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* ''Series/TheMagician'' was a show a MagicianDetective where all of the trickery was achieved by sleight of hand. But "The Illusion of the Fatal Arrow" features a woman with genuine psychic abilities: the only example of anything genuinely paranormal in the whole series.[[note]]The episode was made in the early 70s when parapsychology was an emerging field of huge interest in popular science[[/note]]
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[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* A lot of ''Franchise/AceAttorney'''s cases leave the unfortunate protagonist to debunk the wackier things ([[{{Flight}} Levitation]], {{Teleportation}}, TimeTravel, {{Stock Ness Monster}}s, people appearing in multiple places at the same time, etc.) that some witnesses see. In one case, the culprit uses an ''actual'' magic trick to murder the victim, create an alibi, and pin the blame on the defendant. Also, the [[WillingChanneler Spirit Media]] and [[SpookySeance Divination Séances]] are legitimate.
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* '' TheBigBangTheory'' is realistic except for one closing scene where a couple of aliens propose to come to Earth and eat people.

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* '' TheBigBangTheory'' Series/TheBigBangTheory'' is realistic except for one closing scene where a couple of aliens propose to come to Earth and eat people.

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* ''Series/{{Benson}}'' was generally a perfectly straightforward sitcom, but it had a few episodes like this, like the time the mansion staff acquires a robot, the one where Benson and the Governor have a Close Encounter with a U.F.O., and the Halloween episode where Benson ends up challenging Death to a game of Trivial Pursuit to save the lives of a busload of children. Plus there was the [[AllJustADream dream sequence]] episode where Benson and Krauss are the only two humans left on Earth.
* The "Leap of Faith" episode of ''Series/BlueBloods'' has both the identity of the murderer and an important bit of evidence revealed through the daughter of the VictimOfTheWeek getting messages from {{God}} in an otherwise realistic CopShow.

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* ''Series/{{Benson}}'' was generally a perfectly straightforward sitcom, but it had a few episodes like this, like the time the mansion staff acquires a robot, the one where Benson and the Governor have a Close Encounter with a U.F.O., and the Halloween episode where Benson ends up challenging Death to a game of Trivial Pursuit to save the lives of a busload of children. Plus there was the [[AllJustADream dream sequence]] episode where Benson and Krauss are the only two humans left on Earth.
Earth.* The "Leap of Faith" episode of
*'' TheBigBangTheory'' is realistic except for one closing scene where a couple
of aliens propose to come to Earth and eat people.
''Series/BlueBloods'' has both the identity of the murderer and an important bit of evidence revealed through the daughter of the VictimOfTheWeek getting messages from {{God}} in an otherwise realistic CopShow.
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* Played for laughs in Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Bolt}}'' when aliens are introduced into the new episode of the show. Rhino is shown looking particularly unimpressed by the changes.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Tarzan}}'' is the story of a NatureHero raised by {{Talking Animal}}s. There are no supernatural elements in the story. This carries on to ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'', the [[RecycledTheSeries animated series based on the film]]... until an episode introduces Queen La, a villain with magical powers.

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* Played for laughs in Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Bolt}}'' when aliens are introduced into the new episode of the show. Rhino is shown looking particularly unimpressed by the changes.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Tarzan}}'' is the story of a NatureHero raised by {{Talking Animal}}s. There are no supernatural elements in the story. This carries on to ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'', the [[RecycledTheSeries animated series based on the film]]...TV spin-off]]... until an episode introduces Queen La, a villain with magical powers.



* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}''. Goliath, Elisa Maza, Angela, and Bronx during their world tour arrive on Easter Island and run into Nokar, who is an alien sentinel who was sent by his race to protect Earth from another unmentioned race of aliens. This is a little less weird than it seems, though, as science fiction elements had been in the show from fairly early on, with cybernetics and genetic manipulation having already put in appearances.

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* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}''. ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'': Goliath, Elisa Maza, Angela, and Bronx during their world tour arrive on Easter Island Rapa Nui and run into Nokar, who is an alien sentinel who was sent by his race to protect Earth from another unmentioned race of aliens. This is a little less weird than it seems, though, as science fiction elements had been in the show from fairly early on, with cybernetics and genetic manipulation having already put in appearances.



* ''Anime/TheMysteriousCitiesOfGold'' is set around the conquistador times, and is about men in search for El Dorado, and cities full of Gold. While their are some semi-mythical elements (such as Esteban being the "Child of the Sun" and that the Incas have fairly sophisticated fantasy-esque technology), it was always kept in the theme of the period and explained in terms of what was available at the time. Then out of nowhere, the aliens are revealed and watching the protagonists on television screens...

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* ''Anime/TheMysteriousCitiesOfGold'' is set around the conquistador times, and is about men in search for El Dorado, and cities full of Gold. While their are some semi-mythical elements (such as Esteban being the "Child of the Sun" and that the Incas imperial-age Quechua Nation have fairly sophisticated fantasy-esque technology), it was always kept in the theme of the period and explained in terms of what was available at the time. Then out of nowhere, the aliens are revealed and watching the protagonists on television screens...

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* Back when the {{masquerade}} was still in place in ''Manga/MahouSenseiNegima'', Chisame remarked on pretty much every development with this attitude.



* Back when the {{masquerade}} was still in place in ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'', Chisame remarked on pretty much every development with this attitude.



* ''{{VideoGame/Rayman}}'': [[VideoGame/Rayman1 The first game]] is a light-hearted platformer where you fight musical instruments and colorful wildlife. [[VideoGame/Rayman2TheGreatEscape The second]] has you fighting evil robot pirates who have blown up the heart of the world and enslaved all of your friends. Given the ludicrousness of the series in general though, that probably falls under MoodWhiplash more than this trope.

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* ''{{VideoGame/Rayman}}'': ''VideoGame/{{Rayman}}'': [[VideoGame/Rayman1 The first game]] is a light-hearted platformer where you fight musical instruments and colorful wildlife. [[VideoGame/Rayman2TheGreatEscape The second]] has you fighting evil robot pirates who have blown up the heart of the world and enslaved all of your friends. Given the ludicrousness of the series in general though, that probably falls under MoodWhiplash more than this trope.



* In the ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' side manga ''Wild and Horned Hermit'', [[PhysicalGod Kanako]] uses this trope when doing the cold fusion experiment after Reimu wonders if there would be demons or spirits emerging instead of just bubbling water. The whole use is rather [[{{Irony}} ironic]] considering they are conducting a scientific experiment in [[FantasyKitchenSink Gensokyo]], the land where everything fantastic exists.

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* In the ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' side manga ''Wild and Horned Hermit'', ''Manga/TouhouIbarakasenWildAndHornedHermit'', [[PhysicalGod Kanako]] uses this trope when doing the cold fusion experiment after Reimu wonders if there would be demons or spirits emerging instead of just bubbling water. The whole use is rather [[{{Irony}} ironic]] considering they are conducting a scientific experiment in [[FantasyKitchenSink Gensokyo]], the land where everything fantastic exists.
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* A startling example occurs in the second season of the ghost-and-swordmanship filled ''Anime/JubeiChan'', where it's revealed that the ''reason'' the HumanPopsicle villainess knows about 21th century customs is because upon thawing, she was raised by ''{{Talking Animal}}s.''

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* A startling example occurs in the second season of the ghost-and-swordmanship filled ''Anime/JubeiChan'', where it's revealed that the ''reason'' reason the HumanPopsicle villainess knows about 21th century customs is because upon thawing, she was raised by ''{{Talking Animal}}s.''
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Charteris' tales rarely featured the paranormal.


* Leslie Charteris' ''Literature/TheSaint'' often encountered the paranormal, though he mostly had mundane adventures facing blackmailers, gangsters, kidnappers, and so forth. He encountered advanced technology sought by Dr. Rayt Marius (a [[NoPlansNoPrototypeNoBackup no plans, no back-up]] situation) in ''The Last Hero'', oversized ants in ''The Man Who Liked Ants'', machine to produce gold, advanced aeronautics, zombies, and the Loch Ness Monster. The anthology ''The Fantastic Saint'' collects most of these stories.

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* Leslie Charteris' ''Literature/TheSaint'' often rarely encountered the paranormal, though as he mostly had mundane adventures facing blackmailers, gangsters, kidnappers, and so forth. He encountered advanced technology sought by Dr. Rayt Marius (a [[NoPlansNoPrototypeNoBackup no plans, no back-up]] situation) in ''The Last Hero'', oversized ants in ''The Man Who Liked Ants'', machine to produce gold, advanced aeronautics, zombies, and the Loch Ness Monster. The anthology ''The Fantastic Saint'' collects most of these stories.
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** In a fit of DramaticIrony, there ''is'' a science to Dr. Dinosaur's time travel... [[spoiler: none other than Robo's own personal theory of zorth, the fifth cardinal direction.]]
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* ''VideoGame/{{Rayman}}'': [[VideoGame/Rayman1995 The first game]] is a light-hearted platformer where you fight musical instruments and colorful wildlife. [[VideoGame/Rayman2 The second]] has you fighting evil robot pirates who have blown up the heart of the world and enslaved all of your friends. Given the ludicrousness of the series in general though, that probably falls under MoodWhiplash more than this trope.

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* ''VideoGame/{{Rayman}}'': [[VideoGame/Rayman1995 ''{{VideoGame/Rayman}}'': [[VideoGame/Rayman1 The first game]] is a light-hearted platformer where you fight musical instruments and colorful wildlife. [[VideoGame/Rayman2 [[VideoGame/Rayman2TheGreatEscape The second]] has you fighting evil robot pirates who have blown up the heart of the world and enslaved all of your friends. Given the ludicrousness of the series in general though, that probably falls under MoodWhiplash more than this trope.
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* In ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk'', the world was relatively mundane, aside from the main character and his affliction. David Banner mainly faced off against gun-toting thugs and other criminals, and the only super-powered person he ever encountered was [[EvilCounterpart another person like himself]], who had undergone a similar overdose of gamma radiation. Then, six years after the show ended came the first telemovie, ''The Incredible Hulk Returns'', which included a magical hammer summoning the spirit of a long-dead viking warrior. (By comparison, Kingpin's ninja squad and hoverchair in ''The Trial of the Incredible Hulk'' were downright normal)

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* In ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk'', ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk1977'', the world was relatively mundane, aside from the main character and his affliction. David Banner mainly faced off against gun-toting thugs and other criminals, and the only super-powered person he ever encountered was [[EvilCounterpart another person like himself]], who had undergone a similar overdose of gamma radiation. Then, six years after the show ended came the first telemovie, ''The Incredible Hulk Returns'', which included a magical hammer summoning the spirit of a long-dead viking warrior. (By comparison, Kingpin's ninja squad and hoverchair in ''The Trial of the Incredible Hulk'' were downright normal)
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** Booth, at one point, is trapped in a room with a bomb, and a door that he's not strong enough to open on his own. He's also hallucinating a soldier buddy that he knows is dead, and that he calls a hallucination several times to further reinforce the point. Long story short, he convinces the ''hallucination'' to help him open the door, thereby escaping death by explosion. And if you're thinking that he summoned up some HeroicWillpower, at the end of the episode, the Squints, a team composed ''entirely'' of genius-level academics, points out that the door ''really was impossible for one man to open''. Eventually, [[spoiler: the hallucination is explained by Booth's brain tumor, but the mystery of the door is left unsolved.]] At the very end of the episode, when Booth and Bones visit the gravesite Bones is shown actually seeing and acknowledging the ghost of the dead soldier, but since she was apparently never shown a photo of the deceased, she never realizes she's seen someone who is dead.

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** Booth, at one point, is trapped in a room with a bomb, and a door that he's not strong enough to open on his own. He's also hallucinating a soldier buddy that he knows is dead, and that he calls a hallucination several times to further reinforce the point. Long story short, he convinces the ''hallucination'' to help him open the door, thereby escaping death by explosion. And if you're thinking that he summoned up some HeroicWillpower, at the end of the episode, the Squints, a team composed ''entirely'' of genius-level academics, points out that the door ''really was impossible for one man to open''. Eventually, [[spoiler: the hallucination is explained by Booth's brain tumor, but the mystery of the door is left unsolved.]] At the very end of the episode, when Booth and Bones visit the gravesite Bones is shown actually seeing and acknowledging the ghost of the dead soldier, but since she was apparently never shown a photo of the deceased, she never realizes she's seen someone who is dead.

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* ''Anime/SailorMoon'' was, most of the time, a MagicalGirl show set in the modern day, where the only non-ordinary elements are the Sailor Team itself and the season-specific villain faction. The [[BeachEpisode beach episodes]] (once a season), however, were strange exceptions: episode 20 had Usagi, Ami and Rei confronted by an (apparently) real ghost, not connected to the Dark Kingdom in any way [[spoiler:it is actually the result of little esper girl manifesting something she couldn't control]]. Episode 67 featured no villains and thus no need for the girls to use their powers, instead presenting a couple of living ''plesiosaurs''. Seriously.
** Episode 67 had so little to do with the overall plot, it was actually left out of Creator/ADVFilms' DVD releases of the series. The DVD release simply skips over it.
* A startling example occurs in the second season of the ghost-and-swordmanship filled ''Anime/JubeiChan'', where it's revealed that the ''reason'' the HumanPopsicle villainess knows about 21th century customs is because upon thawing, she was raised by ''{{Talking Animal}}s.''



* ''Anime/MazingerZ'' is a sci-fi MechaShow. Several times [[TheHero Kouji Kabuto]] has said (in the original manga) that he does not believe in ghosts or living corpses. Then in a {{Crossover}} movie with ''Manga/{{Devilman}}'', he accidentally awakens a demon and spends the remain of the movie finding and fighting demons and devils.
* ''Anime/{{Patlabor}}'' featured two episodes that clashed with the show's otherwise stringent policy of depicting "real life, but with robots:" One with a prehistoric [[{{Kaiju}} giant monster]], and another with a haunted building full of ghosts.
** There were a few other giant monsters, as well. Though all of them had sorta-scientific rationales behind them, they still stretched the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief by playing fast & loose with the SquareCubeLaw (more so than the relatively modest sized HumongousMecha of the title, anyway). The first OAV featured a giant monster that was created by a MadScientist doing experiments on abiogenesis that somehow [[EvolutionaryLevels rapidly evolved]] from an amoeba to a humanoid Kaiju that inexplicably had [[TheBigGuy Yamazaki's]] face. The TV series had a Patlabor sized giant rat created by growth hormone experiments and the monster from the 3rd movie, which was a grotesque giant zombie/fish thing created from genetically altered human cancer cells and alien DNA from a meteor.
** The prehistoric monster story also played with the unreality by having hyper-rational ButNotTooForeign cop Kanuka Clancy insisting the creature must be some sort of dinosaur and practically using the trope quote as a MadnessMantra, while dreamy GenkiGirl Noa insists on calling "him" a dragon. It's "him" according to Noa because "He had a deep voice".
* ''Anime/HeavyMetalLGaim'' is a HumongousMecha RealRobotGenre MechaShow. In the episode 2, the main character meets a fairy capable of casting illusions, reading minds and scouting souls.
* In ''Anime/InfiniteRyvius'', StrawVulcan Stein Heigar is quite upset when the spaceship ''Grey Geshpenst'' suddenly goes OneWingedAngel, transforming from a conventional-appearing vessel to a massive organic sphere, insisting that it violates all logic. (He is unaware that the ''Grey Geshpenst'' is a LivingShip).

