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1%%Do not add Ford to the "Pines Family" list as The Author's identity is a Walking Spoiler in and itself!%%
2%%
3!![[center:[-''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'' '''[[Characters/GravityFalls Main Character Index]]'''\
4The Mystery Shack ([[Characters/GravityFallsMysteryTwins Dipper and Mabel Pines]]) | [[Characters/GravityFallsTheAuthor The Author]] | [[Characters/GravityFallsMainAntagonists Main Antagonists]] | [[Characters/GravityFallsAdults Adults of Gravity Falls]] | [[Characters/GravityFallsYouth Youth of Gravity Falls]] | [[Characters/GravityFallsCreaturesAndOtherOddities Creatures and other Oddities]]-]]]
5
6[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gravity_falls_cast_pic_6471.png]]
7----
8[[foldercontrol]]
9
10!Pines Family
11!!Administrivia/CharacterSpecificPages
12* '''[[Characters/GravityFallsMysteryTwins Dipper and Mabel Pines]]'''
13
14[[folder:"Grunkle" Stan Pines]]
15!!"Grunkle" Stan Pines
16[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/grunkle_stan.png]]
17[[caption-width-right:350:''"Sounds like something a responsible parent wouldn't want you doing... Good thing I'm an uncle!"'']]
18!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/AlexHirsch, Stuart Allan/Declan J. Krogman (young)
19
20->''"When life gives you lemons, you call them 'yellow oranges' and sell them for double the price."''
21
22Stan Pines, also known as Great-Uncle Stan and Grunkle Stan, is Mabel and Dipper's humorous, sly, money-loving great-uncle. He runs the Mystery Shack, a tourist trap full of questionable oddities. He represents the fish-shaped symbol on the Zodiac.
23----
24* AbusiveDad: About the worst thing you can say is that he occasionally overworks and frequently mocks Dipper (partly because he feels the need to toughen him up and make him capable of fighting his own battles, but mostly because child labor has low overhead). But he still shows them a lot of affection, even if he is cheap. However, come "A Tale of Two Stans", and in hindsight there's something deeply unsettling about Stanley basing his treatment of Dipper off how his father treated him (most likely down to him misinterpreting Filbrick's abuse as simply trying to toughen him up).
25* AdultsAreUseless: Subverted. When he's first introduced he's set up as your classic useless comedic cartoon adult who seems [[WeirdnessCensor practically blind]] to all the Weirdness going on in Gravity Falls. Later on, he would prove himself a lot more shrewd that you'd expect when dealing with Gideon, and even assist the kids on a few adventures like in "Boys Crazy" or "A Land before Swine"(where he ends up kicking major ass). In season 2, it's all revealed to be [[spoiler:an act he put up to discourage the kids from investigating the supernatural for their own safety, in part because of [[GoMadFromTheRevelation what happened to his brother]]. Turns out he knew all along, has his own share of dangerous secrets, and is generally more of a complex multidimensional character than you'd ever have expected from him.]]
26* AffectionateNickname: Inverted. [[spoiler:His brother, Ford, is the only person who primarily calls Stan by his full name, Stanley. But, considering the fact that Stan went by a fake name for thirty years, Ford referring to him by his real name actually emphasizes their closeness.]]
27* AgentScully: He adamantly doesn't believe that there is anything weird going on in Gravity Falls, telling Dipper that it's all drummed up by guys like him to sell merchandise to gullible tourists. Despite this he is willing to accept the existence of living dinosaurs, with the caveat of insisting that they "don't count" as supernatural because they're just big lizards. [[spoiler:However, this is just a ruse to hide his knowledge of the journals and all of the oddities related to it.]] As of the start of season 2, [[spoiler:he's dropped the ruse and admitted to the twins that he knows about the supernatural things going on. But he still hasn't told them about his secret room or his ultimate plans, although in "Not What He Seems", the twins discover the room on their own and Stan begins to confide in them.]]
28* AllJewsAreCheapskates: Deconstructed and partially justified. When first introduced, Stan appears to be a greedy miser who uses his own family to make an extra buck. By the time the Author is introduced, we learn that he's so preoccupied with money because he was homeless for much of his life and had to turn to crime to survive, and now that he owns the Mystery Shack, he has to pay the mortgage on it to [[spoiler:have a chance of seeing his brother again]]. Notably, we don't get any hints that he's Jewish until "A Tale of Two Stans", when a mezuzah is seen on his childhood home. Contrast his actions in the finale with the archetypal GreedyJew, [[Theatre/TheMerchantOfVenice Shylock]], who cares more for money than his own daughter. [[spoiler:Stan responds to Bill's offer of money and power with a MegatonPunch, proving he puts his family first.]]
29* AllOfTheOtherReindeer: Was a victim of bullying in his youth, which, along with his father's mistreatment, contributed to the insecurities he carries to this day.
30* AlwaysSaveTheBoy: Has a history of going great lengths to assure that he and [[spoiler:his brother]] stay together, or get reunited, at great personal costs but also at the expense of everything else, including [[spoiler:what said brother himself might want]]. Stan even [[spoiler:spent 30 long years working to repair a portal that could destroy the universe]]. Unlike most examples, this winds up having serious repercussions as [[spoiler:the portal's reactivation ends up creating a dangerous rift in spacetime that gets his whole family targeted by Bill and is ultimately used to unleash [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt Weirdmageddon]].]] Ironically, [[spoiler:said brother]] is very much a TheNeedsOfTheMany person and as such, absolutely ''furious'' at Stan for [[spoiler:reactivating the portal]]. It's later revealed that [[spoiler:Stanford]] also finds this trait of Stan's unbearably smothering. [[spoiler:In the finale he stops thinking like this as when Ford is prepared to let Bill know how to break the barrier around Gravity Falls just for a chance to save Dipper and Mabel, ''Stan'' convinces him to try another way.]]
31* AmbiguouslyEvil: It does not help that one of the cryptograms in the show's ''opening'' reads "[[spoiler:STAN IS NOT WHAT HE SEEMS.]]" It only gets even more ambiguous in "Gideon Rises", where [[spoiler:his underground lab, equipped with a large portal generator,]] is finally shown. "Scary-oke" implies he's using it to search for something, and feels confident that he won't "get caught", implying questionable safety/legality at best (which is standard for Stan) or outright villainy at worst. "Society of the Blind Eye" leans towards the former in a WellIntentionedExtremist kind of way, as both a symbol substitution cipher in the Journals and [=McGucket's=] video logs reveal [[spoiler:the Author of the Journals believed that the portal could benefit all of mankind]], while Stan acknowledges that [[spoiler:[[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt the risks of activating the portal]]]] mean little to him in light of the possible rewards for doing so--specifically, [[spoiler:seeing his brother again.]] Exaggerated in (the admittedly non-canon) "Little Gift Shop of Horrors" -- he apparently [[spoiler:drugs a customer and put him on display in the shack because he didn't buy anything]].
32* AmbiguouslyJewish: Like the rest of the family. Eventually made ''relatively'' less ambiguous by Creator/AlexHirsch: after having originally stated that [[https://twitter.com/_AlexHirsch/status/547218052178145280 the Pines family is not canonically Jewish]], and later being questioned about Journal 3 stating that Stan had a Bar Mitzvah, he [[https://twitter.com/_AlexHirsch/status/758547032554344448 suggested that Stan was raised Jewish and became an atheist later in life]]. It also helps that he's a big-nosed [[AllJewsAreCheapskates miser]] who speaks with a Jewish American dialect, including [[YiddishAsASecondLanguage the occasional "Oy!" and "Holy Moses!"]].
33* AnnoyingYoungerSibling: [[spoiler: He's the younger twin by fifteen minutes, and the older they got, the more Ford viewed Stan as a worthless screwup who sabotaged his future.]]
34* AntiHero: He may be a greedy jerk and con artist, but he does have a soft spot in his heart for the twins.
35* ApplianceDefenestration: Stan threw his TV through the window after he was angry how a movie ended.
36* ArbitrarySkepticism: In "Bottomless Pit!" Grunkle Stan still states that everyone's stories are far-fetched, even though he is falling through a bottomless pit even as he speaks, and even ''lived through'' one of the stories. [[spoiler:In "Scaryoke", it's made clear that this is an act, and he's very much aware of the strange goings-on around Gravity Falls.]]
37* ArtEvolution: His head is differently shaped in Season 2.
38* AttentionWhore: As seen in "Headhunters". The below quote is also the page quote!
39-->'''Grunkle Stan:''' But enough about me. Behold, me!
40** Also, in "Boss Mabel" when he's on Cash Wheel. In fact, he got on the show by using his "old man powers" to fake a heart attack.
41* TheAtoner: [[spoiler: Spent thirty years working to bring his brother Ford back from the portal, which Stan himself accidentally knocked him into during a fight.]]
42* BadassNormal: He's just a normal guy with no special powers or cool tech, but he still punches pterodactyls in the face and kills zombies by punching them with brass knuckles like it's nothing.
43* TheBarnum: Most of his revenue seems to come from swindling rubes in really obvious ways.
44* BeatThemAtTheirOwnGame:
45** In an epic moment of his career as a shyster [[spoiler:he gives [[DealWithTheDevil Bill Cipher]] a lousy deal of his own]].
46** Very literal when he defeats Probabilitor in "Dungeons, Dungeons, and More Dungeons".
47* BerserkButton:
48** "Irrational Treasure" shows that he ''really'' doesn't like Pioneer Day.
49** Also he doesn't like being questioned about the tattoo on his back that he keeps denying, and will go nuts if someone tries to uncover it and video record it. [[spoiler: It's revealed it's actually from a burn on his back that he got in a fight with his brother, ending in his brother being sent into another dimension, which goes a long way towards explaining why he's so angry about it.]]
50* BewareTheHonestOnes: Turns out Stan is much harder to deal with when he can only tell the truth as seen in "Bottomless Pit!".
51* BewareTheSillyOnes: He may be a goofy grunkle who runs a tourist trap with absurd attractions, likes to slack off, joke around, and lie down in a seat when he's not running the shack, and has committed what is likely hundreds if not thousands of petty crimes and has been arrested multiple times for said petty crimes. But let's remember, he's a convict and professional conman who runs a successful business with said tourist trap and who can throw a nasty punch with all the boxing lessons he's taken, who [[spoiler:has stolen radioactive waste from a government facility, operated a powerful interdimensional portal to summon his brother back to their home dimension, and [[DidYouJustScamCthulhu conned]] '''[[BigBad Bill Cipher]]''' into going into his burning mindscape before [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu punching him out of existence.]]]]
52* BigBrotherInstinct: Although [[spoiler:the younger twin,]] he's shown to care a great deal about [[spoiler:his twin]] just like Dipper for Mabel. The last half of Season 2 reveals that [[spoiler:he invested a ''lot'' of time into bringing Ford back from another dimension.]]
53* BigOlEyebrows: Has a practically huge grey pair.
54* BookDumb: Academically miles behind [[spoiler:his brother]], [[spoiler:considered useless by his father]], no college education…still a brilliant scammer who can wring money out of anyone [[spoiler:and managed to fix the portal on his own]]. [[spoiler:In the finale, this trope ends up working to his advantage, because he literally had nothing Bill wants, which is what made his mind the perfect vessel to defeat Bill in]].
55* BoxingBattler: His father made him take boxing lessons as a child, and he's shown to still have some moves in "The Land Before Swine" and "Scary-oke".
56* BunnyEarsLawyer: He comes across as rather bumbling, silly and over-the-top at times, but make no mistake, he's actually very sharp when he puts his mind into it, particularly as a salesman (and [[TheBarnum Con artist]]).
57* BrainsAndBrawn: [[spoiler: Was the Brawn to his brother Ford's Brains when they were children. Downplayed in the present, as although Stan is still the stronger of the two, he's also pretty bright in his own right and Ford is no push-over in a fight.]]
58-->'''Stan:''' [[spoiler: [==] [[LampshadeHanging "Good thing you got your smarts, Poindexter. I got the other thing. What's it called? Oh, right. Punching!"]]]]
59* BreakTheCutie: [[spoiler: "A Tale of Two Stans" shows how he went from a cheerful and optimistic kid to a disillusioned wreck]].
60* BriefcaseFullOfMoney: His savings are stuffed inside a duffelbag hidden behind a painting in the Shack.
61* BrilliantButLazy: Stan isn't stupid. He is, however, very good at making things up as he goes along, and managed to pick up enough know-how to [[spoiler: repair the portal in his basement.]] "A Tale of Two Stans" shows him being able to sell several of his con-products and later hold his own business, which is basically just one big con, which shows that he is an amazing salesman. If he had gotten a legitimate sales job he'd probably gotten rich a lot sooner.
62* BrotherhoodOfFunnyHats: Stan's fez vaguely resembles those worn by the Shriners. He also remarks how "the boys from the lodge" won't go fishing with him.
63** Journal 3 reveals that it's his father's fez, from "The Royal Order of the Holy Mackerel".
64* BrokeYourArmPunchingOutCthulhu: [[spoiler: In the Series Finale, Stan manages to destroy Bill, but he’s only able to do so when he’s being inflicted with LaserGuidedAmnesia which effectively destroys his mind. However, this is ultimately subverted as Ford, Dipper and Mabel are able to help him recover his memory.]]
65* BruiserWithASoftCenter: Stan is a bruiser; when he needs to throw down, his weapons of choice are some sort of bludgeon or brass knuckles, he's fast on his feet, hits like a Mack Truck, and he's also very loud. However, he's as soft as a marshmallow when it comes to his family... not that he wouldn't threaten to punch you for pointing it out.
66* CarpetOfVirility: Shown off at the end of ''Dipper Vs Manliness''. Mabel attempts to trim it as part of her makeover for him to impress Lazy Susan, but it immediately grows back.
67* CerebusRetcon: It's hard to look at him the same way again when you learn that [[spoiler:his love of money is the result of being disowned by his family after accidentally sabotaging his brother's future.]]
68* TheCharmer: How he manages to get customers into the Shack despite it being nothing but junk. He's a fast-thinker, and can make a joke about just about anything, and the crowds love it.
69* CloudCuckooLander: While certainly not as spacey as other examples on the show, you can tell where Mabel gets it from.
70* CollectorOfTheStrange: He invokes this as the owner of the Mystery Shack, but it's all a sham - every single one of his exhibits are either fake (like "cryptids" made from random animal parts or Dipper in a bad costume), or nonsense junk passed off as rare artifacts, like Rock That Looks Like a Face Rock, or The World's Most Distracting Object (a hypnosis wheel). [[spoiler: This is because Stan knows how dangerous the supernatural really is, and his fake exhibits are at least harmless.]]
71* CombatPragmatist: His fighting advice to Dipper is along these lines.
72-->'''Stan:''' Just bonk him over the head. It's nature's snooze button!
73** And when outnumbered by zombies, he's got no problems using a grandfather clock to even the odds.
74** Best demonstrated by his method of [[spoiler:taking on and defeating three government agents]] in "Not What He Seems".
75* ComicalOverreacting: Ties into {{Cloudcuckoolander}} - he's known to frequently engage in LargeHam actions, and he apparently considers having a mullet to be [[FauxHorrific incredibly horrifying]].
76-->'''Stan:''' You think you've got problems? I've got a mullet, [[spoiler: Stanford!]]
77* CompanionCube: He becomes a bit overly attached to a wax statue of himself in "Headhunters", and the end credits of "Soos and the Real Girl" show him ''marrying'' the Old Goldie statue in Las Vegas. His concern over the wax statue took a bit of a darker turn when [[spoiler:we learn it was because Stan had lost his real twin to the Portal.]]
78* ConMan: Not only does Stan fool tourists with the fake attractions at the Mystery Shack, but he also has a long record of financial crimes. [[spoiler: However it comes in handy in the finale when he manages to out-con ''Bill''.]]
79* ConsummateLiar: He's an inveterate shyster and proud of it. This trait comes back to bite him ''hard'' in "Not What He Seems". [[spoiler:Only Mabel, who bases her decisions primarily off emotions instead of facts, is willing to trust him still after the extent of exactly ''how much'' he's lied to everyone is revealed. Even ''Soos'', who sees Stan like a father, doesn't trust him anymore.]] This is also apparently one of the reasons his father threw him out of the house as a teenager. Eventually, however, this is subtly proven to be a subversion--even though Stan is excellent at lying, even he has his tells: [[spoiler: in situations that involve his missing brother or him trying to hide something he knows a lot about, Stan crosses his arms and looks up to the side.]]
80* CoolUncle: He didn't start out this way, but once he and the twins spent more time together, he gradually began to fill this role. For starters, he punched a pterodactyl in the face to rescue his great-niece's pet pig.
