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1* ''Series/ThirtyRock'': Almost every NBC employee, but ''especially'' the cast and crew of [[ShowWithinAShow TGS]]. Also {{invoked|Trope}} when Jack is putting together a reality show for Tracy's wife, Angie.
2* ''Series/{{Alias}}'': There's dysfunctional and then there's the Bristow family. The dysfunctionality certainly extends past the Bristows though. Most of the characters lives are marred by the death and/or betrayal of loved ones. It certainly doesn't help when our heroes are forced to work with the bad guys and double-crossers or the people they thought were dead but actually weren't.
3* ''Series/{{Arrow}}'':
4** Oliver: Witnessed his father kill himself, trapped on a hellish island for five years, forced to watch his mentor receive a fatal BoomHeadshot, had to throw away all his previous morals to survive, his island girlfriend and second mentor killed by Ivo ForTheEvulz, targeted by Slade after finding out he inadvertently caused Shado's death, then in present day, his girlfriend is [non-fatally] shot, he fails to stop the Undertaking, which kills Tommy, and then, Slade turns out to be NotQuiteDead. We can now add in being killed by Ra's Al-Ghul and being given a SadisticChoice to either take over the League of Assassins or have them turn the entire city against him.
5** Diggle: His sense of morality was shaken after fatally shooting a child soldier in Afghanistan, his brother was killed by Deadshot, he divorced Lyla after things went to crap, and his best friend from the military turns out to be evil. Of course, it's getting better for Diggle now that he's not only had a daughter with Lyla, but got remarried to her.
6** Laurel: Sister is [[NotQuiteDead supposedly]] killed in a boat crash which she was only on because she was tapping Oliver, Oliver is revealed to be alive, but Sara isn't, she loses Tommy to the Undertaking, and she currently struggles with alcoholism and painkiller addiction. We can add dead sister back to the list and with her struggling to pick up her place as a hero of the city.
7** Quentin: Daughter killed in boat crash, turned to alcoholism to cope, divorced his wife because of differences as a result of Sara's death, and he slowly drives away Laurel with his desire to catch Green Arrow.
8** Slade: Marooned on Lian Yu, betrayed by Billy Wintergreen, [[BecameTheirOwnAntithesis becomes his own antithesis]] thanks to Mirakuru, and has been on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge against Oliver for the past six years because of Shado's death.
9** Thea: Brother marooned on an island for five years, father dead, family torn apart by her mother's part in the Undertaking, and then she turns out to be the bastard child of Malcolm Merlyn.
10** Tommy: Mother killed, his father a psychopathic VisionaryVillain, cut off from his family's fund, DidNotGetTheGirl with Laurel, dies by the Undertaking.
11* Two words: ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|2003}}''. Anyone who wasn't depressed, delusional, suicidal, emotionally repressed, alcoholic, unlucky in love, and/or really really pissed off at both their parents and the world ''before'' the Cylons attacked... sure is now.
12** Sharon 'Athena' Agathon seems to be doing alright (misplaced MamaBear moments aside). Even moreso, Helo. For all that he went through on Caprica and back again, he seems to be levelheaded and reasonable.
13*** They have the Screwed Up Past: Athena was a spy ordered to con a human into getting her pregnant, only to fall for the guy and become a traitor to her own people, while Helo was the aforementioned con victim who discovered his love interest/flight partner was not only a spy, but not even the same individual he'd originally known, who was also a spy.
14*** Said original individual forced them to [[EarnYourHappyEnding work at]] staying happy during the last few episodes of the series.
15*** The fact that Helo remains a level-headed family man in spite of all he has to deal with brings new meaning to the phrase "BadassNormal."
16* Let's face it, every single character on ''Series/BlakesSeven'' has SERIOUS issues. In the original crew alone, we have the delusional revolutionist, the violent smuggler, the guerrilla soldier, the DeadpanSnarker who verges on psychopathic, the compulsive thief (who's also an alcoholic and a coward), the computer who is obviously hiding something from the crew, and the GentleGiant who's only a GentleGiant because he had a limiter put in his head to stop him from murdering anyone else. For bonus points, it's heavily implied that they ALL have tragic pasts. [[BlatantLies This crew is just one big happy family...]]
17* The press release for BBC comedy series ''Blandings'' humorously described Literature/BlandingsCastle with the trope name. If the original series by Creator/PGWodehouse is anything to go by, it will be much, ''much'' [[LighterAndSofter more lighthearted in tone]] than the rest of the examples on this page. The general idea could still apply, though; Lord Emsworth is [[ForgetfulJones alarmingly forgetful]] and [[CloudCuckoolander constantly in his own world]], his son Freddie is very much TheUnfavourite, his secretary Baxter is [[ProperlyParanoid severely (though not unjustifiably) paranoid]], [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking and their butler is a hypochondriac]]. All of this is PlayedForLaughs.
18* The two main characters of ''Series/{{Bones}}'' are a woman whose [[ChekhovMIA parents disappeared]] when she was a teen, and a man with an abusive and alcoholic father. Upon learning that Dr. Sweets had been whipped as a child:
19-->'''Booth''': What are we, the island of Misfit Toys?
20::It was later revealed that Brennan also suffered abuse at the hands of her foster parents
21** Also, one of the newer interns, [[SouthernFriedGenius Finn Abernathy]], had a stepfather so abusive he contemplated killing him...until he read a report on one of Booth and Brennan's investigations and realized that the FBI might easily send them after him.
22** There’s Also Agent Aubrey with his father who was an embezzler and who he ended up arresting himself.
23* ''Series/BurnNotice'' : This seems to be a common trope for spy shows. As Michael notes a bad childhood is a good preparation for a life as a spy. You don't miss home, you don't trust easily and you're used to violence.
24* ''Series/ColdCase'': Lilly Rush's father left her and her younger sister Christina in the 'care' of their alcoholic mother Ellen, who ended up drinking herself to death the same day her daughter got shot almost to death on the job. Christina grew up to be a seductress (even sleeping with Lilly's fiance) and a scam artist, who dated Lilly's partner Scotty Valens and then ran out the moment a police officer from NYC came to Philadelphia to arrest her. Plus what happened to her as a child...
25** Also the rest of the cast. Her aforementioned partner, Valens, was already a cocky, renegade CowboyCop and JerkAss who ''does'' have a loving family, but after his schizophrenic fiancee [[spoiler: commits suicide]], it never got better for him and he eventually [[MoralEventHorizon crossed the line for good]] in the series finale by [[spoiler: arranging for his mother's rapist murdered in prison]].
26** Although Det. Vera was a [[TheAce popular hockey playing jock and homecoming king in high school and is the only detective who was initially married]], he cheats on her ''repeatedly'' AND couldn't get her pregnant [[spoiler: (which resulting in her leaving him and having a family with someone else)]], bungled several cases resulting in further rapes and a innocent man being murdered and is an alcoholic, to boot.
27** Det. Jeffries is fairly competent and more amiable than his fellow male detectives, but is [[{{Mangst}} still grieving]] [[TheLostLenore his dead wife, who was killed in a hit-and-run accident]] and is more often than not subjected to blatant racism from suspects of all colors. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking Oh, and he's often teased by his fellow detectives due to his age.]]
28** Lt. Stillman is AFatherToHisMen (and women), but is married to his job, so much that he actually ''missed his only child's birth'' and his wife (who is now a gambler with an abusive husband) left him. Said daughter, who's now an adult and a single mother, was raped and abused by her boyfriend, [[PapaWolf which led to a very angry]] [[TranquilFury yet restrained confrontation.]] [[note]] He could have and had every right to tear into the prick, but at the risk of losing his badge, and the fact that he didn't shows the depth of his duty to the job and his class.[[/note]]
29** Det. Miller [[TeamMom loves her little girl and is by all accounts pretty good to her]], but has a troubled past that involves substance use and a bad news ex-boyfriend and her takes-no-prisoners attitude has made it tough to find love.
30* In ''Series/{{Community}}'''s group, everyone's banged up emotionally, resulting in the Spanish study group being a substitute family for most of them. (Britta says as much early on)
31** Jeff is on the verge of disbarment, and [[DisappearedDad estranged from his father]]. Also, in season 3 he's in therapy for (presumably) anxiety issues.
32** Britta's past involves having dropped out of high school, and small crimes like vandalism, not to mention an [[RapeAsBackstory incident in her childhood when she was molested by a man in a dinosaur costume]]. Her use of recreational drugs has also been hinted at several times.
33** Shirley's divorced, and her genuine kindness and sweetness duel with some serious rage issues.
34** Abed's parents are divorced, and his relationship with his dad had suffered because of it. He also has mental issues which on occasion impedes his ability to function normally.
35** Annie's past involves bad self-esteem, many many pills and her family disowning her.
36** Troy threw away a bright athletic career. He is also highly insecure about his level of intelligence.
37** Pierce has been divorced 7 times and is... not the most social chap in the world. (Read: a lonely inept old man desperate to be taken seriously). He also develops an addiction to painkillers in season 2.
38*** According to WordOfGod:
39-->"This is a show about broken people. All of them are quite alone, some involuntarily, some by their own hand, some without realizing it, but none of them come to the study room table with the emotional advantages held by that mythical creature known as ‘a normal person.’ There are no normal people, there are just different kinds of weird, all of it is human and all humanity is better than everything inhuman."
40* Good luck finding one main character on ''Series/CriminalMinds'' that doesn't have some damage (this is just the gist, there's a lot more):
41** Hotch's marriage collapsed, he's been blown up, he's been stabbed, and there's evidence of an abusive childhood.
