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* ''Literature/{{Underground}}'': Andrew's lie to get backstage is that he's on the medical team. Then someone from the actual medical team who heard about him grabs him and he really gets put on the medical team. [[spoiler:Only Mark doesn't believe his bluff]].
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** George once created a fake charity called The Human Fund so he could tell coworkers he made charitable donations in their name without actually doing anything (besides printing the cards). His boss hands George a company check for $20,000. When the accountants tell the boss something's up, he confronts George, and George admits he lied...because he didn't want to admit his family celebrates "Festivus", not Christmas. This is an [[ChekhovsGun alternative holiday George's dad made up]], so George takes his boss to the "celebrations" to prove they're real.
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* In ''Fanfic/InfinityTrainBlossomingTrail'', Grace Monroe, like in canon, boasted that she ''totally knows'' how the Train works because she has such a huge number compared to Simons. It turns out she never knew but she would never swallow her pride about it. So a decade later when she's the leader of the cult that has been going around slaughtering denizens, stealing from them and boasting that she doesn't give a fuck about who she hurts, denizens and passnegers are hunting her down to destroy everything she created.
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* ''Radio/OurMissBrooks'': Miss Brooks wants to burrow Mr. Conklin's tools to build herself a night-table . . . unfortunately, Mr. Conklin won't lend his tools to amateurs. Walter Denton "helps" Miss Brooks by describing her as an expert carpenter, who even built her landlady, Mrs. Davis, a gazebo in the backyard. Mr. Conklin, instead of lending Miss Brooks his tools, decides to have Miss Brooks build him a new garage.

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* ''Radio/OurMissBrooks'': In "Do-It-Yourself", Miss Brooks wants would like to burrow borrow Mr. Conklin's tools to build herself a night-table . . . unfortunately, night-table. Unfortunately, Mr. Conklin won't lend his tools to amateurs. Walter Denton "helps" Miss Brooks by describing her as an expert carpenter, who even built her landlady, Mrs. Davis, a gazebo in the backyard. Mr. Conklin, instead of lending Miss Brooks his tools, decides to have Miss Brooks build him a new garage.
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* ''Radio/OurMissBrooks'': Miss Brooks wants to burrow Mr. Conklin's tools to build herself a night-table . . . unfortunately, Mr. Conklin won't lend his tools to amateurs. Walter Denton "helps" Miss Brooks by describing her as an expert carpenter, who even built her landlady, Mrs. Davis, a gazebo in the backyard. Mr. Conklin, instead of lending Miss Brooks his tools, decides to have Miss Brooks build him a new garage.


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* ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' In "Allowance Day", Huey, Dewey and Louie trick Scrooge into believing Friday is really Saturday, so they can get their allowance early and buy a scooter that's on sale. Unfortunately, during Scrooge's morning conference call, the yes-men who run Scrooge's accept that it's ''really'' Saturday. The lie spreads to all of Scrooge's business interests, and from there to the entire world. By the time Huey, Dewey and Louie are let out of school (because their teacher informs them that it's ''really'' Saturday) to go to the department store, the sales' ended. And that's just the beginning of their troubles . . . .
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* In an episode of ''Series/{{Spin City}}'', Carter and Nikki make a bet to see who can be the first to get a number from any woman in the bar they're in. The episode ends with Carter on the phone to the woman he talked to, trying and failing to convince her that he's gay.
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* ''Series/BabylonFive'': After the occupation of Narn, Vir sets up a fake Centauri official who [[FakingTheDead fakes the death]] of Narn dissidents and smuggles them off-world. His cover is almost blown when the sheer volume of death certificates coming from his cover identity's office makes a third party investigate what they think is an ongoing genocide.
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[[folder:Real Life]]
* In 1941, Col. Dudley Clarke began an ambitious deception plan intending to convince Italian forces in Eritrea and British Somaliland that the British were intending to launch an invasion of the latter. The intent was that the Italians would pull forces out of Eritrea to reinforce British Somaliland, making the fighting easier for the real invasion of Eritrea. However the deception worked too well and the Italians, unsure if they could hold British Somaliland, pulled their forces out entirely. Into Eritrea. Making the invasion harder than necessary.
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* ''Film/ThePrestige'': Early in the film, after Angier's wife drowns in a magic act gone tragically wrong, his mentor Cutter tries to comfort him by claiming that drowning is a painless, based off the words of a man he knew who almost died that way. [[spoiler:Much later on, Angier begins to murder his ExpendableClones after he is done with then by drowning them in a water tank, convinced that this is [[MercyKill merciful]]. When a horrified Cutter learns what he's doing, he promptly reveals to Angier that drowning is actually an ''incredibly'' painful and terrifying way to die, and the aforementioned man he knew said as much. He lied about it to spare Angier's feelings.]]
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** In "The Miracle Job", the team fakes a religious miracle in a church in order to prevent a CorruptCorporateExecutive from buying the place ({{ShameIfSomethingHappened by hook or by crook]]) and razing it to make a building. The result is that not only is the executive ''more'' interested in getting the church now (so he can exploit it as buyer bait for a faith-themed mall) but calls in the official investigators from the Vatican to authenticate (expecting they'll either put the Vatican's seal on his new project, or find evidence the local priest is faking it and undercut the bad press of forcing the church to close in the first place).