81* CounterfeitCash: Has been shown paying for merchandise with "Stan Bucks", crudely drawn fake dollar bills with his face on them. A cutaway gag shows that he also roped in Dipper and Mabel into hand-painting actual counterfeit bills.
82-->'''Mabel:''' The county jail was ''so cold.''
83* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: A silly and lazy conman he may be. But, in "The Land Before Swine" he punched a pterodactyl in the face. ''Repeatedly''. Come Season 2, he continues to show how much of a badass he is by fighting off an entire horde of ravenous zombies, half of them with his ''bare hands''. In "Not What He Seems", [[spoiler: he takes out three government agents while he's handcuffed to a chair, using a gravitational anomaly to get the drop on the agents, and manages to steal one of their wallets in the process. He's even the one that deals the final blow to Bill in the finale of the show.]]
84* CuttingCorners: How Stan operates ''all'' his business ventures. Especially his carnival.
85-->'''Stan:''' There she is, the cheapest fair money can rent! I spared every expense. (cable car falls from the sky with Dipper inside)
86* CurtainsMatchTheWindows: Before his hair became gray. Due to the art style it's usually impossible to tell the characters' eye colors, but Stan's are brown as [[https://twitter.com/_AlexHirsch/status/260514979969646592 confirmed by Alex Hirsch.]]
87* TheCynic: Much like Dipper, Stan is somewhat cynical and not up for idealism and wonder, which makes his conflicts with the similarly cynical Dipper and bonding with the upbeat Mabel especially humorous. It's later revealed in "Dreamscaperers" that he's harder on Dipper ''because'' Dipper reminds him of himself.
88* DarkAndTroubledPast: Bullied during his early childhood, was an academic failure, [[spoiler:accidentally cost his brother a scholarship to his dream school,]] was disowned by his parents, and was forced to go on the road to fulfill the impossible task of making up for what the Pines family lost because of his horrible mistake. He spent time as a ConMan and failed at it miserably, getting run out of towns all over the country - and possibly in more countries, considering he claimed to have been thrown in jail in three countries. He was also forced to somehow chew his way out of a car trunk, and before [[spoiler: going to the Mystery Shack to meet his brother]], he was in a rathole apartment with only a peso to his name, and he was behind on his rent. [[spoiler: Then he accidentally threw his brother into another dimension and spent 30 years trying to get him back. Oops.]]
89* DarkIsNotEvil: He wears an all-black suit, and while he may be a crook, he's one of the good guys and is ultimately responsible for [[spoiler:Ford's return and the defeat of Bill.]]
90* DeadpanSnarker: Much like Dipper, Stan possesses a quick wit and never misses a chance to mock the silliness of those around him.
91* DeadPersonImpersonation: [[spoiler: The real Stanford Pines, AKA The Author, has been trapped on the other side of a portal for 30 years. The Stan Pines we've been following is actually his twin brother, Stanley Pines.]] However, see "FakingTheDead" for more. [[spoiler:After Weirdmageddon was foiled, it's implied he's going by Stanley again, as the news refer to him as such]].
92* DentedIron: He can throw some mean punches and is quite spry, but age has impaired his senses and a lifetime of bad eating habits has turned his body into a hot mess from the shoulders down.
93* {{Determinator}}: When Stan puts his mind to it, nothing can stand in his way, be it pterodactyls, government agents, child psychos, or his own lack of knowledge of physics. The best example being how he [[spoiler:spent thirty years working on bringing his brother back from the other dimension he accidentally knocked him into. For this he completely self-taught himself how to maintain and work the Portal (all from his brother's Journal, with ''a third of the instructions'') and went as far as stealing toxic waste from the Government to pull it off.]]
94* DidNotGetTheGirl: And trying to get her back didn't work out so well either, since according to him, [[spoiler:he deliberately ran his rival's car off a cliff.]]
95* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: In the Series Finale, [[spoiler: he punches Bill in the eye while they're both inside his mind, causing him to shatter into a million pieces.]]
96* DidYouJustScamCthulhu: [[spoiler: How he and Ford defeat Bill Cipher. While Bill was chasing Dipper and Mabel, they switched out clothing so Stan would become Ford. After Cipher gets caught in Stan's mind, Ford erases them with his memory gun. ]]
97* DirtyBusiness: The Mystery Shack is a tourist trap in the sleepy town of Gravity Falls, filled with an assortment of hand-made oddities in both the attractions and overpriced merchandise. [[spoiler: It turns out that the Mystery Shack is actually his twin brother's cabin: he was determined to bring his brother back to the extent where he ran out of money. The residents of the town had mistaken Stan for his brother, and he was utterly shamefaced at the realization that he had no choice but to take his brother's name, convert the cabin and some of Ford's research into an attraction in order to continue paying the mortgage and work on repairing the portal.]]
98* DiscoDan: He still uses vinyl, doesn't understand texting and the interior of the Mystery Shack is straight out of the 1970s/early 80's.
99* DreamWorksFace: During the main title theme, he makes one in the group photo that falls atop a pile of other photos before the series logo appears.
100* DrivesLikeCrazy: "Road safety laws, prepare to be ignored!" He also has cataracts and broken headlights. And then there's the time he let a bear drive the car... though [[BlatantLies he had a prescription from Doctor Medicine for that]].
101* EarnYourHappyEnding: ''Hot Belgian Waffles, did he!'' [[spoiler:After 10 years living on the streets, 30 years of working on the Portal, and Weirdmageddon, Stan finally reconciles with Ford, is named the town hero, and the two decide to travel the world together on the Stan-o-War II.]]
102* EasilyForgiven: Despite the fact that Stanley outright lied to them about his intentions and deliberately witheld information from them, as soon as Dipper, Mabel, and Soos heard his story, they immediately forgave him without any signs of distrust towards him. This is especially the case for the former considering that Dipper isn't really the type to let go of a grudge easily, both shown with Pacifica and previous altercations with Stan like in "Dreamscaperers" or "Scary-oke".
103* ExactWords: Stan says he doesn't have a tattoo. He's not lying. [[spoiler: It's actually a ''brand'' burned into his back by accident.]]
104* EyepatchOfPower: Wears one while in-character as Mr. Mystery, even though both of his eyes are fine, and he sometimes switches which side the patch goes on.
105* FakingTheDead: [[spoiler:Stanley faked his own death and is the Stan Pines the headline "Stan Pines Dead" was about.]]
106* FamilyThemeNaming: Stanley and Stanford, due to their father being not very original in his baby naming.
107* FanDisservice: Rips off his shirt in "Dipper vs. Manliness". Not pretty. {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d by Dipper moments after.
108* FatSlob: [[PlayedforLaughs Played for Laughs]] in "Dipper vs. Manliness". After telling Mabel she had to marry Gideon in "The Hand That Rocks the Mabel", to which she ran out of the room screaming, [[ComicallyMissingThePoint he assumed she was upset by his appearance]].
109-->'''Stan:''' [''calling after her''] Bodies change, honey! Bodies change...
110* FatalFlaw:
111** In a way surprisingly similar to Dipper, it becomes apparent that Stan has issues with trust and confiding in others. He often lies to avoid having to do so, which comes back to bite him in ''Not What He Seems''. If he had trusted the twins with the truth earlier, the episode probably would have been far less traumatic for all of them.
112** Stan's temper also proved to be another one, [[spoiler: it led to him accidentally destroying his brother's science project, ruining his chance of getting into his dream college, and severely damaging their relationship. It was this again which caused him to accidentally knock his brother into the Portal, meaning the two didn't see each other for thirty years. And this ''again'' very nearly led to Bill winning after Stan broke a magic circle to attack Ford over his grammar being corrected.]]
113** The flashbacks in "A Tale of Two Stans" shows that he has (or [[CharacterDevelopment had]]) a familiar problem with oblivious selfishness. [[spoiler: He automatically assumed that his brother wouldn't want to go to the best college in the country, so they would stay together as they did as children, completely oblivious to what his brother actually wanted. When he finally realized Stanford was seriously considering the offer, he felt extremely threatened and hurt because he saw this as his brother choosing to leave him behind. His acting out over this is what started the collapse of their good relationship, and being reminded of this old pain is what causes his fits of anger listed above.]]
114* FlatEarthAtheist: Almost literally. According to Alex Hirsch, [[https://twitter.com/_AlexHirsch/status/758547032554344448 Stan does not believe in God]], despite [[AmbiguouslyJewish having been raised Jewish]], seeing the supernatural on a regular basis, using a interdimensional portal to [[spoiler: bring back his twin brother]], and [[spoiler: even punching out the very god-like Bill Cipher in the series finale]].
115* FoolishSiblingResponsibleSibling: [[spoiler: Adding more parallels with Dipper and Mabel, flashbacks to their youth show that Stan was the foolish to the Author's responsible, showing The Author studying diligently on a test while Stan kicks his feet up on the desk one over. It's a bit more complicated in the present; Stan recognizes that the weird stuff in town is ''highly dangerous'', and that the kids should stay away from it. However, his method to do this was to put on an act of SelectiveObliviousness, shrugging any claims of monsters as imagination, while at the same time tinkering with the Portal, the most dangerous thing in Gravity Falls. Ford actually calls Stan out on his recklessness.]]
116%% ForWantOfANail: [[spoiler:Had Stan never accidentally broken Ford's science project or at least told him about the condition of the device so that Ford could fix it, assuming it wasn't literally ''damaged beyond repair,'' [[note]] both from Stan's initial perception and that of us viewers, who predictably haven't seen developments for the concepts behind a perpetual motion machine so far and have no idea how it would/''could'' be fixed [[/note]] Stan's relationship with his family would have been much better. Also, the events of the entire series would have played out completely different]].
117* FourPhilosophyEnsemble: The Cynic. Stan is a reasonably cynical man, not one up for wonder and idealism, he prefers to focus on practical matters. It's down to his experiences he is like this, as a "Tale of Two Stans" shows he used to be lot more optimistic before [[spoiler:he lost his relationship with his brother]].
118* FourTemperamentEnsemble: Choleric: Ambitious with a hair-trigger temper.
119* FreudianExcuse: He's greedy for a reason, namely that [[spoiler:he got kicked out of the house before graduating high school, told he couldn't come back until he made his family a fortune, and left to fend for himself.]]
120* FriendlessBackground: The only friends he seems to have made in life are [[spoiler: his twin brother]] and two Colombian criminals who hoped he died. Which might explain some of his {{Jerkass}} behavior.
121* GagNose: His nose looks like it belonged to a [[Franchise/TheMuppets Muppet]].
122* GeniusBruiser: Although old, Stan is still a powerful figure and likewise proves he can tangle with the best of them, being a brilliant fighter. He's likewise very strong and very quick for his age. However Stan also shows on multiple occasions he's highly intelligent, being an incredibly shrewd and cunning man, able to match wits with the likes of Gideon and Dipper, and win. Business skills aside, he's also clearly got a pretty good understanding of advanced science considering [[spoiler: how well he was able to operate and maintain the portal]]. Made all the more impressive with the reveal he [[spoiler:is completely self taught, in both science and showmanship.]]
123* GlassesOfAging: He didn't wear glasses until after he moved to Gravity Falls.
124* GoshDarnItToHeck: Suddenly having to hang around with two kids [[NotInFrontOfTheKid has forced him to tone down his language]]. This is addressed and parodied in a scene in "Not What He Seems".
125-->'''Stan:''' Gah! Hot Belgian waffles! Wait. I'm alone! I can swear for real! (''[[{{Beat}} Deep inhale]]'') '''''[[CurseCutShort SON OF A-]]'''''!
126* GottaCatchThemAll: [[spoiler: Stan's got Journal #1, and he's been looking for #2 and #3 for years to complete the set. He finally got all 3 at the end of Gideon Rises.]]
127-->'''Stan:''' After all these years... [[spoiler: Finally, I have them all.]]
128* {{Greed}}: His desire to make money is the driving force behind his work ethic.
129-->"''My one and only dream - which was to possess money - has come true!''"
130** Played with in that it's revealed that a lot of the money he makes goes toward [[spoiler:repairing the portal in order to save Stanford. And he spent about ten years in continuous poverty.]] Then again, Stan [[spoiler:is still [[ShouldntYouStopStealing a complete money-grubber even after Ford comes back]], so he may have [[BecomingTheMask become the mask]] at some point.]]
131* GrumpyOldMan: Very fond of complaining.
132* GunNut: We never see them, but he claims to own ten guns [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext due to his fear of ladders.]]
133* HairTriggerTemper: Stan has a quick temper, to the point he near ruined his commercial over him constantly mispronouncing a word. It is not a good idea to be on the receiving end of his temper.
134* HatesBeingAlone: Thoughout certain points in the series it was strongly hinted that Stan dosen't like being left alone.
135** In "Legend of the Gobblewalker", after Dipper and Mabel left Stan to find the titular creature, Stan went through great lengths to interact with people during his fishing trip. All attempts went nowhere.
136** In Stan's flashback in "A Tale of Two Stans", [[spoiler:after he accidentally broke his brother Ford's science project, Stan was kicked out of the house by his father and Ford would not even speak to him. This led to Stan spending years with no one to talk to. When Stan managed to meet his brother again, it led to a huge fight that led to the latter getting sucked into another dimension. This caused Stan to feel that he might be left all alone again]].
137* HeroicBuild: Had one as a younger man and uses a dapper suit to make it look like he still does. He still has some broad shoulders and thick arms for a man pushing 70, but his gut shows how far he is from his prime.
138* HeroicBSOD: Had one after he [[spoiler:accidentally flung his brother into another dimension]]. He could have been in the shack for anywhere from weeks to months.
139* HeroicComedicSociopath: His {{greed}} verges on this now and then, but his RefugeInAudacity on-screen criminal behavior and his WouldHurtAChild tendencies (toward Gideon - not his family) place him firmly in this territory.
140--->'''Stan:''' "Yes, yes... ''[[ItMakesSenseInContext Burn the child]]''..."
141* HeroicSacrifice: [[spoiler: He sacrifices his mind in the finale in order to trap and weaken Bill enough to destroy him. Thankfully, as shown with [=McGucket=] and having not been mindwiped long, he managed to regain his memory just due to being reminded of it thanks to various stimulation such as home videos and Mabel's scrapbook.]]
142* HeyYou: He often addresses Dipper and Mabel as "kid", apparently simply due to his gruff personality.
143* HiddenDepths: Despite being considered an idiot by his parents and teachers, he was able to [[spoiler:secretly repair Ford's dimensional portal by himself with nothing but his brother's journals to aid him.]]
144* HonestJohnsDealership: Most of the exhibits in his House of Mystery are fake. It's deconstructed, as "Boss Mabel" implies that while he could get real oddities for the Mystery Shack like Dipper did, they would be difficult (if not impossible) to control and would terrify and/or hurt customers.
145* IdiotBall:
146** Handles this quite a bit in "The Stanchurian Candidate"; you'd think that a con artist would be able to use his silvery forked tongue to con his way into public office, but oh, no! Instead, he [[OpenMouthInsertFoot can't even open his mouth without revealing his amoral nature and telling it like it is]].
147** He handles it even worse in "Roadside Attraction", where he falls for Darlene's flattery and doesn't even realize that she's a gigantic man-eating spider in disguise until it is almost too late.
148* IHaveNoSon:
149** [[spoiler: After it becomes clear that Ford has no interest in reconciling with his brother and won't even say "thank you" for bringing him back to our dimension, Stan point blank tells him that Mabel and Dipper are the only family he has left as far as he is concerned, even if [[RegretfulTraitor he's very obviously not proud of it.]]]]
150** [[spoiler:Stan himself was also disinherited by his [[AbusiveDad own father]] because he accidentally ruined Ford's chance to get into his dream college]].
151** Played for laughs when Stan warned the twins that if they started talking like pioneers on Pioneer Day, then he would disown them.
152--->'''Stan:''' If you come back to the Shack talking like these people, you're dead to me! (the twins do exactly that and run off laughing) DEAD TO ME!!!
153* IJustWantToBeLoved: [[spoiler:Stan's family disowned him when he accidentally broke Stanford's science project, so he treasures the relationship he has with Dipper and Mabel. He initially wanted to reconcile with Ford, but their combative behavior and mutual stubbornness makes it impossible for now]]. This is a driving force behind many of his decisions, such as announcing his candidacy for mayor.
154* IJustWantToHaveFriends: In "The Legend of the Gobblewonker", he spends most of his time looking for fishing buddies. As implied through dialogue in that episode, and confirmed throughout the series, Stan suffered from a FriendlessBackground, and the closest he got to friendship until his arrival in Gravity Falls were criminal accessories who could barely stand him.