42** JJ was attacked by three vicious dogs that had already torn a woman apart, seems to have issues from her small-town childhood, was hit in the head with a shovel by a serial killer that she didn't know was a serial killer, and when JJ was eleven, her older sister [[spoiler: committed suicide]].
43** Reid was kidnapped, beaten, and drugged, was held hostage, got anthrax poisoning, had to deal with his schizophrenic mother, and his father left when he was ten. [[spoiler: Season 12 adds a months-long prison stay after being framed for murder, which canonically leaves him with PTSD.]]
44** Rossi lost a childhood friend to a drunk driver, was haunted by a murder involving children that he didn't solve until he joined the team, unintentionally got a friend killed, and unintentionally got a fan killed.
45** Morgan was a victim of a [[spoiler: child molester and watched his cop father get shot and killed when he was a kid]].
46** Garcia's parents were killed by a drunk driver when she was eighteen and was shot by a man that she had gone on a date with.
47** Elle was shot in her house, and her cop father was killed when she was a child.
48** Gideon got a bunch of people killed, including [[spoiler: his kinda-girlfriend]] and one or two coworkers before the series.
49** Emily has major issues stemming from her childhood as the daughter of a United States Ambassador, [[spoiler: had an abortion at 15]], and she had the Doyle arc.
50* Pick any of the ''Series/{{CSI}}'' series, and you'll find this trope all over the place.
51* All Degrassi shows suffer from this, to various extents.
52** The original era, which comprises ''Series/DegrassiJuniorHigh'' and ''Series/DegrassiHigh''. In a relatively lower-middle (or middle) class school- in Canada no less, one girl becomes a mother at 14, by a boy who becomes disabled after a drug-induced accident, one has racist parents, one was sexually abused as a young girl, one is physically abused by their boyfriend, one COMMITS SUICIDE in the bathroom, one gets leukemia, TheBully gets HIV - all within the same five years.
53** ''Series/DegrassiTheNextGeneration'' is worse...in a relatively upper-middle class school- in Canada, no less, two students are dead via violence in unrelated incidents, one is crippled, another raped, beaten in a hate crime, had their father die, sent to prison for killing someone in a drag race, contracted HIV, become addicted to cocaine, etc. - ALL WITHIN THE SAME FIVE YEARS.
54* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
55** No-one in "The Robots of Death" is a normal or even functional person. The Doctor and Leela are the sanest people in the setting, and that says a lot (it's Leela's first time off her miserable and religiously oppressive planet, and the Doctor's a MadHatter who likes to pick on her for fun). Uvanov bullies Zilda out of sexual attraction and a sense of working class bitterness, and Zilda covers up for her feelings of inadequacy about her poverty with upper-class snobbery and contempt. Poul is a bitter and emotionally-repressed spy who uses sarcasm to hide his feelings and eventually succumbs to a {{Phobia}} meltdown. Borg is a bullying {{Jerkass}} who sadistically picks on everyone around him for fun, up to and including making death threats, and insists he's done nothing wrong when called on it. Chub is so much of a privileged snob that his reaction to a robot trying to kill him is anger that it would dare touch him. Dask is a smug, tedious knowitall in love with the sound of his own voice and with a really, ''[[RobotWar really]]'' weird fondness for robots.
56** "The Horror of Fang Rock" makes everyone in the cast either blatantly dysfunctional or hiding some seriously dark secrets, as part of painting the era of the setting as a CrapsaccharineWorld. Everyone has some glaring complex, usually regarding sexism and classism.
57** The relaunch often veers towards this. It was more overt during the tenure of the first producer, Creator/RussellTDavies, but Creator/StevenMoffat has also made reference to it.
58*** The Doctor is the sole surviving member of his race, and so he has pretty obvious survivor guilt and a self-destructive streak when left to his own devices. [[spoiler:Later on we find out that he was directly responsible for the death of his own people, for the greater good of the rest of the universe. His guilt and self-hatred over this resulted in him erasing [[{{Unperson}} all evidence of the existence of the incarnation who did it]] he could find.]] "The Doctor's Wife" had him obsessively chasing down clues that suggested another Time Lord might have survived because he wanted forgiveness. "Let's Kill Hitler" showed him activating a voice interface for the TARDIS so he could give it verbal commands and when it generated a hologram of himself as the interface he immediately changed it to "someone I like" instead. [[spoiler:And while it might ''seem'' like the Doctor discovering he'd actually saved his people, rather than killed them, in "The Day of the Doctor" would clear up some of his baggage, it actually just makes him painfully aware of all the ''other'' terrible experiences the incarnation he erased went through. Not to mention that having saved them, they promptly turn around and put him through his own personal Hell for four-and-a-half billion years at the end of Series 9.]]
59*** He also feels extreme amounts of guilt for the irrevocable way he changes the lives of his companions, and not always for the better. The massive bind he's stuck in over even having companions makes this worse -- he knows that one way or another, whether thanks to his dangerous life or his extremely long lifespan, he's going to end up losing them and have to deal with the pain that brings. And he's lost a ''lot'' of people by now. But as "The Waters of Mars" and Series 9 finale (see below) reveal, ''without'' companions to serve as {{Morality Chain}}s and keep him from becoming jaded by near-immortality, he falls into BewareTheSuperman and becomes capable of destroying all space and time just because he can't take the pain of another loss.
60*** The Doctor's companions often have less-than-ideal backgrounds too, and their time with the Doctor in many ways leaves them more screwed up than they were before they met him. It's hinted at in some of the ExpandedUniverse books but pretty much stated outright in the new series that this is because the Doctor has a habit of (mostly) unintentionally turning people into "living weapons" who are unable to return to a quiet ordinary life after leaving him and are then primed to catalyse important events and fight crime, evil and injustice instead.
61*** The Twelfth Doctor's era is this full stop. Series 8 slowly reveals that Clara Oswald, after her experiences in Series 7 with Eleven, is now a NightmareFetishist with a literal addiction to the companion lifestyle -- and because she is ''also'' a ControlFreak she constantly lies and worse to both her human boyfriend Danny Pink and the Twelfth Doctor. Danny has mountains of PTSD from [[spoiler: shooting a child]] when he was a soldier. The Doctor brings along most of his previous baggage ''plus'' a difficult adjustment to a new body, morals, and personality problems (NoSocialSkills, BrutalHonesty, being a more PragmaticHero, etc.). One-shot companion Courtney is a 'disruptive influence' at school, trapped with parents and teachers who don't care. "In the Forest of the Night" features a school trip from the 'gifted and talented' pupils which is explained by Clara to be a euphemism for the hopeless cases. Missy's just bonkers, turning out to have instigated the Doctor and Clara's relationship ''so he would be unhappy'', among other things. In the wake of the SeasonFinale, Clara and the Doctor have/can only relate to each other in "Last Christmas" and Series 9; she becomes his increasingly-reckless DistaffCounterpart and his ChronicHeroSyndrome gets worse in part because he's obsessed with protecting her. The key recurring character, Ashildr, is saved by the Doctor in a way that also immortalizes her, and she almost becomes a sociopath on TheSlowPath. The three-part SeasonFinale sees the Doctor and Clara separated when she [[spoiler: dies in a Senseless Sacrifice thanks in part to Ashildr and his own people]]; he ends up driven mad by anguish, isolation, and torture, obsessed with a TragicDream that almost destroys Time itself. He does return to his best self, but it's a '''very''' BittersweetEnding in that he [[spoiler: loses Clara AND his key physical/emotional memories of her]]. After this, [[ThrowTheDogABone he's happily reunited with the similarly troubled River Song]], but [[spoiler: then has to cope with having to send her to her destined death after twenty-four happy years together, and with trying to redeem Missy for at least fifty years]], until in Series 10 he finally finds a "proper" new companion, Bill Potts, to take his mind off of things (what he had beforehand was more of a {{Sidekick}}, who knew both Twelve and River). Bill doesn't have quite as much baggage as Clara - there's some tension with her foster mother, as she hasn't come out to her as a lesbian, and some wistful fantasising over her birth mother, but that's pretty much it - and Twelve, having worked through much of ''his'' baggage, is in a healthier position than he's been for a long time, having figured out who he is and where he stands, free to just be the Doctor again... [[spoiler:right up until the Doctor/Missy psychodrama explodes in everyone's face in the Series 10 finale]]. ''Twelve needs a hug.''
62* In ''Series/{{ER}}'', a lot of the patients are this and most of the doctors/nurses too.
63** Sam came from a family of alcoholics and druggies and she was pregnant at fifteen.
64** Abby's father left when she was very young and both her mother and brother have bipolar disease, which caused difficulties on Abby, as she had to raise her brother on her own.
65** Pratt's father left him and his mother when he was very young. [[spoiler: Turns out his father tried to get back with them, but Pratt's mother kept blocking him out]]. Had a stepbrother mentally handicapped after receiving a gunshot to the head.
66** Lewis' parents are extremely hard to talk to and are never around. Her older sister has several problems with drugs, alcohol and men.
67** Carter is distant with his mother and she became colder towards him after the death of his brother. His grandfather is disappointed in Carter's career choice.
68** Corday has a strained relationship with her mother, who apparently didn't spend a lot of time with her.
69** Mark Greene has a strained relationship with his father, who he purposely tries to upset and does the opposite of what his father wants.
70*** Like father, like daughter. This troper always found it sad (if not ironic) that Rachel would be to Mark what Mark was to his father.
