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* WesternAnimation/{{Popeye}} had shorts that showed this trope is OlderThanTelevision. In both shorts, Popeye and Bluto would show clips from their past shorts; Bluto's would be when he was getting the best of Popeye, while Popeye's clips would show how he got back at Bluto.
** In "Customers Wanted", Popeye and Bluto are running rival penny arcades, and try to get Wimpy's patronage by showing them moving picture shows from their past shows.
** In "I'm In The Army Now", Popeye and Bluto try to join the army to impress Olive Oyl. However, the recruiter only has room for only one more, so Popeye and Bluto show clips from ''photo albums'' to impress him.
* ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunks'': The episode "Chipmunkmania" is framed as a documentary for the 30th anniversary of the Chipmunks with one shortened past episode each for Simon, Theodore and Alvin.
* Besides the full-length features, the ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' shorts had several of these.
** The 1951 short ''His Hare-Raising Tale'' has Bugs Bunny telling his nephew Clyde about his adventures from ''WesternAnimation/BaseballBugs'', ''Stage Door Cartoon'', ''WesternAnimation/RabbitPunch'', ''WesternAnimation/FallingHare'' and ''WesternAnimation/HaredevilHare''.
** 1954's ''This is a Life'', where Bugs is feted on a testimonial TV show (Daffy thinks ''he's'' the one being celebrated), uses clips from ''WesternAnimation/BuccaneerBunny'' and ''Hare Do''.
** The 1958 short ''Feather Bluster'' has an elderly Foghorn Leghorn and Barnyard Dawg recalling their past pranks on each other with the grandsons listening in, with clips from ''Henhouse Henery'', ''The High and the Flighty'' and ''All Fowled Up''.

to:

* WesternAnimation/{{Popeye}} ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatiansTheSeries'' had shorts two episodes that showed were clip shows. One was "Humanitarian of the Year", where Cruella attempts to win the mentioned title for publicity, while the pups find photographs she ordered Horace and Jasper to hide of her being her usual cruel self, bringing up clips from previous episodes (Oddly, there were no cameras present to take pictures of these situations). Next was "Horace and Jasper's Big Career Move", where Horace and Jasper try to find new jobs, bringing up events of previous episodes. "The Making Of..." uses a few clips from previous episodes at first, but then goes off on its' own.
* A mini-clip show appears in the ''WesternAnimation/ActionLeagueNow'' segment "And Justice for None" when the Action League is trying to explain why the team shouldn't be terminated.
* One of the last episodes of ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'', "[[Recap/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehogS01E60HeroOfTheYear Hero of the Year]]", uses
this trope is OlderThanTelevision. In both shorts, Popeye and Bluto would show as part of a dinner party held in Sonic's honor (with Dr. Robotnik doing a similar one for himself).
* ''WesternAnimation/AngelaAnaconda'': "Childhood for Sale", the penultimate episode of the second season.
* The series finale of ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'', entitled "[[Recap/AnimaniacsEpisode99 The Animaniacs Suite]]", contains
clips from every other segment accompanied by a beautifully orchestrated medley of the show's theme and character themes.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'':
** In some ways, "[[Recap/S3E11DoubleTibbleTroubleArthursAlmostLiveNotRealMusicFestival Arthur's Almost Live Not Real Music Festival]]" is like a clip show with two of the songs: "Leftovers Goulash" and "(Just a Little) Homework", both songs set to various clips from previous episodes, and in many cases, it's quite funny.
** "[[Recap/ArthurS3E14MomAndDadHaveAGreatBigFightDWsPerfectWish D.W.'s Perfect Wish]]" has Arthur cheer up a depressed D.W. on her fifth birthday by reminding her of all the good times she had when she was four.
** "[[Recap/ArthurS16E10SoFunnyIForgotToLaughTheBestDayEver The Best Day Ever]]" has Arthur's friends remembering
their past shorts; Bluto's would be when he was getting the best of Popeye, while Popeye's favorite days, and Arthur trying to come up with one for himself. Even though video clips would from older episodes are used, they are [[FlashbackWithTheOtherDarrin dubbed with the show's current voice actors]].
* The original final episode of ''WesternAnimation/BeavisAndButtHead'', "[[Recap/BeavisAndButtheadS7E41BeavisAndButtHeadAreDead Beavis and Butt-Head are Dead]]", is a clip
show how he got back at Bluto.
where all the secondary characters have flashbacks over their encounters with the two main characters from the previous episodes.
* ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'': The obscure 1980 feature ''Hurray for Betty Boop'' (aka ''Betty Boop for President'') is an extreme version of this -- it's solely assembled from colorized clips from 35 Betty Boop shorts, redubbed and rescored into an original storyline in which she runs for President of the United States.
* ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'':
** In "Customers The original 1993 series has five clip show episodes: "The Tribunal", "The Inquisition", "Villain of the Year", "Mad Scientist Wanted", Popeye and Bluto are running rival penny arcades, "Academy of Hard Knocks".
** The 2006 revival has two clip show episodes: "Carbine's Conundrum"
and try to get Wimpy's patronage by showing them moving picture shows from "Cat and Mouse".
* ''WesternAnimation/CaptainNTheGameMaster'' set a new low for cheaply done clip episodes:
their past shows.
** In "I'm In The Army Now", Popeye and Bluto try to join the army to impress Olive Oyl. However, the recruiter only has room for only one more, so Popeye and Bluto
clip show has no framing story to justify the clips, and in fact contains no new footage whatsoever. It's just a half hour of randomly assembled clips with no explanation... and with no dialog. Yes, for some reason, all the dialog has been removed from ''photo albums'' the clips, resulting in 30 minutes of silent reused animation playing over background music. Kids were understandably confused and upset. When the episode aired in syndication, they put the voices back in and added some new narration, most of which has nothing to impress him.
do with the action on screen.
* ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunks'': ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' has a mini-episode titled "Winslow's Home Videos" sandwiched between two other episodes, in which Winslow not only plays clips of his favorite and most humiliating [=CatDog=] moments which he had previously videotaped, but also videotapes [=CatDog=] taking a bath and broadcasts it live. The episode ends with [=CatDog=] flooding the house while taking said bath, nearly flushing Winslow out of the place -- they then go surfing out the front door, while Winslow ends up tied to the TV monitor hanging upside down.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheChipmunks'':
The episode "Chipmunkmania" is framed as a documentary for the 30th anniversary of the Chipmunks with one shortened past episode each for Simon, Theodore and Alvin.
* Besides ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries'' features a clip show... as its second episode. Most of the full-length features, footage used is new, but there is a flashback to earlier in the ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' shorts had episode.
* The final episode of ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'', "[[Recap/CodeLyokoS4E30 Echoes]]", is a clip show where the main characters reminisce of their adventures throughout the series before shutting off the Supercomputer for good.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheCritic'': The final episode of the second season, "I Can't Believe It's a Clip Show", takes place at the filming of a clip show celebrating the 10th anniversary of the ShowWithinAShow ''Coming Attractions''. As a result, the clips are from that and the various movie parodies featured in the series.
* ''WesternAnimation/DangerMouse'':
** "Demons Aren't Dull" uses clips from the very first series in a sequence unrelated to the story's main plot. While searching for a dimensional demon, Danger Mouse is re-routed to a ''This is Your Life''-themed TV show which uses the clips to magnify his presumed shortcomings (all a Greenback plot in a ruse to get DM to resign as a secret agent).
** The relaunch has three clip shows: The ChristmasEpisode "Yule Only Watch Twice", in which DM and Penfold appear on a chat show; "Danger-Thon", in which the Danger Agency runs a telethon; and, just five episodes after that, "The Supies", set at the Secret Agent Awards.
* The final two episodes of ''WesternAnimation/DangerRangers'' are clip shows. The first one ("Fallbot Forget-Me-Not") involves the characters reinstalling safety rules into Fallbot (represented by clips from the show ''and'' former musical numbers) before he goes to an elementary school to give a presentation about safety. The second one ("Kitty's Surprise Party") is obviously outsourced to another animation studio, has ''eight'' musical numbers to pad out the runtime, and is the only episode that uses [[MediumBlending CGI animation mixed with 2D animation]].
* The final episode of the second season of ''WesternAnimation/DonkeyKongCountry'', entitled "[[Recap/DonkeyKongCountryS2E14MessageInABottleShow Message in a Bottle Show]]", involves Donkey Kong getting a letter where he is elected the Future Ruler of all Future Rulers. He has to leave Kongo Bongo, possibly forever, the following day, so that night, Diddy hosts a banquet dinner honoring him, where montages of characters remembering sequences from older episodes (mostly from the first season) are shown. [[spoiler:At the end of the episode, it is revealed that the letter was addressed to "Monkey Kong" and DK misread it.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/DrZitbagsTransylvaniaPetShop'' has two clip show episodes:
** "Word of Horror" has the framing device of Dr. Zitbag being put on trial for being too nice with the jury evaluating scenes from previous episodes where he appears to do good deeds.
** Clips from previous episodes are used in the slanderous films Zitbag and his rival Professor Sherman Vermin make of each other in "The Seventh Art".
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Duckman}}'''s second season ends with "Clip Job", a clip show that deconstructs clip shows. The framing story has a disgruntled television critic kidnapping the titular character and trying to convince him that ''Duckman'' is the most immoral show of all time. Duckman is unaware that he is a television character, and can't understand where and how the critic acquired all the clips of his past adventures, which he uses to torture Duckman by showing him the worst aspects of his personality. In the end, Duckman is rescued, and his sons Charles and Mambo point out that if their life really were a TV program, then this occurrence would have been a clip show created as an excuse to spend less money on original production. Duckman scoffs at the idea and asks who could possibly be so cynical to do such a thing. He then [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall stares out at the audience]] as the credits start to roll, beginning with [[SelfDeprecation the names of the series' executive producers]].
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'':
** One episode is a clip show centered around the paranoid rantings of a [[RecurringExtra recurring background character]].
** A more subtle clip show is the episode "[[Recap/GargoylesS2Avalon Avalon, Part II]]". The villain of the three-part arc has TimeTravel powers in addition to PhysicalGod status and uses them to instruct his younger self how to attain these powers. Because of the nature of time travel in the setting, which is always {{stable time loop}}s, the net result is him traveling to different past episodes to arrange the various elements to fall into his younger self's possession only after they become no longer story relative. While his interaction in the old episode segments is new footage, it's often intercut with old footage to save on animation, creating
several noticeable {{Animation Bump}}s.
* ''Franchise/GIJoe'':
** The last two episodes
of these.
the Creator/DiCEntertainment continuation of ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'' were both clip shows: "Basic Training" (which was presented in the form of General Hawk giving lectures and battle strategies to new recruits) and "The Legend of Metalhead" (which had Metalhead narrate the events of several episodes that featured him in a significant role).
** The ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeSigma6'' episode "Awards" consisted of clips from previous episodes edited together and with the premise of the Joes looking back at their greatest moments.
* ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' had two direct-to-video films, a Halloween one called ''WesternAnimation/MickeysHouseOfVillains'' and a Christmas one called ''WesternAnimation/MickeysMagicalChristmasSnowedInAtTheHouseOfMouse''. Both of them happened to consist mostly of recycled animation (though Mickey's introduction in ''House of Villains'' had the animation redone so that his vampire costume was less ghoulish). Technically speaking, the original show itself was a clip show as the cartoons shown at the House of Mouse were mainly recycled shorts from ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' as well as some of the WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts.
* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'' has a [[AppliedPhlebotinum phlebotinum]]-induced one in which Jackie actually has to travel to several points in the past while trying not to change the outcome of his adventures.
* The ''WesternAnimation/JayJayTheJetPlane'' episode "Snuffy's Seasons" has Snuffy remember several memories of past episodes as the others teach him about the seasons.
* ''WesternAnimation/KaBlam'' never had an official clip show, but the episodes "Won't Stick to Most Dental Work!" (in the beginning, when Henry shows all the times June has been pranking/beating him up, and at the end, when June was showing all the good times she and Henry had together) and "Under New Management!" (when Henry's thinking back to the moments that Mr. Foot beat him up) play clips from previous episodes.
* ''WesternAnimation/KappaMikey'' decides to go meta for its clip show episode... the plot revolves around putting together a clip show for the ShowWithinAShow.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'': The episode "[[Recap/TheLegendOfKorraS4E8Remembrances Remembrances]]" is a ThreeShorts version of this. The first has Mako telling his history of the Mako/Korra/Asami love triangle, the second has Korra telling Asami about her doubts and defeats, and third was Varrick's plan to make a "mover" VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory. The clip show was done due to a sudden budget cut, and the writers tried ''really'' hard to at least make the episode interesting. Korra's section is a pretty straight example (albeit one with actual CharacterDevelopment). Mako's comes off as the creators' SelfDeprecation at [[RomanticPlotTumor how messy the love triangle was]], and also sort of {{retcon}}s an actual character arc onto it for Mako. Varrick's, meanwhile, was basically the writers making TheAbridgedSeries of their own show.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'' combines this with DirectLineToTheAuthor. In an episode, Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs himself visits Africa, looking for inspiration, and various characters from the show tell him about Tarzan's previous adventures.
* ''WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries'' had the "Ace" segment of late Season 2 episode "[[Recap/LiloAndStitchTheSeriesS2E23MrsHasagawasCatsAce Mrs. Hasagawa's Cats / Ace]]", in which Jumba showed footage of his experiments doing evil things to the head of the Evil Genius Organization. This was to convince the head of E.G.O. that Jumba is still evil and his membership should not be revoked. Notably, the segment showed nearly the entirety of Slushy (523) and Splodyhead (619)'s epic fight from [[Recap/LiloAndStitchTheSeriesS1E27Slushy the former experiment's episode]], and in that episode, Jumba stated that he forgot to bring his camera. It should also be noted that "Ace" was originally supposed to have [[http://www.ersoz.com/storyboard/sb_pages/ls_ace.htm a much more substantial plot]] and not be a clip show, but [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents it was changed in the wake of a then-recent tsunami]] (specifically, the infamous [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Indian_Ocean_earthquake_and_tsunami 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami]]).
* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'':
** The 1951 short ''His Hare-Raising Tale'' has Bugs Bunny WesternAnimation/BugsBunny telling his nephew Clyde about his adventures from ''WesternAnimation/BaseballBugs'', ''Stage Door Cartoon'', ''WesternAnimation/RabbitPunch'', ''WesternAnimation/FallingHare'' and ''WesternAnimation/HaredevilHare''.
** 1954's ''This is a Life'', Life?'', where Bugs is feted on a testimonial TV show (Daffy thinks ''he's'' the one being celebrated), uses clips from ''WesternAnimation/BuccaneerBunny'' and ''Hare Do''.
** The 1958 short ''Feather Bluster'' has an elderly Foghorn Leghorn WesternAnimation/FoghornLeghorn and Barnyard Dawg recalling their past pranks on each other with the grandsons listening in, with clips from ''Henhouse Henery'', ''The High and the Flighty'' and ''All Fowled Up''.