155* IndyPloy: Stan is almost preternaturally good at this. He survived for years with nothing but his wits and a baseball bat, has apparently escaped by the skin of his teeth ([[LiteralMetaphor perhaps literally]], [[NoodleIncident given that he somehow chewed his way out of a car trunk]]) multiple times, and managed to turn his brother's house into a passable tourist trap and thriving business by making it up as he went along.
156* InformedDeformity: The ''Legend of the Gnome Gemulets'' video game has Wendy claim that "you can clearly see [Stan's] bald spot" when he takes his fez off. Yet Stan himself is never shown to have a bald spot of any kind.
157* InformedJudaism: Exaggerated. Despite having been raised Jewish, as noted by the mezuzah on the Pines pawn shop in New Jersey, Stan doesn't even believe in God, let alone keep kosher.
158* INeedToGoIronMyDog: Parodied in the episode "Dreamscaperers" where the main crew see a memory of Stan escaping a date with Lazy Susan.
159-->'''Stan Pines:''' Nonspecific excuse! (''slaps food off the table and runs out the door'')
160* InSeriesNickname: He's refered to as "Grunkle" Stan from the first episode, as he is the grand-uncle of Dipper and Mabel, who are the grandchildren of "Shermy" Pines, his youngest sibling who only appears for a single scene as an infant in "A Tale of Two Stans". It's not clear who came up with it, but the twins use the term from day one, implying their parents might have come up with it.
161* IWasQuiteALooker: Here's a flashback to him in the 70's. Hello, [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_s1e17_stan_and_carla_dancin2_6100.png Handsome]]. The fandom sometimes refer to his younger self as "Hunkle Stan".
162* IconicOutfit: Grunkle Stan is usually seen in a fez and a black tuxedo. When sitting around the house, he is almost always dressed in nothing but a tanktop, blue-striped boxers, slippers, and the fez.
163* ItMakesSenseInContext: InUniverse, he claims the picture in "Gideon Rises" of him in a devil suit in front of a wall of fire is this.
164-->'''Stan:''' That picture's taken out of context.
165* JacobAndEsau: Downplayed. [[spoiler:His father seemed cold and resentful toward his "wimpy" sons in general but valued Stanford as his talents might make the family money, while his mother - possibly because of their similar personalities - seemed at least ''somewhat'' fond of Stanley, calling him her "little free spirit", but ultimately didn't lift a finger when her husband decided to throw him out of the house.]]
166* JerkassHasAPoint: In "Boss Mabel", it is shown that his iron handed rule over the Mystery Shack, use of fake exhibits in the museum and strict no-refunds policies are in fact necessary to run the Shack properly. When Mabel attempts to run things her way, Soos and Wendy either take advantage of her lax attitudes or screw up their jobs, putting real monsters in the Shack proves to be a disaster that hospitalizes two visitors, and Mabel's liberal refund policies end up costing them nearly all their earnings.
167* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Even though he's a greedy con artist and is AmbiguouslyEvil, it's very unsutbly made clear by him personally that he cares about Mabel and Dipper's safety above all else even before "Scary-Oke" reveals that [[spoiler: he always knew about the supernatural goings-on in the town.]] Come season 2, [[spoiler: after it's revealed the Author is his brother]], it turns out that ''everything'' he has done was really for his family, for their safety, their love, and their protection.
168** In "Double Dipper", he claps for Mabel when everyone was voting for her via applause. Granted, the other candidate, Pacifica, is a {{rich|Bitch}} AlphaBitch, but it goes to show that he really cares for Mabel and wanted to support her, even if he usually doesn't show it.
169** And in "Dipper vs. Manliness" he's the one to tell Dipper that standing up for what he believed in even though he [[WhatYouAreInTheDark alienated every single one of the Manotaurs in doing so]] was a manly thing to do.
170** And in the very first episode, he let Mabel and Dipper choose something from the shop to cheer them up. [[BeforeIChangeMyMind Before he changes his mind]] notwithstanding.
171** Really shows through in "Boyz Crazy", where he not only immediately agrees to help Dipper expose [[spoiler:Robbie's mind control of Wendy through subliminal messaging in music (even if partially motivated by his own experiences as a young man)]], but also tells Dipper, [[spoiler:after Wendy angrily brushes him off, that he can just hang out with him until things sort out with Wendy.]] This is the best father figure moment for Stan in the series thus far. Plus, he was more than willing to give Dipper TheTalk in "Carpet Diem", when you'd think he'd be the kind of character to avoid doing that. [[spoiler:Even if it was Mabel in Dipper's body. [[ItMakesSenseInContext It's an odd show.]]]]
172** In "Land Before Swine" he [[spoiler: saves Waddles from a pterodactyl]] out of sheer love for Mabel.
173** "Dreamscaperers" shows that even though Stan is tough on Dipper by making him do terrible chores like cleaning the toilet and chopping firewood, [[spoiler: he does it to toughen him up so he learns to fight back.]]
174** In "Gideon Rises", when he feels like he finally lost to Gideon, he's very disheartened that the kids have to suffer with him too, and while down on his luck and almost out of money, with what little he has left he buys bus tickets to send the twins home. Thankfully though, it got better, but still.
175** "Not What He Seems" and his back story show [[spoiler: his conman career was ten years in barely surviving poverty without even a high school diploma trying to earn his way back into his family,]] and that the only reason he's even been living in Gravity Falls for the last thirty years is [[spoiler: to fix the portal his brother built and bring him back to atone for accidentally sending him through it in the first place.]]
176** In "Weirdmageddon Part 3: Take Back The Falls", [[spoiler:he, a selfish con man, has saved dozens of humans and monsters that aren't family. And then there's his HeroicSacrifice.]]
177* JerkassRealization: After his petty grudge with Ford ended up ruining the chance to truly stop Bill, Stan realizes just how much of petty jerk he is to Ford and blames himself for it. The latter, having the same realization, reassures him that it's not entirely his fault and in the end, they finally decide to bury the hatchet in order to stop Bill in the process.
178* KleptomaniacHero: Stan will gleefully and shamelessly steal anything he wants or needs. [[BrutalHonesty Often while outright saying it straight to the rightful owner's faces.]]
179-->'''Man:''' "These wax statues come at a ''terrible price!''"\
180'''Stan:''' (looking around for a price tag) "[[LiteralMinded 20 dollars??]]" "I'll just steal them while you're not looking".\
181'''Man:''' "What?"\
182'''Stan:''' "I said I was gonna rob you."
183* LaResistance: [[spoiler:Though he only gets one brief scene in "Weirdmageddon", in "Weirdmageddon Part 2" it turns out Stan was alive and well, hiding out in the Shack and leading a holdout against Bill]].
184* LanternJawOfJustice: Though the "Justice" part is definitely in question.
185* LargeHam: Part-and-parcel of being a showman, he tends to ham it up during tours of the Mystery Shack... of course, not that he doesn't display similar tendencies ''outside'' of that.
186* LockedOutOfTheLoop: Despite [[spoiler:the reveal of him knowing all about the general weirdness of the town, he still seems to have no idea of Bill Cipher's existence, or that it's why Ford was so angry at him for turning the portal back on. Stan ''chose'' not to care because of personal grievances against his brother]].
187* LovableRogue: While immoral, shady and sometimes outright criminal, Stan remains a beloved character, and makes it clear to the audience that he is good at heart. The people in-universe are far less lenient; it's stated as early as the second episode that Stan has no friends ("The guys at the lodge don't 'like' or 'trust' me."), due to his dishonest business practices. His campaign for mayor was torpedoed by his own criminal record, and [[spoiler: "A Tale of Two Stans" strongly implies that his amoral tendencies were the reason he got disowned by his family, with the accidental ruining of Ford's college admissions being the last straw. His attempts to get rich through various scams and swindles all ended in failure. The only place a blatant criminal like Stan can operate more-or-less unhindered is Gravity Falls with its stupid populace.]]
188* MadeOfIron: In "Not What He Seems", he gets slammed into a metal pipe hard enough to buckle the metal and crack the stone wall behind it, and he's ''completely unharmed''. Its shown in "The Tale of Two Stans" he's had this from childhood, as he didn't even notice the multiple splinters in his hands (from breaking a plank) until he saw them. Eagle-eyed viewers can probably attest to where/who Dipper got his durability from...
189* MadScientist: PlayedWith. While Stan himself isn't actually a scientist, [[spoiler: his brother, Ford, was. In an effort to rescue his brother, Stan is forced to rebuild Ford's interdimensional portal in an underground lab, despite how dangerous it is.]]
190* ManipulativeBastard:
191** Literally how he runs the Mystery Shack. He creates fake supernatural creatures and uses his own charisma and showmanship to profit off of dumb tourists and even ''dumber'' townspeople.
192** Season 2 takes it up to eleven in a darker way. [[spoiler: It turns out he's been ObfuscatingStupidity for decades, as well as lying to Dipper and Mabel so his experiments will go undetected.]]
193* MeanBoss: He yells at his employees a lot, [[JustifiedTrope but his strictness is how he can keep things in order]]. When Mabel acted as the BenevolentBoss, she was taken advantage of by Wendy and run up the wall by Soos' ineptitude.
194* MeaningfulName: [[spoiler:His real name of "Stanley" roughly translates from Old English to "stony clearing". The "stony" part can be seen in his obnoxious, cheerfully rude demeanor (albeit belying his softer side), and the "clearing" part is an allusion to his family's last name of "Pines" (along with possibly serving as {{Foreshadowing}} for how he preforms a HeroicSacrifice through getting his own mind temporarily erased to eliminate Cipher once and for all).]]
195* MessianicArchetype: [[spoiler: He sacrifices himself to save everyone from the resident SatanicArchetype, and he gets better soon after, but he will forever be remembered for it]].
196* MirrorCharacter: [[invoked]] To Bill Cipher. Both are theatrical conmen with tons of charisma and guided by a ''ruthless'' personal objectivity, to the point where in the Weirdmageddon version of the show's intro, Stan is replaced by Bill predominantly. [[spoiler: It's this very shared trait that spells the end for Bill.]] Notably, Alex Hirsch has even noted that [[FreudianExcuse part of the reason]] why Bill is such a sociopath is because he had an even ''worse'' relationship with his parents than Stan did.
197* MiserAdvisor: Stan sometimes takes this role with the twins, especially Dipper.
198* MiseryBuildsCharacter: [[spoiler: Stan's belief in this is why he's so tough on Dipper. It's also why Stan's father had him take boxing lessons.]] Starting to move towards a [[DeconstructedTrope deconstruction]], as it's shown that [[spoiler: his father's treatment of him gave him huge and long-lasting emotional scars. Not only that, but him singling Dipper out to give him this treatment made their relationship crash so badly Dipper was convinced Stan legitimately ''hated'' him and it nearly drove him to [[StoppedCaring stop caring]] about Stan completely. Despite Dipper now knowing that Stan is trying to [[InvokedTrope invoke]] this, it still causes major underlying emotional tensions that haven't been entirely dealt with.]]
199* MoneyFetish: Stan's love of money, sometimes borders on obsession, he shamelessly (and unnecessarily) strips when he get an opportunity to go in the money shower.
200* MysteriousPast: He claims to be from the East Coast originally, and that Gravity Falls is the only town where the police don't know where he is. "Not What He Seems" shows that he's accrued a number of false [=IDs=] over the years. It's revealed later on that he's from New Jersey, in "[[Joisey the lead paint district.]]" [[spoiler: That said, there's still things we don't know, like how he was jailed in three countries and escaped, what he did when he "went around the world", and why he escaped a car trunk by chewing his way out.]]
201* MyGreatestFailure: [[spoiler:He accidentally sent his twin brother through an interdimensional portal during the middle of a nasty fight. He had spent years living with that memory on his mind. He had been collecting the Journals, hoping to one day be reunited with his long-lost brother.]]
202* MySiblingWillLiveThroughMe: [[spoiler: After losing his twin brother Stanford to an alien dimension 30 years prior to the series, Stan took on his name and identity so as not to arouse suspicion. As of the real Stanford's return, he has been given until the end of the summer to return his identity to its rightful owner.]]
203* NeverMyFault: Shows shades of this in ''Land Before Swine'' when he claims "It's not my fault your pig's potentially delicious!". [[spoiler: That said, it's still an improvement over how he used to be, with him unable to even ''recognize'' how badly ruining his brother's chances of going to a good college affected the latter, and account for being a LazyBum.]] He's [[CharacterDevelopment grown out of this as the show's progressed]], being fully willing to acknowledge that he's screwed up. As proof of this, [[spoiler: he currently blames no one but himself for his own misfortunes in "A Tale of Two Stans". At that present time, anyway; he did accuse Ford of causing TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt with the portal, though he himself went into reparing it fully ignoring that its existence was a huge mistake to begin with and that it was just waiting to be a recipe for disaster, ''and'' disregarding ''every single written instruction'' by Ford ''not'' to use the portal for any reason including trying to save him, naturally leading to a rift that Bill was able to open. That said, Stan finally and actively [[DefiedTrope defies the trope]] during Bill's NearVillainVictory, when he accuses himself of being a screw-up and makes things right with a HeroicSacrifice]].
204* NerdGlasses: Although Stan didn't start wearing glasses until he was elderly, Alex Hirsch [[https://twitter.com/_AlexHirsch/status/651585206982348800 confirmed that he has always needed them]], [[JustifiedTrope but refused to wear them because he thought they made him look lame]].
205* NiceJobBreakingItHero:
206** [[spoiler: He manages to get enough material to re-power the portal and bring his brother back into the main dimension. But unwittingly created a dimensional rift in the process which is why Ford was angry at him upon returning as he knows Bill needs the rift to cross over. However Stan is never told this.]]
207** In the finale, [[spoiler: Ford manages to make a destiny circle that could potentially defeat Bill. However Stan was needed for it and, just as it was being powered up, got into an argument with Ford over grammar. This gave time for Bill to return and stop them, nearly costing everyone. Luckily Stan made up for it.]]
208%% * TheNicknamer
209* NotInFrontOfTheKid: As revealed in a security tape from "Not What He Seems", his frequent use of "GoshDarnItToHeck"-style swearwords actually stems from him making an effort to watch his language whenever Dipper and Mabel are around. He's quite gleeful when he gets a chance to ''actually'' cuss when he's alone.
210-->'''Stan''' ''(drops a barrel [[spoiler:of radioactive waste]] on his foot) Gah!'' HOT BELGIAN WAFFLES! ''(beat)'' Wait... I'm alone! I can swear ''for real! (takes deep breath)'' SON OF A-- [''Dipper pauses the tape while Mabel covers her ears'']
211* ObfuscatingStupidity: "Boss Mabel" hints that Grunkle Stan might know more than he lets on. [[spoiler: "Gideon Rises" confirms it. Stan has had Journal #1 the whole time, and in this episode manages to obtain #2 from Gideon and #3 from Dipper. He uses them to activate some sort of machine, which began to use to search for his brother as of "Scary-oke".]]
212* OlderHeroVsYoungerVillain: Stan, a man old enough to be a great uncle, vs Gideon, a psychopathic child, though admittedly Stan usually takes a unwitting backseat to the twins when fighting Gideon.
213* OneManArmy: Wipes the floor with the zombies attacking the Mystery Shack.
214* OneSteveLimit: Subverted - [[spoiler: his name is actually Stanley (see DeadPersonImpersonation) and his brother's name is Stanford, though his brother has thankfully dispelled any confusion by preferring to be known as Great-Uncle Ford.]] The show chalks this up to his father being unimaginative.
215* OnlySaneMan: [[spoiler: He's the only one in Gravity Falls who recognizes that all of the weird and supernatural happenings are '''highly dangerous''', which is why he tries to dissuade Dipper from investigating them.]]
216* OutOfFocus: Rather jarringly too considering he is one of the main characters, but after [[Recap/GravityFallsS2E12ATaleOfTwoStans "A Tale of Two Stans"]], most of his appearances aren't tied to the MythArc of the series and his two focus episodes are {{Filler}} at best. Averted in the series finale where he gets a ton of focus regarding his resentment of [[spoiler: his brother. He is even the one who comes up with the plan that ultimately defeats Bill by performing a HeroicSacrifice.]]
217* PapaWolf: Despite having very questionable morals and standards, he does obviously care about Mabel and Dipper. Enough to [[spoiler: drop some heavy, extensive research it took him ''years'' to find,]] in order to protect the twins from a group of hungry zombies, and ''winning''. He also tells [[spoiler: his brother Stanford]] to stay away from the Twins, mainly because [[spoiler: his research could put them in danger]].
218** In the series finale he [[spoiler:pulls the old TwinSwitch with Ford on Bill, allowing him to trap the demon in his mind when Bill enters his head while Ford uses the Memory Eraser gun to delete both Stan's mind and Bill. He even manages to [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu deliver a punch that destroys Bill]] before his mind is fully erased.]] Why? Because [[spoiler:Bill]] made the mistake of messing with his family.