71** Kovac saw his wife and children being murdered in Croatia.
72* In ''Series/{{Farscape}}'', everyone starts off with at least a little damage - except John Crichton, [[HumansAreSpecial the human]]. Then as the series progresses everyone else manages to shore up each other's sanity...except John, who ''descends into madness''. While John did have a pretty nice life prior to the show, the whole getting lost far, far from home among aliens, some of whom are trying to capture/torture/kill you, definitely counts as trauma, even before the deliberate crazy-making business.
73* The SRU team in ''Series/{{Flashpoint}}'' has varying degrees of this.
74** Greg Parker was divorced from his wife because of his problems with alcoholism and hadn't seen his estranged son in years. And that's not mentioning how he survived a hard life under his strict father by learning to negotiate.
75** Ed Lane had been having problems with his relationship with his wife and son, being more attached to his job than them.
76** Sam Braddock revealed in "Acceptable Risk" that [[spoiler: he saw his younger sister being hit by a car and killed instantly when he was nine years old]].
77** Kevin "Wordy" Wordsmith appears to be the most normal of the team, HappilyMarried and loving to his three daughters.
78%%* ''Series/FridayNightLights''
79* The ''Series/{{Friends}}'' gang are living at this junction:
80** Phoebe's father ran off, her mother killed herself and she lived on the street, seeking refuge in CloudCuckooLander tendencies to deal with it.
81** The Gellers [[ParentalFavoritism favored]] Ross over Monica, producing a KnowNothingKnowItAll son and ControlFreak daughter determined to be [[ThePerfectionist perfect at everything]]. Ross's wife revealed herself to be a lesbian after their marriage and divorced him turning him into a CrazyJealousGuy with future girlfriends.
82** [[StepfordSnarker Chandler's]] parents had a horrible divorce and [[{{ParentalNeglect}} paid more attention to their sex games than him]]. Consequently he's terrified of commitment and uses [[SadClown humour to hide]] his deep insecurity and self-loathing.
83** [[ItsAllAboutMe Rachel]] was extremely spoiled, and in early seasons incapable of coping in the real world.
84** [[TheCasanova Joey's]] parents had a poor marriage, with his mother enjoying her father cheating on her.
85*** Interestingly as the series continued a lot of the story arcs are about them overcoming their issues. Phoebe reconnects with her family, becomes more grounded and builds a successful relationship rather than jumping from guy to guy. Monica and Chandler fall in love and [[HappilyMarried find in each other]] the support their parents never gave them. Ross gradually gets over his divorces, Rachel learns how to be independent, and Joey starts considering commitment.
86* Every character in ''Series/{{Glee}}'' is somewhat misunderstood, or is a bullied minority in some ways who goes through a trauma conga-line at some point in the series. Look what happens to the original members of New Directions in just season 1 alone;
87** Rachel Berry never knew her mother, doesn't know which one of her fathers is her real dad, suffers tremendous bullying and has no friends whatsoever, finally meets her mother but finds out she wants nothing to do with her, and discovers her first boyfriend was only pretending to date her. He then goes on to egg her *she's a vegan, which makes it infinitely worse for her* in front of fifty other jerring show choir contestants.
88** Finn Hudson's father died in the Afghanistan war when he was just a baby, which resulted in his mother's inevitable depression, he grew up struggling at school and then his girlfriend cheated on him with his best friend, who impregnated her. She then lead him to believe it was his baby. He does not take it well when he finds out, and goes all "HULK SMASH" on the choir room chair.
89** Mercedes Jones was a victim of racist and sizeist bullying ever since she was a little girl and developed a brief eating disorder mid-series, which culminated in her fainting from starvation. She was also rejected by her best friend (who's gay).
90** Kurt Hummel's mother died when he was eight, and Kurt was bullied horribly for his sexuality in high school. It gets a lot worse for him in season 2.
91** Tina Cohen-Chang was so painfully shy that she faked a stutter to avoid having to talk to people. She only had two facebook friends (her parents), and though it was never mentioned on the show, was confirmed by Jenna Ushkowitz to be adopted.
92** Artie Abrams broke both his legs in a car crash when he was eight and is now permanently confined to a wheelchair.
93*** That's just the original six members. That's just season 1 angst. The show gets angstier by the season. Granted, there's still pop classics being sung on cafeteria tables, but for a show where every other scene is a journey song, it's pretty damn heavy.
94* ''Series/GoGoSentaiBoukenger'': Everyone on the team except Sakura/Bouken Pink suffers from some kind of baggage.
95** Akashi is still dealing with seeing his old friends die in front of him.
96** Masumi watched his comrades be killed by Yaiba when he was just a kid.
97** Souta carries the guilt of hurting people back in his spy days.
98** Natsuki couldn't remember her past and then learns she is the sole survivor and princess of an ancient civilization.
99** Eiji is the son of a demon hunter and a demon and his learning this trigger his demon blood for the first time preventing him from saving his father.
100* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' is practically made of this. Anyone who doesn't have a tragic past gets a tragic present.
101* The cast of ''Series/HigherGround'', which is set in a therapeutic boarding school.
102* ''Series/HomicideLifeOnTheStreet'', anyone? All of the characters (with the exception of Ballard and Falsone, of course) are pretty damaged in their own right.
103** [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold Munch]] is a StepfordSnarker whose father committed suicide in his youth and can’t keep a marriage together.
104** [[TheHero Pembleton’s]] either-or attitude, aloofness and lack of faith cause trouble in all of his relationships, including the one with his wife.
105** [[TheWoobie Bayliss]] is traumatized from being sexually abused as a child by his Uncle, his troubled relationship with his abusive and deceased father, [[MyGreatestFailure bungling his first homicide in which a little girl was killed]] and is looked at by his fellow detectives as too emotional for the job.
106** [[TheLoad Felton]] is an alcoholic and a suspected racist in a bad marriage and whose increasing incompetency eventually gets him fired [[spoiler: And upon eventually being rehired to work in the undercover narcotics division, ends up being brutally ''murdered'' after his cover is blown]].
107** [[GrumpyOldMan Bolander]] is world-weary, has a troubled marriage and is saddled with a partner he barely tolerates.
108** [[WeHardlyKnewYe Crosetti]] in spite of being devoted to his daughter and a devout Catholic, is mentally unstable and a compulsive gambler, [[spoiler: both of which drive him to kill himself, and due to this, could not receive a proper police ceremony/burial]].
109** [[TheSmurfettePrinciple Howard]], in addition to originally being the only woman, cannot keep a man and is in love with her partner who's too damaged for her own good.
110** [[BestKnownForTheFanservice Russert]] struggles to raise her daughter as a widow and finds herself in damaging relationships.
111** [[TheAce Lewis]] was initially decent, but over time devolved into a [[ItsAllAboutMe narcissistic]] JerkAss who quickly marries and divorces his wife, shuns his mentally ill brother due to the burden he was to the family and betrayed all three of his partners.
112** [[DefectiveDetective Kellerman]] was surrounded by too many bad influences in his professional and personal life and [[HeWhoFightsMonsters eventually became the dirty detective he was always paranoid about being seen as.]]
113** [[DaChief Gee]] was and continues to be oppressed by racist [[JerkAss jerkasses]] and corrupt bosses and has never gotten over his wife’s death and also struggles to find love because of [[ButNotTooBlack colorism]], leading him to bitterness, which has affected his relationship with his children, especially his only son, [[WellDoneSonGuy Mike Giardello]], who is pretty bitter himself and has an attitude where he [[JadeColoredGlasses cannot see or take in anything good in his life]], ''including becoming a father.''
114** [[BrokenBird Cox’s]] father was murdered in a hit-and-run accident, she gets involved in relationships with both Kellerman and Bayliss which end badly and she’s surrounded by corrupt superiors who eventually drive her to quit her job.
115** [[HeroWithAnFInGood Gharty]] is a [[DirtyCoward coward]] and a racist who very few people in the squad trust.
116** [[SoBeautifulItsACurse Sheppard]] proved herself to be all looks and no skill by almost getting her partner killed through her own incompetency and ended up alienating nearly everyone on the squad who were either angry with or embarrassed by her.
117** [[FlatCharacter Stivers]] is guilty by association through a cover-up [[KarmaHoudini which should have gotten her fired, but didn’t.]]
118* Not one character on ''Series/{{House}}'' escapes this trope, including most patients of the week. In between learning about the patients' tragic past, we get a look into the lives of the doctors who treat them.
119** The misanthropic, crippled, drug-addicted House and his fellow Chase have major parental issues. House goes to extraordinary lengths to avoid contact with his parents. The most extreme example of this is when [[spoiler: his father dies and he refuses to go to the funeral despite his mother's wishes. He does end up attending but only because Cuddy drugged him so Wilson could get him in his car and escort him there]]. In the same episode it is revealed [[spoiler: that his father is not actually his biological father. House worked this out as kid and didn't talk to his father for a whole summer after he found out]].
120** Chase was left to care for his sister and alcoholic mother after his father abandoned them. His father turns up during the thirteenth episode and bridges start to mend, but little does Chase know that [[spoiler: his father is dying of cancer]]. Chase finds out two months later in the eighth episode of the second season when he [[spoiler: gets a phonecall saying his father died of terminal lung cancer]]. It gets even worse the seasons twenty-second episode in which House deduces that Chase was [[spoiler: cut out of his father's will]], a fact that is confirmed in Season 3.
121** Foreman, a former juvenile delinquent, has a mother with Alzheimer's who he can't stand seeing and a fundamentalist Christian father who is anything but supportive.
