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Production-Related Period Piece

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In an Unintentional Period Piece, references to popular fads or news stories at the time a work was created may be unfamiliar to people viewing the work during the present day.
However, there are some works that feature a reference to an element of its own production; this element was part of the work's initial release, but no longer exists during later releases. Other works may tie into a separate work that existed at the time but has since been forgotten. These are Production-Related Period Pieces, in which these references may seem ambiguous or confusing to people who are unfamiliar with the work's original release.
For example, say an episode of a television series crosses over with an episode from another series, but one of the series became much more popular than the other and is far better remembered. If the less popular series no longer airs and has since been forgotten, then the crossover no longer makes sense to the general public and can lead people to ask What Happened to the Mouse?.
See also The Artifact and Deleted Scene. Related to Orphaned Reference.
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When re-runs of America's Funniest Home Videos announce an Assignment America contest or a Grand Prize vacation, it is a contest that would have been new at the time the episode was originally broadcast. This is why it's common for the show to throw up an on-screen message saying "This contest has ended" during that portion.
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The Simpsons:
In "A Star Is Burns", there is a crossover with Jay Sherman from the short-lived show The Critic; viewers born after The '90s might think that Jay was a one-off Simpsons character from an in-universe TV show.
In the season 22 finale "The Nedliest Catch", Edna Krabappel dates Ned Flanders, and the episode ends with Homer and Marge addressing the audience to invite them to vote on the outcome of Ned and Edna's relationship. Realizing that the whole endeavor would not translate well years later, they add that those watching on DVD, reruns or some future media format are too late to vote. As per popular demand, the season 23 premiere episode "The Falcon And The D'ohman" showed them as a couple, and eventually marrying till Mrs. Krabappel was killed off in season 25, after her actress Marcia Wallace's passing in 2013.
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In Young Justice, Secret's first appearance in the series references events from her less-known debut one-shot, where the boys help her escape from the DEO. This one-shot went un-reprinted for many years, but was included when DC finally began releasing YJ omnibuses in the new tens.
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In Pokémon the Series: Ruby and Sapphire, some of the "Trainer's Choice" eyecatches were correct at the time, but with the introduction of Fairy types in Gen 6, plus modifications to the evolution chain of some existing Pokémon, they are no longer correct, however the eyecatches remain in all digital prints and modern repeats. For instance, the question in "It's Still Rocket Roll to Me" states that Tangela does not evolve, but in the very next generation, Tangrowth was introduced.
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The Married... with Children episode "Assault and Batteries" was originally broadcast in 3D. As such, it makes a number of jokes about 3D throughout the episode. The fact that it was aired in 3D isn't indicated during syndication airings or (possibly) the DVD releases, so the jokes during the episode no longer make sense.
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The 2011 Eminem and B.o.B (Rapper) collaboration "Things Get Worse" is a reworking of a track intended for Eminem's scrapped 2009 album Relapse 2, which B.o.B added a guest verse to and put on his album. The problem is that Relapse was a Concept Album in which Eminem adopts a Medical Horror Slasher Movie persona that Eminem scrapped out of embarassment almost immediately as soon as the album came out. By the time "Things Get Worse" was released, Eminem had changed to a softer Sincerity Mode image and had a Career Resurrection with it - even having a major hit with B.o.B during this artistic period in his new stadium pop style. It is difficult to imagine the audience of Eminem and B.o.B's uplifting "Airplanes" picking up "Things Get Worse" and having any idea why Slim Shady is rapping in a weird cod-Egyptian accent about murdering Dakota Fanning and dancing in her panties.
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During Wolverine's 35th anniversary in 2009, Marvel Comics issued variant covers featuring him for all of their titles during the month of April. This was even done for books like Anita Blake: The Laughing Corpse, an adaptation of a novel which did not feature Wolverine in the story and doesn't even take place in the Marvel Universe. Today, fans of the Anita Blake character may wonder what Wolverine is doing on the cover of one of her issues.
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Next Men includes the characters Donna Wojciechowski and Walker Stone from creator John Byrne's then-recent prose novel Whipping Boy. A footnote even directs readers to pick up the novel to find out about "the business in Faulkner" that Stone refers to. Unfortunately, this novel hasn't been in print in about 30 years.
