My Little Pony Friendship is Magic Wiki
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===[[The Super Speedy Cider Squeezy 6000]]===
 
===[[The Super Speedy Cider Squeezy 6000]]===
*The musical number [[The Flim Flam Brothers]] shares many similarities with the number "Ya Got Trouble" from ''[[Wikipedia:The Music Man|The Music Man]]''. Specifically, the identical ryhming styles, staccatos, and theme of con men trying to win over a small town.
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*The musical number [[The Flim Flam Brothers]] shares many similarities with the number "Ya Got Trouble" from ''[[Wikipedia:The Music Man|The Music Man]]''. Specifically, the identical ryhming styles, staccatos, and theme of smooth talkers trying to win over a small town. Also, mid-song, the ponies chant "cider, cider, cider" in the same matter the people of River City chanted "trouble, trouble, trouble" ''Music Man'' number.
 
*The scene where one of the [[Flim Flam brothers]] asks [[Granny Smith]] if she's "chicken" bears similarities in staging and dialog to a scene from the film ''[[Wikipedia:Back to the Future Part II|Back to the Future Part II]]''.
 
*The scene where one of the [[Flim Flam brothers]] asks [[Granny Smith]] if she's "chicken" bears similarities in staging and dialog to a scene from the film ''[[Wikipedia:Back to the Future Part II|Back to the Future Part II]]''.
 
*The competition between the Apple family and the machine is a homage to the legend of John Henry.
 
*The competition between the Apple family and the machine is a homage to the legend of John Henry.

Revision as of 05:17, 26 March 2012

The following is a list of allusions to My Little Pony, works of fiction, people, places, events, and other cultural touchstones in the series My Little Pony Friendship is Magic.

The allusions, references, similarities, homages, and other items on this list should be specific, detailed, unique, or identifying. Avoid adding incidental, broad, general, or tangential similarities.

Contents

Multiple episodes

Episodes
Season one
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Season two
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Multiple episodes

Character names and design

Other names, titles, and design

  • Canterlot is a portmanteau of "canter", a three-beat horse gait, and Camelot from Arthurian legends.
  • Cloudsdale's suffix, "dale", is an old word for a valley or open river valley, but the name is also a play on the Clydesdale breed of horse. The city's buildings and general design take clues from Greek culture, which is appropriate as the myth of Pegasus originated from Greek mythology.
  • The hot air balloon that is featured in the opening sequence, Fall Weather Friends, and Sonic Rainboom was requested to be incorporated into the show by Hasbro's toy division.​[​citation needed​]​
  • The Wonderbolts appear to be based on the U.S. Navy's flight demonstration team, the Blue Angels. They resemble the Blue Angels in uniform color–blue and yellow–and the "flying bolt" logo, evocative of the "flying shield" portion of the Blue Angels logo.

Mythology

  • The show features dragons, unicorns, and Pegasi in multiple episodes, and several other mythological creatures detailed in individual episode sections below.

Re-use of assets

Audio

  • When the ponies panic in the final scene of Bridle Gossip, a distinctive gasp sound is played among the cries, which is the same gasp used by Pinkie Pie in Friendship is Magic, part 1 as a reaction to meeting Twilight Sparkle for the first time. It is used again later in A Bird in the Hoof, and reversed to form Fluttershy's inhalation at the beginning of Sonic Rainboom.
    • Also recycled in Sonic Rainboom is Rarity's laugh, which incidentally is also first heard in the pilot episode.
  • Scootaloo's line "What are you, a dictionary?" from The Return of Harmony Part 1 is used again in Family Appreciation Day.
  • The music that plays during Silver Spoon and Diamond Tiara's cute-ceañera party in Call of the Cutie is the same music that plays during the montage of the Cutie Mark Crusaders' attempts to earn their cutie marks in The Show Stoppers and during Pinkie Pie's birthday party toward the end of Party of One.
  • Twilight's cry of PINKIIIIIEEE!! is used twice in the series, the first being in The Ticket Master and the second in Hearth's Warming Eve.
  • The line 'Holy Guacamole!' is one of the very few instances in which a single clip of audio is re-used in the same episode. It is spoken by Spike during the middle and end sections of Feeling Pinkie Keen and was originally intended to be his catchphrase before being dropped for undisclosed reasons.

