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1%% Image moved to this page per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1450482266007068400
2%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
3%%
4[[quoteright:333:[[LifetimeMovieOfTheWeek https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Craigslist_killer_5842.jpg]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:333:''[[Theatre/AnythingGoes In olden days, an online stalking was looked on as something shocking\
6But now, God knows, anything goes!]]'']]
7
8->''"Codemasters, there's art imitating life, and then there's just plain ''copying'' it."''
9-->-- '''{{WebVideo/SCXCR}}''', regarding ''Heatseeker'' on the [[Platform/PlayStation2 PS2]]
10
11It's that mostly familiar, spiffed up and neatly tied off version of the [[IfItBleedsItLeads sensationally violent yet true story]] you didn't want to read in the papers anyway. Double points if the real crime sounds like something fictional. Sometimes, murder is added to the real story to make it work as an episode.
12
13Often seen on ''Franchise/LawAndOrder'' and its various spinoffs (in fact, their commercials provide the {{Trope Namer|s}}), though it is used in many CrimeAndPunishmentSeries, {{Lifetime Original Movie}}s (who literally use the phrase in their press releases) and the like. However, the original inspiration behind the title was the stock Warner Brothers film studio's tagline "Torn from today's headlines!"; Warners used this catchphrase often beginning in the 1930s to promote the gritty realism of their "social problem" films.
14
15When it's done with more than one real-life story, that falls under PatchedTogetherFromTheHeadlines.
16
17Most often seen in political cartoons, where the entire purpose is to comment on current events.
18
19The EvilTwin of this trope is CouldThisHappenToYou Done poorly.
20
21If a criminal is ''knowingly'' imitating a famous murderer, that's JackTheRipoff.
22----
23!!Example subpages:
24[[index]]
25* RippedFromTheHeadlines/{{Film}}
26* RippedFromTheHeadlines/{{Literature}}
27* RippedFromTheHeadlines/LiveActionTV
28** ''RippedFromTheHeadlines/NineOneOne''
29** ''RippedFromTheHeadlines/ColdCase''
30** ''Criminal Minds''
31*** ''RippedFromTheHeadlines/CriminalMinds''
32*** ''RippedFromTheHeadlines/CriminalMindsBeyondBorders''
33** ''RippedFromTheHeadlines/LawAndOrder''
34* RippedFromTheHeadlines/{{Music}}
35* Video Games
36** ''RippedFromTheHeadlines/WatchDogs2''
37[[/index]]
38
39!!Other examples:
40
41[[foldercontrol]]
42
43[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
44* The ''Manga/AstroBoy'' story ''Capetown Lullaby'', written in the mid-sixties, was inspired by the issue of racial segregation in the US and South Africa, [[FantasticRacism substituting robots for black people]]. Astro even gets told to move to the back of a bus. A few other stories have nods to current events, despite ostensibly taking place in the future. ''Yellow Horse'', published in 1956, which was declared "International Geophysical Year", features both drug smugglers and police using different scientific survey missions as covers. ''The Midoro Swamp'', where Astro fights an army of living dinosaurs was inspired by sightings of the Loch Ness Monster making headlines... [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking and it also features several characters eating soft-serve ice cream because the manga was written shortly after it first went on sale in Japan]].
45* Creator/OsamuTezuka also often did this with ''Manga/BlackJack''. For instance, there really were a number of infanticides in which unwanted babies were left to die in train station coin lockers, although whether or not any of them were rescued by female street gang leaders is another matter.
46* The motive behind the ''Kogoro Mouri's Impostor'' case from ''Manga/CaseClosed'' involves a falling out between the two culprits of a several million yen extortion case. The company they exploited is specifically identified as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glico_Morinaga_case a confectionery company]].
47* ''Manga/CellsAtWork'': The manga's GrandFinale revolves around the body having to fight an infection of SARS-[=CoV=]-2, inspired by the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic.