219* ParentalFavoritism:
220** Was at the less fortunate end of this as a child.
221** Subverted with Dipper and Mabel. Because he's more permissive and openly affectionate toward the latter, both kids assume that Mabel is his favorite, with [[TheUnfavorite Dipper even doubting whether Stan cares about him at all]] at one point. The truth is a lot more complicated as [[spoiler:Stan's own father figure was emotionally distant and Dipper strongly reminds him of both his estranged brother and his own younger self, leading Stan to be harder on him to toughen him up and spare him both his and his brother's mistakes]]. He has actually got a real soft spot for the boy as we see whenever he tries to give him advice, or when Mabel (in Dipper's body) tries to annoy him to assure Dipper doesn't get the new room, only for Stan to react with ''fondness'' and praise "Dipper" for finally standing up to him.
222* ParentalSubstitute: [[spoiler:After Soos realized that [[DisappearedDad his father ran away from his family]], Soos began working for Stan so that he can have a new father figure in his life.]]
223* PermaStubble: Never grows a beard but never seems to shave.
224* PetTheDog: Grunkle Stan gets a moment like this after feeling guilty for insulting Dipper and Mabel and lets each of them take anything they want from the Mystery Shack. In true Grunkle Stan fashion, he tells them to do it before he changes his mind. He also saves Waddles because he wants Mabel to talk to him again and in "Dreamscaperers" when we find out why he's so tough on Dipper.
225* PolarOppositeTwins: Stan is a greedy shyster, [[spoiler: contrast his super-genius brother, Ford, who appears to be well-intentioned.]]
226* PreMortemOneLiner: Delivers a fantastic one in the series finale [[spoiler:to Bill.]]
227-->'''Stan:''' You're a real wise guy, but you made one fatal mistake. [[PapaWolf You messed]] with [[ItsPersonal my family.]]
228* ProperlyParanoid: His claim [[spoiler:to have denied the existence of the supernatural in Gravity Falls was because he believed it to be dangerous. Considering how many of the strange things and oddities have tried to hurt the twins, he's got a point.]]
229* RageBreakingPoint: He goes through one when Gideon takes the best pool chair in "The Deep End".
230-->'''Grunkle Stan:''' '''''GIDEON!''''' '''GET OUT OF MY''' '''''CHAIR, KID!!'''''
231* RealMenWearPink: After the BigNo, Stan gets really into a movie called ''The Duchess Approves'' (think ''Series/DowntonAbbey'' as a black-and-white 1940s melodrama) in [[Recap/GravityFallsS1E5TheInconveniencing "The Inconveniencing"]] (to the point of throwing the TV out the window out of rage at one of the plot elements).
232* RegretfulTraitor: [[spoiler:While he refuses to give Ford the satisfaction of resurfacing his life without lunking to him, it's clear that Stan knows Ford's iciness goes beyond simply refusing to thank him for saving him, and that he took advantage of Ford trusting and confiding him to hide the Journals the one time there was nothing preventing him from ''not'' doing that, regardless of whether he was right to have a beef with Ford or not. While he knows he can't ever really make it up to Ford in a way that can make them both happy, he's still willing to sacrifice as much as he possibly can for him by letting him bond with the kids and tend to whatever he thinks should be tended to while he [[Recap/GravityFallsS2E12ATaleOfTwoStans runs for mayor.]] He ''does'' owe him that much, and Stan sees no reason to weasel his way out of it, even if Ford never ends up forgiving him. [[EarnYourHappyEnding Luckily for him...]]]]
233* RedOniBlueOni: The Red to [[spoiler:his twin brother Ford's]] Blue.
234** As kids, this is even [[ColorCodedForYourConvenience reflected in the color of their shoes]].
235* ReflectiveEyes: Variation. Actually more like reflective glasses.
236** In "Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back The Falls", when Weirdmageddon ends, Stan's glasses reflect the rift on his glasses (which has the shape of an X), making him to look like he has his eyes crossed. Similar to Gideon's picture from "Dreamscaperers".
237** In "Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back The Falls", when Mabel is trying to get her Grunkle to remember her, we have a close up of Stan's face, while we see Mabel's scrapbook reflecting on his glasses.
238* TheReveal: [[spoiler: His real name is Stanley, and he has a twin brother named Stanford, who is the author of the journals. When Stanford got flung into the portal, Stanley faked his death and took on Stanford's name and identity.]]
239* RockBottom: Has ended up at this ''[[TraumaCongaLine three times that we've seen]]'' in the show - [[spoiler: the first was when he was disowned and kicked out of the house while he was still in high school, the second was when he threw his brother into AnotherDimension, and the third was when Gideon kicked him out of his own house.]] [[invoked]]
240** It is hard to say whether the Colombian jail sentence was one of those, as he seemed pretty chipper about something that would be the low point of anybody else's life.
241* SadClown: Stan certainly admired the portrait of the sad clown, and he's quite the funny guy that's seemingly nonchalant about all the shady business he does. [[spoiler: It's not a coincidence: he's actually emotionally burdened for decades after he overheard his principal ''literally'' refer to him as a clown and spoke with BrutalHonesty about Stan's bleak future—the moment where Stan's entire life crumbled. It's made more evident when Stan makes a spontaneous dour response while wearing the truth telling teeth about life during a ''certain'' [[TrollingCreator juggling clown]]'s act on the TV in "Bottomless Pit!"]] [[invoked]]
242-->'''Bud:''' It's imported! All the way from Colombia!\
243'''Stan:''' Wow... I went to jail there once. ''[whistles]'' Some digs you got here. ''[sees the clown painting]'' Oh, this... this is beautiful.
244* SandInMyEyes: Three of the times we've ever seen Stan get teary-eyed (once during the funeral for his wax replica, the other when Mabel knit him an "Our Hero" sash, and a bonus one in "Lost Legends" regarding [[ItMakesSenseInContext his love of comic books]]), Stan has the tendency to say he's got something in them rather than admit he's crying.
245* ScarsAreForever: [[spoiler:His tattoo is actually a burn scar he received during a scuffle with his brother Ford 30 years ago.]]
246* {{Schemer}}: Stan is a very cunning man, and normally concocts a variety of schemes, normally to help him make more money.
247* ScrewPolitenessImASenior: He's rude, grumpy and money-grubbing and makes no secret of it. He's also old, so he can get away with it...sometimes, at any rate.
248* SelfMadeMan: [[spoiler: Was disowned by his father before he even graduated high school, he spent years trying to enter personal sales himself, and after many failures finally found one that worked, namely the Mystery Shack.]]
249* SensitiveGuyAndManlyMan: The Manly Man to Dipper's Sensitive Guy. Of the two Stan's more gruff and unfeeling, preferring to focus on more practical matters, also when working or doing something serious he is highly dedicated and a no nonsense figure. Unlike Dipper, he's also far better at hiding his fears and concerns, though he has his tells.
250* SharpDressedMan: His default outfit.
251* SheepInSheepsClothing: In "Not What He Seems", Dipper and Mabel discover that Stan has been hiding a lot from them. [[spoiler: He has acquired multiple fake [=IDs=], assumed the identity of a dead man, stole radioactive waste from the government, been in possession of Journal #1 the entire time they've known him, and both constructed and activated the Universe Portal, a device capable of annihilating the entire planet. For the first time, the kids have to fight Stan himself. However, when Mabel chooses to trust Stan and allow the device to activate, his motives are quickly made clear.]]
252-->'''Stan:''' I wanted to say that you're gonna hear some bad things about me, and some of them are true, but trust me. Everything I've worked for, everything I care about, it's all for this family!
253* ShootTheShaggyDog: [[spoiler:If Dipper and Ford actually managed to seal the rift which directly prevents Bill from unleashing Weirdmageddon, Stanley would have surely suffered this fate. Basically, the entire reason he worked for 30 years in the Shack is that he hoped that he could bring back his brother from the other dimension, after he accidentally sent him to it following a fight. He hoped to make up with his brother after all he had done. What he gets instead is Ford greeting him with a punch and outright refusing to forgive, thank or even reconcile with him, completely ignoring the fact that he wasted 30 years just to save him. Instead Stan is demanded to relinquish ownership of his identity and house and abandon the whole Mystery Shack forever. As a result, everything Stanley had done felt like a complete waste of his time and he disowns his brother in the process. Weirdmageddon helps subverts this by having Stan finally reconcile with his brother, the very thing that he strived to do in the first place and go out into the sea with Ford as his childhood dream.]]
254* SignatureHeadgear: He's never seen without his fez, except in "Little Dipper" and when he goes on vacation in "Boss Mabel". In the end, [[spoiler:he gives the hat to Soos]] and replaces it with a different hat.
255* SilverFox: Very subtle, but Stan still is considered good-looking at some points:
256** Lazy Susan fell in love with Stan once in "Dipper vs. Manliness".
257** Mabel said he has some kind of charisma when Stan wanted to run for mayor.
258** Tad Strange and Sheriff Blubs said he looked good in the outfit he was wearing ("The Stanchurian Candidate")
259*** If you [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer don't believe that fans joke over thinking that Stan is handsome]], be aware of this: [[spoiler:a group of fans created a video game named ''Swooning Over Stans: A Grunkle Dating Sim'', where you can choose if you want to date Stan or Ford. Can you believe Alex Hirsch played this game and the fans chose Stan's route?]]
260* SitcomArchNemesis:
261** With Gideon; until the events of "Gideon Rises", Stan never treats Gideon as a serious threat (except to his bottom line), but rather an irritating little pest who has to be occasionally swatted out of the Shack with a broom. Whenever they meet casually in public, they're shown to antagonize one another in exceedingly petty ways, and Stan's dialogue in "Dreamscaperers" implies that he's been foiled off-screen as well.
262** Bud, as Stan's direct business competitor when it comes to scamming the townspeople, also gets this treatment; when their "truce" falls apart, Stan even steals a velvet clown painting from Bud's home and runs off. It only gets worse in "The Stanchurian Candidate", when both run for mayor and Bud immediately resorts to cheap shots.
263* SkywardScream: In "Irrational Treasure" after going through a HumiliationConga:
264-->'''Stan:''' '''PIONEER DAY!!!!'''
265* SmallNameBigEgo: Generally not liked among the town beyond his Mystery Shack persona, despite playing himself up as this grand mysterious figure. The town eventually [[spoiler:warms up to him a bit after the events of "Gideon Rises".]]
266* SmarterThanYouLook: Managed to outwit Gideon in "Little Dipper", Dipper in "Dipper's Guide to the Unexplained: Stan's Tattoo", and even [[spoiler: Bill in the finale]]. [[spoiler: He also managed to teach himself enough about theoretical physics and the fringe science Ford was working on to restore the portal to working use. He only really needed the journals in order to figure out how to turn it back on when he had done so.]]
267* SmokeOut: He employs smoke bombs in his showmanship with the Mystery Shack, to further entertain and con the masses into giving him money. Using them is also his preferred escape method after he's done something shady.
268** In "Summerween", Stan uses a smoke bomb to rob a store after the clerk asks security to escort them out.
269** Subverted in "The Stanchurian Candidate", where Stan attempts to flee a store with a smoke bomb just like he did in "Summerween" after confessing his plans to shoplift in front of the clerk. The smoke bomb is long past its expiration date, however, and Stan is effortlessly tackled by security.
270* SnakeOilSalesman: Once tried to market shards of broken glass as rare and valuable crystals, and sells spray-painted rocks under the guise of them being gold nuggets. It's later revealed that he spent a lot of time as this before he came to run the Mystery Shack. It went horribly wrong, with him managing to become BannedFromArgo in almost every state in the country.
271** [[spoiler: It's this quality that makes Ford believe Stan would've seen right through Bill Cipher's trickery at the very first moment.]]
272* SoHideousItsTerrifying: Stan is often considered this by younger characters, particularly in Season 1:
273** In "Headhunters", after walking into a room full of wax figures, Dipper points out one that doesn't look as lifelike as the others. It turns out to be Grunkle Stan, whose appearance scares the kids and Soos out of the room even ''after'' they realize it's him.
274** In "Summerween", the thing that finally scares the BrattyHalfPint trick-or-treaters is ''Stan's (almost) naked body''.
275* SolidCartoonFacialStubble: Grunkle Stan has practically half his face covered in a solid-colored grey color to indicate stubble.
276* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler: The one Pines Bill never took interest in was the one Pines he should have always watched out for.]]
277* StealthMentor: Deconstructed. Making Dipper do difficult chores is Stan's sneaky way of preparing him to fight back as revealed in "Dreamscaperers". However, while it seems to be working, Dipper, even after learning why Stan is so hard on him, is still bitter towards this treatment, leading him to gravitate to the much more kind and supportive Stanford.
278* StepfordSmiler: A minor case; Stan seems to genuinely love most aspects of his life, such as scamming people and spending time with his young charges, "A Tale of Two Stans" [[spoiler: hints that underneath it all is a man who's haunted by the guilt of sending his brother into another dimension. After Ford comes back and makes clear his intent to take back his house and name after the summer, Stan covers it up with his usual gruff nature.]]
279* StreetSmart: As expected of any self-respecting carny, Stan is shrewd, has a knack for deception, and is good at thinking on his feet. It's discussed in the end [[spoiler: during Weirdmaggedon, as a contrast to Stanford being BookSmart, Stanford sees Stan as smarter then him. Sure, ''he'' could build a dimensional portal for Bill, but Stan would have easily been able to tell Bill's true colours and avoided the whole plot.]]
280* StrongFamilyResemblance: "Dreamscaperers" shows that Stan looks a lot like his father. Kid Stan even looks a little like Dipper. [[spoiler: Stan and his brother also look extremely similar to each other, to the point where in the past it was possible to confuse them. And, as Bill discovers to his chagrin, even in the modern day after a clothes swap.]]
281* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome:
282** Stan gets away with A LOT of crime, mostly due to RuleOfFunny, but the buck decidedly stops at [[spoiler:stealing toxic waste from the United States Government. Theft of government property NEVER goes unnoticed]].
283** Also, [[spoiler: his criminal record gets him disqualified from the election of Gravity Falls' new mayor]].
284** Despite Stan's good intentions, his treating Dipper as TheUnfavorite to [[ToughLove toughen him up]] (by mocking Dipper whenever the opportunity hits, making Dipper do most of the hard and dangerous work around the Shack, and refusing to express any positive feedback towards him lest he "get a big head") drove Dipper to dislike him immensely and almost destroyed their relationship entirely.
285* TallDarkAndHandsome: Believe it or not (though he does admittedly slouch often, making him look shorter than Ford). It's more noticeable in "Little Dipper", when he's seen without his fez.
286* TechnologicallyBlindElders: He mistook a CD for a record player, and doesn't know what "texting a photo to someone" is. When Gideon claims to have kidnapped Dipper and Mabel in "Little Dipper" and offers to send him proof, Stan can't even understand him.
287-->'''Gideon:''' I have them in my possession! You don't believe me? I will text you a photo!\
288'''Stan:''' "Text me a photo?" Now you're not even speakin' English!\
289'''Gideon:''' But-\
290'''Stan:''' [''hangs up'']
291* TeenHater: Zig-zagged. Grunkle Stan is in most cases no fan of teenagers, openly dreading the annual outdoor music festival that attracts them to the town. That is, until Soos points out he can make lots of money if he can attract their business. Although he does get along with Wendy pretty well and Soos spent his entire teenage years working for Stan.
292* ThemeTwinNaming: [[spoiler: He and his twin brother (The Author) are named Stanley and Stanford, respectively. This is because, as the puzzle after the credits in "A Tale of Two Stans" reveals, their not-too-creative Father Filbrick didn't plan to have twins.]]
293* ThickerThanWater: Stan would risk causing the apocalypse to [[spoiler: bring back his brother.]]
294* TookALevelInBadass: In his youth, he was severely picked on; Stan's dad had him take boxing lessons, and in his senior years, he still knows how to fight.
295* TookALevelInKindness: He becomes a much nicer person in season 2, which must be due to his [[spoiler:confession knowing about all the weirdness in Gravity Falls all along.]]
296* TopHeavyGuy: Cuts quite a triangular figure while wearing his tux; even without it on, he's been shown to have [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/gravityfalls/images/f/fe/S1e17_stocking_up_for_apocalypse.png a very broad chest and shoulders, thick arms, and skinny legs]] (it all just happens to get a little overshadowed by his gut).
297* ToughLove: A [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstruction]]. Stan's father, Filbrick Pines, was an [[AbusiveDad emotionally abusive]] {{Jerkass}}. Stan, however, seems to have read his actions as tough love even if it most definitely wasn't, and decided that following dad's example was the best way to toughen up Dipper. [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome It made their relationship crash so badly Dipper became convinced Stan hated him and wanted him gone]]. Even with knowing Stan does care, there are still signs Dipper's keeping a lot of bad feelings about this bottled up.