122** Cameron [[spoiler: married a dying man when she was in her twenties and then fell for his best friend]].
123** When we first meet Wilson he has been divorced two times and his third marriage is on the verge of complete collapse. In Season 1, he proclaims that, "[he's] only got two things that work for me: this job and this stupid, screwed-up friendship [with House]." Before season 2 is over, Wilson finds himself divorced again and homeless. In season 3 his assets get frozen while attempting to keep House out of jail and it's revealed (surprise, surprise) he's suffering from depression. In season 4, his [[spoiler: his girlfriend, Amber, dies,]] and in season 5 it's revealed that his long-lost, homeless brother that is mentioned in Season 1 is also [[spoiler: schizophrenic and that he blames himself for him running away]]. In Season 8, [[spoiler:he has terminal cancer]].
124** Cuddy has apparently failed every relationship she's ever tried to make work and angsts about not being able to start a family. In season 5, she [[spoiler: adopts a baby, but has emotional issues bonding with her]].
125** House's new fellows have problems too. Thirteen is [[spoiler: dying from Huntington's. (Her mom died from it too.) And in season 7 it's revealed she had to euthanize her brother who suffered from the same disease]] Kutner's parents were killed in a robbery when he was six and in Season 5 he [[spoiler: commits suicide, and nobody knows why, not even House can figure it out]]. Taub [[spoiler: cheats on his wife]] to the point that it [[spoiler:ruins their marriage in Season 7]], and has financial problems in Season 5.
126* ''Series/HouseOfAnubis'': Everyone is at least a little screwed up, either with family issues and deep emotional problems, or particularly difficult experiences over the course of the series. Notable examples include:
127** Jerome Clarke, whose mother has been implied not to care for him or his little sister Poppy, and whose father had disappeared when he was a kid. It then turns out that his father is actually in jail for theft, which doesn't make things any easier. Confronting this and building a bond with his father is a major part of his season 2 CharacterDevelopment. He also had some nasty experiences with Rufus Zeno in the first seasons, nearly getting very hurt or killed each time.
128** Joy Mercer, who was kidnapped by her father and kept locked away with no contact with the outside world, all just because she was believed to be TheChosenOne. Upon returning in the next season, she learned Fabian, who she had a major crush on, had started dating Nina who Joy herself had never really met until this season. In season 3, she undergoes a big personality change and tries to become a happier person, but finds herself having to help Mara get revenge on Jerome for cheating on her by pretending to like him, and ends up BecomingTheMask, which left her heartbroken and alone after Jerome dumped ''her'' and Mara found out the truth.
129** Patricia is implied to be TheUnfavourite to her twin, Piper, and has never really had much of a break from struggling and pain in any of the three seasons. She had several break downs in the first season as a result of her desperate and lonely quest to save Joy, and then went through a lot just to feel comfortable dating Eddie only to break up with him out of fear of relationships during the summer.
130** Eddie was abandoned for years without any contact by his father, Mr. Sweet. When he first came to the House, he was angry and distant and rejected Mr. Sweet as a father. Soon he agreed to try and mend their relationship, just to be betrayed and manipulated left and right in season 3 by Mr. Sweet, which left him completely shattered and confused.
131** Then there's KT, who was implied to have no parents, leaving her raised by her grandfather. However, he died just before she came to Anubis House, only leaving her with a mysterious key and a mission to "stop a great evil". She then discovers she is in fact the illegitimate great granddaughter of Robert Frobisher-Smythe, which would be cool, if it weren't for the fact that he was the BigBad of the season...
132* ''Series/ILoveMoney'' is a VH 1 reality game show starring contestants from ''Series/FlavorOfLove'', ''Series/ILoveNewYork'', ''Series/RockOfLove'', ''Real Chance of Love'', ''For the Love of Ray J'', ''Daisy of Love'' and ''Megan Wants a Millionaire'', who all immediately proceed to have sex with each other.
133* ''Series/InPlainSight'': The lead character, Mary, is a US Marshal in the witness protection program. During the pilot, she narrates how good she is at solving other people's problems but not her own. Her father abandoned his family to evade the police when she was a child, and she's been taking care of her alcoholic mother and chronically irresponsible sister ever since. During the course of the series, [[spoiler:the sister ends up involved in a drug deal gone bad]]. Even Mary's [[UnresolvedSexualTension sorta-boyfriend]] is a minor-league baseball player who can't make it to the big leagues, and he's the most normal character in the immediate family. With the exception of Mary's coworkers, everyone else in the show is messed-up, even the ''witnesses under protection''. Justified - you would expect people in situations that would necessitate witness protection to have experienced some trauma.
134* The ''Series/ItsAlwaysSunnyInPhiladelphia'' gang is messed up to the point of absurdity, giving the show much of its hilarity.
135* Much of Creator/JossWhedon's work - ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'', and ''Series/{{Angel}}'', mainly. Those few characters without tragic pasts quickly get them within the course of the story, as you know any happy character will either be killed or have a loved one killed.
136** Even those who are relatively happy will always be revealed to have at least one parent (usually the father) who is either abusive or absent. Then they have a tragic event happen to them as well, anyway, to compound the matter.
137*** In the DVDCommentary for "[[Recap/AngelS05E15AHoleInTheWorld A Hole in the World]]", he observes, "Oh, look at that, they're happy. Better have someone cough up some blood!"
138** Subverted in the "[[Recap/AngelS03E05Fredless Fredless]]" episode of ''Angel''. Fred's parents stop by looking for their daughter, and we are led to believe they may have bad intentions for her. Eventually it's revealed that they are loving people who want the best for their daughter. Ironically, this ends up reminding the rest of the cast what a sucky relationship they have/had with their own parents.
139*** Echoed for laughs in "[[Recap/AngelS05E07Lineage Lineage]]":
140---->'''Wesley''': If you're here to tell me about how you killed your parents... perhaps it could wait for another time.
141---->'''Fred''': What? No. They're fine.
142*** The next time they show up, Fred has been taken over by an EldritchAbomination...
143** ''Series/{{Firefly}}'' is better about having a cast with varied backgrounds. River and Simon, however, have a background as traumatic as they come, while Mal and Zoe were comrades on the losing side of a war. Still, the second pair doesn't treat their defeat as entirely traumatic, and focuses on finding little ways to get back at the Alliance (robbery, bar fights, etc.)
144*** Spoofed in a ''[[http://www.homeonthestrange.com/view.php?ID=168 Home on the Strange]]'' strip concerning a hypothetical ''Firefly'' MMORPG: "It's right in the Terms and Conditions: 'No relationship in the [[Creator/JossWhedon Whedonverse]] is allowed to end happily...'"
145** ''Series/{{Dollhouse}}'' is certainly in this vein. There's a whole episode dedicated to proving that Sierra doesn't belong in the house until she has [[spoiler: murdered her rapist]]!
146* While the original ''Series/LawAndOrder'' largely avoids this, both ''[[Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit SVU]]'' and ''[[Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent Criminal Intent]]'' slid into this trope over the years, to the point where one suspects that the detectives had been read their 'Nielsen Rights': "You have the right to Drama; if you waive this right, anything you ''don't'' say can and will be used against you in the Court of Public Opinion. You have the right to a dysfunctional family; if you have no family problems, one will be invented for you...". Prime examples in these series:
147** Robert Goren is the son of a troubled schizophrenic and a serial rapist. His older brother, a heroin addict, was murdered by an obsessed serial killer.
148** Olivia Benson is the daughter of an alcoholic who became pregnant with her after being raped.
149** Alexandra Eames' husband was a police officer who was murdered while on duty. Her father was a detective who was disgraced for corruption.
150** Elliot Stabler's daughter has the HollywoodPsychology version of bipolar disorder, inherited from Elliot's dangerously unstable mother. Elliot himself has violent tendencies that have gotten him in trouble more than once, and his workaholic obsessions have driven his wife away more than once.
151*** Let's start with [=McCoy=]: A lapsed catholic that attributes his legal prowess to having been abused by his father. He can't stop living and dying on every case he has, and has been shown to be willing to bend the law to a very high degree to get a conviction. [[spoiler:He also carried through with convicting a priest that confessed to cover for the real criminal (or so [=McCoy=] thinks)]]. He's also had affairs with every female ADA he's had up through Kincaid, [[spoiler:and the only reason he stopped is because she dies]]. It really says something that there's more to be listed (that are considered to be enough in themselves to list a character dysfunctional), but they're ''mild'' compared to the rest. He's dysfunctional enough for the entire cast, but they have their own stuff they're dealing with.
152*** Ah, Detective Briscoe, where to begin with you? Well, your daughters hate you. In fact, one of those daughters is a meth addict [[spoiler:who's killed after testifying against a dealer]]. You're a recovering alcoholic, and one slip causes the current ADA, Kincaid, to drive you home. While she's driving you home, you confess to her that you wish she was your daughter. [[spoiler:Five seconds later, the car is struck by a drunk driver and she dies. You blame yourself.]] You were also accused by ''your partner'' and ''your boss'' of falsifying a confession, based solely on the fact that the criminal said he didn't confess.
153*** Detective Curtis' wife is dying [[spoiler:more recently, has died]] of MS, which is why he leaves the force. He thinks that his wife's MS is a result of his cheating on her, and is later accused of falsifying evidence to help a woman he is accused of sleeping with.
154*** DA Schiff has many friends in high places. They're all absurdly corrupt. He also pulled the plug on his wife after she suffered a stroke.