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* ''Anime/MazingerZ'' is a sci-fi MechaShow. Several times [[TheHero Kouji Kabuto]] has said (in the original manga) that he does not believe in ghosts or living corpses. Then in a {{Crossover}} movie with ''Manga/{{Devilman}}'', he accidentally awakens a demon and spends the remain of the movie finding and fighting demons and devils.
* ''Anime/{{Patlabor}}'' featured two episodes that clashed with the show's otherwise stringent policy of depicting "real life, but with robots:" One with a prehistoric [[{{Kaiju}} giant monster]], and another with a haunted building full of ghosts.
** There were a few other giant monsters, as well. Though all of them had sorta-scientific rationales behind them, they still stretched the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief by playing fast & loose with the SquareCubeLaw (more so than the relatively modest sized HumongousMecha of the title, anyway). The first OAV featured a giant monster that was created by a MadScientist doing experiments on abiogenesis that somehow [[EvolutionaryLevels rapidly evolved]] from
That [[WidgetSeries really,]] ''[[WidgetSeries really]]'' [[WidgetSeries weird]] ''Film/{{Cloverfield}}'' prequel manga. As an amoeba to a humanoid Kaiju that inexplicably had [[TheBigGuy Yamazaki's]] face. The TV series had a Patlabor sized giant rat created by growth hormone experiments and the monster from the 3rd movie, which was a grotesque giant zombie/fish thing created from genetically altered human cancer cells and alien DNA from a meteor.
** The prehistoric monster story also played with the unreality by having hyper-rational ButNotTooForeign cop Kanuka Clancy insisting the creature must be some sort of dinosaur and practically using the trope quote as a MadnessMantra, while dreamy GenkiGirl Noa insists on calling "him" a dragon. It's "him" according to Noa because "He had a deep voice".
* ''Anime/HeavyMetalLGaim'' is a HumongousMecha RealRobotGenre MechaShow. In the episode 2,
example, it's revealed the main character meets was created by a fairy capable of casting illusions, reading minds cult using human and scouting souls.
* In ''Anime/InfiniteRyvius'', StrawVulcan Stein Heigar is quite upset when the spaceship ''Grey Geshpenst'' suddenly goes OneWingedAngel, transforming from a conventional-appearing vessel to a massive organic sphere, insisting that it violates all logic. (He is unaware
monster DNA, and that the ''Grey Geshpenst'' cult intended to use him to control the monster, which responds to an emotion-powered orb in the character's body.
* L, the master detective in ''Manga/DeathNote'', has solved the world's toughest mysteries, but he
is completely stumped as to Kira's ''modus operandi'' because he doesn't believe in the supernatural -- at most, he allows that Kira must have psychic killing abilities or mental powers, but not something out of (pseudo) Myth/JapaneseMythology. When he's finally presented with evidence that ''shinigami'' are real, he has a LivingShip).[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSMtT5rQeQU screaming freak-out]] followed by a short breakdown. Light does his best to convince him there's no such thing as shinigami, while Ryuuk grins in the background.
** And again [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MilbCV_jk9E in the live-action movie]]: "Such things could not exist!"
** Fairly early in the manga, when it looks like he's exhausted all other explanations, L does briefly consider, in a very general way, the possibility that the "Kira" phenomenon really is of some kind of divine retribution. However, after giving the facts a once-over, he concludes that the case still sounds a lot more like a human with paranormal abilities and a god complex than any god or God that he can take seriously based on present evidence.
** This is especially bizarre when you consider the companion novel ''LightNovel/AnotherNote'', where Beyond Birthday (somehow) had The Eyes, and L knew that. (To be fair, however, this LightNovel was not written until ''after'' the series was over, and was not originally part of the canon, but absorbed into it later. So it could be considered a type of RetCon.)
* ''Manga/GhostInTheShell: Man-Machine Interface'' arbitrarily features a psychic who keeps astrally manifesting to the protagonist as a raccoon dog and a teenaged girl whose body is made out of a dragon, commenting on her activities in a [[TheTrickster Trickster-like]] manner. Motoko's own comment on her first manifestation is "How unscientific" (added with a footnote that it's unscientific to dismiss a phenomenon on the drop of the hat, implying that the author has his own opinions on the subject).



* ''Manga/GhostInTheShell: Man-Machine Interface'' arbitrarily features a psychic who keeps astrally manifesting to the protagonist as a raccoon dog and a teenaged girl whose body is made out of a dragon, commenting on her activities in a [[TheTrickster Trickster-like]] manner. Motoko's own comment on her first manifestation is "How unscientific" (added with a footnote that it's unscientific to dismiss a phenomenon on the drop of the hat, implying that the author has his own opinions on the subject).
* Inverted in ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'', when Kyubey, [[spoiler: who acts like a demon by making [[DealWithTheDevil Faustian Pacts]], [[UnreliableNarrator claims]] to be from [[RecycledINSPACE space.]]]] Although in this case ''both'' interpretations can work at the same time if you consider the show to take place in [[spoiler:a CosmicHorrorStory universe]].

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* ''Manga/GhostInTheShell: Man-Machine Interface'' arbitrarily PlayedForLaughs in ''Manga/GreatTeacherOnizuka'', which is a (slightly exaggerated) slice of life series about the trials and tribulations of a high school teacher: Onizuka is momentarily possessed by ghosts after he takes on the very stressful job of picking up the remains of those who committed suicide by jumping in front of trains. Miyabi and Fujiyoshi also meet the ghost of a child killed in a road accident, though they don't realize it after seeing a sign talking about his death.
* Many of the ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' series (read: everything but ''Anime/TurnAGundam'' and ''[[Anime/MobileFighterGGundam G Gundam]]'') go out of their way to portray everything as realistically as possible, down to giving a justification for apparent SquareCubeLaw violations. They also
features psychics and ghosts.
* ''Anime/HeavyMetalLGaim'' is
a psychic who keeps astrally manifesting to HumongousMecha RealRobotGenre MechaShow. In the protagonist as episode 2, the main character meets a raccoon dog fairy capable of casting illusions, reading minds and a teenaged girl whose body scouting souls.
* In ''Anime/InfiniteRyvius'', StrawVulcan Stein Heigar
is made out of quite upset when the spaceship ''Grey Geshpenst'' suddenly goes OneWingedAngel, transforming from a dragon, commenting on her activities in conventional-appearing vessel to a [[TheTrickster Trickster-like]] manner. Motoko's own comment on her first manifestation is "How unscientific" (added with a footnote massive organic sphere, insisting that it violates all logic. (He is unaware that the ''Grey Geshpenst'' is a LivingShip).
* A startling example occurs in the second season of the ghost-and-swordmanship filled ''Anime/JubeiChan'', where
it's unscientific to dismiss a phenomenon on the drop of the hat, implying revealed that the author has his own opinions on ''reason'' the subject).
HumanPopsicle villainess knows about 21th century customs is because upon thawing, she was raised by ''{{Talking Animal}}s.''
* Inverted in ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'', Back when Kyubey, [[spoiler: who acts like a demon by making [[DealWithTheDevil Faustian Pacts]], [[UnreliableNarrator claims]] to be from [[RecycledINSPACE space.]]]] Although in this case ''both'' interpretations can work at the same time if you consider the show to take {{masquerade}} was still in place in [[spoiler:a CosmicHorrorStory universe]].''Manga/MahouSenseiNegima'', Chisame remarked on pretty much every development with this attitude.



* L, the master detective in ''Manga/DeathNote'', has solved the world's toughest mysteries, but he is completely stumped as to Kira's ''modus operandi'' because he doesn't believe in the supernatural -- at most, he allows that Kira must have psychic killing abilities or mental powers, but not something out of (pseudo) Myth/JapaneseMythology. When he's finally presented with evidence that ''shinigami'' are real, he has a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSMtT5rQeQU screaming freak-out]] followed by a short breakdown. Light does his best to convince him there's no such thing as shinigami, while Ryuuk grins in the background.
** And again [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MilbCV_jk9E in the live-action movie]]: "Such things could not exist!"
** Fairly early in the manga, when it looks like he's exhausted all other explanations, L does briefly consider, in a very general way, the possibility that the "Kira" phenomenon really is of some kind of divine retribution. However, after giving the facts a once-over, he concludes that the case still sounds a lot more like a human with paranormal abilities and a god complex than any god or God that he can take seriously based on present evidence.
** This is especially bizarre when you consider the companion novel ''LightNovel/AnotherNote'', where Beyond Birthday (somehow) had The Eyes, and L knew that. (To be fair, however, this LightNovel was not written until ''after'' the series was over, and was not originally part of the canon, but absorbed into it later. So it could be considered a type of RetCon.)
* Many of the ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' series (read: everything but ''Anime/TurnAGundam'' and ''[[Anime/MobileFighterGGundam G Gundam]]'') go out of their way to portray everything as realistically as possible, down to giving a justification for apparent SquareCubeLaw violations. They also features psychics and ghosts.
* That [[WidgetSeries really,]] ''[[WidgetSeries really]]'' [[WidgetSeries weird]] ''Film/{{Cloverfield}}'' prequel manga. As an example, it's revealed the main character was created by a cult using human and monster DNA, and that the cult intended to use him to control the monster, which responds to an emotion-powered orb in the character's body.
* Back when the {{masquerade}} was still in place in ''Manga/MahouSenseiNegima'', Chisame remarked on pretty much every development with this attitude.
* PlayedForLaughs in ''Manga/GreatTeacherOnizuka'', which is a (slightly exaggerated) slice of life series about the trials and tribulations of a high school teacher: Onizuka is momentarily possessed by ghosts after he takes on the very stressful job of picking up the remains of those who committed suicide by jumping in front of trains. Miyabi and Fujiyoshi also meet the ghost of a child killed in a road accident, though they don't realize it after seeing a sign talking about his death.

to:

* L, ''Anime/MazingerZ'' is a sci-fi MechaShow. Several times [[TheHero Kouji Kabuto]] has said (in the master detective in ''Manga/DeathNote'', has solved the world's toughest mysteries, but original manga) that he is completely stumped as to Kira's ''modus operandi'' because he doesn't does not believe in ghosts or living corpses. Then in a {{Crossover}} movie with ''Manga/{{Devilman}}'', he accidentally awakens a demon and spends the supernatural -- at most, he allows remain of the movie finding and fighting demons and devils.
* ''Anime/{{Patlabor}}'' featured two episodes
that Kira must have psychic killing abilities or mental powers, but not something out of (pseudo) Myth/JapaneseMythology. When he's finally presented clashed with evidence the show's otherwise stringent policy of depicting "real life, but with robots:" One with a prehistoric [[{{Kaiju}} giant monster]], and another with a haunted building full of ghosts.
** There were a few other giant monsters, as well. Though all of them had sorta-scientific rationales behind them, they still stretched the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief by playing fast & loose with the SquareCubeLaw (more so than the relatively modest sized HumongousMecha of the title, anyway). The first OAV featured a giant monster
that ''shinigami'' are real, he has a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSMtT5rQeQU screaming freak-out]] followed was created by a short breakdown. Light does his best MadScientist doing experiments on abiogenesis that somehow [[EvolutionaryLevels rapidly evolved]] from an amoeba to convince him there's no such a humanoid Kaiju that inexplicably had [[TheBigGuy Yamazaki's]] face. The TV series had a Patlabor sized giant rat created by growth hormone experiments and the monster from the 3rd movie, which was a grotesque giant zombie/fish thing created from genetically altered human cancer cells and alien DNA from a meteor.
** The prehistoric monster story also played with the unreality by having hyper-rational ButNotTooForeign cop Kanuka Clancy insisting the creature must be some sort of dinosaur and practically using the trope quote
as shinigami, a MadnessMantra, while Ryuuk grins dreamy GenkiGirl Noa insists on calling "him" a dragon. It's "him" according to Noa because "He had a deep voice".
* Inverted
in the background.
** And again [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MilbCV_jk9E in the live-action movie]]: "Such things could not exist!"
** Fairly early in the manga,
''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'', when it looks like he's exhausted all other explanations, L does briefly consider, in a very general way, the possibility that the "Kira" phenomenon really is of some kind of divine retribution. However, after giving the facts a once-over, he concludes that the case still sounds a lot more Kyubey, [[spoiler: who acts like a human with paranormal abilities and a god complex than any god or God that he demon by making [[DealWithTheDevil Faustian Pacts]], [[UnreliableNarrator claims]] to be from [[RecycledINSPACE space.]]]] Although in this case ''both'' interpretations can take seriously based on present evidence.
** This is especially bizarre when
work at the same time if you consider the companion novel ''LightNovel/AnotherNote'', show to take place in [[spoiler:a CosmicHorrorStory universe]].
* ''Anime/SailorMoon'' was, most of the time, a MagicalGirl show set in the modern day,
where Beyond Birthday (somehow) had the only non-ordinary elements are the Sailor Team itself and the season-specific villain faction. The Eyes, and L knew that. (To be fair, [[BeachEpisode beach episodes]] (once a season), however, this LightNovel were strange exceptions: episode 20 had Usagi, Ami and Rei confronted by an (apparently) real ghost, not connected to the Dark Kingdom in any way [[spoiler:it is actually the result of little esper girl manifesting something she couldn't control]]. Episode 67 featured no villains and thus no need for the girls to use their powers, instead presenting a couple of living ''plesiosaurs''. Seriously.
** Episode 67 had so little to do with the overall plot, it
was not written until ''after'' the series was over, and was not originally part actually left out of Creator/ADVFilms' DVD releases of the canon, but absorbed into it later. So it could be considered a type of RetCon.)
* Many of the ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' series (read: everything but ''Anime/TurnAGundam'' and ''[[Anime/MobileFighterGGundam G Gundam]]'') go out of their way to portray everything as realistically as possible, down to giving a justification for apparent SquareCubeLaw violations. They also features psychics and ghosts.
* That [[WidgetSeries really,]] ''[[WidgetSeries really]]'' [[WidgetSeries weird]] ''Film/{{Cloverfield}}'' prequel manga. As an example, it's revealed the main character was created by a cult using human and monster DNA, and that the cult intended to use him to control the monster, which responds to an emotion-powered orb in the character's body.
* Back when the {{masquerade}} was still in place in ''Manga/MahouSenseiNegima'', Chisame remarked on pretty much every development with this attitude.
* PlayedForLaughs in ''Manga/GreatTeacherOnizuka'', which is a (slightly exaggerated) slice of life series about the trials and tribulations of a high school teacher: Onizuka is momentarily possessed by ghosts after he takes on the very stressful job of picking up the remains of those who committed suicide by jumping in front of trains. Miyabi and Fujiyoshi also meet the ghost of a child killed in a road accident, though they don't realize it after seeing a sign talking about his death.
series. The DVD release simply skips over it.



* In the ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'' story ''Flight 714'', we had a [[spoiler:thrilling hijack plot and Tintin and Co. being trapped on a remote island. And then out of the blue... Aliens!]]



* ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'':
** In the story ''Flight 714'', we had a [[spoiler:thrilling hijack plot and Tintin and Co. being trapped on a remote island. And then out of the blue... Aliens!]]
** "Tintin in Tibet" reveals that the Yeti really exists.



* ''Film/{{Blade}}'' has this to anyone one not familiar with the [[AdaptationDisplacement original comic book]]. [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Vampires]] are explained in DoingInTheWizard fashion (vampirism is a literal virus, they are burned by UV light, they react to garlic but not to crosses, etc) then in the film climax [[spoiler:the BigBad uses a mystic ritual to become the avatar of the vampire's blood god to issue the [[ZombieApocalypse vampire apocalypse]]]]. Despite this he is still killed in a mundane manner.
* ''Film/HighlanderIITheQuickening'', where the Immortals were revealed to be [[spoiler:aliens from the planet Zeist]].
* The case in ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull''. On one hand, this was the film which introduced [[spoiler:interdimensional alien beings]] into a series which had firmly rested on the magical side of MagicVersusScience.



* ''Film/HighlanderIITheQuickening'', where the Immortals were revealed to be [[spoiler:aliens from the planet Zeist]].
* The case in ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull''. On one hand, this was the film which introduced [[spoiler:interdimensional alien beings]] into a series which had firmly rested on the magical side of MagicVersusScience.
* ''Film/{{Blade}}'' has this to anyone one not familiar with the [[AdaptationDisplacement original comic book]]. [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Vampires]] are explained in DoingInTheWizard fashion (vampirism is a literal virus, they are burned by UV light, they react to garlic but not to crosses, etc) then in the film climax [[spoiler:the BigBad uses a mystic ritual to become the avatar of the vampire's blood god to issue the [[ZombieApocalypse vampire apocalypse]]]]. Despite this he is still killed in a mundane manner.



