• Source: The Beatles in popular culture
    • This is a list of references to English rock group the Beatles in popular culture.


      Television



      The Beatles, a late 1960s American fictional animated television series featuring the band's musical misadventures.
      Petticoat Junction, "The Ladybugs": Hoping to cash in on Beatlemania, Uncle Joe recruits Billie Jo, Betty Jo, Bobbie Jo, and Sally to form a Beatles-like pop group.
      The Beagles, a 1967-1968 American animated television series in which its name is a takeoff on The Beatles.
      The Rutles, a mid 1970s series of sketches on the BBC television series Rutland Weekend Television, which would lead to the 1978 mockumentary film All You Need Is Cash.
      Sesame Street featured a parody band called "the Beetles", a group of four bugs with Liverpool accents and Beatle hair performing parodies of their songs, such as "Letter B" and "Hey Food".
      In The Powerpuff Girls episode "Meet the Beat-Alls", Mojo Jojo, "Him", Princess Morbucks, and Fuzzy Lumpkins form a group of supervillains named "The Beat-Alls". There are many additional references to the Beatles, their history, songs, and albums through the episode. Also, in two parts of the episode, all 4 Beatles appear in their animated forms from The Beatles cartoon series and the Yellow Submarine film.
      The Beatles appeared and were mentioned several times in The Simpsons. Specifically, the episode "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" roughly parallels the Beatles' story, providing numerous references. The three surviving members of the band, at the time, have guest starred as themselves during the series on separate occasions.
      In the Wonder Pets! episode "Save the Beetles!", the Wonder Pets save a rock band named The Beetles, consisting of four Liverpudlian insects, whose yellow submarine is tangled in kelp. The band also performs a song titled "Kelp!", a parody of "Help!".
      In the Amphibia episode "Battle of the Bands", in the scene where Sasha Waybright sees Anne Boonchuy's concept art for the group bug outfits, Marcy Wu the drummer of a band named "Sasha and The Sharps", is doing the peace sign. This could somewhat be a reference to Ringo Starr, who also does the peace sign. This reference is seen once again in the episode "Turning Point", where Sasha Waybright sees Anne Boonchuy's journal.
      Doctor Who featured a brief cameo of The Beatles in the second episode of season 1 "The Devil's Chord", which aired in 2024. The episode takes place in an alternate universe in which music is not valued and is seen as unnecessary, with John Lennon and Paul McCartney helping to bring the joy of music back to the universe.


      Film


      The 1967 film The Jungle Book features four vultures named Buzzie, Flaps, Ziggy and Dizzy, with Liverpudlian accents and mop-top hair style referencing the Beatles.
      The 1978 film I Wanna Hold Your Hand is about "Beatlemania" and is a fictionalized account of the day of the Beatles' first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show.
      The rock musical Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, released in 1978, featured Beatles covers by the Bee Gees, Peter Frampton, Aerosmith, Earth, Wind & Fire and many other musical and non-musical celebrities. It went on to be a critical and commercial disaster.
      The 2007 film Across the Universe is a musical that takes place during the 1960s. 34 Beatles compositions were performed in the film along with names of characters referenced in their music and multiple small allusions to The Beatles are scattered throughout the film.
      The 1978 television film All You Need Is Cash (based on a single sketch from a mid-1970s sketch series called Rutland Weekend Television) traces the career of a British rock group called The Rutles in mockumentary style.
      The film Ferris Bueller's Day Off features at least two references to the Beatles: Ferris (Matthew Broderick) states his admiration of John Lennon's quote "I don't believe in Beatles, I just believe in me," and later sneaks onto a parade float and lip-synchs to "Twist and Shout", to positive reception from the crowd.
      The 1994 film Backbeat chronicles the Beatles' Hamburg days.
      In the 2007 comedy film Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, fictional Dewey Cox meets The Beatles who are purposefully portrayed satirically by Jack Black as Paul McCartney, Paul Rudd as John Lennon, Jason Schwartzman as Ringo Starr, and Justin Long as George Harrison.
      In the 2001 film I Am Sam, Sam's daughter is named after the song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds". Lucy's idyllic early years are accompanied by "Across the Universe". Sam and Rita's relationship is seen growing to "Golden Slumbers". Sam's lawyer's name comes from The Beatles' song "Lovely Rita", a point made by Lucy. At the end of the film, "Two of Us" is used.
      The 2008 film I'm Not There features a segment in the mid-1960s in which singer Jude Quinn (a fictionalised version of Bob Dylan, played by Cate Blanchett) visits London and is briefly seen fraternising with the Beatles.
      The 2000 Icelandic film Angels of the Universe, which focuses on schizophrenia and is mainly set in a psychiatric hospital, features one character, Óli, who believes himself to have written most Beatles songs and to have transmitted them to The Beatles via telepathy, even after the split of the band. "Hey Jude" is being "composed" by Óli in one scene of the film.
      In the 1964 James Bond film Goldfinger, Bond is disparaging of the group, commenting: "My dear girl, there are some things that just aren't done, such as drinking Dom Perignon '53 above the temperature of 38 degrees Fahrenheit. That's just as bad as listening to the Beatles without earmuffs!"
      The 2019 film Yesterday written by Richard Curtis and directed by Danny Boyle is set in a world where no one has ever heard of The Beatles apart from one man. The film contains covers of many of their songs, including the titular track: Yesterday.


