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LaDolcezzaEsisteDavvero
# It Sugar Wiki - La dolcezza esiste davvero! Benvenuti nel lato Più Luminoso E Tenero di TV Tropes! Se la TV tropes principale è giusto nel mezzo della Scala Graduata Di Idealismo Contro Cinismo, noi sicuramente ci siamo lanciato verso il punto più idealistico! La positività la fa da padrone qui! Qui, il cielo rosa e glitteroso è il limite. Quindi Siate Voi Stessi, Se Credete Battete Le Mani, non dimenticate i più grandi, sacri, rockeggianti poteri di sempre. Non dimenticate di cantare il nostro inno! Davvero, sentitevi liberi! La vita è tutta basata sul ridere! Fatelo anche voi! Contrastante con Darth Wiki.. E datele un po' di ♥! Il Dolce Indice * Addolcisci Quella Morale * L Altro Troper * Arte Gloriosa * Atmosfera Di Vittoria * Candle Cove * Carburante Per Sogni D Oro * Coronante Momento Di Commozione * Coronante Momento Di Divertimento * Coronante Momento Di Gloria * Coronante Musica Di Gloria * Coronanti Effetti Visivi * La dolcezza esiste davvero! / ||La Dolcezza Non Esiste|| * Doppiaggio Superlativo * Entusiasmarsi Per Personaggi Piaciuti * Entusiasmarsi Per Scrittura Piaciuta * Entusiasmarsi Per Spettacoli Piaciuti * Esempio Eclatante * Eversion * Ha Bisogno Di Piu Amore * Incudini Che Dovevano Cadere * L'inno della Sugar Wiki * Lui Si Che Sa Recitare * Nessun Problema Con I Giochi Su Licenza * Opere Dei Troper * People Letting All Trope Titles Exist Relishably + PLATTER Pin * Postulato Dell'Identità Della Finzione * Prendi Una Bella Tazza Di Te E Siediti * Programmazione Geniale * Robot Unicorn Attack * Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei * Servizio Di Pulizia Cattivi * Il Suono Piu Favoloso * Tanto Figo Da Essere Fantastico * Tropo Preferito * TV Tropes Ha Migliorato La Mia Vita * TV Tropes Migliorerà La Tua Vita ---
ItSugarWiki
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Webcomics
# One Winged Angel - Webcomics --- * In *Acorn Grove*, you only get a hint of the devil's true form in silhouette. Can't really make out anything other than lots of tentacles. * It wouldn't be a proper RPG-spoofing webcomic if *Adventurers!* didn't have an instance of this. (Also pictured in title) + Parodied much earlier in same with "Wing-B-Gone!" Which brings up a good point: wouldn't this be *really inconvenient*? * Wyler, a rich, weak mastermind from *Art of Fighting 3*, became one after drinking an elixir that more or less turned him into The Incredible Hulk. * *Aurora*: After the heroes fight his attempts to terrorize the people of Zuurith and feed on their fear, the storm god Tynan transforms into a dragon to crush their hopes. * *Awful Hospital*: Balphin◊. In a direct reference to this trope, it literally has one fully feathered wing despite being 50% maniacal dolphin and 50% sapient embalming machine. + The Crashslob◊. Even though the Jayslob that Crash emerged from was more of a Clipped-Wing Angel, Crash's final form is so powerful that only blocking can prevent Fern taking immediately fatal damage. * In "Axe Cop Gets Married", the final boss is the alien king Cauber Helen, who's a shapeshifter and just becomes even bigger and uglier to fight. To match him, Axe Cop and his allies, some of whom were already a bit Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot, use his sons' Ultro Power to combine into what the artist (not writer) tentatively describes as "Super Hypno Double-Monkey Batman Axe Cop Familsauras Rex Wrinkles". Cauber then starts transforming into different forms, culminating in a giant sea serpent of planetary size when his opponents send another giant sea serpent against him. * In *Dragon Mango*, the count does this when the knights and Flan have defeated him. * *8-Bit Theater* + ||Super Double Evil Sarda, created from absorbing the power of the elemental orbs and Black Mage's super evil. However, this also turns out to be his undoing||. + Chaos also has a massive, 3D form. This being 8-Bit Theatre, he reverts without a fight. > **Black Mage:** How'd you get Chaos back to his not a giant bastard size? > **White Mage:** *(in flashback)* Chaos! You're too tall! > **Black Mage:** Oh, that *so* did not work. > **White Mage:** So did. + Black Mage's super-evil form probably counts as well, as he gains Combat Tentacles of shadow. * *Freefall* has Sam Starfall, who is drawn as a rather cartoonish mechanical alien, but that's just a disguise for him to "*safely*" interact with other beings. His species' true form is an extremely disgusting squid-like creature, the mere sight of which triggers what he assumes is a regurgitation reflex in humans. * *El Goonish Shive* has a handful of them: + Due to the incident that produced Ellen (long story), Elliot wound up permanently able to change into the cat-man form he'd asked Tedd to zap him into afterwards in order to chase her down. Unlike most examples, though, he didn't *know* he could do it until he involuntarily did it again to fight Hedge. Which knocked him out. + Grace has a metric buttload of One-Winged Angel forms, most also of the Cute Monster Girl variety. Except for her Omega form, which turns her into a feral squirrel with horns and razor claws. And she's ferocious, as opposed to her normal bubbly self. + Vlad does this in reverse. Ellen zaps him with a Gender Bender ray, turning Vlad the part bat, part bird, part terrifying monster-man into Vladia, the relatively normal girl, the only change Vlad's likely to undergo due to a Painful Transformation problem that nearly killed him the last time he tried to be human: she's not sure she'll survive a gender shift, and doesn't want to risk it now that she's finally human. * During the Britain arc of *Girl Genius*, the Other ||possessing Agatha|| manages to ||ascend to the status of a *God-Queen*|| during the battle with Agatha's friends. > **The Other:** It's coming together! I can see the *levers of the universe!* Soon, I will be able to *reach out* and *touch* them ... and then I will *kill you all!* * Lampshaded in *Grrlpower* when Vehemence grows much larger and stronger. > **Sydney:** This had better be your final form! I have stuff to do later! * Happens during the final fight against Jegal in *The God of High School* when he absorbs the power of the Key and obtains the power of the gods, taking on a form vaguely resembling Sephiroth's (except with two wings this time). * *Gunnerkrigg Court* has General Ysengrin, a wolf in what is basically wooden power-armour. Normally he uses this to maintain a humanoid appearance, but when he loses his cool, the living wood turns him into something that would give Hayao Miyazaki nightmares! * *Homestuck* has this sequence, in which Jack Noir uses a Game-Breaker weapon to ||dering and dethrone|| and then kill ||his queen||, then proceeds to take the Ring of Power. Which turns him into an evil, two-winged two-tentacled one-armed cat-faced sword-impaled harlequin-garbed Eldritch Abomination. + It gets worse ||when Becquerel gets prototyped||, though his appearance gets less ridiculous as the last prototyping's power overrides some of the previous elements. He has been shown to be able to return/retract them (at least the tentacles) ||with his newfound Reality Warper powers||. + Lord English is essentially this to ||Doc Scratch||, although it's not so much ||Scratch|| transforming as it is ||Lord English emerging from his dead body.|| - Possibly a straighter example with ||Caliborn, although English is basically a much taller and more muscular version of Caliborn, but *much* more powerful||. + Hell, the Cherubs do this as a mating action: they transform into snake-like creatures a cosmic measurement long and do battle, with the loser laying the eggs. * Inverted in archcriminal Fructose Riboflavin's first appearance in *The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob!.* He first appears disguised as a handsome, muscular human, and does all his ranty monologuing in that form. It's only *after* his scheme has failed that he drops the disguise as pointless, revealing his mildly creepy but not very frightening wizened old alien form. * Lampshaded in *Golden*, when the villain sorcerer decides it is times to turn into his combat form to end the protagonists, and promptly turns into... a binturong with white spots. (And not a badger at all, whatever anyone is saying, no Sir.). The protagonists even comment on this: > Sorcerer: "Enough games! With all the powers of HELL at my command, I now take the form of the Ultimate Destroyer, a [...] fiend so diabolical, so terrible, that all who lay eyes upon his visage fall into..." (his bad guy monologue drones on the background) > "...yeah, he's going to turn into a dragon, isn't he?" > "Seems rather cliché. Perhaps a giant octopus with multifarious appendages?" > "No. Giant snake for sure." * *Kill Six Billion Demons*: Jagganoth. > *The Wheel-Turning King will have three characteristics: a fierce glare, hands as large as ox carts, and red skin. His body will boil like the surface of Hell. He is the annihilator of falsehood.* * Gackt from the "Bishonen Virus" storyline of *Manly Guys Doing Manly Things* has *two*. During his fight with Commander Badass, he transforms into a gigantic, multi-winged Tetsuo-like abomination, that Commander swiftly decapitates. He then returns as an Energy Being, but at this point Commander is unbelivably sick of the whole issue and just chokes him to death with his bare hands. * In *The Non-Adventures of Wonderella*, **Nixon** supposedly does this. * Oosterhuis/||Ari|| from *Panthera* plays this transformation near perfectly. He even seems to win the first encounter, too. * Parodied in this *Sunday At Ten* strip. * In *Problem Sleuth,* Mobster Kingpin's imaginary self becomes Demonhead Mobster Kingpin for the final battle, which takes up nearly half the story. * *Sluggy Freelance* features a random mook getting infected with a "Cheesy Bossmonster Virus", which is this trope in a tube. [1] + In the "Holidays Wars" story, there's one on both sides: Bun-bun becoming ||a quasi-god of various holidays, complete with a different colour scheme, an occasionally visible aura of power, and an updated switchblade design|| and fighting Santa Claus who had ||become an alien monster some time ago and for this fight grown even bigger.|| (It doesn't really make sense in context, it's just Crazy Is Cool.) * Referenced by name in this VG Cats. * *White Dark Life*: Most of the demon characters have either intimidating or otherwise unnerving forms they use when they get seriously pissed off. Yes, even little Priscilla. These range from ||Artemis, a Humanoid Abomination parodying hourglass figures, to a skull wearing thorn covered Dark Matt, and Eloria turning into a wendigo||. Ironically, Altair, who is an angel, has no super powered form. * One of Prof. Broadshoulders' (from Zebra Girl) defining characteristics is a "Mr. Yuk" face branded onto his forehead. Turns out ||it was actually a demonic third eye, and by opening it he turned himself into a demon.|| ---
OneWingedAngel
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WesternAnimation
# The Bus Came Back - Western Animation * *Adventure Time* + After not being seen since his first appearance in "What Is Life?", NEPTR suddenly reappears in "Hot to the Touch"; apparently his three-season absence was the result of a game of Hide and No Seek. > **NEPTR:** I am the ultimate hide-and-seek champion! 15 months, 4 days, and 9 hours, and you guys could not find me. Ha ha ha ha ha ha! > **Jake:** Oh, plops! We forgot about the game! + In "Furniture & Meat", we find the Ancient Psychic Tandem War Elephant from "The Limit" is shown to be living in Finn and Jake's house under one of their many piles of treasure. > **Ancient Psychic Tandem War Elephant:** I will continue to chill here until you command me! * *The Amazing World of Gumball* + Rob, an incredibly minor character who is seen in the background of a few Season One and Season Two episodes, seemingly disappeared after the end of Season Two. ||As it turns out, Rob can be seen in the background in the episode "The Void"... and then he comes back. And he's incredibly disfigured. And the results of his return aren't exactly the most favorable.|| * *Justice League*: While most of the villains from *Batman: The Animated Series* and *Superman: The Animated Series* not named The Joker or Lex Luthor didn't show up at all during Season 1 of the show, in Season 2, they started being used again: Volcana, Luminous and Firefly cameoed during a prison break in "Only a Dream," while in "Secret Society", Clayface, the Parasite, and Sinestro were all part of Gorilla Grodd's titular team. * In 1994, many of the Care Bears cousins were Put on the Bus, and those that weren't were *converted into bears*, an ill-accepted move among fans. Playalong did try to bring back the cousins between 2003 to 2005, but the attempt was stymied by poor marketing and was ultimately aborted to revamp the franchise for *Welcome to Care-A-Lot*. Four of the cousins were finally taken off the bus with 2015's *Care Bears & Cousins*. * The 2021 Disney+ series *Chip 'n' Dale: Park Life* brought back "Pluto's Quin-puplets" from the 1937 Pluto cartoon of the same name. Pluto's puplets hadn't been seen in any Disney related media for 84 years. + Clarice the Chipmunk from the 1952 *Chip 'n Dale* short "Two Chips And A Miss" is also set to appear in the series after being absent in animation for 69 years. * *Doc McStuffins*: After the Season 3 episode "The Scrapiest Dragon", Donny did not make an appearance until the third Season 5 episode "The Doc McStuffins Christmas Special". He was mentioned in the Season 4 episode "Hoarse Hallie". * *Family Guy*: + "The Splendid Source" has Peter and co. encountering their old buddy Cleveland in his new hometown during a road trip. Cleveland (along with his new family) would officially return to Quahog in Season 12's "He's Bla-ack!", which aired a year after *The Cleveland Show* ended. + Similarly, Kevin, son of Joe and Bonnie Swanson, was largely retired after the series' third season and un-cancellation, and a later episode off-handedly suggests he died in Iraq, but he came back in the season 10 episode "Thanksgiving" he is revealed to have actually been AWOL and returns to the recurring cast. + The vaudeville duo Vern and Johnny were shot to death by Stewie in "Saving Private Bryan", who insisted they would not be seen again. They made a reappearance in "Back to the Woods" with Vern as a ghost and Johnny in Hell (because according to Vern, "Johnny liked little boys"). They are also seen briefly in the opening to "A Lot Going On Upstairs", alongside other characters the series had Put on a Bus previously, such as salesman Jim Kaplan, police officer Obie, strongmen Phineas & Barnbaby, RJ, and Peter's co-worker Fouad. They also make a cameo in "Coma Guy". * The *Inspector Gadget* Spin-Off *Gadget and the Gadgetinis* had this with the characters of Brain and Chief Quimby. Quimby was about the same, except Gadget is now working for a different agency, while a shell-shocked Brain has retired to a riverfront house. * In the last season of *Johnny Bravo*, the prominent supporting characters from the first season came back and the newer additions like Carl and Pops stayed as well. * *Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous*: + ||*Spinosaurus*, unseen since *Jurassic Park III* outside of a mounted skeleton in *Jurassic World*, returns in Season 4. The *Dilophosaurus* as well, which haven't been seen since the original *Jurassic Park (1993)*.|| + ||After being absent for the entire fourth season, Bumpy makes a brief cameo at the end of the tenth episode where she is shown to be alive and well on Nublar but missing the campers.|| + After being absent from season three and only appearing in a nightmare in the fourth season, the teaser for season five confirms the return of Toro. * *Jurassic World: Chaos Theory*: The opening intro shows the return of Rexy, who has been absent in animation since the third season of the previous series. ||Bumpy reunites with Ben in the third episode, having been living in Sammy's ranch for some time by this point. Two last episodes of first season show the return of Big Eatie.|| * *Avatar: The Last Airbender* franchise: In the second season finale of *The Legend of Korra*, we learn of the ultimate fate of ||Zhao, from season 1 of *Avatar: The Last Airbender*. It turns out he's been trapped in the Fog of Lost Souls for seventy years with little else to do but ramble aimlessly about his desire to kill the moon||. * *Looney Tunes*: + After characters like Rocky and Mugsy, Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog and the like were missing from most continuations of the franchise for decades, they came back in *Looney Tunes Cartoons*. + Gabby Goat was a character who only appeared in a handful of cartoons in 1937, was met with poor reception due to his Jerkass personality, and was replaced with Daffy as Porky's sidekick. In *New Looney Tunes*, he appeared for the first time in 80 years, albeit with his personality overhauled to make him more tolerable. - *New Looney Tunes* also brought back Hubie and Bertie, The Martin Brothers, Claude Cat, Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot, Sniffles the Mouse, Frisky Puppy, Clyde Bunny, Mighty Angelo, Mot the baby alien from *Rocket-bye Baby* and the Easter Bunny from *Easter Yeggs*. * *Moral Orel*: Shapey was put on a moving van when the Puppingtons and their brief neighbors the Posabules accidentally switched them with their own son. Realizing (about ten episodes later) that Shapey has been switched, Bloberta goes to their new residence to pick him up but *doesn't* take back Block. * *Mickey Mouse Works* brings back Mortimer Mouse, who besides a cameo in *Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas*, wasn't featured in any media related to the Classic Disney Shorts since his debut in "Mickey's Rival", as a recurring character and rival for Mickey. He's also heavingly featured in *House of Mouse* - as is Donald's cousin Gus who frequently appeared in the comics, but not in animated media since his debut in "Donald's Cousin Gus". * In *My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic*: + One-shot antagonist Trixie returned after two seasons for a rematch, and *again* another three seasons later. Since then she became a semi-recurring character. Having a fan following rivaling that of some main characters helped. + Gilda the Griffin was a one-shot antagonist from the first season, merely showing up to teach Rainbow Dash a moral. However, after four seasons, she once again appeared in an episode where Rainbow Dash and Pinkie Pie travelled to her hometown. + After the major backlash regarding Derpy in the Season 2 episode "The Last Roundup" and hasty Orwellian Retcon, it was assumed she wouldn't appear again in the show. Despite that, she returns in the finale of Season 3, though given she hasn't been seen in any promotional material for either that season or for Season 4 many saw it as simply a final farewell. ||And then she shows up again in "Rainbow Falls" as Rainbow Dash's replacement. Her continued cameos since make it apparent that they wouldn't just eliminate such a fan favorite from the show, and she even got a speaking role in the one hundreth episode "Slice of Life".|| + In the Season 5 episode "Tanks for the Memories", Rainbow Dash's tortoise Tank was given a send-off by going into hibernation. He does appear a few episodes later in "Do Princesses Dream of Magic Sheep?" + After the Season 6 episode "P.P.O.V. (Pony Point of View)", Applejack's dog Winona was absent for the next two seasons. She returns in the Season 9 episode "Going for Seed". + After the Season 7 episode "It Isn't the Mane Thing About You", Rarity's cat Opalescence was absent for the entire eighth season. She returns in the Season 9 episode "She's All Yak". * In an episode of *The Penguins of Madagascar*, many, many of the characters that were shipped off to Hoboken came back, complete with evil clones. + Dr. Blowhole came back in a one-hour special. + Alex the Lion, from the original movie, makes a cameo in one episode as a Spirit Advisor to Skipper. * *Possible Possum*: The Blue Jay from the 1968 short "Black and Blue Jay" returned in 1971's "Berry Funny". * *Rick and Morty*: fan-favourite character Evil Morty first showed up in "Close Rick-counters of the Rick Kind" along with Evil Rick, who turned out to be ||a non-sapient cyborg under his Morty's control.|| Three years and two seasons later, "The Ricklantis Mixup" ends with ||the new President of the Citadel getting revealed as Evil Morty, who then proceeds to kill his treacherous subordinates and establish a dictatorship.|| * *Star Wars Rebels*: In "Legacy of Mandalore", ||Sabine chooses to stay with her family and help build the Mandalorian Resistance||. In "Zero Hour", ||she returns when Ezra comes to her and Clan Wren in search of reinforcements to help the besieged rebels on Atollon. However, she can't return permanently, having to return to the ongoing Mandalorian civil war.