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Red Dwarf: The initial VHS releases of the Blooper compliations Smeg Ups and Smeg Outs included continuity links for two competitions. (Smeg Ups had one to allow the winner the chance to become an extra for Series VII, whilst Smeg Outs had the chance to allow two people a day on the set for the same series). This naturally would not have made sense to any viewers viewing them after the competition ended, so when they were rereleased on DVD (as Just The Smegs), these competition links were cut.
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One episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent, in which the team investigates the death of a former hitman in witness protection, featured a brief guest appearance by Marshal Mary Shepard, the protagonist of In Plain Sight, who gives them a briefing about the victim before saying that she has to run so that she can be back in Albuquerque by nine, which causes Mike Logan to ask why anyone would need to be in that city by that particular time. Nine o'clock at night was IPS' original timeslot.
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Solving the mining quest in the Mata Nui Online Game takes the player to a secret underground entrance where a holographic Golden Mask with the inscription "RAHI" appears, neither of which do anything and are given no explanation. When revisiting the place at the end, the mask is gone, which is even mentioned in the dialogue. It was part of a LEGO contest from 2001 where people had to find hidden masks across different media and decode the accompanying text to win a prize. It has no in-story purpose and is seemingly unrelated to the actual Golden Masks in the game.
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Our Miss Brooks: The first season of the radio program features references to Colgate-Palmolive "Lucky Goldmine Contest". One episode, "Connie's New Job Offer", dated July 31, 1949, has Miss Brooks consider going back to her old job - secretary to the mayor of a small city in New Jersey. In story (and in real life), the mayor's secretary had just won the $49,000 jackpot.
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Fraggle Rock: In 1983, spots ran on HBO for a sweepstakes where the grand prize was a trip for four to see the set of Fraggle Rock and a free full year subscription to HBO. The same television promo is included on the North American DVD releases of the show but with an on-screen message that the contest ended on May 31, 1983.
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The Drew Carey Show had a yearly April Fools contest where the April Fools episode would be loaded with deliberate errors and viewers were encouraged to send in lists of every error they found, with one lucky and observant viewer being rewarded. As a consequence, every season, there would be an episode where the plot would grind to a halt to announce who won that year's contest.
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Mystery Science Theater 3000: The episode "Night of the Blood Beast" was initially a Thanksgiving Episode that debuted as the finale of the Turkey Day '95 marathon. The marathon included sketches between the episodes, with Dr. Clayton Forrester desperately preparing a Thanksgiving party for a bunch of unwanted guests. This plot continued into "Night of the Blood Beast" itself, where the host segments showed Forrester's party begin in earnest. The marathon-specific sketches were never aired again, so Best Brains created an alternate standalone version of "Night of the Blood Beast" for reruns, with new host segments that made absolutely no reference to Thanksgiving. The eventual DVD release included both versions of the episode.
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Wheel of Fortune, for instance, had a promotion tying in with the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta (where home viewers could submit puzzles for the show to use); GSN reruns edited all this stuff out, leading to lots of abrupt fade-outs and the like (most of the Olympics-related episodes were absent from GSN, likely due to this).
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The cold open of the Saturday Night Live episode hosted by Jennifer Lopez in 2001 features Will Ferrell apologizing to Lopez for his treatment of her earlier in the week. What is this in reference to? A sketch from a special prime-time episode of SNL which aired the previous Thursday night, which probably hasn't been repeated since its original airing (unlike the regular episode hosted by Lopez).
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Zigzagged with In Living Color! for their live Super Bowl halftime episode from 1992. All of the elements related to the Super Bowl are explained within the show itself, including the countdown clock telling viewers when halftime was over so they could switch back to the game. However, viewers of the episode today may wonder why In Living Color thought they could compete with the Super Bowl halftime show when it contains massive stars and is almost as hyped as the game itself. The reason was, at the time it aired, the halftime show WASN'T as popular as it eventually became, and its entertainment more often than not led viewers to want to take a bathroom break instead. After ILC's gimmick in 1992, the halftime entertainment for the following Super Bowl was none other than Michael Jackson, and the show was taken much more seriously ever since.
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The George Lopez Show:
The episode "George Goes to Disneyland" has many "Hidden Mickeys" hidden in the background throughout, and includes a Cold Open where the stars break character to explain it's part of a contest to win a Disneyland Resort vacation. It's for this reason that the episode aired only once and would be barred from syndication (it would be released on DVD and iTunes, however).