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** In "The Miracle Job", the team fakes a religious miracle in a church in order to prevent a CorruptCorporateExecutive from buying the place ({{ShameIfSomethingHappened ([[ShameIfSomethingHappened by hook or by crook]]) and razing it to make a building. The result is that not only is the executive ''more'' interested in getting the church now (so he can exploit it as buyer bait for a faith-themed mall) but calls in the official investigators from the Vatican to authenticate (expecting they'll either put the Vatican's seal on his new project, or find evidence the local priest is faking it and undercut the bad press of forcing the church to close in the first place).
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** "The Three Strikes Job" has the team try to swindle a corrupt major by exploiting his obsession with baseball and making him believe he can purchase a team (and take his money and the documentation to provide proof of his misuse of funds). The backfire is that the major decides to build the park in some abandoned docks and tells his criminal associates -- a bunch of arms dealers who were using the docks for their base -- to move elsewhere or take a hike. The result: Attempted murder, police intervention, and the team's [[InvincibleVillain invincible]] ArchEnemy [[InspectorJavert Sterling]] starting to look into things.

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** "The Three Strikes Job" has the team try to swindle a corrupt major by exploiting his obsession with mayor into bribing them to relocate a baseball and making him believe he can purchase a team (and take and build a stadium in his money and city on the documentation to provide proof of his misuse of funds). property he's been quietly buying up by the docks. The backfire is that comes when it turns out the major decides to build the park in mayor has some abandoned docks incredibly dangerous arms-dealing business partners (who are operating out of those dock properties). They decide such a huge development project will attract too much attention and tells force him to snitch on the team to his criminal associates -- a bunch of arms dealers who were using the docks for their base -- to move elsewhere or take a hike. own law enforcement contacts. The result: Attempted murder, police FBI intervention, Interpol escalation, and the team's [[InvincibleVillain invincible]] ArchEnemy [[InspectorJavert Sterling]] starting showing up to look start looking into things.
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** In "The Miracle Job", the team fakes a religious miracle in a church in order to prevent a CorruptCorporateExecutive from buying the place ({{ShameIfSomethingHappened by hook or by crook]]) and razing it to make a building. The result is that not only is the executive ''more'' interested in getting the church now (so he can exploit it as buyer bait for a faith-themed mall) but investigators from the Vatican arrive looking for proof that it's an actual miracle.
** In "The Underground Job" the team tries to swindle a CorruptCorporateExecutive who is exploiting coal miners (and has already caused fatalities) by making the man believe the mine has a deposit of rare ore in it. The problem then becomes that the man decides it would be a good idea to set off a bomb to "close" the mine for good (and save the "ore" for a rainy day) and lay off everybody, and if people die in the explosion? Screw them.