* Enoch Root in ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}'' appears to not age in the half century between his appearances in both the UsefulNotes/WorldWarII era and the modern era. In ''Literature/TheBaroqueCycle'', this is elaborated upon, but to someone just reading Cryptonomicon the presence of this unaging man sees pretty much no explanation.
* ''Literature/TheDecameron'' suffers from this in one tale, where the mundane medieval setting is disturbed by an actual vision of Hell.
* Creator/DennisWheatley's adventurer the Duc de Richlieau debuted in a non-paranormal adventure novel. However, Wheatley featured de Richlieau in the novel ''Literature/TheDevilRidesOut'' (1934) where he encounters the modern wizard Damien Mocata, who has actual paranormal powers. The Duc de Richlieau would alternate between paranormal adventures such as ''Strange Conflict'' and ''Gateway to Hell'' and mundane adventures such as ''The Golden Spaniard'', ''Codeword-Golden Fleece'', ''The Second Seal'', ''The Prisoner in the Mask'', ''Vendetta in Spain'' and ''Dangerous Inheritance''. Wheatley's character Gregory Sallust also features in a novel in which Satanism plays a part, ''They Used Dark Forces'' though the supernatural events in this are only peripheral and it is mainly a spy story.



* Leslie Charteris' ''Literature/TheSaint'' often encountered the paranormal, though he mostly had mundane adventures facing blackmailers, gangsters, kidnappers, and so forth. He encountered advanced technology sought by Dr. Rayt Marius (a [[NoPlansNoPrototypeNoBackup no plans, no back-up]] situation) in ''The Last Hero'', oversized ants in ''The Man Who Liked Ants'', machine to produce gold, advanced aeronautics, zombies, and the Loch Ness Monster. The anthology ''The Fantastic Saint'' collects most of these stories.
* Some paperback original heroes of the 1970s such as ''Literature/ThePenetrator'' switched back and forth from mundane gangster foes to enemies with technology that outpaced the 20th century.
* James Lee Burke's ''Robicheaux'' series featured the paranormal in the book and film ''In the Electric Mist (With the Confederate Dead)''.

to:

* Leslie Charteris' ''Literature/TheSaint'' often encountered The ''first'' time the paranormal, though he mostly had mundane adventures facing blackmailers, gangsters, kidnappers, Doctor pulled a WhereIWasBornAndRazed, in the ''Series/DoctorWho'' Literature/EighthDoctorAdventures novels, the absence of the Time Lords allowed magic to gain a foothold in the universe. So the Doctor has sex with a [[TheFairFolk Fair Folk]]-esque water nymph who wants to trap him in her realm, and so forth. He encountered advanced technology sought by Dr. Rayt Marius (a [[NoPlansNoPrototypeNoBackup no plans, no back-up]] situation) gets horribly injured in several magical rituals. What, were they trying to ''literally'' [[DoingInTheScientist Do in the Scientist]]? Also, he has to get married to save the world, [[AWizardDidIt because magic]]. This almost resulted in him marrying a thirteen-year-old girl, although, reassuringly, not only is consummating it never brought up, the {{UST}} between him and the grown woman he does end up marrying remains just that. Amazingly, he's [[IronWoobie never seen complaining about all this damn magic making his life worse]]. You can, of course, ignore all of this, and assume the Doctor's (apparent) TraumaInducedAmnesia is preventing him from giving the [[BlatantLies perfectly scientific]] [[TechnoBabble explanations]] he has for apparent magic in ''The Last Hero'', oversized ants in ''The Man Who Liked Ants'', machine to produce gold, advanced aeronautics, zombies, and the Loch Ness Monster. The anthology ''The Fantastic Saint'' collects most of these stories.
* Some paperback original heroes of the 1970s such as ''Literature/ThePenetrator'' switched back and forth from mundane gangster foes to enemies with technology that outpaced the 20th century.
* James Lee Burke's ''Robicheaux'' series featured the paranormal in the book and film ''In the Electric Mist (With the Confederate Dead)''.
Daemons'', "The Shakespeare Code" etc.



* ''Literature/TheDecameron'' suffers from this in one tale, where the mundane medieval setting is disturbed by an actual vision of Hell.

to:

* ''Literature/TheDecameron'' suffers from this in one tale, where ''Literature/GarrettPI''. In ''Angry Lead Skies'', Garrett's already-GenreBusting world of fantasy noir is intruded upon by strange Visitors which the mundane medieval setting is disturbed by an actual vision of Hell.reader (but not the characters) will quickly recognize as Grey-like space aliens.



* The ''Literature/SkylarkSeries'' by Creator/EEDocSmith may get extremely far-fetched with the science, but it was always science, or at least plausibly something ''like'' science. Then came the series finale, in which the collective witches of the universe got together with the main heroes to turn their collective magical willpower to overcoming the villains' telepaths and [[spoiler:transporting a whole solar system into another galaxy, which is then set on fire to burn for a thousand years]]. May have some of the details off there, but it was not a little disconcerting, what with the effective MoodWhiplash.

to:

* The ''Literature/SkylarkSeries'' by Creator/EEDocSmith may get extremely far-fetched with collection of short stories known as ''TheInformers'' is mostly just plausible tales about quirky characters in Los Angeles...except for the science, but it was always science, or at least plausibly something ''like'' science. Then came the series finale, in which the collective witches of the universe got together with the main heroes to turn their collective magical willpower to overcoming the villains' telepaths and [[spoiler:transporting one about a whole solar system into another galaxy, which is then set on fire to burn for a thousand years]]. May have some of the details off there, but it was not a little disconcerting, what with the effective MoodWhiplash.vampire.



* Some of the ''Literature/MillyMolly'' books imply that the girls can ''[[SpeaksFluentAnimal understand animals]]'', such as when the plovers tell them, "Don't let them fell our trees!". However, in other books, plus the entire TV series, this is never brought up, even when it would've come in useful.
* ''Literature/{{Mog}}'':
** In "Mog and the Granny", Mog has PsychicPowers and can use them to know where Debbie is.
** In "Goodbye, Mog", Mog apparently [[spoiler: dies and comes back as a ''ghost'']]. Even weirder, [[spoiler: she comes back ''again'' as a flesh-and-blood cat in the next book.]]
* Some paperback original heroes of the 1970s such as ''Literature/ThePenetrator'' switched back and forth from mundane gangster foes to enemies with technology that outpaced the 20th century.



* The ''first'' time the Doctor pulled a WhereIWasBornAndRazed, in the ''Series/DoctorWho'' Literature/EighthDoctorAdventures novels, the absence of the Time Lords allowed magic to gain a foothold in the universe. So the Doctor has sex with a [[TheFairFolk Fair Folk]]-esque water nymph who wants to trap him in her realm, and gets horribly injured in several magical rituals. What, were they trying to ''literally'' [[DoingInTheScientist Do in the Scientist]]? Also, he has to get married to save the world, [[AWizardDidIt because magic]]. This almost resulted in him marrying a thirteen-year-old girl, although, reassuringly, not only is consummating it never brought up, the {{UST}} between him and the grown woman he does end up marrying remains just that. Amazingly, he's [[IronWoobie never seen complaining about all this damn magic making his life worse]]. You can, of course, ignore all of this, and assume the Doctor's (apparent) TraumaInducedAmnesia is preventing him from giving the [[BlatantLies perfectly scientific]] [[TechnoBabble explanations]] he has for apparent magic in ''The Daemons'', "The Shakespeare Code" etc.
* Creator/DennisWheatley's adventurer the Duc de Richlieau debuted in a non-paranormal adventure novel. However, Wheatley featured de Richlieau in the novel ''Literature/TheDevilRidesOut'' (1934) where he encounters the modern wizard Damien Mocata, who has actual paranormal powers. The Duc de Richlieau would alternate between paranormal adventures such as ''Strange Conflict'' and ''Gateway to Hell'' and mundane adventures such as ''The Golden Spaniard'', ''Codeword-Golden Fleece'', ''The Second Seal'', ''The Prisoner in the Mask'', ''Vendetta in Spain'' and ''Dangerous Inheritance''. Wheatley's character Gregory Sallust also features in a novel in which Satanism plays a part, ''They Used Dark Forces'' though the supernatural events in this are only peripheral and it is mainly a spy story.
* Enoch Root in ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}'' appears to not age in the half century between his appearances in both the UsefulNotes/WorldWarII era and the modern era. In ''Literature/TheBaroqueCycle'', this is elaborated upon, but to someone just reading Cryptonomicon the presence of this unaging man sees pretty much no explanation.

to:

* The ''first'' time James Lee Burke's ''Robicheaux'' series featured the Doctor pulled a WhereIWasBornAndRazed, paranormal in the ''Series/DoctorWho'' Literature/EighthDoctorAdventures novels, book and film ''In the absence of Electric Mist (With the Time Lords allowed magic to gain a foothold in Confederate Dead)''.
* Leslie Charteris' ''Literature/TheSaint'' often encountered
the universe. So the Doctor has sex with a [[TheFairFolk Fair Folk]]-esque water nymph who wants to trap him in her realm, paranormal, though he mostly had mundane adventures facing blackmailers, gangsters, kidnappers, and gets horribly injured in several magical rituals. What, were they trying to ''literally'' [[DoingInTheScientist Do in the Scientist]]? Also, he has to get married to save the world, [[AWizardDidIt because magic]]. This almost resulted in him marrying a thirteen-year-old girl, although, reassuringly, not only is consummating it never brought up, the {{UST}} between him and the grown woman he does end up marrying remains just that. Amazingly, he's [[IronWoobie never seen complaining about all this damn magic making his life worse]]. You can, of course, ignore all of this, and assume the Doctor's (apparent) TraumaInducedAmnesia is preventing him from giving the [[BlatantLies perfectly scientific]] [[TechnoBabble explanations]] he has for apparent magic so forth. He encountered advanced technology sought by Dr. Rayt Marius (a [[NoPlansNoPrototypeNoBackup no plans, no back-up]] situation) in ''The Daemons'', "The Shakespeare Code" etc.
* Creator/DennisWheatley's adventurer the Duc de Richlieau debuted
Last Hero'', oversized ants in a non-paranormal adventure novel. However, Wheatley featured de Richlieau in the novel ''Literature/TheDevilRidesOut'' (1934) where he encounters the modern wizard Damien Mocata, who has actual paranormal powers. The Duc de Richlieau would alternate between paranormal adventures such as ''Strange Conflict'' and ''Gateway to Hell'' and mundane adventures such as ''The Golden Spaniard'', ''Codeword-Golden Fleece'', Man Who Liked Ants'', machine to produce gold, advanced aeronautics, zombies, and the Loch Ness Monster. The anthology ''The Second Seal'', ''The Prisoner in Fantastic Saint'' collects most of these stories.
* The ''Literature/SkylarkSeries'' by Creator/EEDocSmith may get extremely far-fetched with
the Mask'', ''Vendetta in Spain'' and ''Dangerous Inheritance''. Wheatley's character Gregory Sallust also features in a novel science, but it was always science, or at least plausibly something ''like'' science. Then came the series finale, in which Satanism plays a part, ''They Used Dark Forces'' though the supernatural events in this are only peripheral collective witches of the universe got together with the main heroes to turn their collective magical willpower to overcoming the villains' telepaths and [[spoiler:transporting a whole solar system into another galaxy, which is then set on fire to burn for a thousand years]]. May have some of the details off there, but it is mainly a spy story.
* Enoch Root in ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}'' appears to
was not age in a little disconcerting, what with the half century between his appearances in both the UsefulNotes/WorldWarII era and the modern era. In ''Literature/TheBaroqueCycle'', this is elaborated upon, but to someone just reading Cryptonomicon the presence of this unaging man sees pretty much no explanation.effective MoodWhiplash.



* ''Literature/GarrettPI''. In ''Angry Lead Skies'', Garrett's already-GenreBusting world of fantasy noir is intruded upon by strange Visitors which the reader (but not the characters) will quickly recognize as Grey-like space aliens.
* The collection of short stories known as ''TheInformers'' is mostly just plausible tales about quirky characters in Los Angeles...except for the one about a vampire.



* ''Series/AccordingToJim'' is, for the most part, a realistic SitCom. However, in the episode after [[CousinOliver the twins]] were born, {{Satan}} comes to collect Jim's soul, resulting in Cheryl hating him. (ItMakesSenseInContext.) The episode's plot then revolves around him trying to win Cheryl's heart back. [[spoiler: Of course, it was AllJustADream, so this might be a SubvertedTrope.]]
* The ''Series/BabylonFive'' follow-up "The Lost Tales" introduces a demon into what had until then been a fairly hard sci-fi universe. The fans were not pleased.
* ''Series/{{Baywatch}}'' was ''supposed'' to be a fairly realistic drama about lifeguards, but it quickly began having plots that could have come straight from cheesy action movies, featuring casino heists, international assassins, shootouts with pirates, and oh-so-many jewel thieves. There are also a handful of episodes where supernatural phenomena like ghosts, UFO abductions, and MaybeMagicMaybeMundane Christmas elves appear and then are never mentioned again.
** The spinoff ''BaywatchNights'' centered around Sgt. Garner Ellerbee and [[Creator/DavidHasselhoff Mitch Buchannon]] starting a detective agency and was a fairly realistic crime show. Then the low ratings prompted the producers to ditch Ellerbee, [[GenreShift turn the show into an]] ''[[Series/TheXFiles X-Files]]'' ripoff and have David Hasselhoff fighting aliens and mutants.
* ''Series/{{Benson}}'' was generally a perfectly straightforward sitcom, but it had a few episodes like this, like the time the mansion staff acquires a robot, the one where Benson and the Governor have a Close Encounter with a U.F.O., and the Halloween episode where Benson ends up challenging Death to a game of Trivial Pursuit to save the lives of a busload of children. Plus there was the [[AllJustADream dream sequence]] episode where Benson and Krauss are the only two humans left on Earth.



* ''Series/{{Bones}}'':
** Booth, at one point, is trapped in a room with a bomb, and a door that he's not strong enough to open on his own. He's also hallucinating a soldier buddy that he knows is dead, and that he calls a hallucination several times to further reinforce the point. Long story short, he convinces the ''hallucination'' to help him open the door, thereby escaping death by explosion. And if you're thinking that he summoned up some HeroicWillpower, at the end of the episode, the Squints, a team composed ''entirely'' of genius-level academics, points out that the door ''really was impossible for one man to open''. Eventually, [[spoiler: the hallucination is explained by Booth's brain tumor, but the mystery of the door is left unsolved.]] At the very end of the episode, when Booth and Bones visit the gravesite Bones is shown actually seeing and acknowledging the ghost of the dead soldier, but since she was apparently never shown a photo of the deceased, she never realizes she's seen someone who is dead.
** A crossover later shows that ''Bones'' takes place in the same continuity as ''Series/SleepyHollow'', so.



* During the last few episodes of ''Series/{{Felicity}}'', a to-that-point relatively tame romantic drama about college life, the main character began to wonder whether or not she'd chosen the right man in her life. So her friend cast a spell that sent her back in time a few years. No, really.
* Gradually took over the show in ''Series/FamilyMatters'', with the many and varied inventions of Steve Urkel. It started as a middle-class SitCom starring predominantly black characters. However, after Urkel's ascent to popularity and building of gadgets, rather than this feeling out-of-place it was effectively {{retool}}ed to become the Wacky Adventures Of Steve Urkel, Harmless But MadScientist.
* In the ''Series/VeronicaMars'' episode "Normal Is the Watchword" our titular heroine is saved by a hallucination of (or possibly the actual spirit of) her dead best friend Lilly. Lilly had appeared frequently the previous season (as Veronica tried to solve her murder), but it had certainly been implied she was not a literal ghost, just Veronica's way of working through her emotions and thoughts. At least until "Normal Is the Watchword", when Lilly's sudden and unexplained appearance distracted her friend from getting on a doomed bus. It is later implied that Veronica may be suffering from a neurological condition brought on by various traumas.
* Aliens once appeared in an episode of ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}''. So did Sasquatch. And a Soviet psychic. Also, Time Travel. To medieval Scotland. To save his ancestor. It was AllJustADream, OrWasItADream
* Excluding very few anachronisms and the main character being BeenThereShapedHistory in steroids, ''Series/TheYoungIndianaJonesChronicles'' was a docutainment with a fairly realistic depiction of early 20th century history and UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Until one certain episode where the main character was sent to investigate abductions in Transylvania and ended battling {{Dracula}} himself.
** Which ''is'' in keeping with the supernatural events he eventually runs into as an adult.
** And the original framing sequence (which was removed from the DVD release) implied that it was a ghost story that old Indy was telling to some kids on Halloween.



