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4* Hal Johnson, an African-Canadian athlete turned TV journalist, tired of the racist mistreatment he was enduring on The Sports Network among other Canadian broadcasters, proposed the ''Body Break'' series of TV fitness and nutrition informational spots with himself and his white wife, Joanne [=McLeod=]. TSN turned it down flat, claiming that the Canadian public would not accept a mixed-race couple on TV. Johnson and [=McLeod=] approached the Federal government funded fitness promotion organization, [=ParticapACTION=], and they agreed to fund the series. ''Body Break'' would become a mainstay of Canadian TV for decades, and when Johnson [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c03bii23QCI&t=211s came forward in 2020 about the story of the series' creation]], TSN posted an official apology for how they mistreated him.
5* Executives at advertising agency Goodby Silverstein & Partners thought a little campaign called Advertising/GotMilk wouldn't work, because its name "was lazy, not to mention grammatically incorrect". The campaign was a runaway success, became a pop culture icon, and was a TropeCodifier for {{Snowclones}}.
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9* ''Manga/AssassinationClassroom'' hinges on kids learning how to kill their teacher with guns (ItMakesSenseInContext), which given the history of school shootings in America, didn't seem it would fly high. That fact is why it took so long to avert NoExportForYou. However, once it finally did, it's been a fixture on the New York Time's bestseller lists, so it's safe to say it's done well despite all the fears.
10* Masayuki Ozaki, the executive producer of ''Anime/TigerAndBunny'', stated that ''no one'' expected the series to be successful (namely because of the belief that nobody would want to watch a {{superhero}} anime with a middle-aged single father as its primary protagonist), much less become the instant CashCowFranchise it is now.
11* ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'' was a last-ditch attempt by Creator/StudioGainax to stay afloat, and was not expected to turn out extremely well. An UrbanLegend even claims that investors were hoping for a SpringtimeForHitler situation.
12* Before the English release of ''VisualNovel/{{Shuffle}}'', anime based on {{eroge}} with the porn removed from the adaptation were not commonly licensed, with rumors flying around that MoralGuardians would throw a fit if they ended up on store shelves. When Creator/{{Funimation}} licensed the series, nearly every blog and forum was raising its collective eyebrows and wondering why the distributor obviously hated making money. The first volume of ''SHUFFLE!'' came out and sold ''tons'' of copies, and Funi decided to give the final volume a special edition art box release (which had been common a few years earlier, but in the wake of Creator/{{Geneon}}'s fall, not so much) if the second volume sold as well. It did. Now you can't walk into a video store without tripping over eroge adaptations, whether or not they actually have a plot.
13* ''Anime/CodeGeass'' was the very definition of TroubledProduction thanks to this trope. Director/co-creator Goro Taniguchi asked for a 50-episode series, but [[Creator/BandaiNamcoEntertainment Bandai Namco]] only gave him 25, for reasons that remain unclear[[note]]Some say they felt Taniguchi was "untested", others say it's because he's a perfectionist and somewhat hard to work with -- or because previous works of his like ''Manga/{{Planetes}}'' and ''Anime/GunXSword'' had not done too well in the Japanese market[[/note]]. Even then, the staff had limited resources and had to piggy-back off of other Bandai shows in production at the time. When the show took off and became the Next Big Thing, Bandai was quick to embrace it, though unlike Creator/YoshiyukiTomino and ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'', Taniguchi and fellow co-creator Ichiro Okouchi were smart enough to hold onto the rights.
14* Many within the gaming and anime fandoms questioned whether ''Anime/CyberpunkEdgerunners'' would amount to anything special. For one, the series serves as a prequel to ''VideoGame/Cyberpunk2077'', a game that became [[ObviousBeta infamous for its rough launch two years prior]]. Moreover, when showrunner Rafal Jaki initially pitched it to several anime studios during pre-production, most were skeptical and uninterested (outside of TRIGGER), as they found the story to be too "crazy" and "unsuitable" for animation. However, since the series' premiere, critics and viewers concur that Creator/StudioTrigger nailed it, with the series scoring a 8.7 Website/{{IMDb}} score and a 100% on Rotten Tomatoes. The anime hit the top 5 in Netflix's most-watched shows in Western and Japanese markets alike, and its LoveTheme "I Really Want to Stay at Your House" became a viral musical hit with the song topping Spotify's viral chart and entering the Top 100 charts in Australia, Canada, and the UK. Moreover, the anime's success has [[{{Pun}} triggered]] a NewbieBoom for the game. 22 months after its troubled launch, the game [[https://www.forbes.com/sites/paultassi/2022/09/25/cyberpunk-2077-becomes-steams-top-selling-game-22-months-after-launch/ became the top-selling game on Steam]] and its daily peak concurrent players on Steam spiked to 136,724 in September 2022, a 7x increase compared to the previous month.
15* The first ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' manuscript was sent to Shueisha to publish in Weekly Magazine/ShonenJump, who said it was good, but not good enough for Jump, and rejected it. The author then sent it to rival Kodansha, who published it in their monthly Bessatsu Shounen Magazine. It goes without saying it became a SleeperHit, growing in popularity to surpass famous long-runners like ''Franchise/{{Bleach}}''.
16* Ask any voice actor of any anime that was successful in the US. None of them expected the shows they were working on to be anything more than weird little projects with quick paychecks. This goes all the way back to ''Anime/SpeedRacer'', later ''Anime/{{Robotech}}'', and continued with ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'', ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'', ''Manga/SailorMoon'', ''Anime/DragonBallZ'', ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'', ''Anime/CowboyBebop'', and others. The ''Pokémon'' voice actors didn't expect to work more than 26 episodes, let alone hundreds, for their show to be parodied on ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' and ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', and continue to have a lasting fanbase twenty years later.
17* ''Anime/YuriOnIce'': Before its first episode was released, there was not much hype for the anime, especially since there were two anime adaptations from popular CastFullOfPrettyBoys-focused franchises airing in the same season (the fourth season of ''VisualNovel/UtaNoPrinceSama'' and ''Anime/ToukenRanbuHanamaru''). The anime not only outdid the other two, it also became an internet juggernaut, constantly trending on Twitter and Tumblr (in the latter network, the anime steadily kept first place on the trending tags every Wednesday and Thursday, even on the day of the 2016 US Elections, ''and'' [[DemandOverload crashed Tumblr when the final episode came out]]). The anime even attracted the attention of professional figure skaters, and has a large LGBTFanbase, besides the average sports anime fan. The fact that it went to groundbreaking lengths by [[spoiler:making the two male leads an OfficialCouple, portraying a healthy normalized same-sex interracial couple]], besides the diversity of nationality and race of the rest of the cast, a first in mainstream and sports anime, helped the show go neck-to-neck with other extremely popular series like ''Webcomic/OnePunchMan'' and ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' and surpass all other sports anime that aired in 2016.
18* While he never outright stated it would fail, Creator/EiichiroOda never dreamed that ''Manga/OnePiece'' would [[CashCowFranchise become the smash hit]] it did, planning on ending the series after five years. He was off by a few ''decades''.
19* Nobody involved with the 5 year production of ''Anime/OddTaxi'' thought it would be successful or gain much traction. There weren't any plans for a Blu-Ray release, English dub, or anything beyond what they were making, and the exception by the team was that very few would turn into watching the show. Thanks to strong word of mouth during and after it's release, ''Odd Taxi'' would become one of the highest rated anime originals ''of all time'' while being a critical and commercial success.
20* Prior to its release, people unfamiliar with ''Manga/MissKobayashisDragonMaid'' were angry at [=KyoAni=] because they were under the impression that it was generic fanservice and moe. Those who had read the manga merely laughed as everyone else quickly changed their tune when it came out.
21* ''Literature/TheIrregularAtMagicHighSchool'' was this for its Dengeki Bunko publishing house. While this novel was quite popular on the Internet, none of the publishers wanted to license it, since the settings for InvincibleHero with his ideal BigBrotherWorship sister, which are a step away from BrotherSisterIncest, would obviously have very poor sales. Even the editor who gave him the greenlight said that this work "completely contradicts all those rules, which must correspond to a good light novel." Nevertheless, he decided to take a risk, and in the end, this novel became the second title for the popularity and sales of volumes in the publishing house.
22* ''Anime/KemonoFriends'': Based on a dead mobile game about animal girls with only ten people working on it for five hundred days, NoBudget and full of incredibly obvious [[TwoDVisualsThreeDEffects 3D mixed with 2D]], even the creators expected it to flop terribly. Yet the generally decent writing, solid character designs and surprisingly compelling OntologicalMystery made for a solid watch, and it ultimately became ''extremely'' popular through [[MemeticMutation internet word-of-mouth]]. Its first episode became the most-watched anime episode on Platform/NicoNicoDouga; disc sets and merchandise quickly sold out, and the DoItYourselfThemeTune reached #3 on Japan's iTunes rankings.
23* ''Anime/KingOfPrism'' was initially planned as a 13-episode late-night television series, and Masakazu Hishida had always wanted to create a spin-off of ''Anime/PrettyRhythmRainbowLive'' that would focus on the male characters. However, Avex rejected the proposal twice, the second time after they had reworked it into a film, and told them that they would only follow through if they could provide evidence people wanted it. After Hishida and other staff members managed to accrue evidence, Avex allowed them to make the film but gave them very little budget and promotion in addition to limiting the film to only 60 minutes. In fact, the film was actually given screening events in 14 theaters. However, when the cheer screenings became popular and famous media figures like Creator/TomokazuSugita promoted it, the film actually ended up grossing 800 million yen and became one of the most successful films in 2016. A sequel immediately followed, along with a franchise.
24* When he first released the first chapter of his third manga series, Creator/KoheiHorikoshi felt it might not stay popular, but carried on with it because he enjoyed it. ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'' ended up becoming one of the most popular mangas of the modern age.
