Talk:New Kids on the Blecch
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Hmmm. First it says their singing voices were performed by N*Sync, then by someone else. BaHaReep 02:49, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
Re to the voices: Yeah I changed that. Its always been assumed NSYNC did the voices but thats not true. 2 members from Lou Pearlman's other band [[Natural (boyband)| Natural) did the voices of Milhouse and Nelson and the other 2 are unknown. These were uncredited but widely reported on their official site. It seems to sync up because if you listen to any of their recordings (my suggestion 'Put your arms around me'; Marc (Nelson) sings the first verse and J (Milhouse) sings the second one) you will note the voices have to be theirs otherwise its quite a similiarity! User:Thegingerone
Is there a Breaking Away reference in this? Bart wears an Italian shirt and speaks in cod-Italian like Dave Stoller from the film - have just caught this episode now so if someone can check this out I'd be grateful. User:Mippy
Oh, let's not forget "New Kids on the Blecch" is also a reference to another episode, where Bart was in New York City and went
to the Mad headquarters and overhears someone say something like, "Get me Kaputnik on the Phonebone, I want to talk about next week's 'New Kids on the Bleccch'.." OK, don't quote me on it..Dan Carkner 16:55, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
- The quote is "Get me Kaputnik and Phoneboe. I want to see the drawings for The New Kids on the Bleech." (Yay season 9 DVDs). Adam 16:15, 15 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Syndication after 9/11?
Someone edited in that 'after 9/11 this episode was briefly pulled from syndication because it features some towers in NY being blown up (though not the twin towers)'. Ive heard this before but I dont have any proof of it. I remember watching this episode on my FOX network on 09/12 or 09/13 of 2001 and I did wonder if it was appropriate or not. But I know I seen it! Anyone else have any help on this subject? User:Thegingerone
Bloodhound Gang song Ralph Wiggum, an obvious reference to the Simpsons. They use the lyric "yvan eht nioj", at least as I hear it. It fits the overall theme of the song, so it's possible, but anybody have any sources, or a lyric sheet?
[edit] Goofs
Would it be possible to have a pronunciation that humans can read and (gasp!) pronounce for "yvan eht nioj", rather than this incomprehensible "IPA" nonsense? I'd change it to a more standard transliteration myself, but I haven't seen the episode and I do not know how it is pronounced. -- BBlackmoor (talk) • 2007-03-06 00:38Z