|| * *Voltron: Legendary Defender*: ||At the beginning of season four, Keith is Put on the Bus when he leaves the team, and from that point on only pops up occasionally. Season six gave him much more focus, and he ended up permanently returning to the team with his Galra mom, an Altean girl, and a space dog in tow.|| * *Regular Show*: Mordecai's first love interest, Margaret, leaves for college at the end of season four, just as he's about to formally ask her to be his girlfriend. She returns partway through season six, which causes complications with his current girlfriend CJ, as he still holds an interest in Margaret and she's prone to jealousy. By season eight, both Margaret and CJ are effectively written out of the show once more, as Mordecai's indecision regarding his love life pushes them away. * *Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987)*: After being written out of the show at the end of the eighth season, Shredder and Krang returned in the final season for a 3-part arc. * *Thomas & Friends* + Before "Terence Breaks the Ice", Terence briefly came back in "The Great Discovery" following the "Where, Oh Where is Thomas?" sequence and the scene where Harvey breaks the news about Thomas' reappearance. + Diesel 10 returned during The Stinger of *Misty Island Rescue* making a Sequel Hook for "Day of the Diesels". + Butch returned with a non-speaking role at the very end of *Misty Island Rescue*, but began to have a physical role after that season in the episode, "Stuck on You!" + Trevor returned more than once in CGI. He appeared in the Season 13 Sodor Island intro that was exclusive to the American, Latin American, and Brazilian Portuguese dubs of the show, but never appeared in an episode. He briefly returned as a cameo twice in both Season 15's "Emily and Dash" and "Very Important Sheep" from Season 19, but only four years apart. He also came back the next season, but this time, with a voice actor in both dubs following "Three Steam Engines Gruff". + The Skarloey engines, except for Mighty Mac, Fearless Freddie who was originally meant to return, and Duncan at the time since his real-life counterpart, Douglas, was being overhauled in 2012, returned in CGI working at a new environment on the Skarloey Railway and with accurate designs that resemble most of their real-life counterparts. Skarloey, however, is the most accurately designed of them all. + Thanks to the valiant efforts of a then-brand new writing team, several characters returned in the seventeenth season. These characters were Duck, Bill & Ben, and Harvey. The special that came before Season 17, *King of the Railway*, brought back Jack the Front Loader from the aborted spin-off, *Jack and the Sodor Construction Company*. + The following special, *Tale of the Brave*, saw the return of Oliver, and Season 18 brought back his brakevan Toad, as well as Duncan. + The Breakdown Train return with faces and new names, Judy and Jerome. + The special and season after that, *Sodor's Legend of the Lost Treasure*, brought back Alfie, Oliver the Excavator, Max, Monty, Donald, Douglas, and Daisy. + *The Great Race* brought back the Flying Scotsman just in time for the real-life locomotive's return to steam on British rail the same year. And he finally speaks following his non-speaking cameo in "Tender Engines". + *Journey Beyond Sodor* brought back Rosie as well after a season of absence. + Season 21 would bring back Bulgy (who, coincidentally, is a bus himself) and Terence. + Season 23 brought back the foreman of the Sodor Construction Company, Miss Jenny, who hadn't been seen in the show since Season 12, and is rendered back to her correct design. * When Toonami returned, it was hosted by TOM 3.5, with no sign of TOM 4. However, sometime later, TOM 4 did come back briefly to talk to TOM 3.5/5. ||Sadly, he after suffered a Bus Crash in *The Intruder II*, when The Intruder gloats about killing TOM 4.|| * In *The Venture Bros.*, Baron Underbheit disappears after being deposed from Underland, and this was meant to be his last appearance. Two and a half seasons later, and he appears as a homeless person before joining the Revenge Society. * Morph in *X-Men: The Animated Series*. He was effectively written out after the season 2 finale, returns in a season 4 cameo (compete with increased badassness) only to disappear again until the final episode. * *Trolls: TrollsTopia*: Not only DJ Suki, who was a no show in the second movie, but in the last episode, King Trollex reappears * Spyke/Evan of *X-Men: Evolution* was a member of the main cast until a poison made him mutate out of control, leading him to leave the X-Men and join the more seclusive mutant group known as the Morlocks. Spyke is gone for the rest of that season, and has two more appearances in the final season, one where he's the main focus and the other where he's merely part of the ensemble to help save the world from the show's final villain, Apocalypse. * *ReBoot*: + The Captain and crew of the *Saucy Mare* appeared in a single episode in Season 1. After disappearing for the entirety of Season 2, they returned as major characters in the latter half of Season 3 before disappearing again in *Daemon Rising* and only appearing in the background of *My Two Bobs*. + After being absent since the Season 2 finale, which had Bob shot into The Web, Bob returns in episode 10 of Season 3, *Web Riders on the Storm*, complete with a new character design and voice actor. * Season 11 of *SpongeBob SquarePants* has "Spot Returns", Plankton's amoeba puppy who hasn't shown up since the season 9 episode "Plankton's Pet". The thing is he never seemed to have left, just been forgotten about. + On the topic of season 9, Bubble Bass made his great comeback from that point onwards, several years after only previously showing up in a pair of season 1 episodes. * Recurring characters in *South Park* are often used very infrequently, sometimes with several years between major appearances on the show. + Mr. Hat, a puppet and alter-ego for Mr. Garrison, was a major character in early seasons and seemed inseparable from Garrison and was implied to be sentient. After he came out of the closet, Mr. Hat's usage declined until he was casually written out in "The Death Camp of Tolerance". + Previously phased-out or retired characters such as Mr. Hat, the Super Best Friends, Big Gay Al, Mr. Slave, Pip Pirrup, Dr. Alphonse Mephesto, his assistant Kevin, and others, were all brought back for the series' 200th and 201st episodes for Call-Back reasons, but none of them have returned to the regular cast since. Most of them also appear in the video games. + Stan's grandfather Marvin, who lived with the series' central family for the first eleven seasons, had few speaking roles and disappeared from their home by early Season 13, becoming especially noticeable when the core four family members move out in "You're Getting Old". He was re-introduced in "Cash For Gold", five years later, living in an assisted living facility, but still occasionally appears at dinner with the family. + Tweek, a longtime fan favorite who was briefly a main character, had a nearly seven-year absence from the show. He spoke on only one occasion between Season 10 to 13 (and again from that season to Season 17), and was removed as a regular from the main characters' classroom. He received multiple small speaking parts in Season 17, and the Season 19 episode "Tweek x Craig" seemed to re-establish him as a member of the series' cast, and he has remained slightly more prominent since. However, his classroom absence has not been addressed, and he still goes entire seasons without speaking. + One of the most notable examples may be Ugly Bob, introduced in the second season in a show within a show, but he reappeared fifteen years later in "Royal Pudding", on an actual bus, claiming to have moved to the United States due to his hideous disfigurement. + Although he was never Put on a Bus, the owner of Tom's Rhinoplasty, Dr. Tom, makes no speaking appearances in the twenty years between "Tom's Rhinoplasty" (in season 1) and "Members Only" (in season 20) though he made infrequent cameos. + Season 22 is shaping up to be an epic example of this, since important roles are given to infrequently-seen characters such as Towelie, Mr. Hankey (who however is booted out of town seemingly permanently), Grandpa Marsh, Satan and the Manbearpig. Even Ned Gerblansky makes an appearance! * Halfway into *The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh*, Kanga and Roo seemed to disappear from Disney's *Winnie-the-Pooh* works. However they made a return in the *Seasons of Giving* special almost a decade later, and following *The Tigger Movie* were promoted to even bigger roles than they had before. *The Book of Pooh* also coincided with this, introducing them as regulars in Season Two. * *Arthur*: Arthur's best friend and major cast member Buster Baxter left midway through season 2, in "Arthur's Faraway Friend" — he was leaving on a year-long trip with his divorced dad, who's an airplane pilot. Both episodes of season 3's premiere deal with his return. In "Buster's Back", Arthur is overjoyed to hear that Buster's finally coming home, but wonders if he'll have changed from his travels. "The Ballad of Buster Baxter" is the opposite, with Buster noticing everything that happened during his absence and feeling left out. However, both episodes have a happy ending, where Buster is once again welcomed into the main cast and stays for good. * *Bob's Burgers*: Jimmy Pesto became The Voiceless for three seasons after it was revealed that Jay Johnston had participated in the January 6th insurrection and was subsequently fired from the show. Pesto finally returned in Season 14, now voiced by Eric Bauza. * *Polly Pocket*: The 2018 series had its main antagonists, Griselle and Gwen Grande, disappear for unknown reasons after Season 1. They made a sudden reappearance in the final episode of Season 5. * *Yin Yang Yo!*: The show has a few characters who make a second appearance after disappearing. For example, the Manotaur from "The Manotaur" returns in the episode "Game Over" and Boopy Von Ha Ha Pants from "Gone-A-Fowl" returns in the episode "Clown-Fu Fighting".
TheBusCameBack
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Film
# Good Is Not Soft - Film The following have their own pages: ----------------------------------- * The DCU * Marvel Universe --- * *The Book of Life*: + Manolo Sanchez is a Nice Guy and loves to play the guitar. *Don't* piss him off. + La Muerte is a sweetheart. But, has her limits. And when they are pushed, she is one not to be messed with. * Pretty much any *Disney Animated Canon* hero falls into this. + *Sleeping Beauty (1959)*: - Prince Phillip is an all-around good and kind man. However, he doesn't hesitate to kill Maleficent in the climax. This leaves him as one of the very few Disney heroes who directly and deliberately kills someone. - The Good Fairies as well (though Fauna is a bit softer than the other two). It's Flora who enables Philip to kill Maleficent, enchanting the Sword of Truth to hit its target, and Merryweather buys time by turning Diablo to stone so he can't inform Maleficent of the fairies' location anymore. + The Beast of *Beauty and the Beast (1991)* starts off angry and bad-tempered, but becomes gentler with Belle's love and is not only a better person but undergoing Heroic BSoD when Gaston comes to kill him. He quickly shapes up and delivers him a stern Get Out!. When Gaston doesn't obey and tries to backstab Beast, *that's* when Beast decides to let him fall off the castle. + Simba from *The Lion King (1994)* is kind and playful with his friends, and after finding out that Scar killed his father and made him look like he did it (even to himself, which he had been running away from since he was a kid), he still forgives Scar's life and let him go. However, he's more than willing to fight for his kingdom, he beats Scar quite good before letting him go, and when Scar falls to the fire and the hyenas eats him, Simba makes no gesture to help him or care about him. * *The Incredibles 1*: + Bob and Helen Parr, better known as Mr. Incredible and Elastigirl, respectively. They don't believe in using lethal force, do their best to protect civilians and save lives, and even exchange a sigh of "I love you" in the middle of a battle. But just because they *don't* kill doesn't mean that they *can't*—they choose not to, and there's a big difference (see: Bob taking out a massive group of Mooks in a few seconds, or Helen knocking out a robber with a single punch without even looking at him). And God have mercy on your soul if you dare to touch their children. Not to mention every time a hovercraft explodes with one of Syndrome's henchmen inside. + The three Parr children also get into their share of fights, despite appearing adorable. Violet is willing to use her force fields or other objects to hit people in self-defense, Dash leads multiple henchmen to their deaths in the first film and Jack-Jack goes berserk at anyone who upsets him, even his own family. + It seems as if the trope is going to be subverted when Bob is captured by Syndrome for the first time and (mistakenly) believes Helen and the kids are dead: he tries to grab the villain, but ends up snatching Mirage instead (and only because Mirage protected Syndrome by pushing him out of the way). Bob threatens to crush Mirage if Syndrome doesn't free him, but the villain calls his bluff, calling him "weak" when he lets her go. This leads to Mirage bringing up the trope with Syndrome later, pointing out that valuing life isn't a weakness, and *not* valuing it isn't a strength, and eventually leads her to a full-on Heel–Face Turn later in the film. Unfortunately, by that point, Bob's had some time to think about his family's death, and he's now more than willing to *very* slowly squeeze Mirage's throat so that she'll feel every second of her death. It's only by gasping out that his family survived that she's able to survive herself. Later, when Syndrome ||kidnaps Jack-Jack||, Bob's solution is to *throw a freaking CAR* at the villain, which blows up his aircraft ||and inadvertently kills him||. + Frozone follows a similar policy. He doesn't use deadly force either, and is a polite, cheerful, wisecracking guy, but he's also perfectly willing to completely encase someone in ice, leaving them completely immobile, but alive and aware of their surroundings. The movie *does* go out of its way to prove that this isn't lethal — the policeman who gets this treatment is clearly shown moving his eyes, and other officers discover him immediately afterward, so it will probably be a question of quickly defrosting the guy. But still, the potential side-effects (hypothermia, etc.) and deeper implications (what happens if the cops don't defrost him correctly?) mean he's plenty capable of doing real damage. + Heck, even Edna Mode falls under this trope. She's a fashion designer for superheroes, and serves as a large source of comic relief in the film. But she also gets two moments of pure harshness. When she asks if Helen really knows what Bob has been up to, all semblance of joking vanishes as she repeats the question so pointedly that it sounds like a statement: "Do you *know* where he is." Later, when Helen has a Heroic BSoD upon discovering Bob's secret return to heroism, Edna smacks her around a bit and tells her that she needs to pull herself together and save her husband. * *Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam* shows us what happens when you push a nice guy too far. When Black Adam tries to murder a hostage, the newly empowered Captain Marvel has no problem delivering a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown to the villain. Beware the Nice Ones in the extreme. * In *Turning Red*, Sun Yee was a Friend to All Living Things but also was not afraid to destroy the bandits who threatened her village. * Hermit the Old Wizard in *Adventure In Kigan Castle* is a kind old man and a force for good, but he's not to be trifled with. When Granny the Old Witch disguises herself as Queen Izato to try and break the hero, Osami, out of the dungeon so he can join forces with her, she realizes that Hermit put Osami under a sleeping spell so that she can't get to him. * *Andersonville*: Limber Jim is a dependable ally towards Josiah and the other, works to protect the weak, and is responsible for ultimately defeating the Raiders, but afterwards wants to kill them outright, and is also ruthless towards anyone who tries to tell the guards about the tunnel. * *The Changeling (1980)*: John Russell is a composer of classical music and a thoroughly nice individual, but he's pretty much impossible to frighten. Probably one of the toughest protagonists in the genre of horror. * *Conclave*: While the late Pope is spoken well of by every sympathetic character, he was also shown to have a manipulative side, and an ability to be firm and harsh with errant subordinates when they committed extraordinary crimes. * *Crimson Peak*: When Lucille insists to Edith that their confrontation can only end "when you kill me, or I kill you", Edith immediately calls on Thomas' ghost to help her, then whacks her with a shovel while she's distracted. With Lucille disoriented Edith seems to pause, but when she repeats her previous statement Edith starts swinging to cave in her head before she's finished the sentence. > **Edith:** I heard you the first time. * *Dirty Harry* has no qualms about working outside the law or even torturing suspects, but he does try and lead a normal life. * Samuel Gerard in *The Fugitive* and its Spin-Off sequel *U.S. Marshals*. Sam is sweet and caring toward his team and innocents, but threaten someone dear to him and you're playing with fire. * *Harry Potter*: + In addition to the examples of this trope taken from the novels, the film incarnation of Harry is slightly more ruthless than his book counterpart — most clearly demonstrated from the exchange he shares with Umbridge in *Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix* before the latter is dragged off to an unseen fate by a herd of centaurs. > **Umbridge:** Potter, do something! *Tell them I mean no harm!* > **Harry:** Sorry, Professor. I must not tell lies. + *Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1* also has the disturbing sequence where happy-go-lucky Ron Weasley ||advocates for the killing of a Death Eater|| and kind-hearted Hermione ||appears to almost agree, ultimately compromising and performing Laser-Guided Amnesia on him instead; the film leaves unclear as to whether she just turned him into a vegetable or not||. * *Jason's Lyric*: The main character, Jason, is basically a good man and very protective toward his family. But when his troublemaker younger brother, Joshua, drunkenly harasses his girlfriend, Lyric, he doesn't hesitate to punch him. Later, Jason also dares to get into a vicious fight with Lyric's gangster brother, Alonzo "A-1", as a revenge for ever tortured Joshua. * The titular character in *Madeline* is this. She's quite friendly, if mostly a Deadpan Snarker, towards her classmates, and happens to smile at the good, and frown at the bad. However, she soon develops a hatred towards her new neighbor, Pepito, and even attacks him at one point. She's not afraid to confront Lord Covington over his plans to sell the "Old House in Paris", and also goes to confront the Big Bad after ||seeing him kidnap Pepito||. Not to mention her famous line to the tiger at the zoo. * The *MonsterVerse* incarnation of Godzilla is one of the more benevolent versions of the character. For example, in the ending of *Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019)*, ||he repays Dr. Serizawa's Heroic Sacrifice by improving ecological damage through the Titans' powers, helping humankind and wildlife together||. However, disrupt the natural order of things and *you will pay*. ||He's variously impaled the Male MUTO on a building, killed the Female MUTO by burning her head off with his atomic breath, killed the Prime MUTO by stomping its head in, and burned King Ghidorah to a crisp before chowing down on and finally incinerating the alien dragon's surviving central head. There Is No Kill Like Overkill doesn't even describe it!|| + Mothra is one of the most benevolent kaiju in the series, but she is not to be messed with. Just ask the huge hole in Rodan's torso. + Kong is a pretty chill dude most of the time, but he will get brutal if you piss him off. He tends to inflict particularly painful deaths on his enemies, including but not limited to; ||tearing out the guts of the Skull Devil, pulverizing a Warbat to death and ripping its head off, hacking Mechagodzilla apart with his supercharged axe, ripping a Wart Dog in half in a spray of gore, and reducing Skar King to nothing but frozen pulp.