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11[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Oval_Office020.jpg]]
12[[caption-width-right:350: Nobody behind the Resolute Desk? He's there. You just can't see him.]]
13
14->"''Well, who did you ''expect'' to see — the ''President''?''"
15-->-- '''WesternAnimation/{{Droopy}} Dog''', in the theatrical cartoon ''Droopy's Good Deed''
16
17Whenever a scene calls for the President, but the show is meant to be set "in the real world" (and thus, a fictional president is undesirable, and an [[ThePoorMansSubstitute impersonator]] wouldn't be sufficiently convincing), the President is generally implemented as HeWhoMustNotBeSeen, especially TheFaceless. If the President is vague to the point that even the President’s name is never said, this is done to keep the show from [[UnintentionalPeriodPiece being dated once the president’s term is over]] (think of how every sitting president since George H. W. Bush has been parodied on ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' while the titular family stays the same age). The British counterpart would be the appearance of the outstretched hand of the Monarch or Prime Minister, unseen on the other side of the door.
18
19To a certain degree, this also keeps the work from getting unintentionally political; putting controversial real-life politicians in your story is risky business, doubly so if the in-story president is specifically depicted in a positive or negative light. Compare the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysanthemum_taboo Chrysanthemum taboo]] on depictions of [[UsefulNotes/JapanesePoliticalSystem the Emperor of Japan]] in Japanese media.
20
21See also NoPartyGiven. For celebs that are neither politicians nor actors, see InvisibleCelebrityGuest.
22
23Note: this is '''only''' for when the political leader is supposed to be a real historical person — FDR, Margaret Thatcher, whoever. If the leader is a fictional character, it's one of the other tropes for never-seen characters, like HeWhoMustNotBeSeen, TheFaceless, or TheGhost. Contrast NoCelebritiesWereHarmed.
24
25----
26!!Examples
27
28[[foldercontrol]]
29
30[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
31* During the BeachEpisode of ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex'' where a worldwide spell switches everyone's bodies, Touma sits down in a lounge and watches [[PsychoLesbian Kuroko]] make a presidential address in place of Obama.
32-->"Yes. We. Can!"
33* A scene of ''Manga/DeathNote'' has one of the organizations talking to the President of the U.S, but is referred to as "Mr. President". But only in the anime. The president is David Hoope in the manga. [[spoiler:He commits suicide after Mello threatens him with the Death Note in order to prevent nuclear war.]] [[ZigzaggedTrope Zigzagged]] in ''Death Note Special Chapter'', however, where the President clearly resembles Donald Trump, but behaves and talks like a generic U.S. President. The same goes for his Chinese counterpart, who resembles Xi Jinping but also has generic speech and mannerisms.
34* ''Manga/{{Hellsing}}'' obscures both the faces of Her Highness the Queen and His Holiness the Pope. And yet Alucard still flirts with the former.
35* ''Manga/{{Heroman}}'' plays this...a bit oddly: the President of the United States appears onscreen and has quite a few speaking lines, but looks a lot like former Japanese Prime Minister Jun'ichiro Koizumi.
36* ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers'' flip-flops between showing leaders and hiding their faces. Given the [[EdutainmentShow nature of the series]], readers can usually guess who the leaders are.
37** Averted in the case of Austria (Maria Theresa), Prussia (Frederick II), Russia ([[UsefulNotes/JosefStalin Stalin]]) and possibly Sealand (Roy Bates or his son).
38** Played with for the US Presidents. While their faces are never fully seen, there are subtle cues that hint to who they actually are, such as with UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt in the UsefulNotes/WorldWarII strips.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Comic Books]]
42* ''ComicBook/JimmysBastards'': The comic by Creator/GarthEnnis uses "the current administration" (written in 2017-2018) when the villains are discussing what would happen if they were to use their GenderBender phlebotinum on the U.S. According to them, said reaction would involve firing Tomahawks at the UK (finding somewhere else to play golf) and modifying his gender views to include "grabbing women by the dick". These are clearly references to the president at the time, UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump.
43* ''ComicBook/LargoWinch'': Used when Largo's company gets targeted by a foreign plot to destroy the U.S. economy [[spoiler:by secretly buying up majority shares in most Wall Street companies and running them into the ground at the same time, all for less than the cost of a missile barrage]]. Once the details are learned, he's debriefed at the same time as the President, who has a FaceFramedInShadow and ScaryShinyGlasses.
44* ''ComicBook/TheMightyThor'': In ''ComicBook/ThorVikings'', the President's voice is heard discussing the fallout of [[NukeEm a nuke]] being dropped in New York to stop the [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot Viking zombies]]. He is depicted as oblivious and incompetent, unable to tell that Washington might be affected given the short distance between the two cities and complains that nobody told him about this little fact.
45* ''ComicBook/{{Secret War|2004}}'': This is used in the comic, but considering ComicBook/NickFury details a terrorist threat to the U.S., and the president simply dismisses it, they had to or they would face very serious legal trouble.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Comic Strips]]
49* ''ComicStrip/{{Doonesbury}}'' carries this to its logical extreme by literally showing the president as invisible. This began with UsefulNotes/GeorgeHWBush, to poke fun of his weak stance on issues. Later presidents were shown with floating symbols -- UsefulNotes/BillClinton as a waffle (as in "waffling on the issues"); UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush as an asterisk, a cowboy hat, and (after 9/11) a Roman centurion helmet[[note]] which became increasingly dented and battered as the war dragged on and on[[/note]]. This extended to other politicians, such as Dan Quayle (a feather) and House Speaker Newt Gingrich (a CartoonBomb).
50** Prior to this, strips featuring the President simply showed {{establishing shot}}s of TheWhiteHouse. Then there was the time UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan appeared as "[[Series/MaxHeadroom Ron Headrest]]".
51** Trudeau has stated that this started at least partly so that he doesn't have to try to draw a recognizable depiction of an actual person, which he claims to not be very good at.
52** Didn't stop him from doing a perfect take on [[http://www.gocomics.com/doonesbury/2010/07/04 the Obamas as the Bumsteads]].
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Fan Works]]
56* While the President seems only to have a vague awareness of the FBC and what they do in ''Fanfic/AWEArcadiaBayRogueDemon'', it seems that they have little say in what the FBC does. Their ''gender'' isn't even given, this showing just how little they matter outside of the occasional information regarding paranatural threats.
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
60* ''WesternAnimation/TheIronGiant'' has a brief shot of President Eisenhower being briefed on the situation with the Giant, seen from the back. A portrait of Ike is visible in an earlier scene, hanging in the mayor's office.