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** In "The Miracle Job", the team fakes a religious miracle in a church in order to prevent a CorruptCorporateExecutive from buying the place ({{ShameIfSomethingHappened by hook or by crook]]) and razing it to make a building. The result is that not only is the executive ''more'' interested in getting the church now (so he can exploit it as buyer bait for a faith-themed mall) but calls in the official investigators from the Vatican arrive looking for proof that it's an actual miracle.
to authenticate (expecting they'll either put the Vatican's seal on his new project, or find evidence the local priest is faking it and undercut the bad press of forcing the church to close in the first place).
** In "The Underground Job" the team tries to swindle a CorruptCorporateExecutive who is exploiting coal miners (and has already caused fatalities) by making the man believe the mine has a deposit of rare ore in it. The problem then becomes that the man decides that the deal they have in mind will bring too much attention to the corners he's cut on safety (and where the money he was supposed to use on it actually went). With the discovery of the valuable "ore", a big insurance payout is actually worth more to him and his corrupt partner than they could possibly make through the scam the team is trying to lure them into. So instead they decide it would be a good idea to set off a bomb to "close" the mine for good (and save the "ore" for a rainy day) and lay off everybody, and if people die in the explosion? Screw them.

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* Happens a few times on ''Series/Leverage'' as a show centered around a team of thieves and con artists where the mark believes the story a little too well and the team must switch their game mid-stream.

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* Happens a few times on ''Series/Leverage'' ''Series/{{Leverage}}'' as a show centered around a team of thieves and con artists where the mark believes the story a little too well and the team must switch their game mid-stream. To supply examples:
** In "The Miracle Job", the team fakes a religious miracle in a church in order to prevent a CorruptCorporateExecutive from buying the place ({{ShameIfSomethingHappened by hook or by crook]]) and razing it to make a building. The result is that not only is the executive ''more'' interested in getting the church now (so he can exploit it as buyer bait for a faith-themed mall) but investigators from the Vatican arrive looking for proof that it's an actual miracle.
** In "The Underground Job" the team tries to swindle a CorruptCorporateExecutive who is exploiting coal miners (and has already caused fatalities) by making the man believe the mine has a deposit of rare ore in it. The problem then becomes that the man decides it would be a good idea to set off a bomb to "close" the mine for good (and save the "ore" for a rainy day) and lay off everybody, and if people die in the explosion? Screw them.
** "The Three Strikes Job" has the team try to swindle a corrupt major by exploiting his obsession with baseball and making him believe he can purchase a team (and take his money and the documentation to provide proof of his misuse of funds). The backfire is that the major decides to build the park in some abandoned docks and tells his criminal associates -- a bunch of arms dealers who were using the docks for their base -- to move elsewhere or take a hike. The result: Attempted murder, police intervention, and the team's [[InvincibleVillain invincible]] ArchEnemy [[InspectorJavert Sterling]] starting to look into things.
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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dogbert_slab_of_liver.png]]]]

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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}} [[quoteright:205:[[ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dogbert_slab_of_liver.png]]]]
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* Happens a few times on ''Series/Leverage'' as a show centered around a team of thieves and con artists where the mark believes the story a little too well and the team must switch their game mid-stream.
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* ''Literature/JudgeDee'': On arriving at his new post in a border province, the judge discovers that Imperial authority has been usurped by a local crimelord. The judge fakes the arrival of an army regiment in order to scare the mooks away and arrest the crimelord, but this ends up working against him when the citizens really think he has a bunch of soldiers on call, whose existence must be strictly denied to the populace.

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* ''Literature/JudgeDee'': On arriving at his new post in a border province, the judge discovers that Imperial imperial authority has been usurped by a local crimelord. The judge fakes the arrival of an army regiment in order to scare the mooks away and arrest the crimelord, but this ends up working against him when the citizens really think he has a bunch of soldiers on call, whose existence must be strictly denied to the populace.
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Alice tries to fend off [[AbhorrentAdmirer Bob's unwanted advances]] by acting CuteAndPsycho and it works. Her friend Carol and his friend Dick witness this, and warn everyone introduced to her, "[[BewareTheNiceOnes She seems really sweet, but...]]" Alice catches on that her friends and acquaintances believe she's dangerous, so she tries to convince them otherwise. Of course they [[NiceKitty agree with her]], yet she finds the reputation still spreads, so she tries to confront it more assertively but...[[DeerInTheHeadlights why are they flinching away]]? Gradually, any hint of fear from them [[BerserkButton gets under her skin]], and she visibly struggles (or [[RageBreakingPoint fails to struggle]]) not to [[RoarBeforeBeating scream]], "[[PunctuatedForEmphasis I. am. not]]. [[SuddenlyShouting CRAZY!]]"

