The Wandering Juvie/References

Cultural references

 * The episode title is a pun on the legend of the.
 * While Bart is collecting the ill begotten wedding gifts, he remarks that this prank is his "Sgt. Peppers". This is a reference to The Beatles' 7th studio album , widely regarded as The Beatles' best album and frequently topping "Best Album of All Time" lists.
 * The song playing during the prison dance is "" by.
 * When Gina tells Bart that her crime was pushing Snow White off a parapet at Disneyland, she shows him a newspaper clipping with the headline "It's a Fall World", a pun on the Disney song "".
 * The title of Snake's book, The Ten Habits of Highly Successful Criminals, is a pun on the self-help book .

Goofs

 * As Marge's magnifier continues to zoom closer and closer on her face, the screen number changes from X2, X8, X100, X5000, X1000

Trivia

 * The list of things Bart picks for his fake wedding: A coffee maker, waffle iron, tea service, fondue pot, dish towels, silverware, cheese grater, mellonballer, andirons, china figurine, and chain valance.
 * The voice of Kearney appeared in two different boys when Bart was in Juvie and neither were Kearney. First a kid with blond hair in the yard, and then later in the dance hall in a bald kid.
 * Wiggum just got mauled by a bear, yet his clothes are not ripped at all, and his guts aren't spilling out, he has suffered no blood loss, and he isn't even in any pain.
 * This is the second time Chicago's "Colour my World" has been played in this show. The first was in Homer the Moe.
 * Given Judge Harm's previous dealing with Bart and his family in "The Parent Rap" and the fact she was unsuccessful in sending him to juvenile hall for 5 years when she also had a grudge against Homer and Marge for destroying her houseboat, it is quite surprising that in this episode she only sentences Bart to 6 months.
 * In Marge Be Not Proud, Bart was almost sent to juvenile hall while in The Secret War of Lisa Simpson, he was sent to a military school for punishment which Marge called a 'jail for children'.