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Trivia
- This is one of the few episodes where Vicky isn't the one who babysits Timmy.
- This episode reveals how Timmy got his buck teeth in the first place. It was because Pappy unintentionally let Timmy suck on his pacifier too long as he forgot momentarily where he was.
- This episode was ranked #14 in the "100 Greatest Nicktoons Episode" countdown.
- Pappy was born in the 1930s, so that means he's somewhere in his Eighties. Also, he has a vast amount of knowledge on old cartoons, since he tells Timmy about lots of things that normally happened in old cartoons.
- This is the 4th title card to appear in black and white.
- In 1930s, $1 dollar would be equivalent to nowadays $10 dollars; meaning that Timmy' $20 bucks are equivalent to nowadays $200 dollars.
Allusions
- The Good Old Days! - The title refers to a cliché in popular culture. It means that an era of an old character was better than the currently one.
- As well, as Pappy' contradiction to everything Timmy does is worse than things he will do in his era.
- Ub Iwerks - In the old cartoon world, an intersection of two streets are named "Ube" and "Iwerks," a reference to the famous animator who spent of his career working for Walt Disney and developed famous "Disney-style" pictures.
- Steamboat Willie - The 1930s version of Dimmsdale is a reference to the old Mickey Mouse cartoon.
- Captain Planet and the Planeteers - Captain Green and the Eco-Teens is an obvious parody of the 1990s animated series.
- Popeye - Poke Eye the Longshore Man is a directly parody of Popeye.
- The man Poke Eye was fighting is a parody of Bluto, Popeye's archenemy.
- King Kong - As Cosmo and Wanda chases the wands towards a skyscraper, the panning shot shows a giant gorilla handcuffed with a pilot and a mayor.
- Mickey Mouse' old cartoons - The ending card are a clearly parody the ending cards from the Mickey Mouse' shorts.
- Peg-Foot Vicky is a parody of Peg-Leg Pete, an old version of Pete.
- Looney Tunes - Cosmo and Wanda's "old cartoon" appearance is similar to Foxy and Roxy, a pair of cartoon foxes that appeared in the 1930s.
- When Timmy wished for everything to not be cartoon-related anymore, a POOF! sign appears saying "So Long, Folks". This bears a striking reference of the famous and classic Merrie Melodies/Looney Tunes closing slogan, "That's All, Folks!".
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