|| * In *Mirror, Mirror*, the sweet Snow White convinces the Evil Queen to ||accept defeat by eating the poisoned apple that was meant for Snow, essentially committing suicide.|| * Atreyu in *The NeverEnding Story (1984)* is kind and friendly to his allies, but he's still a warrior and has no problem killing if that's what it takes to save Fantasia, as his nemesis Gmork learns the hard way. * *The Platform*: Brambang favors kindness and diplomacy over force and intimidation, but doesn't advocate giving up when force and intimidation are all that works. > **Brambang:** Convince them, instead of threatening them. > **Goreng:** But what if they won't listen? > **Brambang:** *[without a second's pause]* You smack 'em. But first of all, dialogue. * In *Red One*, while Callum is willing to talk things out before resorting to violence and is generally a nice person if you don't push his buttons, he also has a limit to his patience and won't hesitate to beat the crap out of people who won't see reason. His very first scene has him implicitly threaten a Bad Influencer who was cutting the line to Nick with violence if he doesn't get to the back and let the children whose turn it actually was through. * Dalton from *Road House (1989)*, who tells his fellow bouncers to always "Be nice, until it's time to not be nice." * RoboCop follows three directives: serve the public trust, protect the innocent, uphold the law. Nothing is said about not coldly blowing away killers, or not brutalizing a suspect before bringing them in (laws concerning how to handle arrested criminals have changed slightly in future Detroit). In *RoboCop 2*, he is programmed with several hundred more directives aimed at improving OCP PR, but those directives make him a terrible police officer. Instead of arresting criminals, he starts lecturing them on the immorality of their actions, while they happily go about their criminal business. * *Star Trek*: Most of the *Enterprise* crew in the reboot film series are friendly and decent people who would go out of their way to help others, but they can and *will* break protocol, especially if it means protecting one of their own — and you're screwed if you piss them off. + In *Star Trek (2009)*, after his offer to help Nero and his crew (who had killed hundreds of Starfleet cadets and officers, tortured Pike and ||destroyed Vulcan||) is rejected, Kirk wastes no time ordering to fire on the *Narada* to make sure they don't survive. + Not to mention Spock being quite willing to kill every crew member on that ship to save Earth. + In *Star Trek Into Darkness*, Spock loses it when ||Kirk dies|| and proceeds to beat the living crap out of ||John Harrison/Khan||, including brutally breaking his arm. + Sulu convincingly threatens Harrison to stand down with the experimental torpedoes. ||Although Harrison knows something about those torpedoes that Sulu doesn't...|| > **Leonard "Bones" McCoy:** Mr. Sulu, remind me never to piss you off. + In *Star Trek Beyond*, Kirk ||drops (half of) a starship onto the traitor who caused them to crash||. * *Star Wars* plays with this trope, especially *Return of the Jedi* and Luke Skywalker. For a film that showed the heroes as more pure-hearted, some viewers were surprised to see Luke using powers *generally associated* with the Sith like Force Choke. In this instance, it was used to demonstrate he was sliding towards The Dark Side. + According to the *Return of the Jedi* Novelization, Leia unconsciously uses the Force to help her when ||she sends Jabba where he belongs||. + R2-D2 and C-3PO pull an I Surrender, Suckers! on the Imperials. + It plays it better with Han Solo. + *Obi-Wan* is subject to this at the end of *Revenge of the Sith* after chopping off three of Anakin's limbs, and leaving him *to burn to death*. * *Swordfish*: If not the Trope Namer, close to it, though the "Good" part is really questionable. > **Gabriel:** I like you, you're on my good side. But don't confuse kindness with weakness. *[points pistol at Stanley's head]* Now get in the car. * *Tolkien's Legendarium* (*The Lord of the Rings Film Trilogy* and *The Hobbit Film Trilogy*): + Gandalf is an old man with a humorous streak and a frail appearance who loves children and is a warm and good-hearted person throughout. He's also a Physical God wizard who has no qualms with slaying trolls and orcs by the thousands, or contemptuously knocking out Denethor with his staff when the latter starts raving for his troops to abandon their posts and flee. + Bilbo Baggins is generally a friendly and polite fellow who prefers to use his wits to get out of a situation rather than use a sword, but when ||Thorin is about to be decapitated by an orc leader, Bilbo flings himself at the orc and kills him||. + Frodo Baggins tames Gollum by pointing his sword at his throat, threatening to cut it if he does not release Sam. + A more subtle example: Aragorn, probably the most noble human character, sees Boromir pick up the Ring. He orders him to give it back to Frodo — with one hand on his sword, prepared to attack Boromir if the Ring's power takes control of him. ||Which happens near the end of the movie, when Aragorn isn't around.|| Elrond, on the other hand, is shown to have *not* been capable of friendly fire when the Ring hypnotized Isildur during the previous battle with Sauron. Elrond's inaction might be justified in that attacking a friend in order to claim ownership of the Ring, even for the purpose of destroying it, while at the very center of the Ring's power, is probably a good way to end up under the Ring's control. * *Tombstone*: Wyatt Earp up to the Shootout at the OK Corral was willing to arrest the Cowboys, and only resorted to lethal force as a last resort. Once the Cowboys make it personal by killing his Brother Morgan, maiming his other brother Virgil, and try to finish the job as they are leaving town, Wyatt turns into a death dealing One-Man Army that won't stop until every Cowboy is dead and buried. He even taunts Ike Clanton by flashing a US Marshall badge at him, to let him and the other Cowboys know that Wyatt can do whatever he wants to stop them, with no legal ramifications. > **Wyatt:** From now on, I see a red sash, I kill the man wearing it! * *The Toxic Avenger*: The title hero, Toxie. Formally a 98 pound wimpy mop-boy who worked at a health club. After a freak accident, he was mutated into The Toxic Avenger. He uses his newfound power to help people — from saving lives to simply opening jars for people. And he is a very devoted boyfriend to his love interest, Sara — a blind woman who loves him as a person. He met her after saving her from being raped by robbers, and walks her home because those same robbers shot her guide dog. However Toxie is nowhere near as nice to villains. He has tromatons, which make it instinct to sense and destroy evil. But he kills in a very over the top manner, and seems to get sadistic glee from it. One example includes him tearing off a man's arm, laughing and hitting him across the head with it. Then later he shoves the man into a pizza oven. * *Transformers Film Series*: The Autobots are some of the nicest beings you'll meet, but they don't go easy on the Decepticons, and they rip them apart limb from limb. + In *Transformers: Dark of the Moon*, ||Optimus Prime himself brutally dispatches Megatron and then mere moments later, his fallen mentor Sentinel Prime — the latter while he's trying to explain his actions and *begging Optimus not to shoot*||. > **Megatron:** After all, ||Who would you be without me, Prime?|| > **Optimus Prime:** ||Time to find out.|| + The rebooted continuity of the film series that began with *Bumblebee* is no exception when it comes to this trope. *Especially* regarding Optimus Prime. Case in point, the second film of the aforementioned continuity, *Transformers: Rise of the Beasts*. Just because Prime is one of the kindest members of the Autobots does **not** mean it's okay to piss him off, in particular during the lowest point(s) of his time as Autobot commander. ||Scourge pushes Prime to his absolute limits during the course of the film by committing some of the most atrocious actions towards him, in particular slaying his close companion Bumblebee, and Prime, unable to handle the excess amount of stress piled upon him, becomes very cruel and violent towards the Terrorcon captain during the climax — first by hurting him and inflicting crippling damage on him with extreme amounts of pain, and then by viciously chopping him to shreds, finishing him off by decapitating him.|| * Carrie in *Vicious Fun* wears all black, enough eyeliner to make her look like The Crow, and loves killing serial killers. Everyone else is safe, and probably safer with her around. ---
GoodIsNotSoft
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TropesMToP
# Rick And Morty - Tropes M to P * MacGuffin: Rick's Portal Gun is one of his most important and famous inventions in (and outside of) the series. Many of his enemies, including the Galactic Federation, are those who scheme to steal the gun or the formula to the fluid that powers it from him. It is crucial for Rick's multidimensional adventuring and his creation of it is what made him go from ambitious scientist to one of the smartest men in the universe(s). * Magic Feather: A variant occurs in "Look Who's Purging Now" when the normally meek Morty goes on a bloodthirsty warpath during the Purge. At the end of the episode, Morty is worried that he has several demons to work out within himself, only to be told by Rick that a candy bar he had eaten earlier contained Purgenol, which increases aggression. Cue the shot showing that the candy bar is "Now Purgenol-Free". * Magic Tool: The season 2 DVD set actually reveals (what are implied to be just a *few*) uses of the plumbus tool that seems to be used in nearly every other dimension except for a few Earths in the central finite curve. Just a few of the device's uses include toilet-cleaner, portable stove, food utensil, sex toy, religious icon, babysitter, and vacuum cleaner. Of course, you no doubt knew all this as everybody has one. * Maintain the Lie: + In "Meeseeks and Destroy", The Stinger has a servant finding disturbing pictures (most likely of exploited children) in King Jellybean's closet and being ordered to destroy them so the people will remember him for what he represented, not what he was. + Zeep at the end of "The Ricks Must Be Crazy" is forced to do this, rather than reveal to his people that Rick is using their *entire universe* to power his car battery, or else Rick would destroy the "broken" battery along with the multiverse inside it. + At the end of "A Rick in King Mortur's Mort", Rick and Morty fake their own deaths so that Morty wouldn't have to cut his own dick off for the sake of interplanetary peace, and the Knights of the Sun were so moved by this they abolished the practice. A squire of the Sun finds Rick and Morty alive right after, and Morty tells him if he reveals the lie he'll have to cut his own dick off and the squire agrees. * The Man Behind the Man: Or rather, In Front Of The Man. In "Close Rick-counters of the Rick Kind," Evil Morty is this to Evil Rick, who was only his cyborg puppet. * Manchild: Rick is about 60 but has the maturity of a teenager, swearing, making dirty jokes, and being involved in rather reckless antics. One example is him finding it hilarious telling an alien race that flipping the bird meant "Peace among worlds". Morty's expression says it all. * Man Hug: Jerry and Doofus Rick part ways with one. Also Rick and Morty at the end of "Get Schwifity". * Man of Wealth and Taste: Mr. Needful before he upgrades to his simpler Steve Jobs turtleneck. * Marilyn Maneuver: Jessica in "Rest and Ricklaxation", when she drops from a portal with Rick. * Married Too Young: Since Jerry impregnated Beth when they were 17, he decided to stay with and marry her. Unfortunately neither were emotionally mature enough to be married, never mind parent a child. This is just one reason why their marriage is so strained. * Marshmallow Hell: In "Lawnmower Dog", after Rick and Morty free the rest of the family, Summer pulls Morty face-first into her chest when hugging him. Thanks to recently having had a very awkward encounter with a dream version of her (see Brain Bleach above), Morty is quite uncomfortable by this. * The Masquerade: Utterly averted. Everybody seems to be aware that Rick's a super scientist, but outside of the family, nobody seems too concerned. The town and school are aware but react with indifference. Rick's unknown outside of town before "Get Schwifty." Considering Rick's on the run from The Empire, he takes no special precautions to hide his presence. * Meaningful Name: Beta 7 acts like a Dogged Nice Guy to Unity. A common slang term for men who act like that towards women is "beta male," as opposed to Rick's "alpha male" personality. * Meaningful Rename: A minor character has one in the episode "The Old Man and the Seat". Delivery Drone, originally a robot delivery boy who ran away to join a Robot War in another star system, wrote over the label on his chest so that it instead said *Deliverance*. * Medium Awareness: All over the place: + Rick says a universe run by intelligent dogs would be interesting to watch "at 11 minutes a pop". + In "Rixty Minutes", Rick and Morty comment that TV from other dimensions has a "looser feel" and an "improvisational tone." As they say this, the camera is positioned in such a way that although they're looking at the TV, it seems like they're looking at the audience. + The same episode runs the concept of alternate universes in two different directions, and one turns out to be significantly funnier than the other. Rick says to the characters stuck in the B-plot "you guys clearly backed the wrong conceptual horse." + When Morty and Summer express concerns about their parents in "A Rickle in Time", Rick says that "They're probably living it up in some pointless grounded story about their shitty marriage." The B-plot does indeed involve Beth and Jerry in a grounded story about their marriage. + Throughout the series, Rick (and sometimes other characters) will make references to seasons or episodes of the show. For some examples of each: - Rick celebrates the "end of Season 1", states that he'll accomplish a certain character arc even it if takes him "nine seasons", and notes that he destroyed a certain technology "a few seasons back". Beth also notes in the Season 3 finale that from now on, the show will be "like Season 1, but more streamlined". - All three of the anthology episodes (the 8th episode of each season) has Rick directly mention a previous episode, sometimes by name. And in The Teaser of "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy", he calls it a "Rick and Jerry episode". * Meta Fiction: "Never Ricking Morty" finds Rick and Morty on a very literal Story Train that represents the story-telling process. The whole episode waxes the creative story process and is aware of itself and the meta concepts. The two eventually find themselves in conflict with the Story Lord, who attempts to break the *fifth* wall by tapping into possible storylines that haven't happened. Morty questions if anything they're experiencing is canon, to which Rick states that it *could* have been. The train's story literally derails itself when it's revealed to be a toy that Morty bought from the Citadel of Rick's gift shop, which Rick is very proud to see Morty's participation in consumerism. * Metal Muncher: According to the *Official Character Guide*, after Hammerhead Morty's ||death, a Galactic Federation autopsy found|| nails in his digestive system. The *Guide* then immediately Lampshades the amount of Fridge Logic this raises. * Mind Rape: Being a gaseous creature, this seems to be Fart's only method of attack. Of course, since it can turn a perfectly adjusted person suicidal in less than a second, it's hardly anything to sneeze at. * Missing Mom: Not much is known about Rick's ex-wife, Beth's mom. Not even her name, which may or may not be Diane. There have been some hints that she's dead in the present day, but it's not confirmed. Rick states that his marriage to her failed, but there are also indications that he still has feelings for her on some level. * A Mistake Is Born: Jerry and Beth only got married because they accidentally conceived Summer when they were teenagers. * Mister Seahorse: + The Season 1 opening title sequence shows a scene where Jerry is getting ready to give birth. + "Edge of Tomorty: Rick Die Rickpeat" features a caterpillar version of Mr. Goldenfold, who births a few caterpillar larvae. * Monster of the Week: Rick & Morty would deal with a one-shot villain or rogue alien species in each episode. * Monstrous Germs: In "Anatomy Park", the various diseases are portrayed as hideous monsters who chase the protagonists around in an homage to *Jurassic Park (1993)*. * Mood Whiplash: + Twice in "Meeseeks and Destroy". First, a Giant accidentally smashes his head and dies from the trauma, almost leading to Rick and Morty being convicted as murderers; and secondly, when Morty is almost raped in a restroom. It even cuts to Rick singing karaoke and the ridiculous Mr. Meeseeks brawl in the middle of the latter. + The Stinger for "M. Night Shaym-Aliens" has Rick drunkenly enter Morty's room, telling him he's a good kid and a trooper for putting up with all the crap he's been through. A sweet, if slightly disturbing, gesture. He then pulls a knife and holds it to Morty's neck, screaming at him to tell him if he's a simulation or he'll cut his throat. After a minute of this, Rick passes out on the floor, leaving Morty confused and terrified. + The A plot of "Rixty Minutes" is a series of absurd sketches improvised by the voice actors, with the framing device being that Rick has upgraded the family's cable to pick up channels from other dimensions. The B plot is the family having an existential crisis after learning of a dimension where Beth aborted the unplanned pregnancy that would have been Summer, and as a result, Beth and Jerry didn't get married and ended up with their dream jobs instead. The mood switches again when the Beth and Jerry from the alternate dimension are revealed to be unhappy in their dream jobs and still in love with each other. + "Edge of Tomorty: Rick Die Rickpeat" has this in the scene where Rick C-137 ||in a clone body of Wasp Rick|| is having dinner with the Wasp version of the Smith family. The genuinely heartwarming interactions between the family is juxtaposed with the heavy Black Comedy of them eating Caterpillar Mr. Goldenfold and his babies alive. * Moon-Landing Hoax: + Suggested in "M. Night Shaym-Aliens" that the aliens faked the Earth-Moon Landing when Rick, Morty, and Jerry run past a simulation of it. + During their fight scene in "The Rickchurian Mortydate", Rick and Mr. President run past numerous sound stages of faked historical events, including a lunar lander and the planting of the flag on the moon. The government also apparently actually carried out the murder of Tupac Shakur and staged the JFK assassination, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and George Washington crossing the Delaware. * Moral Myopia: Beth spent years putting Jerry down because she thought she was better than him, but was very offended when she found out she was holding him back as well. + The entire family is this to Jerry to the point where they come across as Holier Than Thou, since they repeatedly call him out for his mistakes despite making those same mistakes themselves. - Season 4 has an example of Morty Calling the Old Man Out in The "Old Man And The Seat" for creating a phone app with Rick's temp even though he was warned not to. Yet Morty could have avoided the conflict of "Rattlestar Ricklactica" if he had both stayed in the car like he was told, and ignored the dead snake astronaut. * Motivational Lie: In "Get Schwifty", Rick tells Morty that his portal gun only has enough charge for two trips: one to grab their family and one to get off-planet. This is to get Morty to focus on placating the Cromulons rather than worrying about his family. Rick blows his own ruse when he casually portals out to pick up some snacks for Ice-T. * MST3K Mantra: In-Universe example. For every disturbing thing Morty sees or experiences, Rick's advice is "Don't think about it!" * Multiboobage: In "The ABCs of Beth", Jerry starts dating a Green-Skinned Space Babe named Kiara, who has three breasts. * The Multiverse: + Rick exploited this in "Rick Potion No. 9" by simply slipping into one universe where he and Morty suddenly died after curing the Cronenbergs. Apparently, he hasn't managed to find very many universes where they both died in such a way that everything's okay afterward. + There's an entire group of alternate Ricks who have banded together to form a society known as the Council of Ricks. However, the Rick we know refuses to be affiliated with them. This refusal to join the Council makes "our" Rick the "Rickiest Rick there is." By default, that makes Morty the "Mortiest Morty." * Mundane Utility: + Rick builds a self-aware, sentient robot to pass the butter, which is about an inch out of his reach and which he could have easily just leaned forward and grabbed in a fraction of the time it took to build the robot. When the robot finds this out, he's devastated. + Rick created a Pocket Dimension, manipulated the intelligent life within into generating massive amounts of power, and then channelled that power into... his car battery. * Mundane Solution: When Rick is about to destroy the Galactic Federation, his grandchildren suggest two options: Summer suggests that he'll set all their nukes to target each other. Morty suggests reprogramming all their military portals to disintegrate their entire space fleet. While Rick appreciates the Hoist by His Own Petard nature of these plans and claims that he's "almost proud," he ultimately decides on this and ||reduces the value of their credit-based economy to zero.