25* Not many analysts even made any predictions about ''Anime/DragonBallSuperBroly'''s international release. Those that did predicted the film's limited release would probably do about as well as the two other recent ''Franchise/DragonBall'' movies -- which is to say, not well at all. Those within the ''Dragon Ball'' fandom were skeptical that a film starring a re-imagining of such a BaseBreakingCharacter like Broly could do well. ''Dragon Ball Super: Broly'' ended up being the number one movie in the USA for several days, and stayed in the top five during its opening weekend. It far surpassed any of the previous international releases of ''Dragon Ball'' movies, and was the third most successful anime movie ''ever'' in the international market. It also was met with fairly positive critical praise, again atypical for anime movies. Experts were baffled that a movie that hadn't been on their radar was crushing it.[[note]] It helps that the company treated the marketing of the film more seriously than any of the franchise's other films, treating and marketing it as a "proper" movie rather than some cartoon tie-in.[[/note]]
26* ''Manga/DropkickOnMyDevil'' is an interesting example of this. While it did moderately okay during it's run in the 2010s, it was expected by most to not last beyond one anime season when it given an adaptation in 2018, which quietly came and went without any fanfare. Thanks to a strong cult following buying Blu-Ray sales to make a 2nd season happen and later crowdfunding for a 3rd season, it was able to be saved from complete obscurity as it became profitable in Japan, to where it'd later get a better reception than when it did when it was originally released as it continued along.
27* In 2010, Creator/BangZoomEntertainment's CEO, Eric P. Sherman, made a very controversial statement stating that the studio will most likely will stop producing dubs for anime if the industry doesn't improve (as well as addressing the issue of [[DigitalPiracyIsEvil piracy and fansubs]]), thus fans thought this will be [[NoDubForYou the end of dubbing as we know it]]. Years later, Bang Zoom still continues to dub anime for Creator/AniplexUSA, Creator/VizMedia, and even [[Creator/NipponIchi NIS America]] with the reissuing of ''Literature/{{Toradora}}'' with an English dub.
28* Creator/StevenSpielberg and Creator/GeorgeLucas called ''Manga/{{Akira}}'' "unmarketable" in the United States. The manga and its film adaptation are now widely considered to be the greatest of all time by many, and even highly influential in Western media.
29* Before the anime of ''Literature/KonoSuba'' aired, the editor of ''Sneaker Bunko'' that was in charge of publishing the original light novels told Natsume Akatsuki to make sure he was gonna have fond memories about it since there wasn't going to be a second season. Said editor fell victim to this trope ''again'' when said show did indeed get a 2nd season, in which he outright stated that this would be the last animation of the franchise. The editor himself [[https://imgur.com/DHVDqQK tweeted about it]].
30* Articles on ''[[Magazine/ShonenJump Shonen Jump]]''-focused 2ch blogs back in Spring 2016, as well as its comment sections, were filled with comments expecting ''Manga/DemonSlayerKimetsuNoYaiba'' to not last 10 weeks, or that it won't click with ''Jump'' readers well and belongs in a more seinen magazine, among other remarks. Scroll down further and you'll see more recent comments laughing at how off-the-mark such notions were. [[http://jumpsokuhou.com/archives/47295301.html Examples in Japanese]] [[http://jumpsokuhou.com/archives/46900371.html can be]] [[http://jumpsokuhou.com/archives/47213668.html seen here]].
31** What's interesting is that in those same articles ''Manga/YuunaAndTheHauntedHotSprings'' was also getting hit with similar sentiments of it not lasting long, despite also getting an Anime adaptation[[note]]6 months before ''Kimetsu'' did, in fact[[/note]] and a 4-year long run[[note]]albeit more modest than ''Kimetsu'', but still impressive given that the manga was on ''Jump''[[/note]].
32** Creator/FujiTelevision passed on broadcasting rights for ''Kimetsu'' when Creator/{{Aniplex}} and Shueisha were looking for a television channel to air the then-upcoming adaptation. Skip to 2020, Fuji found itself having to beg for them to give them the same rights it gave up as the now-super-popular Anime ended up going to smaller, local stations[[note]]Fuji was able to air ''Kimetsu'' reruns in the lead up to the release of the ''Mugen Train'' movie, as well as ''Bonds of Siblings'' and a reedited version of the Natagumoyama Arc on their weekly movie time-slot, and eventually the 2nd season starting in the Fall 2021 coeur[[/note]].
33* Shunpei Maruyama, President of Anime studio Creator/{{Actas}}, was told by his peers when he entered the company that animating tanks is a fool's errand and not worth the effort required to make it work. Maruyama ended up pitching and overseeing the creation of Anime/GirlsUndPanzer.[[note]]Though not without the infamous TroubledProduction which led to the [[ScheduleSlip last two episodes being pushed back for three months]][[/note]]
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37* While fans were excited to see ''Animation/{{Mechamato}}'', many of them didn't really expect the show to be as memorable as ''Animation/BoBoiBoy'' due to it being a prequel series and almost feeling separated from ''[=BoBoiBoy=]'' since it's rare to mention anything that's connected with it. However, since the show has improved animation, aired on both Creator/CartoonNetwork and Creator/{{Netflix}}, and hired a professional cast both in the local dub and international dubs such as English and Japanese, ''Mechamato'' quickly became popular among local fans and non-local fans. In 2023, the show won the "Anime Fan Award" at the Tokyo Anime Awards Festival (TAAF), becoming the first non-Japanese animation to win the award.
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40[[folder:Comic Books]]
41* Creator/{{Herge}} started with ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'' in 1929, at a time when Europe had no tradition in creating comic strips with text balloons. The comic strip was some filler material in ''Le Petit Vingtième'', the youth section of newspaper ''Le Vingtième''. After he had finished the first story the redaction proposed a publicity stunt in which an actor playing Tintin would arrive on the Brussels station, just like Tintin did at the end of ''Tintin in the Land of the Soviets''. Hergé agreed, though he was sure that nobody would be around to witness it. To his surprise, the place was full of people! In an interview, he said: "From that moment on, I realized ''Tintin'' was on its way up!" And it did. By the end of Hergé's life ''Tintin'' had become and still is the most successful European comic strip in the world, about as widespread and popular as any of the Creator/WaltDisney comic strips!
42* "Come on, [[Creator/StanLee Stan]], people hate spiders. They're creepy. And everybody knows that teenagers are [[KidSidekick sidekicks]], not superheroes. This ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' idea just won't sell." — Martin Goodman, founder of Creator/MarvelComics (paraphrased by Stan Lee), 1962.
43** Speaking of Spider-Man, when John Romita Sr. replaced Creator/SteveDitko on penciling in 1966, he thought he'd only be working on the book for about six months because he thought superheroes had overstayed their welcome. He has been involved with Marvel Comics' Earth 616 in general, and Spidey in particular, on some level ever since.
44* In 1933, two teenage comic strip artists tried to pitch a character they had created, intended for a nationally syndicated strip. It took them six years to find a newspaper publisher who would take it. Every publisher they went to told them the character looked ridiculous and would never catch on. That character? ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}''.
45* Originally, publishers at Marvel didn't think [[Characters/MarvelComicsStorm Storm]] of the ComicBook/XMen would be popular because she had white hair and they thought people would think she would look like an old woman. Guess who is one of the most recognizable female superheroes, as well as the most recognizable black superhero, in the industry?
46* [[https://web.archive.org/web/20061206011434/https://www.newsfromme.com/archives/2006_12_03.html In 1962, DC Comics purchased the rights to republish a]] ''Film/DrNo'' comic, and only noticed they had the rights to make Film/JamesBond comics when they were about to expire a decade later. Jack Kirby and Alex Toth were even contacted at that point, but the higher-ups ultimately discarded as Creator/SeanConnery left the series and they did not know if 007 would still be popular. Not only Connery's replacement Creator/RogerMoore kept Bond beloved for over a decade, but the movies are still strong to this day!
47* During a 1993 stunt where Marvel introduced a new character in each of their annuals, Mark Gruenwald famously cited ComicBook/SquirrelGirl as an example of the type of character they were trying to avoid. Specifically, he argued that while Squirrel Girl was a fun and interesting character, she was likely never going to be used again. Pretty much all of the characters introduced in the annuals faded into ComicBookLimbo (save for [[ComicBook/{{Captain Marvel|MarvelComics}} Genis-Vell]], and even he ended up being killed off later), while Squirrel Girl made a comeback in the 2000s and has been appearing as a fan favorite for years. Her series, ''ComicBook/TheUnbeatableSquirrelGirl'', even made it on the ''New York Times'' best-seller list.
48* In the '80s, Tom Veitch, Cam Kennedy, and Archie Goodwin pitched a comic book sequel to ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' called ''ComicBook/DarkEmpire''. Marvel was originally going to publish the series, but dropped it after those in charge concluded that nobody would still be interested in ''Franchise/StarWars'' after the original trilogy had already ended. Not only did ''Dark Empire'' prove to be a huge seller for Creator/DarkHorseComics, but the ''Star Wars'' franchise as a whole is still extremely popular to this day.
49* When Roger Leloup left [[Franchise/{{Tintin}} Hergé's studios]] to create ''ComicBook/YokoTsuno'', Creator/{{Herge}} said a female heroine going on science-fiction adventures isn't going to sell and offered him a place back if he needed a job. He never needed to. Yoko Tsuno became a hit and [[LongRunners is still being sold to this day]].
50* This is why ''ComicBook/{{Wolverine}}'' is Canadian. Back then when John Byrne created him, Marvel allowed the character to be from Canada as they thought he lacked appeal to be anything more than a background dweller in a ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk'' comic. Once Wolverine became [[{{WolverinePublicity}} as popular as he is]], there were several attempts at ''{{retcon}}ning'' his backstory to make him American, to no avail.
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54* ''Fanfic/TheBoltChronicles'': [[invoked]] Happens in universe with the new TV show ''Bolt'', in "The Pilot." Despite poor reviews and production values that leave something to be desired, the first episode is a massive runaway hit, described as becoming "a cultural icon of sorts."