** The 1959 short ''Tweet Dreams'' has Sylvester going to a psychiatrist about his problems with Tweety, using clips from ''Too Hop to Handle'', ''WesternAnimation/SandyClaws'', ''WesternAnimation/TweetysCircus'', ''WesternAnimation/AStreetCatNamedSylvester'' and ''Gift Wrapped''. Oddly, the clip from the first short, which featured Sylvester with his son, is presented as a flashback to Sylvester as a kitten with ''his'' father.

to:

** The 1959 short ''Tweet Dreams'' has Sylvester WesternAnimation/{{Sylvester|TheCatAndTweetyBird}} going to a psychiatrist about his problems with Tweety, using clips from ''Too Hop to Handle'', ''WesternAnimation/SandyClaws'', ''WesternAnimation/TweetysCircus'', ''WesternAnimation/AStreetCatNamedSylvester'' and ''Gift Wrapped''. Oddly, the clip from the first short, which featured Sylvester with his son, is presented as a flashback to Sylvester as a kitten with ''his'' father.



** In addition to re-using old animation in "new" theatrical shorts and TV specials, the Warner Brothers cartoon set has five ''movies'' devoted to this. The first, ''WesternAnimation/TheBugsBunnyRoadRunnerMovie'' (1979), is a ''That's Entertainment!''-esque retrospective hosted by WesternAnimation/BugsBunny in new linking segments; the sequels use new animation to link the shorts together into a long storyline. For example, ''WesternAnimation/DaffyDucksFantasticIsland'' has a framing device of various characters making wishes in a wishing well. You can easily tell what is original footage and what isn't because of the difference in animation. Also, Creator/MelBlanc's voice was noticeably different towards the end of his life, making it easy to distinguish original lines from lines that were redubbed to fit the plot of the film.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'': In the 100th episode, Music/OneDirection lock themselves in a room, in order to focus on writing a great song. However, ''MAD'' comes on the TV, and they are mysteriously unable to turn it off. As they're forced to watch clips of the show, they sing "Worst Show Ever", a parody of "Best Song Ever".
* ''WesternAnimation/MagicAdventuresOfMumfie'' has "The Album", in which the characters find a memento of one of their adventures and a clip from the episode follows it. The order of the items may suggest that all the episodes are OutOfOrder.
* ''WesternAnimation/MattsMonsters'' has one towards the end of the series, with the main characters searching for fitting clips to use in a commercial for their monster hunting job. Recurring villain Madame Bovary gets in the fun too trying to do the same for her activity, but Matt sabotages her job by replacing the tape with one of her ''worst'' moments.
* ''WesternAnimation/MightyMouseTheNewAdventures'' has a number of clips show episodes. "Animation Concerto" and "Mighty's Musical Classics" are exclusively snippets of [[WesternAnimation/MightyMouse original Terrytoons shorts]] set to musical numbers, "Stress For Success" has Mighty Mouse trying to relax and dreaming of old MM cartoon clips, "Scrappy's Playhouse" has Scrappy disrupting a theater screening of Mighty Mouse cartoons with his constant commentary, and "Anatomy Of A Milquetoast" and "Mighty's Tone Poem" use clips from the first season as part of their storylines (MM on trial for Scrappy's disappearance; MM "punishing" his old foes in lieu of a prison sentence).
* ''WesternAnimation/MonsterBusterClub'' ended with a clip show.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has six of these. The episodes take place before Twilight's coronation as ruler of Equestria, and her friends make her a memory book as a gift. Despite being made during production of Season 9, the clip shows [[NoExportForYou still have yet to appear in the US]], even after the presence of ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyANewGeneration''.



** ''Phineas and Ferb'' had a "Musical Cliptastic Countdown" composed of clips from their most memorable ''musical'' numbers, as voted on by the viewers. There's also "Phineas's Birthday Clip-o-Rama", where the gang makes a clip show for Phineas's birthday. As expected, they take joy in lampshading this trope at every chance they get. It is also a subversion because there is at least one clip in each segment that didn't come from any episode and [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext makes no sense at all.]]
** There is also the episode "This Is Your Backstory", which is a much more traditional clip show. Dr. Doofenshmirtz makes a device that will use all of his tragic backstories to make his more evil. It also comes off as a not-quite-successful attempt to organize his numerous backstories.
* In addition to re-using old animation in "new" theatrical shorts and TV specials, the [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Warner Brothers cartoon set]] has five ''movies'' devoted to this. The first, ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie'' (1979), is a ''That's Entertainment!''-esque retrospective hosted by WesternAnimation/BugsBunny in new linking segments; the sequels use new animation to link the shorts together into a long storyline. For example, ''Daffy Duck's Movie: Fantastic Island'' has a framing device of various characters making wishes in a wishing well. You can easily tell what is original footage and what isn't because of the difference in animation. Also Creator/{{Mel Blanc}}'s voice was noticeably different towards the end of his life, making it easy to distinguish original lines from lines that were redubbed to fit the plot of the film.
* ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' had a mini episode called Winslow's Home Movies sandwiched between two other episodes, where Winslow plays a video tape of his favorite and most humiliating [=CatDog=] moments. The episode ends with Winslow nearly getting flushed out of the house after [=CatDog=] flood the place while taking a bath. [=CatDog=] goes surfing out the front door, and Winslow ends up tied to The TV monitor hanging upside down. Not only was he showing clips he had previously videotaped, he was videotaping [=CatDog=] taking a bath and broadcasting it live.
* The final two episodes of short-lived PBS cartoon ''WesternAnimation/DangerRangers'' are clip shows. The first one ("Fallbot Forget-Me-Not") involves the characters reinstalling safety rules into Fallbot (represented by clips from the show ''and'' former musical numbers) before he goes to an elementary school to give a presentation about safety. The second one ("Kitty's Surprise Party") is obviously outsourced to another animation studio, has ''eight'' musical numbers to pad out the runtime, and is the only episode that uses [[MediumBlending CGI animation mixed with 2D animation.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Duckman}}'''s second season ended with "Clip Job", a clip show that deconstructed clip shows. The framing story had a disgruntled television critic kidnapping the titular character and trying to convince him that ''Duckman'' is the most immoral show of all time. Duckman is unaware that he is a television character, and can't understand where and how the critic acquired all the clips of his past adventures, which he uses to torture Duckman by showing him the worst aspects of his personality. In the end Duckman is rescued, and his sons Charles and Mambo point out that if their life really were a TV program then this occurrence would have been a clip show created as an excuse to spend less money on original production. Duckman scoffs at the idea and asks who could possibly be so cynical to do such a thing. He then [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall stares out at the audience]] as the credits start to roll, beginning with [[SelfDeprecation the names of the series' executive producers]].
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'' has a clip show centered around the paranoid rantings of a recurring background character. (See RecurringExtra.)
** A more subtle clip show is the episode "Avalon, Part II", where the villain of the three part episode has TimeTravel powers in addition to PhysicalGod status and uses them to instruct his younger self how to attain these powers. Because of the nature of time travel in the Gargoyles universe, which is always {{stable time loop}}s, the net result is him traveling to different past episodes to arrange the various elements to fall into his younger self's possession only after they become no longer story relative. While his interaction in the old episode segments is new footage, it's often inter cut with old footage to save on animation, creating several noticeable {{Animation Bump}}s.
* ''WesternAnimation/KappaMikey'' decides to go meta for its clip show episode... the plot revolves around putting together a clip show for the ShowWithinAShow.
* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'' has a {{phlebotinum}}-induced one, in which Jackie actually has to travel to several points in the past, while trying not to change the outcome of his adventures.
* The ''WesternAnimation/JayJayTheJetPlane'' episode "Snuffy's Seasons" has Snuffy remember several memories of past episodes as the others teach him about the seasons.

to:

** ''Phineas "[[Recap/PhineasAndFerbPhineasAndFerbsMusicalCliptasticCountdown Phineas and Ferb'' had a "Musical Ferb's Musical Cliptastic Countdown" Countdown]]" is composed of clips from their the series' most memorable ''musical'' numbers, as voted on by the viewers. There's also "Phineas's "[[Recap/PhineasAndFerbPhineasBirthdayClipORama Phineas' Birthday Clip-o-Rama", where Clip-o-Rama!]]", in which the gang makes a clip show for Phineas's birthday. As expected, they take the show takes joy in lampshading this trope at every chance they get. it gets. It is also a subversion because there is at least one clip in each segment that didn't doesn't come from any episode and [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext makes no sense at all.]]
all]].
** There is also the episode "This "[[Recap/PhineasAndFerbThisIsYourBackstory This Is Your Backstory", Backstory]]", which is a much more traditional clip show. Dr. Doofenshmirtz makes a device that will use all of his tragic backstories to make his more evil. It also comes off as a not-quite-successful attempt to organize his numerous backstories.
backstories.
* In addition to re-using old animation in "new" theatrical ''WesternAnimation/PinkyAndTheBrain'': "Schpiel-borg 2000" starts off as this.
* Two ''Franchise/{{Popeye}}''
shorts and TV specials, the [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Warner Brothers cartoon set]] has five ''movies'' devoted to this. The first, ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie'' (1979), is a ''That's Entertainment!''-esque retrospective hosted by WesternAnimation/BugsBunny in new linking segments; the sequels use new animation to link the shorts together into a long storyline. For example, ''Daffy Duck's Movie: Fantastic Island'' has a framing device of various characters making wishes in a wishing well. You can easily tell what is original footage and what isn't because of the difference in animation. Also Creator/{{Mel Blanc}}'s voice was noticeably different towards the end of his life, making it easy to distinguish original lines from lines show that were redubbed to fit the plot of the film.
* ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' had a mini episode called Winslow's Home Movies sandwiched between two other episodes, where Winslow plays a video tape of his favorite
this trope is OlderThanTelevision. In both shorts, Popeye and most humiliating [=CatDog=] moments. The episode ends with Winslow nearly getting flushed out of the house after [=CatDog=] flood the place while taking a bath. [=CatDog=] goes surfing out the front door, and Winslow ends up tied to The TV monitor hanging upside down. Not only was he showing clips he had previously videotaped, he was videotaping [=CatDog=] taking a bath and broadcasting it live.
* The final two episodes of short-lived PBS cartoon ''WesternAnimation/DangerRangers'' are clip shows. The first one ("Fallbot Forget-Me-Not") involves the characters reinstalling safety rules into Fallbot (represented by
Bluto would show clips from their past shorts; Bluto's would be when he was getting the show ''and'' former musical numbers) before he goes to an elementary school to give a presentation about safety. The second one ("Kitty's Surprise Party") is obviously outsourced to another animation studio, has ''eight'' musical numbers to pad out the runtime, and is the only episode that uses [[MediumBlending CGI animation mixed with 2D animation.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Duckman}}'''s second season ended with "Clip Job", a clip show that deconstructed clip shows. The framing story had a disgruntled television critic kidnapping the titular character and trying to convince him that ''Duckman'' is the most immoral show
best of all time. Duckman is unaware that he is a television character, and can't understand where and how the critic acquired all the Popeye, while Popeye's clips of his past adventures, which would show how he uses got back at Bluto.
** In "Customers Wanted", Popeye and Bluto are running rival penny arcades, and try
to torture Duckman get Wimpy's patronage by showing him the worst aspects of his personality. them moving picture shows from their past shows.
** In "I'm
In the end Duckman is rescued, Army Now", Popeye and his sons Charles Bluto try to join the army to impress Olive Oyl. However, the recruiter only has room for only one more, so Popeye and Mambo point out that if their life really were a TV program then this occurrence would have been Bluto show clips from ''photo albums'' to impress him.
* The 13th and final episode of ''WesternAnimation/ProStars'' is
a clip show created as an excuse to spend less money on original production. Duckman scoffs at the idea and asks who could possibly be so cynical to do such a thing. He then [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall stares out at the audience]] as the credits start to roll, beginning with [[SelfDeprecation the names of the series' executive producers]].
show.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'' ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'' has a clip show centered around the paranoid rantings of a recurring background character. (See RecurringExtra.)
** A more subtle clip show is the
episode "Avalon, Part II", where entitled "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS6E10DejaBoo Deja Boo]]", which has Slimer captured by his enemy Professor Dweeb so that he can use a machine to study his memories and find out a way to out-do the villain of the three part Ghostbusters in capturing ghosts. The episode has TimeTravel powers in addition to PhysicalGod status and a regular half-hour version (which uses them to instruct his younger self how to attain these powers. Because of clips from the nature of time travel in the Gargoyles universe, which is always {{stable time loop}}s, the net result is him traveling to different past episodes to arrange "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS3E6StickyBusiness Sticky Business]]", "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS3E7HalloweenTwoAndAHalf Halloween II 1/2]]", and "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS3E9TheCopycat The Copycat]]") and an extended hour-long cut (which uses clips from the various elements to fall into his younger self's possession only after they become no longer story relative. While his interaction in the old episode segments is new footage, it's often inter cut with old footage to save on animation, creating several noticeable {{Animation Bump}}s.
* ''WesternAnimation/KappaMikey'' decides to go meta for its clip show episode... the plot revolves around putting together a clip show for the ShowWithinAShow.
* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'' has a {{phlebotinum}}-induced one, in which Jackie actually has to travel to several points in the past, while trying not to change the outcome of his adventures.
* The ''WesternAnimation/JayJayTheJetPlane'' episode "Snuffy's Seasons" has Snuffy remember several memories of past
same episodes as the others teach half-hour version in addition to the episode "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS3E5TheTwoFacesOfSlimer The Two Faces of Slimer]]").
* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' DirectToVideo movies[[note]]They're not really movies because of this trope, but according to Disney, they're movies; fans usually consider ''All Growed Down'' the show's third movie while ''Miracle on Third Street'' is just a special[[/note]] ''Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street'' and ''Recess: All Growed Down'' both consisted of episodes of the television show (Four for the former, three for the latter) with linking material. Some fans felt ripped off because they hardly got anything new, but it could've been Disney's secret way of saying "Alright, we're not making new episodes of this show. Buy these now before we take the show off!"
** ''Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street'' (released a day after the show aired its final episode) took place right after the ChristmasEpisode, with Principal Prickly carpooling Miss Finster and Miss Grotke home after school, until his car gets stuck in a snowbank, making
him and Miss Finster instantly blame the kids, due to them having to deal with their pranks every day. So Miss Grotke tries to explain to them that the kids aren't as bad as they make them out to be, bringing up previous episodes ("Principal for a Day", "The Great Can Drive", "Weekend at Muriel's", and "Yes, Mikey, Santa Does Shave"), which play as part of the movie.
** ''Recess: All Growed Down'' (Released two years after the show ended, along with ''WesternAnimation/RecessTakingTheFifthGrade'') was
about the seasons.gang getting kidnapped by the kindergarteners, though only because their new leader, Chief Stinky wanted them to, and made the other kindergarteners believe that the older kids were bad. So the gang try to re-affirm the fact that they've been nice to them by bringing up (and playing) the episodes "The Legend of Big Kid", "Wild Child", and "Kindergarten Derby", and the rest of the film is new material- specifically, Gus bringing up the gang's origin story of how they met in kindergarten.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Rugrats}}'':
** While the series never officially had a clip show episode, the featurette "The Pickles Family Album" (included as a bonus on the ''Decade in Diapers'' DVD) features clips from various episodes of the show. The featurette is hosted by Angelica Pickles.
** Clips from various episodes can also be seen at the end of the "All Growed Up" special.
* The prime time ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' special ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyGoesHollywood'' centers around Scooby leaving his Saturday morning show to become a prime time star. When he leaves, a series of clips from ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooWhereAreYou'' are used as Fred, Daphne and Velma do a musical number pleading for Scooby to come back (the song done to the tune of ''WesternAnimation/TheNewScoobyDooMovies'').



* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' did a handful, though they were phased out after Season 13. FOX originally wanted four clip-show episodes a season - the showrunners were mercifully able to push back on that, and the ones that did happen usually came with a decent amount of LampshadeHanging and SelfDeprecation that made it go down a bit easier with the audience.
** "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons' Clip Show" (Season 4): It's April Fools' Day and Bart has had it with [[AprilFoolsPlot Homer's pranks]], so Bart shakes a can of beer up so much that it explodes (using a paint shaker at a local hardware store), putting Homer in a coma. While Homer is in a coma, the rest of the family (and Mr. Burns) reminisces about all the wacky adventures they have had from Seasons 1 through the first half of 4. The episode includes a self-referential joke where Bart remembers an "Itchy and Scratchy" cartoon and says, "It was an amusing episode...[[LeaningOnTheFourthWall of our lives]]." It also has an unusually large amount of new footage for a clip show - the first act is all brand-new, and they added extra animation to the clip of Homer falling down the gorge a second time from "Bart The Daredevil".
** "Another Simpsons Clip Show" (Season 6): After reading ''Literature/TheBridgesOfMadisonCounty'', Marge decides to gather the family in the kitchen so they can discuss their love lives, most of which ended in tragedy (Bart getting his heart broken by Laura from "New Kid on the Block" and Lisa yelling at Ralph in "I Love Lisa") or near-infidelity (Homer almost sleeping with his coworker Mindy in "The Last Temptation of Homer" and Marge almost driving to Jacques the French bowler's house in "Life in the Fast Lane"). Notable for intentionally taking the concept to its extreme by having next to no new footage for its framing scenes: the kitchen sequence used for most of the episode was reused from Season 2's "One Fish, Two Fish, Blowfish, Blue Fish", and one of the only other scenes was similarly recycled from Season 1's "Krusty Gets Busted" (meaning it looks notably less polished than the surrounding footage), with only the very first scene featuring new animation. (Even the couch gag was recycled.) Also notable for this exchange:
--->''Bart and Lisa are watching Itchy & Scratchy''\\
'''Marge''': How many times can you laugh at that cat getting hit by the moon?\\
'''Bart''': It's a new episode.\\
'''Lisa''': Not exactly. They pieced it together from old shows and it seems new to the trusting eyes of impressionable youth.\\
'''Bart''': Really?\\
'''Lisa''': [[WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow Ren and Stimpy]] do it all the time.\\
'''Marge''': Yes, they do. [[TakeThat And when was the last time you heard anyone talk about Ren and Stimpy?]]
** "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular" (Season 7): A take on sitcom retrospective episodes of the 1970s (like the ''Series/ThreesCompany'' example mentioned on the Live-Action TV subpage). It had Troy [=McClure=] hosting a retrospective of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', showing viewers the show's early years as animated filler on ''Series/TheTraceyUllmanShow'', deleted scenes from popular episodes (all of which are real, according to WordOfGod), including the infamous "Robotic Richard Simmons" scene from season 5's "Burns' Heir" and the alternate ending to "Who Shot Mr. Burns?: Part 2", portraying Matt Groening as a bald, drunken gun nut (instead of a bearded, bespectacled nerd), and, of course, "[[NakedPeopleAreFunny hard-core nudity]]!". Interestingly, this is the only Simpsons episode animated entirely in the United States. Usually considered the best clip-show of the series, thanks to some sharp writing, a strong performance from Creator/PhilHartman, and the fact that the material shown was very difficult to find otherwise prior to the release of the DVD boxsets.
** "All Singing, All Dancing" (Season 9): Starts out as a normal episode (much like "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons' Clip Show") where Homer rents ''Film/PaintYourWagon'', thinking it was a typical Creator/ClintEastwood western before finding out it's actually a musical, then complains that musicals suck, prompting the rest of the family to show video clips of the many times the Simpson family (and the people of Springfield) have broken out in song. In response to this, Snake barges in and holds the entire family hostage, but leaves when he realizes how weird it is to hold a singing family at gunpoint. This episode becomes HarsherInHindsight during the credits where gunshots can be heard when Creator/PhilHartman's name appears in the credits (to make matters worse, this was the last episode for which Hartman did voicework shown before he died, although his voice appeared in "Bart the Mother," a leftover season nine episode that aired in season 10).
** "Gump Roast" (Season 13): Homer is honored at a Friars' Club Roast, when Kang and Kodos invade so they can enslave humanity. Not much to write home about, except for the end song, sung by Creator/DanCastellaneta, [[WeDidntStartTheBillyJoelParodies parodying]] Music/BillyJoel's [[WeDidntStartTheBillyJoelParodies "We Didn't Start the Fire" and the lyric]]: "We're sorry for the clip show!" Also has a HilariousInHindsight moment where the song mentions an episode with a "crazy wedding" involving Patty, Selma, and Grampa getting married to each other. Selma and Grampa would marry each other in season 18's "Rome-Old and Juli-Ech." Patty, on the other hand, would get married in season 16's "There's Something About Marrying," but in that episode [[spoiler:she would almost marry a man who looks like a woman and break up with her near-husband/wife because Patty just revealed to Marge that she was a lesbian -- despite her and Selma's crush on Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}]]. Also of note that this is the last clip show the writers have done, according to the season 13 [[WordOfGod DVD commentary]], as the writers have now taken to doing "trilogy" episodes [episodes with three separate stories for each act], such as "Margical History Tour," "Tales From The Public Domain," "Love: Springfieldian Style," "Simpsons Christmas Stories," "Four Great Women and a Manicure," and "The Fight Before Christmas."
*** The show itself sent "Gump Roast" up just one week later with "I Am Furious (Yellow)", in which Bart makes Homer the subject of his highly popular ''Angry Dad'' cartoon; when Homer catches on, he immediately swears off all expressions of anger. Bart, watching Homer get hit by objects but not reacting, says, "Come ''on'', Angry Dad! Get angry! [[SelfDeprecation Don't make me do a clip show!]]"
*** In addition to the full-episode clip shows, there were some partial clip shows ''The Simpsons'' had: in season 5's "Bart's Inner Child," Lisa and Bart think back to all the times Marge has nagged them after Marge asks if she nags the family all the time.
*** In season 11's "Behind the Laughter", the family is portrayed as AnimatedActors. During the "documentary", clips are shown from "Bart the Daredevil" and "The Principal and the Pauper", as well as scenes of previous guest stars.
*** In season 13's "The Blunder Years," Homer thinks back to the time he jumped over Springfield Gorge (from season 2's "Bart the Daredevil"), but Lisa interrupts, stating that everyone is sick of that flashback.
*** In season 19's "Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind," Homer travels through his mind to see what he did to make his family leave him. If you look closely at the background, you can see clips of scenes from the past 18 seasons).
*** In season 20's "How the Test was Won," there was a FullyAutomaticClipShow of the many times Homer has injured himself.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' did has a handful, though they were phased out after Season 13. FOX Creator/{{FOX}} originally wanted four clip-show episodes a season - -- the showrunners were mercifully able to push back on that, and the ones that did happen usually came with a decent amount of LampshadeHanging and SelfDeprecation that made it go down a bit easier with the audience.
** "So "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS4E18SoItsComeToThisASimpsonsClipShow So It's Come to This: A Simpsons' Simpsons Clip Show" Show]]" (Season 4): [[AprilFoolsPlot It's April Fools' Day Day]] and Bart has had it with [[AprilFoolsPlot Homer's pranks]], pranks, so Bart shakes a can of beer up so much that it explodes (using a paint shaker at a local hardware store), putting Homer in a coma. While Homer is in a coma, the rest of the family (and Mr. Burns) reminisces about all the wacky adventures they have had from Seasons 1 through the first half of 4. The episode includes a self-referential joke where Bart remembers an "Itchy and Scratchy" cartoon and says, "It was an amusing episode... [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall of our lives]]." It also has an unusually large amount of new footage for a clip show - -- the first act is all brand-new, and they added extra animation to the clip of Homer falling down the gorge a second time from "Bart The Daredevil".
"[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS2E8BartTheDaredevil Bart the Daredevil]]".
** "Another "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS6E3AnotherSimpsonsClipShow Another Simpsons Clip Show" Show]]" (Season 6): After reading ''Literature/TheBridgesOfMadisonCounty'', Marge decides to gather the family in the kitchen so they can discuss their love lives, most of which ended in tragedy (Bart getting his heart broken by Laura from "New "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS4E8NewKidOnTheBlock New Kid on the Block" Block]]" and Lisa yelling at Ralph in "I "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS4E15ILoveLisa I Love Lisa") Lisa]]") or near-infidelity (Homer almost sleeping with his coworker Mindy in "The "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS5E9TheLastTemptationOfHomer The Last Temptation of Homer" Homer]]" and Marge almost driving to Jacques the French bowler's house in "Life in "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS1E9LifeOnTheFastLane Life on the Fast Lane"). Lane]]"). Notable for intentionally taking the concept to its extreme by having next to no new footage for its framing scenes: the kitchen sequence used for most of the episode was reused from Season 2's "One "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS2E11OneFishTwoFishBlowfishBlueFish One Fish, Two Fish, Blowfish, Blue Fish", Fish]]", and one of the only other scenes was similarly recycled from Season 1's "Krusty "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS1E12KrustyGetsBusted Krusty Gets Busted" Busted]]" (meaning it looks notably less polished than the surrounding footage), with only the very first scene featuring new animation. (Even the couch gag CouchGag was recycled.) Also notable for this exchange:
--->''Bart --->''[Bart and Lisa are watching Itchy & Scratchy''\\
'''Marge''':
Scratchy]''\\
'''Marge:'''
How many times can you laugh at that cat getting hit by the moon?\\
'''Bart''': '''Bart:''' It's a new episode.\\
'''Lisa''': '''Lisa:''' Not exactly. They pieced it together from old shows and it seems new to the trusting eyes of impressionable youth.\\
'''Bart''': '''Bart:''' Really?\\
'''Lisa''': '''Lisa:''' [[WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow Ren and Stimpy]] do it all the time.\\
'''Marge''': '''Marge:''' Yes, they do. [[TakeThat And when was the last time you heard anyone talk about Ren and Stimpy?]]
** "The "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS7E10TheSimpsons138thEpisodeSpectacular The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular" Spectacular]]" (Season 7): A take on sitcom retrospective episodes of the 1970s (like the ''Series/ThreesCompany'' example mentioned on the Live-Action TV subpage). It had has Troy [=McClure=] hosting a retrospective of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', showing viewers the show's early years as animated filler on ''Series/TheTraceyUllmanShow'', deleted scenes from popular episodes (all of which are real, according to WordOfGod), including the infamous "Robotic Richard Simmons" scene from season 5's "Burns' Heir" "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS5E18BurnsHeir Burns' Heir]]" and the alternate ending to "Who "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS7E1WhoShotMrBurnsPartTwo Who Shot Mr. Burns?: Part 2", Burns? (Part 2)]]", portraying Matt Groening as a bald, drunken gun nut (instead of a bearded, bespectacled nerd), and, of course, "[[NakedPeopleAreFunny hard-core nudity]]!". Interestingly, this is the only Simpsons ''Simpsons'' episode animated entirely in the United States. Usually considered the best clip-show of the series, thanks to some sharp writing, a strong performance from Creator/PhilHartman, and the fact that the material shown was very difficult to find otherwise prior to the release of the DVD boxsets.
** "All "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS9E11AllSingingAllDancing All Singing, All Dancing" Dancing]]" (Season 9): Starts out as a normal episode (much like "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons' Clip Show") where Homer rents ''Film/PaintYourWagon'', thinking it was a typical Creator/ClintEastwood western before finding out it's actually a musical, then complains that musicals suck, prompting the rest of the family to show video clips of the many times the Simpson family (and the people of Springfield) have broken out in song. In response to this, Snake barges in and holds the entire family hostage, but leaves when he realizes how weird it is to hold a singing family at gunpoint. This episode becomes HarsherInHindsight during the credits where gunshots can be heard when Creator/PhilHartman's name appears in the credits (to make matters worse, this was the last episode for which Hartman did voicework shown before he died, although his voice appeared in "Bart "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS10E3BartTheMother Bart the Mother," Mother]]", a leftover season nine episode that aired in season 10).
** "Gump Roast" "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS13E17GumpRoast Gump Roast]]" (Season 13): Homer is honored at a Friars' Club Roast, when Kang and Kodos invade so they can enslave humanity. Not much to write home about, except for the end song, sung by Creator/DanCastellaneta, [[WeDidntStartTheBillyJoelParodies parodying]] Music/BillyJoel's [[WeDidntStartTheBillyJoelParodies "We Didn't Start the Fire" and the lyric]]: "We're sorry for the clip show!" Also has a HilariousInHindsight moment where the song mentions an episode with a "crazy wedding" involving Patty, Selma, and Grampa getting married to each other. Selma and Grampa would marry each other in season 18's "Rome-Old "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS18E15RomeOldAndJuliEh Rome-old and Juli-Ech." Juli-eh]]". Patty, on the other hand, would get married in season 16's "There's "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS16E10TheresSomethingAboutMarrying There's Something About Marrying," Marrying]]", but in that episode [[spoiler:she would almost marry a man who looks like a woman and break up with her near-husband/wife because Patty just revealed to Marge that she was a lesbian -- despite her and Selma's crush on Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}]]. Also of note that this is the last clip show the writers have done, according to the season 13 [[WordOfGod DVD commentary]], as the writers have now taken to doing "trilogy" episodes [episodes ([[ThreeShorts episodes with three separate stories for each act], act]]), such as "Margical "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS13E14TalesFromThePublicDomain Tales From the Public Domain]]", "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS15E11MargicalHistoryTour Margical History Tour," "Tales From The Public Domain," "Love: Tour]]", "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS17E9SimpsonsChristmasStories Simpsons Christmas Stories]]", "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS19E12LoveSpringfieldianStyle Love, Springfieldian Style," "Simpsons Christmas Stories," "Four Style]]", "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS20E20FourGreatWomenAndAManicure Four Great Women and a Manicure," Manicure]]", and "The "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS22E8TheFightBeforeChristmas The Fight Before Christmas."
Christmas]]".
*** The show itself sent "Gump Roast" up just one week later with "I "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS13E18IAmFuriousYellow I Am Furious (Yellow)", (Yellow)]]", in which Bart makes Homer the subject of his highly popular ''Angry Dad'' cartoon; when Homer catches on, he immediately swears off all expressions of anger. Bart, watching Homer get hit by objects but not reacting, says, "Come ''on'', Angry Dad! Get angry! [[SelfDeprecation Don't make me do a clip show!]]"
*** In addition to the full-episode clip shows, there were some partial clip shows ''The Simpsons'' had: in season 5's "Bart's "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS5E7BartsInnerChild Bart's Inner Child," Child]]", Lisa and Bart think back to all the times Marge has nagged them after Marge asks if she nags the family all the time.
*** In season 11's "Behind "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS11E22BehindTheLaughter Behind the Laughter", Laughter]]", the family is portrayed as AnimatedActors. During the "documentary", clips are shown from "Bart "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS2E8BartTheDaredevil Bart the Daredevil" Daredevil]]" and "The "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS9E2ThePrincipalAndThePauper The Principal and the Pauper", Pauper]]", as well as scenes of previous guest stars.
*** In season 13's "The "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS13E5TheBlunderYears The Blunder Years," Years]]", Homer thinks back to the time he jumped over Springfield Gorge (from season 2's "Bart "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS2E8BartTheDaredevil Bart the Daredevil"), Daredevil]]"), but Lisa interrupts, stating that everyone is sick of that flashback.
*** In season 19's "Eternal "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS19E9EternalMoonshineOfTheSimpsonMind Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind," Mind]]", Homer travels through his mind to see what he did to make his family leave him. If you look closely at the background, you can see clips of scenes from the past 18 seasons).
seasons.
*** In season 20's "How "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS20E11HowTheTestWasWon How the Test was Won," there was Won]]", there's a FullyAutomaticClipShow of the many times Homer has injured himself.



