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7With this trope, the characters have absolutely no right affording the quality and amount (especially [[BigEater on the far end]]) of food they eat based on their visible income. It's like FriendsRentControl, only for food rather than living space. It's sometimes for the sake of RuleOfCool and/or FoodPorn.
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9Now, as any professional chef will tell you, it is absolutely possible to prepare gourmet meals using simple and inexpensive ingredients, so it ''is'' possible to invoke this trope in real life. But for the most part, the characters who fall into this trope don't cook... rather, the most frequent thing they make for dinner is reservations, usually at a restaurant two or three steps up from the Burger King's price range. Even worse, they usually spend the whole time having plot-relevant conversations and [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodSandwich don't even eat the food in front of them!]]
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11Contrast with DogFoodDiet. See also FriendsRentControl. In historical fiction, this can overlap with YeGoodeOldeDays as characters are frequently seen eating much better than the average person would have in that period.
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13!!Examples:
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15[[foldercontrol]]
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17[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
18* Inverted in ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' where the crew never have money for food even though they take bounties for millions of woolong. In one episode a bounty they catch is several million woolong and presumably they spend it all on repairs ... were repairs exactly 2.999 million woolong? It's extremely improbable when dealing with millions in cash that they couldn't keep even 500 for food. This could be justified in that the series doesn't follow a regular timeframe, and it could be months later when they run out of cash. Also, it's implied that woolong's value is similar to that of the Japanese yen, that is, closer to one cent than one dollar.
19* ''Manga/{{Gintama}}'''s freelancing team Gintoki, Kagura and Shinpachi almost never get paid for their jobs, either because they get scammed or because of their good-hearted intentions, but strangely they seem to have money to spend on the vast amounts of food that Kagura and Sadaharu tend to consume, sometimes from not-so-cheap places like Otose's snack bar.
20* ''Manga/MissKoizumiLovesRamenNoodles'': One has to wonder how Koizumi can afford to go to all those Ramen shops she goes to every episode.
21* Subverted in ''Manga/OnePiece''. At one point, Luffy berates his crew for them not having enough money. They immediately (and violently) respond that all of their money goes into feeding their BigEater captain.
22* Unlike in the games where you receive money upon winning a battle, characters in ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' are never seen making any money. Despite this, Ash and his friends never have any issue buying food. In contrast, [[GoldfishPoopGang Team Rocket]] always find themselves on the verge of starvation despite being shown taking several part-time jobs to make money.
23* In ''Manga/SquidGirl'', when trying to cure Ika Musume of the hiccups, the girls prepare her a huge fancy meal that includes ''lobster''. This from a seaside shack that can't afford to fix a hole in the wall (though that's deliberate to keep Ika busy with working rather than invading).
24* Inverted completely with [[BigBad Rex Godwin's]] former henchman Jeagar in his backstory in ''Anime/YuGiOh5Ds''. He was the oldest son in a family of circus performers, but business was bad, so they couldn't afford to feed themselves. (Given the fact that they lived on Cup Ramen, a traditionally inexpensive food, this suggests that it was even worse than Jeagar suggested.) As a result, Jeagar, being the eldest son, left the circus and went to Neo Domino where he became a member of Sector Security, and managed to keep his family well-fed with a much bigger salary. Unfortunately, that led to him becoming a member of [[AncientConspiracy Yliaster]], and ultimately, an accomplice to morally questionable deeds he later regretted, especially when his family was in danger as a result.
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27[[folder:Comic Books]]
28* Jughead's burgers in ''ComicBook/ArchieComics''. Every once in a while there's a comic about Jughead struggling to pay his tab, but it doesn't explain it.
29* Little Lotta eats tons of food and it's not explained how her family can afford it.
30[[/folder]]
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32[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
33* In ''WesternAnimation/FantasticMrFox'' Mrs. Fox is instantly suspicious that one of the Chickens her husband brings home still has a farmer's tag on its foot, but it's the bulging pantry just stuffed with expensive game that truly tips her off that her husband has resumed his criminal ways.
