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4
5->'''Warner''': ''You'' got into Harvard Law?\
6'''Elle''': What, like it's hard?
7-->-- ''Film/LegallyBlonde''
8
9Despite being considered among the most selective colleges in the United States, with admission rates from 4% to 9%, UsefulNotes/IvyLeague schools show up frequently in fiction. In {{teen drama}}s, a main character (or two) will always get accepted into an Ivy League school. Expect this to become a key part of high school [[SeniorYearStruggles senior year stress]], whether the character is trying to get into a certain Ivy League school, or deciding between an Ivy League college far away from home and a [[CaliforniaUniversity local college]] that keeps the show in the same setting.
10
11For RealLife perspective, of the 20-21 million US college undergrads across the United States at any given time, only about 65,000-70,000 of them are in the Ivy League...a percentage of about 0.3%, and this includes international students as well, meaning the amount of American students is even ''lower''. For graduate students (whether it be law, medicine, engineering, academia, etc.), the ratio is ''slightly'' less competitive of about 90,000-100,000 US graduate students out of about 3 million, a percentage of 3%, which again includes international students, often more than undergrad. Needless to say, the median American college student, let alone the median American teenager, does not attend or get into the Ivy League, and most likely don't even apply, knowing they will not make it.
12
13In a particularly extreme version of this trope, there will be an "Ivy League or nothing!" mentality implying that if a character doesn't get into an Ivy League school, then their only other option is going to community college and hopefully learning how to tell when their pimp is cutting their crack with baking soda. If they get in, don't expect the characters to actually discuss their coursework or major, the name is enough to convince the audience that it's prestigious and important and that's all that matters.
14
15In the case that we're past the high school setting, this information will commonly show up in a character's [[BackStory educational background]]. Usually this will be done as a shorthand to show that a character is either [[TheSmartGuy smart]], [[ToBeAMaster ambitious]], or [[RichPeople filthy rich]]. The rule about not discussing coursework also holds at this stage, so [[SchoolOfNoStudying expect characters to somehow get stellar grades even when they're never actually seen studying at any point.]]
16
17This has been popularized in part by AuthorAppeal--if a writer went to the Ivy Leagues, they might enjoy name-dropping the institution to show off how cool they are. Beyond that, it's just plain convenient - saying that a character came from or is going to a prestigious university is a quick way to show the audience they're well-educated, hardworking or intelligent, and beyond that more prestigious colleges simply have national or even international name recognition less prestigious schools won't.
18
19A few institutions that aren't actually in the Ivy League but have strong reputations in certain contexts also count for this trope. Engineering hopefuls always go to MIT or Caltech. Juilliard is this for the performing arts. Elite West Coast students go to Stanford, UC Berkeley (especially as shorthand for them having [[StrawmanU left-leaning politics]]), USC (especially if they're a film student), and UCLA. Before the Ivies went co-ed, the Seven Sisters schools were this for women. In Japanese stories, the college of choice is typically Tokyo University, or "Todai".
20
21Compare to EliteSchoolMeansEliteBrain, GeniusesHaveMultiplePhDs. Contrast CaliforniaUniversity.
22----
23!!Examples:
24
25[[index]]
26* [[IvyLeagueForEveryone/LiveActionFilms Film – Live-Action]]
27* IvyLeagueForEveryone/LiveActionTV
28[[/index]]
29
30[[foldercontrol]]
31
32[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
33* From ''Anime/PaniPoniDash'', ChildProdigy Rebecca Miyamoto graduated from MIT at the age of ten, though in the manga she tells people she went to Columbia, simply because it's easier to pronounce than "Massachusetts." Might be because in the first episode of the anime, Rei (teasingly, it turns out) asked where Becky studied. Becky answered "MIT", whereupon Rei asked what it stood for. Becky continually stumbles over "Massachusetts" and when she finally notices the class's reaction, she notices Rei and the others snickering over her stuttering because it sounds like rapid-fire farts. Cue "Hau-Hau"-ing and CurtainCamouflage, because she's still an 11-year-old.
34* ''Manga/KaguyaSamaLoveIsWar'':
35** Part of the convoluted backstory that Hayasaka made for her butler disguise for whenever Fujiwara comes over is being a Harvard graduate.
36** Shirogane mentions during the parent teacher conferences that he was going to attend Stanford. [[spoiler:[[GradeSkipper He actually ends up getting accepted a year early and leaves Shuchi'in halfway through third year to start attending]]. Kaguya was originally supposed to go with him, but circumstances involving her family forced her to withdraw her initial application and put off attending until after graduation. Maki's character profile in the final volume also revealed that she applied on a whim because both Kaguya and Shriogane were going and ended up attending alongside them.]]
37* Notably averted in ''Anime/LupinIIITheFirst'', where Laetitia is trying to get into college, but rather than an Ivy League school or the Japanese equivalent, Tokyo University, she wants to go to Boston University. [[spoiler:Lupin steals one of her papers and submits it to the applications board on her behalf, and gives her the acceptance letter they sent back during the finale.]]