* One of the last episodes of ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'', "Hero of the Year", uses this trope as part of a dinner party held in Sonic's honor (with Dr. Robotnik doing a similar one for himself).

to:

* One of ''WesternAnimation/SpiderMan1967'': Aside from the "new" episodes made by revising older episodes or recycling footage from them, the last episode was a clip show episode entitled "Trip to Tomorrow". Scenes were recycled from the episodes of ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'', "Hero "Thunder Rumble", "Return of the Year", uses this trope as part Flying Dutchman", and "The Evil Sorcerer", with the framing device consisting of Spider-Man encountering a dinner party held boy attempting to run away from home and deciding to become a superhero in Sonic's honor (with Dr. Robotnik doing Podunk, Spidey talking the youngster out of his plan by telling him about his previous adventures to make him understand how dangerous and risky being a similar one for himself).superhero really is.



* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': Stand-alone clip show specials are produced separately from the main show. The first of these was "Patchy's Playlist" in 2019, a compilation of songs and musical moments from the show. Some following specials were hosted by guest stars.



* The final episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheCritic'', "I Can't Believe It's a Clip Show", takes place at the filming of a clip show celebrating the 10th anniversary of the ShowWithinAShow ''Coming Attractions''. As a result, the clips are from that and the various movie parodies featured in the series.
* The original final episode of ''WesternAnimation/BeavisAndButtHead'' is a clip show where all the secondary characters have flashbacks over their encounters with the two main characters from the previous episodes.
* The final episode of ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'', "Echoes", is a clip show where the main characters are reminiscing of their adventures throughout the series, before shutting off the Supercomputer for good.
* ''WesternAnimation/MonsterBusterClub'' also ended with a clip show.
* ''WesternAnimation/KaBlam'' never had an official clip show, but the episodes "Won't Stick to Most Dental Work!" (in the begining, when Henry shows all the times June has been pranking/beating him up, and at the end, when June was showing all the good times she and Henry had together) and "Under New Management!" (when Henry's thinking back to the moments that Mr. Foot beat him up) played clips from previous episodes.
** This plays straight in the ''WesternAnimation/ActionLeagueNow'' segment "And Justice for None", when the Action League is trying to explain why the team shouldn't be terminated.

to:

* The final ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'': "The Platypi Psonic Psensation Psimulator" (although, this being ''Taz-Mania'', the Playpus Brothers immediately {{lampshade|Hanging}} this episode as what it is).
* ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'': The GrandFinale episode "Clip Hangers" has Timon and Pumbaa falling off a cliff after trying to catch a grub. Then, clips
of ''WesternAnimation/TheCritic'', "I Can't Believe It's their previous adventures show, but only from the current season.
* ''Franchise/TomAndJerry'' did several "cheater" cartoons. This was sometimes made all the more obvious by the pair's character designs changing over the years -- for example, the Creator/ChuckJones-era cartoon "Shutterbugged Cat" uses footage of the very different-looking Hanna-Barbera era Tom and Jerry while utilizing original animation in
a Clip quasi-classic style by Tom Ray.
* The second aftermath episode in ''WesternAnimation/TotalDramaWorldTour'' features the characters trying to raise enough money to refuel the Total Drama Jumbo Jet. To help the cause, Geoff and Bridgette sing a song called "Save This
Show", takes place at which explains why the filming of a clip show celebrating the 10th anniversary viewers should donate money. For most of the ShowWithinAShow ''Coming Attractions''. As a result, the clips are from that and the various movie parodies featured in the series.
* The original final episode of ''WesternAnimation/BeavisAndButtHead'' is a clip show where all the secondary characters have flashbacks over their encounters with the two main characters from the previous episodes.
* The final episode of ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'', "Echoes", is a clip show where the main characters are reminiscing of their adventures throughout the series, before shutting off the Supercomputer for good.
* ''WesternAnimation/MonsterBusterClub'' also ended with a clip show.
* ''WesternAnimation/KaBlam'' never had an official clip show, but the episodes "Won't Stick to Most Dental Work!" (in the begining, when Henry shows all the times June has been pranking/beating him up, and at the end, when June was showing all the good times she and Henry had together) and "Under New Management!" (when Henry's thinking back to the moments that Mr. Foot beat him up) played
song, clips from previous episodes.
** This plays straight in
all of the ''WesternAnimation/ActionLeagueNow'' segment "And Justice for None", when the Action League is trying to explain why the team shouldn't be terminated.past episodes (besides "Super Happy Crazy Fun Time Japan") play.



** The appropriately named episode "The Elevator", where the spies reminisce about highlights of previous episodes [[LockedInAFreezer while trapped in a]] [[ElevatorFailure malfunctioning elevator]].
** They ended up having another one near the end of season five in the episode "So Totally Not Groove-y", though it ended up having more of an active plot than the first one.
* ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'':
** The original 1993 series had five clip show episodes: "The Tribunal", "The Inquisition", "Villain of the Year", "Mad Scientist Wanted", and "Academy of Hard Knocks".
** The 2006 revival had two clip show episodes: "Carbine's Conundrum" and "Cat and Mouse".
* The GrandFinale episode "Clip Hangers" of ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' had Timon and Pumbaa falling off a cliff after trying to catch a grub. Then, clips of their previous adventures show, but only from the current season.

to:

** The In the appropriately named episode "The Elevator", where the spies reminisce about highlights of previous episodes [[LockedInAFreezer while trapped trapped]] in a]] a [[ElevatorFailure malfunctioning elevator]].
** They ended end up having another one near the end of season five in the episode "So Totally Not Groove-y", though it ended ends up having more of an active plot than the first one.
* ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'':
** The original 1993 series had five
''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' took this is an absurd extreme: the ''entire fifth season'' is a massive clip show episodes: "The Tribunal", "The Inquisition", "Villain in which a large puppet version of the Year", "Mad Scientist Wanted", and "Academy of Hard Knocks".
** The 2006 revival had two clip show episodes: "Carbine's Conundrum" and "Cat and Mouse".
* The GrandFinale episode "Clip Hangers" of ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' had Timon and Pumbaa falling off
Powermaster Optimus Prime tells a cliff after trying to catch a grub. Then, clips of their previous adventures show, but only young boy stories from the current season.Autobot-Decepticon war, with each story consisting of an episode from one of the earlier seasons and the movie edited down somewhat to make room for the new segments with the kid.