61* Despite ''Film/TeamAmericaWorldPolice'' being about international terrorism and American patriotism, George W. Bush, his cabinet and the White House are never seen or even mentioned. This was done on purpose by Creator/TreyParkerAndMattStone, since they felt jokes about Dubya were already overdone by that point, and that they couldn't find anything new or interesting to say about him. (Also, they already parodied Bush before in ''Series/ThatsMyBush'')
62[[/folder]]
63
64[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
65* Another obvious Invisible LBJ "appears" in the 1966 film ''Film/BatmanTheMovie''. A close-up from the "President's" perspective (thus faceless) shows him reclining in his seat, stroking his dog, and congratulating the Dynamic Duo on the phone, in a cartoonishly stereotypical Texan accent (he even says "Howdy!") provided by Fort Worth-born Van Williams of ''Series/TheGreenHornet''.
66* In ''Film/ColdTurkey'' President UsefulNotes/RichardNixon appears in the town of Eagle Rock, but the news producer present complains that none of his cameramen can get a clear shot of him.
67* ''Film/{{The Comedians|1967}}'': In this film about the murderous savagery of Francois Duvalier's regime in Haiti, Duvalier is only seen once, from a distance and behind, as he ascends some stairs in the presidential palace.
68* ''Film/TheCrazies1973''. The President is shown on a VideoPhone, but sitting with his back to the camera. If he had turned round, the audience would have seen it was director Creator/GeorgeRomero.
69* ''[[Film/DrGoldfootAndTheBikiniMachine Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs]]'' (1966). The President is only an LBJ-sounding voice on the {{hotline}} to Colonel Benson, always preempted by the strains of "Hail to the Chief".
70* ''Film/JapansLongestDay'': In this film about the Japanese surrender at the end of World War II, Hirohito's face is never shown clearly. His face can be glimpsed a couple of times from a distance and not quite in focus, but for most of the movie we see the back of his head, or we see his gloved hands as he grips his chair, or his face is hidden by a SceneryCensor. It was considered taboo at this time to show the Emperor's face onscreen (and it would remain taboo until a Russian film about Hirohito called The Sun was shown in Japan in 2006).
71* In the Creator/RowanAtkinson comedy ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'', the queen's hands are shown, and her voice is heard, but everything else is just outside the frame.
72* ''Film/MissionToMoscow'' shows the back of FDR's head as the President is appointing Joseph Davis as U.S. Ambassador to Moscow.
73* The reenactment of [[UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln Lincoln's]] assassination by John Wilkes Booth in the ''Film/NationalTreasure'' sequel shows only Lincoln's back and a part of his head ''even though it is very obvious'' that it's him and using his name and likeness is legal under the protection of the First Amendment.
74* ''Film/NeverLookAway'': Only the back of UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler's head is visible, as Elizabeth hands him a bouquet as he passes by in a motorcade.
75* ''Film/OurManFlint'' from 1966 has a scene where the President, addressing the world to announce capitulation to the bad guys, is told to stall -- he hems and haws in a Johnson-esque drawl.
76* The 1967 film comedy ''Film/ThePresidentsAnalyst'' shows the title character entering and leaving the Oval Office, but never shows the president or mentions his name. Even the country's intelligence agencies are aliased to the FBR and the CEA (possibly under pressure to do so), but it's clearly [[UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson LBJ]]; one character describes himself as liberal in the same tradition as the president ("you know...we're for civil rights!") In an exterior location shot, we see his beagles being walked on TheWhiteHouse lawn.
77* ''Film/SisterAct'' shows the Pope from behind as he listens to the nuns' concert. (It's clearly meant to be Pope John Paul II, as shown by his coat of arms.)
78* ''Film/TheSpyWhoDumpedMe'': This trope is deployed not with a political leader, but with Edward Snowden, notorious hacker and spy. Morgan calls her old boyfriend Snowden to hack into the flash drive. The actor who plays Snowden is only shown from behind.
79* In the 2017 South Korean thriller ''Film/SteelRain'', the plot involves the leader of North Korea, who's been wounded in a coup, being protected by a loyal North Korean agent. Kim Jong Un is never fully shown, just a body lying on a stretcher with the camera angle obscuring his face. He's never referred to by name, just as "Great General" or "Number One". Even a statue of their GloriousLeader shown toward the end of the movie has its head cropped by the top of the movie screen.
80* ''Film/ThatNightInVarennes'' is about the flight of King UsefulNotes/LouisXVI and Queen UsefulNotes/MarieAntoinette from [[UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution revolutionary]] Paris, and their capture in the country town of Varennes, as told from the perspective of the passengers of another carriage traveling behind on the same road. The king and queen are seen only briefly, and only from the waist down, in a scene where Creator/ThomasPaine and Countess Sophie peer from the stairs down below through the doorway to the royal family's room.
81* A short from ''Film/TheThreeStooges'' has them prospecting for gold and inadvertently breaking into a federal gold vault. They explain they were trying to pay for a sick kid's operation to a heard but not seen [[UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt FDR]], who pardons them and pays for the operation, because he's a swell guy.
82* The 2007 ''Film/{{Transformers|2007}}'' movie featured a president whose face was blocked by a pair of feet wearing red socks, who asked an assistant to bring him a Ding-Dong [[UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush with a Texas accent]]. This is his only appearance in the film, though the Secretary of Defense later mentions that the current crisis could define his presidency, and after the climax, he [[spoiler:dissolves Sector 7 and orders the remains of the Decepticons be dumped in a very deep ocean trench]].
83* ''Film/VirginiaCity'': When Julie is begging UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln for mercy, all we see is the back of Lincoln's head and his silhouette on the paper he's reading.
84* ''Film/{{Water|1985}}'':
85** Used for satire: the President (implied to be UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan) is sitting in the Oval Office with his back to the audience as his staff (facing towards the audience) urge him to invade [[FictionalCountry Cascara]] to preempt a communist revolution.
86--->"The decision appears to be unanimous, Mr. President. [DramaticPause] Well, shall we wake him?"
87** Averted with Margaret Thatcher who is referred to by name and played by a well-known impersonator.
88* In ''Film/WillyWonkaAndTheChocolateFactory'', UsefulNotes/ElizabethII shows up offscreen at an auction to bid on a crate of candy bars (ItMakesSenseInContext), and Wonka later mentions offhand that he "really must answer that note from the Queen."
