I have a new segment on my blog!
For those of you that don't know, I'm a 'UGE Gilmore Girls fan and was so stoked about the trailer coming out. I have a party planned to watch them and am full of ideas. However, I feel like a rewatch of the series would do me some good.
I figured I'd document my rewatch as well as assemble an Encyclopedia of Pop Culture references as I went through.
General format:
QUICK summary of the episode with some commentary
Pop Culture fun.
Without further ado: let's dive in.
Summary & Commentary
Hi Lorelai |
Lorelai likes coffee and is introduced as a young single mother.
Lorelai runs an inn and has a chef friend named Sookie and a sassy French concierge friend named Michel.
They make fun of Rory for this outfit, this entire outfit is popular again. I would wear it. You would wear it We all would wear it. |
Rory, Lorelai's daughter, is smart and does smart people things in class like pay attention to the teacher instead of doing her nails. She also has a Korean best friend Lane who likes rock music but has to hide it from her mother, who apparently hates Rory and her mother even though this point is completely dropped in later episodes.
Plaid is Plaid |
Rory gets into an elite prep school called Chilton but it's very expensive and Lorelai can't get a loan even though she's a home owner and banks literally give loans to Birthday Clowns.
Literally the most perfect couple alive. #goals |
Lorelai goes to her rich, but cold, parents (Richard and Emily) and begs for money which they agree to as long as they come over every Friday for dinner. (side note - did not expect how emotional I would be seeing Edward Herman. I can't handle this guys. I'm at work right now!)
So tall. So dreamy. Let's all ditch school! |
Rory meets a Sam from Supernatural, I mean Dean from Supernatural, I mean Dean from Gilmore Girls, and he has no personality except he's nice and asks her questions so I guess he's a good conversationalist? Rory has never experienced this before and no longer wants to go to literally the best school in the country so that she can find out more things about boring Sam Winchester, I mean Dean Winchester, I mean Dean Foster (that's his last name, right? Whatever). Which makes zero sense with her character at all but I mean whatever I guess. (Can you tell I'm a Jess fan. I'll try to tone it down. To be fair, I liked Dean at this point. But I stand by the fact that he's very boring. Points for looking like an anime protagonist though)
Man, this would never have worked in my house. |
Drink up, ladies, we're only just getting started. |
Trench coat game on point. |
Rory learns that her grandparents are paying for Chilton then decides to stop being a crazy person and just go to the fancy school that will make her become a #bossypants
coffee coffee coffee coffee coffee coffee coffee |
Pop Culture Extravaganza
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Jack Keruac | Jack Kerouac was an American novelist and poet. Lorelai is most likely referring to his book, On The Road, that is based off of Keruac's travels with his friends across America. |
5/5 Still Relevant
On The Road is considered "a defining work of the postwar Beat and Counterculture generations." Hipsters everywhere tote this as a favorite - now we know who to blame for the total over use of the word "Wanderlust" - NOTE: Kerouac never actually used the word "Wanderlust" | ||
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RuPaul | RuPaul (or RuPaul Andre Charles) is an American actor, drag queen, model, author, television personality, and recording artist. | 5/5 Still Relevant Currently, RuPaul is most famously known for his TV Show, "RuPaul's Drag Race" - a competition to find "America's next drag superstar." However, this premiered in 2009 while the episode of Gilmore Girls he was mentioned in aired in 2000. At the time, he was most famous for his music career. I would argue that RuPaul is more relevant now given the LGBT-Awareness movement that is currently happening in the world - he was awarded the Vito Russo Award at the GLAAS Media Awards for his work in promoting equality in the LGBT community in 1999 and is truly a spokesperson for the LGBT community to this day. | ||
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Macy Gray | Macy Gray is an american R&B, jazz and soul musician. |
3/5 Still Relevant
Her last album came out in 2011, which isn't a crazy long time ago, but 5 years is 5 years. | ||
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West Side Story | Officer Krupke is the police officer in the movie musical West Side Story. |
4/5 Still Relevant
The movie came out in 1961 - so it wasn't the most current reference at the time. However, it's a classic musical and is still done today and the movie itself is also a classic. Classics never truly fade. | ||
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Eminem | Eminem is an American rapper, music producer, songwriter, and actor from Detroit, Michigan |
5/5 Still Relevant
Even though Eminem's last album came out 3 years ago in 2013 - you'd be hard pressed to find someone who doesn't know who Eminem is. Plus, you're a liar if you say you wouldn't, after a few drinks, be able to bust out all the words to "Lose Yourself" when it comes on at a party. | ||
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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is considered to be one of the Great American Novels. It tells the tale of a young boy named Huck Finn (friend of Tom Sawyer - the narrator in Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer) who runs off on a river boat with a runaway slave named Jim. |
5/5 Still Relevant
This is a book you read in English class in high school, which is exactly what Rory is doing in her high school It is a classic for a reason. Still relevant. | ||