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58* While she was making the drafts of ''"Athens and Sparta Adventures"'' (a [[FanWebcomics Fan Webcomic]] about the [[NationsAsPeople personifications of the two titular city-states]], which is [[TagLine inspired but not constrained by Axis Powers Hetalia]]), the creator Hapo was sure that everyone would hate [[{{Narcissist}} Athens]] and find him annoying and everyone would love Sparta (considering that the former was a {{Narcissist}}, SmallNameBigEgo with few redeeming qualities, while the later was far more well-known in modern culture, it made sense). However, fans enjoyed Athens' [[AwesomeEgo ego]] and his [[JerkassDissonance jerkass, but nevertheless, entertaining personality]] and he ended up becoming ''"everyone's favourite character"'' (as she puts it), something she cannot understand. Meanwhile, while Sparta has his fans, he isn't nearly as popular as Athens.
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62* ''Podcast/RandomAssault'': The podcast had many naysayers back when it was starting out on the Games Radar forums, especially with people thinking of them as a PCN-Gen rip-off.
63* When Creator/MikeDuncan started Podcast/TheHistoryOfRome in 2007, he thought it might be a hobby during his study days and he'd eventually get bored or nobody would listen to it and he'd abandon it. Fifteen years, two podcasts and a book deal later, he still shows no sign of abandoning podcasting or Roman history.
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66[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
67* Creator/RondaRousey's badass image took a significant hit after her two back-to-back bad losses in [[UsefulNotes/UltimateFightingChampionship UFC]] (the first loss actually ending a long undefeated streak, in fact), giving people who had previously liked the idea of her coming to work in Wrestling/{{WWE}} serious doubts about it. But when she finally made her in-ring debut at ''Wrestling/WrestleMania 34'' in a mixed tag match with Wrestling/KurtAngle against Wrestling/StephanieMcMahon and Wrestling/TripleH, it was considered by many to be '''the''' show-stealing match on the card- and despite the combined years of experience WWE had put in the ring with her to help guide her in the match, most of the credit for its awesomeness was laid squarely at Ronda's feet, with everyone who had expressed doubts about her eating their words and admitting that she looked ''amazing''. Since then, she's been regarded as one of the best-booked women in the company throughout 2018 and has been hailed as having one of the best rookie years in a ''long'' time, including winning the Raw Women's Championship ''without'' feeling like she was being rushed to it.
68* Ricky Morton and Robert Gibson were put together as Wrestling/TheRockNRollExpress in Memphis in 1983, based off of their first initials. Wrestling/JerryLawler ''hated'' the name and thought it was the worst name he had ever heard and that they'd use it for one night but would try to come up with something better. As all those screaming girl fans shouting "ROCK N ROLL! ROCK N ROLL! ROCK N ROLL!" proved, he was wrong.
69* Wrestling/{{ECW}}'s Tod Gordon originally dismissed Wrestling/TheDudleyBoys and Wrestling/TheBlueMeanie as "drunken Wrestling/{{Raven}} ideas" (from watching ''Film/SlapShot'' and ''WesternAnimation/YellowSubmarine'', respectively). While it took a while for the Dudleys to find the right combination (Buh Buh Ray and D-Von), they ''did'' eventually get over and became ''very'' successful, and are now known as one of the most prolific tag teams in the history of the business. The Blue Meanie couldn't match the Dudley Boys' career achievements, but, the fans did come to love him.
70* On paper, [[Wrestling/DefiantWrestling WhatCulture Pro Wrestling/Defiant Wrestling]] should have never worked. A Platform/YouTube [[WebVideo/WhatCultureWrestling channel-backed]] wrestling promotion originally centered around its cast with many unknown faces alongside some of the best indie talent in the world. Yet, it ended up [[GatewaySeries introducing]] many wrestling fans to the british wrestling scene, managed to produce many memorable matches, storylines and events, and became itself the launching pad for many other wrestlers. And it managed to pull off a big world tournament which went mostly without any big hitches. At its peak, it was considered one of the (if not THE) best promotions of the UK wrestling scene. Too bad that [=YouTube=]'s demonetization of anything wrestling-related, the departure of the WebVideo/WhatCultureWrestling cast and the eventual launching of ''[[Wrestling/{{WWENXT}} NXT UK]]'' happened.
71* WWE Evolution had quite a lot of skepticism at first. While the women of the company have been treated ''much'' better over the past couple of years compared to the mid-aughts, many still doubted they'd be able to pull off an all-female show, especially with some questionable booking choices leading up to the event. In addition, many felt that the show was WWE trying to save face after their highly controversial Saudi shows (including the upcoming Crown Jewel) would not allow women to compete due to cultural reasons. Come the day of the event, and many were caught by surprise at how well done the show ended up being, with particular praise going towards the production, crowd energy (comparable to that of NXT), usage of the women on the card, and especially the brutal Last Woman Standing match between Wrestling/BeckyLynch and Wrestling/CharlotteFlair, which many deemed a Match of the Year contender in a year full of them (Omega/Jericho, Gargano/Almas, Gargano/Ciampa II, Okada/Omega IV, NOLA Ladder Match just to name a few). By the decade's end, many were naming it one of WWE's best shows of the decade, while the aforementioned Crown Jewel (which WWE tried so hard to hype up as a Saudi [=WrestleMania=]) was constantly named as one of, if not the ''worst'' show WWE put out in that same period.
72* ''[=WrestleMania=] 36'':
73** In general, many weren't sure if the company should've still hosted the event considering the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, and when they revealed that they were still going to host it via stitching together pre-taped matches and segments that would be broadcast over two nights, fans were skeptical over the final product. It turned out to be one of the better ''[=WrestleManias=]'' over the last few years, with some even calling it the best since ''[=WrestleMania=] 31''.
74** There was a lot of uncertainty surrounding the Boneyard Match between Wrestling/TheUndertaker and Wrestling/AJStyles. While the build was good, the Undertaker's matches for the last few years generally haven't been the best and many weren't sure if even AJ (oft-regarded as this generation's Shawn Michaels) could get a good match out of him. Not helping the matter is that, since the announcement of the match, no one was exactly sure ''what'' a Boneyard Match was (including the participants).[[note]]It turned out to be a Buried Alive match that took place at an actual graveyard[[/note]] WWE allayed these fears...by filming it as a campy horror-esque cinematic vignette in the vein of the [[Wrestling/MattHardy Broken Universe]] and ''Wrestling/LuchaUnderground'' with Undertaker returning to his biker roots under an amaglamation of something he called "The Unholy Trinity". By the time it was over many were unironically calling it the greatest ''[=WrestleMania=]'' main event ''ever''.
75** Wrestling/JohnCena vs. [[Wrestling/BrayWyatt "The Fiend" Bray Wyatt]] in a "Firefly Funhouse Match" had the fans nervous if it would be like the infamous "House of Horrors Match" Wyatt had with Wrestling/RandyOrton three years ago. To people's surprise, it was more like a twenty-minute vignette that has ''multiple'' references to WWE, deconstructing John Cena's career and a lot of meta MindScrew as if it was something filmed by Creator/DavidLynch or an episode of ''Black Mirror''. The consensus was that the crowd was loving this at the end, and could give the Boneyard Match a run for its money.
76* ''[=WrestleMania=] 37'' has a tag-team match with Wrestling/TheMiz and Wrestling/JohnMorrison vs Damian Priest and a musician known as Music/BadBunny. Barring Ronda Rousey's match three years ago, most celebrities who take part of wrestling matches don't fare well. However Bad Bunny completely changes ''everyone's'' tune with his acting, selling, and unleashes a Falcon Arrow and a '''Canadian Destroyer''' on John Morrison, wowing his detractors. It helped that Bad Bunny himself is a wrestling fan.
77* ''[=WrestleMania=]'' 38 had three celebrity matches innvolving Logan Paul teaming with Miz against Rey and Dominic, Johnny Knoxville goes toe to to with Sami Zayn and Pat [=McAfee=] fights off against Austin Theory. Needless to say, ''all three delivered''. Logan Paul plays the role of a Heel by performing Eddie Guerrero's Three Amigos and Frog Splash, Johnny Knoxville in a crowd-pleasing match which had Johnny take in lots of bumps and perform a top rope Tornado DDT, and Pat [=McAfee=] had the fans screaming when he jumped ''onto the top turnbuckle'' to perform a Superplex. Needless to say, celebrity matches now have a new standard to fill.
78* Speaking of Creator/LoganPaul, when it was announced that he would not only fight in the main event of ''Crown Jewel 2022'', but that he would fight Wrestling/RomanReigns for the WWE Title, fans were skeptical to say the least. While Logan had surprised everyone with his skills at two of WWE's biggest events of the year, some felt he wasn't ready for a big money match like this and that WWE was using both his and the Saudi shows' controversy [[NoSuchThingAsBadPublicity to drum-up hype]] and let it sell itself. Come match night, and he more than succeeded expectations, being a natural in terms of ring ability and psychology and giving the Tribal Chief a run for his money, with even the likes of Dave Meltzer and Jim Cornette admitting they were impressed by his skills.
79* Wrestling/ChrisJericho had one when he was working in Mexico. As he wrote in his {{Autobiography}}, he had a friend visit him in his hotel room with a kid "that looked to be 12 years old". When his friend started using colorful language, Jericho was worried about swearing in front of the kid, who then showed Jericho his ID, proving him to be 18. The youth went on to say that he was also getting into wrestling. Jericho thought that the kid had no future in the business and would be lucky to be working ring crew. That kid? ''Wrestling/ReyMysterioJr''.
80* The sad part story of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. See, in 1989-1990, long before Bischoff got control of the company, there was this guy called "Mean" Mark Callous. Despite being everything a promoter could want in a wrestler at that time (a big man who could wrestle well), they never did anything meaningful with him. Mark, knowing how things would go if he stayed, asked for his release and jumped ship to the then-WWF. He was then repackaged, lasting with an unparalleled "streak" of decades of popularity, under another name — '''''Wrestling/TheUndertaker'''''.
81* When Wrestling/{{CMLL}} received a {{jobber}} from International Wrestling in Quebec, they initially gave him the Vampiro [[TheGimmick gimmick]] as a joke. Little did they realize Vampiro would become popular enough to star in movies!