* ''Series/{{Castle}}'' generally goes for MaybeMagicMaybeMundane but in the episode "Time Will Tell" it seems to go for this involving time travel as the series of events makes no sense without it. Generally [[AgentMulder Castle]] has to try and come up with a rather convoluted series of events in order for it to be possible but yet in this case [[AgentScully Beckett]] couldn't come up with a logical series of events that worked. This is especially true when the supposed time traveler just disappears from lockup. [[spoiler: There was also the ending in which she spills her coffee on a letter that was a key piece of evidence and it matches the stain from a picture of that letter held by the killer.]]
** As for the chain of events: [[spoiler: Featuring a plot somewhat similar to ''Film/TheTerminator'' with elements of ''Film/TwelveMonkeys''; the killer, Ward, had supposedly traveled back in time to look for a budding physicist named Deschile who would eventually develop a future technology that would win a future war according to Doyle, who supposedly traveled back in time to stop him. The starting point for Ward is a letter sent by Deschile to a present day physicist with a stain that matches Beckett's coffee spill at the end of the episode. The problem with that is that Ward kills the first victim of the episode in order to find her brother, who was the physicist that inspired Deschile. Why would he do this if he already had stolen the letter from said physicist? Beckett's final explanation also doesn't work. Ward was supposedly an anti-technology nut who tried to kill Deschile for stopping him from blowing up a technology seminar. The letter would be irrelevant there. The fact that both appear in the same psych ward doesn't really help as Doyle claims it will be a future mission. Doyle disappearing twice without warning, once from lockup, also helps his argument.]]
** And in "Smells Like Teen Spirit", the murder of the week appears to have been committed by a telekinetic, as a pair of girls were videochatting with the victim at the moment of her death, and saw her thrown around by an invisible force. Investigation uncovers other incidents of apparent TK, [[spoiler: but when they finally pin down who was responsible for the incidents he claimed to have done it all with wires and magnets and such. The real MindScrew? Beckett tells Castle at the very end that CSU had extensively swept the crime scenes, and there weren't any wires or magnets or anything else that could be used to fake those incidents.]]
*** However, Beckett still firmly believes the mundane explanation, so it's possible she's just saying that to screw with Castle.
* ''Series/DiagnosisMurder'' was a light-hearted murder mystery programme which involved a lot of {{Contrived Coincidence}}s but nothing actually unbelievable. Except that one episode where the murderer was an honest-to-gods ''vampire''. Who died when she telekinetically flew herself into a chair leg. And was never spoken of again.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'' slowly crossed the line from at least trying to sound scientific at all times to allowing the supernatural (though usually calling it something else). The dividing line is probably The Key To Time stories in the Tom Baker Years, which introduced [[PowersThatBe the White and Black Guardians.]]
** Perhaps best exemplified in ''The Impossible Planet'', where the Doctor encounters a being that claims to be the Devil (not ''a'' devil, but ''[[{{Satan}} THE]]'' [[{{Satan}} Devil]]). The Doctor refuses to believe it, theorizing that it's just some SufficientlyAdvancedAlien trying to sound impressive. The episode leaves the whole matter [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane ambiguous]].
** Also nicely mocked in "The Girl in the Fireplace," where the Doctor gives the usual TechnoBabble explanation for portals to 18th century Paris in a spaceship, before admitting he made it up just because he didn't want to say "magic door."
* Gradually took over the show in ''Series/FamilyMatters'', with the many and varied inventions of Steve Urkel. It started as a middle-class SitCom starring predominantly black characters. However, after Urkel's ascent to popularity and building of gadgets, rather than this feeling out-of-place it was effectively {{retool}}ed to become the Wacky Adventures Of Steve Urkel, Harmless But MadScientist.
* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' established that various ReligionIsMagic powers and EnlightenmentSuperpowers existed in it's world almost immediately, but for the most part treated them like other sci-fi treats psychic powers so they don't usually stand out too much. The main exceptions are the episodes where the crew goes up against the evil wizard Maldis, where it suddenly turns into a straight-out fantasy story. Maldis deliberately using a gothic aesthetic in-universe doesn't help.
* During the last few episodes of ''Series/{{Felicity}}'', a to-that-point relatively tame romantic drama about college life, the main character began to wonder whether or not she'd chosen the right man in her life. So her friend cast a spell that sent her back in time a few years. No, really.
* One episode of ''Series/GetSmart'' had a brief appearance of what seemed like a ghost.
* An episode of ''Series/TheGuidingLight'' actually featured a character gaining superpowers after a freak accident with Halloween decorations.



* Japanese ''[[Series/SpiderManJapan Spider-Man]]'', episode 37 of 41. A man who specializes in the occult warns that King Enma from Hell is coming. He comes. Note that for the last 36 episodes, the series has entirely been based on sci-fi.

to:

* Japanese ''[[Series/SpiderManJapan Spider-Man]]'', Mild example in a HalloweenEpisode of ''Series/HawaiiFive0'', which has a main plot involving around a creepy, yet realistic story where the team pursues a serial killer involved in black market organ sales. However, the episode 37 of 41. A man who specializes in the occult warns also strongly implies that King Enma from Hell is coming. He comes. Note that for the last 36 episodes, the a series has of misfortunes that hit Danny are due to him being cursed after trespassing on an ancient Hawaiian burial ground, and it's also implied at the end of the episode that the woman who recommended an apartment to him (that he's able to get for cheap due it belonging to one of the murder victims) is in fact a ghost.
* ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'' parodies this. The entire show is ridiculous, but it focuses almost
entirely been based on sci-fi.the (physically-possible if really unlikely) exploits of a group of mundane, if wacky, modern-day New Yorkers. But every so often they throw in a one-shot gag about time travel, [[RuleOfFunny just because]]. Possibly explained by the show's FramingDevice being an UnreliableNarrator.
* In ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk'', the world was relatively mundane, aside from the main character and his affliction. David Banner mainly faced off against gun-toting thugs and other criminals, and the only super-powered person he ever encountered was [[EvilCounterpart another person like himself]], who had undergone a similar overdose of gamma radiation. Then, six years after the show ended came the first telemovie, ''The Incredible Hulk Returns'', which included a magical hammer summoning the spirit of a long-dead viking warrior. (By comparison, Kingpin's ninja squad and hoverchair in ''The Trial of the Incredible Hulk'' were downright normal)



* The fourth season finale of ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' (a show that is usually firmly grounded in reality) has a doctor encounter a little girl who was heavily implied to be the [[TheGrimReaper Angel of Death]].
* Likewise, recent episodes of ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'' have shown Pride having visions of a mysterious beautiful woman who is apparently the Angel of Death. Her words have accurately presaged certain events (albeit in cryptic fashion), implying that she really does exist.
* An episode of ''Series/TheGuidingLight'' actually featured a character gaining superpowers after a freak accident with Halloween decorations.

to:

* The fourth season finale of ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' (a show that is usually firmly grounded in reality) has a doctor encounter a In ''Series/LogansRun'', Logan and Jessica don't just deal with Sandmen, leftover technology, and strange little girl who was heavily implied to be the [[TheGrimReaper Angel of Death]].
* Likewise, recent
civilizations Outside; there are episodes of ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'' have shown Pride having visions of a mysterious beautiful woman who is apparently the Angel of Death. Her words have accurately presaged certain events (albeit in cryptic fashion), implying that she really does exist.
* An episode of ''Series/TheGuidingLight'' actually featured a character gaining superpowers after a freak accident
with Halloween decorations.aliens, people with psychic powers, and even magicians trying to resurrect one of their own. (The desperation of the writers was pretty palpable with this last.) Interestingly, the setting-logical idea of mutants is never brought up, except in a perfunctory manner.



* In one episode of ''Series/TheUnit'', Kim Brown is investigated because she knew vague details of a mission which she claimed to have learned in a dream. The Colonel brings in a psychic specialist, and by the end of the episode (even though none of the characters realize it), the audience is pretty convinced that Kim is a high-level psychic medium.

to:

* In one Aliens once appeared in an episode of ''Series/TheUnit'', Kim Brown is investigated because she knew vague details of ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}''. So did Sasquatch. And a mission which she claimed to have learned in a dream. The Colonel brings in a psychic specialist, and by the end of the episode (even though none of the characters realize it), the audience is pretty convinced that Kim is a high-level psychic medium.Soviet psychic. Also, Time Travel. To medieval Scotland. To save his ancestor. It was AllJustADream, OrWasItADream



* ''Series/{{Baywatch}}'' was ''supposed'' to be a fairly realistic drama about lifeguards, but it quickly began having plots that could have come straight from cheesy action movies, featuring casino heists, international assassins, shootouts with pirates, and oh-so-many jewel thieves. There are also a handful of episodes where supernatural phenomena like ghosts, UFO abductions, and MaybeMagicMaybeMundane Christmas elves appear and then are never mentioned again.
** The spinoff ''BaywatchNights'' centered around Sgt. Garner Ellerbee and [[Creator/DavidHasselhoff Mitch Buchannon]] starting a detective agency and was a fairly realistic crime show. Then the low ratings prompted the producers to ditch Ellerbee, [[GenreShift turn the show into an]] ''[[Series/TheXFiles X-Files]]'' ripoff and have David Hasselhoff fighting aliens and mutants.
* The crossover episodes of ''Series/Warehouse13'' and ''Series/{{Eureka}}'' feel like this. The two shows had existed on the opposite sides of SpeculativeFiction ({{Fantasy}} and SciFi) until they were revealed to be the same universe. (Not even to mention the actor paradoxes.) The gap between the two shows is perfectly illustrated in the episode "13.1" by an exchange between Claudia and Fargo (paraphrased):
-->''[Claudia has a ring on her finger, causing her hand to glow brightly]''\\
'''Fargo:''' Is it somehow increasing your own bioluminescence?\\
'''Claudia:''' ''[shrugs]'' It used to belong to Ben Franklin!

to:

* ''Series/{{Baywatch}}'' The early 1980s detective series ''Series/MattHouston'' had one episode where a faked alien abduction was ''supposed'' to be somehow involved in a fairly realistic drama crime the eponymous hero was investigating. Then, at about lifeguards, but the 3/4 mark of the show, Houston, driving by himself, is actually abducted by the stereotypical little gray buggers. He doesn't remember it quickly began having plots that could have come straight from cheesy action movies, featuring casino heists, international assassins, shootouts with pirates, happening, there's no witnesses, and oh-so-many jewel thieves. There are also a handful it has no effect whatsoever on the plot of episodes where supernatural phenomena like ghosts, UFO abductions, the episode, and MaybeMagicMaybeMundane Christmas elves appear and then are is never mentioned again.
** The spinoff ''BaywatchNights'' centered * ''Series/{{Merlin|2008}}'' deals with fantasy tropes, but one (widely disliked) episode has him battle a manticore that introduces the rather sci-fi concept of parallel dimensions. Of course, plenty of mythologies around Sgt. Garner Ellerbee the world, including the British ones ''Merlin'' is a derivative of, include the concept of 'other worlds' so sci-fi hardly has the monopoly on this. It's merely the way 'other worlds' are introduced that would slot the concept into a sci-fi or fantasy.
* In the infamous ''Series/MiamiVice'' episode "Missing Hours," the otherwise normal TV series sees a lot of weirdness, including Trudy getting abducted by an alien (played by Music/JamesBrown)
and [[Creator/DavidHasselhoff Mitch Buchannon]] starting a detective agency Crockett and Tubbs later seeing a UFO.
* ''Series/MidnightCaller''
was generally a fairly serious, realistic crime show. Then drama, except for the low ratings prompted episode "Do You Believe In Miracles?" in which a statue of baby Jesus [[TearsFromAStone starts crying]]. This is never explained, and is implied to be a genuine miracle.
* In a case of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness, ''Series/MissionImpossible'' had exactly one episode that featured genuine supernatural activity and a woman with real psychic powers: "Zubrovnik's Ghost" in first season.
* ''Series/NaturallySadie'' was teen drama/sitcom about a girl coping with
the producers to ditch Ellerbee, [[GenreShift turn vagaries of high school life. Except for the show episode "Ghouls Just want To Have Fun" which featured Hal's girlfriend Tabitha handing out wristbands that turned people into an]] ''[[Series/TheXFiles X-Files]]'' ripoff and have David Hasselhoff fighting aliens and mutants.
zombies.
* The crossover fourth season finale of ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' (a show that is usually firmly grounded in reality) has a doctor encounter a little girl who was heavily implied to be the [[TheGrimReaper Angel of Death]].
* Likewise, recent
episodes of ''Series/Warehouse13'' and ''Series/{{Eureka}}'' feel like this. The two shows had existed on ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'' have shown Pride having visions of a mysterious beautiful woman who is apparently the opposite sides Angel of SpeculativeFiction ({{Fantasy}} and SciFi) until they were revealed to be the same universe. (Not even to mention the actor paradoxes.) The gap between the two shows is perfectly illustrated Death. Her words have accurately presaged certain events (albeit in the episode "13.1" by an exchange between Claudia and Fargo (paraphrased):
-->''[Claudia has a ring on her finger, causing her hand to glow brightly]''\\
'''Fargo:''' Is it somehow increasing your own bioluminescence?\\
'''Claudia:''' ''[shrugs]'' It used to belong to Ben Franklin!
cryptic fashion), implying that she really does exist.