89* ''Film/TheYellowRollsRoyce'': King George V and Queen Mary are in attendance at the Ascot Gold Cup, where Charles has a horse running. They're only shown from behind or the neck down.
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Literature]]
93* The President during the time period that ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfFoxTayle'' takes place (late 2005 to early 2006, [[SeriesHiatus so far]]) is UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush. Fox Tayle was created in a canceled government project and he escaped, and now the FBI is after him. His long-term goal is to talk to the president to try to get some personal rights and to stop being chased (so far, Bush has only been mentioned twice in the story).
94* In ''Literature/AngelsAndDemons'', the deceased [[UsefulNotes/ThePope Pope's]] name and nationality are never stated, although it's pretty obvious that he was a highly-fictionalized John Paul II (Incumbent at the time of its writing). The film adaptation names him "Pius XIII", from a brief glimpse of his ring before it's destroyed.
95* In book 21 of ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'', the main characters break up a summit of several world leaders, and go to great lengths to not refer to the president, or any of the other heads of state, by name. They even decline to mention what ''country'' one of the leaders represents, as he had had a little too much to drink and [[TooDumbToLive refuses to get out of the way of a rampaging elephant]]. Averted in the last book, which explicitly refers to President Clinton.
96* There's a double-whammy in the ''Literature/DoctorWhoNewAdventures'' novel ''[[Recap/DoctorWhoNewAdventuresTheDyingDays The Dying Days]]''; it's set in 1997, but at the time of publication (1996) both the American and British national elections were being contested, thus meaning that the identities of both the President and the Prime Minister are deliberately kept vague.
97* Creator/StephenKing's novel ''Literature/{{Dreamcatcher}}'' was finished in mid-November 2000, at which time the outcome of the US presidential election was still in doubt; as such, when the President gives a national address regarding the events of the novel, the book strains to avoid mentioning whether the president was meant to be UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush or UsefulNotes/AlGore.
98* ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince'': The POV character of the first chapter is simply "the Prime Minister". The real PM at the time these scenes take place was UsefulNotes/JohnMajor, but there are several references that make it unlikely the PM in the book is supposed to be him (for example, Fudge refers to the PM's predecessor as "he", when Major's predecessor was UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher), so he might just be wholly fictional.
99* From Creator/TomClancy's ''Literature/JackRyan'' series: In an unusual case, ''Executive Orders'' does not refer to the President of Iraq by name when he is assassinated. What little characterization there is is entirely in line with Saddam Hussein (who was still in power when the book was published). Noteworthy in that Saddam Hussein was one of the few heads of state who would probably have been referred to by name in normal conversation, and that the book also uses invented leaders for Iran, India, and Russia.
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
103* The Queen and Prime Minister both appeared as outstretched hands from behind doors in ''Series/AreYouBeingServed''.
104* In the ''Series/Batman1966'' episode "The Mad Hatter Runs Afoul", the White House telephone operator takes a call to inform the President of [[spoiler: Batman and Robin's apparent death]]. The office is decorated with mounted longhorns and a vase with a yellow rose. Why yes, [=LBJ=] ''was'' President at the time, why do you ask?[[note]]for those who didn't get the joke, longhorn cattle are an iconic cattle breed in Texas and the yellow rose is associated with the state, from which Lyndon Baines Johnson hailed[[/note]]
105* ''Series/DharmaAndGreg'' and fake Southern accents and Al Gore. Enough said.
106* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
107** The classic serial "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E5TheGreenDeath The Green Death]]" also portrayed the Prime Minister as an outstretched hand and as the unheard half of a telephone conversation with TheBrigadier. In the phone conversation, he was called "Jeremy", a reference to the then leader of the Liberal Party Jeremy Thorpe (who was never Prime Minister). This was an allusion to the brief resurgence in popularity the Liberal Party was seeing in the early 1970s after their severe decline following UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.
108** In "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E4AliensOfLondon Aliens of London]]", the Doctor asks Rose (after accidentally landing a year late to her home time) who the Prime Minister is. She stares at him cluelessly and explains it ''has'' been a year. The corpse of the Prime Minister himself is later found in the episode, though they make sure not to focus on his face. The extra playing the PM was hired on the understanding that he was a Tony Blair lookalike, but when he turned up on set it was discovered the resemblance was not as strong as hoped, so he is less visible than intended in the final episode, although other references to the Iraq War and a female MP "not being one of the Babes" make it clear who he is intended to be. (Although the episode was to be broadcast very close to the General Election, the huge majority Blair already had and the unpopularity of the opposition coupled with their low starting point meant that the result was never seriously in doubt.)
109** "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E7TheIdiotsLantern The Idiot's Lantern]]" used archival footage of the Queen's coronation since it was set during the event.
110** Averted in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E12TheSoundOfDrums The Sound of Drums]]", which has the Master kill off a fictitious president who likely was designed to be a parody of then-president George W. Bush.
111** "[[Recap/DoctorWho2007CSVoyageOfTheDamned Voyage of the Damned]]": When the Queen and her staff (and corgis) first evacuate the palace and then wave to a passing spaceship, she is only seen from the back. It is, however, clearly meant to be Queen Elizabeth II, and she even gets a line of dialogue (voiced by impressionist Jessica Martin, who had also voiced her in series such as ''Series/SpittingImage'').
112** "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS36E6Extremis Extremis]]" features the President of the U.S., but he's dark-haired and faceless [[spoiler:because he lies face-down on his desk, dead.]] The episode was written before but filmed after UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump's election, and the latter is implied to be President in the following episode. [[spoiler:The unnamed President with dark hair is, in fact, not a true person in-universe but a part of a computer simulation in which the whole episode is set.]]
113--->'''Bill:''' I don't know the President. How would I know the President? [[TakeThat I mean, I wouldn't even have voted for him.]] He's... orange.
114* The Pentagon drama ''Series/ERing'' had an extreme example where the president was never even mentioned, even though in real life he'd be heavily involved in the military missions each episode featured.
115* ''Series/TheExpanse'' does this with the [[UnitedNationsIsASuperpower UN Secretary-General]] in Season 1, who is repeatedly mentioned, but never makes an on-screen appearance. Subverted as of Season 2, when he finally appears. At the same time, however, Season 2 does give a new example in the form of the Martian Prime Minister, who is likewise repeatedly mentioned but has yet to make a physical appearance.
116* ''Series/GetSmart'':
117** CONTROL had a direct phone line to the president. When Chief makes contact, the voice of the president is coming from a stuffed steer head mounted to the wall. The voice was an impersonation of [[UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson LBJ]]. "Let us reason together".