|| * My God, What Have I Done?: + This hits Rick at the end of "Auto Erotic Assimilation," when Unity's note to him makes it clear that his manipulative personality ends up bringing down all of his loved ones. It's enough to make him attempt suicide. + One of Morty's removed memories in "Morty's Mind Blowers" reveals that his mistaken belief that the new school guidance counsellor was up to no good and resultant actions against him led the man to commit suicide, causing Morty to react like this. * Mythology Gag: + The o3o expression the characters use is one of the few things from *Doc and Mharti* that hasn't been changed. + At one point, Rick says that a whole world populated by dogs would make an interesting TV show. This is a reference to an actual pilot Justin Roiland made in the past. + Certain parts of Cronenberg-Rick might bring back some...memories. + The Clone Degeneration invoked with the gradual mental degeneration of the Meeseeks brings to mind the defective Cosby clones from Roiland's earlier Web series *House of Cosbys*. The alternate-dimension TV channels are also a similar concept to the series' nonsensical final episode involving alien satellite transmissions. + There are a few instances where Rick tells someone to "lick [his] balls." It's one of his catchphrases in "Total Rickall", where he follows it up with claiming that he "says it all the time", and he plays samples of himself saying "balls" to annoy Morty in "Get Schwifty." In the original "Doc and Mharti" short, Doc repeatedly asks Mharti to lick his balls as part of his science experiments. + In "Big Trouble In Little Sanchez", Tiny Rick makes a drawing of Doc. * Naked People Are Funny: In "M. Night Shaym-Aliens!", Rick figures out that he and Morty are being monitored by a race of aliens. The aliens also happen to be really uncomfortable with nudity, so Rick and Morty strip to have some privacy. * Name and Name: Rick and Morty. * Never My Fault: + Beth blames all of her failures on Jerry. After their separation in Season 3, she starts blaming it on her kids, and later, her dad. + Rick repeatedly uses his intelligence and/or alcoholism to absolve himself of responsibility for his actions. A particular example of the latter happens in "Vindicators 3: The Return of World Ender", where he refers to Drunk Rick (himself on a blackout-drunk bender) with third-person pronouns and acts like he's someone else completely. * Never Trust a Trailer: Season 7th's promotional commercials showed a whole bunch of random adventures from different episodes. It turns out the majority of those shots were taken from just one episode alone. * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!: + Rick constantly encouraging Morty to "purge" in "Look Who's Purging Now?" causes Morty to go psycho and almost kill Rick. + Rick's overthrow of both the Council of Ricks and the Galactic Federation from "The Rickshank Redemption" gives ||Evil Morty and Tammy, respectively,|| the opportunity to take over what's left of each. + Several episodes showcase how Morty's misguided attempts to do good end up backfiring horribly. The massive death and destruction Fart causes after Morty frees him in "Mortynight Run" and the hostile snake civilization Morty accidentally uplifts in "Rattlestar Ricklactica" are particular examples. * Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!: One of Rick's biggest Jerkass moves in season three was ||manipulating Beth and Jerry into getting a divorce. Even if he's right that they're bad for each other, he makes it clear the only reason he did it was to spite Jerry for wanting to turn him into the Federation. He and Beth have a heart-to-heart later on where he offers to clone her so the original can be free to explore the universe and her dreams. Come the Season Finale, he offhandedly says that if she were a clone he'd kill her for becoming self-aware, causing her to freak out and run to Jerry, disavowing Rick once and for all. Rick brings a shotgun to kill Jerry but admits he can't do it after seeing how he messed up||. * Nipple and Dimed: Lampshaded by Summer when a Powder Keg Crowd who are divided by their nipples ask Morty and Summer to show them theirs: > **Morty:** [pulling up his shirt to show his nipples] We're neither. S-see? > **Summer:** [Not pulling up her shirt] Yeah, take my word for it. * No Accounting for Taste: Beth and Jerry. If they're the focus of an episode's plotline, it's probably about their struggling marriage. Deep down, they still care about each other, but there's so much resentment between them that the only reason they're still together at this point is for the sake of the kids. Well, that and Status Quo Is God. This finally becomes averted in Season 3: the two decide to separate and divorce at the beginning of the season, and while they do get back together by the end, they've both had significant Character Development in the meantime and give the impression that they won't be as miserable together anymore. * No Dead Body Poops: Ruben's death causes such a buildup of fecal matter in his sphincter that it overloads the artificial barrier Rick built there, destroying the enlargement ray at the base of his colon. * NO INDOOR VOICE: + Mr. Meeseeks! (Look at him!) + The Cromulons, though it'd be a difficult task for a moon-sized talking head to take it down a notch. * No More for Me: + Beth attempts to kiss Mr. Meeseeks just as he disappears. A waiter asks if she wants more wine, and she decides she's done. + In an alternate universe where chairs and people are reversed, a chair discards the rest of his booze after seeing Rick and Morty walking around. * Nominal Hero: Rick is just barely a hero by him caring about his family, and there being even worse people. * Non-Indicative Title: The family likes a show from an alternate reality called *Ball Fondlers*. It's basically just *The A-Team*, a peppy action show with no fondling of balls or even any innuendo. Rick does do a fondling motion with his hand when suggesting it to Morty and Summer, but that's it. * Non-Standard Character Design: The characters in the "Strawberry Smiggles" commercial have regular-looking cartoon pupils instead of the weird squiggly things all the other characters have. * Non-Human Head: One of the alternate versions of Morty seen in the Citadel has a giant hammer for a head. * Noodle Implements: + In "Auto-Erotic Assimilation", Rick tells Unity that he wants to perform a sex act involving a hang-glider, a crotchless Uncle Sam costume, and a football stadium full of redheads and men who look like his father. Becomes subverted when we get to see what these are used for shortly afterwards. + The plumbus is one of these, a result of the writers improvising an entire documentary of how it's made (involving other noodle implements as well like Schleem and a Grumbo). * Noodle Incident: + In "Rick Potion #9", Rick has to figure out how to deal with a virus that turned the entire human race minus his family into nightmarish mutants. After a commercial break we see Rick and Morty returning to a perfectly restored neighborhood and Morty congratulates Rick for "finding the crazy solution like you always do." ||Then the two are killed by a bomb, and the real Rick and Morty arrive via a portal and take their place.|| + In "Wedding Squanchers", Birdperson tells Beth that he and Rick once fought in a vicious war, and are now considered terrorists by the Galactic Federation. However, he never says exactly what he and Rick did during that period. + Half of the clips in the opening sequence are these. Says Roiland at a ComicCon... > "The idea with the opening credits is like there's three real episode clips, and then there's three completely fake made-up things every season, and we just love that you don't know what is what until the last episode, y'know?" + C-137 Rick's and Morty's adventure in "The Ricklantis Mixup." All we know is that Morty hooked up and likely had sex with a mermaid and wants to go back. + In the cold open for "Rickfending Your Mort" Morty made "receipts" for all the adventures Rick took him on in case he refuses to honor his "One Morty adventure for every ten Rick adventures" cards. * No Such Thing as Alien Pop Culture: Averted. We get to see pop culture from other planets, other dimensions, you name it. * Note to Self: In "Total Rickall", when Rick first discovers the mind-altering parasites trying to infiltrate the family, he writes the current number of family members on a piece of paper and tapes it to the wall. Whenever the parasites multiply and try to disguise themselves as new family members, Rick kills the likely suspect. The parasites beat this by implanting a new memory in which Rick wrote the number for a nonsensical reason rather than for a logical purpose, foiling that plan. * Nothing Is the Same Anymore: The ending of season 5 changes the possibilities that the series can move forward with, which is saying something considering that there's a very loose definition of what types of adventures and storylines that are prevented from happening in the first place. ||Evil Morty destroyed the Central Finite Curve that sealed off all the infinite universes where Rick is the smartest man in the universe from the rest of the multiverse and now opens up the possibilities for new villains and characters who can challenge Rick. The Citadel of Ricks has been destroyed, with an untold number of Ricks and Morties killed in the process. There's a subtle implication that portal technology may not be as reliable to use anymore and dimension hopping may not be possible. Finally, with Morty now fully aware of Rick's background, and the relationship the two have with each other won't be the same||. This was then completely returned to Status Quo Is God in Season 6 Episode 6, where even Rick lamented that he was hoping to get a season, or at least a 3-episode story arc out of the changes. * Not Helping Your Case: In "Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind", when Rick is suspected of having killed several Ricks from other dimensions, he decides to act rude and unhelpful to the Council, then kills several Security Ricks in his escape. * "Not So Different" Remark: + Stated word-for-word and lampshaded: > **Evil Rick**: We're not so different, you and I. > **Rick C-137**: Uh yeah, *duh*! + Played straight and subverted with the Council of Ricks. Rick calls them all a bunch of sellouts but admits that, like him, they all can't resist tormenting Jerry. Similarly, Rick picks on Doofus Rick just as much as the Council Ricks do. The similarities end when the Council of Ricks marks off Mortys as their main resource and not as their respective grandsons, the moment evil Rick/Morty baffled that C-137 Rick!Prime actually loves his grandson cements this. * No, You: When Jerry and Beth are packing away Rick's stuff, he tells them that they shouldn't be messing with it because it's beyond their reasoning. Jerry retorts "YOU'RE beyond our reasoning!", and Rick counters with "Takes one to know one!" * Nuke 'Em: In "Get Schwifty", the general constantly advocates nuking the Cromulons. When he finally manages it, it's about as effective as flicking embers into someone's beard. * Obfuscating Stupidity: A strange example: Morty's irregular brainwaves literally obscure the normally distinctive brain emissions that would otherwise allow the numerous multiversal governing bodies to track the various alternate selves of the mad scientist. This is at least part of the reason that every Rick hangs out with a Morty if possible, essentially hiding someone else's intelligence by the former's stupidity. * Obnoxious In-Laws: Rick and Jerry very much act this way with each other, though to be fair, they probably wouldn't like each other anyway. The creators say that Rick hates Jerry due to circumstance as he blames Jerry for ruining Beth's life by impregnating her when she was only 17. * Obvious Beta: invoked The simulated world in "M. Night Shaym-Aliens" has quite the number of bugs in it, to say the least. * Odd Couple: Rick and Morty themselves. * Of Corpse He's Alive: The episode "Rixty Minutes" has a fake trailer of a movie where a bunch of cats manipulate the corpse of their owner to convince people she's alive. She's still very obviously dead; with green soft tissues and a maggot infestation. Strangely enough, this is a sequel. * Oh, Crap!: + In "Rick Potion #9", Rick gets this when he hears it's flu season (since the potion he gave Morty will spread like wildfire if combined with the flu virus), and Morty says this word-for-word twice. + "A Rickle in Time" had this, when 32 Ricks were attempting to fix 32 broken collars: > **16 Ricks:** Now hand me that flat-head screwdriver. > **Other 16 Ricks:** *(in unison with above line)* Now hand me that Phillips screwdriver. > **16 Ricks:** Actually, make it a Phillips. > **Other 16 Ricks:** *(in unison with above line)* Actually, make it a flat-head. > *(Time splits in half again, creating 32 new variants)* > **All 64 Ricks:** Ohhhhhh, shit. + Rick and everyone at the wedding reception in "The Wedding Squanchers" when Tammy reveals herself as a deep-cover agent for the Galactic Federation and has the building surrounded. + Morty has one of these in '"The Rickshank Redemption" When Rick is ranting about ||how he got rid of Jerry *and* the government because Jerry threatened to turn Rick in.|| > **Rick:** Ohhh, it gets *darker*, Morty! Welcome to the darkest year of our adventures! First thing that's different? ||No more dad, Morty! He threatened to turn me into the government so I made him and the government *go away!*|| > **Morty:** Ohhhh *fuck*...! * Once a Season: + In-universe, in Planet Music, there's always one planet per season that protests the show and gets disqualified. + For the series as a whole it appears a movie-based episode. Inception for Season 1, The Purge for Season 2, and Ensemble Cast superhero movies such as The Avengers for Season 3. + Allusions to Interdimensional Cable, if not whole episodes devoted to it. + Fan favorite characters like Gearhead, Birdperson, Tammy and Mr. Poopybutthole have appeared at least once per season as well. * Once Done, Never Forgotten: In the episode "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy", Jerry mentions in passing that he has wondered about having a vagina. Afterwards, Groupon reminds him on every occasion about his vagina fantasies, leading to Jerry proclaiming "I don't want to be known as the vagina guy." * Only a Flesh Wound: Rick tries to invoke this in "Total Rickall" when he gets tired of playing Spot the Imposter, instead intending to shoot everyone in the shoulder so only the weaker parasites will die from their wounds. It doesn't pan out because, understandably, no one likes getting shot and the parasites manage to take his gun. * O.O.C. Is Serious Business: You wouldn't expect this show to get so serious at times. + In "Auto Erotic Assimilation", Rick tries to kill himself after Unity tells him that his reckless and self-destructive nature only ends up causing the people around him to suffer. The DVD commentary to the episode reveals that the chemical he drank before doing it was meant to synchronize all his parallel selves - He wasn't only trying to kill himself, but also *all other versions of himself in other dimensions.* + When Morty almost gets raped by King Jellybean in "Meeseeks and Destroy", Rick figures out what happened, and proceeds to murder the king with a single gunshot. + Beth and Jerry found out about their miserable lives without each other in "Rixty Minutes", and realizing how good they have it together after all. + Rick turning himself in "The Wedding Squanchers" after overhearing the others talking about him and realizing how much of a burden he is to them. When calling the Galactic Federation to share his location, he asks for his family to be able to have a safe life on Earth. * Open-Minded Parent: + Tammy's parents are incredibly accepting of the fact that their high school daughter is marrying a middle-aged alien. It helps that they're actually robots to help her cover identity. + Beth is usually pretty okay with Morty and Summer getting involved with Rick's antics. She also defends Morty's use of a sex robot when Jerry wants to intervene, saying that would mess up his development. * Over-the-Top Roller Coaster: The episode "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy" centers on a roller coaster that exists in a theme park protected by an immortality field, meaning no one in the park can die as long as the field is operational. Aside from the fact this means the coaster can be incredibly outlandishly dangerous, it has an added threat: the apex of the highest peak actually barely extends past the immortality field, a fact utilized for an assassination attempt. * Overnight Age-Up: Male Gazorpians reach adulthood in one day. Being half-human, Morty Jr. goes through typical human stages of growing up, including teen rebellion, in that time span. By The Stinger of the same episode, Morty Jr. has grey hair and has written a bestselling novel, whereas none of the other characters have aged nearly so far. * Overly Long Gag: + The "Rick and Morty forever and forever, a hundred years" moment at the end of the pilot goes on for over a minute. + "WHY DID YOU EVEN ROPE ME INTO THIS??" "CUZ HE ROPED *ME* INTO THIS!!" "WELL, HIM OVER THERE, HE ROPED *ME* INTO THIS!!" "WELL *HE* ROPED *ME* INTO THIS!!" + The cereal commercial in "Rixty Minutes". + The fake door commercial, enough that Morty has to ask Rick to not change the channel, and then gives up on it himself. + Personal space! + In the first episode of season 1, Rick goes on a rant saying *Rick and Morty* will go on for "a hundred years". 