Cheers
All season 7 mistakesMistakes
1How to Recede in Business1
2Swear to God0
3Executive Sweet (1)0
4One Happy Chappy in a Sappy Serape (2)0
5Those Lips, Those Ice0
6Norm, is That You?1
7How to Win Friends and Electrocute People0
8Jumping Jerks0
9Send in the Crane0
10Bar Wars II: The Woodman Strikes Back0
11Adventures in Housesitting2
12Please Mr. Postman0
13Golden Boyd0
14I Kid You Not0
15Don't Paint Your Chickens0
16The Cranemakers0
17Hot Rocks0
18What's Up, Doc?5
19The Gift of the Woody0
20Call Me Irresponsible0
21Sisterly Love0
22The Visiting Lecher0

The Bartender's Tale - S3-E23

Revealing mistake: When Frasier comes into the chalet after skiing he doesn't show any of the visible effects after a hard day on the slopes. Meaning, his face isn't even flushed from the cold, his hair is perfectly combed after wearing a hat and there is not even a drop of snow on his boots.

Tobin OReilly

More mistakes in Cheers

Woody: Jack Frost nipping at your toes, Mr. Peterson?
Norm: Yeah, now let's get Joe Beer nipping at my liver.

More quotes from Cheers

Trivia: The portrait of Geronimo hanging in the bar was a tribute to Nicholas Colasanto after he died. The portrait originally hung in his dressing room.

More trivia for Cheers

Show generally

Question: Does anyone know whether the coloured-in photos, which appear throughout the opening titles sequence, are real or made up for the show? If they ARE real, when George Wendt's name appears there's a shot of a man holding a newspaper with 'WE WIN' as the headline - does anybody know what this referred to?

Chimera

Answer: Here is the source of the "WE WIN" photo: http://www.oldnycphotos.com/nyny587ac.html Brooklyn, of all places.

Chosen answer: The pictures in the opening sequences are real pictures of people enjoying alcohol (from various dates), and are not meant to represent or include any of the cast members. The "we win" sign (most likely not a newspaper headline) is referring to the end of prohibition (1933) A fitting tribute to a show about drinking alcohol.

The word "Nazi" appears in the caption to a story underneath the headline. Maybe the headline refers to the Nazi surrender.

More questions & answers from Cheers

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