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37[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
38* ''Film/{{Bubble}}'': Martha and Kyle are struggling to make ends meet while working menial factory jobs, yet they go out for donuts before work every day and eat takeout for lunch.
39* ''Film/EllaEnchanted'': How a door-to-door watch salesman (and a lousy one, at that), manages to feed and clothe his entire household is not explained well. However, [[spoiler:the cook is a fairy]], which might explain why there's [[AWizardDidIt enough food to go around, at least]].
40* The film version of ''Film/SleepingWithTheEnemy''. In addition to Laura having FriendsRentControl, she's able to afford plenty of luxuries like brand name food products - this is after she's fled her abusive husband and set up in a ''really'' fancy house on apparently only a part-time librarian's salary. And she's also been paying for her mother's stay at a nice retirement home. This is AdaptationDecay as in the book she had to live on oatmeal and beans for months after escaping.
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43[[folder:Literature]]
44* The Mad Hatter and the March Hare's teaparty in ''Literature/AliceInWonderland''. They go around the table to reach fresh cups and, despite Alice's wonderings, when they get back to the start not only do they have more tea and dessert, but also more clean plates and cups. Of course, magic (via Time, who stopped at 6:00 p.m. because the Hatter offended him) is implied to create the new stuff and enable the guests to eat and drink perpetually. It's AllJustADream, so...
45* In ''Literature/DoctorDolittle'' (both the book and the [[Film/DoctorDolittle 1967 film with Rex Harrison]]), we're explicitly told that he gets minimal salary, either in money or favors, yet he manages to feed hundreds of animals. It's explicitly stated in the books that he does indeed teeter on the brink of bankruptcy in the best of times, and that with considerable donations from people like the scraps man. Pretty sure he actually runs out of money at least once and is saved only by a few rich people gifting him with money. They had assumed that as a doctor, he simply had enough money to spare (which is TruthInTelevision for people like doctors, lawyers, actors, and professional athletes). The first book eventually resolves the issue by having the doctor visit Africa to heal some sick monkeys and be gifted a little-known animal called a Pushme-Pullyou. At the suggestion of his other animals (and with the Pushme-Pullyou's permission), he visits towns and charges admission for people to see the animal.
46* Toyed with in the ''Literature/HarryPotter'' franchise. The Weasley family is constantly said to be poor, often unable to afford luxuries and making do with second hand items, yet they are shown eating huge meals and can afford to allow an unexpected guest to gorge himself several times a day with no complaint. They do at least keep their own chickens and have a vegetable garden, and the rules about magically multiplying food are a little fuzzy.
47* In ''Literature/HushHush'', Nora constantly mentions money being tight for her and her mother, but she's able to eat out with her friend all the time. And given that she doesn't have a job for most of the series, she must be paying for it out of her mom's pocket.
48* In the YA book ''Dicey's Song'', from ''Literature/TheTillermanFamilySeries'' by Cynthia Voigt, the title character falls victim to this trope. She's in a home economics class in her new school, having spent the last summer leading her younger siblings to find their grandmother from several states away, on foot, after they were abandoned in a parking lot by their mentally ill mother. The assignment is to draw pictures of groceries you could buy to feed a family on a limited budget. She draws things they ate on their journey, like bananas with peanut butter and stale doughnuts you'd get for little or no money from a bakery the day after they were made. The teacher, who knows she doesn't like the class, thinks she's being sarcastic and gives her an F, writing that no one could live on meals like that for long.
49* ''Literature/{{Twilight}}'' has Bella living with her father, who is implied to not make a lot of money. She's somehow able to always cook foods like steak and potatoes, with enough money for her dad to order pizza when he wants her to have a night off from cooking. Mervin also pointed out that the werewolves supposedly live in poverty, and yet Emily is able to make endless amounts of food for Sam's pack, who eat a ''lot''.
50* The ''Franchise/WinnieThePooh'' gang. For most intents and purposes honey, bread and condensed milk seem to constitute their entire diets, but ''none'' of them earns any money whatsoever. Does Christopher Robin buy their food for them? Rabbit seems to grow and produce everything, and everyone else mooches off of him. At least in the Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon. (Piglet and Eeyore, at least, have diets that can be foraged for; "Haycorns" and thistles respectively.)