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Comic Books]]
41* ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'': Bruce Wayne went to an Ivy League school, fitting his old money WASP backstory, but which one (and what his degree was in) varies by the story and adaptation. [[https://library.law.yale.edu/news/holy-diploma-batman-yale-law-school-alumnus One March 1974 issue]] suggests he earned an LL.B from Yale University. ''Film/TheDarkKnightTrilogy'' has him dropping out of Princeton University short of graduation. So on and so forth.
42* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'': Matt Murdock holds a Juris Doctor (doctorate of law) from Columbia.
43* ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange'': Dr. Stephen Strange got his M.D. from Columbia.
44* ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'': Exaggerated with Reed Richards, who went to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, California Institute of Technology, Harvard University, Columbia University, and Empire State University (fictional equivalent of New York University). He had several hard science graduate degrees by the time he was twenty.
45* ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'': At one point, a discussion is made on how just about everyone in the area is a doctor, with multiple degrees, ridiculous accomplishments, etc. Ace, the AcePilot, is a bit annoyed.
46* ''ComicBook/SheHulk'': Jennifer Walters earned both her B.A. and her Juris Doctor from UCLA, the top-ranked public university in the world (according to ARWU, CWUR, U.S. News, and Times Higher Education) and the foremost Public Ivy (neck-and-neck with UC Berkeley). Though some later writer at some point [[MultipleChoicePast didn't get the memo]] and said she went to Harvard Law, that seems to have been explained away as a post-J.D. LLM (a specialized master's degree).
47* ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'': Dr. Jon Osterman/Doctor Manhattan attends Princeton University from 1948 to 1958, graduating with a [[NotThatKindOfDoctor Ph.D.]] in atomic physics.
48* ''ComicBook/XMen'': Professor Charles Xavier has a master's degree in biophysics from Oxford University, a doctorate in anthropology from Columbia University, and ''another'' doctorate in medicine from University College London.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Comic Strips]]
52* ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'': Parodied in one strip where the PointyHairedBoss hires an ex-con purely because he's an Ivy League grad. When Dilbert questions the guy about having been to Yale, the man says "I yust got out last veek".
53* ''ComicStrip/FlashGordon'': Flash Gordon is identified in the first issue as a "Yale graduate and world renowned polo player."
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
57* Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/TheLEGOBatmanMovie'', where Barbara Gordon "was top of her class at Harvard for Police." No, that's not ''comparing'' her training to Harvard, that's literally the name of the school. It says so on her shirt.
58* ''WesternAnimation/AtlantisTheLostEmpire'': Sweet, the team's medical officer, is an alumnus of Howard University (presumably the College of Medicine).
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Literature]]
62* [[spoiler: Subverted]] in ''Literature/{{Catalyst}}'', in which the protagonist has her sights set on MIT. [[spoiler: She thinks she falls under this trope, but doesn't get in.]]
63* The main character of ''Literature/AmericanPsycho'', Patrick Bateman, tells the detective Donald Kimball that he attended Harvard University and Harvard Business School.
64* In ''An American Wife'', a RomanAClef about President UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush and Laura Bush by Curtis Sittenfeld, main character Charlie Blackwell is a Princeton alumnus. One section of the book describes the couple attending a Princeton reunion in great detail.
65* Creator/JhumpaLahiri's ''Literature/InterpreterOfMaladies'' and ''Literature/TheNamesake'' frequently feature Indians (specifically Bengali-Americans) going to prestigious universities such as Columbia, Oxford, Yale, and Stanford.
66* Likely because he himself attended the school, several of Erich Segal's novels are set there--''The Class'' is about the Harvard Class of 1958, and particularly refers to five fictional members of this class: Andrew Eliot, Jason Gilbert, George Keller, Theodore Lambros, and Daniel Rossi, ''Doctors'' is about Barney Livingston and Laura Castellano of the Harvard medical class of 1962, and of course, Oliver and Jenny of ''Film/LoveStory'' meet in the Harvard library.
67* Creator/DanBrown's lead character Robert Langdon in ''Literature/AngelsAndDemons'', ''Literature/TheDaVinciCode'', and ''Literature/TheLostSymbol'' is a professor of Religious Iconology and Symbology at Harvard University. He also graduated from Princeton University, where he played water polo.
68* The main character in the novel version of ''Literature/TheDevilWearsPrada'', Andrea Sachs, is a recent graduate from Brown University.
69* Marina Thwaite, Danielle Minkoff and Julian Clarke, characters from Claire Messud's 2006 novel ''The Emperor's Children'', were all friends at Brown University.
70* Nathaniel Auerbach Clay, the protagonist of Geoffrey Wolff's coming-of-age story ''The Final Club'', is a fictional member of the Princeton Class of 1960. Wolff was an actual member of this class, and he wrote ''The Final Club'' as homage to F. Scott Fitzgerald's ''This Side of Paradise'' and ''Literature/TheGreatGatsby''.
