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* "Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow" reveals that Nancy's mother, Bunny, also had an affair for years with a man named Frank, not unlike her and John Redcorn. One has to wonder if perhaps much like John Redcorn and Joseph, Frank is Nancy's real father and Bunny lied to her daughter about her true parentage for years.
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* In "The Exterminator", Dale gets a promotion by Ms. Pittman as she's too squeamish to fire people. After Dale's first firing, she says that she needs Dale's help because the company is downsizing. What's to say that [[HoistByHisOwnPetard Dale wouldn't end up fired himself after the downsizing finished]], especially since Ms. Pittman was upset with his performance up to that point?
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* When Cotton has flashbacks to the Japanese soldiers he killed during the war, they are unarmed, bandaged, and in various states of undress that *strongly* indicates they were wounded undergoing medical treatment. Coupled with the Real Life treatment of Japanese in the last years of the war, Cotton very likely comitted a war crime.
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* In "Luanne Virgin 2.0" after discovering Peggy wasn't a virgin when they married, Hank dons a green baseball cap and leaves to go stay with Luanne. Possibly unintentional, but in China, a man whose partner has cheated on him is said to be "wearing a green hat."
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* In "Trans-Fascism" Hank, Buck, and the kitchen staff of Sugarfoot's start running and illegal food truck after Arlen bans trans fats. Hank needs to force the cooks to start practicing proper hygiene, with a scene at the beginning showing a guy taking biscuits out of the oven while smoking, testing if they're done by sticking his finger in one, and then another guy ''sneezing'' on them. You would think that working at Sugarfoot's, they'd be familiar with the kinds of things you have to do to keep a kitchen clean, given that some of them are laws and would be noted in health inspections, and even if they weren't aware of ''why'' you'd have to do them, you'd think that they would just do them out of habit if they were already doing it at Sugarfoot's. Combined with the fact that Buck has no qualms against bribing the cops while running the truck, one gets the feeling that Sugarfoot's--a restaurant most of the cast love visiting and eat at regularly throughout the series--was likely horribly unclean and Buck bribed health inspectors to look the other way.

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* More of a Fridge {{Squick}}: In "Trans-Fascism" Hank, Buck, and the kitchen staff of Sugarfoot's start running and an illegal food truck after Arlen bans trans fats. Hank needs to force the cooks to start practicing proper hygiene, with a scene at the beginning showing a guy taking biscuits out of the oven while smoking, testing if they're done by sticking his finger in one, and then another guy ''sneezing'' on them. You would think that working at Sugarfoot's, they'd be familiar with the kinds of things you have to do to keep a kitchen clean, given that some of them are laws and would be noted in health inspections, and even if they weren't aware of ''why'' you'd have to do them, you'd think that they would just do them out of habit if they were already doing it at Sugarfoot's. Combined with the fact that Buck has no qualms against bribing the cops while running the truck, one gets the feeling that Sugarfoot's--a restaurant most of the cast love visiting and eat at regularly throughout the series--was likely horribly unclean and Buck bribed health inspectors to look the other way.
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* In "Trans-Fscism" Hank, Buck, and the kitchen staff of Sugarfoot's start running and illegal food truck after Arlen bans trans fats. Hank needs to force the cooks to start practicing proper hygiene, with a scene at the beginning showing a guy taking biscuits out of the oven while smoking, testing if they're done by sticking his finger in one, and then another guy ''sneezing'' on them. You would think that working at Sugarfoot's, they'd be familiar with the kinds of things you have to do to keep a kitchen clean, given that some of them are laws and would be noted in health inspections, and even if they weren't aware of ''why'' you'd have to do them, you'd think that they would just do them out of habit if they were already doing it at Sugarfoot's. Combined with the fact that Buck has no qualms against bribing the cops while running the truck, one gets the feeling that Sugarfoot's--a restaurant most of the cast love visiting and eat at regularly throughout the series--was likely horribly unclean and Buck bribed health inspectors to look the other way.

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* In "Trans-Fscism" "Trans-Fascism" Hank, Buck, and the kitchen staff of Sugarfoot's start running and illegal food truck after Arlen bans trans fats. Hank needs to force the cooks to start practicing proper hygiene, with a scene at the beginning showing a guy taking biscuits out of the oven while smoking, testing if they're done by sticking his finger in one, and then another guy ''sneezing'' on them. You would think that working at Sugarfoot's, they'd be familiar with the kinds of things you have to do to keep a kitchen clean, given that some of them are laws and would be noted in health inspections, and even if they weren't aware of ''why'' you'd have to do them, you'd think that they would just do them out of habit if they were already doing it at Sugarfoot's. Combined with the fact that Buck has no qualms against bribing the cops while running the truck, one gets the feeling that Sugarfoot's--a restaurant most of the cast love visiting and eat at regularly throughout the series--was likely horribly unclean and Buck bribed health inspectors to look the other way.

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