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4[[quoteright:300:[[ComicStrip/{{Pogo}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/painting-the-medium_pogo_9141.jpg]]]]
5[-[[caption-width-right:300:A circus barker speaking in a circus poster's [[UsefulNotes/{{Fonts}} typeface]].]]-]
6
7Painting the Medium is modifying the presentation of a story in order to convey information about the story. A comic book might give a character special-looking SpeechBubbles that reflect on their personality. A TV show might change to black-and-white or sepia-tone during flashbacks. A video game might change its GUI to show a change in the player character or the setting.
8
9By Painting the Medium, a creator turns a transparent tool--meant to show the work behind it--into a part of the work.
10
11'''This is typically done for one of several reasons:'''
12* To imply something about a character or scene without actually stating it. If done well, this will blend naturally into the rest of the work in a way the viewer or reader barely notices, and its meaning will be clear.
13* To create an intentional jarringly OffModel section of a work to demonstrate that something outside the norm is happening. An EldritchAbomination may be [[NonStandardCharacterDesign drawn in a different art style]] to symbolize that it is an "intruder from another reality", for instance.
14* To play with [[WorldOfSymbolism unusual methods of storytelling]]. This results in the more extreme examples and is wholly [[PostModernism postmodern]] in application. Done well, it creates a sense of [[UsefulNotes/{{Dada}} confused surreality]]; done badly, it can be [[TrueArtIsIncomprehensible pretentious and incomprehensible]].
15* [[PlayedForLaughs Cheap laughs]].
16
17Some of the most popular variants have become so conventional that we stop noticing them completely -- for example, dialogue written in [[NoIndoorVoice ALL CAPITAL LETTERS]] is shouted. (That is, if not in a medium where all caps is the norm, like most comic books -- in which case lowercase letters can be used to indicate an unusually soft-spoken character.)
18
19Heck, even ''we'' do it (check the entries in SelfDemonstratingArticle why not?)
20
21See also RuleOfPerception. Unless the characters themselves remark or interact with the audio or visual effects, then it can't be concluded they occur within the setting, so they must only be presented to the audience's side of the fourth wall. The characters who do remark on these tropes may be uncommonly MediumAware, or they may know that their particular universe is governed by metafictional laws, in which case the 'paint' isn't just on the medium, it's integrated into the text.
22
23Please note: This trope is '''not''' 'Character interacts with the pages of the book/panels of the comic/film camera/suitable alternative for their story'--that trope is MediumAwareness. This trope is 'The setup, layout or presentation of the book/comic/film/whatever is changed to reflect a change in the characters' situation'. Please don't put incorrect examples on pages they shouldn't be on, thank you. Splatter on the camera lens may be acceptable as a way of showing just how much rain/blood/liquid is flying around the scene at that point.
24
25!!Sub-tropes:
26[[index]]
27* AllLowercaseLetters
28* ArtShift
29* ArtShiftedSequel
30* BoldInflation
31* CameraAbuse
32* CapitalLettersAreMagic
33* CapsLock
34* ColorCodedSpeech
35* DecadeThemedFilter
36* DeliberatelyMonochrome
37* DeliberateVHSQuality
38* DizzyCam
39* DiegeticVisualEffects
40* FlashbackEffects
41* FrameBreak
42* ImpairmentShot
43* InfiniteCanvas
44* InterfaceScrew
45* IntoxicationMechanic
46* NoPunctuationPeriod
47* OddShapedPanel
48* OminousVisualGlitch
49* PageTurnSurprise: A CliffHanger's resolution is on the next page.