71* In ''Literature/GoodInBed'', protagonist Cannie Shapiro is a Princeton alumna.
72* Serena's older brother, Eric van der Woodsen, attends Brown University in ''Literature/GossipGirl''.
73* In the novel ''In Her Shoes'' by Jennifer Weiner, protagonist Rose Feller is a Princeton graduate. Her younger sister Maggie camps out in a Princeton library. Jennifer Weiner is an alumna of Princeton's Class of 1991.
74* ''Literature/JohnPutnamThatcher'': Pretty much everyone who holds a notable rank at the Sloan or one of its contemporary banks, brokerage houses, or big corporations went to either Harvard or Dartmouth. ''Come to Dust'' heavily features Dartmouth's admissions process and endowment system.
75* Subverted by Edwin O'Connor's novel ''Literature/TheLastHurrah'', in which the Harvard-educated characters are clearly singled out as ''exceptions'' to the general rule. Given that the story is set among Irish-Americans in the 1950s, this is TruthInTelevision- until at least the early '70s, most Irish-American Catholics in the Northeast were expected to go to schools like Boston College or Holy Cross; those few who went to Harvard or Yale instead were ambitious, upwardly-mobile types who wanted to "make it" as "Americans". [[UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy One famous example is typical]].
76* In the ''Literature/LeftBehind'' series, Cameron "Buck" Williams graduated from Princeton. Chloe was attending Stanford.
77* By the end of ''The Mother-Daughter Book Club'' series, the girls have just graduated high school and will soon be going to college. Several years earlier, Emma's brother Darcy was accepted into Dartmouth along with several other selective universities, though justified because he has been mentioned to have been an exceptional student. Meanwhile, Cassidy's sister Courtney attends UCLA and Becca's brother Stewart was rejected from his dream school, Stanford, but did get into some other smaller-scale but still-respectable schools. As for the girls themselves, Emma, Cassidy, and Becca are all anticipating beginning several decent but not incredible colleges, while Jess has been accepted into the highly-competitive Juilliard School and Megan will be attending Parsons School of Design, well-known as one of the most prestigious design schools in the world. Justified in Jess's case, since from eighth grade on she was one of the top pupils of an elite private school for gifted students.
78* In the science-fiction novel ''Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen'' by Creator/HBeamPiper, Calvin Morrison was a theology student at Princeton before dropping out to join the U.S. Army and fight in the Korean War.
79** Not strictly an example, as the Princeton Theological Seminary is a separate institution unaffiliated with Princeton University.
80* In the second half of Creator/StephenFry's ''Making History'', Michael Young attends Princeton.
81* Written by John Jay Osborn Jr., a 1970 graduate of Harvard Law School, ''The Paper Chase'' is about Hart and his first year as a law student at Harvard.
82* Former CIA-agent Wyman Ford, a fictional character in many of Douglas Preston's novels, is a Harvard alumnus.
83* The author of the 1994 autobiography ''Prozac Nation'', Elizabeth Wurtzel, graduated from Harvard and Yale Law School.
84* Mohsin Hamid's ''Literature/TheReluctantFundamentalist'' is partly set at Princeton. Changez and Erica are fictional members of the Princeton Class of 2001. Hamid was an actual member of the Princeton Class of 1993.
85* The ''Literature/RuleOfFour'' is set on the Princeton University and the neighboring Princeton Theological Seminary. The protagonists are Princeton students.
86* ''The Second Happiest Day'' by John Phillips depicts Harvard University during World War II.
87* ''This Side of Paradise'', F. Scott Fitzgerald's literary debut, is a loosely autobiographical story of his time as a student at Princeton. Protagonist Amory Blaine attends Princeton.
88** For an inverse example, most of the rich characters in ''Literature/TheGreatGatsby'' are described with Ivy-league degrees (Tom played football for Yale, for example), but they are not respectable in the least.
89* In the third ''Literature/TheSisterhoodOfTheTravelingPants'' book, when the FourGirlEnsemble have their last summer together before college, it's noted that although Bridget is the "sloppiest student" of the four, she got into Brown. The other three end up going to the Rhode Island School of Design, NYU's film school, and Williams College, not actually Ivy League but all comparably prestigious.
90* Quentin in Creator/WilliamFaulkner's ''Literature/TheSoundAndTheFury'' attends Harvard. We see him as a freshman at the college in the second part of the novel.
91* The character Robert Cohn attended Princeton in Creator/ErnestHemingway's ''Literature/TheSunAlsoRises''.
92* In ''[[Literature/{{Ripliad}} The Talented Mr. Ripley]]'', Dickie Greenleaf, played by Jude Law, is a graduate of Princeton. Title character Tom Ripley pretends he is a Princeton alumnus.
93* In ''Literature/{{Twilight}}'', Bella Swan and Edward Cullen plan to go to Dartmouth as an excuse for Bella to leave her father. It is heavily implied that the Cullens bribed the school to procure her admission.