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Alice tries to fend off [[AbhorrentAdmirer Bob's unwanted advances]] by acting CuteAndPsycho and it works. Her friend Carol and his friend Dick witness this, and warn warns everyone introduced to her, "[[BewareTheNiceOnes She seems really sweet, but...]]" Alice catches on that her friends and acquaintances believe she's dangerous, so she tries to convince them otherwise. Of course they [[NiceKitty agree with her]], yet she finds the reputation still spreads, so she tries to confront it more assertively but...[[DeerInTheHeadlights why are they flinching away]]? Gradually, any hint of fear from them [[BerserkButton gets under her skin]], and she visibly struggles (or [[RageBreakingPoint fails to struggle]]) not to [[RoarBeforeBeating scream]], "[[PunctuatedForEmphasis I. am. not]]. [[SuddenlyShouting CRAZY!]]"
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This is when your bluff backfires not because it's called, but because it [[GoneHorriblyRight convinced so successfully]] that you'll NeverLiveItDown.

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This is when your bluff backfires not because it's called, but because it [[GoneHorriblyRight convinced so successfully]] that you'll NeverLiveItDown.
[[OnceDoneNeverForgotten never hear the end of it]].
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* In ''Series/GameOfThrones'', Tyrion pulls a BreakHerHeartToSaveHer on his girlfriend Shae, lying that he never really loved her and only thinks of her as a whore, so she'll leave King's Landing and not get caught up in his trial for [[spoiler: killing Joffrey]]. However, Shae is so devastated by Tyrion's brutal rejection she becomes a witness against him [[WomanScorned for revenge]], falsely testifying that she overheard [[spoiler: Tyrion and Sansa plotting to kill Joffrey]].


* ''Fanfic/DungeonKeeperAmi'': Early on Ami bluffs that she is somewhat sexually free. By later chapters quite literally the entire world believes she is a massive sexual deviant that resorts to all manner of hedonistic (and sadistic) sexual acts. Every time she tries to counter the rumours, events conspire to make them worse.

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* ''Series/TheITCrowd'': PlayedForLaughs when Roy gets caught using a handicap washroom and pretends to be disabled himself, which {{snowball|Lie}}s into a story about having had his wheelchair stolen. His every attempt to escape the situation only attracts more and more attention from well-meaning people.

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* ''Series/TheITCrowd'': ''Series/TheITCrowd'':
**
PlayedForLaughs when Roy gets caught using a handicap washroom and pretends to be disabled himself, which {{snowball|Lie}}s into a story about having had his wheelchair stolen. His every attempt to escape the situation only attracts more and more attention from well-meaning people.people.
** In another episode, the team gives their PointyHairedBoss a little black box with an LED light and tell him that the entire Internet is in that box as a gag. The boss and several members of the administrative staff go [[FreakOut completely bonkers]] when the events of the episode get that box accidentally smashed during a meeting, leaving the IT team cringing.
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* In the mid 90s when Kevin Sulivan was the Head Booker of WCW, Brian Pillman developed a "Loose Cannon" persona that ultimately lead to his character saying "I respect you, booker man" to Sullivan (at the time this was a major break in kayfabe that even wrestlers didn't know was a work between the two). Pillman was "fired" by WCW Vice President Wrestling/EricBischoff the day after the incident. To make things look real, Pillman asked for a formal looking release to develop this character further and make some money developing it in ECW. WCW sent a real release (with Turner Letterhead, the parent company) instead of a kayfabe one thinking this would look more legit. Pillman used this official release to make a lot of money from rival WWF.

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* In the mid 90s when Kevin Sulivan was the Head Booker of WCW, Brian Pillman developed a "Loose Cannon" persona that ultimately lead to his character saying "I respect you, booker man" to Sullivan (at the time this was a major break in kayfabe that even wrestlers didn't know was a work between the two). Pillman was "fired" by WCW Vice President Wrestling/EricBischoff the day after the incident. To make things look real, Pillman asked for a formal looking release to develop this character further and make some money developing it in ECW. WCW sent a real release (with Turner Letterhead, the parent company) instead of a kayfabe one thinking this would look more legit. Pillman used this official release to make a lot of money from rival WWF.WWF and costing WCW a top heel.
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Editing fix


* In the final year of ''Wrestling/WCW'', Wrestling/HulkHogan was to have a match at Bash at the Beach 2000 against Jeff Jarrett. Hogan had a creative control clause that he could invoke to further his character and did not want to lose to Jarrett and instead win the title. All sides agree that he invoked this to defeat Jarrett by an easy victory, Vince Russo would nullify the results, and Hogan would be upset, say something negative about the company, temporarily be off of TV, and face the WCW Champion at the Halloween Havoc PPV to unify the titles. Where this becomes the Trope is that Vince Russo, defacto head of the company, publicly buried him and "fired" him inside that ring. Terry Bollea (Hulk Hogan in real life) felt that Russo was shooting on both his character and himself, quit the company, and sued WCW for defamation of character.