Animation

  • The main six's hair 'physics' while running are used consistently throughout the series.
  • Pinkie Pie's crying animation in Friendship is Magic, Part 2 is used as the basis for the same animation used in Baby Cakes.

Episodes

Season one

Friendship is Magic, part 1

  • The episode's title that appears in Hasbro's viewing guide, Mare in the Moon, is a play on the mythical Man in the Moon.
  • Moondancer, mentioned but unseen in the episode, is the name of a G1 and G3 pony.
  • Twilight Sparkle resides in a literal ivory tower.

Friendship is Magic, part 2

  • A manticore is featured in this episode.
  • Fluttershy pulls a thorn from the manticore's paw, much like the classic tale of Androcles and the Lion.
  • The magic of the Elements of Harmony manifests as rainbow that envelops Night Mare Moon. The scene is reminiscent of the Rainbow of Light from the 1984 My Little Pony pilot episode Rescue at Midnight Castle, where Megan defeats Tirac in a similar fashion.

The Ticket Master

  • The episode's title is a play on the American ticket company, Ticketmaster.
  • Fluttershy's line "loons and toucans and bitterns, oh my!" echoes quote "lions and tigers and bears, oh my!" from The Wizard of Oz.
  • The scene where Twilight and Spike are chased by a mob of ponies features bluegrass style sound-alike music of Yakety Sax from The Benny Hill Show.
  • Fluttershy is singing the My Little Pony theme when Twilight Sparkle finds her cleaning the library.

Applebuck Season

  • During the bunny stampede, one of the background ponies, Rose, delivers the line "The horror, the horror...", which is from the Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness, later used as the basis for the movie Apocalypse Now, which also uses the line at its end.
  • The stampede scene features bunnies running around a pony lying on the ground in a down shot, much like the scene in The Lion King when Mufasa is killed by the stampede.
  • After the bunny stampede, Daisy says, "By... by... THEM!", possibly a reference to the classic sci-fi film "Them!"

Griffon the Brush Off

  • A griffon is featured in this episode.
  • When Pinkie Pie is chasing Rainbow Dash, she uses the same bounding gait as Pepe le Pew uses in chasing his unwilling paramour in the Looney Tunes cartoons. The music heard is also in the same style as the aforementioned chase scenes.
  • Spike hums the My Little Pony theme song when gathering scrolls at the town hall.

Boast Busters

  • The title of the episode is a play on the title of the Ghostbusters franchise.
  • The Great and Powerful Trixie shares her title with "The Great and Powerful Oz" from The Wizard of Oz.
  • Trixie's challenge to the audience echoes the phrase "anything you can do I can do better", which originated with the song of the same name from the 1946 Broadway musical Annie Get Your Gun.
  • The ursa bears are named after the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, and feature these constellations on their tails.

Dragonshy

  • When Fluttershy hears the dragon's snores, she stiffly falls to the side accompanied by a goat bleat, alluding to the practice of some breeds of goat to stiffen and fall over after being startled.
  • Pinkie Pie's costume is similar to Daffy Duck's body in a scene from the Looney Tunes cartoon, Duck Amuck.

Look Before You Sleep

Bridle Gossip

  • The title is a pun on "idle gossip" as well as a reference to a "gossip's bridle" or scold's bridle", a medieval punishment and mild torture device, used on women who were nagging excessively or were otherwise verbally abusive or unpleasant.
  • Poison joke is explicitly compared to poison oak.
  • When Zecora comes back to Ponyville, one of the ponies delivers the line "The horror, the horror..." for the second time in the series. The line originates Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness, later used as the basis for the movie Apocalypse Now, which also uses the line at its end.