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53[[folder:Live Action TV]]
54* Up until the final season, Series/{{Angel}} and his employees are poor, yet it's very rare for them to actually cook something instead of getting take-out or going to a diner.
55* ''Series/{{Buffy|the Vampire Slayer}}'' Season 7. How did they pay for food for all the Potentials at the beginning of the season before the town was abandoned? Especially since Buffy nearly went bankrupt in season 6 trying to support herself and Dawn.
56* Norm and Cliff on ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' seem to be at the bar every night, and Norm for one drank a ludicrous amount of beer whenever he was there. His incalculable bar tab was a running gag.
57* One episode of ''Series/{{Dinosaurs}}'' had Earl, Robbie and Charlene after consuming a drug with appetite and happiness-inducing properties wake up with a bad hangover being surrounded by dozens of buckets of half-eaten food, right after it was declared Earl's been out of work for weeks and his wife Fran reported their bank accounts are depleted.
58* Averted in ''Series/{{Farscape}}'', where at least a third of the series dealt with their perpetual lack of food. One episode has the crew buy a load of the most unappealing looking crackers, and still fight over people taking more than their share.
59* Subverted in ''{{Series/Frasier}}'' when Niles has to economize due to Maris' divorce lawyers bleeding him dry and with Roz and Bulldog when the whole KACL staff is temporarily fired, but it's hard to imagine how everyone in Seattle can afford to get coffee at the Cafe Nervosa on a daily basis or how Martin can afford overpriced imported dog food on a retired cop's pension. Daphne hangs a lampshade on this when Martin gets some premium jerky made from fillet mignon for her wedding.
60* The gang of ''Series/{{Friends}}'' is the living embodiment of this trope. Joey and Chandler especially, as they seem to eat takeout every night, and they all drink at least five bucks worth of coffee a day at [[LocalHangout Central Perk]]. Chandler has a well-paying job, and Monica's a chef when she's working, but still.
61** There is one episode when this becomes an issue (Rachel, Phoebe and Joey, at this time the poorer members of the group, talk about the strain this lifestyle puts on their finances). After that episode, it's never mentioned again, despite no visible change in their habits.
62** The coffee bill was given a {{handwave}} in the episode where Rachel quits her job as a waitress at Central Perk:
63-->'''Chandler:''' (to Joey) Does this mean we’re gonna have to start paying for coffee?
64** They do also eat in a lot and Monica frequently cooks for and hosts everyone else. How she pays for 6 people's worth of groceries is never explained, though it's possible Chandler and Ross - her neighbour/later boyfriend and brother respectively - might pay her back or contribute to the food bill.
65* The Series/GilmoreGirls never seem to cook, and eat out constantly and in large amounts, even though Lorelei probably isn't making tons of money running the inn. What's more, they aren't carrying any extra weight. Lorelei probably weighs 120 soaking wet. This is often lampshaded to varying degrees throughout the show. At one point, Rory comes back from college and notices that Lorelai is cooking. She takes this as a sign that her mother is in real financial trouble and turns out to be right.
66* The main characters of ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'' spend almost every night at the bar. Food aside, their alcohol budget must be astronomical. Barney could afford this, but a kindergarten teacher with a shopping addiction? This is lampshaded occasionally.
67* ''Series/ICarly'' uses an odd variation on this trope: they don't seem to ''eat'' beyond their means (indeed, "spaghetti tacos" are something of a TrademarkFavoriteFood, and they've made a RunningGag of the kids turning down the extras proffered on a stick at [[LocalHangout The Groovy Smoothie]]), but they ''waste'' copious amounts of food in the webshow.
68* Typically inverted with Charlie in ''Series/ItsAlwaysSunnyInPhiladelphia'', as he's shown to have a desperately small food budget that includes purchases not fit for human consumption. Played straight in "Mac and Dennis: Manhunters", when Charlie and Dee buy what must be hundreds of dollars worth of exotic meats from specialty grocery stores to convince themselves they aren't cannibals (might be justified if Dee's doing the buying, since she and Dennis both get money from Frank).