118** One episode had Max needing to convince his pal (Creator/DonRickles) he was a spy; he puts Rickles on the hotline and he says "Uh-huh. Right. And I'm Sidney Bird." After he's convinced, he tells Max "Hey, I never met the guy, but I use his baby powder all the time!"
119* One episode of the ''Series/TheGoldenGirls'' shows Dorothy meeting the President (UsefulNotes/GeorgeHWBush) right in her own home, but all the viewer gets to see is the President's hands through the open door. (His voice is heard, provided by Creator/HarryShearer, using ''the exact same impression'' he would later use in ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' -- it's a bit distracting.)
120* ''Series/TheGoodies''. Played straight with the Royal Family (usually via the waving hand version, or a FaceFramedInShadow) but averted with politicians like Margaret Thatcher.
121* In ''Series/HannahMontana'', Miley points out that she's intolerant to raspberries after a childhood incident where she won a pie eating contest, and puked on the Governor of Tennessee when he presented her the award. The Governor is only shown from the back, and is not identified, though the flashback happens in 1999, during which Don Sundquist served as Governor.
122* The Australian series ''Series/TheHollowmen'' is based around a department designed to add a positive spin to any and all of the federal government's policies. Despite there being at least a dozen meetings with the Prime Minister and various other politicians over the course of the series, not one of them is ever shown -- the audience only ever gets to see just inside the door of the PM's office.
123* Similarly, on an episode of ''Series/{{Hustle}}'', the Queen's feet were shown, as was her corgi. Earlier in the episode, in a scene at Buckingham Palace, a bell marked 'HRH' was seen to ring in the butler's pantry, suggesting that the Royal Highness in question was calling for assistance.
124* ''Series/IDreamOfJeannie'': the trope appears in "My Son, The Jeannie". Harold, the inept son of the Chief of the Genies, arrives to apprentice for a day with Jeannie. To make things more chaotic, that evening Major Nelson is chosen to host the Commander-In-Chief for dinner. After several minor disasters (including Harold blinking up a belly dancer to celebrate), Major Nelson greets the unseen, unnamed president while dressed in a Revolutionary War era uniform. The fact the unseen man is wearing a cowboy hat is a nod to the identity of then-president UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson.
125* Old and very funny example. There was an episode of ''Series/TheLucyShow'' where Lucy and a Girl Scout troop went to visit President UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy at TheWhiteHouse. Lucy (Creator/LucilleBall) feels faint and sits down on a historical piece of furniture, UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln's boyhood rocking chair. The chair is too small and gets stuck to Lucy's adult-sized posterior. As she is stumbling around trying to get this thing off, a voice off-camera in the oval office says "It's nice to meet you. I see I am not the only one around with a personal attachment to rocking chairs." This, of course, was an impersonation of JFK. Lucy waddles into the oval office as dignified as she can, patriotic music playing in the background.
126* In ''Series/ParksAndRecreation'', Mayor Gunderson isn’t shown until the penultimate episode as a corpse. Possibly [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] as under Pawnee’s town charter the Mayor appears to be a ceremonial figurehead with actual power vested in the City Council and City Manager, so he likely wouldn’t be involved in day-to-day government business.
127* ''Series/PersonOfInterest''. In "Synecdoche", the VictimOfTheWeek being protected by Team Machine turns out to be the President. We not only don't see him, but even his name is redacted by the Machine as "Relevant One".
128* ''Series/PetticoatJunction'': In "Joe Saves the Post Office", Uncle Joe impresses a crowd at the Lincoln Memorial by reciting the Gettysberg Address by memory. The invisible president comes to shake his hand, at which time Uncle Joe uses the opportunity to convince the president to save the post office. The episode aired in the February of 1969, soon after the inauguration of UsefulNotes/RichardNixon.
129* ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spy_Game_(TV_series) Spy Game]]'': we never see the president. All that is shown is his voice level analysis graph on the communications monitor.
130* The President is never seen or mentioned by name in ''Series/StargateSG1'' until a new one gets elected in the show's seventh season (though prior to that there's at least one fake-out involving a BodyDouble).
131* The POTUS in ''Series/{{Succession}}'' is only referred to as the "California Raisin". He is never shown, nor is his side of the voice call heard whenever he speaks to Logan.
132* ''Series/{{Taken}}'': With the exception of UsefulNotes/GeraldFord and UsefulNotes/BillClinton, every U.S. President from UsefulNotes/HarryTruman to the then incumbent UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush is mentioned or at least alluded to in the series. However, UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy's brief meeting with Owen in "High Hopes" is the only time that a President ever interacts with one of the characters on screen. The audience's view of his face is distorted by the vat containing one of the alien bodies discovered at Roswell. This is because StockFootage of Kennedy's television address to the American people regarding the Cuban Missile Crisis is seen later in the episode. Real footage of two other Presidents is seen in later episodes: UsefulNotes/GeorgeHWBush during the 1980 presidential election in which he was the Republican vice-presidential candidate in "Maintenance" and UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan giving a speech before the United Nations General Assembly concerning aliens in "Charlie and Lisa".
133* In ''Series/TheThickOfIt'', Prime Minister Tom Davis is never seen. His predecessor was known only as "the Prime Minister". The leader of the opposition, 'JB', is also never seen.
134* In ''Series/{{Veep}}'', the TransatlanticEquivalent of ''Series/TheThickOfIt'', the President is never seen, and his name is not revealed [[spoiler:until he resigns at the end of season 3]].
135* In the season 1 finale of ''Series/VeronicaMars'', the Kane family throws a party where the Governor of California is a guest. Based on the episode's air date and a few chance remarks, it's pretty clear that the governor is intended to be Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger, but his name is never mentioned and he never appears onscreen.
136* The President on ''Series/TheWestWing'' was originally intended to be almost entirely unseen -- Martin Sheen was originally only contracted for four episodes of the show's first season. In his one scene in the pilot episode, he was so amazingly impressive that they changed their minds and effectively made him the main character.
137* During season 2 of ''Series/WonderWoman1975'' the IADC received missions directly from the President, whose vaguely UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter-esque sounding voice played over a speaker but who was never seen.
138* While Hacker was Minster for Administrative Affairs in ''Series/YesMinister'', many characters mentioned the Prime Minister, but the PM never actually showed up on-screen despite occasionally determining the outcome of an episode. Averted once Hacker got the top job himself. Notably, the PM was referred to as 'him' despite UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher being in office at the time. This aided the goal of obfuscating Hacker's party membership: referring to the PM as "her" would have led many the erroneous conclusion that the show was specifically a satire of the current government and/or that Hacker was a Tory. (The series stuck very closely to NoPartyGiven.)