Swarm of the Century

  • The song Pinkie Pie plays to get the parasprites to follow her is identical to the song she plays in her flashback in The Cutie Mark Chronicles.
  • Princess Celestia leaves Ponyville early because of an infestation in "Fillydelphia", the latter is a play on the city of Philadelphia.
  • The title is a pun of the mini-series "Storm of the Century".
  • The infestation and Pinkie Pie's use of music to lure the parasprites out of Ponyville were adapted from the Pied Piper of Hamelin legend.

Winter Wrap Up

Call of the Cutie

  • The episode title is either a play on the phrase "call of duty", or on the title of the classic novel The Call of the Wild, which tells the story of a dog trying to finds its true identity.
  • The inside of the dojo where Apple Bloom and Rainbow Dash practice karate has pictures of silhouettes of Princess Celestia and Princess Luna on the walls, as they are illustrated in the prologue of Friendship is Magic, part 1.
  • Diamond Tiara's "cute-ceañera", "a party celebrating me and my fantastic cutie mark", borrows its name and purpose from the Latin American quinceañera, a coming-of-age party for teenage girls.

Fall Weather Friends

  • The title is a play on fair weather friends, which refers to people who are only friends when it is convenient–fair weather–and will abandon their friends at times of strife.
  • The Iron Pony competition shares its name with the sports competition Ironman Triathlon.
  • When Rainbow Dash accidentally knocks apples off a tree onto her head, they fall to the tune of Shave and a Haircut.
  • The Running of the Leaves tradition shares its name with the Running of the Bulls tradition.

Suited For Success

  • Rarity's Dressmaking Song is a direct homage to Stephen Sondheim's song Putting It Together from the musical Sunday in the Park with George.
  • Pinkie Pie's line "I love something. Something's my favorite" echoes the line "I love smiling. Smiling's my favorite" from the film Elf.
  • When Rarity considers exile she says, "Where would I go? And what would I pack?" in a fashion that echoes a line by Scarlett O'Hara in the 1939 classic film Gone With The Wind, "Where shall I go? What shall I do?"
  • The sequence where Rarity has locked herself in her room and says "I vant to be alone" with an Eastern European accent echoes the famous phrase associated with Greta Garbo.
  • Hoity Toity bears a strong resemblance to Karl Lagerfeld, head designer and creative director for the Chanel fashion house.
  • The headdress for Rainbow Dash's "perfect dress" strongly resembles the shape of the helmet of the comic book character The Rocketeer.
  • The musical opening of Rarity's second fashion show has a short sound-alike segment for Also sprach Zarathustra, popularized in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Feeling Pinkie Keen

  • The episode was developed from the concept of achy joints predicting the weather and the concept of raining animals,​[​citation needed​]​ which was expanded into Pinkie Pie's Pinkie Sense.
  • Fluttershy's fear prevents her from flying, as it does in Dragonshy. However when she has to jump to safety, she uses what she learned from Dragonshy and works up her nerve by repeating a line from Pinkie Pie's song.
  • The episode features a hydra, a mythological creature of Greek legend.

Sonic Rainboom

  • Rarity's hubris, leading to the loss of her wings to the sun, echoes the story of Icarus from Greek mythology. In the story, Icarus attempts to escape Crete by means of wings that his father constructed from feathers and wax. He ignores instructions not to fly too close to the sun, which melts the wax and causes him to fall to his death.
  • The music that plays during Rarity's performance is a rearrangement of the waltz from Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake.
  • The episode title is pun on Sonic Boom, which is associated with shock waves created by an object traveling through the air faster than the speed of sound.

Stare Master

  • The title is a play on the exercise device Stairmaster.
  • The episode features a cockatrice, which is a creature of legend mentioned from antiquity to the middle ages.
  • Rarity mentions filling a special order for "Trottingham," a pun on the city of Nottingham, England.