69* In ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'', Hal and Lois are able to make and ruin three lavish evenings (including a limo ride, a roast dinner, and dinner at a fancy restaurant) in three nights in a row. Yet another episode clearly shows Hal resorting to blackmailing his in-laws to afford a new refrigerator, and Hal and Lois' cars were ([[ProductPlacement oddly for television]]) both over ten years old throughout the series.
70* Joe, Owen, and Terry from ''Series/MenOfACertainAge'' eat at their fave diner at least three times a week (which is 3x an episode). Owen owns a struggling car dealership and has a wife/3 children and a mortgage. Joe is divorced (likely paying alimony and child support), has a mortgage, and has a [[spoiler: gambling problem]], and in the beginning Terry was an unemployed actor.
71* A variation on the theme comes from ''Series/{{Reaper}}''. Sam's gang, who work at a CaptainErsatz for The Home Depot, can afford multiple beers and shots at their neighbourhood bar, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Booze]]. Somewhat justified in that Sam and Sock both live with their parents, though Andi complains that she couldn't possibly buy a house with what she makes at The Work Bench.
72* The ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' cast's ability to regularly visit bars may not seem so unlikely, till JD claims they're so poor that they have to sneak one another into movie theaters in backpacks. Turk and JD, as residents, also started stealing a bunch of food and toilet paper from the hospital and working part-time at clinics while they were still paying back their loans. Elliot was still being supported by her wealthy parents at the time.
73* In ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'', the gang is seen eating at the local diner almost every day, despite the fact that George is often out of work and Kramer seems to have no job whatsoever.
74* ''Series/SeventhHeaven'' depicts a huge family that apparently has never heard of "economy-size." The Camdens, despite consisting of two parents, 5 - 7 kids, a dog, and any number of friends and grandparents drifting in and out, are often seen bringing home a "load" of groceries consisting of like two bags (implying that they're not really ''that'' low on food and this was just a quick errand... which Annie must run about half a dozen times a week) and getting pints or quarts of milk out of the fridge (instead of pouring a glass from a gallon). There's also always fruit and cookies and snack foods lying around for the snagging, and at least once Annie cooked a full family-sized meal that ended up getting ''thrown out'' because ''no one felt like eating it''.
75* Carrie on ''Series/SexAndTheCity'', whose sole source of income for most of the early series is writing a newspaper column. On top of her [[FriendsRentControl nice apartment in Manhattan]] and her extensive [[AllWomenLoveShoes collection of shoes]], she also seems to eat out ''all the time''. In one episode she remarks on how she never uses her kitchen and her oven is for storing sweaters.
76* The math never quite adds up in the early seasons of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'', with Dean and Sam's credit card theft plus hustling pool being their only source of income, as hunting is a gig that doesn't pay (although it could, it's just never seen to). They stay in cheap hotels but that just means they're both eating out every single meal, usually at diners or gas stations, and they're both big guys doing physical jobs. That's a lot of pool. It was also suggested that their father kept the whole family afloat for years with a similar lack of cash flow.
77* ''Series/ThreesCompany'' is a confusing example of playing it straight and justifying it. Part of the premise was that the three roommates had to live together as the only way to afford to pay the rent on their apartment. However, they did have a rather large food budget, because Jack was studying to become a chef and needed to practice (and Janet and Chrissy decided to let him stay with them because he always cooked them amazing food.) This might explain why those "we need to pay the rent" stories kept popping up later after their financial situation improved (Jack graduated and found semi-steady work, Janet became manager of the flower shop she worked in, and Chrissy was replaced with Terri, who hopefully was paid better as a nurse than Chrissy was as a typist.)
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80[[folder:Mythology & Religion]]
81* In ''Literature/TheBible'':
82** In [[Literature/BooksOfKings 1st Kings chapter 17]], with God's help, a widow woman of Zeraphath was able to feed herself, her son, and the prophet Elijah for many days on just what little flour and oil she had left in the house, which upon Elijah's arrival would have been enough for just one cake of bread that would barely feed herself and her son.
