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-->''Today we take a look at another chapter in the heavy, heavy book that we call history!''

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-->''Today we take a look at yet another chapter in the heavy, heavy book that we call history!''
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* TheWorldIsJustAwesome: During the song at the end of "The Dreadful Demise of the Dinosaurs" [[spoiler:the Meteor marvels at the beauty of Earth.]]
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Trope was cut/disambiguated due to cleanup


* AnAesop: The Pile of Diamonds cheekily adds one to "Stealing the World's Most Expensive Necklace" against getting catfished at the end of the episode.
-->'''Pile of Diamonds''': ''I guess if there's a lesson\\
To this whole backstabbing mess, then\\
It's that if you think you know the queen\\
'''You make sure that you know the queen!'''\\
Like has she ever talked to you,\\
Or looked at you, or smiled at you,\\
Or ever seemed to think of you,\\
Or met you in the daytime?\\
Maybe ask her for her license\\
Or to pose with today's paper\\
And if she doesn't want to,\\
Then, my dude, '''I think it ain't her!'''''
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It's not that he has any knowledge, even in the general sense, about Hatshepsut so much as he accurate expects history to turn out sad.


* ForegoneConclusion: Ryann Graham makes himself sad throughout the Hatshepsut episode despite not knowing the whole story because he knows the general way things play out for the forgotten pharaoh.

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* ForegoneConclusion: Ryann Graham makes himself sad throughout the Hatshepsut episode despite not knowing the whole story because he knows the general way by anticipating things play out going wrong for the forgotten pharaoh.female pharoah, mostly just on the basis that history is often kind of bleak.
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* ArtisticLicenseHistory: "The Mistress Who Murdered Her Way To The Throne" discusses the allegations that Wu Zetian murdered her own infant daughter and blamed Empress Wang. The daughter who died is said to have been Princess Taiping, who actually lived to the age of 51; the daughter who died as a baby was Princess Si.



** "America v. Smallpox" has the professor ask Jermaine if he contracted dancing plague since the last time he was on the show, in which he replies no. Later in the same episode, the professor name-checks this trope when Jermaine gets the trophy from the "devil" (Shane's hand).

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** "America v. Smallpox" has the professor ask Jermaine if he contracted dancing plague since the last time he was on the show, in to which he replies with no. Later in the same episode, the professor name-checks this trope when Jermaine gets the trophy from the "devil" (Shane's hand).
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* EmbarrassingNickname: To avoid confusion in the Hatshepsut episode, Ryan Bergara offers to go by "R.B." The Professor and other Ryann immediately start calling him "Arby's", which [[DidNotThinkThisThrough Ryan hates]]. The Professor spends the rest of the episode calling him "Beef Boy" or "Beef Man."

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* EmbarrassingNickname: To avoid confusion in the Hatshepsut UsefulNotes/{{Hatshepsut}} episode, Ryan Bergara offers to go by "R.B." The Professor and other Ryann immediately start calling him "Arby's", which [[DidNotThinkThisThrough Ryan hates]]. The Professor spends the rest of the episode calling him "Beef Boy" or "Beef Man."
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** "The Race to the South Pole" ends with [[spoiler: the Professor noting this is usually the point when a false sense of security leads to something bad happening, followed by an ominous pause...and then the episode concludes as normal without incident.]]


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** His jerky behavior in Season 5 is explained when [[spoiler: it's revealed he's actually been replaced by a demented hologram version of himself.]]


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* LighterAndSofter: Season 6 features less grisly topics and a much more relaxed tone. Lampshaded in "The Deadly Race to the South Pole," when [[spoiler: the Professor claims this is usually the point when something bad happens...but it doesn't.]]
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* AnimateInanimateObject: A great deal of the guest singers are these- specifically, we've seen a pile of diamonds, a propeller from the HMS Britannic, an old-fashioned steam train, [[GeniusLoci Mt. Vesuvius]], the Olympic Torch, a Music/RandyNewman-esque coin, a boat oar and a sword that ''used'' to be a boat oar, a spool of thread, a snowman, the sacred Golden Stool, Ziryab's oud (a type of string instrument similar to a ukulele), a pair of poison bottles, a flower-bearing boat, a cute little piece of wheat, a chest of gold coins, a book, a freaky stained-glass window, a cloud that knows [[WhoShotJFK Who Shot JFK]], and the comet that wiped out the dinosaurs.

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* AnimateInanimateObject: A great deal of the guest singers are these- specifically, we've seen a pile of diamonds, a propeller from the HMS Britannic, an old-fashioned steam train, [[GeniusLoci Mt. Vesuvius]], the Olympic Torch, a Music/RandyNewman-esque coin, a boat oar and a sword that ''used'' to be a boat oar, a spool of thread, a snowman, the sacred Golden Stool, Ziryab's oud (a type of string instrument similar to a ukulele), a pair of poison bottles, a flower-bearing boat, a cute little piece of wheat, a chest of gold coins, a book, a freaky stained-glass window, a cloud that knows [[WhoShotJFK Who Shot JFK]], and the comet that wiped out the dinosaurs.dinosaurs, and a prototype for a new musical instrument.
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** Steven Lim returns as a guest in the Season 6 opener, and reference is made to the fact that his first episode was about the Black Death and aired right before the Covid-19 pandemic.
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** The Pile of Diamonds from "Stealing The World's Most Expensive Necklace" makes reappearances in "The Dancing Plague", where he does an ad-read for Mischief, and "The Story of St. Nicholas", where he sings "Love on a Shelf".

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** The Pile of Diamonds from "Stealing The World's Most Expensive Necklace" makes reappearances in "The Dancing Plague", where he does an ad-read for Mischief, MSCHF, and "The Story of St. Nicholas", where he sings "Love on a Shelf".
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* StarCrossedLovers: The oars on Miyamoto Musashi's boat. Their song "Gore on the Shore" is an emotional ballad about how they were once in a passionate relationship, but now that one of the oars has been converted into a sword, they can no longer work in tandem like they once did. They do make out at the end of the song, though, and "The Story Of St. Nicholas" reveals that the two of them are in a committed relationship and are traveling the world together.

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* StarCrossedLovers: The oars on Miyamoto Musashi's boat. Their song "Gore on the Shore" is an emotional ballad about how they were once in a passionate relationship, but now that one of the oars has been converted into a sword, they can no longer work in tandem like they once did. They do make out at the end of the song, though, and "The Story Of St. Nicholas" reveals that the two of them are in a committed relationship were able to work things out and are traveling the world together.together as lovers.
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* StarCrossedLovers: The oars on Miyamoto Musashi's boat. Their song "Either Oar" is an emotional ballad about how they were once in a passionate relationship, but now that one of the oars has been converted into a sword, they can no longer work in tandem like they once did. They do make out at the end of the song, though, and "The Story Of St. Nicholas" reveals that the two of them are in a committed relationship and are traveling the world together.

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* StarCrossedLovers: The oars on Miyamoto Musashi's boat. Their song "Either Oar" "Gore on the Shore" is an emotional ballad about how they were once in a passionate relationship, but now that one of the oars has been converted into a sword, they can no longer work in tandem like they once did. They do make out at the end of the song, though, and "The Story Of St. Nicholas" reveals that the two of them are in a committed relationship and are traveling the world together.

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