82* Wrestling/{{N|ational Wrestling Alliance}}WA World Superstars Wrestling, an attempt to make an "Americanized" version of Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling in 1993 naturally inspired this belief. WSW didn't catch on because it had to change its name due to confusion over the Wrestling/WorldWrestlingFederation, which had a television program called Superstars but Ring Warriors, as it would come to be known, got more viewers in [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff Africa and Europe]] than both Wrestling/{{WCW}} and the WWF till founder Hiro Matsuda's death in 1999. Also, Ring Warriors would be the first wrestling company to stream matches online in 1997, a service people also thought would never catch on, however, Ring Warriors finally started to slowly gain a USA audience in 2011, [[FollowTheLeader when all major promotions streamed]].
83* WCW had this attitude towards quite a few talents, variously attributed to Wrestling/EricBischoff's lack of faith in people not named Kevin Nash or Hulk Hogan, and Wrestling/KevinNash and Wrestling/HulkHogan's inability to let go of the spotlight. You could probably fill this page with a dozen examples involving Bischoff, ranging from letting future legends go – people who would later go to the WWF, become popular, win championships, and become the stars they knew they were, to poor match booking or promotional decisions (see Mick Foley, below). Eventually, this string of bad decisions led to the WCW's failure as a business, and buyout by its chief competitor, the WWF.
84** Reportedly, after [[{{Jobber}} jobbing out]] a "Stunning" to Wrestling/HacksawJimDuggan in record time, Wrestling/{{WCW}} vice president Wrestling/EricBischoff had a phone conversation with the wrestler, who suggested a change in his character from JerkJock to no-nonsense NinetiesAntiHero. Bischoff told him: "[W]e can have you run around in your little black tights and your little black boots, but that just wouldn't be marketable," and then fired him. After a brief stint in Wrestling/{{ECW}}, that man went on to the [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} WWF]], where he met a manager who reluctantly listened to his character input, and ran around in his little black tights and his little black boots (and a little black vest, shaved his head, and grew a goatee) — and became one of the biggest wrestling superstars in the world: Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin.
85** Bischoff took Wrestling/JimRoss off of commentary because Ross was fat and Southern and wouldn't appeal to mainstream America. "J.R." then left for WWE. Jim Ross is now immortalized in the WWE Hall of Fame.
86** Add Wrestling/ChrisJericho to the list of easily recognizable faces Bischoff let get away. The scary part? He didn't see Jericho as a headliner... [[http://www.wrestlingnewsworld.com/wwe-news/eric-bischoff-chris-jericho.php as of 2010,]] well '''after''' Jericho established himself as one of the most popular names in the history of the WWE.
87---> "Bischoff's right. I can't headline in TNA... [[TakeThat cause I'm not in my 50s]]." – Jericho
88** Eric Bischoff, along with Wrestling/HulkHogan and Wrestling/{{Goldberg}}, felt that a SquashMatch between WCW World Heavyweight Champion Goldberg and WCW World Television Champion Chris Jericho would not have been a popular draw. The same Chris Jericho who would later win and unify the WCW World Heavyweight Championship with the WWF Championship to become the very first WWF Undisputed Champion, an even higher honor. One of those titles was won off of Steve Austin (see above).
89** Kevin Nash, [[RunningGag while a booker in WCW]] dubbed many of the cruiserweights as "Vanilla Midgets," smaller wrestlers who could never hope to become popular main eventers and lacked any charisma. The WCW cruiserweight roster at the time included Chris Jericho, Wrestling/ChrisBenoit, Wrestling/EddieGuerrero, and Wrestling/ReyMysterioJr, the four of whom would go on to have a combined 12 reigns as world champion in the WCW or WWF/E. Others included Wrestling/PerrySaturn and Wrestling/DeanMalenko, who when leaving WCW for WWF with Guerrero and Benoit, formed the popular stable the Radicals.
90*** Speaking of Rey, he's a double example. On top of being kept down the card, Eric Bischoff claimed that masked wrestlers weren't "marketable", have Rey unmask on television, and proceed to do nothing with him. After WCW folded, Rey convinced the Mexican Athletic Commission to let him re-mask via copious amounts of LoopholeAbuse, and signed with WWE, where he proceeded to become the most popular luchador in mainstream wrestling and make himself and his new promotion millions and millions of dollars with their top-selling line of Rey masks.
91** With so much ammo to choose (or poach), Wrestling/VinceMcMahon had a habit of taking so-called "Vanilla Midgets" and letting them do their thing back in the Wrestling/AttitudeEra. It got to the point that by the end of WCW, practically the only main-eventer in WWE that wasn't a former WCW employee was [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson The Rock]]... and that was only because he never worked for them.[[note]] The reason he never worked for WCW is that his uncles, The Wild Samoans, were already working for WWF and helped him get a spot. The closest wrestler to The Rock's claim as Attitude Era's main-eventer that has never worked for WCW is Wrestling/{{Kane}}, who wrestled one match as Bruiser Mastino against Wrestling/{{Sting}} in 1993.[[/note]]
92* Mick Foley thought this way of [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson The Rock]] back when he was Rocky Maivia. To quote his book, ''Have a Nice Day!'':
93--->"The next day, one of the guys asked for my impression of Rocky. 'Hey, he's a nice guy,' I said, 'but he just doesn't have it. The office should really cut their losses and get rid of the guy'. I had no idea I was talking about the future 'People's and Corporate Champion.'"
94* Wrestling/CMPunk briefly worked for Wrestling/{{CZW}} and Wrestling/{{TNA}}. They saw nothing in him. He then went on to be a five-time world champion and the longest reigning WWE Champion in the last twenty-five years.
95* So there was this young kid who really, really wanted to be a wrestler. He was well built but didn't have a distinct look. He was dedicated and hard-working, but a bit sloppy at times and tended to mix up moves. And he had, quote, "the charisma of a robot." That lead to his indie-league persona of "the Prototype", a {{cyborg}}-like concept, but after getting the bump up to the full WWF he just couldn't find a niche and nobody figured he'd be anything more than an overeager curtain-jerker. Then one Halloween episode he came out dressed as Music/VanillaIce and started rap-dissing his opponent, being shockingly ''[[PrettyFlyForAWhiteGuy good]]'' at it. Thus began the career proper of the Doctor of Thuganomics, and for better or worse the Wrestling/JohnCena train hasn't stopped chugging since.
96* Ring of Honor's own fanbase didn't want anything to do with Wrestling/KevinSteen in 2005, nor were they particularly thrilled to see him come back, even with the backdrop of the hot Wrestling/{{CZW}} feud. By 2011, they couldn't cheer for Steen loud enough [[RootingForTheEmpire as he campaigned to destroy Ring Of Honor]]. The same could be said of Steen's TagTeam partner Wrestling/ElGenerico. What won the ROH fans over was putting them together as a tag team after they failed to impress as individuals and putting them against the Briscoe Brothers. The hardworking, hard-drinking chicken farmers from slower lower Delaware got to intimately verbalize everything the fans didn't like about the goofy French Canadians, who fans got into as they fired back.
97* Booker, promoter and Wrestling/TheFourHorsemen member Ole Anderson made a bad habit of this.
98** Ole let the likes of Wrestling/HulkHogan, the Undertaker (see above) and Wrestling/MickFoley go because he was convinced they would never draw money. All three of those men would become huge stars who drew enormous amounts of money...but that money went to rival promoters like Wrestling/VinceMcMahon and Wrestling/PaulHeyman. Even Wrestling/JimRoss [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qP6Mzi40lqA criticized Ole for letting Foley go.]]
99** When [=McMahon=] was taking the Wrestling/WWE national, he repeatedly invited Ole to join him in working his pay per view shows. Ole repeatedly told [=McMahon=] to "go fuck himself" because he had no idea what a pay per view was. Ole does regret his actions today, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAlbvhwMxl0 as by his own admission he was a "dumb shit" who didn't understand what McMahon was doing.]]
100* In 2017, [[https://twitter.com/TheWWEGuy_/status/864542537360474112 a random fan asked]] [[Wrestling/TheWrestlingObserverNewsletter Dave Meltzer]] if Ring of Honour can ever sell out an arena with 10k+ fans, in which [[https://twitter.com/davemeltzerWON/status/864544120227848192 the latter responded dismissively]]. Wrestling/CodyRhodes [[https://twitter.com/CodyRhodes/status/864546973461950465 took it as a challenge and a bet]] to initiate the ''All In'' event, which was the biggest indie [=PPV=]. Just half a year later, it resulted in the creation of Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling, which quickly became a bigger threat to WWE than any other promotion at the time ever could be and it's biggest rival since it bought out WCW.
101* When Wrestling/MattHardy unleashed his BROKEN gimmick, people were suspicious of whether or not it would go far, given of how ''absurd'' it was. Come ''The Final Deletion'', a SoBadItsGood cinematic event that involved so many shoddy special effects, stunts, and overdramatic music, combined with hologram-projecting drones and Roman candles, along with how Matt and later Jeff were so into the role, and wrestling fans and critics were lauded at the high risk that Matt took with the gimmick, which ended up being his CareerResurrection.
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
105* Creator/JimHenson couldn't get any of the US networks to support a prime-time variety show featuring those puppets from ''Series/SesameStreet''. Lew Grade, of the UK-based ITC Entertainment, saw something no-one else did and agreed to produce the show and broadcast it on ITC's Creator/{{ITV}} station ATV. That was, of course, ''Series/TheMuppetShow''.
106* Henson dealt with this again trying to succeed again with more adult fare. Many on ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' looked down on his work. Granted, those segments are criticized by even die-hard fans, but his puppetry work, in general, was also generally derided as "not ready for primetime." And what about [[Series/TheMuppetShow that skit show starring a frog, pig, bear and... whatever]]? Oh right, almost everyone took a pass when it was being shopped around. And [[Film/TheMuppetMovie a later movie]] based on those very same characters? Few thought it would work — let alone be a smash hit and lead to a successful, continuing series.
107* [[https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/1999/feb/25/features11.g24 This article]] protests the idea of ''Series/TheNoddyShop'' for being unfaithful to the original ''WesternAnimation/NoddysToylandAdventures'' show, and thought that it would fail in ratings because of competition from other shows. However, it went on for two seasons and became as popular as ''Series/SesameStreet'' was on Creator/PBSKids.
