As Butters give his report on volcanoes, you can see another Butters seated at his desk.
Token and his parents are referred to as "the Williams", but throughout most of the series, Token's surname is "Black"; this is an in-joke referring to the "token black" character trope.
The first and second lions switch positions in a flash as they escort Token to Aslan.
Inside Will Smith's home is an Emmy statuette. Although Smith had been nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award in 1992, neither he nor his wife Jada Pinkett Smith have won the award.
The taxonomical name of the lion species is "panthera leo," not "africanus lionus carnivorus."
None of the Smith children, who are supposedly fictional versions of the real-life children of Will and Jada Pinkett Smith, are named right or aged right. Frederick, Lisa, and Daniel should be, in no particular order, Jaden, Willow, and Trey. One of them should still be about Token's age, but the other two should both be toddlers.
Sean Combs, then known as Puff Daddy, didn't have three children by 2001. He only had two children by then, and neither were named what any of the fictional Combs children are named.
The Lion King (1994) hadn't made it to the DVD format at the time of the episode, though The Lion King II: Simba's Pride (1998) had.
Snoop Dogg repeatedly calls Will Smith "William". The "Will" is actually short for "Willard", not "William".
A reliable and accurate, detailed prediction of weather patterns three months in advance is completely impossible to this day, even though today's computers are infinitely more powerful than when the episode first was aired. Token could not have achieved this feat in 1997 even if he was the smartest fourth-grader in the world.