94* Rae Spellman of ''Literature/SpellmanFiles'' has had issues with her grades, paying attention, doing her homework, being too obsessed with her social life or detective work or well, pretty much ''anything'' during the entire series, and she's not into school extracurricular activities. How on earth did she get into Yale, even after she told them of her new police record?
95* The narrator of Creator/KurtVonnegut's ''Literature/CatsCradle'' is a Cornell alumnus, and another major character flunked out of the university.
96* Talked about in the ''Literature/{{Private}}'' novel series by Kate Brian. Justified because the titular private school is an elite boarding school for the richest of the rich.
97* Scott, the protagonist of ''Literature/TheChronoliths'', and his wife Janice met while attending to Cornell, and Ray, another character comes from MIT.
98** Justified in the case of Ray because he works in a government funded project, so probably they would just want to get their money's worth.
99* In ''Literature/TheAreasOfMyExpertise'', John Hodgman devotes several passages and a whole chapter to Yale's [[AncientConspiracy "true" history]] and plans for OneWorldGovernment. (Hodgman and occasional sidekick Music/JonathanCoulton are Yale alumni.)
100* Unlike the later movie, the original novel of ''Literature/LegallyBlonde'' has Elle attending Stanford University.
101* In ''The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks', Frankie aspires to attend Ivy League. Her sister goes to Berkeley and her boyfriend and his friends are going to Harvard next year. Justified, as it takes place on an elite school and Frankie and most of her classmates are legacies.
102* ''Zimmerman's Algorithm'' has the rogue scientist, Julia Zimmerman, enter an argument with her parents about which university to go to. The parents want her to go to Harvard, but the ChildProdigy is more interested in computer science.
103* In Erica Jong's ''Fear of Flying'', one of the protagonist's lovers thinks his C-average from Harvard is vastly superior to her Phi Beta Kappa from another school. (Jong herself attended Barnard and Columbia.)
104* Somewhat realistically portrayed in ''Literature/ThePrincessDiaries'' where most of the characters end up going to Ivy League (most go to Columbia). Justified in that they go to an elite private school and most of the kids are wealthy and legacies. Despite this, a great number don't get into their first choice schools. The only character to get accepted to all of them is Mia but it's made clear that she was only accepted because she's a Princess. This disappoints Mia and, in the end, she ends up attending Sarah Lawrence.
105** Lana's parents tell Lana that they won't pay for her college unless she gets into an Ivy League. Luckily, she gets into Penn.
106* The majority of Creator/DanielleSteel characters attend or are alumni of Ivy League schools, their equivalents, or schools that are excellent in their own right.
107* In ''Literature/{{Spellsinger}}'', Jon-Tom is a law student at UCLA despite showing little evidence of being anything more than a pot-smoking wannabe rock star. Flores is also a student there, but she actually comes across as someone with legitimate accademic skill.
108* In the Literature/CormoranStrikeNovels, Cormoran met his onetime girlfriend and full-time obsession, Charlotte, at Oxford University (on top of being a decorated war veteran and a member of military police), which is also where a lot of the aristocrats in ''Literature/LethalWhite'' went to university.
109[[/folder]]
110
111[[folder:Music]]
112* In the ''Music/GreenJelly'' song "Three Little Pigs", the third pig studied architecture at Harvard.
113* The singer character of the Music/WeirdAlYankovic song "Skipper Dan" graduated valedictorian at Juillard before falling on hard times [[ClassicallyTrainedExtra as the eponymous Disneyland cast member.]]
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Theater]]
117* Played with in Creator/DavidIves's ''Theatre/SureThing,'' a one-act premised on two people being able to change aspects of each other by ringing a bell. Upon hearing that the male lead went to a less than prestigious college, she rings the bell until he says he went to Harvard.
118* ''Theatre/{{Rent}}'': The ambitious, straitlaced girlfriend of Maureen, Joanne, is a public interest lawyer who received her degree from Harvard Law School. The stage show elaborates a little more on where Joanne falls in this trope as her parents have a lot of connections -- her mom is about to become a diplomat and they are hanging out with a Senator over the holidays. It's mentioned in "Tango: Maureen" that she went to Miss Porter's, a very selective all-girl boarding school in New England.
119* In the musical ''Theatre/SouthPacific'', Lieutenant Joe Cable attended "some little school in New Jersey"...Princeton.
120* ''Theatre/InTheHeights'': Nina attends Stanford.
121* In ''[[Theatre/SeventeenSeventySix 1776]]'', John Adams went to Harvard. Slightly played with as Adams stating this during a congressional debate only evokes derisitory laughter and results in his opponent Thomas Jefferson dryly countering that he attended William & Mary - at which the other delegates applaud. As a result, this exchange is rather popular amongst William and Mary students.
122* The male MC in Djanet Sears' ''Theatre/HarlemDuet'' is a professor at Columbia University, derisively nicknamed "Harlumbia" for reasons explored in the play.