48* In ''Manga/DemonSlayerKimetsuNoYaiba'', within the manga, during the climax of the Red-Light District arc, the Yoshiwara red light district was left in ruins in the middle, and after, the massive clash between the present Slayers against the Upper Rank 6 demons; the anime adaptation, however, went on to make that climax a historical reference, by adding a fire hazard to the fallen district, thus the final fight of that arc is set in the middle of a flaming red light district, that would link the series to the real fires that took place in that very same Yoshiwara red light district, Japan, in 1913. Implicitly it gives a real date and precise timeframe to the series as a whole, whereas the only timeframe given for the whole series in the manga, and anime before, is the Taisho Period, which can be anywhere from 1912 to 1926.
49* The episode "Not Equal" from ''Anime/GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex'' involves Section 9 investigating the mysterious sighting of the daughter of a high profile businessman who had been kidnapped by a terrorist organization many years ago. They eventually find out that the girl is the leader of the faction. This mirrors the disappearance of Patty Hearst, daughter of a media mogul who was kidnapped by a terrorist group and was later seen working with them back in The70s.
50%%* A lot of anime dealing with the [[UsefulNotes/KaijuDefenseForce Japanese Self-Defense Force]], national security, and terrorism that aired beginning 2014 onwards is almost certain to have been influenced by the Abe administration's hawkish stance on foreign policy. Beginning mid-2014, the Japanese government began to loosen the [[TechnicalPacifist restrictions]] concerning overseas military deployment and arms exports and completed this process in late 2015. Anime that were influenced by this include shows like ''Anime/GhostInTheShellArise'', ''Anime/TerrorInResonance'', ''Literature/{{Gate}}'', and ''Anime/PsychoPassTheMovie''. As time goes on, it's almost certain that more will come.
51* ''Manga/TheKindaichiCaseFiles'':
52** The backstory behind the Castle of Wax Murder Case arc is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/300_million_yen_robbery the 300 million yen robbery]], which took place in 1968. The largest heist in Japanese history, it has remained unsolved.
53** Occasionally, some case arcs will have an InUniverse example of this trope, in which a crime that happened in the past would not only serve as source material for a mystery novel but have a connection to the present-day case arc where said mystery novel and the crime said novel was based on are both featured as well.
54* One of the final scenes in ''Manga/MyHeroAcademiaVigilantes'' features a plane above New York City that has lost both its engines and is being forced to make an emergency landing in the Hudson River. This is a clear reference to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_Airways_Flight_1549 US Airways Flight 1549]], which made such a landing after a case of engine failure. The scene from inside the cabin also mirrors the event as told in the movie adaptation of the events, ''Film/{{Sully}}''. [[spoiler:The major difference is that the plane's descent is slowed with Koichi's help as the pro hero, Skycrawler.]]
55* ''Manga/{{Pluto}}'', the 2003-2009 reinterpretation of the ''Manga/AstroBoy'' storyline "The Greatest Robot on Earth" features a FantasyConflictCounterpart of the Iraq War as a key part of the series' backstory, with [[spoiler:most of the robots targeted by Pluto having played a role in the invasion of the Iraq Expy Persia]].
56* The Magic Academy subplot in ''Literature/{{Sexiled|2018}}'' is based on a scandal where Tokyo Medical University was caught docking the grades of female students.
57* This is the reason Manga/TigerMask was never allowed to win an actually existing wrestling title: as the show was set in as close as to real life as possible, whenever he took part to the World Big League or challenged a champion for his title something made him quit, not give his best, or, when he faced Wrestling/DoryFunkJr for the NWA Heavyweight Championship, win in such a way the title didn't pass to him.
58[[/folder]]
59
60[[folder:Comics]]
61%%* Mainstream {{comic book}}s don't do this too often (save for major events like UsefulNotes/WorldWarII or 9/11) to avoid dating themselves, but in ''Comicbook/XMen'', one of the reasons [[Characters/MarvelComicsNightcrawler Nightcrawler]] quit his divinity studies was the rash of child abuse cases surrounding the Catholic Church in the early 2000s. He wondered how God could allow such a thing.
62* Showing this trope is OlderThanTheyThink, a [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden Age]] ''ComicBook/{{Human Torch|1939}}'' story contained a reference to an actor named "[[Creator/OrsonWelles Lawson Bell]]", who had staged [[Radio/TheWarOfTheWorlds a radio hoax involving a Martian invasion of Earth]].
63* ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' once took on the conspiracy theory that Music/TheBeatles secretly replaced Music/PaulMcCartney with a lookalike after the original died in an accident: in the comic, Robin is a fan of a NoCelebritiesWereHarmed version of the Beatles followed around by a similar rumor, and asks Batman to investigate. (Batman ultimately uncovers the shocking truth that the Paul-analogue is the only member of the band who ''hasn't'' been secretly replaced after dying in an accident.)
64* Creator/JohnByrne inverts this oddly, as he said a few times in interviews that sometimes what he writes about actually happens in real life. A big example is where Characters/{{Wonder Woman|TheCharacter}} [[http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2008/08/14/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-168/ died]] in ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'' (and was at this time referred to as Princess Diana in-universe) in an issue released the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesis_(DC_Comics) same month]] the actual Princess Diana (of Wales) [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana,_Princess_of_Wales#Death died.]]
65** Earlier on, during his reboot of ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'', Superman was to make his public debut by rescuing a space shuttle that [[Characters/SupermanLoisLane Lois Lane]], the only civilian there, was on. When the ''Challenger'' disaster occurred, claiming the lives of all crew (and the sole civilian, a woman) the shuttle was changed to a completely unrealistic "space plane".
66** ''Even'' earlier on, John Byrne wrote an issue of ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' where their usual duties were complicated by a city-wide blackout in New York. No sooner had the issue come out, New York City suffered a massive blackout.
67* ComicBook/ThePunisherMAX:
68** A number of stories will occasionally make use of current events. This ranges from corporate fraud to slavery to even the then ongoing War on Terror. Usually so writer [[WriterOnBoard Garth Ennis can give us his opinion on the matter]].
69** In particular, The Slavers appears to be based on The Guardian article "Streets of Despair", with Garth Ennis even basing scenes on real-life moments transcribed in the article, including direct quotes, and even using the same names of the interviewees (which, as the article notes, were changed for their protection).
70* A plot involving stolen nerve gas in Marvel's ''ComicBook/DakotaNorth'' series is driven by a fictional incident based on the Bhopal disaster. In real life, thousands died after a chemical leak at a pesticide factory and the company running it was accused of negligence. In the fictionalised version, it was a actually a chemical weapons project linked to the CIA, and the company was blamed as part of a cover-up.
71* Superhero comics got a nasty shock when the September 11, 2001 attacks happened, as these attacks actually sound a lot like a comic book plot. DC and Marvel had a rather hard time figuring out how to address 9/11 properly in universes in which gods, aliens, giant robots, and supervillains with otherworldly powers and weapons of mass destruction terrorize American citizens, ''especially'' New Yorkers, with death and mayhem on a rather regular basis.
72** Marvel put out several specials, the proceeds of which went to 9/11-related charities, and this was [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] multiple times, ESPECIALLY with ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'', and handled in a rather realistic (for the setting) fashion. When addressed directly, it was either a case of "so busy with giant gaudy supervillains, 13 separated plain-clothed men slipped by unnoticed", or they basically said "We'll figure out who to blame later and deal with the tragedy now!" or, in at least Spider-Man's case, [[HeroicBSOD he spent a long while with no answer to the question, no excuse, no reason at all.]]
73** Slightly more cynical readers might point out that the Twin Towers were destroyed multiple times in Marvel Comics, often by the same villains shown crying in the aforementioned ''Spider-Man'' issue. Characters/{{Juggernaut|MarvelComics}} in particular once smashed through the base of one of the Towers and expressed amusement at the idea he might've killed someone, whereas both Characters/{{Ma|rvelComicsMagneto}}gneto and [[Characters/MarvelComicsDoctorDoom Doctor Doom]] have done far worse in-universe.
74*** Marvel published the Crisis Crossover ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}'' a short time later, a FantasyConflictCounterpart of 9/11 and the consequences of it. It had the "How would it have impacted in the superhero community?" angle, which would be [[DudeNotFunny completely out of place]] if done with the real event.
