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*** Of note, this is a case of [[GratuitousEnglish Gratuitous Gaelic]], as the Japanese misspelled ''and'' mispronounced '''geis''' (alternatively ''geas'' in Scots Gaelic), which is pronounced more like "ghehsh," and most certainly not the katakana "ghee-ahss".
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*** One issue had an article about Trinity Blood with an aside picture that incorrectly identified Count Gyula as Cain.
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* During a ''Trainer's Choice'' quiz during the Hoenn season, they asked which Pokémon evolved into Seviper. The answer was Arbok. Arbok doesn't evolve at all, and Seviper doesn't evolve from anything, so breeding Seviper doesn't get an Ekans (which evolves into Arbok). While this was quickly picked up as ammo against 4Kids (who, as in the movie example above, either didn't notice or didn't change the mistake) it later turned out that they got quiz questions and answers from Pokémon USA -- ''the company in charge of the franchise''. Apparently, the employee they stuck with that role hadn't paid enough attention to the episodes in early Hoenn where Jessie releases Arbok and then catches a Seviper.
* "[[http://www.deseretnews.com/article/731922/ Pikachu, a character from the popular children's television show ''"Pokeman"'' (...)]]"

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* The TropeNamer is from the anime series ''CowboyBebop''. The character pictured is not named "Cowboy Bebop" and is actually female. She goes by "Ed" for most of the show. "[=BeBop=]" in the anime's title refers to the main characters' ship, the [=BeBop=], as well as the music style featured in the soundtrack. "Cowboy," the slang term for "bounty hunter" used in the world of the series, refers to the main characters' profession. In an ironic inversion of the trope, "Cowboy [=BeBop=]" is actually the correct lower-case spelling of the series title, which is almost always spelled "Cowboy Bebop" by fans.

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* The TropeNamer is from the anime series ''CowboyBebop''. The character pictured is not named "Cowboy Bebop" and is actually female. She goes by "Ed" for most of the show. "[=BeBop=]" in the anime's title refers to the main characters' ship, the [=BeBop=], as well as the music style featured in the soundtrack. "Cowboy," the slang term for "bounty hunter" used in the world of the series, refers to the main characters' profession. In an ironic inversion of the trope, "Cowboy [=BeBop=]" is actually the correct lower-case spelling of the series title, which is almost always spelled "Cowboy Bebop" by fans.



* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[{{Hentai}} h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[DidNotDoTheResearch Did not do the research]], indeed.

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* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[{{Hentai}} h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[DidNotDoTheResearch Did not do the research]], indeed.indeed.
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* A review of the ''{{Digimon}}'' apparently never actually saw the movie, as she claimed that "the original Digidestined children are abducted by Diaboromon, and a new group of kids must save them". The same malicious lie was perpetrated by the back of the VHS and Fox Kids' official site. Diaboromon never abducted anyone. He just stalked a twelve-year old boy and then tried to blow up the world. Then, when the new kids get involved, it isn't even to deal with Diaboromon. It's to deal with Antylamon/Cherubimon.

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* A review reviewer of the ''{{Digimon}}'' movie apparently never actually saw the movie, it, as she claimed that "the original Digidestined children are abducted by Diaboromon, and a new group of kids must save them". The same malicious lie was perpetrated by the back of the VHS and Fox Kids' official site. Diaboromon never abducted anyone. He just stalked a twelve-year old boy and then tried to blow up the world. Then, when the new kids get involved, it isn't even to deal with Diaboromon. It's to deal with Antylamon/Cherubimon.
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** This troper frequently sees character figurines from shows like SailorMoon, TokyoMewMew, and OjamajoDoremi being sold as "Pink one, Blue one, Yellow one, Green one, Orange one, Purple one, etc." with "girl" sometimes replaced by "character" , "girl" , etc. ''VERY'' rarely they may say "Sailor", "Mew Mew" or "Ojamajo," but one wonders why, if they knew that much, why they wouldn't just use the character's names.