155*** ADA Carmicheal was [[spoiler:raped in law school]], and a very good friend of hers (a fellow ADA) gets murdered by mobsters she is helping to convict.
156*** Lieutenant Van Buren injured a mugger and killed his partner... who turned out to be a mentally retarded teenager. Her title is grounds for dysfunction as well, as it's discovered that the case that caused her to be promoted was based on evidence that a forensic scientist falsified. More recently, she was diagnosed with cervical cancer as a result of a STD that she received because her husband had been cheating on her.
157*** Admittedly, most of L&O tends to focus on the cases, rather than the characters, but nearly any time part of a character's backstory is revealed, it's something really bad.
158* ''Series/{{Leverage}}'' features this for most of the main characters:
159** Nate was an honest man before the insurance company he worked for as an investigator rejected the policy on his son's health coverage causing him to die. As a result of this, he becomes a [[FunctionalAddict functioning (most of the time) alcoholic]] who lives JustLikeRobinHood.
160** No one actually knows who Sophie really is, as she is a grifter who is constantly living in new identities.
161** As the only member of the team to have physically hurt people in the past, Eliot is TheAtoner and was probably abused as a child.
162** Parker is the most broken of the main cast. She grew up in the foster care system without ever knowing her family, apart from her brother who died at a young age. After being caught for car theft when she was 12, she trained under the greatest thief in the world as a teenager who kept her away from his real family. To top it off, WordOfGod indicates that she also has UsefulNotes/AspergerSyndrome, meaning that she never really fits in in social situations. She also may have killed her last foster parents (the episode doesn't show if they were inside their house when she blew it up), but it's clear that the father in that household was [[AbusiveParents abusive]].
163** Hardison is the only member of the main cast that seems to be relatively normal as the PlayfulHacker. Like Parker, he was raised in the foster system, but his "Nana" was good to him and he speaks fondly of her. Hardison {{lampshade|Hanging}}s the contrast between his upbringing and Parker's in one episode.
164* ''Series/{{Lost}}''. The majority of characters have issues with their fathers, stepfathers, fathers-in-law, or other father figures (the exceptions being Shannon and Ana Lucia, who hate their stepmother and mother, respectively). Plus various other dysfunctionalities. It's saying something when the ''former Iraqi torturer'' is the most level-headed person on the island. One of the earliest episodes is even titled "All the Best Cowboys have Daddy Issues." Turns out to be an InvokedTrope as [[spoiler: Jacob was looking for people who were missing something in their lives to succeed him in protecting the island]].
165* Everyone in ''Series/MadMen''. Or at least, all of the characters who are married.
166* In ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'' the entire family is dysfunctional. In one episode Malcolm discovers a "normal" family and starts spending all his time there as the kids' babysitter, enjoying the "normalcy". Until [[spoiler: he discovers that they were using a video camera to spy on him (something that is actually considered ok by many when it comes to child care) and he decides that although his family is dysfunctional, they are honest with him]].
167* ''Series/TheMentalist''. Every single member of the team has a DarkAndTroubledPast, and Jane is also, frankly, [[DefectiveDetective mentally unstable]].
168* The Harpers of ''Series/MyFamily'' are a pretty messed-up bunch. Ben is a seriously emotionally distant, snarky and abrasive parent; Susan is a ControlFreak of the first order; Janey is a narcissistic and shallow DumbBlonde; Michael is the OnlySaneMan; and Nick is...[[TheDitz Nick]]. Their relatives and friends tend to be equally messed up.
169* ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'': Every resident of Camden County
170* ''Series/{{NCIS}}'':
171** Gibbs lost his wife and daughter in the early nineties and has had three divorces since. He and his father don't get along, and he avoids going home at all costs.
172** Tony lost his mother at a young age. His father has been married several times since, and up until season seven, they appear to have been estranged.
173** Ziva lost her younger sister as a teenager. Her father raised her to be an assassin, [[spoiler:ordered her to kill her half-brother, left her to die in Somalia, and tried to pin a murder on her]]. Her boyfriend [[spoiler: also turned out to be a terrorist]].
174** [=McGee=] can't seem to sustain a relationship to save his life, but whether this is due to his relationship abilities or just the women he chooses is kind of up for grabs. They've also given him Daddy issues as of Season 9.
175** Abby discovers she's been adopted and her (dead) parents never told her. She, and the team in general, can't have functional out-of-work friendships or romantic relationships, and tends to seek a substitute family in their coworkers. Congratulations, NCIS writers. You've officially given the field team, and now Abby too, issues with their parents.
176** After her father's suicide, Jenny Shepard had a decade-long obsession with the arms dealer she suspected of killing him.
177* ''Series/NightAndDay'' parodies soapy dysfunction in spades, with pretty much every character of note. Many of the weekly episode blocks/omnibuses will showcase a ‘breakdown of the week’ – to cite just a few examples, Natalie Harper randomly becoming a prostitute; hairdresser Roxanne Doyle attacking the barnets of all who have wronged her; Mike Brake stuffing himself with junk food to a cartoon-like degree; and a suicidal Duncan Harper holding his friends hostage with a grenade in a church as they confess their sins, in an attempt to talk him out of detonating it. Lampshaded in the final few episodes, as all the characters begin to book in therapy sessions with none other than the BigBad (who is not a therapist), without any sensible explanation.
178* ''Series/NipTuck'': Christian Troy's mother was raped by his father; he was then given up for adoption. The adoptive father sexually abused Christian. Sean [=McNamara=]'s father was abusive towards Sean because he had a cleft lip. Dad left the family when mom secretly paid to have Sean's lip fixed. Sean's ex-wife Julia slept with Christian on the eve of their wedding and became pregnant with Matt. Sean believed that Matt was his son until a DNA test revealed that Christian was his biological father. Julia's mother Erica was emotionally abusive and neglected Julia for all of her life. Sean and Julia's daughter Annie is ignored by both of her parents and eats her hair out of stress. Youngest son Conor has lobster claw hands, Matt married Christian's ex-fiancee, porn star Kimber and had a baby with her. Kimber and Matt got hooked on meth. Matt's done some really crazy shit, but most recently he turned to a life of crime while ''dressed as a mime'' and is now in prison, having just killed his prison husband. Liz Cruz seemed to be above all the crazy, but she married Christian at the end of season 5 and divorced in the first episode of season 6. Even Christian's adopted son Wilbur has some dysfunction. His mother Gina met Christian at a sexaholics meeting and his biological father was part of an orgy that Gina hosted. It looks like Nurse Linda is the only same person at the asylum that is [=McNamara=]/Troy.
179* No one from ''Series/{{Oz}}'' escapes this trope, not even the people who aren't prisoners.
180* The Sallinger family on ''Series/PartyOfFive''. It really is a wonder that none of them picked up on being {{Cosmic Plaything}}s to a FinaglesLaw obsessed writer.
181* ESPN's short-lived ''Playmakers'' series featured a football team where seemingly every player had at least one major dysfunction, including drug addiction, marital abusive, steroid abuse, closet homosexuality and inevitable rabid homophobia, adultery all over the place, a player suffering near-debilitating guilt for having paralyzed an opponent and anything else you could think of to some extent. It's amazing they had time to play any football.
182* The cast of ''Series/PleaseLikeMe''. Josh, Tom, and Claire all deal with issues of co-dependency, low self-esteem, and difficulties keeping relationships; Josh's dad Alan can't seem to let go of his feelings for his ex-wife despite having a girlfriend (whose relationship with him is also strenuous); and Josh's mother Rose, Arnold, Hannah, and Ginger are all mentally ill and spend much of the second season in the mental hospital.
183* Most ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' teams are fairly well-adjusted. [[Series/PowerRangersRPM The RPM team]], however, is composed of an [[AcePilot ex-military pilot]], [[BraveScot a Scottish mechanic]], [[FallenPrincess a former rich girl]], [[HalfHumanHybrid a Venjix hybrid]], and [[GeniusDitz a bumbling ex-criminal]] [[GivingTheSwordToANoob who only became a Ranger by mistake]]. They're later joined by a [[SingleMindedTwins pair of twins]] [[CuteAndPsycho who love to]] [[PsychopathicManchild make things explode]]. And their mentor is a BrokenBird with ''major'' issues stemming from [[spoiler:being raised in [[GovernmentConspiracy a government think tank as a child]], and her efforts to escape [[UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom accidentally causing the apocalypse]], resulting in [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone her creating the Ranger powers to atone for what she did]].]] And all of this while defending the last bastion of humanity in a DomedCity from a [[AIIsACrapshoot killer computer virus]] who's already managed to do what most ''PR'' villains never could and actually TakeOverTheWorld. Suffice it to say, it's a minor miracle they actually bonded and grew as a team and didn't just all kill each other.
184* ''Series/PrisonBreak'' has a metric buttload of this. But then, it's kinda necessary to justify why all these people would be dumb/crazy enough to get caught up in the series' main story arc. Some of the kickers are child rapist and murderer T-Bag, who was sexually abused by ''his'' father and forced to memorise the thesaurus, or Mahone, who [[spoiler:went insane while chasing a fugitive, got hooked on the meds he used to stay sane, caught and then murdered the fugitive in cold blood and was blackmailed by the villains into becoming their assassin]].
185** This is not counting all the extra crap that gets piled on the characters over the course of the series, like [[spoiler:the murder of Mahone's young son, which drives him even further off the deep end]].
186** Revelations made during the series that actually make previous dysfunctions seem even worse, like Michael and Lincoln discovering [[spoiler:not one, but ''both'' their parents worked for the villains, including their long-dead mother who isn't really dead]].