The Show Stoppers

  • Daniel Ingram, the show's music composer, describes the Cutie Mark Crusaders Song on his website as "cheesy '80s with 3 out of tune soloists."

A Dog and Pony Show

  • The phrase "a dog and pony show" originated in 19th century America as a term for small traveling circuses that toured through rural areas. The modern usage refers to an over-staged performance. Typically, the term is used to connote disdain, jocular lack of appreciation, or distrust of the message being presented or the efforts undertaken to present it.
  • The episode's plot is reminiscent of the O. Henry story The Ransom of Red Chief, in which a young boy's antics drive his kidnappers so crazy that they end up paying his family to take him back.
  • Sapphire Shores' upcoming tour, Zigfilly Follies, is a reference to the Ziegfeld Follies series of theatrical productions.
  • The bejeweled costume bears a very striking resemblance to the jumpsuits worn by Rock & Roll Legend Elvis Presley during his 1970s heyday, with a large heavy collar, flared wavy cuffs, and a golden belt.
  • The Diamond Dogs take their name from David Bowie's famous concept album and its titular song, Diamond Dogs.
  • In Spike's fantasy, the Diamond Dogs attack with the characteristic slow motion leap and 'bionic' sound effect from The Six Million Dollar Man.
  • Applejack's phrase "Kick 'em up, kick 'em out. Buck 'em up, buck 'em down" is a reference to Rawhide, a song performed by Frankie Laine.
  • Spike's announcement "Hi-ho Twilight! Away!" is a reference to The Lone Ranger.
  • The lead diamond dog's personality is similar to the character Gollum from The Lord of the Rings series of books and movies referring the gems Spike and Rarity is digging up as “precious". Furthermore, Rarity also quotes the lines “It stings. It burns.” which is another line from that character.

Green Isn't Your Color

  • The color green, mentioned in the episode's title, is associated with envy.
  • Photo Finish wears the same distinct hairstyle and sunglasses as Anna Wintour, editor of Vogue magazine.
  • Photo Finish's name comes from "photo finish" - the phenomenon when two racehorses (or other athletes) cross the finish line together and only a photograph can determine the winner.

Over a Barrel

  • The main locale of the episode, Appleloosa, takes its name from the Appaloosa breed of horse.
  • Fluttershy calling Spike "Huffy the Magic Dragon" is a reference to the 1963 folk song Puff, the Magic Dragon sung by Peter, Paul and Mary.
  • Spike plays the piano in this episode. His predecessor in the My Little Pony movie Escape from Midnight Castle has a similar scene where he plays the piano.

A Bird in the Hoof

  • The episode's title is a play on the phrase "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush".
  • The scene with Angel holding a pocketwatch references Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, in which one of the characters is a white rabbit that carries a pocket watch and is always running somewhere due to being late. In addition, Fluttershy's remark "I'm late, for a very important date" is a quote from Disney's 1951 film adaptation of Alice in Wonderland.
  • Fluttershy stresses over how she looks and what to wear, and looks through a rack of dresses which carries the Grand Galloping Gala dresses from Suited for Success.
  • The scene where the ponies pursue Philomeena is accompanied by sound-alike music to Yakkety Sax, made famous in The Benny Hill Show chase scenes.
  • The scene where Fluttershy attempts to feed birdseed to Philomeena was storyboarded to look like a talk show, and Philomeena's bird-seed-eating gag was styled after similar gags from the Roadrunner Looney Tunes cartoons.[1]
  • Fluttershy, again, sings the My Little Pony theme song.

The Cutie Mark Chronicles

  • "Princess Celestia's School for Gifted Unicorns" is similarly named to X-Men's "Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters".
  • Applejack travels to Manehattan, a play on Manhattan, a borough of New York City. New York City is also known as the Big Apple.
  • The Orange family's name is a reference to the phrase "apples and oranges", a comparison of two very different things, much like how Applejack does not appreciate the Orange family's very different lifestyle.