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:Theatre]]
142* ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'' has UsefulNotes/JohnAdams get mentioned several times, but he never makes an onstage appearance. (This is because John Adams [[Theatre/SeventeenSeventySix already has his own show]], and Miranda knew that many people, himself included, would automatically picture that version of Adams.)
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Video Games]]
146* ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'' may or may not be an exception, with President Eden [[spoiler:being a computer]]. It probably counts as an exception, since we do -- in a manner of speaking -- get to see his face. [[spoiler:That is, his monitor.]] There is also some uncertainty as to whether he legally speaking ''is'' the President, since the person to tell the surviving Enclave that he was a part of the previous President's cabinet was Eden himself, and we do know he lies and bends the truth...
147* President Graham from ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil4''. We never see the president himself (except possibly in some incredibly blurry photographs right before the final boss fight), but we do meet his daughter.
148[[/folder]]
149
150[[folder:Webcomics]]
151* Downplayed in ''Webcomic/OzyAndMillie''; the president is never shown, but he is given speech bubbles from out of frame. He's also outright stated to be Bush Jr.
152* {{ZigZagged}} in ''Webcomic/SaturdayMorningBreakfastCereal''. The president in early strips was a dim-witted, grey-haired white man who, although never identified by name, was clearly intended to be George W. Bush. Following the 2008 presidential election, the president was African-American, but was significantly older than then-president Barack Obama, with a bald pate, grey beard and glasses. His election opponent, who appeared in a single strip, also strongly resembled Mitt Romney. During the Trump administration, the president was always either off panel or in silhouette. A female president also appeared a few times.
153[[/folder]]
154
155[[folder:Western Animation]]
156* In the ''{{WesternAnimation/Batman|TheAnimatedSeries}} / WesternAnimation/{{Superman|TheAnimatedSeries}}'' crossover "World's Finest" Superman stops a hijacking of UsefulNotes/AirForceOne. After the rescue, they cut to Superman saying "Happy I could help out, Mr. President," through the window of the President's limo, which then drives off.
157* The WesternAnimation/{{Droopy}} cartoon ''Droopy's Good Deed'' used this at the end, after Droopy's character, a Boy Scout, had won a visit with the President. Droopy lampshaded this after TheUnreveal with the page quote above. This also subverted Creator/{{M|etroGoldwynMayer}}GM cartoons' tendency towards surprise live-action cameos at the time.
158** Also, at the beginning of the same cartoon, when Spike first learns that the winning scout would meet the president, a thought bubble appears over his head as he imagines himself at Washington DC shaking hands with the president, whose body is all but shown entirely, [[TheFaceless his head out of the thought bubble's frame]]. So even if the president did appear in the ending, he would probably be given the same treatment that Spike's fantasy gave him.
159* The ''WesternAnimation/EarthwormJim'' cartoon used a generic president. The practice was {{lampshade|Hanging}}d by whoever was meeting/kidnapping him and always introducing himself with "I'm one of those generic presidents they use to keep cartoons from becoming dated."
160* ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse'':
161** The episode "Not a Loud" shows a flashback of Lincoln's birth, with the then-President and First Lady delivering him. They do get body shots, but their skin is completely covered.
162** "Road Trip: Bringing Down the House" has the Louds visit the White House on the current President's birthday, but the President and First Lady are unseen.
163* ''WesternAnimation/SchoolhouseRock'': In "I'm Just a Bill", the viewers see nothing but one of the President's arms when the Bill imagines the President signs it. When the President does turn the Bill into a Law, it happens offscreen and the viewers only know it happens because somebody shows up to announce the news.
164* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/SpiderMan1981'' has a faceless President refusing to give in to ComicBook/DoctorDoom's demands, and promptly ordering an airstrike on his nefarious device (this puts Spider-Man's life at risk, since he's there trying to thwart the plan himself, but he doesn't know that). Later, however, at the climax of the show's world-conquering StoryArc, [[spoiler:the President -- now in complete silhouette -- is forced to give up his seat to one of Doctor Doom's robotic proxies]].
165* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' has Homer fantasizing about receiving a medal from the president, who is just a white man in a suit with grey hair. When his fantasy ends, Homer wonders aloud, "What president was that? He looked pretty generic."
166[[/folder]]
167
168[[folder:Real Life]]
169* In a meta version of this trope, Creator/ClintEastwood appeared at the 2012 Republican Convention and appeared to have a conversation with an empty chair representing President Obama. Immediately, the Internet was awash in pictures of vacant chairs, and a new meme was born.
170[[/folder]]
171
172!!Exceptions
173
174[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
175* Because they have to sign off on the hiring, whenever the US government hires ''Manga/{{Golgo 13}}'', the president in office at the time of the story's writing will make an appearance.
176* The ''Anime/ReadOrDie'' {{O|riginalVideoAnimation}}VA has an unnamed fictional US president in two episodes. He spends most of his time on screen cringing, and caps off both appearances by wetting himself (though on both occasions with good reason; first the White House is getting blown up by a flying man shooting electricity, the second because the US fleet just had [[NoSell no effect]] on a weapon about to destroy the world).
177** In the TV show, the president slumps to the ground and wets himself again because the US was politically and diplomatically bested by Mr. Joker and Great Britain. Said President is speculated to be UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush.
178[[/folder]]
179
180[[folder:Comic Books]]
181* Often averted in comic books. Kennedy appeared more than once on page (Franchise/{{Superman}} infamously revealed his identity to him in an issue published after his death, and ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'' featured an {{Elseworlds}} story wherein Kennedy became a space-traveling hero) and UsefulNotes/BarackObama was famously given a back-up story in an issue of ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' (after reporting that Creator/StephenColbert won).
182** We see the back of JFK's head in an early '60s ''ComicStrip/DennisTheMenaceUS''(!) comic book, uttering his famous "Let me say this about that...", and he's talking off-panel in a ''ComicBook/WonderWartHog'' comic of the era.
183** After the aforementioned ''Spider-Man'' backup story, most every time Obama is pictured in Creator/MarvelComics, he either has his FaceFramedInShadow or is shown from the back. The closest they ever got was with some partial (although heavy) shading on his face in an early issue of ''ComicBook/DarkReign'', when he has a meeting with ComicBook/NormanOsborn and Doc Samson.