187* All the ''Series/PushingDaisies'' regulars have to deal with some scarring stuff, but they tend to take it with a great deal of dignity. Ned, Lily and Vivian are the most messed up, but even they soldier on quite well.
188** Ned: Watched his mother die. Twice. Accidentally killed his childhood sweetheart's father. Got sent by his neglectful father to a boarding school. [[spoiler: Upon solving his first "case", was mistaken for a murderer and sent to jail. When he was ''ten''.]] Can't touch his girlfriend.
189** Chuck: Her father died when she was eight. She went to live with her aunts, [[spoiler: one of which actually was her biological mother]]. Upon seeking liberty from her reclusion, got killed in a cruise.
190** Olive: Grew up as a LonelyRichKid. [[spoiler: Was once accidentally kidnapped by two thieves who were very kind to her... and got sent to jail by the Snooks unjustly. Kept for years an oath about the murder of her jockey friend.]]
191** Emerson: BornDetective trained from infancy in the art of crook-catching by his own mother. [[spoiler: Fell in love with - and was promptly swindled by - grifter Lila Robinson, who prevented him from seeing his own daughter for about nine years.]]
192** Lily and Vivian: Two [[SiblingYinYang quite different]] siblings who were prevented from pursuing a career in synchronized swimming by their social phobias. [[spoiler: Lily fell in love with Vivian's fiance, Charles, and had a child with him. Upon finding out, Vivian was not exactly pleased.]]
193* ''Series/RescueMe'' is a show about some ''seriously'' flawed individuals.
194* The heroes of ''Series/{{Scorpion}}'' are a group of brilliant but maladjusted geniuses with NoSocialSkills.
195* ''Series/{{Scrubs}}''. For a comedy, most of the show's characters are pretty messed up whether it be in their backstory, personality, or both. Turk is probably the most normal and well-adjusted of the lot.
196** ''He'' has a couple of episodes where it's implied that his family is somewhat dysfunctional, although nothing compared to the other characters'.
197-->'''Turk''': Let me share with you a typical Thanksgiving at the Turk household. It starts with my mother yelling at my sister for yelling at my grandmother who's yelling at the television screen, which happens to be the microwave. And then my militant brother Jabari, formerly Bob, gives my father attitude for using the word black, even though he's referring to the turkey, which, by the way, only got burnt because instead of turning the oven off, my bi-polar Aunt Leslie tried to shove her head in it!
198** As Carla puts it:
199--->'''Carla''': Me -- dead mom. J.D. -- dead dad. Elliot -- emotionally abusive parents. Dr. Cox -- emotionally and physically abusive dead parents which he may have killed; no one's sure.
200%%* ''Series/TheSecretLifeOfTheAmericanTeenager''
201* The ''entire'' main cast of ''Series/{{Sherlock}}'', and then some:
202** Sherlock himself: InsufferableGenius with NoSocialSkills, self-diagnosed [[SociopathicHero Sociopathic]] AntiHero, who [[FriendlessBackground didn't have any real friends until he met]] [[OnlyFriend John]], who is hated by the entire police force sans Lestrade, who solves crimes only to relieve boredom rather than out of a desire to help people, who forgets to eat and shoots holes in the wall, who stores body parts in the household appliances and rides the tube covered in pig's blood, who frequently relapses to nicotine and drug addictions, and who is (from his perspective) constantly SurroundedByIdiots.
203** [[BadassNormal John]] started the series depressed, alone, and friendless, with a psychosomatic limp. He himself acknowledges that meeting Sherlock was the one of the best things that ever happened to him. However, while he is otherwise a very nice guy, throughout the series, he shows himself to be an [[InHarmsWay adrenaline junkie]] who misses the action of war. As Sherlock lampshades in "His Last Vow":
204--> ''You're an adrenaline junkie who can't go for a month living in the suburbs without storming a crack den and beating up a junkie. Your best friend is a sociopath who solves crimes as an alternative to getting high. (...) My point is, you are repeatedly drawn to dangerous situations and people.''
205** [[AloofBigBrother Mycroft]] takes many of Sherlock's InsufferableGenius traits [[ExaggeratedTrope Up to Eleven]]; Mycroft himself once states that he's "living in a world of goldfish". By the beginning of Series 3, Sherlock, at least, has friends; Mycroft [[FriendlessBackground does not appear to have any]], and Sherlock heavily implies that he is secretly lonely, even if he doesn't realize it.
206** Molly's father died (implied to have been when she was fairly young), she has a hopeless crush on Sherlock only to be treated as his ChewToy for much of the early series, briefly dates the guy who turns out to be the most dangerous man in Britain [[spoiler:(Moriarty)]], and "moves on" from Sherlock by getting engaged to a guy who looks and dresses ''just like him'' (and they eventually break up). She's also a little socially awkward, though not nearly as bad as Sherlock himself.
207** Even the more "normal" characters have this. [[InspectorLestrade Lestrade]] and his wife apparently separated in the past, and tried to get back together only to break up again when he discovers (via Sherlock) that she was cheating on him with a PE teacher. He's frequently shown up by an "amateur" detective, and his fellow officers are entirely unsupportive of his inclusion of Sherlock in their cases, leaving Lestrade stuck in the middle.
208** And [[TeamMom Mrs. Hudson]] is apparently a former exotic dancer whose "pressure point" (weakness) is marijuana, and was married to a man who ran a drug cartel. It was so bad that the reason she "loves Sherlock forever" is because he ''made sure'' her husband was executed.
209** Anderson, formerly Sherlock's ButtMonkey on the forensics team, felt so bad about his role in Sherlock's downfall in "Reichenbach" that he became a conspiracy theorist obsessed with the idea that [[spoiler:Sherlock was still alive]], grew a BeardOfSorrow, got suspended from Scotland Yard, and is implied to have had a minor SanitySlippage.
210*** [[http://68.media.tumblr.com/2e06c185fd8d67c716c7b4c9d30cceac/tumblr_inline_myt5b5DP771rkqtlk.gif ''Implied?'']]
211** Even the seemingly-normal Mary, John's new wife, fits this. [[spoiler:Turns out she's a former CIA assassin who killed a ton of people, and her "name" is actually taken from a stillborn baby; the initials of her real name are [[MythologyGag A.G.R.A.]] She apparently did stuff so bad that she feels certain John would no longer love her if he knew the details about all of it]].
212* Just about every major character in the Scottish/Canadian kids' show ''Series/ShoeboxZoo'' had this trope. The heroine is an angst-ridden eleven-year old who lost her mother to cancer and then had the fate of the world dumped on her shoulders, the four [[LivingToy living toys]] suffer from a FateWorseThanDeath for 1100 years, one of whom, [[NobleWolf Wolfgang]], hates his father for denying him his rightful heritage and then turning him into a toy for trying to save him from his own dark magic, Michael Scot's servant [=McTaggart=] was tortured and then made immortal as punishment for stealing his spellbook, which Wolfgang also tried to dispose of, and the bad guy Toledo is an ArtificialHuman made by Michael, abused, and turned evil to prove his worth.
213* In the HBO series ''Series/SixFeetUnder'', every character is subjected to some horrific event at least once within the run of the series. While the show centers around death, most of the characters have lived or will live through situations seemingly worse than death - sometimes to teach them AnAesop and sometimes just to just have them go through horrible events for the sheer pleasure of it - and often leaves them with countless dysfunctions and irrational fears.
214* ''Series/{{Smallville}}'':
215** The mothers of most main characters are [[MissingMom dead before the series begins]].
216** Clark Kent and his cousin [[Characters/SupergirlTheCharacter Kara]] are the [[LastOfHisKind Last of Their Kind]] after [[EarthShatteringKaboom Krypton exploded]].
217** Chloe Sullivan's mother ended up in a mental institution and [[spoiler:both mother and daughter has psychosis-inducing meteor infection]].
218** [[Characters/SupermanLexLuthor Lex Luthor]] probably has it worst. His mother [[spoiler:murdered his younger brother]]. She soon died afterwards. And he is [[ArchnemesisDad definitely not on friendly terms]] with his father. [[spoiler:Both he and his father are {{Self Made Orphan}}s.]]
219** [[Characters/SupermanSupportingCast Lana Lang]]'s parents were killed by a meteor. And she never, ''ever'' stops {{Wangst}}ing about it.
220** [[Characters/SupermanLoisLane Lois Lane]]'s mother died when she was six, and her army general father is not very nice. [[spoiler:She also has a {{manipulative|Bastard}}, backstabbing sister.]]
221** [[Characters/SupermanJimmyOlsen Jimmy Olsen]]'s father is a huge drunk and he never met his mother.
222** And it extends to dysfunction relationships. And we mean, ALL of them, with the only completely healthy pairings being [[MuggleFosterParents Jonathan and Martha]].
223*** Lionel and Lilian Luthor - just look at the Lex entry.
224*** Clark and Lana is built on secrets and lies, plus a huge dose of {{wangst}}ing. Lana's vain, self-absorbed personality did not help one bit.
225* Good god, ''Series/TheSopranos''. Where to even start:
226** The main character of the series, [[AntiHero Tony Soprano]], is a mobster who suffers from [[TraumaButton panic attacks]] and grew up with a father who was a {{Sadist}}, and a mother who never loved him, giving him serious parental issues.
227** [[DistractedByTheLuxury Carmela Soprano]] is Tony's wife who turns a blind eye to all of his crimes, except for his sexual philandering, and fully enjoys the spoils of being a mob wife.
