Obvious things about a creative work you realize after the millionth time (OPEN SPOILERS POSSIBLE)

Valleys tend to be surrounded by hills. I don’t see any big contradiction naming it after a nearby feature.

Or there again, maybe it’s named after someone with the surname Hill.

Well, there is precedent for that, with Eastwood Canyon.

*Ravine

It’s embarrassing but I just realized why Jim Rockford’s father is called Rocky.

Bit from the Simpsons that took me entirely too long to get- Homer and Marge trying to figure out a name for Bart before he’s born, but Homer nixes everything because of insulting rhymes kids will call him, but proclaims the name Bart to be perfect and taunt proof.

Fart. He missed Fart.

Jane’s brother was Peter Asher of “Peter & Gordon” fame, whose big hit was the McCartney-penned, “World Without Love.”

I never realized this until the last time I saw it and it is 60 years old so I don’t think I need spoiler tags.
Over the ending credits of Fail Safe, we can hear the Russian delegate to the UN’s phone melting.

Was that before or after the Nicholas Cage & Victoria Jackson SNL skit?

Sorry, but I don’t think that’s the HOtO. It’s teardrop shaped, and it has a heavy string of oddly-shaped beads supporting it, not a thin chain. She is wearing heart-shaped earrings, though; I think that’s what you’re supposed to notice in the shot.

Heh, I’ve known that since I was 13. I really liked that song. P & G were just so geeky, though.

I just realized that Bender from Futurama isn’t called that just because he bends things but also because he’s constantly drunk. He’s on a bender.

According to Bender’s wiki page, his name is an homage to actor Judd Nelson.

It didn’t take a million viewings but I was literally halfway through the Hazbin Hotel series before the penny finally dropped on the name “Sir Pentious”.

Because he’s a snake guy.

A serpent.

I feel so dumb.

Did you miss the part where he says concealed? Beads would make a good disguise for a thin chain. Oversized brass cover for the diamond.

For a long time I was a little confused by the the line “Our house, in the middle of our street” from the Madness song, because in American parlance the “middle of the street” would mean literally in the street. I only recently realized that in Britain that presumably means “roughly equidistant from both ends of the street”, i.e. what an American would call the middle of the block.

Better the street than the train tracks…

I was never confused by this, but I might have been if it had been “the middle of the street” instead of “the middle of our street.”

“The middle of the block” could be vulnerable to a different sort of confusion, since “the block” could refer to either the portion of a street between two intersecting streets or to the rectangular area surrounded on all four sides by streets (as in “take a walk around the block”).

Mind. Blown. Can’t believe that never occurred to me either.

Maybe it’s like the Four Yorkshiremen sketch. “We had to live in a shoebox in the middle of the road!”

I’ve been listening to a performance of Arthur Conan Doyle’s second Sherlock Holmes story, The Sign of Four, and it made me notice something that I haven’t in the many times I’ve read it (or even heard it performed). I don’t know if Doyle did this deliberately or not, but now that I’ve seen and heard it, I can’t unsee/unhear it.

At the very beginning, describing his dealings with women, after Watson proclaims his liking for the attractive Miss Mary Morstan, Holmes says he didn’t even notice. Watson calls him an automaton, and Holmes retorts:

At the end of their adventure, Watson proclaims his intention to wed Mostan, anbd this dialogue ensues:

I couldn’t help but notice the similarity in phrasing:

'… the most winning woman I ever knew was hanged for poisoning three little children for their insurance-money"

“she is one of the most charming young ladies I ever met”

He uses the latter phrase while condemning Watson for taking up with her. Is he implying that Miss Morstan, being even a charming woman, might have something in common with that winning female poisoner? Or is this just Holmes’ own distrust of women? Holmes pastiches sometimes have him hooking up with Irene Adler and even having a child with her, but in the Canon, although she is to him “THE Woman”, she’s still a thief and a scoundrel.

Holmes doesn’t “imply”. If he wants to say something, he says it.