Apparently I'm now a "Hot Pocket Prep" alumna.

Two Lehigh Valley schools unwittingly got national exposure on "The Tonight Show Starring

" this week, my alma mater among them.

Tuesday's monologue shows a building that looks oddly familiar.

I can't count how many times I walked through those doors at Plainfield Elementary School in Plainfield Township. I'd recognize it even with the new name, "Hot Pocket Prep."

How did the schools get on Jimmy Fallon's show? I'm not sure they even know.

The show set up a joke about how Colorado is expecting to cash in on $100 million from taxing legalized marijuana sales. Fallon quips that the state hopes to put that money to use by building new schools. He goes on to show a few pictures of potential schools.

The words

. Fallon tweeted the image out to followers of @FallonTonight.

"The Tonight Show" says the

, but can't confirm it's the school in question (because the stock photo site doesn't identify it). The royalty-free site does identify Southern Lehigh High School in its caption. Southern Lehigh becomes "St. Mary Jane's" in the monologue.

Plainfield Elementary School Principal Phil Giaquinto confirms that yes, the picture is without a doubt his school.

"That is definitely our gym entrance -- right down to the windows and brickwork," Giaquinto says.

Giaquinto says "The Tonight Show" didn't contact the school prior to running it. My call and a comment from one teacher was all Giaquinto heard about the shot since it aired.

"I don't know how many people in the elementary world stay up that late," Giaquinto joked about the 11:35 p.m. time slot.

Southern Lehigh Superintendent Leah Christman confirmed it is a Southern Lehigh building. She says no one contacted her about the image, before the show or after it aired.

"I don't know that any of our building photos are on a stock site," Christman says.

"I must share my dismay with the lack of sensitivity on the part of the show. While I understand that this is intended to be 'comedy', we are dealing with teens and trying to help them make wise decisions," Christman writes in an email. "Something that may seem so trite surely does not help us."

"... I will be writing a letter to the show pointing out the insensitivity and asking that they ask permission to use images of our schools in the future even if they acquired the photo legally," Christman says.

There's a third school pictured in the monologue that looks vaguely familiar, but I can't identify it. Maybe you can -- comment below.

Watch the monologue below.