Angela talks about having always wanted to live in Paris, and nobody acknowledges that she and Hodgins actually did move to Paris at the end of season 5 and stayed there for seven months until the events of S6 E1 when Caroline recruited the whole gang to come home to DC and help Cam keep her job.
When Aubrey and Angela are looking at the neighborhood map on the Angela-tron, it says "Adam's Morgan". But the well-known DC neighborhood is Adams Morgan, without an apostrophe, originally named for an elementary school named after U.S. President John Quincy Adams.
Hodgins asks Angela why she never got her name legally changed, however it has been stated more than once in previous episodes that she did change it legally, therefore her birth name shouldn't even have been on her passport for Hodgins to discover.
Aside from the fact that producers and writers are allowed to change back stories as they see fit, just because Angela said she had changed her name doesn't mean that she did. What's more, she said that she had promised her father that she wouldn't change her name until he had passed away.
Aside from the fact that producers and writers are allowed to change back stories as they see fit, just because Angela said she had changed her name doesn't mean that she did. What's more, she said that she had promised her father that she wouldn't change her name until he had passed away.
At the 17:30 point, when The Royal Diner is seen from the outside, it's not Booth, but former guest star Stephen Fry's character as Dr. Gordon Gordon Wyatt.
Gavin, Booth's sponsor and leader of the Gambler's Anonymous meetings, states Booth's full name at his 30 day party. As Booth stated in the previous episode, "It's called 'Anonymous' for a reason."
At his 30 day GA celebration, Booth is given a coin. Coins are only given to GA members on yearly anniversaries. After 30 days, he would have been given a key chain signifying his sobriety. GA members (unlike other recovery groups) aren't given chips because they are usually poker chips. Those would not be conducive to recovery from gambling addiction.