184* The usual unwritten policy at both Marvel and DC was that the president's face could be shown, but his name never be used; he would always just be called "Mr. President". Marvel broke this rule with a few appearances by UsefulNotes/BarackObama in which he's referred to by name. DC went the opposite route in 2000 when ComicBook/LexLuthor [[PresidentEvil was elected president]]. Ever since then, the president in the DCU has always been a fictional character, which obviously allows them to do whatever they want with him. Until the ''Comicbook/New52'', which had Bush (at the end of the first arc of [[Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica Justice League]]) and later Obama.
185* An issue of ''ComicBook/TheAvengers'' has Captain America speaking via viewscreen with Jimmy Carter.
186* In ''ComicBook/BlackSummer'', the protagonist -- a renegade superhero called John Horus -- brutally kills President UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush and his colleagues for sending America into the second Iraq war. Bush is seen dead on the cover of issue 0.
187* In ''ComicBook/BuckDanny'', both Kennedy and Reagan appear on panel, the latter being actually referred to by name (which by the way makes ComicBookTime harder than ever to swallow as the main characters did not noticeably age between both stories).
188* A double-sized issue of ''ComicBook/CaptainAmerica'' has Cap (in his alternate guise as [=USAgent=]) trying to stop a Serpent Society plot to contaminate the drinking water of Washington D.C. with a chemical that turns people into LizardFolk. Cap ends up at the White House, where he gets attacked by a reptilian Reagan. When the effects of the toxin wear off, Ron is dazed and confused, but otherwise unharmed.
189* UsefulNotes/RichardNixon appears in a relatively early issue of ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'', specifically identified as Nixon.
190* Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt play a fairly large role in the adult comic ''ComicBook/DocDare''.
191* During the CrisisCrossover ''ComicBook/Millennium1988'' Ronald Reagan is depicted as the President [[spoiler:and First Lady Nancy has been murdered and replaced by a Manhunter]]!
192* Played with in the ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}''[=/=]''ComicBook/YoungAvengers'' ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion2008'' crossover miniseries. During the final battle against Chrell, Speed grabs Molly Hayes and Klara Prast and dumps them somewhere far away from the fighting. Klara looks around and suddenly exclaims "Mr. President!" [[spoiler:It turns out they've been dropped off in front of Mt. Rushmore.]]
193* The original run of ''ComicBook/SuicideSquad'' includes Ronald Reagan in a very prominent and extremely unflattering role in while he is portrayed as a [[BitchInSheepsClothing charming but self-centered]] politician whose only concern is his own legacy and is fully willing to throw Amanda Waller under the bus to keep his own use of the Squad under wraps. However as mentioned above his name is never mentioned (unlike his Soviet counterpart Gorbachev, who is named explicitly in his appearances).
194* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'': Then-president UsefulNotes/BillClinton actually delivered the eulogy at [[ComicBook/TheDeathOfSuperman Superman's funeral]]. His face was clearly visible, and UsefulNotes/{{Hillary|RodhamClinton}} was there, too.
195** In a less glamorous moment for Slick Willie, his Marvel Universe self also personally kicked ComicBook/CaptainAmerica out of the country after Cap had been accused of treason. Of course, once Cap's name was cleared, he welcomed him back.
196** Bill and Hillary also played a significant role in several issues of ''ComicBook/{{Supreme}}'', and while he was never shown, Obama was mentioned in the revised 2013 series.
197* ''ComicBook/TheTransformersMarvel'': One UK issue had Optimus Prime and the Autobots seek an audience with Ronald Reagan. Optimus wanted to explain the Autobots' reason for being on Earth, but were attacked by Decepticons and retreated before their meeting could be concluded.
198[[/folder]]
199
200[[folder:Fan Works]]
201* [[FanFic/{{ITSMYLIFE}} ITS MY LIFE!]]: By the end of the first fan fiction "the President" appears to give most of the protagonists medals, but it is not revealed who he is. (And, because of the confusing writing, one would assume he is [[Videogame/{{Portal2}} Cave Johnson.]]) By TEEN FORTRESS 2 we figure out that he is... UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln.
202[[/folder]]
203
204[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
205* A clip of UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan appeared in ''Film/AlienNation'', the producers using the "If not us, who? If not now, when?" quote from his second inaugural address to reference the legislation that recognized the aliens as refugees (and future citizens).
206* Another controversial use was in ''Film/{{Contact}}'' where the filmmakers cut together and digitally altered footage of UsefulNotes/BillClinton to make it sound like he was talking about the extra-terrestrial message. The White House was not pleased since they felt that it could imply that the President co-operated with and supported this particular film.
207* In a highly controversial exception, the {{mockumentary}} ''Film/DeathOfAPresident'' digitally superimposes the face of UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush onto an actor as he is killed by a sniper.
208* ''[[Film/NationalLampoon National Lampoon's Senior Trip]]'', which ostensibly takes place in the mid-1990s, depicts a fictional President who looks less like Bill Clinton and more like Franklin Roosevelt (minus the wheelchair).
209* ''Film/TheNakedGun'':
210** In the first film, Queen Elizabeth II attends a baseball game, which turned out to be the setting for an assassination attempt.
211** The second film includes President Bush at a state dinner attended by Drebin.
212* ''Film/ToLiveAndDieInLA'' had William Peterson as a Secret Service agent trying to take out a terrorist during a speech by President Reagan. We don't see him, as the scene takes place on a rooftop, but audio clips of "the Gipper" are played to make it seem like the speech is in progress. The President doesn't appear again, as the film is about the ''other'' job of the Secret Service: stopping counterfeiters.
213* ''Film/TransformersRevengeOfTheFallen'': Director Galloway is explicitly described as President Obama's National Security Advisor and repeatedly states that he's acting on behalf of the president. He spends the whole film making bad decisions and butting heads with the military, making himself a [[StrawCharacter Strawman Political]] of President Obama's defense policies.
214* A photograph of Ronald Reagan was prominently displayed in the NORAD command room in ''Film/WarGames.'' (probably there because it's TruthInTelevision -- US federal government buildings usually display a photograph of the current President, as with the French example below -- but admirers of the "Gipper" have accused the movie of {{Anvilicious}}ly cutting away to his picture every time the Defcon alert was raised.)
215* In ''Film/TheXFilesIWantToBelieve'', Mulder and Scully walk into a government office, where Mulder spies a picture of George W. Bush. He gives Scully a wide-eyed look. Cue the X-Files theme.
