
LORELAI: What, are we going to the prom?
It’s an American tradition for students to hire a limousine for senior prom – which has appeared in so many teen movies that the custom has spread to other countries.
Footnotes to the TV series

LORELAI: What, are we going to the prom?
It’s an American tradition for students to hire a limousine for senior prom – which has appeared in so many teen movies that the custom has spread to other countries.

LORELAI: Rory, you have to do something bad when Mommy’s out of town … . how about a floating craps game or something?
Craps is a dice game where players wage bets based on the outcome of rolling a pair of dice. A “floating craps game” is an illegal operation, so called because operators use portable tables and equipment to quickly move the game’s location, thus staying ahead of legal authorities. The 1950 musical Guys and Dolls features a floating craps game.

LORELAI: Rory, you have to do something bad when Mommy’s out of town. It’s the law. You’re seen Risky Business, right? Now I’m not asking for a prostitution ring, but how about a floating craps game or something?
Risky Business, 1983 teen sex comedy written and directed by Paul Brickman, and starring Tom Cruise in his breakout screen role. The film is about a high-achieving high school student from Chicago whose parents leave him alone in the house while they go on a trip. In their absence, he ends up agreeing to let his parents’ house be used as a brothel for one night.
Risky Business was acclaimed by critics as a sharp, stylish satire that combines teen angst with snappy dialogue and some dark themes. It was the #10 film of the year at the box office, and is considered one of the best films of 1983. The scene of Tom Cruise dancing in his shirt and underwear to Bob Seger’s rendition of Old Time Rock and Roll has become iconic, and often recreated.

Do laundry much more thoroughly than Lorelai
Watch TV in her pyjamas
Order Indian food that Lorelai won’t allow in the house
Go to bed early
Possibly fall asleep on the couch in front of the television
Note that Lorelai is wearing a top that says Yoga Kills on it – a callback to breaking her leg doing yoga, mentioned in “Rory’s Birthday Parties”.

Collagen facial skin rejuvenation and eye treatment (has Vitamin C and plant extracts in it)
Salt Glow (skin exfoliation done with coarse grains of salt)
Scalp Treatments
Watsu Massage (hydrotherapy shiatsu massage treatment done in a warm pool)
Pedicures
Egyptian Mud Bath (bathing in mud enriched with minerals that have anti-inflammatory effects)
Massages
They also have eucalyptus-scented air to breathe, cucumber water to drink, and serve fruit and yoghurt every morning by the pool.

LORELAI: It’s as close as you’ll ever come to being a dog.
EMILY: I beg your pardon?
LORELAI: You know, a whole life of nothing but eating, sleeping, lying on your back and getting rubbed.
EMILY: I’d love the comparison to stop there.
Emily probably asks Lorelai to stop comparing her to a dog because she’s thinking the next thing on the list is cleaning her own private areas with her tongue! Or that Lorelai is getting perilously close to calling her mother a “bitch”.

EMILY: It was for charity, I had to bid on something. And I certainly didn’t want another portrait of George Washington. I’ve got four in the attic already.
George Washington (1732-1799), soldier, statesmen, and Founding Father who served as the first President of the United States from 1789 to 1797. Commander of the Continental Army he led the Patriot forces to victory during the American Revolutionary War, and presided over the 1797 convention which established the Constitution of the United States, and its federal government. He has been called “the Father of the Nation” for his leadership during the formative days of the country.
His legacy endures as one of the most influential people in American history, and his birthday has been a federal holiday in the US since 1879, celebrated on the third Monday in February. The Washington Monument in Washington DC is an obelisk built in his honour, his face is one of the four presidents carved into Mount Rushmore, while Washington state is the only US state to be named after a president. George Washington appears on the one dollar bill, and appeared on the nation’s first postage stamps in 1847.
George Washington was the husband of First Lady Martha Washington, previously discussed.

EMILY: I wanted to know if you’d like a gift certificate for a weekend at the Birch Grove Spa.
A fictional spa. In real life, there are several luxury spas in Connecticut where Emily and Lorelai could have gone. The Mayflower Inn in Washington Depot, which provided inspiration for the Independence in Stars Hollow, has luxury spa facilities [pictured], but I think they were introduced at the inn a year or two after the date of this episode.

LUKE: The ceiling’s falling in. I’ve got customers eating drywall here.
Drywall is a North American term for the building material which is elsewhere known as plasterboard, gyprock, or gypsum board – panels made from gypsum sandwiched between paper, used in the construction of interior walls and ceilings. The plaster is mixed with fibres and various additives that reduce mildew, flammability, and water absorption.

We open with the diner in disarray, because Luke’s apartment that he bought in the previous episode is still under construction. In real life, it usually takes months for the sale of a property to go through so you can begin work on it, but this is television, and Luke is already in the middle of renovations.
Jess, wearing a construction helmet, chivalrously brings Rory an umbrella to shield her from the mess. Although Luke gets cranky about Jess making fun of the situation, the umbrella saves Rory from being hit by debris just a minute or so later.
This is the first official sighting of Tom the Contractor, although it is the same actor (Biff Yeager) who played Tom who was the foreman at Rebuilding Together in Hartford where Rory did volunteer work. They have the same name and personality, and obviously look the same, so it seems perfectly possible that they are actually the same character. This is never confirmed, however.
It’s not clear how much time has passed since the previous episode, but Luke complains to Tom about the renovation taking another week, and in 2002 Easter was at the end of March, so perhaps three weeks have gone by and it’s now early April (Thursday 4th April). I won’t be able to keep blog entries in step with events in the show, or I will run out of time. Time gets very stretchy in the last few episodes of the season!