rdfs:comment
| - Jay and Silent Bob, popular characters from Kevin Smith's movies, appear as tourists visiting Sunrise Studios. Jay mistakes Gale Weathers for TV reporter, Connie Chung, and sarcastically asks her about Maury Povich. In Scream, a VHS copy of their first film Clerks can be spotted in Stu Macher's house. Kevin Smith would later go on to include Wes Craven in a cameo as the director of a fictitious Scream 4 in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. In addition, a copy of Scream 3 can be seen in the background of a scene taking place within a video store in Smith's 2004 film Jersey Girl.
- Jay and Silent Bob are fictional characters portrayed by Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith, respectively, in Kevin Smith's View Askewniverse (a fictional universe created and used in most films, comics and television by Kevin Smith). As an example, the duo express a great interest in John Hughes' films (especially Sixteen Candles), the movie Purple Rain, the heavy metal musician King Diamond and the funk and dance-pop ensemble Morris Day and the Time.
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abstract
| - Jay and Silent Bob, popular characters from Kevin Smith's movies, appear as tourists visiting Sunrise Studios. Jay mistakes Gale Weathers for TV reporter, Connie Chung, and sarcastically asks her about Maury Povich. In Scream, a VHS copy of their first film Clerks can be spotted in Stu Macher's house. Kevin Smith would later go on to include Wes Craven in a cameo as the director of a fictitious Scream 4 in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. In addition, a copy of Scream 3 can be seen in the background of a scene taking place within a video store in Smith's 2004 film Jersey Girl.
- Jay and Silent Bob are fictional characters portrayed by Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith, respectively, in Kevin Smith's View Askewniverse (a fictional universe created and used in most films, comics and television by Kevin Smith). Jay and Silent Bob have appeared in all of Smith's films with the exceptions of Jersey Girl and Zack and Miri Make a Porno. They are drug dealers (mainly marijuana) who spend most of their time standing in front of stores selling their product, and are generally stoned. The resultant characters then express eclectic characteristics in pop culture which make them familiar, but distant; such as people you would buy things from, but never associate with. As an example, the duo express a great interest in John Hughes' films (especially Sixteen Candles), the movie Purple Rain, the heavy metal musician King Diamond and the funk and dance-pop ensemble Morris Day and the Time.
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