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** This troper frequently sees character figurines from shows like SailorMoon, TokyoMewMew, and OjamajoDoremi being sold as "Pink one, Blue one, Yellow one, Green one, Orange one, Purple one, etc." with "girl" "one" sometimes replaced by "character" , "girl" , etc. ''VERY'' rarely they may say "Sailor", "Mew Mew" or "Ojamajo," but one wonders why, if they knew that much, why they wouldn't just use the character's names.
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** This troper frequently sees character figurines from shows like SailorMoon, TokyoMewMew, and OjamajoDoremi being sold as "Pink one, Blue one, Yellow one, Green one, Orange one, Purple one, etc." with "girl" sometimes replaced by "character" , "girl" , etc. ''VERY'' rarely they may say "Sailor", "Mew Mew" or "Ojamajo," but one wonders why, if they knew that much, why they wouldn't just use the character's names.
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* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[hentai h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[DidNotDoTheResearch Did not do the research]], indeed.

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* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[hentai [[{{Hentai}} h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[DidNotDoTheResearch Did not do the research]], indeed.

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The Boondocks =/= anime. Although it is similar.


* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[hentai h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[didnotdotheresearch Did not do the research]], indeed.
* TheBoondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. It seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes, and concluded what the show was about.

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* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[hentai h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[didnotdotheresearch [[DidNotDoTheResearch Did not do the research]], indeed.
* TheBoondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. It seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes, and concluded what the show was about.
indeed.
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* TheBoondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. It seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.

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* TheBoondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. It seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.clothes, and concluded what the show was about.
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* The Boondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. It seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.

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* The Boondocks TheBoondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. It seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.
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* The Boondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. UnfortunateImplications may also apply since it seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.

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* The Boondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. UnfortunateImplications may also apply since it It seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.
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* The Boondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. [[UnfortunateImplications]] may also apply since it seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.

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* The Boondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. [[UnfortunateImplications]] UnfortunateImplications may also apply since it seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.
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* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[hentai h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[didnotdotheresearch Did not do the research]], indeed.

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* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[hentai h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[didnotdotheresearch Did not do the research]], indeed.indeed.
*The Boondocks suffered from this a few times. One smaller case was its very small, bottom of the page sum up for Newtype USA. Huey and Riley were described as gangsters from the hood who get into trouble in the suburbs. Many things can be assumed just by looking at a few scenes, but calling both Huey and Riley gangsters is easily offensive. Perhaps Riley, though he falls under wannabe territory, and this can only be concluded when you see him in the show. Huey is as far from this as humanly possible. And the plot summary is also thin, even for a small box summary. [[UnfortunateImplications]] may also apply since it seems the whoever wrote the summary simply saw a two black boys with cornrows,an afro, wearing baggy clothes.
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added example


* One has to wonder what SouljaBoy could have meant in his song "[[http://limelinx.com/files/1503452cfa80c3783a6b688e88dceba9 Anime]]", declaring he's "looking like DeathNote, looking like CaseClosed", etc.

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* One has to wonder what SouljaBoy could have meant in his song "[[http://limelinx.com/files/1503452cfa80c3783a6b688e88dceba9 Anime]]", declaring he's "looking like DeathNote, looking like CaseClosed", etc.etc.
* A fairly recent example: the American Family Association wrote an article on the dangers of video games and this somehow segued into [[hentai h-games]]. This would've been fine and all....except the article mispelt it as 'hentia'. Again, wouldn't have been a problem except the article KEPT ON spelling it in that manner. [[didnotdotheresearch Did not do the research]], indeed.

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* Sort of a minor one, but on the back cover of the English translations of the HaruhiSuzumiya light novels, Kyon is described as the "guy who sits behind Haruhi in homeroom", when in reality, Haruhi is the one who sits behind Kyon in homeroom. That fact is referred to frequently in the novel, with Kyon lamenting the fact that whenever they are assigned seats in class, Haruhi's always ends up behind his.