* In the mid 90s when Kevin Sulivan was the Head Booker of WCW, Brian Pillman developed a "Loose Cannon" persona that ultimately lead to his character saying "I respect you, booker man" to Sullivan (at the time this was a major break in kayfabe that even wrestlers didn't know was planned). Pillman was "fired" by WCW Vice President Wrestling/EricBischoff the day after the incident. To make things look real, Pillman asked for a formal looking release to develop this character further and make some money developing it in ECW. WCW sent a real release (with Turner Letterhead) instead of a kayfabe one thinking this would look more legit. Pillman used this official release to make a lot of money from rival ''wrestling/wwe''.

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* In the final year of ''Wrestling/WCW'', ''WCW'', Wrestling/HulkHogan was to have a match at Bash at the Beach 2000 against Jeff Jarrett. Hogan had a creative control clause that he could invoke to further his character and did not want to lose to Jarrett and instead win the title. All sides agree that he invoked this to defeat Jarrett by an easy victory, Vince Russo would nullify the results, and Hogan would be upset, say something negative about the company, temporarily be off of TV, and face the WCW Champion at the Halloween Havoc PPV to unify the titles. Where this becomes the Trope is that Vince Russo, defacto head of the company, publicly buried him and "fired" him inside that ring. Terry Bollea (Hulk Hogan in real life) felt that Russo was shooting on both his character and himself, quit the company, and sued WCW for defamation of character.

* In the mid 90s when Kevin Sulivan was the Head Booker of WCW, Brian Pillman developed a "Loose Cannon" persona that ultimately lead to his character saying "I respect you, booker man" to Sullivan (at the time this was a major break in kayfabe that even wrestlers didn't know was planned).a work between the two). Pillman was "fired" by WCW Vice President Wrestling/EricBischoff the day after the incident. To make things look real, Pillman asked for a formal looking release to develop this character further and make some money developing it in ECW. WCW sent a real release (with Turner Letterhead) Letterhead, the parent company) instead of a kayfabe one thinking this would look more legit. Pillman used this official release to make a lot of money from rival ''wrestling/wwe''.WWF.
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Wrestling - Non-Kayfabe

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[[folder:Pro Wrestling - Non-Kayfabe]]


*In the final year of ''Wrestling/WCW'', Wrestling/HulkHogan was to have a match at Bash at the Beach 2000 against Jeff Jarrett. Hogan had a creative control clause that he could invoke to further his character and did not want to lose to Jarrett and instead win the title. All sides agree that he invoked this to defeat Jarrett by an easy victory, Vince Russo would nullify the results, and Hogan would be upset, say something negative about the company, temporarily be off of TV, and face the WCW Champion at the Halloween Havoc PPV to unify the titles. Where this becomes the Trope is that Vince Russo, defacto head of the company, publicly buried him and "fired" him inside that ring. Terry Bollea (Hulk Hogan in real life) felt that Russo was shooting on both his character and himself, quit the company, and sued WCW for defamation of character.

*In the mid 90s when Kevin Sulivan was the Head Booker of WCW, Brian Pillman developed a "Loose Cannon" persona that ultimately lead to his character saying "I respect you, booker man" to Sullivan (at the time this was a major break in kayfabe that even wrestlers didn't know was planned). Pillman was "fired" by WCW Vice President Wrestling/EricBischoff the day after the incident. To make things look real, Pillman asked for a formal looking release to develop this character further and make some money developing it in ECW. WCW sent a real release (with Turner Letterhead) instead of a kayfabe one thinking this would look more legit. Pillman used this official release to make a lot of money from rival ''wrestling/wwe''.
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* ''Series/TheITCrowd'': PlayedForLaughs when Moss gets caught using a handicap washroom and pretends to be disabled himself, which {{snowball|Lie}}s into a story about having had his wheelchair stolen. His every attempt to escape the situation only attracts more and more attention from well-meaning people.

