Linda Tripp and Monica Lewinsky go antique shopping, and Tripp finds a German-made Christmas ornament, saying how much she loves Christmas decorations. Tripp would later go on to marry the German architect, Dieter Rausch, and the two would own and operate a German winter-themed holiday store, called the Christmas Sleigh in Middleburg, Virginia.
The article in The American Spectator that names Paula Jones (but does not give her last name) was written by David Brock. Brock later apologized to Jones in an open letter in Esquire in 1998.
Paula Jones' lawsuit against Bill Clinton was filed on May 6, 1994.
Stephen Jones, husband of Paula Jones, is the actor who played the Ghost of Elvis Presley in Mystery Train (1989).
Paula refers to the television show Designing Women (1986) and notes that the show's creator is good friends with the Clintons. The creator of that show, Linda Bloodworth-Thomason, and her husband Harry Thomason are known to be good real-life personal friends of and media advisors to Bill and Hilary Clinton. Bloodworth-Thomason has also been known for her liberal activism and for tackling progressive causes in several episodes of Designing Women.