Jenny's bedroom wall is adorned with two photos of the Chicago White Sox players. They have been previously misidentified as Hall of Fame shortstop Luis Aparicio, a sports hero of author Charles Beaumont's home town. However, the players' uniforms date to the mid-1930s, not the late 1950s when Luis Aparicio played. The lower portrait is actually that of right-handed White Sox pitcher Monty Stratton. Stratton accidentally shot himself while hunting and lost his leg as a result. He battled back after his injury to pitch in the minor leagues despite having an artificial leg. Monty Stratton would have been an obvious inspiration for Jenny, who had also lost the use of one of her legs. A biopic about him starring James Stewart was released in 1949 and was titled The Stratton Story (1949). Both pictures are in fact Monty Stratton.
This is one of four occasions in which future stars of "The Beverly Hillbillies (1962)" appeared on "The Twilight Zone." In this case, Jenny's "aunt," Mrs. Gann, is portrayed by Nancy Kulp, who went on to play Miss Jane Hathaway, the assistant to the Clampett's banker, Mr Drysdale. Drysdale was played by Raymond Bailey, who appeared as a doctor in the Twilight Zone episode "Escape Clause (1959)" (s01e06),. "Beverly Hillbillies" star Buddy Ebsen (Jed Clampett) appeared in the episode "The Prime Mover (1961)" (s02e57), and Donna Douglas (Elly May Clampett) featured in the classic episode "Eye of the Beholder (1960)" (s02e06).