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* ''Series/TheITCrowd'': PlayedForLaughs when Moss Roy gets caught using a handicap washroom and pretends to be disabled himself, which {{snowball|Lie}}s into a story about having had his wheelchair stolen. His every attempt to escape the situation only attracts more and more attention from well-meaning people.
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* A later season episode in ''LiveActionTV/TheFreshPrinceOfBelAir'' when Will goes to a remote cabin with his crush Lisa. Lisa proceeds to scare the bejeezus out of him by steadily acting more and more unhinged, even tying him to a chair. Will breaks free while she's gone, only to learn this was all a prank by her sorority, payback for Will's philandering ways. He also learns that cousin Carlton had a hand in the set up. After the main plot has been resolved, Will returns home, confronting Carlton with a harried and disheveled appearance as he tells of the events at the cabin, omitting the revelation of the prank in favor of insinuating he'd killed Lisa in self defense (which would probably be a straight example of this trope from Carlton's point of view). This leads to one of the funniest events in the show's run as Carlton's actor Alfonso Ribeiro decides to [[BreakingTheFourthWall take a sledgehammer to the fourth wall]] by tearing across all the sets used in the episode and even into the audience while screaming "No! No no no no no! No!"

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* A later season episode in ''LiveActionTV/TheFreshPrinceOfBelAir'' ''Series/TheFreshPrinceOfBelAir'' when Will goes to a remote cabin with his crush Lisa. Lisa proceeds to scare the bejeezus out of him by steadily acting more and more unhinged, even tying him to a chair. Will breaks free while she's gone, only to learn this was all a prank by her sorority, payback for Will's philandering ways. He also learns that cousin Carlton had a hand in the set up. After the main plot has been resolved, Will returns home, confronting Carlton with a harried and disheveled appearance as he tells of the events at the cabin, omitting the revelation of the prank in favor of insinuating he'd killed Lisa in self defense (which would probably be a straight example of this trope from Carlton's point of view). This leads to one of the funniest events in the show's run as Carlton's actor Alfonso Ribeiro decides to [[BreakingTheFourthWall take a sledgehammer to the fourth wall]] by tearing across all the sets used in the episode and even into the audience while screaming "No! No no no no no! No!"

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[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* One arc of ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' has Dogbert sell his consulting services to Dilbert's company. He tells the PointyHairedBoss that his consultants are so smart their brains don't fit in their heads and they have to wear them tied around their waists. Next panel has him tying a slab of liver to Ratbert and explain he got a little carried away.
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[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* One arc of ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' has Dogbert sell his consulting services to Dilbert's company. He tells the PointyHairedBoss that his consultants are so smart their brains don't fit in their heads and they have to wear them tied around their waists. Next panel has him tying a slab of liver to Ratbert and explain he got a little carried away.
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TLP cleanup


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!!Indexes: FameAndReputationTropes, FinaglesLaw, ImageSource.ComicStrips IndexBackfire

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!!Indexes: FameAndReputationTropes, FinaglesLaw, ImageSource.ComicStrips IndexBackfire
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Created from YKTTW

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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dogbert_slab_of_liver.png]]]]
->''"One of the dangers of any kind of psychological warfare is it can be too effective, and send the target into a paranoid tail-spin. That paranoia can be useful... or deadly."''
-->-- '''Michael Westen''', "[[Recap/BurnNoticeS1E8WantedMan Wanted Man]]", ''Series/BurnNotice''

This is when your bluff backfires not because it's called, but because it [[GoneHorriblyRight convinced so successfully]] that you'll NeverLiveItDown.

Alice tries to fend off [[AbhorrentAdmirer Bob's unwanted advances]] by acting CuteAndPsycho and it works. Her friend Carol and his friend Dick witness this, and warn everyone introduced to her, "[[BewareTheNiceOnes She seems really sweet, but...]]" Alice catches on that her friends and acquaintances believe she's dangerous, so she tries to convince them otherwise. Of course they [[NiceKitty agree with her]], yet she finds the reputation still spreads, so she tries to confront it more assertively but...[[DeerInTheHeadlights why are they flinching away]]? Gradually, any hint of fear from them [[BerserkButton gets under her skin]], and she visibly struggles (or [[RageBreakingPoint fails to struggle]]) not to [[RoarBeforeBeating scream]], "[[PunctuatedForEmphasis I. am. not]]. [[SuddenlyShouting CRAZY!]]"