Owl's Well That Ends Well

  • When Spike falls asleep in the punch bowl, Pinkie Pie says "And now the punch has been... Spiked!", a play on "spiking the punch", which means adding alcohol to the punch.
  • The title is a play on the phrase "All's well that ends well".

Party of One

  • Pinkie Pie's chant to Gummy: "Go Gummy! It's your birthday! Go Gummy! It's your birthday!" is a paraphrase of hip-hop artist 50 Cent's In Da Club.
  • At the party near the end of the episode, when Spike tries to dance with Rarity, he does a dance move made famous by the 1977 film Saturday Night Fever.
  • When Pinkie Pie is chasing Rainbow Dash, she chases her by hopping a way that is similar to the way Pepe le Pew of Looney Tunes fame would chase after Penelope Pussycat.
  • Pinkie Pie's imaginary friend in this episode, named "Rocky", appears to be a reference to Sylvester Stallone, who is known for his rough accent, as well as his portrayal as Rocky Balboa in the Boxing movie series "Rocky".

The Best Night Ever

Season two

The Return of Harmony Part 1

The Return of Harmony Part 2

  • According to director Jayson Thiessen, one of the storyboard artists decided to board the award ceremony sequence at the end of the episode as a shot-for-shot equivalent of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, though parts of the sequence were ultimately cut to shorten the episode.[2]

Lesson Zero

Luna Eclipsed

  • The episode title could be a pun on "lunar eclipse", which is when the sun, moon, and Earth are directly in line with one another.

Sisterhooves Social

  • Rarity paraphrases the famous line from the 1939 film Gone with the Wind, "As God is my witness, I'll never be hungry again!"

The Cutie Pox

  • At the bowling alley, four of the male ponies look similar to characters from the film The Big Lebowski, which features the theme of bowling.
  • A version of the painting American Gothic, with ponies for people, hangs on the wall at the Apple family's house.
  • One of the cutie marks Apple Bloom receives is a red shoe which causes her to dance uncontrollably, like the main character in the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale The Red Shoes.
  • The statue Apple Bloom constructs is Venus Anadyomene, a common theme in art in antiquity and the renaissance.

May the Best Pet Win!

  • One of the cats under Fluttershy's care looks similar to those from the Littlest Pet Shop toyline, another Hasbro-owned property.
  • The bat contestant plays the My Little Pony theme song on a glass harmonica.
  • The fire trail left by Rainbow Dash is similar to Back to the Future when the Delorean reaches 88mhp.
  • The streaks left behind by Dash's sprinting on the race track bears resemblance to those of the lightcycles from Tron.

The Mysterious Mare Do Well

The episode's lead storyboard artist, Sabrina Alberghetti, commented on how the crew incorporated "one [superhero] cliché after another" in a "fun tongue-in-cheek kind of way."[3] Among them:

  • Rainbow Dash's catchphrase, "never fear, your friendly neighborhood Rainbow Dash is here!" is a play on both "your friendly neighborhood Spider-Man", and "There’s no need to fear, Underdog is here!"
  • The Mysterious Mare Do Well shares the same purple-and-black color scheme and wide-brim hat and black ribbon as Darkwing Duck. Alberghetti had worked on Darkwing Duck comics before, however she did not design the character.[4]
  • The fanfare, accompanying music, and rally posters of the Mare Do Well strongly resemble the same from Batman: The Animated Series.
  • The musical score as the cart rolls uncontrollably downhill mimics the score of the film Speed .

Sweet and Elite

  • Among other places Rarity visits in the montage is an art exhibit, where the central painting on the wall combines elements of Salvador Dalí's paintings, particularly The Persistence of Memory. The painting to the left resembles Pablo Picasso's signature style of Cubism. The painting to the right is an abstract style akin to the works of Kandinsky. The show's director, Jayson Thiessen, had hinted about Salvador Dali and avant-garde in an interview in September 2011, long before the episode's initial broadcast.
  • The bags that Rarity uses to carry her shopping in before she runs into Fancypants for the first time have two horseshoes arranged to imitate the Chanel fashion house branding.