The episode "George Gets Cross Over Freddie" is Part 1 of a crossover with Freddie, with Part 2 airing on said show immediately after on their original ABC airings. However, Freddie would only last one season, while George Lopez would get syndicated and become more well-known. And unlike the above-mentioned episode, this episode wound up in the syndie package, which would lead to confusion about a plot that would apparently be abandoned and forgotten about in the next episode in rotation.
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Near the end of The Golden Girls episode "Yokel Hero", Harry Weston (from the spinoff Empty Nest) comes over to bring the girls their mail when Blanche proceeds to come on to him; she later comments to the other girls that Harry is finally available for her to date after the death of his wife. This subplot then continues in the Empty Nest episode "Fatal Attraction", which aired the same night as "Yokel Hero" during its original airing. However, since Empty Nest is far less popular than The Golden Girls today,note As of 2019, the series has never had an official DVD release, and has been rerun far less frequently than The Golden Girls the scene from "Yokel Hero" appears to lead nowhere in the series itself and seems unnecessary.
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Pokémon: The Series
Almost all digital prints of Pokémon: The Original Series' first season still have the PokéRap at the end of every episode. The interstitials of the PokéRap have the announcers telling the viewer to watch Monday through Friday, referencing how the show was originally put into first-run syndication. This trope was subverted on the original DVD/VHS releases, which removed them from the individual episodes in favor of the full-length PokéRap at the end of every disc/tape, as well as Kids' WB! which started airing new episodes of the show on a weekly basis by having them dub over the announcer's voice by telling the viewer to watch next week to see more of the show, not mentioning the PokéRap at all. However, even on streaming, the PokéRap messages remain, and as for Kids' WB!, all prints of "The Problem with Paras" on Cartoon Network, Boomerang, and the former's Video On Demand service kept the Kids' WB! announcer, even long after the Kids' WB! block met its demise. In addition, the DVD/VHS releases still had Ash saying, "Don't go away, the PokéRap is next!" originally referencing the commercial breaks. Doesn't make as much sense when the PokéRap immediately begins afterwards. The UK broadcasts made some attempts to subvert this trope as well.
In Pokémon the Series: Ruby and Sapphire, some of the "Trainer's Choice" eyecatches were correct at the time, but with the introduction of Fairy types in Gen 6, plus modifications to the evolution chain of some existing Pokémon, they are no longer correct, however the eyecatches remain in all digital prints and modern repeats. For instance, the question in "It's Still Rocket Roll to Me" states that Tangela does not evolve, but in the very next generation, Tangrowth was introduced.
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In the Doom Patrol (2019) episode "Dumb Patrol", the team is briefly reunited with their one-time nemesis Beard Hunter, who was last seen getting banished to the White Space with Mr. Nobody. When they ask him what happened to Mr. Nobody, he remarks that he hasn't seen him since he got hired for "some animated bullcrap", at which point an ad for Harley Quinn (2019) (in which Mr. Nobody actor Alan Tudyk voices The Joker) pops up on the screen. This ad doesn't appear in all versions of the episode, so some viewers might not get the joke.
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Almost all digital prints of Pokémon: The Original Series' first season still have the PokéRap at the end of every episode. The interstitials of the PokéRap have the announcers telling the viewer to watch Monday through Friday, referencing how the show was originally put into first-run syndication. This trope was subverted on the original DVD/VHS releases, which removed them from the individual episodes in favor of the full-length PokéRap at the end of every disc/tape, as well as Kids' WB! which started airing new episodes of the show on a weekly basis by having them dub over the announcer's voice by telling the viewer to watch next week to see more of the show, not mentioning the PokéRap at all. However, even on streaming, the PokéRap messages remain, and as for Kids' WB!, all prints of "The Problem with Paras" on Cartoon Network, Boomerang, and the former's Video On Demand service kept the Kids' WB! announcer, even long after the Kids' WB! block met its demise. In addition, the DVD/VHS releases still had Ash saying, "Don't go away, the PokéRap is next!" originally referencing the commercial breaks. Doesn't make as much sense when the PokéRap immediately begins afterwards. The UK broadcasts made some attempts to subvert this trope as well.
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

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