* ''Series/{{Bones}}'':
** Booth, at one point, is trapped in a room with a bomb, and a door that he's not strong enough to open on his own. He's also hallucinating a soldier buddy that he knows is dead, and that he calls a hallucination several times to further reinforce the point. Long story short, he convinces the ''hallucination'' to help him open the door, thereby escaping death by explosion. And if you're thinking that he summoned up some HeroicWillpower, at the end of the episode, the Squints, a team composed ''entirely'' of genius-level academics, points out that the door ''really was impossible for one man to open''. Eventually, [[spoiler: the hallucination is explained by Booth's brain tumor, but the mystery of the door is left unsolved.]] At the very end of the episode, when Booth and Bones visit the gravesite Bones is shown actually seeing and acknowledging the ghost of the dead soldier, but since she was apparently never shown a photo of the deceased, she never realizes she's seen someone who is dead.
** A crossover later shows that ''Bones'' takes place in the same continuity as ''Series/SleepyHollow'', so.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'' slowly crossed the line from at least trying to sound scientific at all times to allowing the supernatural (though usually calling it something else). The dividing line is probably The Key To Time stories in the Tom Baker Years, which introduced [[PowersThatBe the White and Black Guardians.]]
** Perhaps best exemplified in ''The Impossible Planet'', where the Doctor encounters a being that claims to be the Devil (not ''a'' devil, but ''[[{{Satan}} THE]]'' [[{{Satan}} Devil]]). The Doctor refuses to believe it, theorizing that it's just some SufficientlyAdvancedAlien trying to sound impressive. The episode leaves the whole matter [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane ambiguous]].
** Also nicely mocked in "The Girl in the Fireplace," where the Doctor gives the usual TechnoBabble explanation for portals to 18th century Paris in a spaceship, before admitting he made it up just because he didn't want to say "magic door."
* ''Series/{{Benson}}'' was generally a perfectly straightforward sitcom, but it had a few episodes like this, like the time the mansion staff acquires a robot, the one where Benson and the Governor have a Close Encounter with a U.F.O., and the Halloween episode where Benson ends up challenging Death to a game of Trivial Pursuit to save the lives of a busload of children. Plus there was the [[AllJustADream dream sequence]] episode where Benson and Krauss are the only two humans left on Earth.

to:

* ''Series/{{Bones}}'':
** Booth, at one point, is trapped in a room
This was basically what [[IncrediblyLamePun torpedoed]] ''Series/SeaquestDSV''. The first season was fairly hard scifi with a bomb, and a door plots that he's not strong enough to open on his own. He's also hallucinating a soldier buddy revolved around real oceanic phenomenon. Then in the second season ExecutiveMeddling forced the introduction of outlandish soft scifi stories; including the god Poseidon being real, time travel, and aliens. The How Unscientificness of it pissed off Creator/RoyScheider so much that he knows is dead, left the show.
* ''Series/SeeingThings'': This light-hearted 1980s Canadian dramedy was usually squarely in the MundaneFantastic camp. It had a single fantastic element: Toronto Gazette reporter Louis Ciccone suddenly starts manifesting precognitive flashes, which allow him to uncover
and that he calls a hallucination several times to further reinforce solve the point. Long story short, he convinces the ''hallucination'' to help him open the door, thereby escaping death by explosion. And if you're thinking that he summoned up some HeroicWillpower, at the end of the show's typical mystery-of-the-week mysteries. However, in one very out-of-character episode, a mysterious, befuddled old man found wandering the Squints, a team composed ''entirely'' streets of genius-level academics, points out that the door ''really was impossible for one man to open''. Eventually, [[spoiler: the hallucination is explained by Booth's brain tumor, but the mystery of the door is left unsolved.]] At the very end of the episode, when Booth Toronto and Bones visit the gravesite Bones is shown claiming to be an alien actually seeing turns out to BE an alien, complete with anti-gravity levitation powers and acknowledging the ghost of the dead soldier, but since she was apparently never shown a photo of the deceased, she never realizes she's seen someone who is dead.
** A crossover later shows that ''Bones'' takes place
laser battle with hostile reptilian aliens in the same continuity as ''Series/SleepyHollow'', so.
a Toronto park.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'' slowly crossed the line ''Series/SevenDays'' mostly deals with TimeTravel. Said TimeTravel equipment came from at least trying to sound scientific at all times to allowing a crashed alien ship; so there's sci-fi. Then there's the supernatural (though usually calling it something else). The dividing line is probably The Key To Time stories in the Tom Baker Years, which introduced [[PowersThatBe the White and Black Guardians.]]
** Perhaps best exemplified in ''The Impossible Planet'', where the Doctor encounters a being that claims to be the Devil (not ''a'' devil, but ''[[{{Satan}} THE]]'' [[{{Satan}} Devil]]). The Doctor refuses to believe it, theorizing that it's just some SufficientlyAdvancedAlien trying to sound impressive. The episode leaves the whole matter [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane ambiguous]].
** Also nicely mocked in "The Girl in the Fireplace," where the Doctor gives the usual TechnoBabble explanation for portals to 18th century Paris in a spaceship, before admitting he made it up just because he didn't want to say "magic door."
* ''Series/{{Benson}}'' was generally a perfectly straightforward sitcom, but it had a few episodes like this, like the time the mansion staff acquires a robot, the one where Benson and the Governor have a Close Encounter with a U.F.O., and the Halloween
episode where Benson ends up challenging Death to a game of Trivial Pursuit to save the lives main character stops a nuclear war started by ''{{Satan}}.''
* ''Series/{{Sliders}}'' was obviously science-fiction to begin with, with the premise of sliding between worlds. Spirituality and psychic phenomena (over which some worlds are depicted as having overt control) came under its domain in short order. ''Then'', all
of a busload sudden, they find themselves in a world of children. Plus there was the [[AllJustADream dream sequence]] episode where Benson wizards, shapeshifters, dragons, and Krauss are the what can only two humans left be described as magic. Scientists Quinn and Professor Arturo, to their credit, are genuinely baffled by this. Quinn's analysis gets as far as something about string theory and fundamentally different laws of physics, but by that time, he is also tempted to settle on Earth."[[Theatre/{{Hamlet}} More things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio...]]"
** Arturo dismisses not being meant to understand as "blasphemy", but by the end, the events of that particular world force him to admit that, somehow, the system apparently works and he can roll with it.



* ''Series/AccordingToJim'' is, for the most part, a realistic SitCom. However, in the episode after [[CousinOliver the twins]] were born, {{Satan}} comes to collect Jim's soul, resulting in Cheryl hating him. (ItMakesSenseInContext.) The episode's plot then revolves around him trying to win Cheryl's heart back. [[spoiler: Of course, it was AllJustADream, so this might be a SubvertedTrope.]]
* ''Series/{{Merlin|2008}}'' deals with fantasy tropes, but one (widely disliked) episode has him battle a manticore that introduces the rather sci-fi concept of parallel dimensions. Of course, plenty of mythologies around the world, including the British ones ''Merlin'' is a derivative of, include the concept of 'other worlds' so sci-fi hardly has the monopoly on this. It's merely the way 'other worlds' are introduced that would slot the concept into a sci-fi or fantasy.
* ''Series/NaturallySadie'' was teen drama/sitcom about a girl coping with the vagaries of high school life. Except for the episode "Ghouls Just want To Have Fun" which featured Hal's girlfriend Tabitha handing out wristbands that turned people into zombies.
* In a case of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness, ''Series/MissionImpossible'' had exactly one episode that featured genuine supernatural activity and a woman with real psychic powers: "Zubrovnik's Ghost" in first season.

to:

* ''Series/AccordingToJim'' is, Japanese ''[[Series/SpiderManJapan Spider-Man]]'', episode 37 of 41. A man who specializes in the occult warns that King Enma from Hell is coming. He comes. Note that for the most part, a realistic SitCom. However, in last 36 episodes, the episode after [[CousinOliver the twins]] were born, {{Satan}} comes to collect Jim's soul, resulting in Cheryl hating him. (ItMakesSenseInContext.) The episode's plot then revolves around him trying to win Cheryl's heart back. [[spoiler: Of course, it was AllJustADream, so this might be a SubvertedTrope.]]
* ''Series/{{Merlin|2008}}'' deals with fantasy tropes, but one (widely disliked) episode
series has him battle a manticore that introduces the rather sci-fi concept of parallel dimensions. Of course, plenty of mythologies around the world, including the British ones ''Merlin'' is a derivative of, include the concept of 'other worlds' so sci-fi hardly entirely been based on sci-fi.
* ''Series/StarskyAndHutch''
has the monopoly on this. It's merely the way 'other worlds' are introduced that would slot the concept into a sci-fi or fantasy.
* ''Series/NaturallySadie'' was teen drama/sitcom about a girl coping with the vagaries of high school life. Except for the episode "Ghouls Just want To Have Fun"
"The Psychic," in which featured Hal's girlfriend Tabitha handing out wristbands that turned people into zombies.
* In
a case of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness, ''Series/MissionImpossible'' had exactly one episode that featured genuine supernatural activity and a woman with real man uses his psychic powers: "Zubrovnik's Ghost" visions to help the police track down a kidnapped girl, and "Murder on Voodoo Island," in first season.which HollywoodVoodoo causes Starsky to try to strangle Hutch.



* ''Series/DiagnosisMurder'' was a light-hearted murder mystery programme which involved a lot of {{Contrived Coincidence}}s but nothing actually unbelievable. Except that one episode where the murderer was an honest-to-gods ''vampire''. Who died when she telekinetically flew herself into a chair leg. And was never spoken of again.
* ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'' parodies this. The entire show is ridiculous, but it focuses almost entirely on the (physically-possible if really unlikely) exploits of a group of mundane, if wacky, modern-day New Yorkers. But every so often they throw in a one-shot gag about time travel, [[RuleOfFunny just because]]. Possibly explained by the show's FramingDevice being an UnreliableNarrator.



* The early 1980s detective series ''Series/MattHouston'' had one episode where a faked alien abduction was somehow involved in a crime the eponymous hero was investigating. Then, at about the 3/4 mark of the show, Houston, driving by himself, is actually abducted by the stereotypical little gray buggers. He doesn't remember it happening, there's no witnesses, and it has no effect whatsoever on the plot of the episode, and is never mentioned again.
* ''Series/SevenDays'' mostly deals with TimeTravel. Said TimeTravel equipment came from a crashed alien ship; so there's sci-fi. Then there's the episode where the main character stops a nuclear war started by ''{{Satan}}.''
* In ''Series/LogansRun'', Logan and Jessica don't just deal with Sandmen, leftover technology, and strange little civilizations Outside; there are episodes with aliens, people with psychic powers, and even magicians trying to resurrect one of their own. (The desperation of the writers was pretty palpable with this last.) Interestingly, the setting-logical idea of mutants is never brought up, except in a perfunctory manner.
* ''Series/{{Castle}}'' generally goes for MaybeMagicMaybeMundane but in the episode "Time Will Tell" it seems to go for this involving time travel as the series of events makes no sense without it. Generally [[AgentMulder Castle]] has to try and come up with a rather convoluted series of events in order for it to be possible but yet in this case [[AgentScully Beckett]] couldn't come up with a logical series of events that worked. This is especially true when the supposed time traveler just disappears from lockup. [[spoiler: There was also the ending in which she spills her coffee on a letter that was a key piece of evidence and it matches the stain from a picture of that letter held by the killer.]]
** As for the chain of events: [[spoiler: Featuring a plot somewhat similar to ''Film/TheTerminator'' with elements of ''Film/TwelveMonkeys''; the killer, Ward, had supposedly traveled back in time to look for a budding physicist named Deschile who would eventually develop a future technology that would win a future war according to Doyle, who supposedly traveled back in time to stop him. The starting point for Ward is a letter sent by Deschile to a present day physicist with a stain that matches Beckett's coffee spill at the end of the episode. The problem with that is that Ward kills the first victim of the episode in order to find her brother, who was the physicist that inspired Deschile. Why would he do this if he already had stolen the letter from said physicist? Beckett's final explanation also doesn't work. Ward was supposedly an anti-technology nut who tried to kill Deschile for stopping him from blowing up a technology seminar. The letter would be irrelevant there. The fact that both appear in the same psych ward doesn't really help as Doyle claims it will be a future mission. Doyle disappearing twice without warning, once from lockup, also helps his argument.]]
** And in "Smells Like Teen Spirit", the murder of the week appears to have been committed by a telekinetic, as a pair of girls were videochatting with the victim at the moment of her death, and saw her thrown around by an invisible force. Investigation uncovers other incidents of apparent TK, [[spoiler: but when they finally pin down who was responsible for the incidents he claimed to have done it all with wires and magnets and such. The real MindScrew? Beckett tells Castle at the very end that CSU had extensively swept the crime scenes, and there weren't any wires or magnets or anything else that could be used to fake those incidents.]]
*** However, Beckett still firmly believes the mundane explanation, so it's possible she's just saying that to screw with Castle.
* ''Series/SeeingThings'': This light-hearted 1980s Canadian dramedy was usually squarely in the MundaneFantastic camp. It had a single fantastic element: Toronto Gazette reporter Louis Ciccone suddenly starts manifesting precognitive flashes, which allow him to uncover and solve the show's typical mystery-of-the-week mysteries. However, in one very out-of-character episode, a mysterious, befuddled old man found wandering the streets of Toronto and claiming to be an alien actually turns out to BE an alien, complete with anti-gravity levitation powers and a laser battle with hostile reptilian aliens in a Toronto park.
* In ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk'', the world was relatively mundane, aside from the main character and his affliction. David Banner mainly faced off against gun-toting thugs and other criminals, and the only super-powered person he ever encountered was [[EvilCounterpart another person like himself]], who had undergone a similar overdose of gamma radiation. Then, six years after the show ended came the first telemovie, ''The Incredible Hulk Returns'', which included a magical hammer summoning the spirit of a long-dead viking warrior. (By comparison, Kingpin's ninja squad and hoverchair in ''The Trial of the Incredible Hulk'' were downright normal)
* ''Series/{{Sliders}}'' was obviously science-fiction to begin with, with the premise of sliding between worlds. Spirituality and psychic phenomena (over which some worlds are depicted as having overt control) came under its domain in short order. ''Then'', all of a sudden, they find themselves in a world of wizards, shapeshifters, dragons, and what can only be described as magic. Scientists Quinn and Professor Arturo, to their credit, are genuinely baffled by this. Quinn's analysis gets as far as something about string theory and fundamentally different laws of physics, but by that time, he is also tempted to settle on "[[Theatre/{{Hamlet}} More things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio...]]"
** Arturo dismisses not being meant to understand as "blasphemy", but by the end, the events of that particular world force him to admit that, somehow, the system apparently works and he can roll with it.
* The ''Series/BabylonFive'' follow-up "The Lost Tales" introduces a demon into what had until then been a fairly hard sci-fi universe. The fans were not pleased.
* Mild example in a HalloweenEpisode of ''Series/HawaiiFive0'', which has a main plot involving around a creepy, yet realistic story where the team pursues a serial killer involved in black market organ sales. However, the episode also strongly implies that a series of misfortunes that hit Danny are due to him being cursed after trespassing on an ancient Hawaiian burial ground, and it's also implied at the end of the episode that the woman who recommended an apartment to him (that he's able to get for cheap due it belonging to one of the murder victims) is in fact a ghost.
* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' established that various ReligionIsMagic powers and EnlightenmentSuperpowers existed in it's world almost immediately, but for the most part treated them like other sci-fi treats psychic powers so they don't usually stand out too much. The main exceptions are the episodes where the crew goes up against the evil wizard Maldis, where it suddenly turns into a straight-out fantasy story. Maldis deliberately using a gothic aesthetic in-universe doesn't help.
* This was basically what [[IncrediblyLamePun torpedoed]] ''Series/SeaquestDSV''. The first season was fairly hard scifi with plots that revolved around real oceanic phenomenon. Then in the second season ExecutiveMeddling forced the introduction of outlandish soft scifi stories; including the god Poseidon being real, time travel, and aliens. The How Unscientificness of it pissed off Creator/RoyScheider so much that he left the show.
* ''Series/MidnightCaller'' was generally a serious, realistic drama, except for the episode "Do You Believe In Miracles?" in which a statue of baby Jesus [[TearsFromAStone starts crying]]. This is never explained, and is implied to be a genuine miracle.
* ''Series/StarskyAndHutch'' has "The Psychic," in which a man uses his psychic visions to help the police track down a kidnapped girl, and "Murder on Voodoo Island," in which HollywoodVoodoo causes Starsky to try to strangle Hutch.
* In the infamous ''Series/MiamiVice'' episode "Missing Hours," the otherwise normal TV series sees a lot of weirdness, including Trudy getting abducted by an alien (played by Music/JamesBrown) and Crockett and Tubbs later seeing a UFO.

to:

* The early 1980s detective series ''Series/MattHouston'' had In one episode where of ''Series/TheUnit'', Kim Brown is investigated because she knew vague details of a faked alien abduction was somehow involved mission which she claimed to have learned in a crime dream. The Colonel brings in a psychic specialist, and by the eponymous hero was investigating. Then, at about the 3/4 mark end of the show, Houston, driving by himself, is actually abducted by the stereotypical little gray buggers. He doesn't remember it happening, there's no witnesses, and it has no effect whatsoever on the plot episode (even though none of the episode, characters realize it), the audience is pretty convinced that Kim is a high-level psychic medium.
* In the ''Series/VeronicaMars'' episode "Normal Is the Watchword" our titular heroine is saved by a hallucination of (or possibly the actual spirit of) her dead best friend Lilly. Lilly had appeared frequently the previous season (as Veronica tried to solve her murder), but it had certainly been implied she was not a literal ghost, just Veronica's way of working through her emotions
and thoughts. At least until "Normal Is the Watchword", when Lilly's sudden and unexplained appearance distracted her friend from getting on a doomed bus. It is never mentioned again.
* ''Series/SevenDays'' mostly deals with TimeTravel. Said TimeTravel equipment came
later implied that Veronica may be suffering from a crashed alien ship; so there's sci-fi. Then there's neurological condition brought on by various traumas.
* Excluding very few anachronisms and
the main character being BeenThereShapedHistory in steroids, ''Series/TheYoungIndianaJonesChronicles'' was a docutainment with a fairly realistic depiction of early 20th century history and UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Until one certain episode where the main character stops a nuclear war started by ''{{Satan}}.''
* In ''Series/LogansRun'', Logan
was sent to investigate abductions in Transylvania and Jessica don't just deal ended battling {{Dracula}} himself.
** Which ''is'' in keeping
with Sandmen, leftover technology, and strange little civilizations Outside; there are the supernatural events he eventually runs into as an adult.
** And the original framing sequence (which was removed from the DVD release) implied that it was a ghost story that old Indy was telling to some kids on Halloween.
* The crossover
episodes with aliens, people with psychic powers, of ''Series/Warehouse13'' and ''Series/{{Eureka}}'' feel like this. The two shows had existed on the opposite sides of SpeculativeFiction ({{Fantasy}} and SciFi) until they were revealed to be the same universe. (Not even magicians trying to resurrect one of their own. (The desperation of mention the writers was pretty palpable with this last.actor paradoxes.) Interestingly, The gap between the setting-logical idea of mutants two shows is never brought up, except in a perfunctory manner.
* ''Series/{{Castle}}'' generally goes for MaybeMagicMaybeMundane but
perfectly illustrated in the episode "Time Will Tell" it seems to go for this involving time travel as the series of events makes no sense without it. Generally [[AgentMulder Castle]] has to try and come up with a rather convoluted series of events in order for it to be possible but yet in this case [[AgentScully Beckett]] couldn't come up with a logical series of events that worked. This is especially true when the supposed time traveler just disappears from lockup. [[spoiler: There was also the ending in which she spills her coffee on a letter that was a key piece of evidence and it matches the stain from a picture of that letter held by the killer.]]
** As for the chain of events: [[spoiler: Featuring a plot somewhat similar to ''Film/TheTerminator'' with elements of ''Film/TwelveMonkeys''; the killer, Ward, had supposedly traveled back in time to look for a budding physicist named Deschile who would eventually develop a future technology that would win a future war according to Doyle, who supposedly traveled back in time to stop him. The starting point for Ward is a letter sent by Deschile to a present day physicist with a stain that matches Beckett's coffee spill at the end of the episode. The problem with that is that Ward kills the first victim of the episode in order to find her brother, who was the physicist that inspired Deschile. Why would he do this if he already had stolen the letter from said physicist? Beckett's final explanation also doesn't work. Ward was supposedly an anti-technology nut who tried to kill Deschile for stopping him from blowing up a technology seminar. The letter would be irrelevant there. The fact that both appear in the same psych ward doesn't really help as Doyle claims it will be a future mission. Doyle disappearing twice without warning, once from lockup, also helps his argument.]]
** And in "Smells Like Teen Spirit", the murder of the week appears to have been committed by a telekinetic, as a pair of girls were videochatting with the victim at the moment of her death, and saw her thrown around
"13.1" by an invisible force. Investigation uncovers other incidents of apparent TK, [[spoiler: but when they finally pin down who was responsible for the incidents he claimed to have done it all with wires exchange between Claudia and magnets and such. The real MindScrew? Beckett tells Castle at the very end that CSU had extensively swept the crime scenes, and there weren't any wires or magnets or anything else that could be Fargo (paraphrased):
-->''[Claudia has a ring on her finger, causing her hand to glow brightly]''\\
'''Fargo:''' Is it somehow increasing your own bioluminescence?\\
'''Claudia:''' ''[shrugs]'' It
used to fake those incidents.]]
*** However, Beckett still firmly believes the mundane explanation, so it's possible she's just saying that
belong to screw with Castle.
* ''Series/SeeingThings'': This light-hearted 1980s Canadian dramedy was usually squarely in the MundaneFantastic camp. It had a single fantastic element: Toronto Gazette reporter Louis Ciccone suddenly starts manifesting precognitive flashes, which allow him to uncover and solve the show's typical mystery-of-the-week mysteries. However, in one very out-of-character episode, a mysterious, befuddled old man found wandering the streets of Toronto and claiming to be an alien actually turns out to BE an alien, complete with anti-gravity levitation powers and a laser battle with hostile reptilian aliens in a Toronto park.
* In ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk'', the world was relatively mundane, aside from the main character and his affliction. David Banner mainly faced off against gun-toting thugs and other criminals, and the only super-powered person he ever encountered was [[EvilCounterpart another person like himself]], who had undergone a similar overdose of gamma radiation. Then, six years after the show ended came the first telemovie, ''The Incredible Hulk Returns'', which included a magical hammer summoning the spirit of a long-dead viking warrior. (By comparison, Kingpin's ninja squad and hoverchair in ''The Trial of the Incredible Hulk'' were downright normal)
* ''Series/{{Sliders}}'' was obviously science-fiction to begin with, with the premise of sliding between worlds. Spirituality and psychic phenomena (over which some worlds are depicted as having overt control) came under its domain in short order. ''Then'', all of a sudden, they find themselves in a world of wizards, shapeshifters, dragons, and what can only be described as magic. Scientists Quinn and Professor Arturo, to their credit, are genuinely baffled by this. Quinn's analysis gets as far as something about string theory and fundamentally different laws of physics, but by that time, he is also tempted to settle on "[[Theatre/{{Hamlet}} More things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio...]]"
** Arturo dismisses not being meant to understand as "blasphemy", but by the end, the events of that particular world force him to admit that, somehow, the system apparently works and he can roll with it.
* The ''Series/BabylonFive'' follow-up "The Lost Tales" introduces a demon into what had until then been a fairly hard sci-fi universe. The fans were not pleased.
* Mild example in a HalloweenEpisode of ''Series/HawaiiFive0'', which has a main plot involving around a creepy, yet realistic story where the team pursues a serial killer involved in black market organ sales. However, the episode also strongly implies that a series of misfortunes that hit Danny are due to him being cursed after trespassing on an ancient Hawaiian burial ground, and it's also implied at the end of the episode that the woman who recommended an apartment to him (that he's able to get for cheap due it belonging to one of the murder victims) is in fact a ghost.
* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' established that various ReligionIsMagic powers and EnlightenmentSuperpowers existed in it's world almost immediately, but for the most part treated them like other sci-fi treats psychic powers so they don't usually stand out too much. The main exceptions are the episodes where the crew goes up against the evil wizard Maldis, where it suddenly turns into a straight-out fantasy story. Maldis deliberately using a gothic aesthetic in-universe doesn't help.
* This was basically what [[IncrediblyLamePun torpedoed]] ''Series/SeaquestDSV''. The first season was fairly hard scifi with plots that revolved around real oceanic phenomenon. Then in the second season ExecutiveMeddling forced the introduction of outlandish soft scifi stories; including the god Poseidon being real, time travel, and aliens. The How Unscientificness of it pissed off Creator/RoyScheider so much that he left the show.
* ''Series/MidnightCaller'' was generally a serious, realistic drama, except for the episode "Do You Believe In Miracles?" in which a statue of baby Jesus [[TearsFromAStone starts crying]]. This is never explained, and is implied to be a genuine miracle.
* ''Series/StarskyAndHutch'' has "The Psychic," in which a man uses his psychic visions to help the police track down a kidnapped girl, and "Murder on Voodoo Island," in which HollywoodVoodoo causes Starsky to try to strangle Hutch.
* In the infamous ''Series/MiamiVice'' episode "Missing Hours," the otherwise normal TV series sees a lot of weirdness, including Trudy getting abducted by an alien (played by Music/JamesBrown) and Crockett and Tubbs later seeing a UFO.
Ben Franklin!



* Several scholars of Greek Tragedy have claimed this to be the case for the [[Theatre/OedipusRex Oedipus story]]. The confines of realistic human tragedy seem to always be at odds with the riddle-spewing, man-eating, she-beast in the backstory.



* Several scholars of Greek Tragedy have claimed this to be the case for the [[Theatre/OedipusRex Oedipus story]]. The confines of realistic human tragedy seem to always be at odds with the riddle-spewing, man-eating, she-beast in the backstory.



* ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaLordsOfShadow2'' has for half of the game the supernatural elements in a Medieval castle that are the staple of other ''Franchise/{{Castlevania}}'' games, the other half is set in the modern world, where the player as Dracula has to face mooks in PoweredArmor, robotic enemies, genetically enhanced super-soldiers and shotgun wielding mutants.



* This reaction, taken to ''extremely'' FanDumb levels (''death threats'' were involved), forced a significant change to ''VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic III: Armageddon's Blade'': originally the expansion pack was supposed to be centered around a ''science fiction'' faction, the Forge, and the attempts to stop it from taking over the world, but that had to be thrown out and another story quickly come up with. Whether this trope is an accurate reaction is... more complex: the ''setting'' was a clear ScienceFantasy one, so looked at from that perspective the Forge was in keeping with genre conventions. ''[[MorePopularSpinoff Heroes]]'', on the other hand, had previously only loosely alluded to the science fiction elements in ways that didn't make clear they ''were'' science fiction elements, so looked at from the perspective of the series it was a breach of genre conventions.
* ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' takes place mostly in a Myth/GreekMythology inspired fantasy world. With, the exception, of the few SpacePirates, as well as when the [[spoiler: world desroying aliens called the Aurum]] show up.
* ''VideoGame/TheKingOfFighters'', which already featured ninjas, [[SupernaturalMartialArts superpowered martial artists]], street fighters, crime lords, secret agents, sorcerers, demons, gods, other preternatural beings, other cybernetically and bio-augmented warriors, and [[MurderArsonAndJaywalking Duck King]], entered this territory in spinoff ''The King of Fighters: Maximum Impact 2'' with the introduction of [[BigBad Jivatma]] and [[MysteriousWaif Luise Meyrink]] as well as the revelation that [[spoiler: the Meira brothers]] were aliens themselves.
* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask'' featured cow abductions and a battle against aliens despite its otherwise HighFantasy setting.
* ''VideoGame/{{Okami}}'' starts out as a FarEast version of FracturedFairyTale, including references to people who live on the moon. Sounds appropriately mystical at first, but you eventually see these people's vessels and the game portrays them as [[spoiler:spaceships]] (one - described the locals as a "metal bamboo shoot" - even looks like [[spoiler:a traditional rocket]]). The BigBad itself is [[spoiler:practically a robot]].



* ''VideoGame/{{Okami}}'' starts out as a FarEast version of FracturedFairyTale, including references to people who live on the moon. Sounds appropriately mystical at first, but you eventually see these people's vessels and the game portrays them as [[spoiler:spaceships]] (one - described the locals as a "metal bamboo shoot" - even looks like [[spoiler:a traditional rocket]]). The BigBad itself is [[spoiler:practically a robot]].



* In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsV'', [[Characters/SuperRobotWarsV Velt]]'s first comment about the [[Anime/CrossAnge Dragons]] once it's revealed [[spoiler: they're half-humans is that they're violating conservation of mass and energy.]]
* ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'''s Halloween events. [=TF=]2 is normally about a (not so) normal war going on between two companies, but every Halloween supernatural elements come into play. For example, in 2013 you had to send your employer's dead brother to Hell, while fending off skeletons with magic.
* The final Nevada level in ''VideoGame/TombRaiderIII'' is pretty consistent in theme, ranging from a high security area in the middle of a desert and transitioning to a secret government lab experimenting on aliens and have an alien spaceship locked away in a room. However, at one point, you see a pair of orcas/whales in a tank. The whales are just there without any explanation at all and they severely clash with the theme of the level. The only reason you would jump into their tank is to collect the level's last secret.
* In the ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' side manga ''Wild and Horned Hermit'', [[PhysicalGod Kanako]] uses this trope when doing the cold fusion experiment after Reimu wonders if there would be demons or spirits emerging instead of just bubbling water. The whole use is rather [[{{Irony}} ironic]] considering they are conducting a scientific experiment in [[FantasyKitchenSink Gensokyo]], the land where everything fantastic exists.



* In the ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' side manga ''Wild and Horned Hermit'', [[PhysicalGod Kanako]] uses this trope when doing the cold fusion experiment after Reimu wonders if there would be demons or spirits emerging instead of just bubbling water. The whole use is rather [[{{Irony}} ironic]] considering they are conducting a scientific experiment in [[FantasyKitchenSink Gensokyo]], the land where everything fantastic exists.
* The final Nevada level in ''VideoGame/TombRaiderIII'' is pretty consistent in theme, ranging from a high security area in the middle of a desert and transitioning to a secret government lab experimenting on aliens and have an alien spaceship locked away in a room. However, at one point, you see a pair of orcas/whales in a tank. The whales are just there without any explanation at all and they severely clash with the theme of the level. The only reason you would jump into their tank is to collect the level's last secret.
* This reaction, taken to ''extremely'' FanDumb levels (''death threats'' were involved), forced a significant change to ''VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic III: Armageddon's Blade'': originally the expansion pack was supposed to be centered around a ''science fiction'' faction, the Forge, and the attempts to stop it from taking over the world, but that had to be thrown out and another story quickly come up with. Whether this trope is an accurate reaction is... more complex: the ''setting'' was a clear ScienceFantasy one, so looked at from that perspective the Forge was in keeping with genre conventions. ''[[MorePopularSpinoff Heroes]]'', on the other hand, had previously only loosely alluded to the science fiction elements in ways that didn't make clear they ''were'' science fiction elements, so looked at from the perspective of the series it was a breach of genre conventions.
* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask'' featured cow abductions and a battle against aliens despite its otherwise HighFantasy setting.
* ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'''s Halloween events. [=TF=]2 is normally about a (not so) normal war going on between two companies, but every Halloween supernatural elements come into play. For example, in 2013 you had to send your employer's dead brother to Hell, while fending off skeletons with magic.
* ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' takes place mostly in a Myth/GreekMythology inspired fantasy world. With, the exception, of the few SpacePirates, as well as when the [[spoiler: world desroying aliens called the Aurum]] show up.
* ''VideoGame/TheKingOfFighters'', which already featured ninjas, [[SupernaturalMartialArts superpowered martial artists]], street fighters, crime lords, secret agents, sorcerers, demons, gods, other preternatural beings, other cybernetically and bio-augmented warriors, and [[MurderArsonAndJaywalking Duck King]], entered this territory in spinoff ''The King of Fighters: Maximum Impact 2'' with the introduction of [[BigBad Jivatma]] and [[MysteriousWaif Luise Meyrink]] as well as the revelation that [[spoiler: the Meira brothers]] were aliens themselves.
* ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaLordsOfShadow2'' has for half of the game the supernatural elements in a Medieval castle that are the staple of other ''Franchise/{{Castlevania}}'' games, the other half is set in the modern world, where the player as Dracula has to face mooks in PoweredArmor, robotic enemies, genetically enhanced super-soldiers and shotgun wielding mutants.
* In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsV'', [[Characters/SuperRobotWarsV Velt]]'s first comment about the [[Anime/CrossAnge Dragons]] once it's revealed [[spoiler: they're half-humans is that they're violating conservation of mass and energy.]]



* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' was primarily a sci-fi show centered around giant robots. However, there were several occasions where the plot delved into supernatural areas--in one episode they ran into a wizard in the past, in another they dealt with a Quintesson who used magic, and two episodes were devoted to Starscream's [[spoiler: ghost.]]
* ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' has occasionally been known to replace [[ScoobyDooHoax the guy in a monster mask]] with an actual monster. Generally, if Shaggy and Scooby are alone (or with Scrappy), the monsters are real. If Fred or Velma is there, they aren't. The films, both live-action and Direct-to-Video, usually have real monsters regardless of their cast.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' was primarily a sci-fi show centered around giant robots. However, there were several occasions where the plot delved into supernatural areas--in one episode they ran into a wizard in the past, in another they dealt with a Quintesson who used magic, and two Some episodes were devoted to Starscream's [[spoiler: ghost.]]
* ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' has occasionally been known to replace [[ScoobyDooHoax
of ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'' have scenes implying that aliens actually exist (such as the guy in a monster mask]] with an actual monster. Generally, if Shaggy and Scooby end of "The Chips are alone (or with Scrappy), the monsters Down" where two aliens are real. If Fred or Velma is there, seen talking about how they aren't. The films, both live-action and Direct-to-Video, usually have real monsters regardless like ballet). Even more peculiar, sometimes the alien scenes are inconsistent, such as in "D.W.'s Snow Mystery" it's shown that some aliens took D.W.'s snowball thinking it to be human food, but in "Return of their cast.the Snowball", it's shown that two ''different'', teenage aliens stole it.



* ''Anime/TheMysteriousCitiesOfGold'' is set around the conquistador times, and is about men in search for El Dorado, and cities full of Gold. While their are some semi-mythical elements (such as Esteban being the "Child of the Sun" and that the Incas have fairly sophisticated fantasy-esque technology), it was always kept in the theme of the period and explained in terms of what was available at the time. Then out of nowhere, the aliens are revealed and watching the protagonists on television screens...


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* ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse'':
** Zigzagged in "Spell it Out" where [[{{Goth}} Lucy]] finds Great-Grandma Harriet's spell book and believes she's made [[ChildProdigy Lisa]] sticky, broken [[PhoneaholicTeenager Lori]]'s phone, made [[ThePigPen Lana]]'s butt itchy, and [[LostVoicePlot all her siblings lose their voices]]. However, it turns out that Lisa had spilled adhesive on herself, Lori's phone had simply run out of battery power, Lana's butt was itchy because she'd sat in poison ivy, and apparently, the siblings had lost their voices cheering for their grandfather, however, [[CreepyChangingPainting the picture of Great-Grandma Harriet smiles]], so it's unknown if that really happened, or if it really was magic and cheering for their grandfather was a coincidence.
** In "Washed Up", a Nessie-type monster named Plessy is shown to exist.


Added DiffLines:

* ''Anime/TheMysteriousCitiesOfGold'' is set around the conquistador times, and is about men in search for El Dorado, and cities full of Gold. While their are some semi-mythical elements (such as Esteban being the "Child of the Sun" and that the Incas have fairly sophisticated fantasy-esque technology), it was always kept in the theme of the period and explained in terms of what was available at the time. Then out of nowhere, the aliens are revealed and watching the protagonists on television screens...
* The ChristmasEpisode of ''WesternAnimation/PostmanPat'' features an old man with ''[[MindOverMatter psychokinesis]]'', who [[SantaAmbiguity might]] be SantaClaus.


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* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Rugrats}}'' episode "The Santa Experience" ends with Santa's sleigh flying off.
* ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' has occasionally been known to replace [[ScoobyDooHoax the guy in a monster mask]] with an actual monster. Generally, if Shaggy and Scooby are alone (or with Scrappy), the monsters are real. If Fred or Velma is there, they aren't. The films, both live-action and Direct-to-Video, usually have real monsters regardless of their cast.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' was primarily a sci-fi show centered around giant robots. However, there were several occasions where the plot delved into supernatural areas--in one episode they ran into a wizard in the past, in another they dealt with a Quintesson who used magic, and two episodes were devoted to Starscream's [[spoiler: ghost.]]
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40k is openly Science fantasy in any case and Fantasy has enough steampunk for things like chainswords to barely stand out.


* In older editions of ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' and ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', the two verses were connected through the Chaos Wastes via the Warp, which is how some lucky champions got their hands on chainswords and plasma guns.
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->''"I detest talk of supernatural drivel. I suppose now you'll say she has midi-chlorians."''

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->''"I detest talk of supernatural drivel. I suppose now you'll say she has midi-chlorians."''midi-chlorians?"''

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[[folder:Anime and Manga]]

to:

[[folder:Anime and & Manga]]



--> '''Shinpachi:''' Could it be there's really a ghost?
--> '''Gintoki:''' Huh? I don't believe in things that can't be scientifically sustained like ghosts. Though I do believe in the Continent of Mu. ''(beat)'' This is ridiculous. I don't feel like goofing around with you guys. Let's go back.
--> '''Shinpachi:''' Gin-san.
--> '''Gintoki:''' Hm?
--> '''Shinpachi:''' What is this? ''(Gintoki is holding hands with him and Kagura)''
--> '''Gintoki:''' What do you mean? I was just worried that you two might be afraid or something.
--> '''Kagura:''' Gin-chan's hand's all sweaty, this is disgusting.
--> '''Gintoki:''' Huh? What are you talking about?
--> '''Okita:''' Ah. The woman in the red kimono ''[the ghost in question; in this case, Okita's just {{troll}}ing them, as customary]''.
--> ''(Gintoki leaps into a cupboard and assumes fetal position)''
--> '''Shinpachi:''' What are you doing, Gin-san?
--> '''Gintoki:''' Uh, nothing. I just saw a gate to the Continent of Mu.

to:

--> '''Shinpachi:''' -->'''Shinpachi:''' Could it be there's really a ghost?
-->
ghost?\\
'''Gintoki:''' Huh? I don't believe in things that can't be scientifically sustained like ghosts. Though I do believe in the Continent of Mu. ''(beat)'' This is ridiculous. I don't feel like goofing around with you guys. Let's go back.
-->
back.\\
'''Shinpachi:''' Gin-san.
-->
Gin-san.\\
'''Gintoki:''' Hm?
-->
Hm?\\
'''Shinpachi:''' What is this? ''(Gintoki ''[Gintoki is holding hands with him and Kagura)''
-->
Kagura]''\\
'''Gintoki:''' What do you mean? I was just worried that you two might be afraid or something.
-->
something.\\
'''Kagura:''' Gin-chan's hand's all sweaty, this is disgusting.
-->
disgusting.\\
'''Gintoki:''' Huh? What are you talking about?
-->
about?\\
'''Okita:''' Ah. The woman in the red kimono kimono. ''[the ghost in question; in this case, Okita's just {{troll}}ing them, as customary]''.
--> ''(Gintoki
customary]''\\
''[Gintoki
leaps into a cupboard and assumes fetal position)''
-->
position]''\\
'''Shinpachi:''' What are you doing, Gin-san?
-->
Gin-san?\\
'''Gintoki:''' Uh, nothing. I just saw a gate to the Continent of Mu.



* The ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}}'' book, ''Asterix and The Falling Sky'', features two groups of ''aliens'' fighting for control of the magic potion. With Franchise/{{Superman}} clones. And lasers. In an otherwise LowFantasy version of AncientRome.
* Some of the humor in ''ComicBook/AtomicRobo'' comes from LampshadeHanging on things that are too ridiculous for its universe, such as [[AttackOfThe50FootWhatever giant ants]]. This really comes into play, however, when Robo fights the talking raptor Dr. Dinosaur, who claims to have time-traveled from the death of the dinosaurs with a [[PowerCrystal crystal-powered time machine]]. Robo points out the grossly bad science in this backstory before pointing out that Dr. Dinosaur is probably just a genetic experiment gone wrong (which is implied to be true).
** At the same time, whenever Robo lampshades how ridiculous, or in defiance of the laws of physics Dr. Dinosaur's plans are, ''they always work''.

to:

* The ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}}'' book, ''Asterix and The the Falling Sky'', features two groups of ''aliens'' fighting for control of the magic potion. With Franchise/{{Superman}} clones. And lasers. In an otherwise LowFantasy version of AncientRome.
* Some of the humor in ''ComicBook/AtomicRobo'' comes from LampshadeHanging on things that are too ridiculous for its universe, such as [[AttackOfThe50FootWhatever giant ants]]. This really comes into play, however, when Robo fights the talking raptor Dr. Dinosaur, who claims to have time-traveled from the death of the dinosaurs with a [[PowerCrystal crystal-powered time machine]]. Robo points out the grossly bad science in this backstory before pointing out that Dr. Dinosaur is probably just a genetic experiment gone wrong (which is implied to be true).
**
true). At the same time, whenever Robo lampshades how ridiculous, or in defiance of the laws of physics Dr. Dinosaur's plans are, ''they always work''.



* In ''ComicStrip/ThePhantom'', TheCowl of the title seems to live in [[ArbitrarySkepticism surprisingly strong denial]] of the weirder side of his LowFantasy world, refusing to admit in the existence of things like aliens or magic when he keeps several monsters (a unicorn, a stegosaurus and a family of primeval humanoids) as pets or his ancestors' journals discuss one ancestor who used magic to regenerate his gouged-out eyeballs.



[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* In ''ComicStrip/ThePhantom'', TheCowl of the title seems to live in [[ArbitrarySkepticism surprisingly strong denial]] of the weirder side of his LowFantasy world, refusing to admit in the existence of things like aliens or magic when he keeps several monsters (a unicorn, a stegosaurus and a family of primeval humanoids) as pets or his ancestors' journals discuss one ancestor who used magic to regenerate his gouged-out eyeballs.
[[/folder]]



* Played for laughs in Disney's ''Disney/{{Bolt}}'' when aliens are introduced into the new episode of the show. Rhino is shown looking particularly unimpressed by the changes.
* ''Disney/{{Tarzan}}'' is the story of a NatureHero raised by {{Talking Animal}}s. There are no supernatural elements in the story. This carries on to ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'', the [[RecycledTheSeries animated series based on the film]]... until an episode introduces Queen La, a villain with magical powers.

to:

* Played for laughs in Disney's ''Disney/{{Bolt}}'' ''WesternAnimation/{{Bolt}}'' when aliens are introduced into the new episode of the show. Rhino is shown looking particularly unimpressed by the changes.
* ''Disney/{{Tarzan}}'' ''WesternAnimation/{{Tarzan}}'' is the story of a NatureHero raised by {{Talking Animal}}s. There are no supernatural elements in the story. This carries on to ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'', the [[RecycledTheSeries animated series based on the film]]... until an episode introduces Queen La, a villain with magical powers.



** The apparently functional Voodoo prescience and a [[TheDragon Dragon]] who [[spoiler: ''actually comes back from the dead'' like the deity he's named for/impersonating/possibly ''is'']].

to:

** The apparently functional Voodoo prescience and a [[TheDragon Dragon]] who [[spoiler: ''actually [[spoiler:''actually comes back from the dead'' like the deity he's named for/impersonating/possibly ''is'']].



* Some paperback original heroes of the 1970s such as ''ThePenetrator'' switched back and forth from mundane gangster foes to enemies with technology that outpaced the 20th century.

to:

* Some paperback original heroes of the 1970s such as ''ThePenetrator'' ''Literature/ThePenetrator'' switched back and forth from mundane gangster foes to enemies with technology that outpaced the 20th century.



* Used in the ''{{Literature/Lensman}}'' series. The way the Hell-Hole in Space works, and what happens to someone who goes through it, are nothing like anything else that happens in the series, and do not make sense even in terms of the most far-out reaches of the series's mental or physical science. Up until this point everything that happens is basically a more extreme version of something that has happened before, but the Hell-Hole in Space is on a different track altogether. Even the description of it flounders, and resorts to using words like "binding" and "geas". The literal invocation of ThePowerOfLove as a DeusExMachina to put right what the Hell-Hole put wrong could also be considered as this; it is presented as an aspect of the series's mental science, but if that segment was read in isolation with the characters' names changed the connection would not be at all obvious.
* The ''PureDead'' series has this kind of moments. Its mostly about fantasy, but the second book introduces ''cloning''. Given how it was handled (basically the clones were incubated in a duck corpse and ended up as being small sized, red versions of the humans that they were cloned from) it hardly matters.
* The ''first'' time [[Series/DoctorWho the Doctor]] pulled a WhereIWasBornAndRazed, in the ''Series/DoctorWho'' Literature/EighthDoctorAdventures novels, the absence of the Time Lords allowed magic to gain a foothold in the universe. So the Doctor has sex with a [[TheFairFolk Fair Folk]]-esque water nymph who wants to trap him in her realm, and gets horribly injured in several magical rituals. What, were they trying to ''literally'' [[DoingInTheScientist Do In The Scientist]]? Also, he has to get married to save the world, [[AWizardDidIt because magic]]. This almost resulted in him marrying a thirteen-year-old girl, although, reassuringly, not only is consummating it never brought up, the {{UST}} between him and the grown woman he does end up marrying remains just that. Amazingly, he's [[IronWoobie never seen complaining about all this damn magic making his life worse]].
** You can, of course, ignore all of this, and assume the Doctor's (apparent) TraumaInducedAmnesia is preventing him from giving the [[BlatantLies perfectly scientific]] [[TechnoBabble explanations]] he has for apparent magic in ''The Daemons'', "The Shakespeare Code" etc.
* Creator/DennisWheatley's adventurer the Duc de Richlieau debuted in a non-paranormal adventure novel. However, Wheatley featured de Richlieau in the novel ''Literature/TheDevilRidesOut'' (1934) where he encounters the modern wizard Damien Mocata, who has actual paranormal powers. The Duc de Richlieau would alternate between paranormal adventures such as ''Strange Conflict'' and ''Gateway to Hell'' and mundane adventures such as ''The Golden Spaniard'', ''Codeword-Golden Fleece'', ''The Second Seal'', ''The Prisoner in the Mask'', ''Vendetta in Spain'' and ''Dangerous Inheritance''.
** Wheatley's character Gregory Sallust also features in a novel in which Satanism plays a part, ''They Used Dark Forces'' though the supernatural events in this are only peripheral and it is mainly a spy story.

to:

* Used in the ''{{Literature/Lensman}}'' ''Literature/{{Lensman}}'' series. The way the Hell-Hole in Space works, and what happens to someone who goes through it, are nothing like anything else that happens in the series, and do not make sense even in terms of the most far-out reaches of the series's mental or physical science. Up until this point everything that happens is basically a more extreme version of something that has happened before, but the Hell-Hole in Space is on a different track altogether. Even the description of it flounders, and resorts to using words like "binding" and "geas". The literal invocation of ThePowerOfLove as a DeusExMachina to put right what the Hell-Hole put wrong could also be considered as this; it is presented as an aspect of the series's mental science, but if that segment was read in isolation with the characters' names changed the connection would not be at all obvious.
* The ''PureDead'' ''Literature/PureDead'' series has this kind of moments. Its mostly about fantasy, but the second book introduces ''cloning''. Given how it was handled (basically the clones were incubated in a duck corpse and ended up as being small sized, red versions of the humans that they were cloned from) it hardly matters.
* The ''first'' time [[Series/DoctorWho the Doctor]] Doctor pulled a WhereIWasBornAndRazed, in the ''Series/DoctorWho'' Literature/EighthDoctorAdventures novels, the absence of the Time Lords allowed magic to gain a foothold in the universe. So the Doctor has sex with a [[TheFairFolk Fair Folk]]-esque water nymph who wants to trap him in her realm, and gets horribly injured in several magical rituals. What, were they trying to ''literally'' [[DoingInTheScientist Do In The in the Scientist]]? Also, he has to get married to save the world, [[AWizardDidIt because magic]]. This almost resulted in him marrying a thirteen-year-old girl, although, reassuringly, not only is consummating it never brought up, the {{UST}} between him and the grown woman he does end up marrying remains just that. Amazingly, he's [[IronWoobie never seen complaining about all this damn magic making his life worse]].
**
worse]]. You can, of course, ignore all of this, and assume the Doctor's (apparent) TraumaInducedAmnesia is preventing him from giving the [[BlatantLies perfectly scientific]] [[TechnoBabble explanations]] he has for apparent magic in ''The Daemons'', "The Shakespeare Code" etc.
* Creator/DennisWheatley's adventurer the Duc de Richlieau debuted in a non-paranormal adventure novel. However, Wheatley featured de Richlieau in the novel ''Literature/TheDevilRidesOut'' (1934) where he encounters the modern wizard Damien Mocata, who has actual paranormal powers. The Duc de Richlieau would alternate between paranormal adventures such as ''Strange Conflict'' and ''Gateway to Hell'' and mundane adventures such as ''The Golden Spaniard'', ''Codeword-Golden Fleece'', ''The Second Seal'', ''The Prisoner in the Mask'', ''Vendetta in Spain'' and ''Dangerous Inheritance''.
**
Inheritance''. Wheatley's character Gregory Sallust also features in a novel in which Satanism plays a part, ''They Used Dark Forces'' though the supernatural events in this are only peripheral and it is mainly a spy story.