75** DC put out four volumes of anthologies: ''9-11: Artists Respond'', ''9-11: The World's Finest Comic Book Writers & Artists Tell Stories to Remember'', ''9-11: Emergency Relief'' and ''A Moment of Silence'', stories showing their heroes dealing with the tragedy. A particularly strong story, which also managed to avoid the logic gaffes from the above-mentioned Marvel reactions, was Creator/{{Dwayne McDuffie}}'s ''Comicbook/{{Static}}'' entry in the second volume. Rather than dealing with the destruction of the Twin Towers themselves, the story instead focused on the backlash against innocent Muslims that began once people started blaming them for 9/11. Several of the other stories also had this theme and reminded readers that people of all faiths, Muslims included, died in the attacks.
76* ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'' did this constantly in the first periodic strips published in the 1930s, to the point that modern readers might fail to get what were at the time obvious references to world events. The situation changed after ThoseWackyNazis invaded Belgium and direct commentary on those world events became... unwise. Hergé spent the war writing more light-hearted stories with no political commentary, and after the war, many of the 1930s strips were re-released in book form with the more shallow references (like to popular 1930s films and actors) deleted.
77** The early ''Tintin in America'' (1931-1932) has Tintin go to Chicago to bring down UsefulNotes/AlCapone, the only time he has a real person as an antagonist.
78** ''Cigars of the Pharaoh'' (1932-1934) is inspired by the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb and the post-UsefulNotes/WorldWarI wars in the Middle East that shaped Saudi Arabia's borders as they are today. While adrift at the Red Sea, Tintin is saved by a then famous French mercenary/smuggler that operated in the area.
79** ''The Blue Lotus'' (1934-1935) has Tintin stumble on a Japanese plot to stage a FalseFlagOperation blowing up the Shanghai-Nanking railway as a pretext to invade China. This is an obvious jab at the [[UsefulNotes/SecondSinoJapaneseWar Mukden Incident]].
80** ''The Broken Ear'' (1935-1937) is based on the Chaco War, and features an international ArmsDealer modeled on [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_Zaharoff Basil Zaharoff]].
81** ''King Ottokar's Sceptre'' (1938-1939) is inspired both by the German annexation of Austria and the Italian invasion of Albania.
82** ''Land of Black Gold'' (1939-1940) was originally set in the British Mandate of Palestine and dealt with Irgun insurgency. Publication was cancelled before the ending because of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and when it was due to be resumed in 1948 it was deemed obsolete. The story was edited heavily and released as set in a fictional Arab country torn by civil war.
83* Creator/MarkWaid's ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' run had an issue inspired by the Trayvon Martin killing, with the only real difference being that the racist shooter was [[GenderFlip a woman]] instead of a man.
84* ''Comicbook/SecretAvengers'':
85** One issue involved a new "Hacktivist" inspired version of U.S. Agent who had leaked a bunch of sensitive documents to the public. The resulting debate about whether or not the American people have a right to total government transparency even when lives are at stake was very similar to the controversies surrounding Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning.
86** In the wake of the controversy surrounding the United States' use of drones in UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror, Nick Spencer did a storyline about Iron Patriot drones [[AIIsACrapShoot running amok]] [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything and killing innocent civilians in a Middle Eastern nation]]. Unlike the real world situation, [[Characters/IronManHeroes War Machine]] and [[Characters/MarvelComicsBruceBanner the Hulk]] stepped in to save the day.
87* ''ComicBook/MortadeloYFilemon'': Ever since the end of the Spanish Democratic Transition in 1977 (and thus, the end of Franco's dictatorship censorship system), Ibáñez very often bases (very loosely) his stories in RealLife current events.
88** Ibáñez rarely did this during the Silver Age (early '80s). It wasn't until the 90s (let's be generous and say late 80s) that RealLife was referenced in the comics (either as celebrity cameos or as stories based on RealLife events, and until the XXI century that it played a big role in them.
89* The ''Comicbook/JudgeDredd'' storyline "Mega-City Confidential" is a clear commentary on the NSA/GCHQ surveillance programs revealed by Edward Snowden. Crucially, even Dredd feels that Justice Department's spying [[EvenEvilHasStandards is going too far]].
90** An earlier story mocked the divorce of Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman through a war between two blocks named after the actors.