123* In ''Theatre/SongsForANewWorld'', the narrator of "The World Was Dancing" attends Princeton on a scholarship. Averted since t's unclear whether or not he finished, and also the classmate with whom he had a fling transferred to [=McAlester=].
124[[/folder]]
125
126[[folder:Video Games]]
127* ''VideoGame/HalfLife'', where all the named scientists we know of came from elite universities. Justified in that a place like Black Mesa would be on the lookout for people with such outstanding qualifications.
128** Gordon Freeman earned a Ph.D. in theoretical physics from MIT before he turned 27!
129** Eli Vance has a doctorate from Harvard, as he proudly displays with his Harvard t-shirt.
130** Issac Kleiner worked as one of Freeman's professors at MIT, and worked in the same department at Black Mesa, so he presumably received his doctorate in physics there.
131** Gina Cross from ''Decay'' has a Ph.D in electrical engineering from Caltech. [[ImprobableAge She's 25,]] according to the manual.
132* In ''VideoGame/PlantsVsZombies'', the upgrade plant Cob Cannon attended Harvard.
133* Robert House of ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'' was a graduate of the setting's version of MIT (known as the Commonwealth Institute of Technology as of ''Videogame/Fallout4''). In ''4'', the CIT is revealed to have become the Insitute, a cabal of sinister scientists.
134* In ''Videogame/YakuzaLikeADragon'', it's mentioned that Tokyo Governor and central antagonist Ryo Aoki studied Political Economics at Harvard alongside Hajime Ogasawara, with whom he would eventually start the "[[VillainousGentrification Bleach Japan]]" movement.
135* Defied in ''Videogame/MetalGearRisingRevengeance'', where the main villain brags about playing college ball, and not at some "Cushy Ivy League School" as Raiden puts it.
136-->[[spoiler:'''Senator Armstrong''']]: Try University of Texas! Coulda gone pro if I hadn't join the Navy!
137[[/folder]]
138
139[[folder:Visual Novels]]
140* Parodied in ''VisualNovel/DoubleHomework''. With Dennis’s help, Henry, by far the stupidest character in the story, prepares for the Ivy League... which he thinks is a gardening competition.
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Web Comics]]
144* Emily in ''Webcomic/{{Misfile}}'' has two years of her life wiped out by the eponymous filing error, including an acceptance to Harvard. She struggles to do it all over again, taking tests she's already passed, touring campuses she's already seen, and having her EducationMama hound her for two more years.
145* ''WebComic/DumbingOfAge'': Dorothy aspires to be admitted to Yale and leave Indiana University. She receives an acceptance letter from Yale's undergraduate equivalent about the time second semester begins, though her hastily covering it up shows something had changed about her aspirations. [[spoiler: As she later admits to Becky (who found the acceptance letter), she plans to turn it down because they only accepted her once she resubmitted her application to talk about being in the hostage situation in the first semester, but she felt guilty about using that day-a day that ended with Becky losing her father, Amber also losing her father, and Mike dying of his injuries-as a stepping stone to her future greatness. Becky is annoyed that Dorothy is holding herself back because of her dad's actions, and pointed out that she is going to have to do much worse things than exploiting a traumatic situation for personal gain if she wants to make it in politics. (Also she was looking forward to having the dorm room to herself so she can canoodle with Dina.)]]
146* One comic in ''WebComic/KevinAndKell'' suggested in that FunnyAnimal universe, the Ivy League schools were only open to species that could eat ivy, at least until diversity became a issue. (Lindesfarne apparently got acceptance letters from all the schools, but she chose to go to the closer-to-home Beige University instead.)
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Web Original]]
150* ''WebVideo/TheAutobiographyOfJaneEyre'': Present-day Canadian Mr Rochester doesn't have many friends, but Harvard graduates are prevalent in his social circle -- himself, his long time aquaintance Blance Ingram and their friend Warren Danton all went to Harvard and have a degree in Business.
151[[/folder]]
152
153[[folder:Western Animation]]
154* Brian Griffin of ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' dropped out of Brown one class short of graduating. He re-enrolls in the episode ''[[Recap/FamilyGuyS4E15BrianGoesBackToCollege Brian Goes Back to College]]'' [[spoiler:and fails]].
155* ''WesternAnimation/MissionHill'' -- Kevin aspires to attend into Yale. He spends an entire episode trying to "crack" the supposed secret code in the SAT's believing that only a perfect score can get him into Yale, with help from a reclusive computer expert who was trying to get into Princeton. In an unfinished episode, he fakes a terminal illness to gain admittance.
156* Quite a few characters in ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' have gone to Ivy League. [[WriteWhatYouKnow This is doubtlessly inspired by]] how many of the ''writers'' are Harvard graduates, specifically writers for the Harvard Lampoon:
157** Mr. Burns is a Yale alum, as part of his general "old money" characterization.