298* TrademarkFavoriteFood: He's shown in one episode to like Toffee Peanuts. It's to the point where, [[spoiler: in the very same episode, in a flashback to back when he and Ford were in high school, a bag of Toffee Peanuts at the scene was all Ford needed to incriminate Stan for sabotaging his science experiment]].
299* {{Tritagonist}}: Stan gets the third largest amount of focus, after Dipper and Mabel.
300* {{Tsundere}}: Shows shades of a platonic form of this towards the kids at times. He tries to continue this act during the series finale (in a [[TearJerker gut wrenching]] kind of way). [[invoked]]
301-->'''Stan Pines:''' [''tearfully''] [[BlatantLies You kids were nothing but a nuisance and I'm glad to be ridda ya.]]
302* TheUnfavorite: Was this in his family since he apparently didn't contribute to them as a teenager. And really got strengthened when his father threw him out of the house after he [[spoiler:accidentally broke Stanford's machine and ruined his chances to go to his dream college]]. His father even accused him of [[spoiler:riding on his brother's coattails]].
303* UnreliableNarrator: In a number of his flashbacks, [[spoiler: he's designed to look like a composite between himself and Ford (not to mention his memories painting his dad as being not a heartless jackass).]]
304* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: [[spoiler:All of Stan's efforts to bring his brother back (after having set in motion the chain of events that trapped him offworld in the first place) created a chain of bad events that lead up to the EndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt. His efforts to bring Ford back left behind an unstable dimensional rift, every subsequent event related to that MacGuffin slowly created tension between Dipper and Mabel, especially with Dipper spending more time with Ford. Mabel's broken emotional state over the idea of being apart from Dipper made her vulnerable to Bill Cipher's manipulations. It doesn't help that Stan disregarded every warning against using the portal, and now everyone, including himself has to suffer the consequences of his foolishness. He also agitated the first signs of an emotional rift between Mabel and Dipper by joining with and at times even encouraging Mabel to pick on Dipper for the sake of "humorous" jokes. This alienated Dipper emotionally from both Stan and Mabel, adding to the reasons Dipper would choose to spend most of his time with Ford when he arrived--since not only was Ford his idol, but he also didn't pick on Dipper like the rest of the family. It's this choice that convinced Mabel her paranoia over their relationship was legitimate, which built until she reached her breaking point in "Dipper and Mabel Vs. The Future".]]
305* UsedToBeASweetKid: As a kid, he was nice and cheerful. However, [[spoiler:getting disowned by his family]] forced him to become a criminal just to survive, resulting in the bitter old man that he is today.
306* VanityLicensePlate: If you look closely, the plate on Grunkle Stan's car says "STNLY MBL." Which is odd, since according to Gideon, his full name is 'Stanford'. [[spoiler: His real name is actually Stanley, but he faked his death and took up his brother's name Stanford while he went missing in the portal.]]
307* VoiceChangeling: [[spoiler: In the series finale, he is able to imitate Ford's voice perfectly after they do a TwinSwitch to trick Bill.]]
308* WantingIsBetterThanHaving:
309** He used to have a crush on Lazy Susan. But when he finally went out on a date with her, he decided that she looked "weird up close", and quickly bailed.
310** [[spoiler: He spent thirty years desperately trying to rescue his brother from the portal, only to be reminded of how strained their relationship was once Stanford was back. It's not a total loss however, as Stan does want Dipper's happiness, and if his brother can make that happen, he won't stand in their way.]]
311* WeirdnessCensor: [[spoiler: {{Subverted|Trope}}. If the end of "Gideon Rises" tells us anything, he knew about all the weird stuff. In "Scaryoke" he all out admits to knowing, but claimed otherwise in an attempt to keep Dipper and Mabel from getting too close and being in danger.]]
312* WellDoneSonGuy: [[spoiler:Disowned by his father for accidentally ruining their chance at a fortune, Stan spent years trying and make money to be accepted back. Fittingly, [[FreezeFrameBonus one of the books he owns is called ''Daddy Issues'']]]].
313* WellIntentionedExtremist: "Trust me. Everything I've worked for, everything I care about, it's all for this family!" [[spoiler:And that "everything" includes committing various felonies, deceiving and endangering his own family, deliberately causing gravitational anomalies that at the very least destroy a good chunk of the town, and gambling the entirety of the human race on the off chance that the Portal in his basement, despite all evidence to the contrary, won't end the universe. His actions in ''Not What He Seems'' in particular are so extreme that even Soos is temporarily against him by the end of the episode, if only to protect Dipper and Mabel.]]
314* WeUsedToBeFriends: [[spoiler:In their childhood, Stan and his brother Stanford were each other's OnlyFriend and did everything together. Because of an accident and their father throwing Stan out for costing their family a fortune and Stanford his dream school, their relationship was strained. Over 10 years later, Stanford called Stan to Gravity Falls. It wasn't to reconcile, but to ask him to hide the last of his journals and he still blames him for ruining his chances, despite Stanford managing to still gain a [=Ph.D.=] and a large amount of money. Their fight landed Stanford in another dimension that Stan has been trying to free him from 30 years, only to receive no thanks and a demand that Stanford get his life back at the end of the Summer. As shown near the end of "A Tale of Two Stans", it seems the two want to reconcile (particularly Stan), but are too bitter over how their lives have gone, and Stanford being trapped in another dimension, have made this near impossible. Luckily, they eventually manage to repair this]].
315* WhatTheHellHero: In "Not What He Seems", Dipper comes to his breaking point when Stan [[spoiler:begs them to trust him about the Portal despite having lied to them about everything else.]]
316-->'''Dipper:''' And I should trust you ''why?!'' After you [[spoiler:stole radioactive waste?]] After you [[spoiler:lied to us all summer?! I don't even know who you are!]]
317* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: He was afraid of heights, though he has since been cured.
318* WouldHurtAChild:
319** He has no compunction with trying to punt Gideon, blind Gideon, or smack him around with a broom, although Gideon [[EnfantTerrible more than deserves it.]]
320-->'''Stan:''' Soos, broom.\
321'''Gideon:''' Oh no, not the broom!
322** He also planned on punching Robbie in the face when he and Dipper manage to confirm that the emo teen guitar player [[TeensAreMonsters was brainwashing Wendy with a song.]]
323-->'''Stan:''' (gleefully) Finally a good reason to punch a teenager in the face!
324** He's also stated a desire to physically harm [[AlphaBitch Pacifica Northwest]] in "The Golf War".
325-->'''Stan:''' Soos, is it wrong for me to ''punch a child''?
326* YoungerThanHeLooks: Mild example. He's improbably (but [[WritersCannotDoMath not impossibly]]) 58 or, at most, in his mid-sixties. Darlene mistakes him for over seventy. It's only that noticeable as he has an [[spoiler: identical twin brother]] who is in significantly better shape[[note]] though it is possible that time moves differently beyond the portal and that Stanford is actually younger[[/note]], while Stan wound up with a lot more grey hair and health issues due to a life of stress, [[spoiler: on-and-off poverty,]] and the resulting bad habits. On top of that, he has FatSlob tendencies and has a tendency to be extremely lazy around the Shack.
327* YouCantGoHomeAgain: Grunkle Stan's situation in his youth [[spoiler: after being kicked out [[TragicDream becomes even more tragic]] given the fact that he had gotten himself banned from New Jersey, his own home. Even if by some miracle he had managed to get out of destitution and made the money to get his parents' approval and forgiveness, his own mistakes means that he cannot ever come back home without the risk of being arrested.]]
328[[/folder]]
329----
330!Mystery Shack Employees
331
332[[folder:Soos Ramirez]]
333!!Jesus "Soos" Alzamirano Ramirez
334[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/soos_appearance.png]]
335[[caption-width-right:200:''"My wisdom is both a blessing and a curse."'']]
336!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/AlexHirsch
337
338->''"I have a new mission now. Protecting these kids!"''
339
340Handyman at the Mystery Shack. Soos often accompanies Dipper and Mabel on their adventures. He's goofy and acts much like OneOfTheKids, though you'll find he's actually quite intelligent. He represents the question mark on the Zodiac.
341----
342* {{Acrofatic}}: "The Legend of the Gobblewonker" shows that Soos is capable of running faster than the Gobblewonker while carrying Dipper and Mabel without even breaking a sweat or going out of breath.
343** His agility may be [[JustifiedTrope explained]] by the fact that he practiced martial arts (apparently Karate) when he was younger, as seen in a picture at Abuelita's home.
344* ActionSurvivor: As evidenced in "The Legend of the Gobblewonker" and later during [[spoiler: Weirdmageddon]].
345* ADayInTheLimelight: He's the [[TagalongKid Tagalong Adult]] / TokenAdult in most episodes, but "Soos and the Real Girl" and "Blendin's Game" focus on him specifically.
346* AffablyEvil: Even when he's temporarily turned into a zombie with a hunger for human flesh, he's still as cheerful and laid-back as ever.
347-->'''Zombie!Soos''': Braiiiiins! ''Braiiiiiiins!''\
348'''Mabel''': SOOS! Cut it out!\
349'''Zombie!Soos''': Heh, heh! Sorry, dude.
350* AgentMulder: Quick to believe the supernatural happenings in Gravity Falls when Dipper raises his own suspicions, such as believing the local Mailman to be a werewolf.
351* AmazonChaser: If the drawing of his dream woman from the "Mailbox" short is any indicator.
352* AmbiguouslyBrown: Averted; he was this at first when Alex Hirsch stated that his real first name was Jesus (which is a Hispanic name), but in season 2, his full name is confirmed to be Jesus Alzamirano Ramirez, which makes it pretty obvious that he's Latino. According to Alex Hirsch, he's half Mexican, with a white father and a Mexican mother.
353* AscendedFanboy: Loves working for the Mystery Shack and Stan, and he even makes fan fiction about the crazy mysteries that happen around Gravity Falls while also living them. [[spoiler:In the GrandFinale, he becomes the Mystery Shack's new owner with Melody working with him]].
354* AttentionDeficitOohShiny: He's easily distracted by a laser pointer in "Double Dipper."
355* AwesomeMomentOfCrowning: [[spoiler:Post-Weirdmageddon, he succeeds Stan as Mr. Mystery.]] This includes receiving the hat.
356* BadassDriver: He comes in clutch on multiple occasions when the twins need to escape from or head towards the mystery of the week, be it with his truck, boat, or bus.
357* BecauseYouWereNiceToMe: The reason he's so loyal to Stan is because [[spoiler: Stan unintentionally stepped up as a ParentalSubstitute by hiring Soos as his handyman after Soos had realized his real dad was never going to come home.]]
358* BerserkButton: He very rarely gets angry, but he's rather sensitive to people pointing out his weight, as alluded to in "Fight Fighters" and displayed more clearly in "The Land Before Swine."
359* BewareTheSillyOnes: Despite being an overall ditz and {{Cloudcuckoolander}}, he has proven himself to be very useful on occasion. And as "Not What He Seems" can attest, [[spoiler:he was willing to [[PapaWolf fight Stan, whom he viewed as a father figure, to protect the kids.]]]]
360* BigBeautifulMan: InUniverse, Mabel scores every man in Gravity Falls on a scale of 1 to 5. Soos gets a [[BrokeTheRatingScale 12]].
361--> '''Soos:''' My grandma was right all along. I am the world's most perfect man. (Light falls upon him as three birds land on him)
362--> '''Voice:''' TOTAL HUNK
363* BigEater: Soos is, more often than not, seen eating something, whether he's doing maintenance at the Mystery Shack or adventuring with the twins. The scene where he's first introduced features him eating a chocolate bar.
364* BigFun: He's plus sized and always willing to spend time with Dipper and Mabel.
365* BirdsOfAFeather:
366** He and his date ([[spoiler:and eventual girlfriend]]) Melody are both overweight, lighthearted, fun-loving goofballs. They hit it off effortlessly.
367** A platonic version with Mabel--while he's close with both of the twins, he's much more similar to her. They both have {{Cloudcuckoolander}} tendencies that sometimes inconvenience those around them, but are also [[GeniusDitz intelligent in their own ways]] and [[LetsGetDangerous quite competent when necessary]]. They both also [[BigEater eat a lot]], [[CuddleBug love to hug]], and [[SarcasmBlind don't always recognize sarcasm]].
368* BirthdayHater: He doesn't "hate" his birthday exactly, but having a party does bring back the painful memory from when he was twelve [[spoiler:and realized his father, who had left him when he was four years old, was never coming back. However, after seeing how much Dipper and Mabel care about him, he stops dwelling on his father and accepts the twins as his ''real'' family.]]
369* BreakTheComedian: Usually the amiably goofy, kind-hearted CloudCuckooLander of the Mystery Shack. However, in "Blendin's Game," he finds himself uncharacteristically depressed on his birthday and unable to join in any of the party games. [[spoiler: It turns out that his dad continuously promised to return and spend time with him on his birthday, only to remain a no-show except for a postcard.]] Thankfully, Dipper and Mabel are able to cheer him up at the end of the episode by using the wish they won in Globnar to give him a happy birthday.
370* BreakoutCharacter: His role has increased substantially as the show has gone on.
371* BrokenPedestal: Even he was horrified by [[spoiler:Stan's duplicity, and was willing to stop him from carrying out his plan.]]
372* BunnyEarsLawyer: He might not be the brightest, but he seems to be a pretty good handyman. "Fixin' It With Soos" shorts show him pimping out a broken cuckoo clock and augmenting a golf cart with illegal rocket boosters that give it enough power to go airborne.
373* ButtMonkey: Frequently the butt of slapstick shenanigans.
374* CannotTalkToWomen: Incredibly awkward on the dating scene, mostly due to freezing up and saying whatever absurd thing pops into his head when he's nervous. Only Melody, who's almost as shy as he is, can manage to [[MeetCute coax him into a full conversation]].
375* CaptainObvious: He often points out the blatantly obvious.
376-->'''Soos:''' In my opinion, this is an axe.
377* {{Chuunibyou}}: He displays traits of this in the first episode, acting like a guardian of esoteric knowledge. This gets exaggerated in the shorts "Fixin' It With Soos."
378* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Much like Mabel, he often goes off on odd tangents. In "Soos and the Real Girl," he admits that he usually just says whatever pops into his head.
379* TheConscience: Surprisingly often, as seen in "Legend of the Gobblewonker" and "The Time Traveler's Pig."
380-->'''Old Man [=McGucket=]''': You just don't know the length us old-timers go through for a little quality time with our family.\
381''(Dipper and Mabel look at the fishing hats Grunkle Stan gave them and sigh)''\
382'''Soos''': Dude, I guess the real lake monster is you two. Heh, heh! Sorry, it just like, boom, just popped into my head there.
383** In "Time Traveler's Pig"
384--->'''Soos''': And here we have Miserable Mabel, the girl whose dreams were shattered by a heartless jerk. Oh, hey, Dipper!
385* TheConstant: If [[WordOfSaintPaul a cryptogram in]] WesternAnimation/{{Amphibia}} [[WordOfSaintPaul is to be believed]], there's a Soos in every dimension, displayed in the show itself with its [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin rather aptly named]] Frog Soos.
386* CrazyPrepared: He gives Dipper a baseball bat in "Tourist Trapped" just in case he sees a piñata.
387* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Soos may be wacky and seemingly dumb, but he is always ready to rise when the situation calls for it.
388** Epitomized in [[spoiler:Weirdmageddon]] where he has been traveling the countryside [[spoiler:helping other survivors.]]
389--->'''Soos''': Apparently there are, like, folk songs about me now.
390* CuddleBug: He's quite the huggable dude. He hugs the twins often, and attempts to initiate an unwanted group hug in "Dreamscaperers," admitting that he never knows when the time is right. In ''Gravity Falls: Dipper's and Mabel's Guide to Mystery and Nonstop Fun!'', Mabel says of Soos, "Soos is like a giant anime panda creature that makes the forests grow and lets you sleep on his tummy."
391--->'''Soos''': Guys, if I die, I wanna die hugging.
392* DisappearedDad: "Blendin's Game" reveals that [[spoiler:Soos's dad left when he was four.]]
393* FamilyOfChoice: How he sees the Pines family, and vice-versa.
394* FanDisservice: He's been shown shirtless a few times, like in the "Stan's Tattoo" short and "The Golf War". And in one of the "Fixin' It With Soos" shorts, he is at one point shown wearing nothing except boxers while saying "Hey, you" to the camera and winking.
395-->'''Stan:''' Soos, I will ''pay'' you to put your shirt back on.
396* FatIdiot: Most of the time. It's downplayed, though. He isn't unintelligent so much as ditzy and socially awkward.