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| Britney Spears | Britney Spears is an American pop singer regarded as a Pop Idol and credited with reviving the teen pop genre in the late 90s. Rory jokes that she is going to be in a Britney Spears music video because in the music video for Britney's debut single "... Baby One More Time," Britney sports a school-girls outfit. |
5/5 Still Relevant
It's Britney freaking Spears. Nuff said. | |
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Stephen King | Stephen King is an American Horror and Supernatural Fiction novelist. His books are known for being particularly gorey or psychologically traumatizing. |
5/5 Still Relevant
Dude's prolific. He puts out at least one book every year and hasn't slowed down since 1974. Considered one of the greatest writers of our time. | ||
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Zsa Zsa Gabor | Zsa Zsa Gabor is an Hungarian-American actress and socialite known for her charm, grace, and decadent lifestyle. Think the Kardashians of the 30s and 40s. I love this quote by Gerold Frank (who helped Gabor write her autobiography) so much that I'm going to share it with you: "Zsa Zsa is unique. She's a woman from the court of Louis XV who has somehow managed to live in the 20th century, undamaged by the PTA ... She says she wants to be all the Pompadours and Du Barrys of history rolled into one, but she also says, 'I always goof. I pay all my own bills. ... I want to choose the man. I do not permit men to choose me.'" |
1/5 Still Relevant
I would say the majority of kids today have no idea who Zsa Zsa Gabor is. However, I just ordered her autobiography after reading 2 paragraphs about her so maybe they should? | ||
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Rosemary's Baby (film) | Rosemary's Baby is an American psychological horror film written and directed by Roman Polanski, based off the book written by Ira Levin. In the movie, Minnie Castevet, played by Ruth Gordon, stands there holding a tannis root. |
4/5 Still Relevant
Still a great movie. I'm sure most people would recognize the name - but most people haven't seen it. Then again, I think that's why Rory was so excited that Dean kew it. So, kinda the point. | ||
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| Oprah Winfrey | Oprah Winfrey is from Chicago. |
5/5 Still Relevant
It. Is. Oprah. | |
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| Moby-Dick, by Herman Melville | Moby-Dick is novel written by Herman Melville about a captain obsessed with catching and killing a whale that destroyed his former ship and severing one of his legs at the knee. Also considered a Great American Novel - this book was commercially a failure during Melville's lifetime and became beloved after his death. |
5/5 Still Relevant
It's a classic book that everyone recognizes the name of and knows what it's about (a whale) even though most people don't read it because it's hella long. | |
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Madame Bovary, by Gustave Flaubert | Madame Bovary is a novel written by Gustave Flaubert about an adulterous doctor's wife that created a huge controversy in the late 1800s. His book more or less established modern realist narration that most books today employ. |
5/5 Still Relevant
Again, another classic if not as recognizable as Moby. However, I have officially ordered this book to read as well. | ||
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Florence Griffith Joyner, also known as “Flo Jo” | Flo Jo was an American track and field athlete considered to be the fastest woman of all time. |
2/5 Still Relevant
She’s still regarded as the fastest woman because of the world records she set – but Gilmore Girls is the only place I’ve heard her mentioned. | ||
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Mommie Dearest | Mommie Dearest was a “1981 American biographical drama film about Joan Crawford and the abusive relationship she had with her adopted daughter […] and son. |
2/5 Still Relevant
This film is regarded as a cult classic but not well known within the regular populace. It’s on my list, but then again, what isn’t? | ||
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The Little Match Girl | The Little Match Girl has many iterations, so I’m not sure which one Rory is referring to. There is the original short story written by Hans Christian Anderson, the 1928 French film, and a 2016 Disney animated short film. I’m assuming it’s one of the first two as the latter was after this episode aired (unless Rory had an “in” at Disney and knew their future projects. However, the story is about a young girl standing in the cold trying to sell matches on the street. Lorelai and Rory are standing motionless outside Emily and Richard’s door in the cold. |
3/5 Still Relevant
Again, this was relatively obscure when it was mentioned in 2009. But, I mean, Hans Christian Anderson is Hans Christian Anderson. | ||
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Lyle and Erik Menendez | Lyle and Erik Menendez were criminals convicted in 1994 for murdering their wealthy parents. |
2/5 Still Relevant
Unless you followed the trial in 1994 – you probably won’t remember the Menendez brothers. | ||
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Nick@Nite | Nick@Nite is a segment featured on Nickelodeon featuring sitcoms for preteens rather than children. They used to feature many older sitcoms like “The Brady Bunch, “Gilligan’s Island,” and “Three’s Company.” |
4/5 Still Relevant
Nick@Nite still exists but it’s veered away from shows like “The Brady Bunch” to feature more shows like “Friends.” Rachel is less likely to talk about how dreamy Ross was than Marsha was to talk about whatever boyfriend she had. |
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