Beth (Anya Taylor-Joy) speaks with a really bad Spanish accent when she orders a drink in the zoo. Spanish is actually Taylor-Joy's mother first language.
Alma Wheatley asks Beth to accompany her to the 'folkorico'. She would have been referring to the famous Ballet Folklórico de México, a dance group founded in 1952 which performs at the Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of Fine Arts), a short walk from the Zócalo, or central plaza, where the fictional Aztec Palace Hotel appears to be located.
'Baile folklorico' literally 'folkloric dance' in Spanish, is a collective term for traditional Mexican dances that emphasize local folk culture with ballet characteristics - pointed toes, exaggerated movements, highly choreographed. The Ballet Folklórico de México performs music and dances from various regions in Mexico.
'Baile folklorico' literally 'folkloric dance' in Spanish, is a collective term for traditional Mexican dances that emphasize local folk culture with ballet characteristics - pointed toes, exaggerated movements, highly choreographed. The Ballet Folklórico de México performs music and dances from various regions in Mexico.
The episode title also refers to the number of this episode in the series having three episodes before and after.
When Beth pulls the bottle of Ripple from the sack in the college dude's apartment, that's as historically and culturally accurate as one could be. Ripple was the go-to inexpensive wine choice for kids in the late 1960s.