216[[/folder]]
217
218[[folder:Literature]]
219* The Queen is a major character in Creator/RoaldDahl's ''Literature/TheBFG''. Admittedly, she's never directly called Queen Elizabeth II... but in the animated version, she is drawn to look exactly like her.
220* One of Creator/RobertRankin's rather insane stories (his most common thread involves Elvis with a time-traveling sprout lodged in his head) features Prince Charles as a love interest for one of the semi-protagonists, including some quite surprising scenes...
221* ''Literature/WorldWarZ'': Howard Dean, Colin Powell, Paris Hilton, Bill Maher, Ann Coulter, and Nelson Mandela are all described in such explicit detail as to leave no doubt who they mean, but characters go to great lengths to avoid naming them. Fidel Castro ''is'' mentioned by name, as the leader of Cuba who gives in to democracy -- unfortunately, in a context from which actual history has marched on.
222[[/folder]]
223
224[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
225* A {{mockumentary}} in the UK featured footage of UsefulNotes/TonyBlair used to talk about a stock market crash.
226* Tony Blair appeared as himself in a Comic Relief sketch of ''Series/TheCatherineTateShow''.
227* In the ''Series/{{Community}}'' episode "Intro to Political Science", the Vice President visiting the college is explicitly identified as Joe Biden, but we only see the back of his head and hear his voice.
228* Canada's last two Prime Ministers, Paul Martin and Stephen Harper, both claim cameo appearances as themselves on ''Series/CornerGas''. Many Canadian politicians have also been known to cameo in sketch comedy shows such as the ''Radio/RoyalCanadianAirFarce''.
229* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
230** Historical presidents and prime ministers are usually accurate. The Eleventh Doctor has met both UsefulNotes/RichardNixon and UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill, for instance.
231** Zig-zagged in "The End of Time," which identified the U.S. president as UsefulNotes/BarackObama and used actual audio of him, but only showed him from the back or with his face obscured.
232* Played with in ''Series/ForAllMankind''. Richard Nixon is portrayed via stock footage, but there are also fictionalised '[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nixon_White_House_tapes Nixon tapes]]' of him discussing the situation with his staff. Later presidents have the same, usually involving phone conversations.
233* In an episode of ''Series/HannahMontana'' the Obama girls are big fans of Hannah's (just like every other living person under 13) so she is visited by the president. He is shown only from the back and addresses her as "Miley." When Lily gasps "How did ''he'' know?" Miley brushes it off with "Well, he ''is'' leader of the free world. I think he can keep a secret."
234* A first season episode of ''Series/{{JAG}}'' used stock footage of UsefulNotes/BillClinton jogging through a park, edited to look like Harm, who was jogging the other way, passed him.
235** The second season opener starts with UsefulNotes/BillClinton presenting Harm with the Distinguished Flying Cross. Again stock footage was edited into the show.
236** In one episode, Bud Roberts carried the so-called "football" for UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, and archived footage of the President was used in the episode.
237** Stock footage of the presidents of the time were often seen in the background in the bullpen scenes. Later seasons featured regular background footage of then-SECDEF Donald Rumsfeld.
238* In ''Series/TheJeffersons'' (season 4, George and Jimmy) President [[UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter Carter]] was invited by George Jefferson to stay at his house.
239* Averted in two ways in ''Series/LieToMe''. The show has a habit of using still images of famous people to illustrate whatever emotion they're talking about, and a solid majority of these seem to be recent US Presidents (as well as Presidential candidates and Vice Presidents). In addition, President Obama has been referred by name to at least twice so far by the characters in the show.
240* This was deliberately set up and then subverted in the opening ceremony for the London 2012 Olympics. Given how many portrayals of the Queen in fiction are limited to a shot from behind of a (usually [[TheVoiceless voiceless]]) grey-haired head in a pastel pink hat, with a corgi trotting around nearby, when Creator/DanielCraig-as-Film/JamesBond walks down a Buckingham palace corridor and steps through a door, that's precisely what he seems to be met with. Then she turns around, and it's the real deal. AndThereWasMuchRejoicing. (There were seditious rumours that it may not have been the actual Queen who followed Bond in parachuting out of a helicopter into the stadium, however.)
241* Real footage of Prince Charles was used and redubbed for the finale of ''Series/LookAroundYou'', to make it look like Prince Charles was actually presenting the Look Around You Award. They even go so far as to make him express an interest in a sex-change device and later get attacked by a mad scientist with a skin spray.
242* ''Series/MrRobot'' prominently features footage of President Obama using out-of-context and/or dubbed dialogue to make it seem like he's commenting on events in the series.
243* "Series/MurphyBrown": Then-Vice President Dan Quayle made a real-world comment about declining family values due to the character of Murphy having become a single mother on prime-time television. The next episode featured archival footage of Quayle with the characters treating his remarks as something that happened in-universe.
244** Another episode used footage of George Bush Sr. with dubbed lines to portray Murphy in the White House press room.
245* ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' steamrolled this trope in their first episode. The president getting who enters Air Force One is, to all intents and purposes, UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush in practically every respect. He's actually played by Steve Bridges who certainly isn't unfamiliar with [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDPAUi3VPSo playing the role]]. Archive footage of GWB is also used in the series, such as one of him getting into a helicopter as the NCIS learn of an attempt to take down the helicopter.
246* Zig-zagged in ''Series/TheNewStatesman'', which featured Margaret Thatcher as an occasional character, but always found excuses to hide her face.
247* Footage of Blair and [[UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush Bush]] appeared in an episode of ''Series/{{Spooks}}'' about a state visit of the latter.
248* A Season 1 episode of ''Series/ThirdWatch'' had UsefulNotes/HillaryClinton, then the first lady, walking past the main police officers en route to a debate with Republican Rudolph Giuliani during the 2000 Senate campaign.
249* While the actual president never appeared in ''Series/TheXFiles'', a large photo of UsefulNotes/BillClinton was clearly visible in Skinner's office throughout several seasons. However, no pictures of UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush ever appeared after his election.
250* Obviously averted in ''Series/{{Veep}}'' [[spoiler:once Selena becomes President]].
251* UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher famously appeared as herself in a sketch she wrote for ''Series/YesMinister''.
252** When the Prime Minister is the main character, you can't very well keep him invisible, and hence ''[[Series/YesMinister Yes, Prime Minister]]'' averts this trope.
253[[/folder]]
254
255[[folder:Theatre]]
256* In Creator/SammyJ's 2023 show ''Good Hustle'', then current [[UsefulNotes/PrimeMinistersOfAustralia Australian Prime Minister]] Anthony Albanese appears via video insert to offer Coach the job of Australian Ambassador to the United States.