Secret of My Excess

  • One of the working titles of the episode, "Attack of the 50 Foot Dragon", is a play on the movie title Attack of the 50 Foot Woman, and it hints to the episode's "giant monster rampaging through a city" theme that popularized by the 1954 film Godzilla.
  • The siren that sounds when Spike begins rampaging through the town is similar in design and sound to Civil Defense sirens of the 1950s and '60s.
  • The kidnapping of Rarity and subsequent aerial assault on Spike draws parallels with the classic 1933 film King Kong.
  • The music that plays when Twilight is reshelving bears a strong resemblance to the theme for Disney's The Sorcerer's Apprentice.
  • The episode title is pun on the comedy film "The Secret of My Success" starring Michael J. Fox

Hearth's Warming Eve

  • A creature similar to Discord is depicted fighting a Pegasus on a relief in the theater.
  • The Pegasus Tribe culture is based on Classical Greece.

Family Appreciation Day

  • The Smith family's appearance highly resemble the Western American pioneers of the late 1800s. Addtionally, the wagon they hauled remembled the type of covered wagons used during the period.

Baby Cakes

  • The brief screeching violins that play when Pinkie Pie finds Pound Cake on the ceiling echo the musical piece The Murder, made famous by the film Psycho. The scene in general is modeled after horror films, with an unidentified silhouette crawling in the shadows.
  • The music that plays when Pinkie Pie urges the Cakes to pick her as babysitter is based on Aquarela do Brasil, a Brazilian samba standard from the 1930s.
  • Pinkie's instructions for using the crib mirror a line from The Simpsons episode The Last Temptation of Homer.

The Last Roundup

  • The scene where Pinkie Pie and Fluttershy work at a conveyor belt and can't handle the pace is a homage to the television series I Love Lucy. The scene replicates one from the I Love Lucy episode "Job Switching", where Lucy and Ethel wear mushroom-like hats and work on a production line wrapping candies. They can't handle the pace and stuff the unhandled chocolates into their hats and mouths.
  • Rainbow Dash mentions Calamity Mane and Wild Bull Hickok, whose names are based off two prominent Wild West figures.
  • Dodge Junction is a namesake of Dodge City, a famous locale for Western films.

The Super Speedy Cider Squeezy 6000

  • The musical number The Flim Flam Brothers shares many similarities with the number "Ya Got Trouble" from The Music Man. Specifically, the identical ryhming styles, staccatos, and theme of smooth talkers trying to win over a small town. Also, mid-song, the ponies chant "cider, cider, cider" in the same matter the people of River City chanted "trouble, trouble, trouble" Music Man number.
  • The scene where one of the Flim Flam brothers asks Granny Smith if she's "chicken" bears similarities in staging and dialog to a scene from the film Back to the Future Part II.
  • The competition between the Apple family and the machine is a homage to the legend of John Henry.

Read It and Weep

  • The musical cue that plays when Rainbow Dash looks at the book and starts reading it is very similar to the one that plays in a similar scene in the film The NeverEnding Story.
  • The quote of Pinkie Pie saying "Did the crash somehow give her super-duper spider powers?" and the doctor saying "No, nor it gave her the amazing healing powers", resembles to Marvel Comics references; the "spider powers" resembles to Spider-Man, and "healing powers" resembles to Wolverine from X-Men.
  • The game that Fluttershy and Twilight Sparkle play with Rainbow Dash is very similar to Battleship, which is produced by Milton Bradley and owned by Hasbro.
  • The Ahuitzotl is a creature of Aztec mythology.
  • Ahuitzotl petting his white cat at the end of the Daring Do story is a cinematic element made famous by the character Ernst Stavro Blofeld of the James Bond series.
  • There are several allusions to the Indiana Jones franchise:
    • The harp plucking that plays when Daring Do first enters the temple bears a strong resemblance to the music that plays in the opening of Raiders of the Lost Ark when Indiana Jones casually brushes spiders off of his back.
    • The sunlight shining into the chamber is a reference to the map room scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark, where the sunlight shines on a crystal at the center of the room.
    • The way Daring Do makes her way to the Sapphire Stone's pedestal mirrors a scene from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade where the titular hero navigates a trap floor by only stepping on the correct tiles.
    • The scene where Daring Do retrieves the Sapphire Stone mirrors a scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark in which Indiana Jones retrieves a statue of an idol from pedestal.

