In the beginning of the episode, Jack announces at a staff meeting that NBC has been bought by Kabletown, a company network from Philadelphia. Immediately, Jack and Liz exchange opinions about Philadelphia and
Boston; Liz, who grew up near Philadelphia, declares "Go
Eagles! Philly rules!
Cheesesteaks!
Bobby Clarke!
Will Smith! [Boston] sucks!". Jack, who is from Boston, responds "Boston is the greatest city in the world.
Boston Tea Party.
Boston cream pie.
Boston Rob Mariano. Birthplace of
Benjamin Franklin." Liz interjects "Yeah, then [Franklin] looked around, realized it sucked, and moved to Philadelphia!" Jack and the New York staff then deride the city of
Los Angeles, provoking an NBC executive teleconferencing in from Los Angeles to assert that "LA rules:
Michael Bay,
freeways,
Legoland—" before Jack shuts off his feed. While meeting with Kabletown executives, Jack learns that they focus on adult films and sees their list of features, including
Assatar,
The Lovely Boners,
The Hind Side, and
Fresh-Ass: Based on the Novel Tush by Assfire, puns on the 2009 films
Avatar,
The Lovely Bones,
The Blind Side, and
Precious: Based on the Novel "Push" by Sapphire. Jenna claims to Tracy that she "ate the pig that played Babe", in a reference to the 1995 film
Babe based on the British novel
The Sheep-Pig. At Don Geiss's funeral, the trumpet solo that his daughter Kathy Geiss (Marceline Hugot) performs is
Ellens dritter Gesang by
Franz Schubert, a melody best known as a setting for the
Latin Catholic prayer
Ave Maria. When Liz tells Tracy that he has a life with his family and should enjoy it after Tracy tries to have sex with her in order to restore his womanizing reputation, she tells him "You know what I have? A
Sims family that keeps getting murdered."
The Sims is a video game in which players create virtual people called "Sims" and places them in houses and helps direct their moods and satisfy their desires. Tracy responds "One day, you will have what I have because you are an amazing, strong, intelligent woman, like Hilary ... from
Fresh Prince of Bel-Air."
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air was a series that previously aired on NBC, and the
Hilary character was a dull-witted individual who lacked intelligence. Liz and Wesley also attend a
second run of the movie
Hot Tub Time Machine, which provokes arguments between them despite their mutual enjoyment of the film.
Star Wars is frequently referenced in
30 Rock, beginning with the
pilot episode in 2006 where Tracy is seen shouting that he is a
Jedi. Liz admits to being a huge fan of
Star Wars, saying that she had watched it many times with
Pete Hornberger (
Scott Adsit), and dressed up as the
Star Wars character
Princess Leia during four recent Halloweens, and while trying to get out of jury duty in Chicago and New York.
Star Wars is also referenced when Tracy takes on the identity of the character
Chewbacca. In this episode, at Don Geiss's funeral, he is shown to be frozen in carbonite similar to that of
Star Wars character
Han Solo in the 1980 film
The Empire Strikes Back. Fey, a fan of
Star Wars herself, said that the weekly
Star Wars joke or reference "started happening organically" when the crew realized that they had a
Star Wars reference "in almost every show". Fey said that from then on "it became a thing where [they] tried to keep it going", and that even though they could not include one in every episode, they still had a "pretty high
batting average". Fey attributed most of the references to executive producer and writer
Robert Carlock, whom she described as "the resident expert". ==Reception==