** The episode ''Grill'', in which Agent Fowler must make a case to his superiors for Team Prime to stay active on Earth in the wake of MECH's plots to discredit the Autobots with a fake version of Optimus.
** In the same season, we also got the episode ''Patch'', where Megatron enters Starscream's mind and overviews Starscream's previous plots against him to see if he should rejoin the Decepticons. Unlike other examples, it ends up having immediate, ''heavy'' consequences for both Knockout and Dreadwing.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'' combines this with DirectLineToTheAuthor. In an episode, Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs himself visits Africa, looking for inspiration, and various characters from the show tell him about Tarzan's previous adventures.
* ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'': "The Platypi Psonic Psensation Psimulator" (although, this being ''Taz-Mania'', the Playpus Brothers immediately {{lampshade|Hanging}} this episode as what it is).
* ''WesternAnimation/CaptainNTheGameMaster'' set a new low for cheaply done clip episodes: their clip show has no framing story to justify the clips, and in fact contains no new footage whatsoever. It's just a half hour of randomly assembled clips with no explanation...and with no dialog. Yes, for some reason, all the dialog has been removed from the clips, resulting in 30 minutes of silent reused animation playing over background music. Kids were understandably confused and upset. When the episode aired in syndication, they put the voices back in and added some new narration, most of which has nothing to do with the action on screen.
* ''WesternAnimation/PinkyAndTheBrain'': "Schpiel-borg 2000" starts off as this.
* ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatiansTheSeries'' had two episodes that were clip shows. One was "Humanitarian of the Year", where Cruella attempts to win the mentioned title for publicity, while the pups find photographs she ordered Horace and Jasper to hide of her being her usual cruel self, bringing up clips from previous episodes (Oddly, there were no cameras present to take pictures of these situations). Next was "Horace and Jasper's Big Career Move", where Horace and Jasper try to find new jobs, bringing up events of previous episodes. "The Making Of..." uses a few clips from previous episodes at first, but then goes off on its' own.
* The 13th and final episode of ''WesternAnimation/ProStars'' was a clip show.
* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' DirectToVideo movies [[note]]They're not really movies because of this trope, but according to Disney, they're movies. Fans usually consider ''All Growed Down'' the show's third movie while ''Miracle on Third Street'' is just a special[[/note]] ''Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street'' and ''Recess: All Growed Down'' both consisted of episodes of the television show (Four for the former, three for the latter) with linking material. Some fans felt ripped off because they hardly got anything new, but it could've been Disney's secret way of saying "Alright, we're not making new episodes of this show. Buy these now before we take the show off!"
** ''Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street'' (released a day after the show aired its final episode) took place right after the ChristmasEpisode, with Principal Prickly carpooling Miss Finster and Miss Grotke home after school, until his car gets stuck in a snowbank, making him and Miss Finster instantly blame the kids, due to them having to deal with their pranks every day. So Miss Grotke tries to explain to them that the kids aren't as bad as they make them out to be, bringing up previous episodes ("Principal for a Day", "The Great Can Drive", "Weekend at Muriel's", and "Yes, Mikey, Santa Does Shave"), which play as part of the movie.
** ''Recess: All Growed Down'' (Released two years after the show ended, along with ''WesternAnimation/RecessTakingTheFifthGrade'') was about the gang getting kidnapped by the kindergarteners, though only because their new leader, Chief Stinky wanted them to, and made the other kindergarteners believe that the older kids were bad. So the gang try to re-affirm the fact that they've been nice to them by bringing up (And playing) the episodes "The Legend of Big Kid", "Wild Child", and "Kindergarten Derby", and the rest of the film is new material- specifically, Gus bringing up the gang's origin story of how they met in kindergarten.
* ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries'' featured a clip show... as its second episode. Most of the footage used was new, but there was a flashback to earlier in the episode.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'':
** The episode "DW's Perfect Wish" has Arthur cheer up a depressed D.W. on her fifth birthday by reminding her of all the good times she had when she was four.
** The episode "Best Day Ever" has Arthur's friends remembering their favorite days, and Arthur trying to come up with one for himself. Even though video clips from older episodes are used, they are [[FlashbackWithTheOtherDarrin dubbed with the show's current voice actors]].
** In some ways, the episode "Arthur's Almost Live Not Real Music Festival" was like a clip show with two of the songs: "Leftovers Goulash" and "(Just a Little) Homework", both songs set to various clips from previous episodes, and in many cases, it's quite funny.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Rugrats}}'':
** While ''Rugrats'' never officially had a clip show episode, the featurette "The Pickles Family Album" (included as a bonus on the ''Decade in Diapers'' DVD) features clips from various episodes of the show. The featurette is hosted by Angelica Pickles.
** Clips from various episodes can also be seen at the end of the "All Growed Up" special.
* ''WesternAnimation/MagicAdventuresOfMumfie'' had "The Album", where the characters find a memento of one of their adventures and a clip from the episode follows it. The order of the items may suggest that all the episodes are OutOfOrder.
* ''WesternAnimation/MightyMouse: The New Adventures'' had a number of clips show episodes. "Animation Concerto" and "Mighty's Musical Classics" were exclusively snippets of original Terrytoons shorts set to musical numbers, "Stress For Success" had Mighty Mouse trying to relax and dreaming of old MM cartoon clips, "Scrappy's Playhouse" had Scrappy disrupting a theater screening of Mighty Mouse cartoons with his constant commentary, and "Anatomy Of A Milquetoast" and "Mighty's Tone Poem" used clips from the first season as part of their storylines (MM on trial for Scrappy's disappearance; MM "punishing" his old foes in lieu of a prison sentence).
* The "Wolves, Witches, and Giants" episode "The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing" contains one of these with the Wolf conducting his latest scheme by dressing up as a sheep so he can blend in with the herd and eat them and his partner the Fox telling him that it's bound to fail, he then shows him a videotape of his various failures throughout the series, and the Wolf tries to counter this by showing him his few victories, and his scheme fails as the Giant tries to eat him and he escapes by slipping out of the skin.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' episode "[[Recap/TheLegendOfKorraS4E8Remembrances Remembrances]]" is a ThreeShorts version of this. The first has Mako telling his history of the Mako/Korra/Asami love triangle, the second has Korra telling Asami about her doubts and defeats, and third was Varrick's plan to make a "mover" VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory. The clip show was done due to a sudden budget cut, and the writers tried ''really'' hard to at least make the episode interesting. Korra's section is a pretty straight example (albeit one with actual CharacterDevelopment). Mako's comes off as the creators' SelfDeprecation at [[RomanticPlotTumor how messy the love triangle was]], and also sort of {{retcon}}s an actual character arc onto it for Mako. Varrick's, meanwhile, was basically the writers making TheAbridgedSeries of their own show.
* ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' had two direct-to-video films, a Halloween one called ''Mickey's House of Villains'' and a Christmas one called ''Snowed in at the House of Mouse''. Both of them happened to consist mostly of recycled animation (though Mickey's introduction in ''House of Villains'' had the animation redone so that his vampire costume was less ghoulish). Technically speaking, the original show itself was a clip show as the cartoons shown at the House of Mouse were mainly recycled shorts from ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' as well as some of the classic Disney shorts.
* ''WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry'' did several "cheater" cartoons. This was sometimes made all the more obvious by the pair's character designs changing over the years-for example, the Creator/ChuckJones-era cartoon "Shutterbugged Cat" uses footage of the very different-looking Hanna-Barbera era Tom and Jerry while utilizing original animation in a quasi-classic style by Tom Ray.
* The final episode of the second season of ''WesternAnimation/DonkeyKongCountry'' entitled, "The Message in a Bottle Show" involves Donkey Kong getting a letter where he is elected the Future Ruler of all Future Rulers. He has to leave Kongo Bongo, possibly forever, the following day, so that night, Diddy hosts a banquet dinner honoring him, where montages of characters remembering sequences from older episodes (mostly from the first season) are shown. [[spoiler:At the end of the episode, it is revealed that the letter was addressed to "Monkey Kong" and DK misread it.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' took this is an absurd extreme: the ''entire fifth season'' is a massive clip show in which a large puppet version of Powermaster Optimus Prime tells a young boy stories from the Autobot-Decepticon war, with each story consisting of an episode from one of the earlier seasons and the movie edited down somewhat to make room for the new segments with the kid.
* ''WesternAnimation/DangerMouse:''
** "Demons Aren't Dull" uses clips from the very first series in a sequence unrelated to the story's main plot. While searching for a dimensional demon, Danger Mouse is re-routed to a ''This is Your Life''-themed TV show which uses the clips to magnify his presumed shortcomings (all a Greenback plot in a ruse to get DM to resign as a secret agent).
** The relaunch has three clip shows: The ChristmasEpisode "Yule Only Watch Twice", in which DM and Penfold appear on a chat show; "Danger-Thon", in which the Danger Agency runs a telethon; and, just five episodes after that, "The Supies", set at the Secret Agent Awards.
* ''WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries'' had the "Ace" segment of late Season 2 episode "[[Recap/LiloAndStitchTheSeriesS2E23MrsHasagawasCatsAce Mrs. Hasagawa's Cats / Ace]]", in which Jumba showed footage of his experiments doing evil things to the head of the Evil Genius Organization. This was to convince the head of E.G.O. that Jumba is still evil and his membership should not be revoked. Notably, the segment showed nearly the entirety of Slushy (523) and Splodyhead (619)'s epic fight from [[Recap/LiloAndStitchTheSeriesS1E27Slushy the former experiment's episode]], and in that episode, Jumba stated that he forgot to bring his camera. It should also be noted that "Ace" was originally supposed to have [[http://www.ersoz.com/storyboard/sb_pages/ls_ace.htm a much more substantial plot]] and not be a clip show, but [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents it was changed in the wake of a then-recent tsunami]] (specifically, the infamous [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Indian_Ocean_earthquake_and_tsunami 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami]]).
* The series finale of ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'', entitled "The Animaniacs Suite" contains clips from every other segment accompanied by a beautifully orchestrated medley of the show's theme and character themes.
* ''Franchise/GIJoe''
** The last two episodes of the Creator/DiCEntertainment continuation of ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'' were both clip shows: "Basic Training" (which was presented in the form of General Hawk giving lectures and battle strategies to new recruits) and "The Legend of Metalhead" (which had Metalhead narrate the events of several episodes that featured him in a significant role).
** The ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeSigma6'' episode "Awards" consisted of clips from previous episodes edited together and with the premise of the Joes looking back at their greatest moments.
* Aside from the "new" episodes made by revising older episodes or recycling footage from them, the last episode of ''WesternAnimation/SpiderMan1967'' was a clip show episode entitled "Trip to Tomorrow". Scenes were recycled from the episodes "Thunder Rumble", "Return of the Flying Dutchman", and "The Evil Sorcerer", with the framing device consisting of Spider-Man encountering a boy attempting to run away from home and deciding to become a superhero in Podunk, Spidey talking the youngster out of his plan by telling him about his previous adventures to make him understand how dangerous and risky being a superhero really is.
* The prime time ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDoo'' special ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyGoesHollywood'' centers around Scooby leaving his Saturday morning show to become a prime time star. When he leaves, a series of clips from ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooWhereAreYou'' are used as Fred, Daphne and Velma do a musical number pleading for Scooby to come back (the song done to the tune of ''WesternAnimation/TheNewScoobyDooMovies'').
* ''WesternAnimation/MattsMonsters'' haves one towards the end of the series, with the main characters searching for fitting clips to use in a commercial for their monster hunting job. Recurring villain Madame Bovary gets in the fun too trying to do the same for her activity, but Matt sabotages her job by replacing the tape with one of her ''worst'' moments.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'' had a clip show episode entitled "Deja Boo", which had Slimer captured by his enemy Professor Dweeb so that he could use a machine to study his memories and find out a way to out-do the Ghostbusters in capturing ghosts. The episode had a regular half-hour version (which used clips from the episodes "The Copycat", "Halloween II 1/2", and "Sticky Business") and an extended hour-long cut (which used clips from the same episodes as the half-hour version in addition to the episode "The Two Faces of Slimer").
* ''WesternAnimation/DrZitbagsTransylvaniaPetShop'' had two clip show episodes.
** The episode "Word of Horror" had the framing device of Dr. Zitbag being put on trial for being too nice with the jury evaluating scenes from previous episodes where he appeared to do good deeds.
** Clips from previous episodes are used in the slanderous films Zitbag and his rival Professor Sherman Vermin make of each other in the episode "The Seventh Art".
* The second aftermath episode in ''WesternAnimation/TotalDramaWorldTour'' features the characters trying to raise enough money to refuel the Total Drama Jumbo Jet. To help the cause, Geoff and Bridgette sing a song called "Save This Show", which explains why the viewers should donate money. For most of the song, clips from all of the past episodes (besides "Super Happy Crazy Fun Time Japan") play.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'': In the 100th episode, Music/OneDirection lock themselves in a room, in order to focus on writing a great song. However, ''MAD'' comes on the TV, and they are mysteriously unable to turn it off. As they're forced to watch clips of the show, they sing "Worst Show Ever", a parody of "Best Song Ever".
* The obscure 1980 feature ''Hurray for WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'' (aka ''Betty Boop for President'') is an extreme version of this -- it's solely assembled from colorized clips from 35 Betty Boop shorts, redubbed and rescored into an original storyline in which she runs for President of the United States.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has six of these. The episodes take place before Twilight's coronation as ruler of Equestria, and her friends make her a memory book as a gift. Despite being made during production of Season 9, the clip shows still have yet to appear in the US, even after the presence of ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyANewGeneration''.
* ''WesternAnimation/AngelaAnaconda'': "Childhood for Sale", the penultimate episode of the second season.
* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': Stand-alone clip show specials are produced separately from the main show. The first of these was "Patchy's Playlist" in 2019, a compilation of songs and musical moments from the show. Some following specials were hosted by guest stars.

to:

