Tracy is missing her hat when she gets into her father's Jeep.
When Tracy and her father are riding to the restaurant in his Jeep, they are not wearing seat belts. This is obvious when Tracy kisses her father on the cheek. In 1980, there were no mandatory seat belt laws in the U.S. The first mandatory seat belt law was enacted in New York in 1984.
In the first "Oh, God!" film, Jerry Landers described God to a sketch artist on Dinah and Her New Best Friends (1976), a national TV series. Tracy would have been only 8 years old during the events of said first film, thus she would have been too young to recognize him, but the hand-drawn image would have been published in historical books, news archives, and maybe even artist renditions at various churches all over the world and, of course, schoolbooks for kindergarten to 12th grade. Worst case scenario: even if no one believed Jerry Landers and he spent the rest of his life at best ridiculed and at worst admitted
into a mental hospital, the sketch still would have been both a
major historical event and a widely-recognized image - yet Tracy
still does not recognize God.
Dr. Jerome Newell says that all of Tracy's sightings of God have been in places where food is served. This is not true: her mother saw her talking to God inside the house and there was no food around at all.