50* PictorialSpeechBubble
51* PlayableMenu
52* RainbowSpeak
53* RebusBubble
54* ScreenShake
55* SelfReferentialTrackPlacement
56* SpeechBubbles
57* SpeechBubblesInterruption
58* SplashOfColor
59* StaticScrew
60* SymbolSwearing
61* {{Textplosion}}
62* ThinkInText
63* TranslationConvention
64* TranslationPunctuation
65* UnconventionalFormatting
66* VisibleSilence
67* VisualCalculus
68* WallOfBlather
69* WingdingEyes
70* {{Wingdinglish}}
71* WrittenSoundEffect
72[[/index]]
73
74!!Examples:
75[[index]]
76* PaintingTheMedium/{{Advertising}}
77* PaintingTheMedium/AnimeAndManga
78* PaintingTheMedium/ComicBooks
79* PaintingTheMedium/ComicStrips
80* PaintingTheMedium/FanWorks
81* [[PaintingTheMedium/LiveActionFilms Films — Live-Action]]
82* PaintingTheMedium/{{Literature}}
83** ''PaintingTheMedium/{{Discworld}}''
84* PaintingTheMedium/LiveActionTV
85* PaintingTheMedium/{{Pinball}}
86* PaintingTheMedium/TabletopGames
87* PaintingTheMedium/{{Theatre}}
88* PaintingTheMedium/VideoGames
89* PaintingTheMedium/VisualNovels
90* PaintingTheMedium/WebAnimation
91* PaintingTheMedium/WebOriginal
92** PaintingTheMedium/SCPFoundation
93* PaintingTheMedium/{{Webcomics}}
94* PaintingTheMedium/WesternAnimation
95[[/index]]
96[[foldercontrol]]
97
98[[folder:Comedy]]
99* At one point during the video of Creator/BoBurnham's live show ''what.'', he starts to make an insulting joke about video editors, only to be suddenly cut off by a mysterious JumpCut.
100* In the vinyl album version of the ''Creator/MontyPython'' sketch ''The Piranha Brothers'', the voice-over announcer for the skit is being menaced by one of Dinsdale's thugs, and told that the sketch has gone on too long. When he protests, the thug "scratches the record", ending the bit. We fade out to: "Aw! Sorry, squire! I've scratched the record --orry, squire! I've scratched the record! --" over and over. ''Infinitely'', as this part ran on an actual loop on the LP.
101* Creator/CheechAndChong's self-titled first album features Tommy Chong attempting to put a vinyl record (supposedly the very one this skit is on) on the phonograph and failing miserably, the skit (and this side) ending in a fluster of wild record needle scratching.
102* The first of Creator/StanFreberg's ''Dragnet'' [[AffectionateParody affectionate parodies]], ''St. George and the Dragonet'', opens with this disclaimer: "The legend you are about to hear is true. Only the needle should be changed to protect the record."
103* In Creator/RobinWilliams's ''Weapons of Self Destruction'' special, he tells a story about Dock Ellis's no-hitter game while on LSD. While he tells it, the camera blurs the screen and adds motion trails and other hazy effects.
104[[/folder]]
105
106[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
107* Here's a really meta one: the early Disney ''[[WesternAnimation/TheManyAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh Winnie the Pooh]]'' shorts were played out as readings of the books, down to the animated characters being able to walk on the text, a hurried page-turning at one point to keep Pooh from flying out of the book, and so forth. Thus it [[MediumAwareness played with the concept that it was a book]], when in fact it ''wasn't''. All this in a cartoon for children.
108* At the end of ''WesternAnimation/TheThiefAndTheCobbler'', the Thief comes out and takes the letters from the THE END title. Then he goes and takes the ''very film he is on'' out of the projector as it is rolling, rolls it up and runs off into the now blank screen. Gives new meaning to the term "scene stealer".
109* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/BrotherBear'', when Kenai is transformed, the movie changes its aspect ratio to subtly tell the viewer that he's seeing through different eyes now.
110* In ''WesternAnimation/TheEmperorsNewGroove'', Kuzco-the-{{narrator}} freezes the frame and literally paints on the screen to bring the story back to himself. He then continues to interrupt the story so it focuses on himself. Later on in the story, Kuzco-the-character yells at Kuzco-the-narrator to stop talking and leave him alone. From then on, the movie is un-narrated.
