A Season 1 episode of the Knight Rider TV series, in which a senator requires protection after attempts on her life, is entitled Just My Bill.
At the close of this commercial, the woman wakes up as if it is a dream, while her child watches the "I'm Just a Bill" video on the TV screen.
In the episode, "Mr. Griffin Goes to Washington", an anthropomorphic legal bill sings on the steps of the U.S. Capitol Building until he is stabbed and stuffed into a garbage bag by a sanitation engineer.
In the episode, "Red Faced in the White House" (1997), when Johnny walks past the United States Capitol, he sees Bill sitting on the steps, just like in the Schoolhouse Rock segment.
In the January 16, 2011, issue of the comic strip Prickly City, Winslow, who is a long-time fan, discovers that the Bill (in this case an oversized piece of legislation) likes to smoke and drink, and proceeds to tell Winslow that if he wants to get an autograph that he'll need to pay $100 and has to be bribed with laundering money through political action committees.
Stephen Colbert parodied the opening of the song in a segment on The Late Show on March 27, 2017, in response to the withdrawal of the American Healthcare Act in the US House of Representatives the prior week.
[5] The fourth season premiere of Black-ish, ("Juneteenth"), which aired on October 3, 2017, included an animated parody titled "I'm Just a Slave", with the music performed by Aloe Blacc.
In January 2018, the character Bill was used in an editorial cartoon by syndicated cartoonist Greg Kearney dealing with the issue of the Kansas state legislature's use of anonymous introduction of legislation.
[6] In October 2019, Homsar, a character in Homestar Runner, dressed up as the Bill in the series' annual Halloween special.
In the Animaniacs 2020 reboot, Dot Warner throws the Bill into a printing press while singing about the First Ladies, in this case Rosalynn Carter and Florence Harding.
[9] Sessions pointed out how the reform bill had proceeded through the Senate in contrast with what educational material like the cartoon had laid out, saying, "[Professor Hugh Hewitt has written that this is] not what we were taught in grade school, I assure you, and I couldn’t agree more.