      Video games


      EarthBound had a large number of references to The Beatles.
      The Beatles: Rock Band, developed by Harmonix Music Systems, was released 9 September 2009.
      Beatle Quest
      Wolfenstein: The New Order and Wolfenstein: The New Colossus, an alternative history games developed by MachineGames, features a german singing version of The Beatles under the name "Die Käfer", who sing Nazi propaganda songs, which are mostly parodies of real life Beatles songs.


      The Beatles mentioned in song


      "All I Want for Christmas is a Beatle", a 1963 novelty song by Dora Bryan.
      "We Love You Beatles", a 1964 novelty song by The Carefrees.
      1965 song "A Simple Desultory Philippic" by Simon and Garfunkel: "I been Rolling Stoned and Beatled till I'm blind"
      The Who song "The Seeker": "I asked Bobby Dylan, I asked the Beatles..."
      Mott the Hoople song "All the Young Dudes": "and my brother back at home with his Beatles and his Stones..."
      1970 song "Ball of Confusion (That's What the World Is Today)" by The Temptations: "Unemployment rising fast, the Beatles new record's a gas"
      1971 song "American Pie" by Don McLean: "While the Sergeants played a marching tune..."
      1971 song "Never Been To Spain" by Hoyt Axton: "Well, I never been to England / But I kinda like the Beatles..."
      1976 song "Shangri-La" by Electric Light Orchestra: "Faded like the Beatles on 'Hey Jude'..."
      1977 song "1977" by The Clash: "No Beatles, Elvis or The Rolling Stones"
      1977 song "Taxman, Mr. Thief" by Cheap Trick, whose title and lyrics reference the Beatles' "Taxman": "Like the Beatles he ain't human..."
      In the 1979 song "London Calling" by The Clash, the line "Phony Beatlemania has bitten the dust" appears to be aimed at the movement itself. However, Mick Jones stated in an interview that "[the line] was aimed at all the touristy sound-alike rock bands in London in the late '70s." and that he and the rest of the band were fans of the group.
      1983 song "The Late Great Johnny Ace" by Paul Simon: "It was the year of the Beatles"
      1982 song "Are the Good Times Really Over" by Merle Haggard: "Before the Beatles and yesterday"
      1989 song "We Didn't Start the Fire" by Billy Joel: “British Beatlemania...”
      The Dream Academy song "Life in a Northern Town": "It felt like the world would freeze, with John F. Kennedy and The Beatles"
      Gorillaz song "Revolving Doors": "I sit in a diner, And the Beatles play..."
      2010 song "Gorgeous" by Kanye West: "And what's a black Beatle anyway?"
      2011 song "Beatles and Stones" by Beady Eye: "Like Beatles and Stones"
      In the 2017 song "Echame La Culpa" by Demi Lovato and Luis Fonsi, the line "Play me like The Beatles, baby, just let it be" references the band and their song "Let it Be".
      In the 2018 song "Going Bad" by Meek Mill featuring Drake, the latter raps, "I got more slaps than the Beatles", referencing how he beat the band's record for the most top-ten singles on the Billboard Hot 100 chart within a single year, which they had previously held since 1964. After beating the record, Drake got a tattoo of himself walking in front of the group in their Abbey Road formation, appearing to be waving back at them.


      See also


      Outline of the Beatles
      The Beatles timeline


      References

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