397%%* FourPhilosophyEnsemble: Conflicted.
398* FourTemperamentEnsemble: Phlegmatic: Observant, reliable, and reactionary.
399* FriendToAllChildren: He gets along pretty well with Dipper and Mabel. He even wants to have seven kids himself, just so he can have one to love every day of the week.
400* GeniusDitz: At first glance you would think he's a FatIdiot, and he kind of is. But he's also very observant and knows more about the Gravity Falls's weirdness than most other characters. "Fixin' it With Soos" shows that he's also a very good handyman, modifying a broken golf cart into a rocket car and a broken cuckoo clock into...[[AwesomebutImpractical a really awesome thing that wasn't a clock anymore]]. This is on top of still retaining some sentience when zombified.
401* GentleGiant: Tall and stocky, [[StoutStrength with strength to match]], and one of the kindest characters in the show.
402* GleefulAndGrumpyPairing: The lovable goofball Soos usually pals around with Dipper, who tends to quite snarky and serious most of the time.
403* {{Handyman}}: His official job and position at the Mystery Shack.
404** Even after [[spoiler:Weirdmageddon]] begins, Soos's commitment to his work is so strong that he vows to fix the [[spoiler:ruins of the town]] with his bare hands. Two days later, he's already became a folk hero to [[spoiler:the ravaged Gravity Falls as "The Handyman of the Apocalypse,"]] where he was seen [[WalkingTheEarth "wandering the plains like a desperado, helping strangers"]] while trying to find his friends.
405-->'''Soos''': I guess there are some... folk songs about me now?
406* HiddenDepths: One of the cryptograms in the online game Rumble's Revenge states that he knows more than he lets on. [[spoiler:Bill Cipher]], after he and the twins defeat him, outright states this about him.
407* InconsistentSpelling: His name is often misspelled as "Zeus," especially in close captioning. [[spoiler:Journal 3 shows that both Dipper and Ford upon meeting him [[AscendedMeme made this exact same mistake]].]]
408* IntergenerationalFriendship: With Dipper and Mabel.
409* KavorkaMan: Somehow managed to get a 12 on Mabel's relationship test in "Mabel's Guide to Dating," despite the ratings scale only going from 1 to 5, giving him the rating of Total Hunk. However, it's subverted in "Soos and the Real Girl" where he has a lot of trouble talking to women until he meets Melody, who he turns out to have a lot in common with.
410** It seems that while Soos [[NiceGuy knows how to treat a woman on paper]], in real life, he finds actually talking to them extremely intimidating. On the same note, Soos is inexperienced with flirting and when he would initiate a conversation, he starts a little too directly or awkwardly.
411* KidsLoveDinosaurs: He wore a T-Rex shirt as a child, and his grandma made him dinosaurs cookies to cheer him up.
412* KindheartedSimpleton: Soos can come off as somewhat stupid, but he's kind to everyone.
413** Played with. He may be quite slow or oblivious in some areas, but he really knows his way around repairs. He even fixes up the golf cart with illegal rocket boosters in "Fixin' It With Soos." Though his "repairs" are often eccentric or missing the point, [[SmarterThanYouLook it does prove he's far smarter than his general behavior would indicate]].
414* {{LARP}}: Soos and some of the men in town are into "FCLORP" (Foam and Cardboard Legitimate Outdoor Role-Play).
415* LetsGetDangerous: When the Gobblewonker attacks, Soos immediately gets serious, grabs Dipper and Mabel, and runs to get them to safety.
416* LivingLegend: During [[spoiler:Weirdmageddon]] he becomes a beloved folk hero while WalkingTheEarth and helping anyone he comes across.
417* {{Manchild}}: Disney's promotions even use that exact word to describe him. In "Gideon Rises," Grunkle Stan compliments him with the phrase "You're a good man...child, Soos."
418* MaskedLuchador: He dresses up as one in "Summerween." It helps that he's Hispanic.
419* MeaningfulName: Although Jesus is a common name in Hispanic countries influenced by Catholicism, it also means "He saves" in Hebrew. Soos has definitely saved the day more than once. Also, the fact that his great respect for the children resembles traditional Christian teaching about Jesus and the little children helps.
420%%* MediumAwareness: On occasion.
421* MetaGuy:
422** At one point, when Dipper notes that side characters in horror movies don't usually survive, Soos questions whether he's a side character.
423** He also breaks the fourth wall to comment on fan reactions to plot twists.
424* MundaneObjectAmazement: Easily impressed by things like laser pointers and battery-operated talking skulls.
425* NeverBareheaded: [[http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mazlt3n9KC1qigah7o3_1280.png Until "Little Dipper"]], people thought he was bald.
426* NewJobAsThePlotDemands: After the Mystery Shack closes in "Gideon Rises," Soos starts taking other jobs, including cooking at the diner and [[spoiler:driving the bus taking Dipper and Mabel back home.]] It is implied that he isn't very good at them.
427* NiceGuy: He's really nice, especially [[OneOfTheKids towards the kids as well as hanging out with them a lot]], often shifting into BigFun.
428* NomDeMom: His father has been confirmed to be Caucasian and his mother Latina, so given his Hispanic last name, this is most likely the case. And with how distant Soos's father is, it's not hard to see why.
429* ObfuscatingStupidity: Despite his ManChild persona (or perhaps because of it), Soos is more perceptive of the presence of the supernatural in Gravity Falls than many other adults in town. He also understands the dangers of making wild accusations without hard proof and encourages Dipper to carefully investigate the strange goings-on before taking any action.
430* ObsessedWithFood:
431** In "Dreamscaperers," one of his big questions about [[spoiler:chasing Bill through Stan's mind]] is whether or not he can bring his snacks with him.
432** In "Blendin's Game," [[spoiler: he uses the Time Wish to get an infinitely regenerating slice of pizza]].
433* OlderSidekick: He's a 22-year-old man, but hangs out with 12-year-old kids.
434* {{Omniglot}}: As well as English and Spanish, he apparently knows Japanese, as he was able to read the kanji on the back of ''Romance Academy 7''.
435* OneOfTheKids: He spends more time hanging out with Dipper and Mabel than he does doing his actual job, and he treats them as genuine equals.
436* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Storyboards from "The Legend of the Gobblewonker" confirm that Soos is short for Jesus (pronounced the Spanish way, "hay-SOOS", after his namesake Jesus Chambrot), and then outright shown in "Blendin's Game" after the twins look at one of his licences.
437* OnlyOneName: Usually just referred to as "Soos," although it's revealed in "Blendin's Game" that his full name is Jesus Alzamirano Ramirez.
438* OurZombiesAreDifferent: When he was zombified, he retained a surprising amount of his sentience.
439* OutOfCharacterMoment: Soos is generally very hard to annoy, but when Wendy literally throws his favorite song out of a moving car, he gives her a very stern [[WhatTheHellHero "what the hell"]] look.
440* PapaWolf: A mild example but, when Dipper and Mabel are in trouble, Soos knows to drop the act and be an adult.
441** In "Little Dipper", he actually tries to stop Stan and Mabel from making fun of Dipper; [[SmarterThanYouLook he's much more on the ball than people think]].
442** Shown again in "Soos and the Real Girl" when he is having to defend Melody, Dipper, and Mabel from the [[spoiler: [=.GIFfany=]-controlled animatronics.]] He outright takes it upon himself to go into the fray so that the others can get away and [[spoiler:sacrifices a life spent in [=.GIFfany's=] game where she will unconditionally love him by melting the disc.]] Say what you will about the man, but he can nut up when he has to.
443** Easily the most shining example of this is in "Not What He Seems." [[spoiler: The second it becomes clear Grunkle Stan's plans are genuinely dangerous and that he may not even ''be'' Stan Pines, despite his own UndyingLoyalty, Soos steps in and ''physically'' stops the closest thing he has to a father figure to protect Dipper and Mabel. CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass indeed.]]
444-->'''Soos:''' Sorry, [[spoiler: Mr. Pines - if that is your real name -]] but I have a new mission now. Protecting these kids!
445* ParentalNeglect: [[spoiler:His father abandoned Soos with his abuelita when he was four]] and has thereafter only communicated with him via the occasional birthday postcard, which, combined with the never-realized promises to return, eventually made Soos hate his own birthday.
446* PassingTheTorch: Receives the title of [[spoiler:the new Mr. Mystery]] in the GrandFinale, when [[spoiler:Stan leaves to reconnect with Ford.]]
447* PersonAsVerb: He does it to himself in one episode. "Guess I kinda Soos-ed that one up, huh?"
448* RaisedByGrandparents: Abuelita has been raising Soos since he was at least nine years old, in the absence of his mother and [[spoiler:neglectful father.]]
449* ScarsAreForever: According to ''[[Literature/GravityFallsJournal3 Journal 3]]'', Soos still has a scar that [[spoiler:Ford]] easily identified as a zombie bite.
450* SarcasmBlind: A lot of characters, Stan in particular, tend to make snarky comments at his expense. Not that he notices. This is a trait he shares with Mabel.
451* SeriousBusiness: Soos deems Old Man [=McGucket=]'s ignorance of anime a pressing need to be remedied during the construction of [[spoiler:the Shacktron]]; teaching the old inventor about anime is nestled into a HardWorkMontage that also includes reanimating a t-rex and punching out a tree with a mech arm.
452* SiblingRivalry: With his older cousin Reggie; it doesn't seem to be outright hostile, but Soos acknowledges openly that the guy's a jerk. The fact that Reggie's [[AllGirlsWantBadBoys dated more women than he has]] (and is engaged to be married) is also an uncomfortable blow to his self-esteem.
453* SignatureHeadgear: Soos is always seen wearing a brown cap. [[spoiler:He trades it in for Stanley's trademark fez.]]
454* SmarterThanYouLook: Soos is definitely smarter than his {{Cloudcuckoolander}} personality and disposition would suggest.
455** He's a mechanical genius, having designed an Applause-O-Meter and turned a broken golf cart into a rocket car. His mechanical finesse shines in the ''Fixin' It with Soos'' shorts.
456** In "The Love God," he convinces Stan that it'd be more financially sensible to make profits off the Woodstick Festival's "kale-munching" hippies (Stan's words) than to shoot them down. He also points out that Stan's hot air balloon has the flame too close to the kerosene, which winds up causing it to crash.
457** He apparently possesses at least some knowledge about pterosaur biology. In "The Land Before Swine," his advice to the twins to follow him in a straight line, as the pterodactyl's eyes are "so far apart" that it cannot see directly in front of itself, [[spoiler: winds up saving them.]]
458* StoutStrength: He has a fairly physically-demanding job, but doesn't seem to struggle, despite his weight.
459* TagalongKid: Inverted. It's the three kids, Dipper, Mabel and Wendy, who are in control. Soos just comes along for their adventures. Later deconstructed when Dipper is reluctant to let Soos go on an adventure because he's accident-prone.
460* TokenAdult: As stated above, he fills this role whenever he goes on adventures with Dipper, Mabel, and Wendy.
461* TrueCompanions: With the Pines family. He's been working for Stan ever since he was 12 and states that he would do anything for them. He even gives up on [[spoiler:seeing his deadbeat father]] once he hears everything Dipper and Mabel did for him, [[FamilyOfChoice even calling them family]].
462* {{Tuckerization}}: Soos' middle name and surname are a reference to storyboard artist Alonso Ramirez Ramos.
463* VerbalTic: Soos says the word "Dude" a '''lot'''.
464* VocalDissonance: He sounds very adultlike like as a child.
465* WrongGenreSavvy: Famously in "The Legend of the Gobblewonker" when he fears he might be a side character and [[RedShirt will die in the first five minutes]]. In reality, he gets the fourth-most focus out of all characters.
466* YoungerThanTheyLook: He could be mistaken for being in his late twenties or early thirties, but is only in his early twenties, being 22.
467[[/folder]]
468
469[[folder:Wendy Corduroy]]
470!!Wendy Blerble Corduroy
471[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wendy_corduroygravityfalls.png]]
472[[caption-width-right:250:''"Later, dorks."'']]
473!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/LindaCardellini, Amory Watterson (young)
474
475->''"We're women, and we take what we want!"''
476
477A teenager who works at the Mystery Shack. Dipper happens to have a crush on her. She relishes the chance to go on adventures with the twins. She represents the bag of ice on the Zodiac for being cool in the face of danger.
478----
479* ActionGirl: The biggest one on the show next to Mabel. Her signature weapon is an axe, but she's also quite skilled with a crossbow.
480** In "Into the Bunker," she scales a tree using her belt and fights a shapeshifting monster.
481%%** In "Society of the Blind Eye,"
482** In "The Last Mabelcorn," Wendy leads the girls into a brutal fistfight with [[spoiler:the unicorns.]]
483** [[spoiler:The Weirdpocalypse]] finds her having survived by herself through her father's rigorous [[spoiler:apocalypse survival training.]] Among her actions are utilizing BadassDriver skills to escape angry inmates cornering her and Dipper in the junkyard and jumping on the back of an [[spoiler:eye-demon to shoot its eyebeams at Bill's Henchmaniacs.]]
484* ActionSurvivor: [[spoiler:In "Weirdmageddon,"]] she's the only one of her friends besides Dipper to not be [[spoiler:captured or missing, and helps Dipper steal a car, beat up Gideon's goons, and go to rescue Mabel.]] Justified, because her father made her and her brothers train for the apocalypse.
485* AmbiguouslyAbsentParent: We've seen her dad and brothers, but her mom isn't even mentioned. Someone [[https://www.reddit.com/r/gravityfalls/comments/1kgq85/i_am_alex_hirsch_creator_of_gravity_falls_ask_me/cbotzzv/?context=3 asked Alex Hirsch about this]] and he responded "Alas Wendy's mom is no longer with her."
486* ApatheticClerk: Spends more time [[TheSlacker slacking off with her friends and lazing about]] than working the register.
487* ArtisticAge: She's quite tall despite being 15. Her friends (one of which has an arm covered in tribal tattoos) make things more confusing. Stan actually calls her as tall as a grown woman because of her "freak lumberjack genes." Given how much of a burly giant her father, Manly Dan is, it's clear Wendy's height is from his side of the family.
488** In "Double Dipper", she's shown to have always been tall for her age, being a good three heads taller than her three brothers until they hit the pubescent growth spurt. They're now as tall as most teenagers despite being her younger brothers and it's likely they'll grow to be as large as Dan himself.
489* TheBabyOfTheBunch: Of her friend group. She's explicitly stated to be 15, whereas her friends are strongly implied to be somewhere in the 16-18 range (Nate has tattoos and Thompson can drive without supervision). Unusually for this trope, she's also more or less the de-facto leader of the group, as she's usually the one who leads whatever shenanigans they get into, and is TheFace with her outgoing personality.
490* BadassBoast: Flat-out tells Gideon during [[spoiler:Weirdmageddon that his plans for the imprisoned Mabel]] aren't going to work because "after I break [[TheBrute Ghost-Eyes']] arm and steal that key from your neck, I'm gonna wear your butt on my foot like a rhinestone slipper." And then she ''immediately'' delivers on it.
491* BadassNormal: Wendy may be laid-back, but she's "a flippin' CORDUROY!" She has hand-to-hand combat skills and is an expert with an axe. It's best shown in "Into the Bunker" where she [[spoiler: climbs up a tree effortlessly with her belt and beats up the shapeshifter]], and during the events of [[spoiler:"Weirdmageddon,"]] where she [[spoiler: survives on her own and can use a crossbow, quickly breaks free and armlocks the muscular Ghost-Eyes, and fearlessly jumps atop a Floating Eyeball monster and petrifies a henchmaniac's head.]]
492* BeautyEqualsGoodness: She's physically attractive, and one of the nicest and most laid-back characters of the series.
493* BeautyIsNeverTarnished: [[AvertedTrope Averted]]; whenever there's a skirmish, Wendy (like the other female characters) will sustain as much injury or damage as the show's male characters. Instances include "Into the Bunker," during [[spoiler: "Weirdmageddon,"]] and "The Last Mabelcorn," the latter episode having her sport a full-on black eye after a fight. She also uses the bathroom (off-screen) in "Double Dipper."
494* BetterAsFriends: [[spoiler: With Dipper as of "Into the Bunker".]]
495* BewareTheNiceOnes: She can be quite confrontational when she needs to be, especially when it comes to [[BigSisterInstinct aiding Dipper or Mabel]], as shown in episodes like "Into the Bunker" and "The Last Mabelcorn".
496* BigEater: The girl can put it away. She's frequently seen eating (usually junk food of some sort) while working at the Mystery Shack, she takes more snacks than is authorized while working temporarily as a lifeguard in "The Deep End", and in "Double Dipper", when Dipper asks her what her favorite snack food is, she replies that she can't pick just one.