257[[/folder]]
258
259[[folder:Video Games]]
260* Infamously in ''VideoGame/BadDudes'': [[MemeticMutation If you are a bad enough dude to save him]], [[UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan President "Ronnie"]] will treat you to a hamburger.
261* ''VideoGame/DukeNukem3D'''s expansion pack Duke It Out in D.C. had what was for all intents and purposes UsefulNotes/BillClinton, tied to a chair and kept in stasis at the end of the game. Clinton and Janet Reno both appear in framed photographs in the Atomic Edition's 4th episode, as well.
262* An unnamed fictional President appears in the intro of ''VideoGame/MadWorld'', explaining the government's response to the situation on Varrigan City.
263* While he is never named, President Obama can be clearly seen in photographs on the wall of Konrad's penthouse in ''VideoGame/SpecOpsTheLine''.
264* A fictional US President, whose name is never mentioned, is clearly visible in ''VideoGame/WorldInConflict'' cutscenes.
265[[/folder]]
266
267[[folder:Webcomics]]
268* Hilariously subverted in ''Webcomic/GrrlPower'', as [[http://grrlpowercomic.com/archives/1707 seen when Sydney barges into a teleconference]] with the Commander in Chief. She first recognizes Barack Obama by his voice, before turning around.
269[[/folder]]
270
271[[folder:Western Animation]]
272* ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfSuperMarioBros3'', "Reptiles in the Rose Garden": While the President and First Lady are not named (and only referred to as "Mrs./The President"), the First Lady is a striker for the late Barbara Bush, and, although seen only from the back, the President is clearly meant to represent George H.W. Bush.
273* UsefulNotes/BillClinton ended up with quite a bit of animated screen time in ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'', ''WesternAnimation/{{Freakazoid}}'' and ''WesternAnimation/PinkyAndTheBrain'' as the current President. (Prior series ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' used UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln as a generic President). Al Gore doesn't get quite as much, but he does show up a few times. Of course, this isn't quite the ''actual'' image, merely an animated version several times.
274** UsefulNotes/BillClinton is in the opening credits of ''Animaniacs'', with the line "Bill Clinton plays the sax."
275** Of course, an exception for ''Tiny Toons'' was the VerySpecialEpisode about {{Media Watchdog}}s, where the cast went to the capitol to pick on the Bush administration in person (the highlight was, of course, Quayle).
276* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'' had a UsefulNotes/BillClinton-like President in one episode, and a UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush-like one in another. In a 2015 episode, a President character appears with a UsefulNotes/BarackObama-like skin complexion.
277* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'': Plastic Man [[RecognitionFailure doesn't recognize]] President Obama at the end of "Cry Freedom Fighters!"
278* On ''WesternAnimation/TheClevelandShow'', Cleveland initially [[FailedASpotCheck does not realize]] that the [[UsefulNotes/BarackObama Barry Obama]] he beat at basketball as a child grew up to be President.
279* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddparents'' had two episodes which had the President appear as a minor character. One episode had him look similar to then-President George W. Bush as well as having a Texan accent but he was never named. Another episode had him dressed as George Washington, saying he's going for a "retro look". This was probably done to avoid dating the episode but he still had the Texan accent which strongly implies they're still Bush.
280* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' has never shied away from portraying sitting Presidents, having done so with UsefulNotes/BillClinton, UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, and UsefulNotes/BarackObama.
281* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'', Fred dreams of teaching a prehistoric version of LBJ (and some of his Cabinet) "The Twitch."
282* Al Gore, then-Vice President, appeared as himself in ''{{WesternAnimation/Futurama}}'' in 2000. He reappeared 3 years later as his future self, "Al Gore, First emperor of the moon and [[MemeticMutation Inventor of the Environment]]."
283** Al Gore's daughter just happens to be a writer for ''{{WesternAnimation/Futurama}}''...
284** And of course, the President of Earth in 3000 is UsefulNotes/RichardNixon's Head.
285** In a flashback to Fry's childhood, a young Barack Obama appears working as a delivery boy at the same pizza parlor Fry would later work at (before being frozen).
286* A fictional president bearing a passing resemblance to George Bush appears in ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'', albeit in a parallel universe run by the [[KnightTemplar Justice Lords]], who now decide when (or if) elections are held. Played straighter in ''Unlimited'', where in the aftermath of [[spoiler:the Watchtower being overridden and firing on Earth]], J'onn receives a call from the President, who is not clearly shown.
287* Unusual variant in the 1953 ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' cartoon "Ant Pasted": WesternAnimation/ElmerFudd has been deliberately targeting an anthill with firecrackers. War is declared on him by an ant version of UsefulNotes/HarryTruman.
288* British Prime Minister UsefulNotes/TonyBlair appeared as himself in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' in 2004, becoming the first serving leader to do so.
289* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'', in accordance to its EqualOpportunityOffender and RippedFromTheHeadlines philosophy of satire, has also averted this trope, having addressed UsefulNotes/BillClinton, UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, ''and'' UsefulNotes/BarackObama both by name and on-screen during its run. One prominent exception to this is UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump, who was substituted with Mr. Garrison in an episode satirizing the 2015 Republican primary as [[ItWillNeverCatchOn they didn't expect Trump to actually become President a year later]]. His surprise victory forced them to keep using Garrison instead of Trump himself.
290[[/folder]]
291
292[[folder:Other]]
293* French films or live-action TV are an ''inversion'' of this trope. In France, every police station and town hall is required to display the official portrait of the current president. And during the last half-century, every president had a very long term (the mandate was originally seven years, and Mitterrand was able to run two full mandates). So, it is very common in French films or live-action TV to display the president's portrait, even if the show is about people way too unimportant to deal with the actual president.
294* The same holds true in several countries with regimes at least nominally modeled on that of France. This is most especially common in the Middle East, where semi-presidential authoritarian regimes abound; the portrait of Hosni Mubarak in particular became famous across the Arab world because of all the Egyptian ''[[SoapOpera musalsalat]]'' in which the characters have to go to a government office only to stare at his mug hanging over the head of some petty official.
295* Every diplomatic mission of the United States has a portrait of the President, Vice President, and Secretary of State; very often this is at the security checkpoint. So if you go into the gatehouse of the American Embassy pretty much anywhere, you will, as you empty your pockets and submit to scanning, be treated to the smiling faces of UsefulNotes/JoeBiden and UsefulNotes/KamalaHarris.
296[[/folder]]
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