108* According to TV producer John Lloyd, when trying to fill space on ''Series/NotTheNineOClockNews'' in 1979, he approached two artists known for producing sculpted caricatures of politicians for the newspapers and suggested that puppets in that style would be a good fit for satirical comedy. They weren't interested. A few years later, however, Fluck and Law would indeed work with Lloyd on ''Series/SpittingImage''.
109* When Abby Cadabby was first announced for ''Series/SesameStreet'', [[https://web.archive.org/web/20061028100040/http://commercialfreechildhood.org/news/stereotypestreet.htm The Boston Globe]] believed that she wouldn't be as popular as Zoe or Rosita because they thought that the only reason for her existence was to FollowTheLeader with the ''Franchise/DisneyPrincess'' line that took away most of Sesame Street's toddler girl audience, compared to how most girl characters on the shows liked unisex things. She later became almost as popular as Elmo.
110[[/folder]]
111
112[[folder:Sports]]
113* Any North American expansion team is bound to be a terrible squad, being players the other teams considered expendable and maybe a few rookies. And so it was assumed that the UsefulNotes/NationalHockeyLeague's Vegas Golden Knights would be no different in the 2017-18 season, with the location (UsefulNotes/LasVegas never had a major league franchise, and its climate is nowhere near optimal for ice hockey) only making it more laughable. So what a surprise when the Knights won their first game... and eight of their first nine... and 51 total in the regular season, finishing fourth overall in the league! The playoffs were even more successful, as Vegas won the conference losing only three games in those three rounds. Only in UsefulNotes/TheStanleyCup did Vegas' luck run out, as they took the first game against the Washington Capitals, only for the [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut perpetual underachievers]] to win the next four and become champions. And it wasn't exactly a one-time case of beginner's luck, as it took until year 5 for Vegas to miss the postseason, only for them to come back with a vengeance and win in their sixth season becoming the youngest franchise to win the Cup and fulfilling the owner's bet of winning the Cup in Six!
114* When the International Olympic Committee announced in 1990 that UsefulNotes/{{Atlanta}} would be hosting the 1996 Summer UsefulNotes/OlympicGames, the response ranged from amusement to horror. Every late-night comic was ready to go with jokes about how [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball college football]], mud wrestling, tractor pulling, and UsefulNotes/{{NASCAR}} would be included in the first Olympics hosted in the DeepSouth, and on a more substantial level, Atlanta in TheNineties was associated with commerce and [[StepfordSuburbia Sun Belt suburban sprawl]] rather than the kind of high culture and sport normally associated with Olympic host cities. Many predicted disaster, and indeed, the Games were criticized by Europeans as garish and overly commercialized (and were unfortunately marred by a terrorist bombing). However, in an age when the Olympics are increasingly notorious for {{Troubled Production}}s, Atlanta's organizing committee managed to bring the Games in on time, on budget, and turning a profit, all while leaving downtown Atlanta with a ton of valuable infrastructure that is still in use today. The 1996 Atlanta Olympics very quickly came to be seen as a model for how to run the Olympics right.
115* In the 2010 World Series most analysts predicted the Texas Rangers would beat the San Francisco Giants, stating the Giants offense was too weak, only able to put only 2-3 runs up a game (with their superb pitching that's all they needed.) The Giants ended up beating The Rangers 4 games to 1. A [[http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/472498/Rangers_WS_Vote_II_pic.png ESPN]] state-by-state online poll showed that 49 states predicted that the Rangers would win. California, the Giants' home state, was the only one that had them in the majority to win.
116** History repeated itself in 2012 with most analysts favoring the Detroit Tigers over the Giants, stating specifically that the Giants would never be able to handle Tigers ace Justin Verlander. In the Series opener, Verlander lasted only four innings, giving up two home runs to Pablo Sandoval (who would hit a third that night as well), who isn't known as a big home run hitter. In fact, the Giants were dismissed pretty early on in the playoffs. They ended up facing elimination 6 times and went on to sweep the Tigers, 4 games to 0. (People who followed the Tigers closely were less surprised; Verlander had been showing signs of age and fatigue since August—to the point where most Tigers fans were more excited about games with Max Scherzer—and the Tigers bullpen was notoriously shallow.)
117** While a slight majority of analysts rooted for the Giants, most fans considered the Kansas City Royals would win (69 to 31 percent, sweeping ''all'' fifty states), as did betting houses (the Giants paid twice the amount of the Royals on [=Bet365=] the day of Game 1). Although the predictions were based on baseball fundamentals (KC had been building up a solid team from its farm system for years), the opinions may have been skewed by the Royals' sudden appearance from nowhere and a sense that after decades of hovering at the bottom of the American League, it was "time" for the Royals to come back. However, fate would be on San Francisco's side once again, with the Giants narrowly defeating the Royals (3 to 2) in Game 7, becoming SF's third World Series in five years (and increasingly cementing the idea of the Giants as the Team of the '10s).
118* The Bay Area MLB teams are known for this: Oakland's legendary "Swinging A's" won the Series between 1972 and 1974. However, the NL teams (Reds in '72, Mets in '73 and Dodgers in '74) were the most favored in predictions (the Athletics were more noted for their internal tensions instead). However, Oakland trounced each of those teams to become one of baseball's biggest dynasties of TheSeventies.
119* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_career_achievements_by_Wayne_Gretzky They said he was too weak, too slow and that he would flounder in the NHL]]. [[UsefulNotes/WayneGretzky The Great One]] was unfazed.
120* In the 1984 NBA Draft, the Portland Trail Blazers (who has the 2nd draft pick) drafted Kentucky center Sam Bowie ahead of some guy named UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan. (The Houston Rockets, who had the 1st draft pick, get a free pass: Hakeem Olajuwon was the No. 1 draft pick; although no Michael Jordan, Olajuwon was not a bad pick, especially for the Rockets—he led them to back-to-back championships the years Jordan was out of the NBA. Olajuwon eventually joined MJ in the Hall of Fame.)
121** Actually entirely justified from the Blazers' perspective. A less famous example from the year before justified the Bowie pick (in Portland's mind) because the Bulls had passed on the Blazers' 1st round pick: Clyde Drexler. (another then-future Hall of Famer who was already playing the same role on the court as Jordan would... and would lose one NBA final ''to Jordan'' and only get a title when joining the aforementioned Olajuwon in Houston).
122** Unfortunately for Portland, they would make the same draft mistake ''again'' in 2007. They have the No. 1 draft pick, and they chose Greg Oden, who had been a star at Ohio State when healthy but had battled knee injuries all the way back to high school. Continued injuries to his knees and ankles derailed his career, while the Seattle [=SuperSonics=], as they were still known at the time[[note]]They moved to Oklahoma City and were renamed the Thunder a year later[[/note]], drafted ''Kevin Durant'' with the number 2 pick.
123** The Bulls passed on Bill Cartwright (their starting center for the first three championship teams) in the 1980 draft before trading Charles Oakley to the Knicks for him.
124** And going back to Jordan, he was cut from his high school team in his sophomore year. One imagines that provided some motivation.
125* Joe Montana and Creator/TomBrady would become one of the most successful quarterbacks of their respective generations in the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague, with them winning eleven UsefulNotes/{{Super Bowl}}s between them (Montana winning four of them, while Brady won seven), despite only being drafted in the third (82nd overall, 1979) and sixth (199th overall, 2000) rounds, respectively.
126-->"''Poor build. Very skinny and narrow. Ended the '99 season weighing 195 pounds and still looks like a rail at 211. Looks a little frail and lacks great physical stature and strength. Can get pushed down more easily than you'd like. Lacks mobility and ability to avoid the rush. Lacks a really strong arm. Can't drive the ball down the field and does not throw a really tight spiral. System-type player who can get exposed if he must ad-lib and do things on his own.''" — '''[[http://www.boston.com/sports/touching_all_the_bases/2011/04/the_book_on_brady.html Tom Brady's scouting report for the 2000 NFL Draft]]'''
127* The 1991 Atlanta Falcons drafted Brett Favre as a backup QB in the second round, 33rd overall, but coach Jerry Glanville did not approve of him. Favre only threw five passes for the Falcons, two interceptions (one for a touchdown) and not a single completion. The following year, he was traded to the Green Bay Packers and went on to be the Ironman of football, breaking nearly every passing record in the books, and retired as the winningest QB in the history of the NFL (later passed by Creator/PeytonManning, who was in turn passed by Tom Brady).
128* Before 2008, it was common knowledge that the Spanish national football team would never [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut get past the quarter-finals]], let alone win a tournament. Two consecutive Euros and one World Cup later, and they started looking boring and invincible instead, at least until 2014.
129* "Possesses minimal football knowledge and lacks motivation." – an early scouting report on NFL coach Vince Lombardi.
130* [[https://twitter.com/garylineker/status/620629826303598592 "Claudio Ranieri? Really?"]] Former Leicester City player Gary Lineker wasn't the only one skeptical of Ranieri's appointment as manager of his former team. Bookies also had him as the favorite to be the first manager of the 2015-16 Premier League season to be sacked. The relegation candidates ended up winning their maiden league title that season.
131* In 1961, a 16-year-old midfielder was released from Wolverhampton Wanderers' youth team, then turned away from Bolton Wanderers for being too short - manager Bill Ridding told him he'd have a better chance as a jockey. He eventually signed for Blackpool... and five years later, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Ball_Jr Alan Ball]] became the youngest member of England's 1966 World Cup-winning squad, and provided the assist for Geoff Hurst's controversial second goal against West Germany in the final.
132* The 2001/02 edition of ''[[VideoGame/FootballManager Championship Manager]]'' included a 15-year-old Everton youth player whose stats and growth potential were unimpressive, suggesting the game's scouts didn't expect much from him. In August 2002, that youth team player made his first team debut against Tottenham Hotspur, whose fans jeered and heckled "Who are ya?" every time he touched the ball. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w8RIS871No0 Just two months later]], everyone in England knew ''exactly'' who Wayne Rooney was--and he went on to become one of the greatest strikers of his generation, and the England national team's record goalscorer between 2015 and 2022.