497* TheBigGirl: As of [[TookALevelInBadass Season 2]] -- she packs the biggest punch of the heroes.
498* BigSisterInstinct: While she is a big sister, she's more often seen in this role with the Pines twins. She regularly helps and protects the twins. In "The Last Mabelcorn," she goes into full-blown attack mode when she sees Mabel get mistreated by [[spoiler:a scheming unicorn,]] and in "Into the Bunker," she shields Dipper from [[spoiler:a malevolent shapeshifter.]]
499* BloodKnight: Her reaction to Mabel punching the [[spoiler:charlatan unicorn]] in "The Last Mablecorn," paired with her enthusiasm for getting in on the action, show that she loves a good brawl. In the story "Comix Up" from ''Gravity Falls: Lost Legends: 4 All-New Adventures!'', she's overjoyed about going into a comic book dimension due to the opportunity to be violent with no consequences.
500* BootsOfToughness: As part of her standard attire, she wears perpetually muddied boots, and if "The Last Mablecorn" is any indication, she doesn't like taking them off.
501* BrilliantButLazy: She slacks on the job and is apathetic to it, but when things get serious ("[[Recap/GravityFallsS2E2IntoTheBunker Into the Bunker]]") her BadassNormal side comes out in full-swing; she becomes quick-witted, flexible, and [[{{Determinator}} utterly relentless]] until she and her friends win.
502* BrokenAce: Wendy is an attractive young lady with semi-surprising amounts of strength who's very popular and friendly. [[spoiler: However, her dysfunctional family life is a massive source of stress and may explain why she takes any opportunity to hang out with the rest of the gang at the Mystery Shack.]]
503* CharacterDevelopment: At the beginning of the pilot episode ("Tourist Trapped"), she is entirely apathetic to her job at the Shack and doesn't hesitate to show it. She also has to be bribed by Stan in "Headhunters" to participate in a Mystery Shack event. [[spoiler: By the second season, in "Scary-oke", she's willingly and enthusiastically promoting the Mystery Shack's Re-Opening party to the townsfolk. It seems Dipper and Mabel have brought out her more playful and enthusiastic side.]]
504* ChildhoodFriends: She and Tambry have been friends at least since they were five.
505* CoolBigSis: A surrogate one to Mabel, most notably seen in "Society of the Blind Eye" when she comforts Mabel about her failed romances. It has been said by Alex Hirsch that when he created Wendy, everyone just took the coolest person they knew and mixed them all together.
506** Subverted with Dipper given how their friendship is one of equals (and one can say he's the mature one of the two).
507** Wendy is also a surrogate version of this trope when she interacts and goes on adventures with Mabel's friends, Candy and Grenda, such as in "The Last Mabelcorn."
508--->'''Wendy''': Honestly, I stopped believing in unicorns when I was like, five years old. I'm just coming along to keep you kids from walking into a bear trap.
509* CrazySurvivalist: Instead of celebrating Christmas, she and her family train for the Apocalypse every year. [[spoiler: Given the Apocalypse literally happens in "Weirdmageddon"]], it's a case of ProperlyParanoid.
510* ADayInTheLimelight: "The Inconveniencing," "Into the Bunker," and the [[spoiler: Weirdmageddon trilogy]] give us the biggest glimpses into her character and personal life.
511%%* DeadpanSnarker: Challenges Stan for the position.
512* TheDeterminator: No matter how tough things get, Wendy refuses to throw in the towel. This is most apparent during [[spoiler: Weirdmageddon]], where she has not given up on surviving [[spoiler:the apocalypse]] despite her friends and family being petrified. Dipper finds her holed up in the mall, using her survival training to fend for herself.
513* DudeMagnet: Heavily implied. Wendy has a long list of ex-boyfriends and she was [[PrecociousCrush Dipper's first crush]]. Though [[TimeTravel technically]], he was her first crush too. Heck, even ''Bill Cipher'' ([[spoiler:while inside of Dipper's body]]) hits on her at one point, though whether he's attracted to her or just trying to razz Dipper isn't certain.
514* DysfunctionalFamily: It is revealed in "Society of the Blind Eye" that [[spoiler:Wendy's family causes her to be stressed, underneath her outwardly calm and cool personality.]]
515* EmbarrassingMiddleName: Half-jokingly [[https://twitter.com/_AlexHirsch/status/535307479949660160 confirmed]] by Alex Hirsch to be [[spoiler:Blerble.]]
516* FarmersDaughter: Or rather, a ''lumberjack's'' daughter, but she fits the trope aptly enough; she's an attractive young woman [[DudeMagnet pined after by more than one male character]], who grew up in the backwoods and is resultantly handy with an axe, [[MightyLumberjack proficient in activities associated with her father's profession]], and [[TheLadette able to spit with the best of them]]. Not to mention that her attire includes boots, and she sported overalls and GirlishPigtails when she was younger.
517* FieryRedhead: ZigZagged; she's the only redhead and the calmest and most laid-back character of the main cast, but with how stressed she actually is underneath her relaxed exterior, some fire leaks out from time to time.
518* ForgottenFirstMeeting: [[http://www.reddit.com/r/gravityfalls/comments/1kgq85/i_am_alex_hirsch_creator_of_gravity_falls_ask_me/ According to Alex Hirsch]], Wendy first met Robbie at a birthday party during the fifth grade. He pulled one of her pigtails, and she punched him in the face, chipping a tooth. While Wendy does not remember this, Robbie does. She also very briefly met a time-traveling Dipper when she was five, [[{{Irony}} and thought he was cute]].
519%%* FourPhilosophyEnsemble: Apathetic.
520* FourTemperamentEnsemble: Phlegmatic: Calm and collected, but lazy.
521* GirlishPigtails: Wore them when she [[http://66.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m8f6mqbQy61qb99cqo1_1280.png was]] [[https://www.pinterest.es/pin/325385141802608185/ younger]].
522* GirlsLikeMusicians: Part of why she liked Robbie was because he can play guitar. [[spoiler: She ends up dumping him when a song he claimed to have written for her turned out to be a hypnotizing track written by someone else.]]
523* GirlsLoveStuffedAnimals: Is excited when Dipper tries to win her a plush panda/duck hybrid at the Mystery Shack Fair, and has a few stuffed animals in her room.
524* GoodBadGirl: A G-rated (probably) version. She's a mischievous, rebellious teenage girl with an outgoing, {{Ladette}}-ish personality. She's open about [[ReallyGetsAround having dated more guys than she can count on one hand]], and is also very [[NiceGirl kind]], [[CoolBigSis protective]], [[IndifferentBeauty humble]], and by far one of the nicest characters on the show.
525* GoodIsNotSoft: Wendy's a NiceGirl, but mistreat her or her friends and all bets are off.
526** When [[spoiler:a shapeshifter]] deceives her, Dipper, Mabel, and Soos in "Into the Bunker," Wendy states, "He took us into his home, tricked us, and tried to destroy us. I say we return the favor," right before devising a plan to do so.
527** In "The Last Mabelcorn," she also doesn't take kindly to [[spoiler:a unicorn]] stringing Mabel along, and likewise comes up with a plan [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption "the Wendy way"]] to get what they came for.
528* HiddenDepths: She's normally very passive, though she can be quite insightful. She's also very opinionated when it comes to the music industry, believing groups like Sev'ral Timez to be vapid, meaningless cash-grabs.
529** She also may be more ambitious than expected. When Alex was asked which character would be into which [[Franchise/HarryPotter Hogwarts house]], Wendy would be sorted into ''Slytherin''. Whether or not Alex was being serious is a different matter, though.
530* {{Hipster}}: Shows shades of this. She expresses an interest in up-and-coming indie bands in "The Love God," voices a disdain for what she refers to as the "bloated corporate music industry" in "Boyz Crazy," and is frequently seen reading a magazine called Indie Fuzz.
531* HugeSchoolGirl: As Grunkle Stan described in [[http://www.adamwarrock.com/GFGStanSE.mp3 this podcast]]: "Wendy, the fifteen-year-old who's tall like a grown woman 'cause of freak lumberjack genes."
532* HumbleHero: Wendy has all the traits of an [[TheAce Ace]]--she's friendly, popular, talented, athletic, and highly competent during a fight or on an adventure. Both of the twins look up to her. Still, she's a laid-back girl who isn't one to brag. In [[spoiler:"Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back the Falls,"]] when [[spoiler:Ford]] says he needs someone who's cool in the face of danger to [[spoiler:step into the Zodiac wheel]], Wendy's friends start chanting her name and she responds with a nonchalant smirk and "Shut up, you guys." When Dipper tells her she's the coolest person he knows, she just says, "I know, dude. Tell me about it later." She also seems [[IndifferentBeauty pretty humble about her appearance]].
533* ImprobableAimingSkills: In "The Inconveniencing," she hits Thompson directly in the belly button with a jellybean from numerous paces away.
534* IndifferentBeauty: She's apparently a looker (as evidenced by the fact that she's a DudeMagnet), yet she's very kind, down-to-earth, and seems rather humble about her appearance, as we never see her focus on it or use it to her advantage.
535* JerkassBall: She [[TakingAdvantageOfGenerosity takes extreme advantage of Mabel's selflessness]] during the latter's temporary tenure as boss in "Boss Mabel" by letting her friends completely trash the Mystery Shack and refusing to help Mabel at all. Given how consistently [[BigSisterInstinct supportive and protective]] Wendy is of Mabel, her behavior in this episode is quite [[OutOfCharacterMoment out-of-character]].
536* TheLadette: A Disney-friendly version sans the sex and alcohol (maybe--she does mention a [[ReallyGetsAround long list of ex-boyfriends]] and another time talks about attending a WildTeenParty). She loves a good brawl, sits with her legs apart, gives friendly arm punches (especially to Dipper) quite often, and is thrilled in [[spoiler:"Weirdmageddon: Part 1"]] at the prospect of driving a tank.
537* LazyBum: She has no work ethic and spends most of her time lazing out around the Mystery Shack.
538* TheLeader: She's this to her friend group of other teens. She tends to be very outgoing and it's implied that she's the one who plans the group's mischief.
539-->'''Wendy''': ''[about going to the abandoned convenience store)]'' Let's hurry it up, guys. I got big plans for tonight!
540* ManicPixieDreamGirl: A ''very'' [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] example and one that's [[ZigZaggingTrope zig-zagged]] all over the place, but her dynamic with Dipper has some shades of this. Wendy, who starts off as a SatelliteLoveInterest for Dipper, is very rebellious and outgoing, and both intentionally and inadvertently brings out Dipper's more daring side, by doing things such as encouraging him to bend the rules (e.g., in "Scary-oke," she encourages a hesitant Dipper to break into Stan's room to get something he needed, and states that the possibility of getting caught is part of the thrill). Dipper's desire to appear cool around her also causes him to break out of his normally introverted and cautious personality. Interestingly, it's ''Wendy'' who tells Dipper in "Into the Bunker" ([[spoiler:after he confesses his feelings to her]]) that it's him who has livened up ''her'' life.
541* MasculineGirlFeminineBoy:
542** The Masculine Girl to Robbie's Feminine Boy; she's a {{Ladette}} who's implied to get over relationships fairly quickly while he's more melodramatic and also something of a [[TheDandy Dandy]].
543** She's likewise the Masculine Girl to Dipper's Feminine Boy, albeit to a lesser degree; she's more boisterous, athletic, and reckless than the generally reserved, nerdy, and cautious Dipper (though he does become more outgoing as the series goes on and has displayed athletic feats more than once). All things considered however, Dipper is a GuileHero who tends to use violence as a last resort whereas Wendy is an ActionGirl who likes to fight.
544* MeaningfulName: Her name, when short for the Welsh name Gwendolen/Gwendolyn, means "white, fair, blessed"--pretty fitting given Wendy's pale complexion and ([[spoiler:seeming]]) status as the show's [[TheAce Ace]]. It's also the name of a major character in ''Literature/PeterPan'', and in this context it came from [[ElmerFuddSyndrome "fwendy"]], which was a mispronunciation of the word "friendy" (friend) by a child whom the author was close with. A friend is [[spoiler:what Wendy ultimately tells Dipper she wants to stay with him.]]
545* MightyLumberjack: Not to the extent of her father, but she can hold her own with an axe and she excelled at lumberjack games when she was younger.
546* MissingMom: Wendy isn't often seen with her family but appears in several photos alongside her father and brothers. In these instances her mother is always mysteriously absent. Whilst Alex Hirsch states that Wendy's mother is no longer with her, it has never been confirmed what really happened to her.
547* MusclesAreMeaningless: She breaks the arm of a guy three times her size. Because she's "[[PreAssKickingOneLiner a flippin' Corduroy]]".
548* NervesOfSteel:
549** During "The Inconveniencing," Wendy is the only character who doesn't panic once (she's scared, but she can still think straight).
550** Displayed again in "Into the Bunker," where she remains relatively calm the entire time she is under the attack of [[spoiler:the Shapeshifter]], even taking the time to tend to one of her injuries.
551** To drive it home, during [[spoiler:"Weirdmageddon," she winds up representing the ice pack on the Zodiac]] due to her ability to be cool in the face of danger.
552* NiceGirl: Despite her flaws in being TheSlacker and a troublemaking personality, she's a good person at heart.
553** She doesn't look down on the twins for being younger, she's quick to comfort them when they're down, and she always jumps at the chance to lend them a hand, whether it's playing look-out for Dipper or accompanying Mabel and friends on a potentially dangerous journey to obtain a unicorn hair. There's no implication that she aids the twins out of anything other than pure altruism, which is saying something considering Wendy's unapologetic slackerness.
554** She's well-aware that Dipper is completely infatuated with her and would likely do anything she wants or asks, but she never takes advantage of the situation. Being the lover of mischief that she is, she'll occasionally encourage Dipper to bend the rules for fun, but never for her own benefit. When [[spoiler:Dipper accidentally confesses because of the situation, she is not bothered. While she initially tries to play it off, when she sees how much he's distressed, she lets him down gently and is shown to be genuinely flattered by it.]]
555** She's the first to verbally give Soos a shot of confidence in "Soos and the Real Girl" when he's feeling down about the state of his love life.
556** She may bend Stan's rules and shirk her responsibilities towards him, but she cares for the old guy. In "Soos and the Real Girl," she spends the entire episode snarking at him, but after seeing him incredibly stressed out, she asks him with genuine concern if he needs to talk.
557** In "Society of the Blind Eye," she defends Lazy Susan when Soos makes a joke about the latter's mascara.
558%%* NotSoAboveItAll:
559* NotSoStoic: Wendy is usually defined by her chill and mellow response to most of the things that come her way, but there are several instances that show that there's plenty of things that can get under her skin.
560** In "Boyz Crazy," when Wendy learns that [[spoiler: Robbie stole a song with subliminal messages from another musician]] she is more angry to learn that he lied to her about [[spoiler:writing the song for her in the first place than the thought that the music was brainwashing her. When Dipper tries to talk to her, she points out to Dipper and Stan how all their actions came from selfishness rather than actual concern for her and then she storms off - in tears - to be alone.]]
561** In "Society of the Blind Eye," the usually mellow Wendy becomes irritated by a summer hit song that she complains about, and later even tosses Soos' CD featuring that song out the window of his truck when she could no longer stand to hear it anymore. To be fair, she almost immediately realized what she did was uncool and told Soos she'd buy him a new one.
562** In "The Love God," she becomes so angered [[spoiler:that her long-time friend she's known since at least age five has begun to date her ex that she threatens to tear Tambry's highlights out then refuses - along with Nate and Lee, similarly incensed to learn Tambry and Robbie dating - to attend Woodstick in blind anger against the pleas of Dipper and Thompson. She calms down at the end of the episode when Thompson uses his ButtMonkey status to bring his friends back together again.]] On a minor note, in TheStinger to the episode, in one of the photos of Waddles and Gomper's "wedding", Wendy looked visibly irked after Soos shoved into her face while she was eating a piece of the wedding cake in order to catch the bouquet.
563** In "The Last Mabelcorn," Wendy decides to use force to get the badly needed unicorn hair after the unicorn refuses on the grounds that Mabel isn't pure of heart, [[spoiler: and later opens up a can of whoopass on them.]]
564* OneOfTheBoys: She's best friends with a girl named Tambry ([[ChildhoodFriends whom she's known since childhood]]), but most of her other friends are guys, and she has a [[TheLadette Ladette]] personality to boot.