83** In all [[Literature/TheFourGospels four Gospels]], Jesus is able to feed a few thousand people just out of a few loaves and fishes, and even have leftovers filling several baskets. One of His disciples even said it would take 200 denarii (or 200 full days' wages) in order to give that many people just a little something to eat.
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86[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
87* There is the lasagna that ''ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'' seems to consume by the metric ton. Obviously, Garfield's not paying for the stuff, but it is odd that Jon apparently spends that much money making/buying huge amounts of a dish he doesn't even appear to ''eat''. Some comics show Garfield just stealing whatever Jon was making for himself, sometimes [[RefugeInAudacity as Jon's eating it]]. It still raises the question of how Jon's able to pay for so much food, but it does explain ''why'' he'd bother making it.
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90[[folder:Video Games]]
91* Vincent from ''VideoGame/{{Catherine}}'' must spend a lot of money at the bar every night. Lampshaded when Katherine calls out Vincent on how much he spends there, telling him that he must stop to save money for the future.
92* The prequel to ''VideoGame/SakuraWarsSoLongMyLove'', ''Kouya no Samurai Musume'' (roughly, "The Samurai Girl from the Wild West"), takes this trope to extremes. Gemini and Juanita win $100,000 in Las Vegas (this is set in 1928, so this would be equal to more than a million in 2010 dollars). A few scenes later, after an in-story elapsed time of only a few weeks, it is implied that they have spent the entire amount on food for themselves. How they can afford to eat in times when they ''don't'' have such sums of money flowing in is not clear.
93* Numerous ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' characters possess inexplicable sources of food. Reimu consistently complains about a lack of donations to the shrine, yet never lacks for food (despite what's commonly depicted in fan portrayals), and even throws a party at the end of almost every game. Koumakan and Eientei are both gargantuan mansions with equally gargantuan staffs to support without any source of income (though a resident of the latter has recently opened a clinic). Even [[KleptomaniacHero Marisa]] falls into this, as not even ''she'' cares about her pathetic attempt at a business and she doesn't steal perishables. This being [[FantasyKitchenSink Gensoukyou]] however, AWizardDidIt is a perfectly valid explanation, though at least in Reimu's case her status as BarrierMaiden means that ''bad things'' [[WeCannotGoOnWithoutYou would happen if she were to actually starve]], behoving any one of Gensokyo's many political entities to support her for that reason alone.
94* ''VideoGame/TwistedWonderland'': Kalim comes from a family of ridiculously wealthy aristocrats, and he has a habit of regularly throwing massive, lavish parties for his friends. His family is once shown to buy truckfuls of coconut water, Kalim's TrademarkFavoriteFood.
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97[[folder:Visual Novels]]
98* Played with in the ''Franchise/AceAttorney'' series.
99** Gumshoe's salary is so low that he can only afford the cheapest of instant noodles despite being a police detective. Justified as he's often incompetent, though one suspects Edgeworth would never actually let him get too poor, and that his moments of competence are generously rewarded.
100** Phoenix and Maya are often noted to be poor (which makes sense, given how Phoenix is only seen taking a case every few months), but Maya loves to eat and often insists that Phoenix takes her out for burgers to satiate her hunger. On several occasions Phoenix is made to host large, end of game feasts for the protagonists as well.
101** Ron [=DeLite=] notes his wife loves the finest things in life, including food, [[spoiler:thus his need to become Mask☆[=DeMasque=].]]
102* Lauren from ''VisualNovel/DoubleHomework'' averts this trope interestingly. She can cook absolutely delicious food from random ingredients and/or scraps. If the protagonist takes her on a food run during the yacht trip, she admits that she learned these impressive skills because she had to. Her [[spoiler:upbringing in a poor family]] and her desire to have herself and her family treated with dignity have made it mandatory for Lauren to work with whatever she has, and to do without whatever she doesn’t have.