133** And who would overtake him? Harry Kane, who was dismissed as a one season wonder after scoring 21 goals in the 2014/15 season, making him the second highest scorer in the Premier League that season, and another ten in the EFL Cup and Europa League. He kept on scoring - his lowest return was 24 in all competitions in two separate seasons - and, by 2023, had not only become the top scorer for England and become the highest-scoring one club player in the Premier League[[note]]Alan Shearer has scored more than Kane, but his were split between Blackburn and Newcastle; Kane's all came for Tottenham[[/note]], he had also win the 2018 World Cup Golden Boot before signing for German giants Bayern Munich for ''€110 million'', a Bundesliga record.
134* UsefulNotes/{{NASCAR}}:
135** While covering a televised practice session for the 2013 Sprint Showdown (the "last chance" race for drivers not already in the Sprint All-Star Race), Darrell Waltrip recalled the opening of the condominiums located by Turn 1 of Charlotte Motor Speedway, in 1984. After winning a race at the track in 1985, he had been offered his pick of any of the condo units for $75,000. His response was to say that no one would ever want to buy one because there was no interest in living at a racetrack. Within two years, the average price had jumped by $200,000; by 1991, a second condo suite had opened; and today, they go for upwards of a half-million dollars, with a lengthy waiting list to boot. Other tracks, including but not limited to Charlotte's sister tracks Atlanta and Texas, have installed their own condo suites.
136** During a practice session at Atlanta in August of 2014, Waltrip related the story of the time Rick Hendrick called him at the end of 1993 to ask him what he thought of Hendrick's new superstar, Jeff Gordon. Darrell bluntly told Rick that Jeff "would never make it" and referred to him as a "crash artist" because of how much equipment he had torn up in his rookie season on the circuit. That Atlanta race was the occasion of Gordon's 750th start in the Cup Series, in a first-ballot Hall of Fame career that produced four championships, the fourth-best mark in series history, and 93 wins, 325 top fives and 477 top tens, all third-best in series history. Not to mention that all of Gordon's starts are consecutive from his debut at that same track in the 1992 season finale,[[note]]other Gordon benchmarks to occur at Atlanta include his first national series victory in a then-Busch Series (currently the Xfinity Series as of this writing) race earlier in 1992, and his 85th Cup win in September 2011, which propelled him out of a tie with Waltrip and Bobby Allison to third on wins list[[/note]] which is the longest streak from the start of a career and would go on to become the longest streak of all time after surpassing UsefulNotes/RickyRudd's mark of 788 at the New Hampshire playoff race in 2015, ending with 797 at Homestead the same year, after which Gordon retired from racing full-time and joined Waltrip as an analyst for Fox Sports.
137** Gordon himself also ran into this later in his career, ironically with Hendrick being the reluctant party this time. In 2000, Gordon ran a race in what is now known as the Xfinity Series, NASCAR's 2nd-tier league, at Michigan International Speedway, and found himself struggling with one driver in particular. This kid managed to pass Gordon on a late restart despite Gordon having by far a better car, surprising the more experienced driver. He went back to team owner Rick Hendrick and pushed him to sign the kid for the then-Winston Cup (now just the NASCAR Cup, though the Championship trophy itself is called the "Bill France Cup" after [[{{OurFounder}} "Big Bill" France]]) Series; Hendrick was reluctant to field a fourth car, and after a few weeks of Gordon hounding him, finally offered Gordon a partnership to buy the fourth car himself, which Gordon gladly accepted. That kid's name was Jimmie Johnson, and he would go on to win over 80 races (placing him sixth on the all-time career wins lineup as of this writing) and become the second person to tie Richard Petty's record seven championship wins.
138* UsefulNotes/FormulaOne:
139** When Renault debuted the first turbocharged F1 car, the [=RS01=], in 1977, it was overweight and chronically unreliable, earning it the disparaging moniker "Little Yellow Teapot". In truth, the [=RS01=] was little more than a test bed while Renault worked out the kinks in the engine. Once they did, its successor, the [=RS10=], showed up to the 1979 French Grand Prix, took pole position, and won. By the end of the year the [=RS10=] had taken four further pole positions, and the entire grid had gone from laughing at Renault's efforts, to frantically trying to develop turbo engines of their own.
140** When Nigel Mansell left Lotus in 1984 after 4 years and no race wins, team boss Peter Warr remarked to the press: "He'll never win a Grand Prix as long as I have a hole in my arse". Less than a year later, Mansell won his first Grand Prix, then became one of the main championship contenders in 1986, '87 and '91 before finally taking the title in 1992 in [[CurbStompBattle dominant fashion]]. He held the record for the number of Grand Prix wins by a British driver for the next twenty years (before being de-throned by Lewis Hamilton) and is the only man ever to hold both the F1 title and the CART title at the same time.
141** The 1995 [=McLaren=] featured an unusual mid-wing on the engine cover, as well as a less-conventional shape on the rear of the cover itself, quickly becoming an object of ridicule within the paddock and the press who thought that it was pathetic how one of the great F1 teams would have to resort to such a gimmick. By the mid-2000s, it was unusual to see a team NOT running extra wings such as these on their cars. The wings were banned in 2009, yet by 2014 the rear of the engine covers on most cars bore a resemblance to that of the [=McLaren=] experiment.
142** Similarly, the 1997 Tyrrell was regarded as laughable within F1 circles. The car, as long-time fans may recall, ran an "X-Wing" configuration at several high-downforce circuits where 2 high supports with mini-wings on top were mounted on the sidepods. When the 1998 season came round with a massive amount of regulation changes, several teams struggled. Their response? X-Wings of their own! By the San Marino Grand Prix, Tyrrell, Prost, Jordan, Sauber and even ''Ferrari'' had used them. Eventually, someone at the FIA saw sense and banned them for "safety reasons" (a botched pitstop in San Marino supposedly the straw that broke the camels back) although it is generally accepted that they were simply banned for being ugly to look at.
143* At the 2011 national championships, an elite gymnast fell off the balance beam three times in one routine; experienced gymnastics reporter Lauren Hopkins described it as "watching a career die". The gymnast in question was Gabby Douglas, 2011 World team member, 2012 Olympic All-around champion and 2015 World All-around silver medalist.
144* Robert Kraft bought the New England Patriots in 1994 for $172 million, which was very expensive at the time for a historically awful team that saw itself try to move to two different cities under two previous owners (Victor Kiam and James Orthwein tried to move the Patriots to Jacksonville and St. Louis, respectively). Under Kraft's ownership, the Patriots became one of the most successful teams in the NFL, as they went to ten Super Bowls, winning six of them (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX, XLIX, LI, LIII), as well as having multiple ten or more winning seasons from 2003-2019, a rare accomplishment in the league's era of free agency and the salary cap.
145* When German TV station [=Sat1=] took over Super Bowl coverage, there were plenty of doubters saying they didn't have enough American Football experts on hand. Similarly were the skeptics when coverage was expanded to most of the Playoffs. When Series/RanNFL started few people gave it more than a year of life, what with having no recognizable faces besides Frank Buschmann (who isn't an American Football expert) and what with the "gimmicky" setup with a "netman" who above all has long hair and speaks in a Brandenburg dialect. As of 2017, numerous other stations wish any of their non-soccer sports coverage were even half as successful.
146* With the fourth pick in the 2015 NBA Draft, New York Knicks fans were dismayed that the team drafted some guy from Europe that most people had never heard of and those in attendance made their feelings known by [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmIURIqjDmY booing him]]. By his third season, Kristaps Porziņģis became the star of the team, one of the first players from that draft class selected to the All-Star Game[[note]] Alongside Karl-Anthony Towns [[/note]] and one of the NBA's most versatile players.
147* Sportscaster Michael Lombardi had '''zero''' faith in the Philadelphia Eagles' hiring of first-time coach [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0D8eYo4_Js8 Doug Pederson]] in 2016. Comparing him to infamously bad basketball coach Roy Rubin and telling them it was a mistake. What did Pederson do? Oh, just take to Philly to the Super Bowl. Which they won (making their first title since 1960). Against Creator/TomBrady and the [[TheJuggernaut Patriots]]. In his ''second season''. Despite this, Pederson would later be fired one week after a disappointing 2020 season as well as [[https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/doug-pederson-was-toast-of-philly-eagles-3-seasons-ago-now-hes-fired-how-did-it-end-so-quickly-183447392.html disagreements with the Eagles' front office]].
148* Aaron Rodgers was the 25th pick in the 2005 NFL Draft (by the Packers), partly because he was seen as a "system quarterback" by various NFL scouts that came as a result of having Jeff Tedford coaching him at Cal; Tedford's quarterbacks at that point failed to perform well in the NFL. After replacing Brett Favre in the 2008 season, Rodgers would help the Packers win Super Bowl XLV in the 2010 season, as well as earning three NFL MVP awards (2011, 2014, 2020).
149* Being a brand new expansion team filled with castoffs, no one expected the Vegas Golden Knights to do much in their inaugural season. Even team staff expected at least a 4-5 year span before they'd even entertain the thought of becoming a playoff team. What did Vegas do? ''Reach UsefulNotes/TheStanleyCup Finals''. Despite [[BittersweetEnding losing in 5 games to Washington]], they were ''the'' story of the hockey season.
150* A football manager sacked by St Mirren in 1978 sued its chairman for wrongful dismissal, but lost the case with the tribunal board concluding, "He possesses, neither by experience nor talent, any managerial ability at all." The manager's name? Alex Ferguson.
151* On the opening day of the 1995/96 Premier League season, Manchester United were beaten 3-1 by Aston Villa, having played a side full of emerging young talent. BBC pundit Alan Hansen insisted that United needed more strength and depth, remarking, "You can't win anything with kids". Those "kids" included David Beckham, Paul Scholes, and Ryan Giggs, three of the greatest midfielders of their generation, along with Gary Neville and Nicky Butt, who went on to become legends at the club. Oh, and they went on to win the league ''and'' the FA Cup that season. Needless to say, Hansen's "you can't win anything with kids" line has become one of the most infamous moments in British sporting history.