3 years and 120 days later, when the first episode of season 3 premiered, Rick goes on another rant and mentions they've got "97 years" left to go. * Papa Wolf: Rick may be an incredibly flawed individual with practically no regard for the lives or well-being of others, but there's one moral misstep he will not forgive you for: messing with his grandkids. + Also, when Beth and Jerry disagree or fight in front of Rick, he echoes this trope by typically taking his daughter's side, belittling Jerry in the process. + Jerry is a Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass with extra Moron and a side of Butt-Monkey who will field any Idiot Ball that is hit anywhere near him, but when his family is threatened, he can step up to the plate to keep them safe. * Paranoia Fuel: In-Universe for Rick in The Stinger of "M. Night Shaym-Aliens" when he bursts into Morty's room drunk and, after an out of character moment of praise, pulls a knife on him and demands to know if he's still inside a simulation. * Parents as People: Both Jerry and Beth often show concern for their kids and the effect Rick's antics can have on them, however, they are continuously hindered by their own psychological problems and their failing marriage. * People's Republic of Tyranny: The Galactic Federation is an intergalactic Empire controlled by one alien species that turns the worlds it conquers into Police States. * Perfectly Cromulent Word: Morty protests that "schwifty" isn't an actual word. * Person as Verb: + After inflicting Body Horror on the whole world, Rick says that he "Cronenberged" the place. + When Summer is screwed out the business by her boss, she states that she's been Zuckerberged. * Pet the Dog: Rick is a foul-mouthed, abusive asshole scientist who's rude to just about everybody, but he has quite a few moments of this (especially with his daughter Beth and grandkids Morty and Summer, but even sometimes with his son-in-law Jerry and other people as well) that hint at a Hidden Heart of Gold. * Piss-Take Rap: "Flu Hatin' Rap" from "Rick Potion #9". * Planet of Hats: + In "Rixty Minutes", there's a universe where Earth is populated by corn people, and one where it's populated by hamsters living in human butts. + All Zigerians are scammers who are prudish towards nudity. + Several alternate universe versions of Rick and Morty in "Close Rick-counters of the Rick Kind", including a cowboy version, multiple alien versions, a robot version, and Cronenberg Rick and Morty. + In "The Wedding Squanchers," ||when searching for a replacement home planet,|| the Smiths happen upon a large Earth-like planet where everything — strawberries, flowers, birds, mountains, ants, and even *atoms* — is on a cob. Upon this revelation, Rick hastily makes the family leave ||and nixes relocating there||, for reasons never explained. + In "Edge of Tomorty", Rick travels to several different dimensions: one where the whole world is fascist, another inhabited by shrimp-people (which is also fascist), a third world of teddy bear people (which, once again, is fascist), and a fourth where everyone is bug-people (which *isn't* fascist!), including wasp versions of the Smith family. * Pocket Dimension: In "The Ricks Must be Crazy", Rick's car is revealed to be powered by one. One of the inhabitants created his own, and one of *its* inhabitants, in turn, discovered *his own*. * Political Overcorrectness: In "Something Ricked This Way Comes", when Rick tells Morty that the microscope he got from Summer's boss will make him retarded, Morty tell him that he probably shouldn't use that word because, even though he was speaking objectively and the microscope would have literally made him mentally retarded, it would still offend "powerful groups who feel like they're doing the right thing". Rick's response? "Well, that's retarded." * Poorly Disguised Pilot: Parodied at the end of the second episode. Rick suggests that the world populated by dogs "could be developed into a very satisfying project for people of all ages", and that he would watch it "for at least eleven minutes a pop". * Poor Man's Porn: While living with the tree people, Morty was without access to internet porn and instead used an extra curvy piece of driftwood. * Pop-Cultural Osmosis Failure: At the end of "Meeseeks and Destroy" Rick makes an Arsenio Hall reference, making Beth and Jerry laugh, but then Beth says she doesn't get it, as she's too young. * Pop-Culture Pun Episode Title: Many episode titles are puns of other works, like "The ABCs of Beth" being a pun on *The ABCs of Death*. * Potty Failure: Happens to Summer twice: First in "A Rickle in Time", out of the shock of Morty knocking out Rick, and again in "Total Rickall" during the elevator flashback, though both aren't explicitly seen, but mentioned by Morty the first time and Summer the second time. * The Power of Love: Played with in "Morty's Mind Blowers". One of the memories is of Morty being possessed by a demon worm, which Rick, Beth, and Summer discover can be coaxed out of Morty by telling him they love him. However, they can't help but crack jokes at Morty's expense as the spectacle becomes more disgusting and drawn out, leading to the Power wavering and creating extended discomfort for Morty. * Powered Armor: + In "Lawnmower Dog", Snuffles builds walking, humanoid exoskeletons for himself and all the neighborhood dogs, due to becoming an Uplifted Animal with genius intellect by way of a helmet Rick invented to make him smarter. Models with yellow Tron Lines are combat-capable, sporting shoulder guns; whereas blue denotes civilian. + In "Look Who's Purging Now", Rick and Morty have Summer send each of them a set of this so they can defend themselves from the Purgers trying to kill them. Unfortunately, Morty hits his Rage Breaking Point and gets a little kill-happy with his, forcing Rick to knock him out. Rick then lets Arthricia borrow Morty's armor, and the two of them use it to slaughter the rich people who orchestrate the yearly Purges. * Prison Rape: + In "Meeseeks and Destroy", Rick and Morty are about to be sent to Giant Prison. Rick bemoans that, if someone drops the soap, it will land on them and crush their spines. It would be really easy to rape them, then. + The fourth-dimensional lifeform in "A Rickle in Time" tells Rick, Morty, and Summer that they're going to Time Prison. > "You know what they do to third-dimensional lifeforms in Time Prison? Same thing they do in regular prison, only forever!" * The Problem with Licensed Games: In-universe, lampshaded in Rick and Morty's Rushed Licensed Adventure. It's right there in the title! The characters frequently complain about not being able to perform certain simple actions because the developers were too lazy to implement them (The game is actually not that bad for a free-to-play Flash game). * Product Placement: + Blatantly lampshaded in "Total Rickall". A flashback shows Rick walking into the living room with his arms full of Nintendo 3DSs, rambling on about how they can take advantage of the Walmart sale to turn a profit and sell them for more money because they were all the limited edition *The Legend of Zelda* versions. In the end, he turns right to the camera and yells "Nintendo! Send me free stuff!" Apparently, Justin Roiland did this once in real life. + Done again in The Rickshank Rickdemption with the Mulan Szechuan sauce. This caused such an out-of-universe demand for it from the fans that McDonald's actually brought it back in a limited capacity. * Protagonist-Centered Morality: + The collateral damage wreaked by Rick's schemes, whether implied or shown outright, is often absolutely gruesome in its sheer body count, but receives no serious repercussions for it, week after week. He's destroyed *an entire reality* just through incompetence, and that's probably not the first, and he stated that he once made the same mistake Beth did (in which she accidentally shot a genuine family friend whom she thought was an evil parasite) on "a planetary scale". - In general, Rick does the same things (or worse) than the people the show paints as villains without it being ever really relevant. He dislikes government for how controlling they are, yet he rules his family with an iron fist and severe gaslighting. He hates fascists, yet he considers himself a superior being with no issue to kiill those he deems "inferiors" (which, as stated above, includes several genocides). The galactic government keeping prisoners into stasis and feeding them a virtual reality was considered crossing a line, it's then discovered Rick does the same to people with no apparent reason. Rapists and slavers are considered utterly despicable when they are secondary characters, yet Rick is both things. And the list goes on. + Averted and played with in "Mortynight Run". After Rick sells a gun to Krombopulos Michael for an assassination, Morty argues that's as bad as pulling the trigger. Morty then goes and tries to save the life of Krombopulos Michael's target, causing hundreds of casualties as a result. Rick doesn't let him hear the end of it. * Punch a Wall: Jerry does so after having to say goodbye to Doofus Rick. * Punch-Clock Villain: Parodied by Scary Terry, the "legally-safe knock off" of Freddy Krueger living deep in Mr. Goldenfold's dreams: not only is terrorizing people literally just his day job, after he's done he goes home to a perfectly normal-looking suburban house, complete with an equally-scary wife and infant son.
RickAndMorty
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Webcomics
# What Happened To The Mouse - Webcomics --- * In the final arc of *The Adventures of Dr. McNinja*, Doc's ally Martin was last seen Bound and Gagged in King Radical's lair ||after Doc's family was tricked into betraying him.|| He makes no further appearances after that and there's no indication that anyone went to rescue him. * Jessica's pregnancy in *Better Days*, though it's possible that the sequel, *Original Life* (which follows the children of Better Days' main characters) will bring this up. + In *Original Life*, it is shown that Jessica has many children, enough that Elizabeth feels uncomfortable asking her to take time babysitting her own kids. + Elizabeth's father all but vanishes as the series goes on. This is notable since he was written as being a reasonable parent to Elizabeth as opposed to her strict mother, and backed his daughter on things like having Fisk over. One has to wonder why he had no input when his wife all but forced their daughter to marry someone she didn't care about. * In *Bob and George*, on average once per *Mega Man (Classic)* game parody, Mega Man would beat one of the Robot Masters without killing them, and for the most part they never showed up again, though they spawned numerous Epileptic Trees. However, on rare occasions they showed up again, especially Shadow Man, who became a running joke due to his stealthy nature and the Epileptic Trees about his disappearance. + Shadow Man in particular said, after his initial appearance, that he'd disappear into the background until he was needed once again, which seemed a natural set up for him to return. It was *years* before he really did, and at every new plot development he was tagged as possibly being behind it. One fancomic lampshaded this by having him come and say the reason he hadn't shown up again was because, as a Ninja he would return and strike when least expected... but the readers *kept expecting him*. * You'd never know in *Ciem* that resident Depraved Bisexual Poison Dart Eddie even *had* a sidekick, as he is so quickly brushed aside and never mentioned again. Even *Claire Rauscher* has the decency to at least return in a later chapter, if only to ||fall to her death||. * Averted in *Daughter of the Lilies*; in a magical university setting, a frog is used as sacrifice to summon a demonic entity that, as intended part of the experiment, possesses the frog. Readers commented that they wanted to know what happened to the frog, and the author did indeed reveal the ultimate fate of the frog. * *Dominic Deegan*: The climactic fight of the arc "The Battle for Barthis" involved several corrupt Knights having been hired by Serk Brakkis as insurance. Siegfried's comments about looking into the corruption of the Knights, as well as a brief teaser sketch for an arc called "Knightvision", implied there would be a story about Siegfried's attempts to deal with it. This was halted when the arc immediately after had Siegfried be retconned into being a more villainous person and killed off while the Knights were disbanded by order of the king a few arcs later. * *Freaking Romance*: Misty's story never is solved. Presumably she's lost in another dimension somewhere. * *Fox Fires*: After the Bird King gives some advice to Raate and part ways, Tuike later meets up with Raate again and reveal that the Bird King has gone missing. Aside from an ominous warning much later to never trust him, the Bird King is never mentioned or heard from again. Another character is the lynx Velko who told the original story of Repo the fire fox, who Raate tries to talk with to learn more, but ultimately doesn't as she goes on her journey. * *Get Medieval (Irony-Chan)*'s "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue is infamously missing Oneder, Iroth's bodyguard-turned-Muslim holy warrior. In the annotated reruns, Ironychan stated that she left out Oneder (and Sir Gerard) because she felt there was nothing really left to say about them. + Also; Asher's kitten. It disappeared shortly after Asher received it and was unmentioned for months, until it reappeared after the "Trip To The Moon" arc. Ironychan has never said whether or not this was planned all along or whether the constant cries of "WHERE'S THE KITTY" caused her to bring it back. * *Homestuck*: + There is Minihoof, Dirk's pet miniature pony, who has not been seen since he entered the Medium, roughly six months ago in-comic. This is kind of concerning, given that Minihoof is tiny enough to be easily crushed and it's not certain Dirk has been home to feed her... + The A2 versions of the Draconian Dignitary and the Courtyard Droll completely disappear from the narrative after Act 6 Act 5. + Aranea completely disappears from the story once ||John retcons the timeline||, with Meenah mentioning she never saw or heard from her again after that. She's the only Beforan troll to not make an appearance in the "Vriskagram" flash. * *Kevin & Kell* has left a long trail of minor characters by the wayside in its 25-plus-year history. This is most literal with Lindesfarne's lab mice, which were most recently plot-relevant in 2004, and only seen twice since then. + Two of Lindesfarne's friends when she was at Caliban Academy, armadillo Colina and turtle Cara, were briefly seen when Lindesfarne decided to look for them online in 2012. Colina was also seen in a flashback in 2017. * *Little Nuns*: Two nuns from when Artist was in convent (and also when current adult nuns started joining) have apparently disappeared from the convent with no explanation. On boorus, one of them is nicknamed Brunette Bangs Nun, while the other is nicknamed Parted Grey Nun. The former has not appeared in any present images (as in, images that acknowledge the existence of any of the youngest nun generation) and can only be seen in flashback pictures or background photographs. The latter made some appearances in present time early on, but has not been seen (flashbacks to way deep past excluded) since these two strips, and it seems like her presence in convent from those days was retconned, as no later strip acknowledges that she used to be there alongside Clumsy and co. + Eventually they make a guest reappearance in 2022 Christmas arc, with one strip revealing that they had previously departed for a monastery in the city. * Emily from Mortifer. Last appeared on this page, and was promptly never seen again. This trope was barely averted however, when a fan drew a (spoileriffic) piece of Fan Art lampshading it, which the author saw, stating that she had completely forgotten about the character and that she would try to find a way to bring her back into the story. * In the *My Little Pony* arc of *Murry Purry Fresh and Furry*, it is ominously mentioned near the beginning that Molly is no longer a friend to pony land, possibly setting her up as the Big Bad of the arc. However near the end the author simply lost interest in continuing, abruptly ended it with Princess Celestia *being arrested* and called it quits without never once mentioning Molly again. * This is actually a power of henchmen in *Nodwick*. They have a Become Irrelevant power that allows them to vanish any time no one is directly paying attention to them. * The titular character in *Oglaf* barely appeared at all in the first place, and hasn't shown in the comics in years, to the point that one may forget there was a character sharing a name with the comic in the first place. * Averted in *1/0*. By the end of the strip's run, every character that has ever appeared, even those you thought were one-off throwaway characters, has been accounted for. * Defied in *The Order of the Stick*. A mini arc featured the group of heroes tangling with a Bandit Clan, and the father & daughter team that led the bandits were spared at the end of the arc and given just enough characterization that fans frequently speculated on when/how the two would return to the story. The fan speculation and questioning irked author Rich Burlew enough that he wrote in a single comic where the two encountered a much more plot critical enemy, engaged in some Mugging the Monster, and were summarily killed for it. * On the occasion that *Penny Arcade* indulges in continuity (for example, Anne's new table-top game crew in 2014), the multi-part comic will suddenly end as soon as Jerry and Mike run out of jokes or come up with a joke that would only work individually, abandoning anything that was potentially brewing in the multi-part. * *The Petri Dish*: One story arc has Gordon, and later Thaddeus, drinking gene-altering formulae, mistaking them for soda. They're seen turning into monsters, and later go back to normal, but it's never revealed how they went back to normal. * In *Questionable Content* the character Sara just disappears and is never mentioned again. The Cast page lampshades this by saying she was eaten by an allosaurus. Author Jeph Jacques says he just dropped her for being boring. + In 2012, three new characters were introduced as library interns: Claire, Emily and Gabrielle. Claire became a major character and started dating Marten. Emily is a popular recurring character. Gabrielle largely vanished after the introductory story. She appears in 21 strips; Claire and/or Emily are in 19 of those, and in the other two Gabby does not speak. * *Rumors of War*: Who was that walking around as ||Couric||? Where did ||Penelo|| disappear to? What about the rest of the characters on the ship in the first Story Arc? What about all those character Nenshe recruited to the Order of Orion? (Some of these turn into Brick Jokes later in the comic.) * *Sam & Fuzzy* has this happen often, as the story over the years has created a huge cast of characters, and many have unresolved plot points, from simple ones like "Did Mr. Ackerman get repaid?" to complete story arcs like Detective Morris's investigation. * For a long time it looked like ||Haban and Breya Andreyasn|| in *Schlock Mercenary* were heading this way, ||made more glaring and worrisome by their last appearance ending on an ominous note, though the enemy AI claimed they were not killed.|| But then six and a half years after disappearing, they got better. * *Sluggy Freelance* had a minor one where a reader actually asked, "What happened to the demonic ferret?" The answer was, "She's still there with the other demons, I just forgot to draw her." * Monette's baby, in *Something\*Positive*. The full humor and drama of an unplanned pregnancy are played to maximum effect, but Monette's baby disappears from the plot with barely a ripple (subtle clues in the dialogue reveal it was either stillborn or died very shortly after birth). Millholland lampshaded the baby's absence much later in a filler strip in which the baby turned up in a Lost and Found box. Word of God says it was stillborn. * *Sonichu* in spades. The author's wild-running attention span has caused him to start and drop so many plots and characters, it isn't even funny. * *The Story of Anima* has Jade's briefly seen caretaker, who vanishes from the story after only one page. When mercenaries attack the airship, not only is her fate left uncertain, the cast themselves seem to forget she even existed. * The eponymous slime of *Unicorn Jelly* simply disappeared after episode 581. Before *To Save Her*, the author claimed it was an intended symbolic plot point about childhood, magic or something or another. * In *Weak Hero*, the main group frequently visit a pool hall with a receptionist that many of them are quickly smitten with. She is then the one responsible for Ben finding out that his friend Alex was beaten up by Jimmy, which is part of what encourages him to fight back against the Union. In Season 2 they're too busy fighting the Union to visit the hall, but even when they return, at the very end of the season, the receptionist is nowhere to be seen. * In *Wooden Rose*, Aidan gives Nessa his horse so she can safely go home in the first chapter, and visits her to get it back in the second. The horse is never seen or mentioned again after that, ||which leaves it unclear as to where it went after Aidan returned to the woods in his tree spirit form and later died in the forest fire.|| * Narrowly averted in *YU+ME: dream* . The author realised she was going to do this with ||No Face, a minor but very scary enemy|| and so Dropped a Bridge on Him for completeness. ||Lia had just made a Face–Heel Turn and he got in her way. Cue a Neck Snap in the background of a conversation.|| ---
WhatHappenedToTheMouse
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ProductionCompanyExamples
