are acquainted with.
"I wanna get home in time to watch Crime Drama" - Back in "It Hits The Fan" the boys were watching Cop Drama but even there some graphics were mislabeled. For instance, "Crime Drama Statistics" should have read "Cop Drama Statistics."
The lieutenant working under pressure is a common thing in police dramas going back to 1930s films, but also appears in Superman (The Daily Planet's Editor in Chief) and Batman (Police Commissioner Gordon) comic books.
Kenny and Cartman take off their hats in the locker room when the adult officers confront them, but Cartman's hat is back on moments later. Kenny's remains off.
The boys have no genitalia to show for their age.
Butters shows up in class with everyone else the next day, as the boys catch up on their sleep in class. But he's supposed to be in Cartman's bathroom trying to give a semen sample...
The Park County police officers drive up in SPPD cruisers at the end of the episode.
The scenes and music which have the boys interact with the lieutenant and his men is a tribute to FX's The Shield
The Peppermnit Hippo strip club is a spoof of the Spearmint Rhino Gentemen's Clubs, to which Devid Goodman went with Trey and Matt a few times and wrote about on Salon magazine.
The scenes and music which have the boys going into the strip club is taken from New Jack City, only the name there is Nino, not Gino.
Five-O (5-0), slang for police detectives, comes from the show Hawaii Five-O (9/26/1968 - 4/26/1980), about the elite Hawaii Five-O investigative unit that reported to the Governor of Hawaii in the show. The "Five-O" is just a reflection of Hawaii becoming the 50th state in the Union.