152* The 2017 NFL Draft was considered by experts to be a weak class in terms of quarterback talent and many doubted any of the prospects would be viable long term starters. The 2018 season saw all three quarterbacks taken in that draft's first round, Patrick Mahomes (Kansas City Chiefs), Mitch Trubisky (Chicago Bears)[[note]]although Trubisky is considered by some to be something of a [[OneHitWonder one-season wonder]][[/note]], and Deshaun Watson (Houston Texans), named to the Pro Bowl, with Mahomes selected as the NFL MVP. And one of those QB's (Mahomes) won the Super Bowl and was the MVP of that game barely 3 years later.
153* In the 2018 NFL Draft, some analysts side-eyed the Cleveland Browns for taking Oklahoma quarterback Baker Mayfield with the first overall pick, with scouts saying that he was too small and lacked the skill set of other top prospects in that draft class, namely Sam Darnold and Josh Rosen. Mayfield proved to be exactly what the Browns needed, taking them from being one of the worst teams in the NFL to a respectable contender that even made the playoffs in 2020. And just to put the icing on the cake, Darnold and Rosen, the two quarterbacks everyone thought the Browns should have taken over Mayfield, ended up being average at best.
154* {{Downplayed|Trope}} in the case for the 2019 LSU Tigers football team. The team was expected to be potential contender for the College Football Playoff, but they were projected to be the runner-up to [[TheJuggernaut Alabama]], who was expected to be in the Playoff once again, in the SEC West Division. What ''no one'' saw coming, however, was that the Tigers, a team who is normally known for their running backs and their defense, would finish with the best offense in the [=FBS=] thanks to eventual Heisman winning quarterback Joe Burrow's record-setting performance, throwing for '''''sixty''''' touchdown passes and would lead the team to a perfect 15-0 season, with wins against perennial national powerhouse Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma, and defending national champions Clemson. Some would consider this team to be one of the best college football teams of all time thanks to their explosive offense.
155* In 1983, a renowned ice dancing team debuted a free dance [[https://youtu.be/N6h6_AIgiMU?t=1905 so risky and cutting-edge]] that common wisdom said it would either tank their medal chances, or get them disqualified altogether. It was called "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8obUdxnTlc Bolero]]", and it won Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean Olympic gold medals, the only complete set of perfect scores ever awarded in figure skating, the hearts of millions around the world, and an enduring place in the pantheon of Greatest Athletes of All Time.
156* Born from a family line with little accomplishments in terms of [[UsefulNotes/HorseRacing horse racing]], and with leg shapes deemed undesirable, Sunday Silence was expected by virtually no one to become a successful racehorse, to the point that [[https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1989-04-08-sp-1208-story.html no one put a price on him]] when his breeder put him up for sale TWICE, and the breeder, Arthur B. Hancock III, had to buy him back. From there, Sunday Silence went on to win 9 out of the 14 races[[note]]two of which were Triple Crown races[[/note]] he ran from 1989 to 1990, with him finishing the 5 other races in 2nd place; earning him the 1989 American Horse of the Year. Sunday Silence's story doesn't stop there, however; as after his retirement in 1990 due to injuries, Hancock tried to have him stand stud for 10 million dollars but no one took up the offer due to the aforementioned family history. Yoshida Zenya[[note]]who had bought a share of Sunday not long before[[/note]], on the other hand, went ahead and bought him for 11 million to stand stud at their farm in Hokkaido, earning them a lot of mockery from Stateside breeders. Sunday Silence would go on to sire so many successful race horses that the Leading Sire of Japan has gone to him or his sires, most notably Deep Impact, for every year since 1995, with the exception of 2009 and 10.
157** Sunday Silence wasn't the only instance the Yoshidas took part in this trope. When Zenya Yoshida told his son Teruya to buy the best sire of Northern Dancer he could get his hands on, Teruya went ahead and bought Northern Taste for $100000, and after several years of racing in France, it was time for the horse to be brought to Japan... It was there that Zenya reportedly saw Northern Taste's small posture and regretted he ever let Teruya have a say in this. Northern Taste ultimately went on to be the leading sire of Japan from 1982 to 1992, with many of its descendants still racing in Japan.
158* Another racer like this was Seabiscuit. He was a grandson of Man o' War, but was smallish and had an odd gait and knobby knees and hadn't won a lot of his first races, which resulted in no takers in his claming races. Things changed when trainer Tom Smith paired him with jockey Red Pollard and he became a champion, even beating his uncle, triple crown winner War Admiral.
159[[/folder]]
160
161[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
162* When Catalyst Game Labs announced that they were going to have a Kickstarter drive to fund a Clan Invasion Box Set for ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'', there was a lot of doubts about whether or not it would succeed. When it finally went live, it met its funding goal of $30,000 in seven minutes and ended up receiving in excess of two and a half million dollars in pledges, making it not only one of the most successful gaming Kickstarters ever but one of the 100 most successful Kickstarter projects of all time.
163* ''TabletopGame/PrincessTheHopeful'' was initially designed as a parody with no intent to be taken seriously. People ended up liking it so much it was developed into an actual fan line. Nowadays, it's considered one of the best fan-games in the community.
164* Someone told Kevin Crawford of Sine Nomine Publishing that a game set in a fantasy version of Africa would never sell. Taking that as a challenge, he wrote ''TabletopGame/SpearsOfTheDawn'', which proceeded to be one of the hottest retroclones of its year.
165* After it flopped in Japan, many analysts doubted the viability of ''TabletopGame/{{Bakugan}}'' succeeding in America. It became [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff a huge hit]] getting new episodes before Japan did and even won an award for the best toy of 2009.
166* Creator/GaryGygax pitched [[TabletopGame/OriginalDungeonsAndDragons the first iteration]] of ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' to various publishers of traditional board– and wargames. He was always turned down with some variation of "Why would anyone want to play a game that has no winner?"
167[[/folder]]
168
169[[folder:Theatre]]
170* The concept of doing a hip hop themed musical about UsefulNotes/AlexanderHamilton sounded very stupid to many people, and Creator/JonStewart even mocked the premise in an episode of ''Series/TheDailyShow''. ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'' star Daveed Diggs thought it was a terrible idea before signing up. Even [[Creator/LinManuelMiranda the guy]] who [[RenaissanceMan came up with the idea, wrote the music, book, and lyrics, and played the lead man]] thought it wouldn't do very well. Despite this, ''Hamilton'' became a smash at the box office, and won near-universal acclaim.
171* ''Theatre/{{Oklahoma}}'' is apocryphally associated with reluctant backers' premature verdict of "no girls, no gags, no chance," referring to the musical's relative lack of {{Fanservice}} and broad clowning compared with the oversexed star-comic vehicles that proliferated on Broadway during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII (and flopped more often than not).
172* ''Theatre/TheSpongeBobMusical'' was dismissed as nothing more than a cash grab by Creator/{{Nickelodeon}}. Instead, critics found a surprisingly heartwarming and funny musical.
173* Forty years before ''Hamilton'', the other great political musical -- ''Theatre/SeventeenSeventySix'' -- encountered much the same. Sherman Edwards didn't find many takers for his idea for a musical where everyone in the audience [[ForegoneConclusion would know the ending in advance]]; by the time it finally reached Broadway, it had a first-time songwriter (Edwards), a producer who had never had a hit, a book writer whose only previous Broadway credits were two musicals that flopped, and a director whose only previous Broadway credits were as a lighting designer. It had no stars -- the lead role was played by character actor Creator/WilliamDaniels -- only two women in the cast who both have minor roles, and several long scenes with no music where men argue over Congressional votes and the wording of a document. It became a smash hit.
174* ''Theatre/SpringAwakening'':
175** The original, containing a lot of teen angst, a masturbation scene, underage sex, gay kisses, incest, suicide, and advertised "real onstage nudity", had a lot going against it. Ended up nominated for 11 Tony Awards and won 8.
176** The revival, which incorporated American Sign Language, censored nothing from the original, and had cast members with varying hearing abilities, turned off some hearing audience members who didn't want to see a "deaf musical", assuming it'd be incomprehensible. Result: Nominated for three Tonys and got a national tour announcement slated for 2017 (which sadly never ended up happening).
177* OlderThanSteam: When ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'' premiered, supposedly one reviewer described it as "a mawkish melodrama which, God willing, will see no second performance."
178* Robert Greene, an Elizabethan playwright, wrote an autobiographical pamphlet, ''Greene's Groats-Worth of Wit'', in which he decried all other playwrights of the age. He is now [[SmallNameBigEgo only remembered]] for the particular contempt he heaped on the "upstart crow" Creator/WilliamShakespeare.
179* In 1948, legendary Broadway producer Cheryl Crawford turned down a play by a young Arthur Miller, arguing that the story was too depressing and the use of flashbacks would confuse the audience. As she later put it in an interview, [[Theatre/DeathofASalesman "Who would want to see a play about an unhappy traveling salesman?"]]
180* As captured in the documentary ''Show Business: The Road to Broadway'', ''Theatre/AvenueQ'' was considered a risk by a lot of industry people on Broadway, who believed it to be a strange concept that had no chance of catching on and would probably close shortly after it opened. Then the play opened, and it became a critically acclaimed blockbuster with crossover appeal which ultimately won Best Musical at the 2004 Tonys and ran on Broadway for six years.
181** For comparison, three other musicals opening that year were featured in that documentary. The first was ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' which from the start was pegged to become a phenomenon, which it inevitably became. The other two? ''Caroline, or Change'', the hotly anticipated new work from Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright [[Theatre/AngelsInAmerica Tony Kushner]], and ''Taboo'', [[Music/CultureClub Boy George]]'s autobiographical tribute to the New Romantic scene. Both wound up receiving the fate that some of the interviewees in the documentary had believed ''Avenue Q'' was going to get: ''Caroline, or Change'', which was pegged to be the critical darling of the season, received middling reviews and closed after just 136 performances; It's best known now as the first major role for Creator/AnikaNoniRose, who won a Tony for her supporting role. ''Taboo'', also tipped for success, premiered to scathing reviews and was chased off-Broadway after under 100 performances.