91** The story "Let's Get To Work" has an in-universe example. After dealing with the VillainOfTheWeek on a movie set, he asks what the plot of the film is. When told, he notes that it was exactly what happened with an old case of his from twenty years prior.
92* The Creator/ECComics story "The Bribe!" (''[=Shock SuspenStories=]'' #7) is loosely based on the story of the Cocoanut Grove nightclub fire. The Cocoanut Grove passed a fire safety inspection eight days before it burned down, causing hundreds of deaths; that the nightclub's owners had bribed the inspectors, as in EC's story, was alleged but never proven. The identification of the victims by pictures taken by a club photographer shortly before the fire broke out is another element of the story that actually happened.
93* ''ComicBook/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicIDW'' has the "Elections" arc from the 46th and 47th issues. It came out in the months leading to the 2016 U.S. Presidential election and has Filthy Rich running against Mayor Mare for mayor of Ponyville. Filthy, a wealthy business pony with no prior political experience, can be seen in this as a loose {{Expy}} of UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump.
94* The 2012 "Northstar Gets Married" issue of ComicBook/XMen, in which Jean-Paul and Kyle Jinadu tie the knot, came out when an increasing number of American states were legalizing same-sex marriage. Given that Kyle's relationship with Northstar mostly developed off-panel, and Northstar himself wasn't one of the most prominent X-Men, the full-blown "Superhero Wedding" treatment it received sent a clear message from Marvel, and probably wouldn't have happened if Kyle were Kylie instead.
95* The plot of ''ComicBook/AmericaVsTheJusticeSociety,'' which revolved around the discovery of a (false) diary implicating the Golden Age ComicBook/JusticeSocietyOfAmerica as Nazi collaborators, was inspired by the discovery and publication of the so-called Hitler Diaries.
96[[/folder]]
97
98[[folder:Fan Works]]
99
100* ''Fanfic/WhiteSheepRWBY'': In-universe. A photo of Ruby caught by a [[HumanoidAbomination humanoid Grimm's]] CombatTentacles becomes front-page news. Someone makes a comic of it with an... alternate ending. Ruby buys it, finding it amusing that the heroine is obviously based on her, and finally discovers what [[NaughtyTentacles tentacle hentai]] is.
101-->Ruby turned the page, eager to see how Miriam escaped from his tentacle grasp.\
102She didn't.\
103She didn't escape at all.\
104"Oh..." Ruby's eyes widened. Her cheeks flushed with colour. She slapped the comic shut and gazed over the top at her teammates. Neither was paying attention. That... this... was this...? Ruby swallowed. Slowly, tentatively, she opened the page once more and took another look.\
105[[HeadTiltinglyKinky Her head tilted to the left]].\
106"Ooh..."
107[[/folder]]
108
109[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
110* ''ComicStrip/DickTracy'' was created out of Chester Gould's disgust at criminals like UsefulNotes/AlCapone and Film/BonnieAndClyde getting lionized in the papers as folk heroes and decided to create a police detective determined to stop them.
111* ''ComicStrip/MaryWorth'' of all things had a story arc where Wilbur and Dawn go on a cruise in Italy that ends up mimicking the Costa Concordia disaster, six months after the events in question.
112* ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' had a few story arcs inspired by real-world events, like the passing of Comet Kohoutek (where Snoopy expresses worry about it harboring TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt), or Hank Aaron's attempts to beat Babe Ruth's record for career home runs (with Snoopy in the running as well).
113* ''ComicStrip/DeRechter'': Many of the comics are based on recent headlines from the newspapers the comic is published in.
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
117* The Lakers[==]Celtics UsefulNotes/NationalBasketballAssociation rivalry stretching back to 1954 led the Wrestling/NationalWrestlingAlliance to try and create a similar rivalry at least once. In the 1980s, where the two teams met in the NBA finals three times, it was Wrestling/RicFlair (Lakers) vs Wrestling/DustyRhodes (Celtics).
