Trivia[]
- This is, so far, the only regular internet episode where Mime has survived.
- This is one of the five Season 1 episodes to have a moral that has anything to do with the episode, instead of just a random piece of advice like "Read a book" or "Eat your veggies!". The others are Nuttin' but the Tooth, Wheelin' and Dealin', Water You Wading For, and Sweet Ride.
- This is the very first episode to entirely take place inside. This makes this one of the many episodes that have no trees.
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- The YouTube thumbnail for the remastered version spoils Toothy's injury.
- This is the first time a character has alcohol splashed on an open part of their body. The second time is in Easy Comb, Easy Go with Lumpy.
- There are no female characters in this episode.
- If one looks closely when Toothy gets killed, a tin can be seen flung into the air, just like in Banjo Frenzy and Milkin' It.
- Toothy's body parts that were shredded by the fan:
- His bandaging
- Pieces of his spinal cord
- Two pieces of his torso (one with a piece of his spine and the other one with another piece of his spine as well as his ribs)
- His arms
Cultural References[]
- The episode's title is a pun on the idiom "time and time again", which means to happen over and over again.
- The moral for this episode is used to say that it is often better to remain silent than to speak.
Superlatives[]
- Toothy's death is similar to Handy's death in Who's to Flame? and A Handy Nanny, Shifty's death in Milkin' It, Cuddles' death in Party Animal, Pop's death in Havin' A Ball, Lumpy's death in No Time Like the Present, and Thomas Murphy's death in the 1992 film Alien 3.
Production Notes[]
- In the DVD 'Second Serving' commentary, one of the people mentions how the picture of a rainbow seen on the wall was snuck in by one of the animators, who was fired.