The name appears in several episodes of the long-running television show
M*A*S*H, most notably in the 10th season episode
Heroes where fictional prize fighter "Gentleman Joe" Cavanaugh visits the outfit and Margaret remarks "Is that what it takes to get a steak dinner around here, a visit from some Joe Palooka?" South of
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania on the way to the town of
Mountain Top, Pennsylvania is Joe Palooka Mountain, named in the early 1980s by then-Mayor of Wilkes-Barre Thomas McLaughlin. A granite monument with the likeness of Joe Palooka is located at the base of the mountain at the intersection of Pennsylvania State Routes 309 and 437, between Wilkes-Barre and the town of Mountain Top. In September 1948, a limestone Joe Palooka statue (in a flowing cape) was erected on a hill overlooking
Indiana State Road 37. In 1984, the nine-foot high, ten-ton statue and its base were moved and rededicated to the town hall in
Oolitic, Indiana. In
The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor, sailor Luis Alejandro Velasco refers to a "Joe Palooka" tavern at a port in Mobile, Alabama, United States, where he and his shipmates, while on leave, went to drink whisky and threw a fight from time to time. In
Sometimes a Great Notion,
Ken Kesey skewers one of his characters with this paragraph: "'
Tsk, tsk,' said Brother Walker. And, as he had learned the comment from
Joe Palooka, it came out 'tisk tisk', the way he assumed it was pronounced." In the 1977 film
Smokey and the Bandit, after having been drawn into a fight and taking a beating, character Cledus "Snowman" Snow (
Jerry Reed) tells his friend Bo "Bandit" Darville (
Burt Reynolds) over the
CB radio, "Look, you ain't gonna believe this, but I just did my imitation of Joe Palooka." ==Filmography==