Hearts and Hooves Day

  • The holiday featured in the episode shares many similarities with Valentine's Day and was originally aired a few days before the holiday. It features couples spending time together and the exchange of greeting cards.

A Friend in Deed

  • The episode's title is part of the phrase "a friend in need is a friend indeed".
  • "Cranky Doodle Donkey" has the same meter as Yankee Doodle Dandy, a pejorative song sung by the British to mock the American revolutionaries. Pinkie sings a song about him to the tune of Yankee Doodle Dandy.
  • Pinkie's line "Ooh, what does this bauble do?" is nearly homophonic to "Ooh, what does this button do?", the catchphrase of the character Dee Dee from the cartoon Dexter's Laboratory.

Putting Your Hoof Down

  • Fluttershy paraphrases the famous line from the 1939 film Gone with the Wind, "As God is my witness, I'll never be hungry again!", similar to Rarity in Sisterhooves Social. Though in these cases, "God" is replaced by "Celestia".
  • In a scene featuring the character Iron Will in his workshop for assertiveness, a background music clip borrows from the primary motif of Eye of the Tiger by Survivor.
  • Iron Will's presentation takes place in the center of a hedge-maze, a reference to the Labyrinth of Greek mythology, which held the Minotaur, a half-man, half-bull creature, at its center.
  • Iron Will's character appears to be inspired by actor Lawrence Tureaud, aka Mr. T, and other characters of the 'Macho Man' archetype The inspiration extends even further to the former using the latter's famous 'I pity the fool' catchphrase.
  • Pinkie Pie's negotiation trick with the Tomato Stallholder and Iron Will is derived from a similar trick used in several Looney Tunes animated shorts, including 1946's Baseball Bugs and 1951's Rabbit Fire.
  • Some of Iron Will's gestures in theatrics rememble those of professional wrestlers. Most notably when Iron Will states that he wants to hear the audience, he make a hand gesture to his ear similar to that of one of wrestling legend, Hulk Hogan's signature taunts.
  • The episode incorporates a sound-alike of the theme "The Lonely Man" from the CBS television series The Incredible Hulk.

It's About Time

  • This episode borrows two elements from Greek mythology:
    • The Cerberus is the three-headed canine that protects the gateway to the Underworld, the realm of the dead.
    • Tartarus, the area that the Cerberus in this episode guards, is one of the darker and deeper depths of the Underworld where the wicked are said to depart to after death.
  • When Rainbow Dash reports to Twilight about the safety of Ponyville, she mentions "Fillydelphia" and "Las Pegasus", a play on the cities of Philadelphia and Los Angeles or Las Vegas respectively. Later, she also mentions "Baltimare", a play on the city of Baltimore.

Dragon Quest

  • The episode shares its name with a series of console RPGs.
  • The episode's plot is similar to an episode from the 1980's series My Little Pony, "Spike's Search" where Spike goes on a quest to learn to be a dragon and gets involved with a group of dragons who turn out to be thieves and bullies.
  • The game "King of the Hoard" the teenage dragons play appears to be the same as the children's game "King of the Hill."
  • The soundtrack during Spike's encounter with the teenage dragons features a sound-alike of wrestler "Stone Cold" Steve Austin's arena theme.

Hurricane Fluttershy

  • In the opening scene, Fluttershy tries to avoid going to the pegasus meeting by disguising herself as a tree. This is likely a reference to her famous line from Over a Barrel, "I'd like to be a tree", which has become an in-joke in the fan community.

References

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