228** [[DrugsAreBad Christopher Moltisanti]], Tony's nephew and heir apparent, is a hothead with a drug addiction who constantly seeks Tony's approval, despite their incredibly tenuous relationship.
229** [[GoGetterGirl Meadow Soprano]], Tony's daughter, is a hardworking girl who has to deal with the relatively-conservative culture her parents grew up in, and who slowly becomes more of a traditional MafiaPrincess as the series goes on.
230** [[TheDitz A.J. Soprano]], Tony's son, is overshadowed by his [[GoGetterGirl hardworking]] sister, and the lacks the brains or balls that the rest of his family has.
231** [[HeroicComedicSociopath Paulie Walnuts]] is a PsychopathicManchild and a ProfessionalButtKisser who never feels as if he measures up to other mobsters, and is willing to switch sides if it means moving up within the hierarchy of the New Jersey/New York mafia scene.
232** [[EvilUncle Corrado "Uncle Junior" Soprano Jr.]] desires to have real power and influence within the [=DiMeo=] family, but is unpopular in comparison to his nephew Tony. After being arrested on RICO charges in the Season 1 finale, he loses whatever influence he has on the mob, [[spoiler: and once his trial is over, he descends into dementia. He is also very inadequate about his masculinity, hiding the fact that he gives cunnilingus to his [[TheMistress mistress]]]].
233** [[TheConsigliere Silvio Dante]], while more well-adjusted than most of his fellow mobsters, can't handle the pressure of being acting leader [[spoiler: after Tony is incapacitated]].
234** [[EvilMatriarch Livia Soprano]] is cruel, demoralizing old woman who has no love for her children, [[spoiler: to the point where she even convinces Uncle Junior to sanction a hit on Tony,]] and is the main source of Tony's mommy issues.
235** [[AxCrazy Richie Aprile]] is the brother of the well-respected and deceased Jackie Aprile, who gets released from prison in Season 2 and doesn't restrain himself from being a violent, petty, and all-around unlikeable thug.
236** [[AffablyEvil Bobby Baccalieri]] is much more sane than most characters on the show, but he goes through a giant TraumaCongaLine throughout the course of the series that results in him [[spoiler: getting killed in a mob war]].
237** [[ItsAllAboutMe Janice Soprano]], Tony's older sister, is a self-absorbed and petty bitch who tries to work her way upwards as a GoldDigger.
238** [[SmallNameBigEgo Jackie Aprile Jr.]] is the sole son of the aforementioned Jackie Aprile, and despite Tony's best efforts to keep him out of the mob and its lifestyle, Jackie feels entitled to it due to his heritage, and still has lingering issues over his father dying of cancer.
239** [[ICouldaBeenAContender Ralph Cifaretto]] is a crude, sycophantic, and violent weasel who feels overshadowed by Tony Soprano and Jackie Aprile Sr., and is disliked by plenty members of TheMafia. Probably his worst moment is [[spoiler: beating a [[WouldHitAGirl stripper]] [[WouldHurtAChild carrying his child]] to death, which is enough for Tony to assault him and for the other mobsters to hate him entirely]].
240** [[HeelFaceRevolvingDoor Tony Blundetto]] is the cousin of Tony Soprano, and who has one of the most positive relationships on the show with him, with the two considering themselves to be surrogate brothers. However, Tony B. is unable to go straight after his release from prison, even with Tony Soprano's help and blessing, [[spoiler: and when he hears that his old cellmate died as a causality of a leadership crisis in the New York mafia, he ends up shooting the Leotardo brothers (killing one of them) and kickstarting the [=DiMeo=]-Lupertazzi war]].
241** [[MouthOfSauron Johnny Sack]] seems to be one of the better mobsters at first, being TheConsigliere to Carmine Lupertazzi Sr. in the New York mafia, as well as an intermediary between the [=DiMeo=] and Lupertazzi families, and even as an occasional mediator between members of the [=DiMeo=] family. However, he is violently protective of his wife and incredibly opportunistic, and loses much of his ReasonableAuthorityFigure status [[spoiler: after Carmine Sr. dies. In Season 6, he is in jail and ends up testifying against the mob, [[ShaggyDogStory only to die of cancer shortly]] after]].
242** [[ArmoredClosetGay Vito Spatafore]] is initially just another grunt who works his way up the [=DiMeo=] family, but as it turns out, he's a homosexual man in a culture that violently frowns upon non-heterosexuals. When this is revealed to everyone else, he leaves town and spends several months in hiding, [[spoiler: only to return to New Jersey and get brutally killed by Phil Leotardo]].
243** [[FinalBoss Phil Leotardo]] is arguably the most brutal mobster on the show. Initially released from prison in the beginning of Season 5, [[spoiler: his [[BigBrotherInstinct younger brother's]] death at the hands of Tony Blundetto make him a prime source of hostility towards the [=DiMeo=] family, and once Johnny Sack is imprisoned, he becomes acting leader of the Lupertazzi family. He brutally murders Vito Spatafore for being gay, with it being implied that Phil Leotardo might also be gay himself, and ends up devising a plan to kill the three highest-ranking members of the [=DiMeo=] family (Tony Soprano, Silvio Dante, and Bobby Baccalieri)]].
244* ''Series/StargateSG1'' Shall we make a list?
245** Jack O'Neill: Originally joined the SGC on a suicide mission because he was depressed after his son accidentally shot himself. Has an implied dark past working for Special Ops, but they never go into too much detail, However, whenever he meets someone from his past, he always has issues with them.
246*** Not too much detail, other than noting that he had a parachute accident on the wrong side of the Iran/Iraq border during the First Gulf War, and he had to save himself by walking nine days with a fractured skull and broken leg. Also that he spent four months in an Iraqi prison after being left for dead by his friend, who he never forgave. None of this touches upon the myriad traumas suffered during the series, most notably the episode [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CtAez-1X5cE]] Abyss.
247** Daniel Jackson: Saw his parents die when he was eight. Lived in foster care, failed at every romantic relationship, before joining the SGC because he had nowhere else to go. Stayed behind with his wife on an alien planet for a year before she was kidnapped and taken over by creepy evil aliens. And that's just his backstory.
248** Sam Carter: Her mother died when she was pretty young, and she and her brother both blamed her father for that. When Sam eventually got over it, her brother never forgave her, and her father was already distant and detached. Add to that the crazy and possibly abusive (ex)fiance, and you've got yourself a walking tragedy.
249*** Almost all the men she's ever been involved with have [[CartwrightCurse croaked]].
250** Teal'c: Bent on getting revenge for his father's murder. Also grew up in slavery to an evil guy. (Same evil guy who kidnapped Daniel's wife. He was a ''really'' evil guy). Abandoned the love of his life when she joined a temple, and had to leave his wife and son behind when he went off to start a revolution.
251** Jonas Quinn: Plagued with guilt after standing idly by while watching his predecessor take a lethal dose of radiation. Exiled from his home planet for trying to set things right.
252** Cameron Mitchell: Cam had to grow up watching his father cope with being a paraplegic, and later during service in the Air Force was the trigger man for a mistargeted air strike that resulted in friendly casualties.
253** Vala Mal Doran: Host to evil Goa'uld Qetesh, tortured by her own people, abandoned by her father, sold by her mother, innumerable failed marriages, tortured again, gave birth to the BigBad's [[TheDragon Dragon]], left on a hostile planet for the better part of a year, spent decades trapped on a ship, and finally entered into a loving and supportive relationship which was immediately retconned. Ouch.
254*** Stargate doesn't delve all ''that'' much into the dark sides of the character's pasts, though you know it's there.
255* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''. While they might have started out darker than your average [[TheCutie cutie]], Sam and Dean have been [[BreakTheCutie broken into martyred, self-loathing, co-dependent, slightly suicidal basketcases]], after Mary's death John was a suicidal, [[AbusiveParents emotionally abusive]] {{jerkass}} who you can't help but pity, Mary might have started this whole mess anyway, Bela turned out to be a broken, sexually abused fourteen year old who made a DealWithTheDevil, [[TheWoobie Jimmy (Castiel's vessel)]] has had to say goodbye to his wife and daughter forever in order to save their life, and Bobby had to kill his own wife. Twice. Even the angels have severe daddy-issues. And that's not even mentioning the show's love of killing characters.
256* ''Series/{{Taken}}'': The characters possess a wide variety of flaws and suffer from numerous addictions and disorders: alcoholism (Anne Crawford, her father Colonel Thomas Campbell and Russell Keys), Oedipus complexes (Mary Crawford's relationship with her childhood HonoraryUncle Chet Wakeman), multiple cases of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder as a result of alien abductions (Russell, his son Jesse and grandson Charlie), drug abuse (Jesse again) and outright sociopathy (Owen Crawford). Notably, while the Clarke family experiences many hardships over the years, they manage to survive relatively unscathed compared to the Crawfords and the Keys.
257* ''Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles'' runs rampant with this. John Connor suffers from post-traumatic stress and the sheer weight of BecauseDestinySaysSo, Sarah Connor has to deal with raising her son through the hardest time of his life, relationship issues, ''and'' fighting to save the world without killing anyone, Derek Reese is just plain sociopathic and suffers from enough PTSD for a battalion of Vietnam vets, and ''don't even get started'' on the mountain of psychological issues with Cameron....
258* ''Series/ThisIsWonderland'', starting with the name. Unglamourous lawyers representing hideously dysfunctional people, many of whom are drug addicts, and just waiting for their nervous breakdown. Luckily, it's only a borderline example, as there were a few people who were moderately well adjusted.
