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8[[caption-width-right:260:All fair questions!]]
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10->''"By the time you figure out what was wrong with that, it won't matter anymore!"''
11-->-- '''Sauron''', ''[[Creator/LegendaryFrog One Ring to Rule Them All Special Edition]]''
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13%% One quote is sufficient. Please place additional entries on the quotes page.
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16Half an hour after the show is over, a random viewer is staring into their refrigerator, vaguely bemused by the fact that their six-pack of beer has somehow become a two-pack of beer. Rather than work out how this might have happened, it occurs to them to wonder how in the hell [[Series/{{Alias}} Sydney Bristow]] went from Hungary to Melbourne, Australia, then to LA, all within 24 hours. Or maybe it occurs to them that they've never met anyone who ''actually'' named their dog Fido. It didn't bother them during the show. It wasn't until they opened their fridge and discovered they were running short of beer that it became an issue.
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18Fridge Logic has been the writer's-room term for these little InternalConsistency issues for a good while, as in "Don't sweat the Fridge Logic, we've got bigger fish to fry. We've only got 20 minutes left to work in [[NoodleImplements three costume changes, a foreign language, and a weird wig]]." It refers to some illogical or implausible plot point that the audience doesn't realize during the show, but only long afterwards. This naming is highly subjective, since not every person follows the same train of thought. Some people will never even realise there was a problem, while others will call it a PlotHole, since they already noticed the problem during the show.
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20The concept was first suggested by Creator/AlfredHitchcock. When asked about the scene in ''Film/{{Vertigo}}'' when Madeleine mysteriously and impossibly disappears from the hotel Scottie saw her in, he responded by calling it an "icebox scene": a scene that "hits you after you've gone home and start pulling cold chicken out of the icebox."
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22It is also known under a variety of other names:
23* In science fiction circles, this is also known as a "Jellybean Moment". This refers to a story by Creator/HarlanEllison titled ''Literature/RepentHarlequinSaidTheTicktockman'', where the climax of the story involves gumming up the works of the society with the application of jellybeans. It's only after the story has been read that the average reader thinks "[[AssPull Where the heck did he get the jellybeans?]]" This phrase is at the core of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Harlan_Ellison/Archive_2#The_.22Jelly_Bean.22_Incident a famous story involving Ellison at a Worldcon.]] This is also {{Lampshaded}} in-story: "No one has manufactured jelly beans for over a hundred years. Where did he get jelly beans? That's another good question. [[RiddleForTheAges More than likely it will never be answered to your complete satisfaction]]."
24* On the commentary track for the ''Film/HotFuzz'' DVD, the filmmakers refer to this as "popcorn logic." It's five minutes after the movie ends, you're walking out of the theater, finishing off your popcorn, and--''wait a tick!''
25* The writer David Gerrold refers to this as the "refrigerator door question" in his book on writing, ''Worlds of Wonder''. He also gives an example: If Film/{{ET|The Extraterrestrial}} can make the bicycle fly, why didn't he use it at the beginning of the film to avoid pursuit?
26* It has a long history as a famous French idiom: “l’esprit de l’escalier“ — “the wit of the stairs”. [[ComebackTomorrow It’s the clever remark that occurs to you only as you are going down the stairs at the end of a party.]]
27* Popularized by Website/{{Reddit}}, it's referred to in many parts of the internet as "shower thoughts", with the idea being that you start to think extensively about a topic while taking a shower.
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29Ronald D. Moore talks about Fridge Logic extensively on the commentary to ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'' episode (2.02) "Valley of Darkness," likening it to the type of logic used to figure out whether the light in the fridge stays on when the door is closed.
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31Stories with a TomatoSurprise or ThroughTheEyesOfMadness may ''count'' on this phenomenon to prevent you from questioning oddities in what appears to be happening. By the time the Fridge Logic would have hit the audience, they've explained what was really going on, and those problems are explained to be clues that something was up.
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33See also FridgeBrilliance for when there's actually a really good explanation when you think about it, and FridgeHorror when something is incredibly [[NightmareFuel nightmarish]] when you think about it. Sometimes Fridge Logic (and/or a heaping helping of ValuesDissonance) can turn an otherwise happy ending into a {{bittersweet|Ending}} or outright DownerEnding (such as by pointing out the possibility of an InferredHolocaust); for this, see EsotericHappyEnding. This is also related to the MST3KMantra, which allows you to just go along for the ride and not sweat the details. When fans notice these ''during'' the show, it's a plain old PlotHole. Not related to StuffedIntoTheFridge. Also not to be confused with BridgeLogic, the un-tasty OvenLogic, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begriffsschrift Frege logic]] or Bathroom Logic. If the characters themselves fail to ask questions about a given plot development or device, then it's because ApathyKilledTheCat. Fridge Logic is the antithesis of TropesHiddenFromAudience -- usually, those remain "hidden" until the audience really has time to think about them.
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35'''By the way, we have whole ''sections'' of Website/ThisVeryWiki dedicated to these issues. This article just defines a term.''' It neither needs nor wants any examples. To discuss Fridge Logic issues that bug you -- which can be a lot of fun -- see [[Headscratchers/HomePage Headscratchers]], or any of our fine [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/topics.php Forums,]] or the "Fridge" tab on a work's page. If what occurred to you later was a wild theory, see WildMassGuessing.
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