111* Creator/RalphBakshi's animated ''WesternAnimation/TheLordOfTheRings'' also has blood splattering the camera during battles.
112* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'', Literature/{{Rapunzel}} ''literally'' paints the fourth wall.
113* In one scene, ''{{WesternAnimation/Ratatouille}}'' uses splashes of color to convey the indescribable qualities of tastes that harmonize well, and the differences in taste perception by Rémy and his brother.
114* In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanReturnOfTheCapedCrusaders'', Batman [[spoiler:gets drugged by Catwoman to turn him evil]]. As his disposition gets harsher, his HitFlash onomatopoeia shifts to words like "BLUDGEON" and "FRACTURE" to reflect the fact that he is delivering a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown rather than merely subduing his foes as usual.
115* The Eraser Bombs in [[WesternAnimation/DrawnTogether The Drawn Together Movie: The Movie!]] essentially undo the process of animation. They first render objects to sketches, then the objects disintegrate, leaving a blank white space where they used to be.
116* In ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed'', when Mei spots the posters Tyler has put up the camera's screen cracks.
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Music]]
120* Autotune was first used to correct errors in pitch. Many modern musicians use it to deliberately distort their voice so it's obvious that they're using Autotune, as well as for aesthetic effect, even when they're fully capable of singing themselves. [[StopHavingFunGuys Some people have expressed their distaste.]]
121* [[Music/AmandaPalmer The Dresden Dolls]] use some quirky, but meaningful, production techniques in the song "Coin-Operated Boy", which is about the superiority of vibrators to real boyfriends. The mix begins monophonic, but it abruptly widens to stereo during the line "I turn him on / And he comes to life". The performers imitate a BrokenRecord over the line "And I'll never be alone", signifying that this is the narrator's false repetition to herself. The end of the bridge features an intense ''rallentando'' to evoke the tapering end of an orgasm, a battery-powered device running out of juice, or more likely both.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Music Videos]]
125* The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZwMX6T5Jhk music video for Kanye West's "Love Lockdown,"]] if watched on a standard-definition TV or Youtube, is letterboxed. At about one minute in, a character in the video races towards the camera, then actually jumps ''out'' of the letterbox.
126** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMH0e8kIZtE&ob=av3e Welcome To Heartbreak]] was mistaken by many people, on first viewing, for a video with graphics errors.
127* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQ9YtJC-Kd8 The TV Show]]"'s central conceit it that it's showing us a series of TV shows being viewed by two guys in a control booth. Then one falls asleep on a console, and elements from some of the shows start interacting with each other, the camera, and the producers. HilarityEnsues.
128* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewc1hixzYPY "Madvillain – All Caps."]] It's an animated comic book--literally.
129* The video for {{Music/Justice|Band}}'s remix of Lenny Kravitz's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDDxBSvOYB8 "Let Love Rule"]] feature the end of a fictitious movie and its credits sequence. Early on, the lead character's sleeve gets caught on one line of the credits. At first, things are fun, but then the video deconstructs the idea of having a credits sequence be a physical part of the world.
130* In ''Music/{{Nanowar of Steel}}'s'' "And Then I Noticed That She Was a Gargoyle", the captions get interrupted when the main singer's character gets attacked during the video.
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Opera]]
134* In Music/ArnoldSchoenberg's opera ''Moses und Aron'', the composer illustrates the two lead characters' differences by a radical break with the basic convention of opera:
135** The tongue-tied Moses, whose direct contact with the God of Israel has shown him the inadequacy of human words to describe Him, ''never sings a note''. Instead, he speaks in ordinary non-musical prose throughout.
136** By contrast, Moses' brother and spokesman--the plausible, tactful, crowd-pleasing Aaron--sings in a gorgeous tenor.