259* The whole point of ''Series/{{Titus}}'' (and the stand-up it was based on) was Christopher's supremely dysfunctional family, especially his manic-depressive schizophrenic mother and his hard-drinking/chronic-marrying/wussy-hating father. "Hey, once you've driven your drunk father to mom's parole hearing, what else is there?"
260* The ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' team. An immortal man obsessed with finding the only person who he thinks [[WhoWantsToLiveForever can remove his immortality.]] A [[JerkassWithAHeartOfGold hedonistic]] doctor who lost his lover to an alien and [[spoiler: eventually half-dies]]. [[AllLoveIsUnrequited A woman whose love interests always seem to either not return her affection or are evil.]] A man [[TheButlerDidIt hiding]] his crazed cyberchick girlfriend in the basement of their secret hideout while struggling with his bisexuality. [[LoveDodecahedron A woman who cheats on her boyfriend with a coworker, while in love with her boss.]] And that's just to name a ''few'' of their issues.
261** And, as of the end of the ''[[Series/TorchwoodChildrenOfEarth Children of Earth]]'' miniseries, [[spoiler: [[KilledOffForReal three of them are dead]], one has run away to pick up men in outer-space bars after [[DespairEventHorizon killing his own grandson]] and one is...happily married and pregnant with her first (human) child, though feels guilty for feeling so happy]].
262* ''Series/UchuuSentaiKyuranger'' has most of the team deal with some kind of DarkAndTroubledPast. It's a side effect of living in [[CrapsackWorld CrapsackUniverse]] ruled by Jark Matter. They spent the whole story trying to figure out how exactly they are supposed to fit together as a team and helping each other cope along the way.
263** Stinger/Sasori Orange tries hard to cover it, but still turns out to be painfully awkward kid whose self esteem is so abysmal that it probably hit negative numbers at one point of time. [[note]] That time he went on suicide mission/temper tantrum that nearly got everyone killed and the universe doomed.[[/note]] This is largely because he was bullied as a child and had to watch his beloved brother slowly slide off a slippery slope trying to protect him. His tribe was slaughtered in an attack that his brother led after betraying the planet to Jark Matter. His brother is generally a TraumaButton for him.
264* ''Series/{{The Umbrella Academy|2019}}'': All of the Hargreeves siblings are traumatized, emotionally unstable individuals, partly because of their [[AbusiveParents horrific upbringing]] at the hands of Sir Reginald and partly because of their own individual [[DarkAndTroubledPast screwed-up backstories]]:
265** Luther was transformed into a grotesque BeastMan by his father following a near-death experience, and was then exiled to the moon.
266** Diego [[spoiler:had to watch his ex-girlfriend die as a result of circumstances that he believed to be his fault, and later had to kill [[TeamMom Grace]]]].
267** Allison [[spoiler:lost her marriage and visitation rights with her daughter after abusing her CompellingVoice]].
268** Klaus became a drug addict in order to [[ISeeDeadPeople stop seeing ghosts]], and spent years homeless and in and out of rehab. [[spoiler:He also served a year in the Vietnam War, during which his boyfriend died in his arms]].
269** Number Five spent forty-five years alone in an apocalyptic future following a failed attempt at TimeTravel, and [[spoiler:was forced to work as a ProfessionalKiller for the Commission for another thirteen years]]. By the time the story begins, he's a sixty year old trapped in a thirteen year old body.
270** Vanya withstood extra abuse from Reginald, and is ostracized by her siblings and most other people in her life, for [[TheTeamNormal not having powers]] - as a result, she's developed depression and a severe inferiority complex. Then it turns out that the one man who's ever loved her [[spoiler:is an abusive sociopath who only ever took interest in her as a means of getting revenge against her siblings]].
271* ''Series/TheVampireDiaries'': There are a lot of interpersonal problems between the main characters.
272** To Elaborate: Elena and Jeremy's parents died before the series started, prompting Jeremy to turn to drugs and alcohol to cope while Elena buries her feelings in her diary.
273** Jeremy's girlfriend's keep dying, then HE died and was resurrected but his girlfriend Bonnie died in his place, and everyone keeps erasing his memory without his consent.
274** Elena is in love with two vampires while knowing it's probably not good for her and that her parents were vampire hunters, she learns in the same conversation that she was adopted and that her adoptive father died saving her life, is sometimes implied to have a death wish, she found her birth parents but they died too, was a sacrifice in an arcane ritual, became a vampire against her wishes and nearly ended up committing suicide due to the hunter's curse, turned into a blood hungry psychopath after shutting off her emotions when her brother died, has a tendency to put everyone else's needs above her own even when she really shouldn't, her crazy doppelganger/ancestor stole her body to avoid death, and is now in a magical coma that won't end until her best friend dies.
275** Stefan and Damon grew up with a verbally abusive father, their mother died(only she really became a vampire and abandoned her family to go on a killing spree until she was trapped in a pocket dimension), they were shot and killed by their own father when they tried to save the women they loved.
276** Stefan is a ripper, forced Damon to become a vampire against his will, killed his father, has a hero complex, and was friends with Klaus at one point.
277** Damon has an inferiority complex the size of China towards his brother, spent at least a hundred years trying to free the woman he loved from captivity only to discover she'd been free the whole time and never gave a shit about him, has complicated feelings towards being human, loves Elena so much it could possibly destroy them both, most of his attempts to be good blow up in his face, he actually managed to make some real friends but they keep dying, was held in captivity by the Augustine group for years, and he was killed/ trapped in a pocket dimension with an insane killer.
278** Caroline's parents are divorced because her father is gay then he died in season three, she wasn't very close to her mother for while and a few years after that changed her mother died of cancer despite Caroline's best attempts to save her, was used as human blood bag by Damon in the first season, became a vampire in the second(or in her words a neurotic control freak perfectionist on crack), her friends keep dying, and she keeps falling for guys who need more therapy than she does.
279** Bonnie's mother ran out on her when she was three, her father was barely around and didn't approve of the whole witch thing, her grandmother died, by season six her mother is a vampire and her father is dead. The guy she was dating cheated on her with his dead ex-girlfriend, her two best friends are vampires, her love interest died and then she died bringing him back to life, and she ended up stuck in a pocket dimension with Damon and a psychopathic killer.
280** Matt never knew his father, his mother is a drunk who ran out on him, and he has watched his older sister and friends either die or turn into monsters.
281** Alaric came home one night to find his wife murdered by a vampire, became a vampire hunter to avenge her only to discover that she wasn't killed but turned at her own request, his new love interest is forcibly turned into a vampire and sacrificed by Klaus, his best friend is Damon, his magic ring turned him into a psychotic killer with a split personality, he was turned into a vampire by a crazy witch who wanted him to kill all vampires, died in Damon's arms, was resurrected and became human again, he met a nice woman with whom he fell in love and was going to marry her but she and their unborn children were murdered at the wedding.
282** Katherine was forced to give up her daughter moments after giving birth, was exiled and then almost made a sacrifice in an arcane ritual, was on the run from Klaus for over 500 years, became human again against her wishes and was finally dragged off to hell.
283** Klaus grew up with an abusive father who turned out to not be his real father and who hated him for no real reason, his mother turned him and siblings into vampires to protect them after their younger brother died tragically, his mother sealed his werewolf side in what looks to have been a painful process, he got the hunter's curse, he's got deep abandonment issues that have lead him to dagger his siblings and cart them around in coffins so they won't ever leave him, and both his parents keep trying to kill him.
284** Elijah is basically a very battered babysitter to all his siblings, he has deep regrets over not protecting Klaus from his father in his youth, he killed the woman he loved, and constantly puts everyone else ahead of himself while keeping his own feelings hidden under a carefully crafted noble demon persona.
285** Rebekah bore the brunt of Klaus's abuse for a thousand years, has even worse luck in the romance department than Alaric, and desperately wants to be human but always finds that wish out of reach.
286** Tyler grew up with a verbally abusive father who then died, his girlfriend died and then his favorite uncle, he became a werewolf when he accidentally killed a girl, then he was turned into a hybrid as an experiment, and his mother was murdered after he tried to rebel against Klaus. And that's only the main cast!
287* The entire cast of ''Series/{{Weeds}}'' are constantly screwing themselves and each other over, typically in an attempt to escape the consequences of completely different problems, which they usually brought upon themselves in the first place.
288* ''Series/TheWestWing'' is an unusual case; everyone on the cast has father issues, but very few mommy problems.
289** Jed Bartlet's father beat him for being smarter and Catholic.
290** Leo [=McGarry=]'s father passed on his alcoholism gene before committing suicide.
291** Sam Seabourne's father is unfaithful to his wife.
292** Toby Ziegler's father was a convicted felon and member of the Jewish Mafia.
293** CJ Cregg's father is [[spoiler: suffering from Alzheimer's and at times forgets who she is]].
294** Charlie Young's father is conspicuously absent. Charlie's mother [[spoiler: was killed in the line of duty]].
295** And finally, Josh's father was actually very supportive of his son and by all accounts a good guy - [[spoiler: until he died]]. Josh gets to substitute daddy issues for a literal dead little sister.
296* ''Series/{{Yellowjackets}}'' is about a group of teens who were stranded in the wilderness and then forced to eat each other to survive, and their adult selves 20 years later who have not recovered from that trauma. Needless to say, even if they didn't have issues going in (nearly all of them did, for one reason or another), they have issues coming out.

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