182* When Disney CEO Michael Eisner approached Disney Theatrical Group President Thomas Schumacher about adopting ''WesternAnimation/{{The Lion King|1994}}'' into [[Theatre/TheLionKing a Broadway musical]], Schumacher thought it was "the stupidest idea he ever heard" and there was no way it would work. As of September 2014, the Broadway, West End, and all other productions have generated '''$6.2 billion'' in revenue and several awards.
183* Creator/AgathaChristie herself believed that ''Theatre/TheMousetrap'' would only last a few months. Six decades later...
184[[/folder]]
185
186[[folder:Theme Parks]]
187* [[Ride/DisneyThemeParks Disneyland]] was known as [[Creator/WaltDisney "Walt's Folly"]] in Hollywood while he was building it and 'Walt's Nightmare" in the press after a disastrous opening day. After said opening day, it has become one of the most successful theme parks in America, even acquiring many more theme parks around the world.
188* Ride/RaceThroughNewYorkStarringJimmyFallon at [[Ride/UniversalStudios Universal Orlando Resort]] was initially thought to be a failure by theme park enthusiasts, stating that Universal was hitting the bottom of the barrel when it came to simulator rides. However, the ride is immensely popular at the park, even to this day.
189* Back in its early days, Ride/DisneyThemeParks in general, when Walt was trying to get funding to build Disneyland. The critics couldn't have been more wrong. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkxFJpURZ3U Demonstrated]] by ''WebVideo/SomeJerkWithACamera''.
190-->'''Walt Disney:''' I want to build Me Land!\
191'''Wealthy Businessman:''' You fool, that'll never work!\
192'''Walt Disney:''' [[AndYouThoughtItWouldFail Hey, look]], I built Me Land, and it worked!\
193'''Wealthy Businessman:''' Good, now build more of them.
194* Disneyland Paris faced this initially, with almost every prominent French intellectual equating its mere existence to the end of civilization as we know it (a journalist for ''Le Figaro'', a right-wing newspaper, even wanted "[[BombThrowingAnarchists the rebels]]" to burn the resort down, and stage director Ariane Mnouchkine called the park "a cultural Chernobyl"). Subverted in that the park almost failed at first (this was when it was called Euro Disney) but was able to rebound and become one of the most visited theme parks in Europe.
195* This was said a lot about the Ride/{{Futuroscope}} in France at the time of its beginning. It was even nicknamed "Monory's Madness" ("''La Folie Monory''", from the name of its main instigator, René Monory). But although it has known some difficult times, it is now more than 30 years old, and one of the most visited amusement parks in France (after Disneyland Paris, and along the Ride/ParcAsterix and Le Puy du Fou).
196[[/folder]]
197
198[[folder:Toys]]
199* Mattel initially passed on ''Franchise/JurassicPark'' merchandising because they weren't sure how the dinosaur toys could be distinguished from all the other dinosaur toys on the market. They chose ''Film/LastActionHero'' instead, only for it to get destroyed in sales by ''Jurassic Park'' and Kenner to come up with the JP logo and the mark all JP toys had on them. Mattel did get a second chance with ''Film/JurassicWorldFallenKingdom'', though after Hasbro's toys for ''Film/JurassicWorld'' proved less than spectacular, and they are doing quite well.
200* In 1993, a man named Joel Glickman and his brother Bob started up a company to manufacture a construction toy product that would use basic rods and connectors that could be easily attached together to make various constructions. They called their product K'Nex and presented it to Hasbro, Mattel, Lego and Tyco, all of whom turned it down, thinking it wouldn't sell, and it was only through encouragement from Toys "R" Us executives that K'Nex chose to sell the product themselves. And the gamble paid off, as K'Nex became an overnight success, going on to be sold in over 25 countries and even selling building sets based off licensed properties.
201* Several toy companies rejected the idea for ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'' when the creator was trying to get it off the ground. Hasbro ultimately accepted the idea and the franchise is now a big hit.
202* A (likely apocryphal, given it's the company that made ''Franchise/StarTrek'' toys in the '70s) story says that Mego Corporation was the first company approached to make ''Franchise/StarWars'' toys, but it turned down the offer because "there's no money in doing toys for every flash-in-the-pan sci-fi B-movie". Creator/{{Kenner}} took a chance on the ''Star Wars'' license instead, and history was made. History that doesn't include Mego, as they went bankrupt in 1982. And while Kenner may have taken the chance, even they had their doubts about ''Star Wars''. They produced a limited line of toys and were caught completely off-guard when the film became a smash hit. By then, it was clear that customers would not be satisfied with the meager puzzles and posters that usually tied-in with a film; they needed action figures, dolls, playsets, and more, all of which could take a year from designing to being in stores. Unable to fulfill orders in time for Christmas, they created an "empty box campaign," in which toys would be mailed as they became available from purchase vouchers.
203* In the mid-80s, a licensing agent tried to get deals for [[ComicBook/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesMirage some independent comic]]. He was turned down by LJN, Mattel and Hasbro, and only a Hong Kong company which was attempting to go stateside bought into the idea, on the condition of also having [[Westernanimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles1987 a cartoon]] that would help sell this kooky idea about "Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles". And the gamble by Creator/PlaymatesToys paid off handsomely, making rejections such as "turtles aren't heroic and green doesn't sell" and "that's the dumbest thing I've ever heard" very shortsighted.
204* Mattel, Hasbro and even ''Disney's own consumer products division'' turned down the offer to do ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory1'' merchandising, because they weren't sure if they could get anything out in the 8 months before the film was released. Eventually, Disney settled on outsourcing the production of ''Toy Story'' toys to an obscure Canadian company by the name of Thinkway Toys, and even then they were unsure if the gamble would pay off since they thought the film would flop. The initial Buzz Lightyear and Woody toys were among the hottest that year's Christmas season, with the Buzz figures in particular selling out nationwide (with it [allegedly] getting so extreme that Buzz Lightyear toys ''were being sold on the black market''), and Disney would partner with Thinkway again several more times. The franchise itself later made a joke about it in the sequel, with Barbie telling the other toys that "short-sighted retailers did not order enough toys to meet demand".
205* ''Series/TheToysThatMadeUs'' covers a plethora of franchises that, when they were just trying to take off, were rejected by multiple companies for this very reason. Said plethora includes such juggernaut franchises as Franchise/{{LEGO}}, ''Star Wars'', Franchise/GIJoe, Franchise/{{Barbie}}, He-Man, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}''.
206[[/folder]]
207
208
209[[folder:Web Videos]]
210* The DVD commentary of WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic's ''Film/{{Pixels}}'' review had Rob mocking anti-clipless people by saying the episode was the second highest viewed on the [=YouTube=] page, and that all the other clipless reviews have done really well regarding hits too.
211* [[SuccessThroughInsanity This is one of]] WebVideo/{{Muselk}}'s main sources of humor. Strats like the [[VideoGame/{{Overwatch}} sexy Junkrat and surprise Bastion]] were admonished by his friends for being useless and foolish, but worked insanely well for quite a while until the fanbase caught on.
212* The idea of an English branch of WebAnimation/{{Hololive}} was long treated by many as a joke: after all, why would English-speaking audiences turn out to streams of new Vtubers from a Japanese company when they could watch established streaming personalities on Youtube and Twitch? Once the first generation of hololive EN launched, however, it became a runaway success, with all five founding members earning a combined total of around $100,000 in Superchat donations from their debuts. Gura Gawr, one of the members of hololive EN, would later go on to be ''the first'' hololive star to break a million subscribers, helping to solidify her place, as well as those of her companions, in the video game streaming landscape and the Vtuber industry.
213* Creator/AchievementHunter:
214** An example with their [[AscendedMeme Tower of Pimps]]. Beginning as [[AlcoholInducedIdiocy drunken buffoonery]] on the part of Creator/GavinFree in episode 2 of ''[[LetsPlay/AchievementHunterMinecraftSeries Let's Play Minecraft]]'', using loads of [[TheAce Ray]]'s gold to build four gold blocks and place them outside a house. When it is torn down by the others, he declares that the Tower of Pimps was not a success. In later videos, this became the prize for winning competitions in their ''Let's Play Minecraft'' episodes, and even became an AscendedMeme in ''Minecraft'' itself.
215** In the "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Y_H2eqqR2U Halo 4: Terminus]] Achievement Guide", Gavin messes up his mic test and accidentally calls himself "Vav". Later, we get this as part of a SeinfeldianConversation between Gavin and Ray:
216--->'''Gavin:''' Do people ever call you "X-Ray"?\
217'''Ray:''' No. Under no context does ''anybody'' call me "X-Ray". Why would they call me "X-Ray"? Because Ray is my name?\
218'''Gavin:''' New nickname!\
219'''Ray:''' ''[laughs]'' Let's see if ''that'' sticks.
220** Less than a month later, not only did "X-Ray and Vav" become their official team name within Achievement Hunter, but they developed a complex backstory for the nicknames as the aliases of a duo of wannabe superheroes, which Creator/RoosterTeeth made into a [[WebAnimation/XRayAndVav cartoon]] two years later.
221* ''WebVideo/CriticalRole'':
222** Neither Creator/MatthewMercer nor the rest of the cast had any great expectations for a stream of "a bunch of nerdyass voice actors sitting down and [playing] ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''". Mercer gave it a few episodes before going back to play at his house. The show exploded in popularity nearly immediately, and once more as people in quarantine for the COVID-19 pandemic discovered it. ''Critical Role Productions'' is now its own company, overseeing the eponymous flagship show, spinoff shows (Talks Machina, Narrative Telephone, Critter Hug, etc.), publishing their own games (via Darrington Press), and the world of Exandria is now official ''D&D'' canon (via [[spoiler:the acknowledgment of Arkhan acquiring the Hand of Vecna]] and the publishing of ''Explorer's Guide to Wildemount'')!
223** The cast got hit with this again when they went to raise money on Website/{{Kickstarter}} for a single animated special of the Briarwood arc, not expecting much. The [[FanCommunityNickname Critters]] overdelivered -- stretch goals kept being added and they kept hitting them. At the end of the campaign, Creator/AmazonPrime picked ''The Legend of Vox Machina'' up for ''two whole seasons.''

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