Although this film has no titles for cast and crew at the beginning of the film, the intertitles identify many of the MGM employees shown, including Joan Crawford under her real name of Lucille LeSueur, "a recent MGM discovery".
On a box containing film reels being sent to Pittsburgh (misspelled as "Pittsburg", though that was the correct spelling from 1891-1911), Pennsylvania, the value is indicated as being $900. That amount would equate to over $13,000 in 2020. The warning label on the box reads "Caution: Keep fire and lights away"; this was due to the flammability of the nitrate film stock used for the prints.
Culver City, California, where the studio is located, had a population around 2,500 in the year 1925.
One of the intertitles states the completed films were stored in fireproof vaults. At the time of this movie nitrate film was used. Nitrate film stock was called nitrocellulose. Due to its high combustibility, the studios swapped to acetate safety film in 1950.