# Channel Hop - Production Company Examples * The 1980s *Alvin and the Chipmunks* series started out being animated by Ruby-Spears (a sister studio to Hanna-Barbera) for its first five seasons, before animation was switched over to DiC for the final three seasons, with 11 episodes in season six done by Murakami-Wolf-Swenson, the same company behind the first TMNT series. * In terms of *Batman* media, DC Comics parent Warner Bros. produces and owns almost every adaptation out there....*almost*. First, there are the Columbia *Batman* serials *The Batman* and its sequel *Batman and Robin* from the 1940's. Unlike the *Superman* serials, they did *not* revert to DC and thus are now owned by Columbia parent Sony Pictures. Then there's the 1966 TV series and its tie-in movie, both of which were produced by 20th Century Fox. Fox's parent Disney (who owns DC rival Marvel Comics) now owns both the show and movie, though WB is currently licensed to handle home video distribution for the former. In both cases, the films and shows were produced long before WB bought out DC, and because WB doesn't own syndication rights to any of them, they are all barred from appearing on HBO Max. * Season 3 of *Batwheels* is animated by Icon Creative Studio instead of Super Prod Studios. * The NBC episodes of *Baywatch* were produced by GTG Entertainment — making for a strange-but-true link between this series and *The Mary Tyler Moore Show*, as MTM's ex Grant Tinker was the "GT"(Gannett Newspapers supplied the second "G") — while the syndicated ones were produced by Tower 12 Productions/The Baywatch Production Company (and due to financial involvement from Britain's London Weekend Television thanks to Brits and Germans loving David Hasselhoff, the end credits (at least on its ITV run in the UK) carried the card "A Baywatch Production Company Production for LWT"). * *Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventures*, on the other hand, went in the opposite direction — the CBS episodes (which had Keanu Reeves, Alex Winter, George Carlin and Bernie Casey voicing the characters they played in the movie) were made by Hanna-Barbera in association with Orion, while when it moved to Fox (making this a channel hop AND a company hop) DiC took over production with the voices of the actors starring in a live-action adaptation of the movie. * *Captain Planet and the Planeteers* moved from DiC to Hanna-Barbera, starting with its fourth season, following Ted Turner's purchase of Hanna-Barbera. Turner eventually purchased the copyright to the DIC-produced seasons from them. * For Care Bears, the shows started out being produced by DiC Entertainment with Care Bears (1980s), then moved to Nelvana before the bears went on a long hiatus. When they returned, Nelvana produced two direct-to-video CGI movies before the animation production changed hands again with Care Bears: Adventures in Care-a-Lot, when production went to Sabella-Dern Entertainment, then finally to the US branch of Moonscoop with Care Bears: Welcome to Care-a-Lot, who then rebranded themselves as Splash Entertainment after a takeover and produced Care Bears & Cousins under the new name. *Care Bears: Unlock the Magic* is animated by Copernicus Studios in Canada. * Cartoon Network originals that Hanna-Barbera first made (*Dexter's Laboratory*, *Johnny Bravo,* *The Powerpuff Girls (1998)*) would have production moved to CN's Burbank studios after H-B closed its doors in 2001 and was absorbed by Warner Bros. Animation. * The pilot for *Codename: Kids Next Door* was produced by Cartoon Network Studios in Burbank, but the series was made at Curious Pictures in New York, where creator Tom Warburton was based. * *Concentration* originated in 1958 as a Jack Barry-Dan Enright production. Less than two months later, NBC took over production of the show (as well as fellow B&E shows *Tic Tac Dough* and *Dough Re Mi*) after Barry and Enright were implicated in the Quiz Show Scandals. After *Concentration* was canceled in 1973, NBC (who to this day still holds the rights to it) licensed Jim Victory Television to create a new syndicated series, with Goodson-Todman Productions subcontracted to produce it. Victory and G-T would also make *Classic Concentration* for NBC in 1987. * The vast majority of Direct-to-Video Disney sequels, while still being produced and distributed by Disney, were animated by Disney Television Animation, as opposed to Walt Disney Animation Studios. * *Doug*: Jumbo Pictures was there for all episodes, but their co-producers varied. Nickelodeon Season 1 was mostly produced by Jumbo with the network only handling the production duties associated with owning the show, as Nickelodeon did not have an animation studio at the time. Starting in Season 2, Ellipse Programme took on co-producer duties in exchange for the European rights to the Nickelodeon episodes. With the Disney acquisition of the franchise, Jumbo co-operated with Disney Television Animation on the ABC episodes. * The 1999-present run of *Family Feud* has had several different syndicators throughout its run. Pearson Television, who owned the franchise by then, handled both production and distribution duties until Fremantle Media bought the company in 2001. Although Fremantle has handled production duties since then, they transferred syndication duties to Tribune Entertainment until the company folded in 2007. Lionsgate-owned Debmar-Mercury then picked up syndication duties and has handled distribution of the series ever since. However, from that point ad sales services were handled separately by 20th Television, Fox's syndication unit. After Disney absorbed that unit in 2019, along with the rest of Fox's entertainment properties, Debmar-Mercury contracted CBS Television Distribution to handle ad sales in 20th's place. * *Fancy Nancy* is all over the place when it comes to animation studios. Season 1 was animated by Toiion Animation. Season 2 alternated between Stellar Creative Lab and Snowball Studios. Season 3 alternated between Snowball Studios and Toiion Animation. * Of the pre-TV variety; Felix the Cat was originally made by the Pat Sullivan studio and distributed by at least five different companies (Paramount, Winkler, Educational, First National, and Copley Pictures). By 1936, Van Beuren Studios licensed the character for their cartoon studio, and for that brief period, they were distributed by RKO Radio Pictures. * *Fireman Sam*: + Series 1 through 4 were originally produced by Bumper Films, and aired on BBC. When the series was bought by HiT Entertainment and revived for a fifth season in 2003, the animation production was moved to Siriol Animation due to Bumper Films' then-recent shutdown. + After Season 5, the show Shifted to CGI, with the new animation style being handled by Xing Xing Digital Corporation. Around this time was also when the series moved from BBC to Milkshake!. + In 2016, a scene from the Season 9 episode "Troubled Waters" was discovered to contain a split-second depiction of a verse from The Qur'an. Due to the disrespectful context (the page with the text was left lying on the floor and then carelessly stepped on), HiT Entertainment severed ties with Xing Xing Digital, and the animation was passed over to WildBrain. Unlike the previous hops from Bumper Films to Siriol, and then to Xing Xing, this change was not as noticeable, as the series retained the same style of animation, just with brighter colours and smoother motion. * After Fox's syndication unit 20th Television was absorbed into Disney-ABC Domestic Television, Fox Corporation formed Fox First Run to syndicate first-run programs they held onto, such as *Divorce Court*(Seasons 1-15, as well as previous incarnations, are retained by Disney; Disney licensed Season 14 to Fox for repeats on Tubi) and *Dish Nation*(Pre-2014 episodes remain with Disney). They also assumed syndication and promotional duties for MyNetworkTV, which was previously syndicated through 20th. In addition, in 2021, Fox Alternative Entertainment took over production of *TMZ on TV*(Pre-2021 episodes remain with Warner Bros.), with Fox First Run handling syndication duties. * When Rooster Teeth parent company WarnerMedia decided to make a season 2 of *gen:LOCK*, it moved onto HBO Max, with animation handled by Bardel Entertainment. * *G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero* was originally produced by Sunbow Entertainment, which produced two five-episode miniseries followed by two seasons and *G.I. Joe: The Movie*. Sunbow intended to continue the series with a third season, but Hasbro cancelled their license and instead had the show receive a continuation helmed by DiC Entertainment, which began with a Five-Episode Pilot and lasted two seasons. * *The Golden Girls* *nearly* went towards this: In 1991 Touchstone Television decided against making any more episodes for financial reasons. Warner Bros. Television said they'd step into the breach, but that plan fell apart when Beatrice Arthur announced she was quitting. Touchstone would make a pseudo-spinoff, *The Golden Palace*, which aired on CBS for one year (making it a pseudo-Channel Hop, as *The Golden Girls* aired on NBC). * The pilot for *The Highwayman* was made by Glen A. Larson's company at 20th Century Fox, but the series was produced on a lower budget by Larson's New West Entertainment. * *Let's Make a Deal* was first a Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall production, but later editions were made by Catalina, Dick Clark/Ron Greenburg Productions, and Renegade 83 (co-produced with Hall). The current show on CBS is a Fremantle production. * The animated movies based on *The Loud House* franchise, while still made by Nickelodeon, have come out on different networks and used different animation studios. *The Loud House Movie* and *The Casagrandes Movie* both came out on Netflix instead of Nickelodeon and were respectively animated by Top Draw Animation and Mighty Animation Studio. For *No Time to Spy: A Loud House Movie* , it came out on Paramount Plus and Nickelodeon while being animated by the franchise's main animation studio, Jam Filled Entertainment. * When *The Man from U.N.C.L.E.*'s reunion movie *The Return Of The Man From U.N.C.L.E.: The Fifteen Years Later Affair* got the go-ahead in 1983, it wasn't made by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (home of the original series); writer-producer Michael Sloan convinced MGM to lease the property to his company and Viacom Productions. * *Maury* was distributed by Paramount Domestic Television (now CBS Television Distribution) from its premiere until Paramount considered canceling it after its seventh season in 1998. Maury Povich instead pitched the series to Studios USA Television (who also produced then-competitor *The Jerry Springer Show*) for its eighth season, and has stuck with them ever since even after Studios USA later became Universal Television and then NBCUniversal. The change in companies coincided with the show's leap to more outrageous topics, much like *Springer* though more subdued. * The original four-season run of *Pingu* was made by The Pygos Group's Trickfilmstudio. After Pygos was sold to HiT Entertainment in 2001, they had their in-house studio, Hot Animation, make a two-season revival of the show. Over a decade later Mattel, who had bought HiT in 2011, contracted Polygon Pictures to make a new series, *Pingu in the City*. * The first two seasons of *Postman Pat* were produced by Woodland Animations. Series 3 through 5 and the first of *Special Delivery Service* were animated by Cosgrove Hall, and the final two seasons were produced by Mackinnon and Saunders. * *The Price Is Right* began as a Goodson-Todman Production (followed by Mark Goodson Productions after Bill Todman died). Goodson himself died in 1992, but the show retained his Vanity Plate in the credits as a tribute to him even after his heirs sold the company to All American Television in the mid-1990s. Over fifteen years after Mark Goodson died, *Price* became a Fremantle Media Production (after All American had been sold several times, first to British publishing company Pearson, then to the RTL Group). Similarly, *Family Feud* was a G-T production; it is now co-produced by Fremantle with Wanderlust Productions. * *Punky Brewster* not only switched from network to syndication, it also changed producers. It was originally produced in-house by NBC, but the network had to license the rights to Columbia Pictures Television. Under Federal Communications Commission rules at the time, a network could not be involved in a syndicated show. * Rankin/Bass started out as an independent studio until General Electric bought R-B (then known legally as Videocraft International) in 1971, giving them ownership of their library (including the iconic *Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer* and *Frosty the Snowman* specials). When R-B was spun-off as an independent company three years later, GE retained their library. + Through a string of mergers and acquisitions, the library is now split: StudioCanal now owns the Videocraft theatrical library (except one film that carried over to DreamWorks, who also retains the copyrights to all the movies in question). Universal through DreamWorks Animation owns all R-B works prior to 1974, while R-B material made from then on (starting with *The Year Without a Santa Claus*) are owned by Warner Bros. through Telepictures, who bought R-B in 1978. This may explain why *The Year Without A Santa Claus*, *Frosty's Winter Wonderland*, *Rudolph's Shiny New Year* and *Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July* don't feature any footage from either *Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer*, *Frosty the Snowman*, and *Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town*, even though all the specials are set in the same continuity as those three. * The Disney Junior show *Rise Up, Sing Out* was originally animated by Lion Forge Animation in season 1. Starting with season 2, Snipple Animation would work on the series instead. * *Rocky and Bullwinkle* was always owned by the Jay Ward estate, but the distribution rights changed several times. + Most rights were owned by Universal from the early 90s until 2002, then by Classic Media until 2012, when the studio was acquired by DreamWorks Animation. Distribution came full circle in 2016, when Universal acquired DWA. In 2022, the distribution deal with Universal expired, with the Ward estate signing a deal with WildBrain. + The series was distributed on home video by RCA, then Buena Vista, then Classic Media (under license to Sony Wonder, then Genius Products and Gaiam Vivendi). The most recent home video release was by Universal. + TV syndication was handled by The Program Exchange from 1979 until its demise in 2016. All distribution rights moved to DreamWorks until 2022, when WildBrain took over. * *Rubble & Crew* is animated by Jam Filled Entertainment, instead of by Guru Studio like its parent series. * *Sofia the First* was animated by Toiion Animation. The upcoming sequel series, *Sofia The First Royal Magic*, will be animated by Icon Creative Studios, the same studio that animated Sofia's spinoff series *Elena of Avalor*. * *Stargate*: the original movie was produced by Carolco Pictures and released by MGM under a short-lived distribution arrangement. The debt-ridden Carolco ended up selling the *Stargate* IP to MGM so that it could raise financing for *Cutthroat Island*, which ended up a box office bomb. While MGM turned the cult hit into a Cash-Cow Franchise with *Stargate SG-1*, current Carolco library holder StudioCanal has gotten nothing but checks for sales of the film and nothing else. * Season 2 of *SuperKitties* is animated by Mainframe Studios instead of Bardel Entertainment . * The long running CBC series *This Hour Has 22 Minutes* has been through quite a few producer changes, for a Canadian production that is. For the first 10 seasons the show was produced by the independent Halifax-based studio Salter Street Films.(Who also created Lexx and financed the film Bowling for Columbine, plus children's programs and other CBC shows such as Made in Canada.) In 2001, Alliance Atlantis purchased the company, becoming a wholly owned subsidiary. In 2003, Alliance closed down nearly all of it's production division, but kept the show as a direct production very briefly.(Alliance's formal demise came in 2007 when it was purchased by CanWest Global (predecessor of what is now Corus Entertainment). Which led to the massive sell off of Alliance's library piece by piece.) In 2004, Halifax Film (started by former Salter Street executives) purchased the rights from Alliance and took over production. Halifax Film would later become DHX Media (now WildBrain) in 2006. As a result of DHX's financial troubles, the show is now produced by Island of Misfits (which acquired DHX's Halifax studio), as per the CBC press release. * Osamu Tezuka's *Unico* started out as a joint effort with Sanrio. The 1979 short film *Unico: Black Cloud and White Feather* was animated in-house by Sanrio Animation which served as a pilot for a potential anime series. The film series (*The Fantastic Adventures of Unico* and *Unico in the Island of Magic*) was handled by Sanrio Animation, Tezuka Productions, and Madhouse between 1981 and 1983. After Tezuka's passing in 1989, future animated Unico projects would be handled at Tezuka Productions beginning with the 2000 short film *Saving our Fragile Earth: Unico Special Chapter*. + Sanrio previously had the merchandise rights to Unico between 1976 and throughout the 1980s. Following Tezuka's passing, Tezuka Productions took over the merchandise to the Unico franchise. * When Cannon Television ran into financial problems of their own after the first few episodes of *Walker, Texas Ranger*, CBS (with some help from Columbia Pictures Television) agreed to foot the bill thereafter. * *The Wonder Years*; both the original series and the reboot aired on ABC. However, the original show was produced by New World Television, while the reboot is produced in-house via sister studio 20th Century Fox Television (the current *Wonder Years* rights-holders, after they folded New World). ---
ChannelHop
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EdIlFandomEsulto
# It Sugar Wiki - Ed Il Fandom Esulto Allora, finalmente stanno producendo Il film del vostro franchise (probabilmente risalente a Gli Anni Ottanta). E vi fa schifo. Stanno facendo il casting a caso, hanno assunto il regista sbagliato, stanno rovinando la vostra infanzia ecc... E poi tirano fuori quell'unica cosa che vi fa esclamare, "*Oggesù! Che figata!*" La ragione per tale reazione varia a seconda della produzione specifica e del fan specifico. Sembra che l'esempio più comune sia collegato a quelle volte in cui qualcuno di relativo all'opera originale torna a farsi vivo in un certo ruolo importante o sottolinea la fedeltà all'opera da parte del nuovo regista. Altri casi comprendono l'assunzione di un attore o il regista risaputamente Fanboy Promosso, una mostra sui costumi o sul set, o una petizione per richiedere un certo attore che viene *veramente* presa in considerazione. Si noti che questo termine descrive la reazione. In una sorprendente inversione della Legge Di Sturgeon, la maggior parte delle volte è anche un buon sintomo della qualità della produzione. Ma, nonostante tutto, ci sono sempre quegli altri casi in cui tutto va a farsi benedire. Per quello si veda Hanno Sprecato Un'Ottima Trama, Solo Per Una Scena e Adattamento Decadente. I SIII, gli Squee e le loro varianti sono tutte reazioni comuni dei fan a questi momenti. Su internet, la Mutazione Memetica "Reaction Guys / Gaijin 4Koma" qualche volta viene impiegata per far notare queste situazioni. Gli utenti di TV Tropes tendono a sottolineare questi momenti con una frase che descrive il momento propizio annessa ad un Pothole a questa pagina. Contrasta Guastato Dall Anteprima e Rovinato PERSEMPRE. Affine a Compiacere Il Fandom, anche se non sempre finisce bene. Da non confondersi con E Tutti Esultarono, a meno che non ci vada di mezzo Lo Scrappy. --- Esempi: -------
ItSugarWiki
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SouthPark
# Insufferable Imbecile - South Park *South Park* Is a show where a lot of characters are either assholes or idiots, so it's no surprise that dimwitted jerks in this show are quite common: * Eric Cartman may be cunning when it comes to creating evil schemes at times, but he's otherwise dimwitted and clueless, and sometimes his mean tricks only make him look like an idiot. A good example is "Cartman Sucks", where he tries to humiliate Butters in a very stupid way (which is actually more humiliating to Cartman himself than Butters), then gets easily tricked by Kyle into believing his Blatant Lies about "gay polarity". * Randy Marsh. Despite being an educated scientist (a geologist, to be exact), he often acts like an incredibly airheaded and selfish Manchild. His tendency to impulsively engage in crazy antics to satisfy his hedonistic desires has caused endless grief for his wife and children, often acting stubbornly and willfully ignorant of their protests. * Stephen and Linda Stotch are quite abusive towards Butters, finding excuses to punish him and being outright inconsiderate to his well-being. However, they have also proven themselves to be just as clueless and idiotic as the other parents, especially in "Marjorine" and "City Sushi". And karma has bodyslammed them at least once. * Carol and Stuart McCormick are ignorant, alcoholic Lower-Class Louts who often beat each other up over trivial matters. And while they're not as bad as the Stotches, they (especially Stuart) are nonetheless quite neglectful and distant towards their children. * Mr. Garrison is an extremely incompetent teacher at South Park Elementary School who puts no effort into actually teaching his students anything. He is also extremely delusional and insane, regularly displaying severe anger issues and psychopathic tendencies, which sometimes lead to violent outbursts of rape and murder. * Mayor McDaniels is an egotistical Know-Nothing Know-It-All who looks down on everyone she views as inferior, makes idiotic decisions that result in chaos, and has no problem ordering Officer Barbrady to shoot a group of defenseless children because they were allegedly part of a terrorist group. * Sgt. Harrison Yates is a Dirty Cop who is grossly incompetent at his job, has zero qualms about using lethal force against unarmed children, and outright admits that he only joined the police force so he could beat up minorities. * The rest of the adult population (with a few exceptions) also qualifies; they are often complete idiots who couldn't care less about the world around them, screw each other over for petty reasons, and are prone to going on psychotic rampages when anything goes wrong. * Clyde Donovan has become this as an adult in the Bad Future shown in "Post Covid" and "The Return of Covid". He strongly believes in the already-disproven myths about COVID vaccines, to the point that he stubbornly refuses to get vaccinated despite knowing that he can get the federal quarantine around South Park lifted if he does so. ||Clyde also becomes easily manipulated by Cartman into trying to kill a child and proceeds to continue this murder attempt even after Cartman changes his mind and orders him to stand down.||
InsufferableImbecile