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* Sort of a minor one, but on the back cover of the English translations of the HaruhiSuzumiya ''HaruhiSuzumiya'' light novels, Kyon is described as the "guy who sits behind Haruhi in homeroom", when in reality, Haruhi is the one who sits behind Kyon in homeroom. That fact is referred to frequently in the novel, with Kyon lamenting the fact that whenever they are assigned seats in class, Haruhi's always ends up behind his.his.
** The description of Novel 4 lists [[ArtificialHuman Yuki Nagato]] as a [[TimeTravel time-traveling]] [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot robot]]. While the time-traveling part could technically be correct (if you count her ability to freeze time and synchronize memories with her future self as "time travel"), it sort of [[CompletelyMissingThePoint misses the point]] because "time traveler" means something entirely different within the series (in the more traditional sense, it's someone who's physically come to the present from the future). The robot part, on the other hand, is all wrong; while she isn't exactly human, she is an organic lifeform.
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** They even have the phonetic spelling of Geass wrong.
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** The website of the German network that aired Yu-Gi-Oh provided us with hilariously ill-researched character descriptions. To provide a few examples: Yami was banned because he tried to seize the throne of the pharao with his shadow powers, Shizuka is blind, Anzu (MsFanservice in the early manga) is eleven years old and has been the boss of a cheerleader-group for years, and Seto became the CEO of KaibaCorp by beating Gozaburo at another game of chess, not to mention that he's two years older than everybody else. Suprisingly subverted with Bakura, whose sister Amane they mention.
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* Sort of a minor one, but on the back cover description English translations of the HaruhiSuzumiya light novels, Kyon is described as the "guy who sits behind Haruhi in homeroom", when in reality, Haruhi is the one who sits behind Kyon in homeroom. That fact is referred to frequently in the novel, with Kyon lamenting the fact that whenever they are assigned seats in class, Haruhi's always ends up behind his.

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* Sort of a minor one, but on the back cover description of the English translations of the HaruhiSuzumiya light novels, Kyon is described as the "guy who sits behind Haruhi in homeroom", when in reality, Haruhi is the one who sits behind Kyon in homeroom. That fact is referred to frequently in the novel, with Kyon lamenting the fact that whenever they are assigned seats in class, Haruhi's always ends up behind his.
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A small mention


* Sort of a minor one, but on the back cover description English translations of the HaruhiSuzumiya light novels, Kyon is described as the "guy who sits behind Haruhi in homeroom", when in reality, Haruhi is the one who sits behind Kyon in homeroom. That fact is referred to frequently in the novel, with Kyon lamenting the fact that whenever they are assigned seats in class, Haruhi's always ends up behind his.



* One has to wonder what SouljaBoy could have meant in his song "[[http://limelinx.com/files/1503452cfa80c3783a6b688e88dceba9 Anime]]", declaring he's "looking like DeathNote, looking like CaseClosed", etc.

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* One has to wonder what SouljaBoy could have meant in his song "[[http://limelinx.com/files/1503452cfa80c3783a6b688e88dceba9 Anime]]", declaring he's "looking like DeathNote, looking like CaseClosed", etc.
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* An [[http://www.dailyemerald.com/media/storage/paper859/news/2007/10/15/Opinion/Japanese.Anime.Destroying.American.Society-3032463.shtml?reffeature=recentlycommentedstoriestab article]] on the Oregon Daily Emerald criticizing anime for destroying American society says that ''[=~Pokémon~=]'', ''{{Digimon}}'', and ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh}}'' (which at first is spelled "Yugio", but after that, "sorry, Yu-Gi-Oh!") all began life as trading card games. In reality, while they all have had card games, none of them started out as that. ''Pokémon'' began life as a Nintendo game created by Game Freak (and the card game came to the U.S. just a few months ''after'' the video game was released there), ''Digimon'' was originally a virtual pet (hence "Digimon", or Digital Monsters), and ''Yu-Gi-Oh!'' started out as a manga written by Kazuki Takahashi.