** The episode ''Grill'', "[[Recap/TransformersPrimeS2E9Grill Grill]]", in which Agent Fowler must make a case to his superiors for Team Prime to stay active on Earth in the wake of MECH's plots to discredit the Autobots with a fake version of Optimus.
** In the same season, we also got get the episode ''Patch'', where "[[Recap/TransformersPrimeS2E24Patch Patch]]", in which Megatron enters Starscream's mind and overviews Starscream's previous plots against him to see if he should rejoin the Decepticons. Unlike other examples, it ends up having immediate, ''heavy'' consequences for both Knockout and Dreadwing.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'' combines this with DirectLineToTheAuthor. In an episode, Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs himself visits Africa, looking for inspiration, and various characters from the show tell him about Tarzan's previous adventures.
* ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'': "The Platypi Psonic Psensation Psimulator" (although, this being ''Taz-Mania'', the Playpus Brothers immediately {{lampshade|Hanging}} this episode as what it is).
* ''WesternAnimation/CaptainNTheGameMaster'' set a new low for cheaply done clip episodes: their clip show has no framing story to justify the clips, and in fact contains no new footage whatsoever. It's just a half hour of randomly assembled clips with no explanation...and with no dialog. Yes, for some reason, all the dialog has been removed from the clips, resulting in 30 minutes of silent reused animation playing over background music. Kids were understandably confused and upset. When the episode aired in syndication, they put the voices back in and added some new narration, most of which has nothing to do with the action on screen.
* ''WesternAnimation/PinkyAndTheBrain'': "Schpiel-borg 2000" starts off as this.
* ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatiansTheSeries'' had two episodes that were clip shows. One was "Humanitarian of the Year", where Cruella attempts to win the mentioned title for publicity, while the pups find photographs she ordered Horace and Jasper to hide of her being her usual cruel self, bringing up clips from previous episodes (Oddly, there were no cameras present to take pictures of these situations). Next was "Horace and Jasper's Big Career Move", where Horace and Jasper try to find new jobs, bringing up events of previous episodes. "The Making Of..." uses a few clips from previous episodes at first, but then goes off on its' own.
* The 13th and final episode of ''WesternAnimation/ProStars'' was a clip show.
* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' DirectToVideo movies [[note]]They're not really movies because of this trope, but according to Disney, they're movies. Fans usually consider ''All Growed Down'' the show's third movie while ''Miracle on Third Street'' is just a special[[/note]] ''Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street'' and ''Recess: All Growed Down'' both consisted of episodes of the television show (Four for the former, three for the latter) with linking material. Some fans felt ripped off because they hardly got anything new, but it could've been Disney's secret way of saying "Alright, we're not making new episodes of this show. Buy these now before we take the show off!"
** ''Recess Christmas: Miracle on Third Street'' (released a day after the show aired its final episode) took place right after the ChristmasEpisode, with Principal Prickly carpooling Miss Finster and Miss Grotke home after school, until his car gets stuck in a snowbank, making him and Miss Finster instantly blame the kids, due to them having to deal with their pranks every day. So Miss Grotke tries to explain to them that the kids aren't as bad as they make them out to be, bringing up previous episodes ("Principal for a Day", "The Great Can Drive", "Weekend at Muriel's", and "Yes, Mikey, Santa Does Shave"), which play as part of the movie.
** ''Recess: All Growed Down'' (Released two years after the show ended, along with ''WesternAnimation/RecessTakingTheFifthGrade'') was about the gang getting kidnapped by the kindergarteners, though only because their new leader, Chief Stinky wanted them to, and made the other kindergarteners believe that the older kids were bad. So the gang try to re-affirm the fact that they've been nice to them by bringing up (And playing) the episodes "The Legend of Big Kid", "Wild Child", and "Kindergarten Derby", and the rest of the film is new material- specifically, Gus bringing up the gang's origin story of how they met in kindergarten.
* ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries'' featured a clip show... as its second episode. Most of the footage used was new, but there was a flashback to earlier in the episode.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'':
** The episode "DW's Perfect Wish" has Arthur cheer up a depressed D.W. on her fifth birthday by reminding her of all the good times she had when she was four.
** The episode "Best Day Ever" has Arthur's friends remembering their favorite days, and Arthur trying to come up with one for himself. Even though video clips from older episodes are used, they are [[FlashbackWithTheOtherDarrin dubbed with the show's current voice actors]].
** In some ways, the episode "Arthur's Almost Live Not Real Music Festival" was like a clip show with two of the songs: "Leftovers Goulash" and "(Just a Little) Homework", both songs set to various clips from previous episodes, and in many cases, it's quite funny.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Rugrats}}'':
** While ''Rugrats'' never officially had a clip show episode, the featurette "The Pickles Family Album" (included as a bonus on the ''Decade in Diapers'' DVD) features clips from various episodes of the show. The featurette is hosted by Angelica Pickles.
** Clips from various episodes can also be seen at the end of the "All Growed Up" special.
* ''WesternAnimation/MagicAdventuresOfMumfie'' had "The Album", where the characters find a memento of one of their adventures and a clip from the episode follows it. The order of the items may suggest that all the episodes are OutOfOrder.
* ''WesternAnimation/MightyMouse: The New Adventures'' had a number of clips show episodes. "Animation Concerto" and "Mighty's Musical Classics" were exclusively snippets of original Terrytoons shorts set to musical numbers, "Stress For Success" had Mighty Mouse trying to relax and dreaming of old MM cartoon clips, "Scrappy's Playhouse" had Scrappy disrupting a theater screening of Mighty Mouse cartoons with his constant commentary, and "Anatomy Of A Milquetoast" and "Mighty's Tone Poem" used clips from the first season as part of their storylines (MM on trial for Scrappy's disappearance; MM "punishing" his old foes in lieu of a prison sentence).
* The "Wolves, Witches, and Giants"
''WesternAnimation/WolvesWitchesAndGiants'' episode "The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing" contains one of these with the Wolf conducting his latest scheme by dressing up as a sheep so he can blend in with the herd and eat them and his partner the Fox telling him that it's bound to fail, he then shows him a videotape of his various failures throughout the series, and the Wolf tries to counter this by showing him his few victories, and his scheme fails as the Giant tries to eat him and he escapes by slipping out of the skin.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' episode "[[Recap/TheLegendOfKorraS4E8Remembrances Remembrances]]" is a ThreeShorts version of this. The first has Mako telling his history of the Mako/Korra/Asami love triangle, the second has Korra telling Asami about her doubts and defeats, and third was Varrick's plan to make a "mover" VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory. The clip show was done due to a sudden budget cut, and the writers tried ''really'' hard to at least make the episode interesting. Korra's section is a pretty straight example (albeit one with actual CharacterDevelopment). Mako's comes off as the creators' SelfDeprecation at [[RomanticPlotTumor how messy the love triangle was]], and also sort of {{retcon}}s an actual character arc onto it for Mako. Varrick's, meanwhile, was basically the writers making TheAbridgedSeries of their own show.
* ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'' had two direct-to-video films, a Halloween one called ''Mickey's House of Villains'' and a Christmas one called ''Snowed in at the House of Mouse''. Both of them happened to consist mostly of recycled animation (though Mickey's introduction in ''House of Villains'' had the animation redone so that his vampire costume was less ghoulish). Technically speaking, the original show itself was a clip show as the cartoons shown at the House of Mouse were mainly recycled shorts from ''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'' as well as some of the classic Disney shorts.
* ''WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry'' did several "cheater" cartoons. This was sometimes made all the more obvious by the pair's character designs changing over the years-for example, the Creator/ChuckJones-era cartoon "Shutterbugged Cat" uses footage of the very different-looking Hanna-Barbera era Tom and Jerry while utilizing original animation in a quasi-classic style by Tom Ray.
* The final episode of the second season of ''WesternAnimation/DonkeyKongCountry'' entitled, "The Message in a Bottle Show" involves Donkey Kong getting a letter where he is elected the Future Ruler of all Future Rulers. He has to leave Kongo Bongo, possibly forever, the following day, so that night, Diddy hosts a banquet dinner honoring him, where montages of characters remembering sequences from older episodes (mostly from the first season) are shown. [[spoiler:At the end of the episode, it is revealed that the letter was addressed to "Monkey Kong" and DK misread it.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' took this is an absurd extreme: the ''entire fifth season'' is a massive clip show in which a large puppet version of Powermaster Optimus Prime tells a young boy stories from the Autobot-Decepticon war, with each story consisting of an episode from one of the earlier seasons and the movie edited down somewhat to make room for the new segments with the kid.
* ''WesternAnimation/DangerMouse:''
** "Demons Aren't Dull" uses clips from the very first series in a sequence unrelated to the story's main plot. While searching for a dimensional demon, Danger Mouse is re-routed to a ''This is Your Life''-themed TV show which uses the clips to magnify his presumed shortcomings (all a Greenback plot in a ruse to get DM to resign as a secret agent).
** The relaunch has three clip shows: The ChristmasEpisode "Yule Only Watch Twice", in which DM and Penfold appear on a chat show; "Danger-Thon", in which the Danger Agency runs a telethon; and, just five episodes after that, "The Supies", set at the Secret Agent Awards.
* ''WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries'' had the "Ace" segment of late Season 2 episode "[[Recap/LiloAndStitchTheSeriesS2E23MrsHasagawasCatsAce Mrs. Hasagawa's Cats / Ace]]", in which Jumba showed footage of his experiments doing evil things to the head of the Evil Genius Organization. This was to convince the head of E.G.O. that Jumba is still evil and his membership should not be revoked. Notably, the segment showed nearly the entirety of Slushy (523) and Splodyhead (619)'s epic fight from [[Recap/LiloAndStitchTheSeriesS1E27Slushy the former experiment's episode]], and in that episode, Jumba stated that he forgot to bring his camera. It should also be noted that "Ace" was originally supposed to have [[http://www.ersoz.com/storyboard/sb_pages/ls_ace.htm a much more substantial plot]] and not be a clip show, but [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents it was changed in the wake of a then-recent tsunami]] (specifically, the infamous [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Indian_Ocean_earthquake_and_tsunami 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami]]).
* The series finale of ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'', entitled "The Animaniacs Suite" contains clips from every other segment accompanied by a beautifully orchestrated medley of the show's theme and character themes.
* ''Franchise/GIJoe''
** The last two episodes of the Creator/DiCEntertainment continuation of ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'' were both clip shows: "Basic Training" (which was presented in the form of General Hawk giving lectures and battle strategies to new recruits) and "The Legend of Metalhead" (which had Metalhead narrate the events of several episodes that featured him in a significant role).
** The ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeSigma6'' episode "Awards" consisted of clips from previous episodes edited together and with the premise of the Joes looking back at their greatest moments.
* Aside from the "new" episodes made by revising older episodes or recycling footage from them, the last episode of ''WesternAnimation/SpiderMan1967'' was a clip show episode entitled "Trip to Tomorrow". Scenes were recycled from the episodes "Thunder Rumble", "Return of the Flying Dutchman", and "The Evil Sorcerer", with the framing device consisting of Spider-Man encountering a boy attempting to run away from home and deciding to become a superhero in Podunk, Spidey talking the youngster out of his plan by telling him about his previous adventures to make him understand how dangerous and risky being a superhero really is.
* The prime time ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDoo'' special ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyGoesHollywood'' centers around Scooby leaving his Saturday morning show to become a prime time star. When he leaves, a series of clips from ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooWhereAreYou'' are used as Fred, Daphne and Velma do a musical number pleading for Scooby to come back (the song done to the tune of ''WesternAnimation/TheNewScoobyDooMovies'').
* ''WesternAnimation/MattsMonsters'' haves one towards the end of the series, with the main characters searching for fitting clips to use in a commercial for their monster hunting job. Recurring villain Madame Bovary gets in the fun too trying to do the same for her activity, but Matt sabotages her job by replacing the tape with one of her ''worst'' moments.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'' had a clip show episode entitled "Deja Boo", which had Slimer captured by his enemy Professor Dweeb so that he could use a machine to study his memories and find out a way to out-do the Ghostbusters in capturing ghosts. The episode had a regular half-hour version (which used clips from the episodes "The Copycat", "Halloween II 1/2", and "Sticky Business") and an extended hour-long cut (which used clips from the same episodes as the half-hour version in addition to the episode "The Two Faces of Slimer").
* ''WesternAnimation/DrZitbagsTransylvaniaPetShop'' had two clip show episodes.
** The episode "Word of Horror" had the framing device of Dr. Zitbag being put on trial for being too nice with the jury evaluating scenes from previous episodes where he appeared to do good deeds.
** Clips from previous episodes are used in the slanderous films Zitbag and his rival Professor Sherman Vermin make of each other in the episode "The Seventh Art".
* The second aftermath episode in ''WesternAnimation/TotalDramaWorldTour'' features the characters trying to raise enough money to refuel the Total Drama Jumbo Jet. To help the cause, Geoff and Bridgette sing a song called "Save This Show", which explains why the viewers should donate money. For most of the song, clips from all of the past episodes (besides "Super Happy Crazy Fun Time Japan") play.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'': In the 100th episode, Music/OneDirection lock themselves in a room, in order to focus on writing a great song. However, ''MAD'' comes on the TV, and they are mysteriously unable to turn it off. As they're forced to watch clips of the show, they sing "Worst Show Ever", a parody of "Best Song Ever".
* The obscure 1980 feature ''Hurray for WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'' (aka ''Betty Boop for President'') is an extreme version of this -- it's solely assembled from colorized clips from 35 Betty Boop shorts, redubbed and rescored into an original storyline in which she runs for President of the United States.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has six of these. The episodes take place before Twilight's coronation as ruler of Equestria, and her friends make her a memory book as a gift. Despite being made during production of Season 9, the clip shows still have yet to appear in the US, even after the presence of ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyANewGeneration''.
* ''WesternAnimation/AngelaAnaconda'': "Childhood for Sale", the penultimate episode of the second season.
* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': Stand-alone clip show specials are produced separately from the main show. The first of these was "Patchy's Playlist" in 2019, a compilation of songs and musical moments from the show. Some following specials were hosted by guest stars.
skin.



* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'''s penultimate episode had another variation: the characters attend a play about their adventures, which provides a more-or-less accurate summary of the series so far while somehow managing to get the details comically wrong and accurately poke fun at itself at the same time.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'''s penultimate Parodied in the final episode had another of ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfSamAndMaxFreelancePolice''. While captured by the most memorable villains of the series, Sam and Max reminisce about things that never happened in the show. They continue to do this while escaping.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'':
** The SeriesFauxnale episode "[[Recap/TheAmazingWorldOfGumballS2E40TheFinale The Finale]]" starts off as a clip show by showing scenes from previous episodes as the Wattersons look through their photo album. However, [[BaitAndSwitch this quickly gets dropped]] after Hector's Mom reminds the Wattersons that [[HeroismWontPayTheBills they owe the town large amounts of money to pay for the damages caused by their past actions]]. Afterwards, while events from past episodes are constantly mentioned, only twice are clips from past episodes shown, the first of which is a FullyAutomaticClipShow of Richard's reckless driving.
** "[[Recap/TheAmazingWorldOfGumballS4E38TheCompilation The Compilation]]" has a FramingDevice of being an inexplicable "best of" video, but only the introduction clips are from previous episodes.
%%** "The Test"
* ''Amy's Mythic Mornings'' has an episode dedicated to simply playing all the songs from earlier episodes without story.
* The ''WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce'' episode "[[Recap/AquaTeenHungerForceS4E8GrimReaperGutters Grim Reaper Gutters]]" starts out as a subversion of a clip show when at least a couple of the flashbacks turn out to be camera footage secretly compiled by Frylock and Meatwad. [[spoiler:Their clip show ends when Meatwad, faced with his depressing and meaningless life, kills himself.]]
* The ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' episode "[[Recap/AvatarTheLastAirbenderTheEmberIslandPlayers The Ember Island Players]]" has a
variation: the characters attend a play about their adventures, which provides a more-or-less accurate summary of the series so far while somehow managing to get the details comically wrong and accurately poke fun at itself at the same time.time.
* The ''WesternAnimation/BigCityGreens'' episode "[[Recap/BigCityGreensS2E16 Cheap Show]]" invokes and parodies this by Bill telling this family to reminisce about previous adventures, such as the time they got [[PersonaNonGrata banned from a seafood restaurant]] ("[[Recap/BigCityGreensS1E9 Fill Bill]]"). However, the family is not buying it, and instead the episode escalates, with Alice remembering an event incorrectly, Tilly using storyboards to illustrate her battling a {{Kaiju}}, and Cricket ''literally'' BreakingTheFourthWall.
* The second episode of ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries'' is a clip show that flashes back to a single scene of the first episode several times, and then starts making up clips from episodes that had never happened, as well as showing clips from the episode itself that happened 5 minutes ago. It's made even better by the fact that the series was aired out of production order, and as such there are no clips or references to the fourth episode produced, which was actually the first to air.
* ''WesternAnimation/DuckDodgers'' has a subversion in "Deconstructing Dodgers", in which specific episodes and incidents are mentioned, but the actual clips shown are outtakes, unused gags or even one-shot jokes with no setup or context whatsoever.