137[[/folder]]
138
139[[folder:Print Media]]
140* The literary journal ''Timothy [=McSweeney's=] Quarterly Concern'' is as much a vehicle for editor Dave Eggers to play with the magazine format as a collection of fiction. The format changes with each issue, from paperback to hardcover to a collection of smaller booklets containing individual stories. One of the more elaborate issues (#17) was published as a bundle of misdelivered mail, containing some stories in individual envelopes and some in the fictitious magazines that the fictitious intended recipient subscribed to. Sometimes stories take advantage of the flexibility of the format: "Heart Suit", in issue 16, was printed on a deck of oversized playing cards and readable in any shuffled order. On a smaller scale, Eggers will sometimes put long rambling asides in the copyright notice and other bits of {{paratext}}.
141* In the book ''Color: A Natural History of the Palette'', author Victoria Finley describes an ''ukiyo-e'' print ([[http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lz3f4v8NB61qd384p.jpg likely this one]]) that shows the famous [[KabukiTheater kabuki]] actor Onoe Kikugoro V portraying a ghost. [[SplashOfColor The brown spot on the ghost's head was once green malachite pigment]]; Finley theorizes that the artist deliberately used the corrosive mineral to illustrate the ghost's supernatural power and malevolence as it literally burned through the canvas.
142* A [[http://yesterdays-print.com/post/158621421399/feather-river-bulletin-quincy-california-march humorous poem]] appearing in a 1924 edition of the Feather River Bulletin reads:
143[[center:''When her mother is in the parlor we sit'']]
144[[center:''LIKE.................THIS'']]
145[[center:''But after mother retires we always sit'']]
146[[center:''LIKETHIS'']]
147[[center:''And sometimes (don't be shocked) we sit'']]
148[[center:''LIKE'']]
149[[center:''THIS'']]
150[[/folder]]
151
152[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
153* Wrestling/OldeWrestling, which started in 2013 and is set in TheRoaringTwenties, deliberately scratches up the film to make it look old.
154[[/folder]]
155
156[[folder:TV Tropes]]
157* Several {{Self Demonstrating Article}}s:
158** SelfDemonstrating/AllBlueEntry
159** DarthWiki/AllRedEntry
160** BiggerIsBetter
161** '''Creator/BrianBlessed'''
162** BoldInflation
163** EasterEgg
164** FootnoteFever
165** ''Literature/HouseOfLeaves''
166** ''Film/{{Memento}}''
167** ShamelessSelfPromoter
168** SpeechBubbles
169** Administrivia/TVTropesMoreLikeTVQuotes
170** JustForFun/CandleJack, most def--
171* This site (and other wikis, for that matter) itself when it comes to links. [[Website/TVTropes Normal links show up in blue]], [[LinkDiscussion discussion links]] or [[CutList links to certain pages are in orange]], [[{{Green}} disambiguation pages are in green]], and [[ItLooksLikeThis links to nonexistent articles are in red]]. Checking out the new edits gives even ''more'' colors.
172* '''[[Tropers/TheAdvertisementServer ADBOT]] SAYS HELLO.'''
173* On many websites, including this wiki, some posters seem use spoiler tags for hiding words that should not be said, written, or seen for some superstitious reason, such as the Tetragrammaton, or the name of [[Theatre/{{Macbeth}} The Scottish Play]], or less seriously, a potentially FlameWar fueling forum post, as if the whiteness would make them partially unwritten.
174* Many ''very'' old-timer tropers will be able to recount when the various [[YMMV/HomePage YMMV tropes]] were helpfully highlighted with a solid red bullet. This was removed during one of the first revamps to the site, though this functionality still lives on, with tropes instead displaying their proper symbol next to them if not in their proper namespace.
175* There are two main functions of [[AC: the AC font]]: AI dialogue to show their synthesised voicebox, and giving proper gravitas to the words 'In SPACE!'.
176[[/folder]]
177
178[[folder:Real Life]]
179* Ride/UniversalStudios' Ride/TheIncredibleHulkCoaster suddenly hurls the passengers forward during the climb up the first hill, right when the audio says the experiment they're listening to goes wrong. The engineer says this represents the sudden surge of uncontrollable power experienced by Bruce Banner upon turning into the Hulk.
180[[/folder]]

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