The trope can also appear when TheNewGuy Frank meets Alice after she stopped bothering to fight it and let the reputation hang. As an outside observer, Frank is baffled by the claims made about her and the apparent discrepancy from what he perceives, and shares a moment to learn the true Alice. Frank may just ignore the rumors, try to protest against them, or he may play along with if Alice still benefits from them somehow.

Subtrope of GoneHorriblyRight. Different from a SnowballLie, which gains mass until it collapses, a Runaway Bluff gains momentum even without further contributions, and trying to slow it down may just be DiggingYourselfDeeper. Compare BecomingTheMask, when your cover bleeds over into your real personality and changes it, IAmOneOfThoseToo, when somebody you meet coincidentally shares details of your bluff, SpringtimeForHitler, when you bank on losing and win, and UnintentionallyNotoriousCrime, when a crime goes too well and attracts too much attention.
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!!Examples:
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[[folder:Comic Books]]
* In ''ComicBook/ExitStageLeftTheSnagglepussChronicles'', Gigi Allen threatens to out the married Huckleberry Hound and ruin his career and his family unless Snagglepuss names some other homosexuals and/or Communists to throw under the bus. This plan goes horribly awry when [[spoiler:Huckleberry kills himself, and an enraged Snagglepuss chooses to get blacklisted rather than help the people who ruined his best friend, which also effectively ends Allen's career, as her investigation hinged on Snagglepuss' cooperation.]]
* Early in Volume 2 of ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'', Nico and Chase con a low-level MGH dealer named Pusher-Man into believing that the Pride is planning to expand to New York in order to dissuade him and his bodyguard from killing them for poking around in his business. In the last arc of Volume 2, this comes back to bite them in the ass when they're summoned to dinner with ComicBook/TheKingpin, who informs them that because of their bluff, Pusher-Man tried to deny Kingpin his cut of his profits, and Kingpin killed him.
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[[folder:Fan Works]]
* ''Fanfic/DungeonKeeperAmi'': Early on Ami bluffs that she is somewhat sexually free. By later chapters quite literally the entire world believes she is a massive sexual deviant that resorts to all manner of hedonistic (and sadistic) sexual acts. Every time she tries to counter the rumours, events conspire to make them worse.
* ''Fanfic/TheDarkLordsOfNerima'' revolves around this: In order to protect a young woman being hunted down by the [[Manga/SailorMoon Sailor Senshi]] (actually a Youma that had done a HeelFaceTurn), the [[Manga/RanmaOneHalf Nerima Wrecking Crew]] successfully manage to bluff the Senshi into believing that they are a group of high-powered "Youma" lords who don't want the Senshi (or other Youma) in Nerima. Events just escalate out of control afterwards to the point that the Wrecking Crew have to fight off the ''real'' Dark Lords to prevent them from taking over the planet and the Sailor Senshi decide to declare the Wrecking Crew a "KillOnSight" threat.
* In ''Fanfic/TheSevenMisfortunesOfLadyFortune'', Marinette learns Hawk Moth's identity, and blackmails him into giving up his Miraculous. Unfortunately, she plays the part of a cold-hearted blackmailer so well, that Gabriel, afraid of further blackmail, decides an assassin would be cheaper.
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[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/JudgeDee'': On arriving at his new post in a border province, the judge discovers that Imperial authority has been usurped by a local crimelord. The judge fakes the arrival of an army regiment in order to scare the mooks away and arrest the crimelord, but this ends up working against him when the citizens really think he has a bunch of soldiers on call, whose existence must be strictly denied to the populace.
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[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/BurnNotice'':