158** Sideshow Bob is also an alumnus of Yale, and is dismissive of his brother Cecil's history at Princeton ("clown college" as far as he's concerned).
159** Snake/Jailbird attended Princeton, but took a year off, presumably never to return.
160** Lisa fervently hopes to go to an Ivy League School when she reaches college age, and not just any Ivy League school, either. She has a mini-freakout at the thought that she might have to settle for Brown. Of course, there's nothing wrong with Brown -- after all, bus driver and drug enthusiast Otto nearly got ''tenure'' there.
161*** In [[Recap/TheSimpsonsS16E15FutureDrama a flash-forward episode]] she's seen obtaining a scholarship to Yale.
162*** In [[Recap/TheSimpsonsS29E08MrLisasOpus another one]], she goes to Harvard [[NegativeContinuity instead]].
163** Speaking of Otto, a throwaway gag in "Team Homer" has him playing a "prize-crane" arcade machine, with one of the prizes inside he hopes to win being a Harvard diploma. (This was partially a joke on how Mike Scully, the episode's writer, was one of the few writers on staff who didn't go to Harvard.)
164** In an episode where the whole family is arrested, Lisa worries that she'll never get into an Ivy League college now. Cue Bart mockingly singing "You're going to Staaanford! You're going to Staaanford!"
165--->''"I've had JUST ABOUT ENOUGH of your Vassar-bashing, young lady!"''
166** Sideshow Mel is an alumnus of Cornell.
167** Lionel Hutz claims to have graduated from Princeton. As you might expect, Princeton has never had a law school.
168** Barney Gumble was Harvard bound until Homer introduced him to beer the night before he took his UsefulNotes/SATs.
169** Lindsay Naegle has an [=MBA=] from the Wharton School, Penn's business college.
170** Mrs. Krabappel has a masters from Bryn Mawr.
171** Prof. Frink attended Cornell, which he deems the worst Ivy League university. He got in for not exposing the admission test's flaws.
172** "The Front" has a bit where it's revealed that most of the writers of ''JustForFun/TheItchyAndScratchyShow'' went to Harvard (a bit of SelfDeprecation, as they're also [[WritersSuck universally shown to be hacks]]). When Roger Meyers Jr. throws his nameplate at one of them, the writer tries to shoot back with another one of these.
173--->''"You, sir, have the boorish manners of a Yalie!"''
174* Brown University is referenced on ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' by the same-named institution in the ruins of Old New York, where sewer mutants learn how to maintain the pipes for surface dwellers.
175* ''WesternAnimation/RockyAndBullwinkle'' one ups the Ivies by introducing the ultra-prestigious Double Dome University, where having degrees from Harvard, Columbia ''and'' Caltech is just good enough to make [[AlmightyJanitor janitor]].
176* ''WesternAnimation/{{Daria}}'':
177** {{Deconstructed}}. Daria applies to Bromwell, implied to be an alternate version of Yale, but doesn't get in despite her excellent grades; her boyfriend does, in large part because he has a family legacy. She goes through a version of the "Ivy League or nothing" version of this trope herself before her mother helps her realize that her second choice college is also a very fine school.
178** Also PlayedWith regarding Jodie--she ''does'' get accepted into Crestmore (possibly a Harvard analogue, since it's alumni are "literally running this country") but would rather go to Turner, a historically black college that her father and grandmother both graduated from. Her parents eventually allow this, though she says she may still transfer to Crestmore after a year or two.
179* ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'' shows Bedrock is home of "Prinstone University," a prehistoric version of Princeton; its archrival in the "Poison Ivy League" is "Shale" (Yale's Stone Age counterpart). Fred is briefly enrolled at Prinstone in one episode (where he mainly plays for its football team). The 90s TV-movie "Hollyrock-A-Bye Baby" has Wilma's mother hope one day her great-grandchildren get to attend Prinstone.
180* Mayor [=McDaniels=] of ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' graduated from Princeton University.
181* In ''{{WesternAnimation/Gargoyles}},'' "Dominique Destin" is quite impressed that the woman applying for a job as her assistant graduated from the Sorbonne. Of course, since this woman is actually one of the new [[HunterOfMonsters Hunters]] and Dominique is [[InvoluntaryShapeshifting the gargoyle]] [[BigBad Demona]], it's possible that this was a lie just so that she could get the job and investigate her new boss's identity.
182* Gary Andrews, otherwise known as WesternAnimation/GaryTheRat, graduated from Harvard law before signing on with the firm he works for throughout the series.
183* ''WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman'':
184** Beatrice graduated from Barnard (not Ivy League, but still prestigious) with a bachelor's degree...which irks her father Joseph, as he wanted her to come back from college with ''[[MRSDegree a husband]]''.
185** Hollyhock eventually starts attending Wesleyan, and Bojack briefly begans teaching there so he could bond more with her. One imagine's she's able to afford it because she has eight fathers to fund it.