103* The protagonist of ''VisualNovel/{{Melody}}'' can pay for a couple outings with the title character per week, plus less frequent dates with Isabella, Becca, and Amy as well. Some of these outings are to very expensive places, and the protagonist often orders expensive items like steaks for dinner.
104* In ''VisualNovel/RedactedLife'', Adrian [[LampshadedTrope lampshades]] how impossible it is for Rebecca and himself to be able to afford living in a mansion.
105-->'''Adrian:''' Apparently, this is a world where you play an estate agent a lot of money [[DeadpanSnarker and then hope for the best.]]
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108[[folder:Web Comics]]
109* In ''Webcomic/CravingControl'', the gluttonous protagonist Lalia frequently consumes enough food to feed her entire university, despite not having a job of any kind.
110* In ''Webcomic/QuestionableContent'', Marten works at a college library and Faye and Dora work at a coffeeshop, yet they go out to eat (and to the bar) all the time. Plus, Marten and Faye's apartment is really nice. Part of this can be explained by the number of cheap restaurants one would expect to find in a college town, but they still go out to eat a bit too often.
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113[[folder:Western Animation]]
114* The conclusion of ''WesternAnimation/TheHairBearBunch'' episode "King Klong Vs. The Masked Marvel" had the superintendent ordering Peevly and Botch to give the bears anything they wanted as a reward for helping Peevly win $500 at a wrestling match. The bears order virtually every edible thing they can think of, and the keepers run back and forth delivering the stuff out of nowhere.
115* ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'': In "House of Scrooge", one of Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s [[CuttingCorners cost-cutting measures]] for the club is a lighter menu. [[WesternAnimation/FunAndFancyFree Willie the Giant]] takes umbrage that he is only served a single olive; [[WesternAnimation/{{Dumbo}} Timothy the mouse]] is fine with it, but Scrooge reminds him that he has to share "the family plate" with other mice.
116* Lampshaded in one episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Kaeloo}}'', where Kaeloo tells Mr. Cat that [[BigEater Quack-Quack]] is broke and doesn't have any money. [[TheSmartGuy Mr. Cat]] refuses to believe it because of the amount of yogurt Quack-Quack eats and starts trying to do calculations to see how much money that yogurt should be costing him.
117* Coop from ''WesternAnimation/MegasXLR'' pushes this one to ridiculous heights, constantly eating as much junk food as he can while being a bona fide [[TheSlacker Slacker]].
118* In ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'', Scooby and Shaggy eat copious amounts of food; it's practically their defining trait. Yet the gang doesn't appear to actually have any flow of income at all, except in rare cases where the plot demands that one or more of them has a job. It doesn't appear that they're paid for solving the mysteries, and none of them actually have a job. Most continuities make Daphne explicitly wealthy, however, so perhaps she's treating them.
119* Played with several times in ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
120** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when Frank Grimes points out that someone of Homer's status shouldn't be able to afford to eat lobster. Something of a subversion, since the lobster is specifically meant to impress Grimes, and the family normally eats TV dinners and meatloaf.
121** In another episode, after Bart explains that he only eats the eyes on lobster, he points to a large pile of eyeless cooked lobsters in the garbage can.
122** According to Marge, she feeds the family on only twelve dollars a week, using sawdust to pad Homer's food.
123** ''Seriously'' lampshaded in "22 Short Films About Springfield", where Moe sends away to NASA in order to calculate Barney's tab, and it turns out to be $14 billion (which in all logic would be impossible). To make it even weirder, Barney is able to pay $2,000 of it (in cash) and gives no explanation of how he got it (although some episodes imply that he can make decent money letting himself be used for dubious medical experiments).
124* WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants is paid less than a dime a year, and he can still afford to pay for his food and Gary's. And Patrick's essentially, because he's always over.
125* The sewer-dwelling WesternAnimation/{{Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles|1987}} sure can buy a lot of pizza.... (In fact, seeing how they don't seem to have any income, how they pay for ''anything'', including their equipment, furniture, gasoline for a vehicle - which Donatello could have built from salvaged parts - is a mystery.)
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