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SuperSentai
# Actor Allusion - Super Sentai Actor Allusions in *Super Sentai*: * *Kyōryū Sentai Zyuranger* + Boi learns ninjutsu in an episode titled "Ninja Warrior Boi". This is a reference to Hashimoto's previous role as Manabu Yamaji in *Sekai Ninja Sen Jiraiya*. + Later, Geki would fight a giant monster again, now alone as Kamen Rider J. + Bandora's name is similar to Pandora, another tokusatsu villainess portrayed by Machiko Soga. * *Ninja Sentai Kakuranger*: The sexy red outfit worn by Amikiri in #17 is not so different from the one actress Ami Kawai previously wore as Karsha in ''Jiban'' #12. * *Chouriki Sentai Ohranger*: *Ohranger vs. Kakuranger* has a scene taking place in a Wild West-themed locale. The male rangers are cornered by cowboys with guns, and then Chief Miura shows up wearing a black leather cowboy hat, playing a certain tune on a guitar... * *Kyukyu Sentai Go Go Five* + As early as episode 3, Kyouko, played by Yuko Miyamura, utters "Are you that dumb?"(Anta baka?) Miyamura's character from *Neon Genesis Evangelion*, Asuka Langley Sohryu, also uses it as one of her catchphrases. + Go Blue is now the more-brutal-yet-still-intelligent Kamen Rider Amazon Alpha going into Amazon hunting. + In Episode 9, Matsuri mentions that her paramedic mentor, Mizuki, likes orchids. Mizuki's actress previously portrayed Flower Ninja Ran.(("Ran" is Japanese for orchid.)) + Zeek from The Movie is played by Keiichi Wada, or ||Ryo of DaiRanger||. Three guesses what his henshin pose looks like. * *Hyakujuu Sentai Gaoranger*: Hidekatsu Shibata once more voices the male half of a villain with male and female nature. + *Hyakujuu Sentai Gaoranger vs. Super Sentai*: Through the use of Stock Footage, Akira Shinmei and Councillor Naoyuki Miura are seen leading the Red Mecha into battle, and it is indicated that Banba had anticipated them. All three characters are played by Hiroshi Miyauchi. * *Ninpuu Sentai Hurricaneger*: + Sandaaru (who is voiced by Shūichi Ikeda) has a tendency to say modified versions of Char Aznable's famous quotes, including this line "Let's just see the capabilities of the Earth's Karakuri Giant!"(a nod to "Let's just see the capabilities of the Federation's mobile suit!"). + Each of Shurikenger's human disguises are played by past Sentai actors, and whenever they transform into Shurikenger, they'll usually incorporate the henshin pose of the character they originally played. - Played with in regards to Kenji Ohba, who did Gavan's henshin pose instead. + In *Ten Years After*, Ikkou's musical group Junretsu includes Yusuke Tomoi, who doesn't appear in the special; they tell the audience he's apparently home with the measles and certainly not off fighting monsters as a green superhero — which he did ten years before as Kamen Rider Gills. - Junretsu actually exists in Real Life(The name is written differently in *Ten Years After*), and features multiple Toku actors including Tomoi, Yujiro Shirakawa (Ikkou), Ryohei Idou (Kamen Rider Zolda) and Kazuyoshi Sakai (Gao Black). + Also in *Ten Years After*, Nanami's idol career was reaching its sell-by date, so to speak, and her manager was asking her to consider doing a Hotter and Sexier production. Which Nao Nagasawa *already did*, in Koichi Sakamoto's DTV movie *Dimension Travellers*. * *Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger* + In *10 Years After*, the mic alien is once again played by Isao Sasaki (who also performs the ED of *Dekaranger*), and the last thing he yells out is "goodbye to Earth." This is the first line of the OP for *Uchuu Senkan Yamato*, also performed by Sasaki. * *Juken Sentai Gekiranger* + Shafu's VA, Ichirō Nagai, also voiced Korin before, and he apparently isn't shy about having it known; the same tone, the same way of speech, and the same use of "*-ja*" after sentences. (Although, do note that "*ja*" is also an actual particle in Japanese language.) Even the "Show respect to your elders" part is there in Training 2. + A Monster of the Week voiced by Tetsu Inada at one point shouts "We'll delete you!". He used to have the badge to back up his call as the SPD boss. * *Engine Sentai Go-onger*: Or in this case, Voice Actor Allusion, as the voice of Carrigator also voiced the comic relief crocodilian monster Yatsudenwani from *Bakuryuu Sentai Abaranger*. * *Samurai Sentai Shinkenger* + The voice actor from *GaoGaiGar*, as a monster with a golden lion head on his chest. + Romi Park's previous role in the equally Jidaigeki-inspired *Samurai 7* has her character forming an attachment to someone called Kyuuzo. Here, it's someone called Juuzo. For added points, 'kyu' and 'juu' translate into 'nine' and 'ten'. + Ryuunosuke's worst fear is, oddly, cacti. Ironically, one of Aiba's previous roles cast him as Fuji Shuusuke in *The Prince of Tennis* musicals, a character who loves cacti and owns quite a number of them. * *Tensou Sentai Goseiger* + Gosei Ground is formed from a combination of Gosei Knight in his Groundion form as well as two additional (non-sentient) Gosei Machines, similar to the King of the Braves. + Appearing in The Movie is Sayaka Isoyama of *Chou Sei Shin Gransazer* fame, whose costume◊ already sports a large gold coin with a symbol on it, as all Sazers have. + An indirect example in Epic 26 when Alata tries to get Hyde to loosen up by doing one comedy act after another, including *a Louis Yamada impression*. + Both Gosei Knight (in his Groundion form) and Metal-Alice have had drill-like equipment. Maybe because they were ex-drillmates? + If Magis had survived, he would've become this Sentai's green warrior, just like his actor did six years before… * *Super Sentai Versus Series Theater* + While watching *Gaoranger vs. Super Sentai*, Alata believes that the old man (Hiroshi Miyauchi) is Chief Counsellor Naoyuki Miura from *Ohranger* before he is revealed as Sokichi Banba / Big One. + While watching the *Dekaranger* features, Hyde comments that Senichi "Sen-chan" Enari / Deka Green looks familiar; his actor, Yousuke Itou, also played Hyde's fallen partner, Magis / Gosei Green. * *Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger*: + Gai's actor, Junya Ikeda, stated in his blog that when he was a child he wanted to be the Kiba Ranger. In episode 19, the first thing Gai does when he is allowed to summon Ranger Keys is to summon the Kiba Ranger key. + In episode 29, when Ahim dons a schoolgirl disguise, she says she's from Saitama and needs directions. Her actress, Yui Koike, is actually from Saitama, herself. + Momo making the Gokaigers do random errands in exchange for the Greater Power in #31 is believed to be an inside joke to Tamao Sato's attitude during the production of Chouriki Sentai Ohranger where she'd make constant unreasonable demands to Toei for being on a kids' show. + Joji Nakata, who played the Monster of the Week Zaien in the *Liveman* tribute episode (#30), was the same actor who played the lead antagonist in that series (Professor Bias). ||Both were also responsible for turning a former friend to the enemy - Kenji, Rui, and Goh for the Liveman and Sid for Joe, though they were done in different ways.|| * *Kaizoku Sentai Ten Gokaiger* + Kaoruko Ishii and Rara Shimizu, who portrayed the original child versions of Mio Natsume/ToQ 3gou and Kagura Izumi/ToQ 5gou appear as a pair of normal high school girls here, wearing yellow and pink respectively. + The commentators of the Derby Colosseum, Akiro Masukoda and Hiroya Matsumoto get a few of these as well. - Hiroya keeps calling Akiro "*Basco*da". Kei Hosogai, Akiro's actor, previously portrayed Basco in *Gokaiger* itself. - Hiroya sheds tears of disappointment upon watching Beet Buster and Magi Yellow defeated, having previously portrayed the both of them. Their opponents? *Battle Kenya and Denji Blue*, who both similarly share the same actor between themselves. * *Hikonin Sentai Akibaranger* + In #4, an Imagine Spot shows Malshina going into past villainess outfits ( Kegalesia) that also belonged to a former porn star. And in #7, Malshina's focus ep, we see Hakase handling a diorama that features Zonette, who also falls under this group. + Yumeria's mother actually says to the Kabukicho MOTW "I'll buy 10 bottles - no, 151, *getto daze!*" + Partial example in #10. Kozukozu is the first to notice that Takuma Tsuzuki is identical to Retsu/Geki Blue - but the Rangers shoot her down immediately. And they're not wrong - Takuma is played by *Shinpei* Takagi, while Retsu is played by his twin brother *Manpei* Takagi (Shinpei only appeared in *Gekiranger* for an Evil Twin story). That's right, our heroes have outdone Gai by being able to tell *twins* apart! - To play further on Shinpei's Gekiranger association, Episode 11's fight is full of Gekiranger references, starting from the verbally and physically elaborate roll call, then going all out on unarmed combat, and then right down to spelling out the "heart-technique-body" triangle and using Animal Battle Aura Ki Manipulation. Interestingly, Takuma himself had something from each one of the core Gekirangers: the color of Jan/Geki Red; the element of Ran/Geki Yellow; and the animal spirit of Retsu/Geki Blue. + In Season 2, Nobuo addresses a toy shop clerk that has a ||Bae doll riding his arm. Said clerk may have possibly been a mad scientist with an obsession for endings that had a creepier-looking doll riding his arm.|| - ||Said creepier-looking doll is actually on top of the cash register|| + ||Katsuyuki Konishi voices a smartphone-themed MotW - which he used the last time he was in a Sentai series.|| + General Tsuu is singing Ginga Honey from *Denshi Sentai Denziman* when he's at the karaoke. He is played by Ryō Horikawa, and the one-off character who originally sung the song was played by Ryūsei Nakao. In other words, Vegeta is covering a song originally sung by Frieza. * *Tokumei Sentai Go-Busters* + In *Tokumei Sentai Go-Busters vs. Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger: The Movie*, Buster Hercules transforms into MagiKing, prompting Jin to comment that he feels right at home inside it. He even does the Magiranger hand pose! * *Zyuden Sentai Kyoryuger* + Tessai's gray suit looks more like a darker silver. Also, the clear domed portion on his head reflects light the same way Masayuki Deai's old Bouken Silver suit did. + Oddly enough, this isn't the first time Shigeru Chiba portrayed a mad scientist with a high respect towards his female assistant in a Toei-produced show. + A purple, dinosaur-themed character is nothing new to Chiba either. + Additionally, in episode 21, after Daigo tells him to run, Ulshade bravely responds by saying “Run?” In a similar fashion to another one of Chiba's characters. + In #40, when Yuko — played by Ayumi Kinoshita, who also portrayed Jasmine/DekaYellow — fends off some Zorima, she ends up performing the Dekaranger henshin pose (complete with the familiar sirens in the background). > **Yuko:** What an *emergency*! + While Souji's father is played by Dyna Black, Souji's mother in Brave 43 is played by Dyna Pink. + Deathryuger introduces himself by saying "I am Deathryuger". Mamoru Miyano is also a Gundam and Kira. * *Ressha Sentai ToQger* + Jun Fukuyama is playing a hammy, masked aristocrat associated with the color black. + The ToQgers dig up the real name of their hometown, Subarugahama. Hikari was previously Iseki Jiro from Subaruboshi High School. + Look carefully at the Wagon helmet with its heart-shaped black visor. Does it look kinda like Kyoryu Pink? That's because they have the same suit actor! + They bring in Akira Kushida to sing the new Leitmotif for Safari Gaoh, which is interesting as Kushida actually sang a jingle for a safari park once! + Mio previously guested on Goseiger where she played a high school girl that another male student had a huge crush on. + Hiroyuki Konishi, who played the idiot police chief from episode 14, is constantly referred to as "Boss" by his subordinates — a nod to his role on *Ultra Galaxy Mega Monster Battle*, as Captain Hiroshi Hyuuga, who was also referred as "Boss". * *Shuriken Sentai Ninninger* + Not surprisingly, Ariake No Kata has her own In the Name of the Moon sequence, but the kicker is the moon actually appearing in it! + Done indirectly with Tomokazu Seki as the voice of Nekomata, who's otherwise based off of Jibanyan from *Yo-kai Watch* (where Seki voices another character, Whisper). In episode 26, they even give him Jibanyan's usual Verbal Tic. + Yoshi Sudarso's cameo has him being rescued by Ao Ninger. Yoshi plays the **Blue** Dino Charge Ranger. This particular reference came full circle when it was revealed at Power Morphicon 2016 that Yoshi's brother Peter was cast as Ao Ninger's *Power Rangers* counterpart, the Blue Ninja Steel Ranger. * *Doubutsu Sentai Zyuohger* + The motorcycle-based Monster of the Week in ep. 8 is Nobuyuki Hiyama, who was not only around for the last anniversary season, but was also a motorcycle monster very long ago! - The monster he voiced also fought a yellow-armored, lion-themed, Hot-Blooded Screaming Warrior — that description also fits Guy Shishioh, who is one of his most iconic roles. + Episode 23's Monster of the Week has a sailor motif and is voiced by Akio Suyama, who also voices a certain Assault Force leader that arrived fresh out of the Japanese Navy. + The V Cinema movie, *Zyuohger Returns*, introduces Lilian, a character that goes from enacting Pervert Revenge Mode against an Accidental Pervert (Misao) to falling in love with them. Is it any surprise that she was voiced by Tsundere Queen Rie Kugimiya? * *Kamen Rider × Super Sentai: Chou Super Hero Taisen*: When Yakumo (AoNinger) joins Emu's team, he suggests recruiting Tsubasa Ozu (MagiYellow), who was established as his mentor by a Continuity Cameo in *Ninninger* #38, only to be joined by the identical Masato Jin (Beet Buster), who was also played by Hiroya Matsumoto. Furthermore, the gold-colored Beet Buster fills the slot to become the yellow Ki-Rider. * *Uchu Sentai Kyuranger* + Champ is covered in smooth black armor, with gaps revealing pipes that look like organic sinews from a distance. This mimics his suit actor Jiro Okamoto's first major role, Kamen Rider BLACK (coincidentally, his origin story could easily pass for a Showa Rider one.) + Champ gets another one in Space 21, where he says "Kept ya waiting, huh?" + One of Scorpio's signature attacks is a Diving Kick; ironically, while his character in *Kamen Rider Gaim* *does* officially have a Rider Kick, he never actually used it in the main series. + In Space 17, Balance hits the Monster of the Week with Rapid-Fire Fisticuffs, just like Josuke and Crazy Diamond. - How can one forget that this isn't the first time Yuki Ono (Balance's voice actor) voiced a character in gold whose both The Social Expert and Agent Peacock. + In *Uchu Sentai Kyuranger Final Live Tour 2018*, Tsurugi Ohtori, played by Keisuke Minami, uses the four Minami (South) Kyutama, representing the constellation of Southern Cross, to cross dimensions. He even suggests that that combining the four Kyutama could form a Keisuke Minami Kyutama. + Also in the *Final Live Tour*, Raptor 283, voiced by Mao Ichimichi, at one point yells "Shut up, idiot!"(Urusei, baka!) in frustration, with Spada observing that she did a Gokai Change, her actress having played Luka Millfy (Gokai Yellow) in *Gokaiger*. * *Kaitou Sentai Lupinranger VS Keisatsu Sentai Patranger* + Some scenes with Cmdr. Hilltop turn into impromptu language lessons, which mirrors what his actor Ike Nwala normally does on primetime tv. More specifically, the "omimai" mutateed into "Hold me tight" is a Running Gag of his. + In episode 17, when Sakuya asks Umika to sign a photobook of her in the dream world, she exclaims that she hasn't published one, but her actress Haruka Kudo has. The title of the photobook "mi" is even a reference to Haruka's first photobook "Do" (both are the last characters of their last names). * *Kishiryu Sentai Ryusoulger* + Canalo hitting on Master Pink leads to an artsy backdrop with Roman pillars and a Gigantic Moon, pulled directly out of *Sailor Moon* which Miyu Sawai (Master Pink) is still well remembered for. + Episode 45 has a flashback show Master Black transforming into Ryusoul Black with pose similar to his actor's previous role as Tatsuya Asami/TimeRed. * *Mashin Sentai Kiramager* + Inori Minase (Mabushina) once played a good genie who is related to an evil genie (even though the latter redeemed himself). Her outfit during her concert section in Episode 23 also look like Cure Parfait's, especially the rainbow-colored skirt. + Yūichi Nakamura (Galza) previously voiced Orm/Ocean Master (an evil prince who plotted to kill his older brother out of jealousy of being denied the throne) in the Japanese dub of *Aquaman (2018)*. + The series has multiple references to Daimaou Kosaka's (Muryo) well-known role as Piko-Taro of PPAP fame: - A sign hanging in CARAT HQ, visible in various episodes, reads "Perfect Performance And Physical". - Episode 2 has Muryo name a new gimmick by *putting words together*. - The ending skit of episode 16 is even more blatant, with Juru standing with Muryo while holding up *a pineapple and an apple.* - Episode 17 has Juru describe Gigant Driller's transformation (complete with signature hand gesture) as > **Juru**: Takamichi and Drijan have —*Ugh!*— combined into a titan! - Episode 20 shows Muryo mime the PPAP hand gestures again while describing a Sticky Situation. - In episode 26, a scene with the camera on all 5 Kiramagers one by one reveal two pineapple and apple ornaments decorating the CARAT office. - Takamichi's Imagine Spot of Muryo as Kiramai Gold in episode 30 has his Kiramager form wear a long golden scarf in a similar fashion to Piko-Taro's. - Episode 37 has Muryo come up with a solution to recombine the split-up Senas PPAP-style. > **Muryo:** We have a Sena 1, we have a Sena 2, *UGH!* Sena 1+2! - Episode 41 has Muryo and Mabushina sitting together, the latter of which is holding two sticks adorned with an apple and a pineapple. - *Bee-Bop Dream* throws the entire kitchen sink by having him actually sing the song and do the routine, and gave it an actual role in the story. + Numajo's mask resembles the Terror Dopant's head from *Kamen Rider W*; her voice actress, Naoko Kouda, previously starred in that series as Shroud/Fumine Sonozaki — who was the wife of Ryubee Sonozaki, the civilian identity of the Terror Dopant. Numajo also curses Oradin by targeting someone close to him instead, which is what happened in the backstory of Kamen Rider Skull, whom Shroud was backing at the time. + This isn't the first time Subaru Kimura voiced a MoTW with a bowling schtick. + In #43, Oradin does a certain running pose that makes you think he'd be saying "NIGERUNDAYOOOO!" + *Mashin Sentai Kiramager Final Live Tour 2021*: Hiroya Matsumoto, who serves as MC for the *Final Live Tour* in his capacity as *Super Sentai* Goodwill Ambassador, is recognized by the Kiramagers since he appeared as an Ice Cream Vendor in episode 35. * *Kikai Sentai Zenkaiger* + Episode 43 has the MOTW modeled on GaoGaiGar and Guy Shishio, voiced by Nobuyuki Hiyama. + Episode 44 has the head of the MOTW shaped like DaiDenzin, and is voiced by none other than Denzi Green himself, Naoya Uchida. + In *Kikai Sentai Zenkaiger Final Live Tour 2022*, the Zenkaigers use the Magiranger Sentai Gear to summon Tsubasa Ozu and later the Go-Busters Sentai Gear to summon Masato Jin. Both are played by Hiroya Matsumoto, who was also the MC for the *Final Live Tour* in his capacity as *Super Sentai* Goodwill Ambassador.
ActorAllusion
null
End of preview. Expand in Data Studio