186* ''WesternAnimation/XMenTheAnimatedSeries'' shows a young Charles Xavier attending Bard College, which in the comics is one of Beast's many alma maters. Jean Grey is also implied to be a legacy, as her father was one of Xavier's professors.
187[[/folder]]
188
189[[folder:Real Life]]
190* If you happen to be an East Coast-dwelling American of the right age and background, you likely know someone who wants to be or has been accepted into an Ivy League school. Many high school (or even ''middle school'') students bust their ass to try and get accepted with varying results. There are articles about this phenomenon.
191* 31% of [[UsefulNotes/ThePresidentsOfTheUnitedStates U.S. presidents]] attended Ivy League schools. That percentage is even higher in recent decades: UsefulNotes/JoeBiden was the first president without an Ivy League education since UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan. This is justified as people who become president tend to come from wealthy and connected families. As you go further down the federal hierarchy, the numbers actually increase slightly. Ditto for corporate executives, especially in companies based on the East Coast.
192** This probably peaked in 2004, when opposing candidates UsefulNotes/JohnKerry and UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush were not only both Yale alums, they were both members of the same exclusive secret society while there: Skull and Bones. In response to comments that the campaign looked like a class war, one reporter quipped: "Yeah, Yale Class of '66 vs. Class of '68."
193** The 2020 Democratic ticket of UsefulNotes/JoeBiden and UsefulNotes/KamalaHarris is the first of either party since 1984 to not have an Ivy League alum.[[note]]Biden got his bachelor's at the University of Delaware and his JD from Syracuse University, while Harris went to Howard University (an HBCU) for undergrad and UC Hastings (now known as UC Law SF) for law school.[[/note]]
194* They were only for rich people who went to the right feeder schools and now almost anyone has the opportunity (as long as they are smart enough and special enough to stand out from all the other smart people applying for the same spot). Fortunately, you no longer have to be rich, thanks to financial aid -- as long as you don't mind a mountain of student loan debt after graduation. Princeton eliminated student loans in 2001 and now does all its financial aid through repayment-free grants. Harvard gives out large amounts of need-based aid; if you are poor enough it covers tuition completely. Combined with grants and scholarships many can go there without paying a dime. Brown has also eliminated loans for students living below a surprisingly high annual income, and eliminated tuition ''entirely'' for annual family incomes of below $60,000. It's worth noting that many selective schools such as the Ivies are desperate to increase their diversity—whether racial, geographical, or financial.
195** Subverted in Owen Wister's "Philosophy 4" (written in 1904 and thus out of copyright and available on line), which tells the story of two would-be idle young men who match this description--and their poor, immigrant, striver classmate. This was {{Truth in Television}} even then.
196* If we're counting law schools, the US Supreme Court was made up entirely of Harvard and Yale alums with the half-exception of [[Film/{{RBG}} Ruth Bader]] [[Film/OnTheBasisOfSex Ginsburg]] before her death in 2020. She started law school at Harvard, but transferred to Columbia when her husband took a job in New York City. Both of Obama's nominees — Sotomayor and Kagan — got their bachelors' at Princeton. Obama himself went to Harvard Law School and was the first black President of the ''Harvard Law Review''. And the latter part of his undergraduate career was spent at Columbia — however, for the first couple of years he studied at Occidental College which... is ''not'' an Ivy League school. Trump's first nominee, Neil Gorsuch, also got his bachelor's at Columbia and JD at Harvard—though unlike Obama, he did all of his undergrad work at Columbia. Trump's second nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, earned both his bachelor's and JD at Yale. Finally averted with Trump's ''third'' nominee, Amy Coney Barrett, who had ''no Ivy League education at all''—she earned her bachelor's at Rhodes College, a well-regarded liberal arts school in Memphis but by no means an Ivy, and her JD at Notre Dame, likewise a well-regarded but non-Ivy school. The Ivies returned in full force with Biden's only nominee so far, Ketanji Brown Jackson, who earned both her BA and JD at Harvard.
197* Justice Thomas has a strained relationship with Yale Law School, his alma mater.[[note]]Thomas is only a law school Ivy man. He earned his bachelor's at Holy Cross, which made him the only current justice who didn't attend an Ivy or the equivalent as an undergrad until Barrett's confirmation. The only other non-Ivy undergraduate on the court when Barrett was confirmed, Stephen Breyer, went to Stanford; after his retirement, he was replaced by the aforementioned Jackson, a Harvard product through and through.[[/note]] In 2013, he cracked a joke at their expense during oral arguments. It was the first thing he said in oral arguments ''for seven years.''
198* Quite a few show business persons have gone to Ivy League schools or schools of equal prestige.
199** Screenwriter Erich Segal to Harvard. As noted above, he later admitted to having modeled the male lead in the novel ''Film/LoveStory'' (and its film adaptation) on his Harvard contemporaries UsefulNotes/AlGore and Creator/TommyLeeJones.
200** Creator/JodieFoster went to Yale.
