That’s exactly what happened to me. Now it stands out every time I hear it.
Likewise, there’s a Superman in every episode of Seinfeld.
Later episodes of Sealab 2021 have a running gag involving the code or serial number “934-Texas.” The meaning of this is known only the show’s writers.
The Homestar Runner webtoons have various running gags, including but not limited to Lem Sportsinterviews, A. Chimendez, Thorax Corp. and the Delabors, Videlectix, Limozeen, and DNA evidence.
Julie Dwyer drowned in the pool at the YMCA.
Brain embolism mid-backstroke.
The Utah teapot, an early model for 3D rendering experiments, has been used in several animated movies. One nice image featuring the teapot is The Six Platonic Solids.
[prisoner]I’ll be seeing you[/prisoner]
Always gives me the creeps when I see it.
Mornington Crescent isn’t really a game, and there are no rules. I only say this because it stopped being funny a long time ago.
The ubiquitous “Hello, world!” program (the first program implemented in any language, which just prints “Hello, world!” to the standard output) comes from the first edition of “The C Programming Language” by Kernighan and Ritchie, where it is, appropriately, the first example program.
“TINC!” stands for “There Is No Cabal!”, which refers to the days when there was a Usenet Cabal that effectively controlled all of the high-bandwidth connections that could be used for Usenet traffic. The Cabal died a long time ago and blaming it for anything now is pure kookery.
A pipe-smoking man named “Bob” is the God/Prophet/Chief Salesman of the Church of the Subgenius, created by Ivan Stang as an offshoot of Discordianism. Discordianism also gave the world the modern conception of Eris, the connection between the numbers 5, 17, and 23, “Fnord!”, the modern Illuminati, and an unhealthy obsession with the pineal gland. Asking if it’s serious likely means you’ve missed the point, but you’re a pope anyway.
Shhh!
That’s the question that triggers Ebert’s comment about Kubrick’s work always having toilets. Ben Kingsley in Sexy Beast pees in his host’s toilet, then turns and continues peeing on the carpet. I haven’t seen Sweet Sweetback’s Badaaaass Song, but a review mentioned Sweetback doing one scene in a restroom, making a lot of toilety body noises. In a film I can’t recall the name of, Elliot Gould’s grad student character and a prof have a conversation at the urinals in a university restroom.
I was glad to read in the Wiki article that the teapot shows up in Microsoft’s Pipes screensaver - I’m not crazy after all! Yay! Well, not because of seeing teapots, anyway.
I don’t know if it’s a running gag, but has Jeff Bridges ever been in a movie where he hasn’t removed his shirt?
A line from 2001: A Space Odyssey, actually. Said by Poole’s parents during the birthday call.
Richard Sanders wearing a band-aid on the set of the first WKRP led to Les Nessman always having one on his person somewhere.
Jon Lovitz likes to sneak in an exaggerated throat-clearing sound in many of his works (“ACH-hem! ACH-hem!”).
Likewise, I think every Goldie Hawn movie had a peek up her skirt from behind. Climbing a ladder, etc. Not that I’m complaining, now!
I don’t remember seeing him without his shirt in the movie Stick It, but that one wasn’t aimed at his usual audience, either.
My nine year old son was watching one of the Indiana Jones movies a few weeks back, heard the scream and said “That’s the same yell the guy makes in Star Wars (Return of the Jedi) when he falls in the sand pit!”
So there ya go. It’s so over-used now that even nine year olds are picking up on it.
Sam Raimi uses the same 1973 Oldsmobile Delta 88 in every movie, it is his trademark. In Spiderman, it was Uncle Ben’s car.