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* An [[http://www.dailyemerald.com/media/storage/paper859/news/2007/10/15/Opinion/Japanese.Anime.Destroying.American.Society-3032463.shtml?reffeature=recentlycommentedstoriestab article]] on the Oregon Daily Emerald criticizing anime for destroying American society says that ''[=~Pokémon~=]'', ''{{Digimon}}'', and ''{{Yu-Gi-Oh}}'' (which at first is spelled "Yugio", but after that, "sorry, Yu-Gi-Oh!") all began life as trading card games. In reality, while they all have had card games, none of them started out as that. ''Pokémon'' began life as a Nintendo game pair of Game Boy games created by Game Freak (and the card game came to the U.S. just a few months ''after'' the video game was released there), ''Digimon'' was originally a virtual pet (hence "Digimon", or Digital Monsters), and ''Yu-Gi-Oh!'' started out as a manga written by Kazuki Takahashi.



* In Mexico, in the year 2000 an "investigative program" called "El Ojo del Huracán" (transmitted over TV Azteca) released once a documentary about Satanism, where it blamed the perversion of youth to [=~Pokémon~=], and presented a lot of facts which made [[DidNotDoTheResearch NO DAMN SENSE WHATSOEVER]], like for example, Pikachu spelled backwards meant "More powerful than God" [[AsLongAsItSoundsForeign in Hebrew]], Gyarados meant "Great Orgy", and Alakazam was a representation of Satan because its head formed five points; and also, mentioning the wrong names to several Pokémon. The sad part, a lot of people actually believed it and it began a nation-wide witch hunt against everything that was about Pokémon.
** Made much worse because the whole "investigative report" was made only to destroy the success that Pokémon was enjoying on a rival channel, and taking in account TV Azteca just had bought the rights for several Disney cartoons...

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* In Mexico, in the year 2000 an "investigative program" called "El Ojo del Huracán" (transmitted over TV Azteca) released once a documentary about Satanism, where it blamed the perversion of youth to [=~Pokémon~=], and presented a lot of facts which made [[DidNotDoTheResearch NO DAMN SENSE WHATSOEVER]], like for example, Pikachu spelled backwards meant "More powerful than God" [[AsLongAsItSoundsForeign in Hebrew]], Gyarados meant "Great Orgy", and Alakazam was a representation of Satan because its head formed five points; and also, mentioning the wrong names to of several Pokémon. The sad part, part is that a lot of people actually believed it and it began a nation-wide witch hunt against everything that was about Pokémon.
** Made much worse because the whole "investigative report" was made only to destroy the success that the Pokémon anime was enjoying on a rival channel, and taking in account TV Azteca just had bought the rights for several Disney cartoons...
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* A newspaper article about various ways people are trying to encourage literacy through video games and online games had a fail moment when they mentioned one kid who found Death Note through surfing on the internet. They said that Death Note is a series of novels based on videogames.
** From the same article, they said that xxxHolic is "A series of graphic novels based off Japanese manga cartoons". This troper isn't sure whether this is a case of Department of Redundancy Department or just a straight Epic Fail.
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* An article about various ways people are trying to encourage literacy through video games and online games had one fail moment when they mentioned one kid who found Death Note through surfing on the internet. They said that Death Note is a series of novels based on videogames.
** From the same article, they said that xxxHolic is a series of graphic novels based of "Japanese manga cartoons". This troper isn't sure whether this is a case of Department of Redundancy Department or just a straight Epic Fail.