565** Wendy is actually a [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstruction]] of this trope. At the beginning of "Boyz Crazy," she smugly agrees with Dipper when he scoffs at Mabel and her friends' {{FanGirl}} behavior over [[BoyBand Sev'ral Timez]]--yet at the end of the episode, [[spoiler: after finding out that Robbie brainwashed her and when Dipper tries to take advantage of the situation]], she reacts very emotionally and accuses guys of only thinking about themselves, showing that despite her tomboyishness, she's a girl nevertheless with stereotypically feminine feelings. She's also stated that she works at the Mystery Shack to avoid [[TestosteronePoisoning her family]], and reveals in "Society of the Blind Eye" that being the [[ResentfulOutnumberedSibling only girl in a family of hypermasculine lumberjacks]] has had devastating effects on her stress levels, which is why she [[spoiler: constantly puts on a relaxed front]]. Interestingly enough, this may explain why she's drawn to guys not "traditionally masculine" such as her [[spoiler:brief]] relationship with Robbie and her close friendship with Dipper.
566* OneOfTheKids: Not as much as Soos, but she has some traits of it. Either [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]] or [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in that she's only a few years older than the twins. She seems to resent growing up to some degree. When Mabel runs into her at her school registration in "Dipper and Mabel vs. the Future," she rants about how awful high school and puberty are, and remarks that she'd rather be 12 again.
567* OnlySaneWoman: To an extent. She's sometimes the voice of reason among her peers (which gives her a commonality with Dipper) while other times, she is [[NotSoAboveItAll just as crazy as the rest of them]].
568** In "Society of the Blind Eye," she's quick to explain to Mabel why the latter using a memory-erasing device to erase memories of failed relationships isn't a good idea.
569** In "Soos and the Real Girl," she spends the whole episode snarking at and attempting to deflate Stan's crazy obsession with an animatronic badger from a local pizzeria, a device that she tries [[spoiler:(and fails)]] to dissuade him from stealing.
570* OutdoorsyGal:
571** Befitting a lumberjack's daughter, she's proficient in and seems to enjoy outdoor activities. In "The Inconviencing," she slides down two trees effortlessly to get down from the Mystery Shack's roof. "Into the Bunker" shows that she's just as good at climbing trees as she is at getting down them, and in "Fight Fighters," she mentions going camping with her family.
572** Her bedspread also has pine trees on it, and her bedroom is filled with outdoorsy decor.
573* OutOfFocus: Of the five main characters, she has the least amount of screen-time of all. This is becoming remedied with her joining the twins on more adventures in Season 2, but even then, she is not showcased with the rest as much.
574* ThePrankster: While not displayed on-screen very often, it's implied that she loves a good prank. We see her and Dipper play pranks on pool patrons during their stints as lifeguard and assistant lifeguard, respectively. In [[spoiler:"Weirdmageddon 2: Escape from Reality,"]] while [[spoiler: in Mabeland]], she lets her desire to prank her school principal get the best of her.
575-->'''Nate''': Wanna drive this truck to the high school and glue this plunger to the principal's head?
576-->'''Wendy''': ''(Eyes sparkling)'' Yes. Yes I do. Sorry, guys, I've always wanted to do that. I'll be back in just a few minutes. ''[gets in truck]''
577* PreAsskickingOneLiner: "'Cause I'm a flippin' CORDUROY!" precedes a beatdown of a hulking inmate three times her size.
578* PrecociousCrush: The subject of one from Dipper. Also had one when she was five years old, on...Dipper, [[TimeTravel thanks to time travel]].
579* PubescentBraces: She had them when she was younger, as shown [[http://66.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m8f6mqbQy61qb99cqo1_1280.png here]].
580* RaisedByDudes: [[https://www.reddit.com/r/gravityfalls/comments/1kgq85/i_am_alex_hirsch_creator_of_gravity_falls_ask_me/cbotzzv/?context=3 Alex Hirsch never stated exactly how long Wendy's mom has been gone]], but it's safe to assume that it's been a while since she was never mentioned even once on the show. We '''do''' see that in the picture of Wendy with her pigtails and braces that her youngest brother is in diapers, and given the average young age of braces is 9, she was likely near the end of grade school when her mother was gone. It would also explain how Wendy developed her [[TheLadette Ladette-ish]] personality with only her father and three younger brothers.
581* ReallyGetsAround: A G-Rated version; Wendy has a hefty list of old boyfriends, including one she isn't even sure if she's broken up with or not.
582* RedheadInGreen: Her standard attire includes a green flannel shirt. Dipper also imagines her wearing a form-fitting green dress during his [[ImagineSpot Imagine Spots]] in "Double Dipper."
583* ResentfulOutnumberedSibling: Wendy has three brothers and is stressed about being surrounded by [[RaisedByDudes hypermasculine lumberjacks]]. [[https://mobile.twitter.com/TheMysteryofGF/status/868299267718479872 The names of her brothers from oldest to youngest are Marcus, Kevin, and Gus.]]
584* RousingSpeech: Gives one in "The Last Mabelcorn" when she, Candy, and Grenda [[spoiler: decide to implement a secret plan to obtain a unicorn hair]]:
585-->'''Wendy''': Look, it's time we stop trying to be so "perfect" and be who we really are. We're crazed, angry, sweaty animals! We're not unicorns, we're WOMEN! '''AND WE TAKE WHAT WE WANT!''' ''(punches a tree)''
586* ServileSnarker: Wendy is often this to Grunkle Stan.
587%%* ShesAllGrownUp: Wendy doesn't look quite like [[http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m8f6mqbQy61qb99cqo1_1280.png this]] anymore...
588* SignatureHeadgear: Rarely seen without her trapper hat. [[spoiler:She gives it to Dipper in the finale as something to remember her by; in exchange she now owns Dipper's hat.]]
589* SignificantGreenEyedRedhead: Due to the art style it's usually impossible to tell the characters' eye colors, but Wendy's are green as [[https://twitter.com/_AlexHirsch/status/260514979969646592 confirmed by Alex Hirsch.]]
590* TheSlacker:
591** She states in "The Inconveniencing" that she "may or may not" sneak up onto the Mystery Shack's roof during her work hours...all the time, every day.
592** In ''Gravity Falls: Dipper and Mabel's Guide to Mystery and Nonstop Fun!'', she writes this:
593---> Hey, guys. So Dipper asked me to write about relaxing, but what he calls "relaxing" is what I call "slacking." The first rule of slacking is not doing work. And writing something for someone else sounds a lot like work. So I'm taking the day off instead and accepting Stan's bribe to let him have the next few pages so he can write...
594* StatuesqueStunner: Is stated to be tall for her age, and [[DudeMagnet has had no shortage of boys interested in her]].
595* StepfordSmiler: [[spoiler: Despite her upbeatness and apparent confidence, she states in "Society of the Blind Eye" that her laid-back demeanor is a facade she puts on to hide the stress from dealing with [[TestosteronePoisoning her boisterous family]].]]
596* StepfordSnarker: Downplayed. Wendy is passively snarky, lazy, and has an apathetic outward attitude. This may be a front since [[spoiler:she's actually very stressed underneath it all.]]
597* SuperStrength: Mentioned above in MusclesAreMeaningless. Clearly, she got it from her dad.
598* TakeThat: She hates the modern music industry, especially boy bands, for their engineered business-dominated practices.
599* TankTopTomboy: {{Ladette}} Wendy sports this look in "The Last Mabelcorn," "Into the Bunker" (when [[spoiler: she fights the Shape-Shifter]]), and [[spoiler: during Weirdmageddon.]]
600* TomboyAndGirlyGirl:
601** The {{Tomboy}} to Mabel's GirlyGirl. Wendy's into things like tree climbing, pranking, indie rock bands, and zombie flicks, while Mabel likes knitting, bejeweling, boy bands, and teen romance movies. Though the two of them have some notable things in common—they both [[GirlsLoveStuffedAnimals adore stuffed animals]], [[OutdoorsyGal enjoy the outdoors]], and [[BloodKnight love to brawl]]. Hanging out with Mabel tends to bring out Wendy's girlier side.
602** She's also the {{Tomboy}} to her friend Tambry's GirlyGirl. While not immediately obvious, Wendy wears flannel shirts and tends to be as [[OneOfTheBoys rowdy and mischievous as the guys]], whereas Tambry wears a skirt, dyes her hair and [[PhoneaholicTeenager spends almost all of her time texting]].
603* TomboyWithAGirlyStreak: She revels in pranking and mischief, has a OneOfTheBoys demeanor and [[TotallyRadical manner of speech]], is very experienced in [[OutdoorsyGal outdoors-]] and [[MightyLumberjack lumberjack-related]] activities, and [[BloodKnight loves to brawl]]. She also loves cute things, as evidenced by how she lets out a {{Squee}} when Dipper does the Lamby Lamby Dance in "The Inconveniencing," and by [[GirlsLoveStuffedAnimals the fact that she likes stuffed animals]]. Not to mention that she has extremely long hair and wears makeup (as stated in "Boyz Crazy"). And despite her OneOfTheBoys vibe, she does get quite emotional, especially about relationships. Her girlier side tends to come out when she's around Mabel, as the two of them do things together like engage in random dance parties ("The Inconviencing") and angrily defend Lazy Susan's make-up when Soos makes fun of it ("Society of the Blind Eye").
604* TookALevelInBadass: Wendy is understandably caught off-guard by her first encounter with the supernatural (that she remembers) in "The Inconveniencing" but comes far more prepared in her later adventures.
605** In "Into the Bunker," she brings an axe as a weapon, climbs up a tree trunk using a belt, [[spoiler:takes on the Shapeshifter without any hint of fear, protects Dipper, and calmly stops her bleeding by ripping her shirt and using it as a bandage.]]
606** Later, she helps kick the ass of the [[spoiler: unicorns who were scamming Mabel.]]
607** She moves into full ActionSurvivor status in [[spoiler:"Weirdmageddon Part 1," leading a resistance against Bill Cipher and even breaking Ghost Eyes' arm.]]
608* TotallyRadical: She includes "dude" and "man" in almost every sentence she utters, and sometimes uses cheesy slang.
609-->'''Wendy''': This is so, stupid cool!
610* TownGirls: The athletic, axe-wielding, [[TheLadette Ladette-ish]] Butch to Pacifica's vain AlphaBitch Femme and Mabel's hardy, adventurous GirlyBruiser Neither.
611* TheUglyGuysHotDaughter: [[http://img3.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20120816025430/gravityfalls/images/thumb/7/7f/S1e6_manly_dan_test.png/1000px-S1e6_manly_dan_test.png Her father]] is a giant of a man, but as far as Dipper is concerned, she's a babe.
612* UnabashedBMovieFan: In the opening of "Into the Bunker," she and Dipper enjoy a cheesy, clearly low-budget zombie movie called ''Nearly Almost Dead But Not Quite!'' It's a fitting choice of film for them both given her affinity for indie things and Dipper's nerdy, eccentric interests.
613* WalkingSwimsuitScene: During "The Deep End", when she's working as a lifeguard.
614* YoungerThanTheyLook: As stated by Stan, she's a fifteen-year-old who's tall like a grown woman, courtesy of her "freak lumberjack genes." Her father and brothers are the same.
615* YouthfulFreckles: The only thing about her appearance that is remotely childish. Without them, she could easily pass for an adult.
616[[/folder]]
617----
618
619!Animals
620
621[[folder:Waddles]]
622!!Waddles
623[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/waddles2.png]]
624[[caption-width-right:300:''"Greetings, friends. It is I, Waddles the pig."'']]
625!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/DeeBradleyBaker, UsefulNotes/NeilDegrasseTyson (As Genius Waddles)
626
627Mabel's beloved pet pig. She wins him at the Mystery Shack's fair after guessing his weight (which was blatantly given away by his name, Ol' 15-Poundie).
628----
629* AccessoryWearingCartoonAnimal: In "Summerween" at least, where Mabel dresses him up like a businessman. This later becomes the subject of a CreditsGag involving [[WebOriginal/LOLCats lolpigs]]. Also used in one of the Life According To Mabel shorts, where she dresses him in exercize clothes as part of her Jog Hog segment.
630* BigEater: As is typical of cartoon pigs, he's capable of eating quite a lot.
631* BlackBeadEyes: His most common trait, along with a few other animals in Gravity Falls. When Soos ends up in his body in "Carpet Diem," his eyes become large with sclera around the pupils. The same thing happens with Dipper, and later, Mabel.
632* CutenessProximity: He has this effect on Mabel, causing her to {{Squee}} frequently about him.
633* DubNameChange: The Latin American dub changed his name to "Pato" ([[ADogNamedCat Duck]]).
634* EvilDetectingDog: In an alternate time line in "The Time Traveler's Pig," Pacifica wins him, but he refuses to go with her, a sharp contrast to how he usually acts towards everyone else.
635* ExtremeOmnivore: Like with real-life pigs, Waddles often attempts to eat anything he comes across, such as Mabel's shirt, playing cards, a table, a book, napkins...
636* GluttonousPig: VERY, though it isn't portrayed as a negative trait, except to Stan, when Waddles once ate one of the Mystery Shack's exhibits Stan had built out of corncobs.
637* HousepetPig: He is Mabel's pet pig and lives indoors for his own safety.
638* InterspeciesRomance:
639** When he temporarily stuck in Soos's body, he ends up [[spoiler:romancing and proposing to a woman who came into the Mystery Shack while Soos/Waddles was flailing around, trying to figure out how to move on two legs.]] Soos is understandably confused when returned to his own body.
640** The episode "The Love God" reveals that thanks to Mabel, Waddles is now married to Gompers, the Mystery Shack's goat.
641** Although the consent of that relationship is debatable, considering they had shown no actual romantic interest in each other and Mabel formed the relationship by duct-taping them together.
642* MeaningfulName:
643** "I call him that cause he waddles!"
644** His original name was "Old Fifteen Poundie." Keep in mind that the man who owned him ran a ''weight-guessing game'' with the pigs as prizes.
645* MessyPig: Averted; he's shown rolling in mud briefly in "Land Before Swine," but other than that, he's typically clean, as most real-life pigs usually are.
646* PetHeir: Mabel intends to leave everything to Waddles.
647%%* RidiculouslyCuteCritter: Of course.
648* TeamPet: He's Mabel's pig, but the whole cast interacts with him in this way, more or less.
649* SpannerInTheWorks: Had Waddles not jumped out of Mabel's backpack in the [[ComicBook/GravityFallsLostLegends Lost Legends]] story, ''Don't Dimension It'', [[spoiler: Mabel would never have realized how bothersome her obnoxious behavior could be at times, and her alternate universe counterparts would have been stuck in Dimension MAB-3L.]]
650* SuddenlyVoiced: Builds a combined motor cart/voice modulator for himself while he is a genius in "Little Gift Shop Of Horrors", and he's voiced by ''UsefulNotes/NeilDeGrasseTyson'', of all people.
651* TalkingAnimal:
652** Mabel thinks he is, since she thought he either said "Mabel" or "Doorbell" when first encountering him. He's really just making pig noises.
653** He actually does speak in "Little Gift Shop of Horrors" when he temporarily becomes a super-genius.
654* UpliftedAnimal: He becomes a genius for a short while in "Little Gift Shop of Horrors" after eating a magic mushroom.
655[[/folder]]
656
657[[folder:Gompers]]
658!!Gompers
659[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gompersgravityfalls.png]]
660
661A goat usually found on the Mystery Shack property.
662----
663* AllThereInTheManual: The reason he's at the Shack at all, as a cut scene from "Blendin's Game" would've revealed, is that a tourist to the Mystery Shack attempted to use a baby Gompers as payment, and the goat just stayed there ever since.
664* AmbiguouslyEvil: Bill Cipher claims in his Reddit AMA that Gompers is something more ancient and eldritch than even him. That said, we can never really trust what Bill says, and the show doesn't depict him doing anything particularly malicious, at least directly.
665* AttackOfTheFiftyFootWhatever: [[spoiler:Bill's weirdness wave in "Weirdmageddon Part 1"]] turns him into a giant version of himself who tramples through the area around the Mystery Shack, [[spoiler:forcing Stan to flee for his life.]]
666* ChekhovsGunman:
667** Plays a very minor but substantial role in the episode "Boyz Crazy," in which him eating Ergman Bratsman's license plate gets the manager arrested.
668** In [[spoiler:"Weirdmageddon Part 1",]] after being turned giant, [[spoiler:he eats part of the prison wall, freeing Gideon and his fellow inmates.]]
669* ExtremeOmniGoat: While not as pronounced as other goats in cartoons, Gompers has been seen chewing on things like Mabel's sweater, Stan's fez, license plates, and other random things. [[spoiler:In "Weirdmageddon Part 1", as a giant, he even chomps on a ''prison wall!'']]
670* FunnyBackgroundEvent: Gompers typically does not contribute much to the plots of episodes.
671* InterspeciesRomance: In "The Love God" Mabel gets him and Waddles the pig married...by duct-taping their bodies together, rendering the relationship somewhat questionable.
672[[/folder]]

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