* [[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer Buffy]] has fought robots several times, including one becoming a major part of the sixth season, despite the show being virtually entirely focused on magic and demons and the like. Series/{{Angel}} has as well, though less frequently and in a less important role. WordOfGod is that they're supposed to represent MagicPoweredPseudoscience and aren't really technology.

to:

* [[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer Buffy]] ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'': Buffy has fought robots several times, including one becoming a major part of the sixth season, despite the show being virtually entirely focused on magic and demons and the like. Series/{{Angel}} has as well, though less frequently and in a less important role. WordOfGod is that they're supposed to represent MagicPoweredPseudoscience and aren't really technology.



* The fourth season finale of ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' (a show that is usually firmly grounded in reality) had a doctor encounter a little girl who was heavily implied to be the [[TheGrimReaper Angel of Death]].
** Likewise, recent episodes of ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'' have shown Pride having visions of a mysterious beautiful woman who is apparently the Angel of Death. Her words have accurately presaged certain events (albeit in cryptic fashion), implying that she really does exist.

to:

* The fourth season finale of ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' (a show that is usually firmly grounded in reality) had has a doctor encounter a little girl who was heavily implied to be the [[TheGrimReaper Angel of Death]].
** * Likewise, recent episodes of ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'' have shown Pride having visions of a mysterious beautiful woman who is apparently the Angel of Death. Her words have accurately presaged certain events (albeit in cryptic fashion), implying that she really does exist.



* Invoked on ''Series/{{Lost}}'' every time the current plot elements shift from pseudo-scientific discussions and theories to mythological and religious elements. Which happened quite often.

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* Invoked on ''Series/{{Lost}}'' every time the current plot elements shift from pseudo-scientific discussions and theories to mythological and religious elements. Which happened happens quite often.



* The crossover episodes of ''Series/{{Warehouse 13}}'' and ''Series/{{Eureka}}'' feel like this. The two shows had existed on the opposite sides of SpeculativeFiction ({{Fantasy}} and SciFi) until they were revealed to be the same universe. (Not even to mention the actor paradoxes.)
** The gap between the two shows is perfectly illustrated in the episode "13.1" by an exchange between Claudia and Fargo (paraphrased):
-->''(Claudia has a ring on her finger, causing her hand to glow brightly)''\\

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* The crossover episodes of ''Series/{{Warehouse 13}}'' ''Series/Warehouse13'' and ''Series/{{Eureka}}'' feel like this. The two shows had existed on the opposite sides of SpeculativeFiction ({{Fantasy}} and SciFi) until they were revealed to be the same universe. (Not even to mention the actor paradoxes.)
**
) The gap between the two shows is perfectly illustrated in the episode "13.1" by an exchange between Claudia and Fargo (paraphrased):
-->''(Claudia -->''[Claudia has a ring on her finger, causing her hand to glow brightly)''\\brightly]''\\



'''Claudia:''' ''(shrugs)'' It used to belong to Ben Franklin!

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'''Claudia:''' ''(shrugs)'' ''[shrugs]'' It used to belong to Ben Franklin!



* ''Series/{{Bones}}'' has Booth, at one point, trapped in a room with a bomb, and a door that he's not strong enough to open on his own. He's also hallucinating a soldier buddy that he knows is dead, and that he calls a hallucination several times to further reinforce the point. Long story short, he convinces the ''hallucination'' to help him open the door, thereby escaping death by explosion. And if you're thinking that he summoned up some HeroicWillpower, at the end of the episode, the Squints, a team composed ''entirely'' of genius-level academics, points out that the door ''really was impossible for one man to open''. Eventually, [[spoiler: the hallucination is explained by Booth's brain tumor, but the mystery of the door is left unsolved.]]
** At the very end of the episode, when Booth and Bones visit the gravesite Bones is shown actually seeing and acknowledging the ghost of the dead soldier, but since she was apparently never shown a photo of the deceased, she never realizes she's seen someone who is dead.

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* ''Series/{{Bones}}'' has ''Series/{{Bones}}'':
**
Booth, at one point, is trapped in a room with a bomb, and a door that he's not strong enough to open on his own. He's also hallucinating a soldier buddy that he knows is dead, and that he calls a hallucination several times to further reinforce the point. Long story short, he convinces the ''hallucination'' to help him open the door, thereby escaping death by explosion. And if you're thinking that he summoned up some HeroicWillpower, at the end of the episode, the Squints, a team composed ''entirely'' of genius-level academics, points out that the door ''really was impossible for one man to open''. Eventually, [[spoiler: the hallucination is explained by Booth's brain tumor, but the mystery of the door is left unsolved.]]
**
]] At the very end of the episode, when Booth and Bones visit the gravesite Bones is shown actually seeing and acknowledging the ghost of the dead soldier, but since she was apparently never shown a photo of the deceased, she never realizes she's seen someone who is dead.



[[folder:Myths and Religion]]

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[[folder:Myths and & Religion]]



* The 1st Edition ''Advanced TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' adventure ''Expedition to the Barrier Peaks'' starts out like any other fantasy dungeon-crawl of the era ... at least until the heroes enter the mysterious "cavern"--actually the airlock of a crashed spaceship full of weird life forms and hostile robots.

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* The 1st Edition ''Advanced TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' adventure ''Expedition to the Barrier Peaks'' starts out like any other fantasy dungeon-crawl of the era ... at least until the heroes enter the mysterious "cavern"--actually "cavern" -- actually the airlock of a crashed spaceship full of weird life forms and hostile robots.
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* ''Film/MontyPythonsLifeOfBrian'' has [[spoiler:an alien abduction scene set in a decidedly non SciFi context]]. It has [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment little bearing on the plot and never comes up again]], which is [[TropesAreTools oddly appropriate]] in a movie explicitly about InsaneTrollLogic.

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* ''Film/MontyPythonsLifeOfBrian'' has [[spoiler:an alien abduction scene set in a decidedly non SciFi context]]. It has [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment little bearing on the plot and never comes up again]], which is [[TropesAreTools [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools oddly appropriate]] in a movie explicitly about InsaneTrollLogic.
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* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has the first season episode, "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS1E15FeelingPinkieKeen Feeling Pinkie Keen]]", an episode where Twilight Sparkle attempts to figure out the scientific nature of Pinkie Pie's "[[SpiderSense Pinkie Sense]]" and is driven up the wall by the fact that it doesn't make any sense at all.

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* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has the first season episode, "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS1E15FeelingPinkieKeen Feeling Pinkie Keen]]", an episode where Twilight Sparkle attempts to figure out the scientific nature of Pinkie Pie's "[[SpiderSense Pinkie Sense]]" and is driven up the wall by the fact that it doesn't make any sense at all. In later episodes it's simply accepted as fact that laws of magic and physics don't really apply to her.
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Potholes are not allowed in quotes


->''"I detest talk of supernatural drivel. I suppose now you'll say she has [[Film/ThePhantomMenace midi-chlorians]]."''

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->''"I detest talk of supernatural drivel. I suppose now you'll say she has [[Film/ThePhantomMenace midi-chlorians]].midi-chlorians."''
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The clown is part of a reference to the Marx Brothers throughout the game (Groucho is the Saurus salesman, Chico runs the stand where you buy the map of Shapier, and the clown is Harpo).


* The "silly clowns" option in ''VideoGame/QuestForGloryII'', a game that takes place in a middle-eastern fantasy setting. Granted, these games basically run on AnachronismStew combined with an overabundance of cheesy gags, but there's just something about seeing a brightly dressed clown walk through the streets of the Sultan's palace.

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* The "silly clowns" option in ''VideoGame/QuestForGloryII'', a game that takes place in a middle-eastern fantasy setting. Granted, these games basically run on AnachronismStew combined with an overabundance of cheesy gags, but there's just something about seeing this takes it UpToEleven with sight gags like a brightly dressed clown walk through golfer in the streets middle of the Sultan's palace.desert.
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A violation of GenreConsistency. May be caused by AchievementsInIgnorance or PowerBornOfMadness. May also be the result of {{Filler}} or other {{Padding}}. A character who can consistently do this is InexplicablyAwesome. See also: ArbitrarySkepticism, MagicRealism, SkepticismFailure, SomethingCompletelyDifferent, ThisIsReality, ScrewTheRulesIHavePlot, OutOfGenreExperience. Contrast MagicAIsMagicA, MinovskyPhysics.

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A violation of GenreConsistency. May be caused by AchievementsInIgnorance or PowerBornOfMadness. May also be the result of {{Filler}} or other {{Padding}}. A character who can consistently do this is InexplicablyAwesome. See also: ArbitrarySkepticism, MagicRealism, SkepticismFailure, SomethingCompletelyDifferent, ThisIsReality, ScrewTheRulesIHavePlot, NewRulesAsThePlotDemands, OutOfGenreExperience. Contrast MagicAIsMagicA, MinovskyPhysics.
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Come on...


* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' established that various ReligionIsMagic powers and EnlightenmentSuperpowers existed in it's world almost immediately, but for the most part treated them like other sci-fi treats psychic powers so they don't usually stand out too much. The main exceptions are the episodes where the crew goes up against the evil wizard Malgus, where it suddenly turns into a straight-out fantasy story. Malgus deliberately using a gothic aesthetic in-universe doesn't help.

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* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' established that various ReligionIsMagic powers and EnlightenmentSuperpowers existed in it's world almost immediately, but for the most part treated them like other sci-fi treats psychic powers so they don't usually stand out too much. The main exceptions are the episodes where the crew goes up against the evil wizard Malgus, Maldis, where it suddenly turns into a straight-out fantasy story. Malgus Maldis deliberately using a gothic aesthetic in-universe doesn't help.
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None


* Creator/DennisWheatley's adventurer the Duc de Richlieau debuted in a non-paranormal adventure novel. However, Wheatley featured de Richlieau in the novel ''The Devil Rides Out'' (1934) where he encounters the modern wizard Damien Mocata, who has actual paranormal powers. The Duc de Richlieau would alternate between paranormal adventures such as ''Strange Conflict'' and ''Gateway to Hell'' and mundane adventures such as ''The Golden Spaniard'', ''Codeword-Golden Fleece'', ''The Second Seal'', ''The Prisoner in the Mask'', ''Vendetta in Spain'' and ''Dangerous Inheritance''.

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* Creator/DennisWheatley's adventurer the Duc de Richlieau debuted in a non-paranormal adventure novel. However, Wheatley featured de Richlieau in the novel ''The Devil Rides Out'' ''Literature/TheDevilRidesOut'' (1934) where he encounters the modern wizard Damien Mocata, who has actual paranormal powers. The Duc de Richlieau would alternate between paranormal adventures such as ''Strange Conflict'' and ''Gateway to Hell'' and mundane adventures such as ''The Golden Spaniard'', ''Codeword-Golden Fleece'', ''The Second Seal'', ''The Prisoner in the Mask'', ''Vendetta in Spain'' and ''Dangerous Inheritance''.
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None


* L, the master detective in ''Manga/DeathNote'', has solved the world's toughest mysteries, but he is completely stumped as to Kira's ''modus operandi'' because he doesn't believe in the supernatural -- at most, he allows that Kira must have psychic killing abilities or mental powers, but not a something out of (pseudo) Myth/JapaneseMythology. When he's finally presented with evidence that ''shinigami'' are real, he has a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSMtT5rQeQU screaming freak-out]] followed by a short breakdown. Light does his best to convince him there's no such thing as shinigami, while Ryuuk grins in the background.

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* L, the master detective in ''Manga/DeathNote'', has solved the world's toughest mysteries, but he is completely stumped as to Kira's ''modus operandi'' because he doesn't believe in the supernatural -- at most, he allows that Kira must have psychic killing abilities or mental powers, but not a something out of (pseudo) Myth/JapaneseMythology. When he's finally presented with evidence that ''shinigami'' are real, he has a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSMtT5rQeQU screaming freak-out]] followed by a short breakdown. Light does his best to convince him there's no such thing as shinigami, while Ryuuk grins in the background.
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How To Write An Example - Do Not Pothole the Trope Name


* ''Manga/GhostInTheShell: Man-Machine Interface'' arbitrarily features a psychic who keeps astrally manifesting to the protagonist as a raccoon dog and a teenaged girl whose body is made out of a dragon, commenting on her activities in a {{Trickster}}-like manner. Motoko's own comment on her first manifestation is "How unscientific" (added with a footnote that it's unscientific to dismiss a phenomenon on the drop of the hat, implying that the author has his own opinions on the subject).

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* ''Manga/GhostInTheShell: Man-Machine Interface'' arbitrarily features a psychic who keeps astrally manifesting to the protagonist as a raccoon dog and a teenaged girl whose body is made out of a dragon, commenting on her activities in a {{Trickster}}-like [[TheTrickster Trickster-like]] manner. Motoko's own comment on her first manifestation is "How unscientific" (added with a footnote that it's unscientific to dismiss a phenomenon on the drop of the hat, implying that the author has his own opinions on the subject).
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* ''Series/StarskyAndHutch'' has "The Psychic," in which a man uses his psychic visions to help the police track down a kidnapped girl, and "Murder on Voodoo Island," in which HollywoodVoodoo causes Starsky to try to strangle Hutch.
* In the infamous ''Series/MiamiVice'' episode "Missing Hours," the otherwise normal TV series sees a lot of weirdness, including Trudy getting abducted by an alien (played by Music/JamesBrown) and Crockett and Tubbs later seeing a UFO.
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* Aliens once appeared in an episode of ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}''. So did Sasquatch. And a Soviet psychic. And a Christmas angel. Also, Time Travel. To medieval Scotland. To save his ancestor. It was AllJustADream, OrWasItADream

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* Aliens once appeared in an episode of ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}''. So did Sasquatch. And a Soviet psychic. And a Christmas angel. Also, Time Travel. To medieval Scotland. To save his ancestor. It was AllJustADream, OrWasItADream
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* Aliens once appeared in an episode of ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}''. So did Sasquatch. And a Soviet psychic. Also, Time Travel. To medieval Scotland. To save his ancestor. It was AllJustADream, OrWasItADream

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* Aliens once appeared in an episode of ''Series/{{MacGyver|1985}}''. So did Sasquatch. And a Soviet psychic. And a Christmas angel. Also, Time Travel. To medieval Scotland. To save his ancestor. It was AllJustADream, OrWasItADream
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* ''Series/{{Benson}}'' was generally a perfectly straightforward sitcom, but it had a couple of episodes like this, like the time the mansion staff acquires a robot, and the Halloween episode where Benson ends up challenging Death to a game of Trivial Pursuit to save the lives of a busload of children. Plus there was the [[AllJustADream dream sequence]] episode where Benson and Krauss are the only two humans left on Earth.

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* ''Series/{{Benson}}'' was generally a perfectly straightforward sitcom, but it had a couple of few episodes like this, like the time the mansion staff acquires a robot, the one where Benson and the Governor have a Close Encounter with a U.F.O., and the Halloween episode where Benson ends up challenging Death to a game of Trivial Pursuit to save the lives of a busload of children. Plus there was the [[AllJustADream dream sequence]] episode where Benson and Krauss are the only two humans left on Earth.
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** Likewise, recent episodes of ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'' have shown Pride having visions of a mysterious beautiful woman who is apparently the Angel of Death. Her words have accurately presaged certain events (albeit in cryptic fashion), implying that she really does exist.

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