We'll likely see this on the third season.
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She's measuring mushrooms.
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She doesn't have very wide-ranging tastes.
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An aqueous martini glass.
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A ladle doesn't play a huge part in Lemony Snicket's universe.
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Mrs. Bass' line work is excellent.
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The Self-Sustaining Hot Air Mobile Home from "The Vile Village."
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This one is easy to miss.
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It's definitely Mrs. Bass' best drawing.
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Jerome Squalor fixing a few non-alcoholic martinis.
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We've seen this before.
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They won't survive, unfortunately.
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A bag of flour.
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The spyglass on Mrs. Bass' board.
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The Lavender Lighthouse.
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Olive oil.
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We finally see the sugar bowl in the "Hostile Hospital" and "Carnivorous Carnival" parts of the season.
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Mrs. Bass knows exactly what size it is.
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Hint: It's from "The Bad Beginning."
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Klaus found it in the wreckage of his home.
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Lemony Snicket is on the lam.
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So that's how much they weigh.
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The Baudelaires find the map in Madame Lulu's tent.
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You need to look closely for this one.
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Mrs. Bass' classroom in "A Series of Unfortunate Events."
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This post includes spoilers for the "A Series of Unfortunate Events" TV show and book series.
Netflix's "A Series of Unfortunate Events" has a lot of Easter eggs and hidden references.
The book series, by Daniel Handler, is filled with puns and allusions to other literary works. And the story itself has a lot to do with secret organizations and hard-to-crack codes.
But the TV series ups the ante with even more visual references. We counted 30 hidden references on the first season and 48 on the second one.
Showrunner Barry Sonnenfeld told INSIDER he snuck in 15 Easter eggs into a single shot in the show's second season. It's on the first episode, in the classroom of math teacher Mrs. Bass, who has an expanded presence on the TV adaptation. On the blackboard behind her in her classroom, there are numerous references to the Baudelaire orphans' lives.
"I think it's fantastic and no one who worked on the show has ever noticed it," Sonnenfeld said. "I had to point it out to them."
We figured them out. Here they are.