When George Martin first sees Butters and Scott, he thinks incorrectly that they are fans who come to complain about the Red Wedding. Indeed, many fans of "Game of Thrones" were upset about killing off their favorite characters in the Red Wedding, and sent Martin furious messages.
George R.R. Martin's obsession with penises is a parody of the frequent descriptions of genitals in "A Song of Ice and Fire", though in almost every occurrence he describes female parts. Two descriptions of males do occur: "A Storm of Swords" and "A Feast for Crows" contain passages describing the penises of Tyrion Lannister and Samwell Tarly respectively. Martin later commented, "I've been told that my character on South Park is obsessed about weenies. I have to deny this as a scurrilous rumor. I have nothing against weenies, weenies are fine, but I am not obsessed with weenies. I am definitely on the boobies side of the equation. They picked the wrong equation for me. Boobies, not weenies."
George R.R. Martin taking hours to order a pizza is a slight at his tendency to underestimate completion times for the novels in his "A Song of Ice and Fire" series. For example, after two year intervals between the first three novels, the fourth novel "A Feast For Crows" (2005) took five years to complete and omitted many major characters and left cliffhangers from the previous book unresolved. Martin stated that the fifth novel "A Dance with Dragons" would follow the next year and continue the missing story lines. It ultimately took six years to complete and was released in 2011.
Among the phallic symbols in George R.R. Martin's office is the Clockwork Orange penis sculpture.
The choir of men George R.R. Martin leads, are singing the theme from "Game of Thrones", only with Martin's added words.