Hey Arnold!

School Play - S3-E19

Continuity mistake: In the auditorium, when Mr. Leichliter says, "Indeed, it is I," there is no exit door on the wall to the left of him. In the next shot, an exit door appears on the wall. Later on, in a wide shot of the auditorium, the door is gone, and there are now double exit doors on the perpendicular wall. (00:05:22 - 00:05:57)

zenee

School Play - S3-E19

Continuity mistake: Lila's collar is gold throughout the episode. When the girls audition for the part of Juliet and Mr. Simmons says that they were all very good, her collar is white, and her gold button is missing. Then when Mr. Simmons says Lila will be the third understudy, her collar is gold again, but her button remains missing. Later on, when Mr. Simmons announces Lila will take the role of Juliet, her collar is white again, and her gold button is missing again. (00:08:46 - 00:14:26)

zenee

School Play - S3-E19

Continuity mistake: When Helga tries to convince Lila to drop out of the play, as she says, "What about that crazy costume you have to wear?", Lila's gold button is missing. It's also missing when Lila says, "I'm sorry, Helga, you're mumbling." (00:15:42 - 00:17:06)

zenee

Hey Arnold! mistake picture

Girl Trouble / School Dance - S3-E18

Continuity mistake: Besides the fact that when Helga is sharpening her pencil, the desk arrangement changes, one of the students visible when she looks at Arnold is... Helga. This happens because the shot is taken from the episode "Helga's Love Potion."

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Helga: Move it, football head!

zenee

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The List/Haunted Train - S1-E8

Question: Why did that boy steal Arnold's ball? Was that the whole reason he came to the park? He seemed awfully obnoxious and destined to ruin Arnold's day, just wanting more clarity. Thank you.

Answer: The episode doesn't really elaborate on who the kid was and what his motives were, so its pure speculation as to why he took it. Perhaps the kid could simply want a ball all for himself and decided to just take it, or was simply a rotten kid. The truth is the kid's motives are not important to the story other than it highlights Arnold was having a lot of trouble getting through the list.

Lummie

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