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* An A newspaper article about various ways people are trying to encourage literacy through video games and online games had one a fail moment when they mentioned one kid who found Death Note through surfing on the internet. They said that Death Note is a series of novels based on videogames.
** From the same article, they said that xxxHolic is a "A series of graphic novels based of "Japanese off Japanese manga cartoons". This troper isn't sure whether this is a case of Department of Redundancy Department or just a straight Epic Fail.
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* One has to wonder what SouljaBoy could have meant in his song "[[http://limelinx.com/files/1503452cfa80c3783a6b688e88dceba9 Anime]]", declaring he's "looking like DeathNote, looking like CaseClosed", etc.

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* One has to wonder what SouljaBoy could have meant in his song "[[http://limelinx.com/files/1503452cfa80c3783a6b688e88dceba9 Anime]]", declaring he's "looking like DeathNote, looking like CaseClosed", etc.etc.
* An article about various ways people are trying to encourage literacy through video games and online games had one fail moment when they mentioned one kid who found Death Note through surfing on the internet. They said that Death Note is a series of novels based on videogames.
** From the same article, they said that xxxHolic is a series of graphic novels based of "Japanese manga cartoons". This troper isn't sure whether this is a case of Department of Redundancy Department or just a straight Epic Fail.
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* An in-media example for ''GundamSousei'': a newspaper announcing the release of the Gundam movie features a picture of [[ActionGirl Sayla]], while captioning it as "the hero, Amuron".

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* An in-media example for ''GundamSousei'': a newspaper announcing the release of the Gundam movie features a picture of [[ActionGirl Sayla]], while captioning it as "the hero, Amuron".Amuron".
* One has to wonder what SouljaBoy could have meant in his song "[[http://limelinx.com/files/1503452cfa80c3783a6b688e88dceba9 Anime]]", declaring he's "looking like DeathNote, looking like CaseClosed", etc.
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* A recent midwest US article claimed that the local library would show "two or three episodes of an anime series, such as [[FullMetalPanic Full Metal Panic!]], '''[[{{Clamp}} Clamp]]''' or [[DeathNote Death Note]]." Somehow I really don't think this is the first time the mangaka group has been [[DidNotDoTheResearch mistaken for an actual series]]...
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** And the other Tokyopop series about "swingers" referenced in that article is obviously ''MarmaladeBoy.''
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since the separation, the pic is no more here. Removed the reference to it.


* The TropeNamer pictured above is from the anime series ''CowboyBebop''. The character pictured is not named "Cowboy Bebop" and is actually female. She goes by "Ed" for most of the show. "[=BeBop=]" in the anime's title refers to the main characters' ship, the [=BeBop=], as well as the music style featured in the soundtrack. "Cowboy," the slang term for "bounty hunter" used in the world of the series, refers to the main characters' profession. In an ironic inversion of the trope, "Cowboy [=BeBop=]" is actually the correct lower-case spelling of the series title, which is almost always spelled "Cowboy Bebop" by fans.

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* The TropeNamer pictured above is from the anime series ''CowboyBebop''. The character pictured is not named "Cowboy Bebop" and is actually female. She goes by "Ed" for most of the show. "[=BeBop=]" in the anime's title refers to the main characters' ship, the [=BeBop=], as well as the music style featured in the soundtrack. "Cowboy," the slang term for "bounty hunter" used in the world of the series, refers to the main characters' profession. In an ironic inversion of the trope, "Cowboy [=BeBop=]" is actually the correct lower-case spelling of the series title, which is almost always spelled "Cowboy Bebop" by fans.
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* According to the Verizon television listings, one of the shows on the current {{Funimation}} Channel lineup is [[{{ptitlej8ixspaskltm}} Dr. Gray-Man]]

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* According to the Verizon television listings, one of the shows on the current {{Funimation}} Channel lineup is [[{{ptitlej8ixspaskltm}} Dr. Gray-Man]]Gray-Man]]
* An in-media example for ''GundamSousei'': a newspaper announcing the release of the Gundam movie features a picture of [[ActionGirl Sayla]], while captioning it as "the hero, Amuron".
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[[quoteright:300:[[CowboyBebop http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/CowboyBebopClip.jpg]]]]

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