** Parodied in the episode "The Good Ol' Ed", which had the Eds collecting things from previous episodes for a time capsule and reminiscing about past misadventures. While events of actual episodes were mentioned, all the "flashbacks" were to [[UnInstallment events never seen in previous episodes]] (a fake time machine scam, Edd getting a bad case of the hiccups, and the Eds trying to make the world's biggest pancake), all of which ended with the other members of the trio protesting that said event never happened. The only {{flashback}} to something that actually happened was Ed remembering the opening of the ''current'' episode, which was interrupted by Eddy smacking Ed with a fish and shouting "I ''hate'' clip shows!"
** In a similar vein was the episode "Every Which Way But Ed," where the Eds end up getting physically lost in the flashbacks of multiple secondary characters, and must find their way back to the present. Unfortunately, they end up going so far back that they end up in the day Edd first met the other two members of the trio, and Eddy, never one to ignore a scam, has Ed slam a house on Edd to give him [[EasyAmnesia amnesia]], so he would pay to watch Ed eat a TV. This time, however, Ed ends up accidentally eating Eddy as well.
* The ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' episode "Phineas's Birthday Clip-o-Rama" is both a straight example and a subversion, because there is at least one clip in each segment that didn't come from any episode and [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext makes no sense at all.]]
* The second episode of ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries'' is a clip show that flashes back to a single scene of the first episode several times, and then starts making up clips from episodes that had never happened, as well as showing clips from the episode itself that happened 5 minutes ago. It's made even better by the fact that the series was aired out of production order, and as such there are no clips or references to the fourth episode produced, which was actually the first to air.

to:

** Parodied in the episode "The "[[Recap/EdEddNEddyS4E14TheGoodOlEd The Good Ol' Ed", Ed]]", which had has the Eds collecting things from previous episodes for a time capsule and reminiscing about past misadventures. While events of actual episodes were mentioned, all the "flashbacks" were to [[UnInstallment events never seen in previous episodes]] (a fake time machine scam, Edd getting a bad case of the hiccups, and the Eds trying to make the world's biggest pancake), all of which ended with the other members of the trio protesting that said event never happened. The only {{flashback}} to something that actually happened was is Ed remembering the opening of the ''current'' episode, which was is interrupted by Eddy smacking Ed with a fish and shouting "I ''hate'' clip shows!"
shows!".
** In a similar vein was the episode "Every is "[[Recap/EdEddNEddyS5E2EveryWhichWayButEd Every Which Way But Ed," where but Ed]]", in which the Eds end up getting physically lost in the flashbacks of multiple secondary characters, and must find their way back to the present. Unfortunately, they end up going so far back that they end up in the day Edd first met the other two members of the trio, and Eddy, never one to ignore a scam, has Ed slam a house on Edd to give him [[EasyAmnesia amnesia]], so he would pay to watch Ed eat a TV. This time, however, Ed ends up accidentally eating Eddy as well.
* There's an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' in which Wanda and Timmy show clips to prove what a good godparent, friend, and humor generator Cosmo is -- but they're all things that must've happened between episodes.
* ''WesternAnimation/LittleCharmers'' has several episodes like "Magic of Charmville" which is 95% clips. It gets especially weird when they air this prior to some of the episodes the clips are from.
* When ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' was still being shown in theaters, several shorts were compiled in the manner of WesternAnimation/BugsBunny telling stories to WesternAnimation/YosemiteSam, and at least one where Bugs, as a (possibly) retired multimillionaire, tells the story of his life to an unseen reporter; later television reruns often had segments where Bugs (and occasionally WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck, trying to execute a HostileShowTakeover) acted as the "host" at the beginning and end of the cartoons being shown.
* Played with in the ''WesternAnimation/MikeTysonMysteries'' episode "[[Recap/MikeTysonMysteriesS3E14MyFavoriteMystery My Favorite Mystery]]". The Mystery Team gets stuck in an elevator with an old man and begin reminiscing about their favorite mysteries, all of them being extended clips from the ActionHoggingOpening rather than clips from previous episodes. The old man then reveals that he was present for about half of them, having been part of the bank robbery that Marquess tried to stop, then used the money to create the dinosaurs and the samurai robot Mike crashed a jet into, and was also the guy in kabuki makeup that Mike punched in the opening.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Motorcity}}'' does this with the episode "Threat Level: Texas" in which Texas retells events that happened in "Power Trip", "The Duke of Detroit" and "Going Dutch", only [[SelfServingMemory he believes that all the good ideas and KaneCo attacks were performed by him instead of Mike]]. Everyone in these flashbacks is incredibly out of character and can't stop talking about how "awesome" Texas is.
* The ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' episode "Phineas's "[[Recap/PhineasAndFerbPhineasBirthdayClipORama Phineas' Birthday Clip-o-Rama" Clip-o-Rama!]]" is both a straight example and a subversion, because there is at least one clip in each segment that didn't come from any episode and [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext makes no sense at all.]]
* The second episode of ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries'' is a clip show that flashes back to a single scene of the first episode several times, and then starts making up clips from episodes that had never happened, as well as showing clips from the episode itself that happened 5 minutes ago. It's made even better by the fact that the series was aired out of production order, and as such there are no clips or references to the fourth episode produced, which was actually the first to air.
all]].



** Parodied in "The City of Clipsville". The episode starts out looking like a clip show, but the clips quickly turn into outrageous, bizarre events that never took place (most infamously the girls growing into teenagers and the Rowdyruff Boys asking them out), and everyone eventually barges into the girls' house to reminisce about rather insipid things like mowing the lawn. Ultimately, it turns out the clip show was a clip, with them at the end saying "Remember when we were remembering things?"
** A more subtle parody happens in "Monkey See, Doggy Two", the sequel to "Monkey See, Doggy Do" (both of which were also included in clips from "The City of Clipsville"). The episode begins exactly the same way as its predecessor. When the girls realize [[NeverRecycleYourSchemes Mojo Jojo is reusing his previous plan]], they quickly confront him... and he reveals he's made a new plan by [[SurveillanceAsThePlotDemands looking at the footage from his old one]] to figure out what he did wrong. [[EvilGloating He then shows the footage]], which are clips from the original episode, [[{{MST}} as the four provide commentary.]]
* Parodied in the final episode of the ''WesternAnimation/SamAndMaxFreelancePolice'' cartoon. While captured by the most memorable villains of the series, Sam and Max reminisce about things that never happened in the show. They continue to do this while escaping.
* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' parodies this in "City on the Edge of Forever," where the children recall incidents from past episodes, but their stories increasingly diverge from the original episodes. Eventually, the kids start lampshading the fact that the original stories didn't happen quite like that. Ultimately the episode is explained away as AllJustADream of Cartman's, which then turns out to be a DreamWithinADream of Stan's, who notes "I must have some serious emotional problems!"
* ''WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce'' episode "Grim Reaper Gutters" started out as a subversion of a clip show where at least a couple of the flashback turned out to be camera footage secretly compiled by Frylock and Meatwad. [[spoiler: Their clip show ends when Meatwad, faced with his depressing and meaningless life, kills himself.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/DuckDodgers'' uses a subversion in "Deconstructing Dodgers", where specific episodes and incidents are mentioned, but the actual clips shown are outtakes, unused gags or even one-shot jokes with no setup or context whatsoever.
* Played with in the ''WesternAnimation/MikeTysonMysteries'' episode "My Favorite Mystery". The Mystery Team gets stuck in an elevator with an old man and begin reminiscing about their favorite mysteries, all of them being extended clips from the ActionHoggingOpening rather than clips from previous episodes. The old man then reveals that he was present for about half of them, having been part of the bank robbery that Marquess tried to stop, then used the money to create the dinosaurs and the samurai robot Mike crashed a jet into, and was also the guy in kabuki makeup that Mike punched in the opening.
* Subverted in ''[[WesternAnimation/TotalDrama Total Drama Action]]'', where the contestants briefly return to Camp Wawanakwa from the first season.
-->'''Chris:''' If you need to take a moment to reminisce about the great times you had here...\\
'''Everyone else:''' ''[laugh for a rather long time]''\\
'''Chris:''' Fine. We'll skip the good memories montage.
* There's an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' in which Wanda and Timmy show clips to prove what a good godparent, friend, and humor generator Cosmo is -- but they're all things that must've happened between episodes.
* ''{{WesternAnimation/Motorcity}}'' did this with the episode "Threat Level: Texas" in which Texas retells events that happened in "Power Trip," "The Duke of Detroit" and "Going Dutch" only to match his SelfServingMemory, so believes that all the good ideas and [=KaneCo=] attacks were performed by him instead of Mike. Everyone in these flashbacks are incredibly out of character and can't stop talking about how "awesome" Texas is.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'':
** "[[SeriesFauxnale The Finale]]" starts off as a clip show by showing scenes from previous episodes as the Wattersons look through their photo album. However, [[BaitAndSwitch this quickly gets dropped]] after Hector's Mom reminds the Wattersons that [[HeroismWontPayTheBills they owe the town large amounts of money to pay for the damages caused by their past actions]]. Afterwards, while events from past episodes are constantly mentioned, only twice are clips from past episodes shown, the first of which is a FullyAutomaticClipShow of Richard's reckless driving.
** "The Compilation" has a FramingDevice of being an inexplicable "best of" video, but only the introduction clips are from previous episodes.
%%** "The Test"
* When ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' was still being shown in theaters, several shorts were compiled in the manner of Bugs telling stories to Yosemite Sam, and at least one where Bugs, as a (possibly) retired multimillionaire tells the story of his life to an unseen reporter; later television reruns often had segments where Bugs (and occasionally Daffy, trying to execute a HostileShowTakeover) acted as the "host" at the beginning and end of the cartoons being shown.

to:

** Parodied in "The "[[Recap/ThePowerpuffGirlsS5EP9SeedNoEvilTheCityOfClipsville The City of Clipsville".Clipsville]]". The episode starts out looking like a clip show, but the clips quickly turn into outrageous, bizarre events that never took place (most infamously the girls growing into teenagers and the Rowdyruff Boys asking them out), and everyone eventually barges into the girls' house to reminisce about rather insipid things like mowing the lawn. Ultimately, it turns out the clip show was a clip, with them at the end saying "Remember when we were remembering things?"
** A more subtle parody happens in "Monkey "[[Recap/ThePowerpuffGirlss3E6ThreeGirlsAndAMonsterMonkeySeeDoggyTwo Monkey See, Doggy Two", Two]]", the sequel SequelEpisode to "Monkey "[[Recap/ThePowerpuffGirlsS1E1MonkeySeeDoggieDoMommyFearest Monkey See, Doggy Do" Do]]" (both of which were also included in clips from "The City of Clipsville"). The episode begins exactly the same way as its predecessor. When the girls realize that [[NeverRecycleYourSchemes Mojo Jojo is reusing his previous plan]], they quickly confront him... and he reveals that he's made a new plan by [[SurveillanceAsThePlotDemands looking at the footage from his old one]] to figure out what he did wrong. [[EvilGloating He then shows the footage]], which are clips from the original episode, [[{{MST}} as the four provide commentary.]]
* Parodied in the final episode of the ''WesternAnimation/SamAndMaxFreelancePolice'' cartoon. While captured by the most memorable villains of the series, Sam and Max reminisce about things that never happened in the show. They continue to do this while escaping.
* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' parodies this in "City on the Edge of Forever," where the children recall incidents from past episodes, but their stories increasingly diverge from the original episodes. Eventually, the kids start lampshading the fact that the original stories didn't happen quite like that. Ultimately the episode is explained away as AllJustADream of Cartman's, which then turns out to be a DreamWithinADream of Stan's, who notes "I must have some serious emotional problems!"
* ''WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce'' episode "Grim Reaper Gutters" started out as a subversion of a clip show where at least a couple of the flashback turned out to be camera footage secretly compiled by Frylock and Meatwad. [[spoiler: Their clip show ends when Meatwad, faced with his depressing and meaningless life, kills himself.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/DuckDodgers'' uses a subversion in "Deconstructing Dodgers", where specific episodes and incidents are mentioned, but the actual clips shown are outtakes, unused gags or even one-shot jokes with no setup or context whatsoever.
* Played with in the ''WesternAnimation/MikeTysonMysteries'' episode "My Favorite Mystery". The Mystery Team gets stuck in an elevator with an old man and begin reminiscing about their favorite mysteries, all of them being extended clips from the ActionHoggingOpening rather than clips from previous episodes. The old man then reveals that he was present for about half of them, having been part of the bank robbery that Marquess tried to stop, then used the money to create the dinosaurs and the samurai robot Mike crashed a jet into, and was also the guy in kabuki makeup that Mike punched in the opening.
* Subverted in ''[[WesternAnimation/TotalDrama Total Drama Action]]'', where the contestants briefly return to Camp Wawanakwa from the first season.
-->'''Chris:''' If you need to take a moment to reminisce about the great times you had here...\\
'''Everyone else:''' ''[laugh for a rather long time]''\\
'''Chris:''' Fine. We'll skip the good memories montage.
* There's an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' in which Wanda and Timmy show clips to prove what a good godparent, friend, and humor generator Cosmo is -- but they're all things that must've happened between episodes.
* ''{{WesternAnimation/Motorcity}}'' did this with the episode "Threat Level: Texas" in which Texas retells events that happened in "Power Trip," "The Duke of Detroit" and "Going Dutch" only to match his SelfServingMemory, so believes that all the good ideas and [=KaneCo=] attacks were performed by him instead of Mike. Everyone in these flashbacks are incredibly out of character and can't stop talking about how "awesome" Texas is.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'':
** "[[SeriesFauxnale The Finale]]" starts off as a clip show by showing scenes from previous episodes as the Wattersons look through their photo album. However, [[BaitAndSwitch this quickly gets dropped]] after Hector's Mom reminds the Wattersons that [[HeroismWontPayTheBills they owe the town large amounts of money to pay for the damages caused by their past actions]]. Afterwards, while events from past episodes are constantly mentioned, only twice are clips from past episodes shown, the first of which is a FullyAutomaticClipShow of Richard's reckless driving.
** "The Compilation" has a FramingDevice of being an inexplicable "best of" video, but only the introduction clips are from previous episodes.
%%** "The Test"
* When ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' was still being shown in theaters, several shorts were compiled in the manner of Bugs telling stories to Yosemite Sam, and at least one where Bugs, as a (possibly) retired multimillionaire tells the story of his life to an unseen reporter; later television reruns often had segments where Bugs (and occasionally Daffy, trying to execute a HostileShowTakeover) acted as the "host" at the beginning and end of the cartoons being shown.
commentary]].