TvTroper-2025

A cleaned & refreshed dump of ~708 k pages from tvtropes.org

Dataset Summary

TvTroper-2025 is an updated snapshot of TvTropes.org (≈ 708 000 wiki pages, namespaces and date-grouped pages excluded). Every page is released in two flavours:

  • Raw HTML – 22 GB single file
  • Markdown-cleaned – split into 1 GB JSONL shards (no unpacking required)

No additional content filtering has been applied; short sub-index pages are left in so you can decide what to drop.

What's changed since the 2023 release?

  • Crawler re-written from scratch; BeautifulSoup -> Selectolax for speed & memory.
  • Made a selectolax version of markdownify.
  • Output is now native JSONL (no zips).
  • Raw dumps keep only the main article body; headers/footers/nav stripped.
  • Cleaned version ships side-by-side with raw dumps in the same repo.
  • Changes for Cleaned Version:
    • Additional markdown syntax:
      • ||Spoilers|| are marked similarly to discord
      • ^Super Script^ for Super script

Intended uses

Unsupervised pre-training or fine-tuning of language models with a focus on narrative patterns, tropes, themes and pop-culture knowledge. Down-stream ideas: text generation, classification, controllable story generation, trope-aware summarisation.

Languages

English (en)

Dataset structure

Each line is a single JSON object:

{
  "id": "RealLife",
  "article": "# Spanner In The Works - Real Life\n\n...",
  "ns": "SpannerInTheWorks",
  "err": null
}

Fields

  • id – TvTropes page key (final URL slug; may differ from original redirect).

  • article – page content; raw HTML or Markdown (check config).

  • ns – namespace stub the crawler recorded when the page was fetched.
    Special namespaces you may wish to drop:
    SugarWiki, DarthWiki, YMMV, WMG, Trivia, Administrivia.
    "What are these?"

    • SugarWiki – gushy fan praise.
    • DarthWiki – mirror-rant pages.
    • YMMV – subjective fan reactions (Your Mileage May Vary).
    • WMG – Wild Mass Guessing, fan theories without proof.
    • Trivia – out-of-universe production notes.
    • Administrivia – site-maintenance stubs, no narrative content.
  • err – HTTP / parsing error string; null if the scrape succeeded.

Quick main-namespace filter

# discard the special namespaces above
# If you wanna go faster (Recommended):
# 1. Replace `json` with `orjson` (external package required)
# 2. Change `r` to `rb` & `w` with `wb`
import json, pathlib, sys

for file in pathlib.Path("data/").glob("*.jsonl"):
    clean = file.with_suffix(".main.jsonl")
    with open(file,"r",encoding="utf-8") as fin, open(clean,"w",encoding="utf-8") as fout:
        for line in fin:
            row = json.loads(line)
            if row.get("ns") in {"SugarWiki", "DarthWiki", "YMMV", "WMG", "Trivia", "Administrivia"}:
                continue
            fout.write(line)

Splits

No canonical train/val/test split.

Markdown-cleaned: 17 x 1 GB shards Raw HTML: 1 x 22 GB file

Data collection

TvTropes.org editors produced the original text.
We crawled every reachable page during October 2025, kept the 200 OK responses, and stored the literal HTML.
No normalization, de-duplication or PII scrubbing was performed.

Biases & limitations

  • Reflects the demographics, opinions and humor of the TvTropes contributor base.
  • Contains spoilers, informal prose, in-jokes, and occasionally NSFW language.
  • Short disambiguation/index pages are retained—filter them if you need long-form text only.
  • No manual balancing across media types (anime, games, film, etc.).

Licensing

Dataset wrapper & extraction code: Apache 2.0 (copyright © 2025 KaraKaraWitch)
Fair-use media excerpts may appear in raw HTML; these remain under their respective owners.

Citation

@misc{tvtroper2025,
  title        = {{TvTroper-2025}: A {TVTropes.org} Corpus},
  author       = {KaraKaraWitch},
  year         = {2025},
  howpublished = {\url{https://huggingface.co/datasets/KaraKaraWitch/TvTroper-2025}}
}

Contributions

Curator: @KaraKaraWitch

Release Climate Notes

Open, unencumbered dumps like this one are becoming an endangered species. Use, share and (re)release while you still can.

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