201** Creator/DeanCain, Creator/DavidDuchovny, and Creator/BrookeShields all graduated from Princeton in 1985.[[note]]As did two more prominent non-entertainment people, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and First Lady Michelle Obama.[[/note]]
202** Creator/EmmaWatson and her armed bodyguard (disguised in cap and gown) graduated from Brown in 2014.
203** Creator/HenryWinkler holds an MFA (Drama) from Yale.
204** Creator/NataliePortman was attending Harvard during most of the filming for the ''Franchise/StarWars'' prequels, under her real name. She actually advised Creator/AaronSorkin about Harvard social life when he was writing ''Film/TheSocialNetwork'' and the movie even has a small ShoutOut to her attending.
205*** Creator/RashidaJones, who played Marilyn Delpy in ''The Social Network'', also went to Harvard.
206** Creator/LisaKudrow attended Vassar.
207** Creator/MasiOka graduated Brown in '97.
208** Filmmaker Creator/DamienChazelle (''Film/{{Whiplash}}'', ''Film/LaLaLand'') graduated from Harvard in 2007.
209** Though not an Ivy League school, Creator/FrankCapra went to Caltech back when it was called Throop Institute.
210* Some East Coast prep schools ship their graduates to Ivies en masse. Likewise, there are cram schools in Asia (especially China and Korea) that try to get their pupils into the Ivies as much as they can.
211* Ivy Leaguers are not represented very frequently in professional sports.[[note]] The actual UsefulNotes/IvyLeague schools do not offer athletic scholarships, which makes it hard to attract or produce elite talent. Particularly for major sports like basketball and football, athletics tends to be less important to most students and alumni than it is at top-tier schools.[[/note]] Despite this, the late-2000s Buffalo Bills had a General Manager from Harvard, a head coach from Yale and a backup quarterback from Harvard.[[note]]The starter was from Stanford, but they play in the Pac-12 and do offer athletic scholarships, so he doesn't fit the example.[[/note]] (Incidentally, then-backup quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick later became a starter.)
212** Jeremy Lin, who made a brief sensation when he was signed by the New York Knicks in 2011, was a Harvard graduate.
213** Jason Garrett, the current head coach of the Dallas Cowboys, is a former Princeton Tigers QB who also played at Columbia.
214** This is why it was such a big deal in the media when Cornell's basketball team actually advanced into the NCAA Basketball Tournament (aka March Madness) Sweet Sixteen in 2010.
215* Although lately, schools like Harvard and Yale have begun to use this exact trope and a recruiting pitch to bring talented basketball players (within reason, players still have to qualify academically) to their teams and have experienced post-season success.
216* Stanford had also used this to build a once-moribund football program into a national power in its own right, and under longtime coach David Shaw, the Cardinal was noted for playing a very physical style of play. Stanford has a team of {{Genius Bruiser}}s. First overall 2012 draft pick and retired Colts quarterback Andrew Luck is an alumnus. However, the team's recent prominence faded thanks to a combination of COVID-19 effects and changes to NCAA transfer policies; Shaw resigned after losing seasons in both 2021 and 2022.
217* [[https://www.npr.org/2020/09/30/914061484/lies-money-and-cheating-the-deeper-story-of-the-college-admissions-scandal/ It came out in 2019 that numerous wealthy parents]], including Lori Loughlin of ''Series/FullHouse'' fame and Felicity Huffman, were going beyond donating buildings and pulling strings to get their kids into prestigious colleges. The scandal, called Operation Varsity Blues, revealed that the ringleader was a college counselor named Rick Singer that rigged test scores for the SAT and ACT, faked disabilities for extended time on tests, falsified "evidence" that they were athletes. In some cases, he even hired proctors to take exams for the kids. Some of the students themselves were embarrassed when the scandal came out, with only a few willing to tell their side of the story. Singer has been arrested but not sentenced owing to his willingness to cooperate with authorities, and universities have withdrawn or expelled a few of the kids involved. It turns out Ivy League means nothing when money can manipulate the system.
218* A lot of major newspapers and magazines, especially in and around the publishing hub of New York City, almost exclusively recruit graduates of Ivy League universities for editorial positions.
219* Some high school students have resorted to computer hacking to change their grades to ensure Ivy League admission. As Ivy League demands exceptional grades from its applicants, those people may get upset over [[TheBGrade a weak or a single outright bad grade]] destroying their chances of acceptance; this leads to hacking school computer systems. Unfortunately for them, this is against the law and said students can end up in prison. A specific example happened in Tenafly, New Jersey in 2017 [[https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/student-hacks-high-school-changes-grades-and-sends-college-applications/ with a student being arrested]] for hacking his grades and then mailing out Ivy League applications. What is worse is that offenders are just not able to get into Ivy League; they can find themselves barred from any college or university. A criminal record can ban you from receiving financial aid in many jurisdictions and many universities actually deny applications from convicted criminals, even nonviolent ones. Obviously, safety plays a major role in said denial, and even nonviolent offenders are regularly seen as lacking in basic integrity.
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