** In the episode "Total Rickall", the Smith household is invaded by alien parasites that multiply by implanting fake memories into people's heads, and taking on the form of a random, zany character. The parasite multiplies every time someone has a fake flashback, leading to a whole lot of fake flashbacks and colorful characters appearing out of nowhere. Eventually, the Smiths realize they can tell which family members are real by remembering ''bad'' memories of them, and the resulting flashbacks are real but new to the audience.
** "Morty's Mind Blowers" is what [[BreakingTheFourthWall Rick downright admits]] is "a clip show made of ''clips you never sawwww!!!''"
* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'' has an episode ''literally'' named "BottleEpisode". It features the Titans getting stuck in a giant bottle and remembering the past through clips. It features almost nothing but lampshadings on the topic, with Robin being angry that they're remembering the past instead of singing new songs and having adventures while the others complain that trips cost money and try to make Robin believe that flashbacks aren't boring.
** There was also "Garage Sale", which did this with items (like the Mumfie example above) rather than clips of the show.
** "Had To Be There" had flashbacks to four previous episodes.
* ''Amy's Mythic Mornings'' has an episode dedicated to simply playing all the songs from earlier episodes without story.
* ''WesternAnimation/LittleCharmers'' has several episodes like "Magic of Charmville" which is 95% clips. It gets especially weird when they air this prior to some of the episodes the clips are from.
* The ''Literature/RottenRalph'' animated series had a clip show episode in "Ralph's Bedside Manner", where the FramingDevice consisted of Ralph tending to his owner Sarah while she is sick and attempting to disprove everyone's claims that he is bad at helping others.
* The ''WesternAnimation/BigCityGreens'' episode "Cheap Show" invokes and parodies this by Bill telling this family to reminisce about previous adventures, such as the time they got [[PersonaNonGrata banned from a seafood restaurant]] ("Fill Bill"). However, the family is not buying it, and instead, the episode escalates with Alice remembering an event incorrectly, Tilly using storyboards to illustrate her battling a {{Kaiju}}, and Cricket ''literally'' BreakingTheFourthWall.
* The ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks'' episode "Caves" takes the piss out of this trope and a few others connected to the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Boimler, Mariner, Rutherford and Tendi are all trapped inside a cave and, in an attempt to escape, start telling stories of being trapped in caves. Not only are these incidents new, they proceed to piss off the characters because they were hanging out with other people. The one story that even remotely tries to play this straight, Tendi's, not only ''doesn't'' take place in a cave (it takes place in a stuck turbolift on the ''Cerritos''), it takes place ''at the very end of the episode it's flashbacking to''!

to:

** In the episode "Total Rickall", "[[Recap/RickAndMortyS2E4TotalRickall Total Rickall]]", the Smith household is invaded by alien parasites that multiply by implanting fake memories FakeMemories into people's heads, heads and taking on the form of a random, zany character. The parasite multiplies every time someone has a fake flashback, leading to a whole lot of fake flashbacks and colorful characters appearing out of nowhere. Eventually, the Smiths realize they can tell which family members are real by remembering ''bad'' memories of them, and the resulting flashbacks are real but new to the audience.
** "Morty's "[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E8MortysMindBlowers Morty's Mind Blowers" Blowers]]" is what [[BreakingTheFourthWall Rick downright admits]] is "a clip show made of ''clips you never sawwww!!!''"
sawwww!''".
* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'' The ''Literature/RottenRalph'' animated series has an a clip show episode in "Ralph's Bedside Manner", the FramingDevice of which consists of Ralph tending to his owner Sarah while she is sick and attempting to disprove everyone's claims that he is bad at helping others.
* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' parodies this in "[[Recap/SouthParkS2E7CityOnTheEdgeOfForever City on the Edge of Forever]]", in which the children recall incidents from past episodes, but their stories increasingly diverge from the original episodes. Eventually, the kids start lampshading the fact that the original stories didn't happen quite like that. Ultimately the episode is explained away as AllJustADream of Cartman's, which then turns out to be a DreamWithinADream of Stan's, who notes "I must have some serious emotional problems!".
* The ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekLowerDecksS4E08Caves Caves]]" takes the piss out of this trope and a few others connected to the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Boimler, Mariner, Rutherford and Tendi are all trapped inside a cave and, in an attempt to escape, start telling stories of being trapped in caves. Not only are these incidents new, they proceed to piss off the characters because they were hanging out with other people. The one story that even remotely tries to play this straight, Tendi's, not only ''doesn't'' take place in a cave (it takes place in a stuck turbolift on the ''Cerritos''), it takes place ''at the very end of the episode it's flashbacking to''!
* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'':
** "[[Recap/TeenTitansGoS3E21GarageSale Garage Sale]]" does this with items (like the ''WesternAnimation/MagicAdventuresOfMumfie'' example in the above folder) rather than clips of the show.
** A BottleEpisode
''literally'' named "BottleEpisode". It titled "[[Recap/TeenTitansGoS3E29BottleEpisode Bottle Episode]]" features the Titans getting stuck in a giant bottle and remembering the past through clips. It features almost nothing but lampshadings on the topic, with Robin being angry that they're remembering the past instead of singing new songs and having adventures while the others complain that trips cost money and try to make Robin believe that flashbacks aren't boring.
** There was also "Garage Sale", which did this with items (like the Mumfie example above) rather than clips of the show.
** "Had To Be There" had
"[[Recap/TeenTitansGoS5E42HadToBeThere Had to be There]]" has flashbacks to four previous episodes.
* ''Amy's Mythic Mornings'' has an episode dedicated to simply playing all the songs from earlier episodes without story.
* ''WesternAnimation/LittleCharmers'' has several episodes like "Magic of Charmville"
Subverted in ''WesternAnimation/TotalDrama Action'', in which is 95% clips. It gets especially weird when they air this prior to some of the episodes contestants briefly return to Camp Wawanakwa from the clips are from.
* The ''Literature/RottenRalph'' animated series had a clip show episode in "Ralph's Bedside Manner", where the FramingDevice consisted of Ralph tending
first season.
-->'''Chris:''' If you need
to his owner Sarah while she is sick and attempting to disprove everyone's claims that he is bad at helping others.
* The ''WesternAnimation/BigCityGreens'' episode "Cheap Show" invokes and parodies this by Bill telling this family
take a moment to reminisce about previous adventures, such as the time they got [[PersonaNonGrata banned from great times you had here...\\
''[Everyone else laughs for
a seafood restaurant]] ("Fill Bill"). However, rather long time]''\\
'''Chris:''' Fine. We'll skip
the family is not buying it, and instead, the episode escalates with Alice remembering an event incorrectly, Tilly using storyboards to illustrate her battling a {{Kaiju}}, and Cricket ''literally'' BreakingTheFourthWall.
* The ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks'' episode "Caves" takes the piss out of this trope and a few others connected to the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Boimler, Mariner, Rutherford and Tendi are all trapped inside a cave and, in an attempt to escape, start telling stories of being trapped in caves. Not only are these incidents new, they proceed to piss off the characters because they were hanging out with other people. The one story that even remotely tries to play this straight, Tendi's, not only ''doesn't'' take place in a cave (it takes place in a stuck turbolift on the ''Cerritos''), it takes place ''at the very end of the episode it's flashbacking to''!
good memories montage.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* The ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks'' episode "Caves" takes the piss out of this trope and a few others connected to the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Boimler, Mariner, Rutherford and Tendi are all trapped inside a cave and, in an attempt to escape, start telling stories of being trapped in caves. Not only are these incidents new, they proceed to piss off the characters because they were hanging out with other people. The one story that even remotely tries to play this straight, Tendi's, not only ''doesn't'' take place in a cave (it takes place in a stuck turbolift on the ''Cerritos''), it takes place ''at the very end of the episode it's flashbacking to''!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** There is also the episode "This Is Your Backstory", which is a much more traditional clip show. Dr. Doofenschmirtz makes a device that will use all of his tragic backstories to make his more evil. It also comes off as a not-quite-successful attempt to organize his numerous backstories.

to:

** There is also the episode "This Is Your Backstory", which is a much more traditional clip show. Dr. Doofenschmirtz Doofenshmirtz makes a device that will use all of his tragic backstories to make his more evil. It also comes off as a not-quite-successful attempt to organize his numerous backstories.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** "Another Simpsons Clip Show" (Season 6): After reading ''Literature/TheBridgesOfMadisonCounty'', Marge decides to gather the family in the kitchen so they can discuss their love lives (most of which ended in tragedy [Bart getting his heart broken by Laura from "New Kid on the Block" and Lisa yelling at Ralph in "I Love Lisa") or near-infidelity (Homer almost sleeping with his coworker Mindy in "The Last Temptation of Homer" and Marge almost driving to Jacques the French bowler's house in "Life in the Fast Lane"). Notable for intentionally taking the concept to its extreme by having next to no new footage for its framing scenes: the kitchen sequence used for most of the episode was reused from Season 2's "One Fish, Two Fish, Blowfish, Blue Fish", and one of the only other scenes was similarly recycled from Season 1's "Krusty Gets Busted" (meaning it looks notably less polished than the surrounding footage), with only the very first scene featuring new animation. (Even the couch gag was recycled.) Also notable for this exchange:

to:

** "Another Simpsons Clip Show" (Season 6): After reading ''Literature/TheBridgesOfMadisonCounty'', Marge decides to gather the family in the kitchen so they can discuss their love lives (most lives, most of which ended in tragedy [Bart (Bart getting his heart broken by Laura from "New Kid on the Block" and Lisa yelling at Ralph in "I Love Lisa") or near-infidelity (Homer almost sleeping with his coworker Mindy in "The Last Temptation of Homer" and Marge almost driving to Jacques the French bowler's house in "Life in the Fast Lane"). Notable for intentionally taking the concept to its extreme by having next to no new footage for its framing scenes: the kitchen sequence used for most of the episode was reused from Season 2's "One Fish, Two Fish, Blowfish, Blue Fish", and one of the only other scenes was similarly recycled from Season 1's "Krusty Gets Busted" (meaning it looks notably less polished than the surrounding footage), with only the very first scene featuring new animation. (Even the couch gag was recycled.) Also notable for this exchange:
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* The ''WesternAnimation/BigCityGreens'' episode "Cheap Show" invokes and parodies this by Bill telling this family to reminisce about previous adventures, such as the time they got [[PersonaNonGrata banned from a seafood restaurant]] ("Fill Bill"). However, the family is not buying it, and instead, the episode escalates with Alice remembering an event incorrectly, Tilly using storyboards to illustrate her battling a {{Kaiju}}, and Cricket ''literally'' BreakingTheFourthWall.
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** "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular" (Season 7): A take on sitcom retrospective episodes of the 1970s (like the ''Series/ThreesCompany'' example mentioned above). It had Troy [=McClure=] hosting a retrospective of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', showing viewers the show's early years as animated filler on ''Series/TheTraceyUllmanShow'', deleted scenes from popular episodes (all of which are real, according to WordOfGod), including the infamous "Robotic Richard Simmons" scene from season 5's "Burns' Heir" and the alternate ending to "Who Shot Mr. Burns?: Part 2", portraying Matt Groening as a bald, drunken gun nut (instead of a bearded, bespectacled nerd), and, of course, "[[NakedPeopleAreFunny hard-core nudity]]!". Interestingly, this is the only Simpsons episode animated entirely in the United States. Usually considered the best clip-show of the series, thanks to some sharp writing, a strong performance from Creator/PhilHartman, and the fact that the material shown was very difficult to find otherwise prior to the release of the DVD boxsets.

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** "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular" (Season 7): A take on sitcom retrospective episodes of the 1970s (like the ''Series/ThreesCompany'' example mentioned above).on the Live-Action TV subpage). It had Troy [=McClure=] hosting a retrospective of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', showing viewers the show's early years as animated filler on ''Series/TheTraceyUllmanShow'', deleted scenes from popular episodes (all of which are real, according to WordOfGod), including the infamous "Robotic Richard Simmons" scene from season 5's "Burns' Heir" and the alternate ending to "Who Shot Mr. Burns?: Part 2", portraying Matt Groening as a bald, drunken gun nut (instead of a bearded, bespectacled nerd), and, of course, "[[NakedPeopleAreFunny hard-core nudity]]!". Interestingly, this is the only Simpsons episode animated entirely in the United States. Usually considered the best clip-show of the series, thanks to some sharp writing, a strong performance from Creator/PhilHartman, and the fact that the material shown was very difficult to find otherwise prior to the release of the DVD boxsets.



* ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'': In the 100th episode, ''Music/OneDirection'' lock themselves in a room, in order to focus on writing a great song. However, ''MAD'' comes on the TV, and they are mysteriously unable to turn it off. As they're forced to watch clips of the show, they sing "Worst Show Ever", a parody of "Best Song Ever".

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* ''WesternAnimation/{{Mad}}'': In the 100th episode, ''Music/OneDirection'' Music/OneDirection lock themselves in a room, in order to focus on writing a great song. However, ''MAD'' comes on the TV, and they are mysteriously unable to turn it off. As they're forced to watch clips of the show, they sing "Worst Show Ever", a parody of "Best Song Ever".



* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has six of these. The episodes take place before Twilight's coronation as ruler of Equestria, and her friends make her a memory book as a gift. Despite being made during production of Season 9, the clip shows still have yet to appear in the US, even after the presence of My Little Pony: A New Generation.

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* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has six of these. The episodes take place before Twilight's coronation as ruler of Equestria, and her friends make her a memory book as a gift. Despite being made during production of Season 9, the clip shows still have yet to appear in the US, even after the presence of My Little Pony: A New Generation.''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyANewGeneration''.



** "Morty's Mind Blowers" is what [[BreakingTheFourthWall Rick downright admits]] that is "a clip show made of ''clips you never sawwww!!!''"

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** "Morty's Mind Blowers" is what [[BreakingTheFourthWall Rick downright admits]] that is "a clip show made of ''clips you never sawwww!!!''"

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