** In "[[Recap/BurnNoticeS1E8WantedMan Wanted Man]]", Michael pretends to be a black market dealer trying to purchase a stolen diamond brooch from a CorruptCorporateExecutive. He plants the suggestion that other buyers might try to get a FiveFingerDiscount, then the team starts triggering alarms around his house to make it look like somebody's casing the joint. [[spoiler:The thief calls him back and it turns out he's been torturing the fence who got Mike the meeting, thinking he was in on it. The fence quickly gave up Mike as having been trying to find the brooch, forcing Mike to run for it.]]
** "[[Recap/BurnNoticeS2E7RoughSeas Rough Seas]]": Mike, Sam, and Sam's service buddy Virgil approach a gang of RuthlessModernPirates with a fake proposal for a heist in hopes of finding where they're storing drugs they stole off a ship. The pirates instead decide to keep Mike with them for the duration, forcing Sam and Virgil to set up an actual boat for them to rob.
** In "Partners In Crime", Michael tries to obtain information on his burn notice from Polish Intelligence and he tries to approach a local member by pretending to be a Russian spy out to bribe him for useless facts. The Polish spy pretends to fall for Michael's faked bribery long enough to go someplace private, draws a gun on Michael, and makes clear that he's a hard-core patriot (he's half-Russian and has had to struggle with proving it all of his life, [[BerserkButton so Mike just made him a bit angry]]) and he's going to interrogate Michael for intel [[JackBauerInterrogationTechnique in a very painful fashion]] and then eliminate him. [[BigDamnHeroes Fiona ends up having to save Mike's ass as a result]].
* A later season episode in ''LiveActionTV/TheFreshPrinceOfBelAir'' when Will goes to a remote cabin with his crush Lisa. Lisa proceeds to scare the bejeezus out of him by steadily acting more and more unhinged, even tying him to a chair. Will breaks free while she's gone, only to learn this was all a prank by her sorority, payback for Will's philandering ways. He also learns that cousin Carlton had a hand in the set up. After the main plot has been resolved, Will returns home, confronting Carlton with a harried and disheveled appearance as he tells of the events at the cabin, omitting the revelation of the prank in favor of insinuating he'd killed Lisa in self defense (which would probably be a straight example of this trope from Carlton's point of view). This leads to one of the funniest events in the show's run as Carlton's actor Alfonso Ribeiro decides to [[BreakingTheFourthWall take a sledgehammer to the fourth wall]] by tearing across all the sets used in the episode and even into the audience while screaming "No! No no no no no! No!"
* ''Series/TheITCrowd'': PlayedForLaughs when Moss gets caught using a handicap washroom and pretends to be disabled himself, which {{snowball|Lie}}s into a story about having had his wheelchair stolen. His every attempt to escape the situation only attracts more and more attention from well-meaning people.
* In an episode of ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'', Hal is under house arrest while he is on trial for embezzling from his company (he had been framed by a group of senior executives). One of the executives is willing to talk to Hal and provide exonerating evidence, but only if he does so at a location other than Hal's house. Malcolm builds a portable transceiver and houses it in a backpack (so that Hal's ankle monitor won't go off), but when Hal gets to the library he sees a sign that backpacks will be searched, so he leaves the backpack in a bush. When he comes out of the library, a police officer notices the backpack and starts to search it. Hal claims that he's a bomb technician; one GilliganCut later, Hal is shown "defusing" the backpack's contents while a semicircle of police officers and onlookers have gathered. Hal claims that the bomb's about to go off, and runs off with the backpack while everyone else is evacuating.
* In an episode of ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'' Jerry and George pretend to be gay to prank an eavesdropper at Monk's cafe, who turns out to be a reporter from a college newspaper and who publishes that they're gay. No matter how much they try to backpedal and/or deny that they're gay (NotThatTheresAnythingWrongWithThat) it just "proves" that they're gay that much more.
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[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* One arc of ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' has Dogbert sell his consulting services to Dilbert's company. He tells the PointyHairedBoss that his consultants are so smart their brains don't fit in their heads and they have to wear them tied around their waists. Next panel has him tying a slab of liver to Ratbert and explain he got a little carried away.
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[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'': In "[[Recap/SouthParkS19E6TweekXCraig Tweek x Craig]]", the two decide to stage a public breakup in hopes of convincing everyone they're not a couple, despite Tweek thinking he won't be convincing enough. Unfortunately, Tweek turns out to be a ''much'' better actor than he gives himself credit; so good, in fact, that he ends up making Craig look like a cheating, manipulative jerk.
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!!Indexes: FameAndReputationTropes, FinaglesLaw, ImageSource.ComicStrips IndexBackfire

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