118* Michael Fay being sentenced to punishment by caning in Singapore in 1994 led to the Singapore Cane match held by Wrestling/{{ECW}} between Wrestling/TommyDreamer and [[Wrestling/JimFullington Sandman]].[[note]]Of course they didn't use an actual Singapore cane, but a kendo stick (normally used as a practice sword). Like most things from ECW it was stolen by the bigger companies (invoking this trope themselves) and overused to the point that it doesn't get a reaction anymore. So if you've ever been curious why kendo sticks are so common in wrestling, there ya go.[[/note]]
119* Kenny King and Rhett Titus's Wrestling/RingOfHonor "Cabinet" campaign to "Make wrestling great again" obviously echoed many complaints pro wrestling fans had for years, but outside of the wrestling bubble it even more obviously paralleled the 2016 presidential elections of the USA, particularly in its use of StrawFan plants [[AstroTurf meant to drown out the ticket-buying fans]]. The follow up "Rebellion" which saw the additions of Caprice Coleman and Shane Taylor were, in turn, playing on the fallout from the election.
120[[/folder]]
121
122[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
123* On ''Series/BearInTheBigBlueHouse'', the episode in which the Woodland Valley library was damaged by a storm was loosely inspired by 9/11 and the idea of overcoming disastrous events in the wake of that. Also, the community and community helpers focus of the fourth season, in general, was inspired by this.
124* The ''Series/{{Thunderbirds}}'' episode "[[Recap/ThunderbirdsS2E5Ricochet Ricochet]]", featuring a [[BuccaneerBroadcaster pirate radio]] [[RecycledInSpace space station]], was heavily inspired by the RealLife [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Caroline Radio Caroline]].
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Radio]]
128* The radio show ''Radio/{{Dragnet}}'' claimed: "The story you are about to hear is true. The names have been changed to protect the innocent" at the start of every show. Jack Webb took great pains to be realistic, down to counting the number of footsteps to go from one place to another in the LAPD police station. The shows WERE based on actual events.
129[[/folder]]
130
131[[folder:Theatre]]
132* John Adams' ''The Death of Klinghoffer'' -- which, with his ''Nixon In China'', are nicknamed "CNN Operas".
133* The opera ''Der Lindberghflug (The Lindbergh Flight)'' by Creator/BertoltBrecht with music by Kurt Weill [[strike:and Paul Hindemith]].
134* Before Maurine Watkins wrote a little play called ''Theatre/{{Chicago}}'', she worked for a while reporting for the ''Chicago Tribune'', which assigned her to cover a few murder trials. Roxie Hart was an only barely fictionalized version of Beulah Annan, described in Watkins' reporting as "the prettiest murderess in Cook County." [[http://www.northshire.com/blog/?p=6585 Velma Kelly]] had a real-life counterpart as well. So, for that matter, did the Hungarian immigrant who speaks little English; her counterpart was an Italian immigrant named [[http://www.newlinetheatre.com/chicagochapter.html Sabella Nitti]], who spoke no English, worked for Velma's counterpart, Belva Gaertner, was convicted of beating her farmer husband to death with a hammer and chopping him into pieces, and was hanged.
135* ''Theatre/TwilightLosAngeles'' is a series of interviews with people that were in UsefulNotes/LosAngeles during the riots in 1992.
136* From ''Theatre/{{Macbeth}}'': The ''Tiger'', wracked at sea "Sennights nine times nine", was based off the then-recent story of a ship called the ''Tiger's Whelp''. This ship had disappeared at sea and been presumed lost in 1604, but returned to port five hundred sixty-seven days later.
137* ''[[Theatre/ThrillMe Thrill Me: The Leopold and Loeb Story]]'' is based on the real Leopold and Loeb, who appeared to have murdered a young boy simply because they thought they could get away with it.[[hottip:*:They couldn't.]] It takes a few artistic liberties to make Nathan Leopold more sympathetic, and they also made Nathan and Richard older and their victim younger. (Though a lot of the dates given in the show are weird, so this may have been unintentional.)
138* ''Theatre/MarginForError'' is an extrapolated fictionalization of Mayor Fiorello La Guardia's assignment of an all-Jewish police detail to guard the German consulate in New York City in the wake of Kristallnacht. (The non-appearing mayor of the play is left unnamed, as is the city.)
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:Video Games]]
142* ''VideoGame/AnimalRestaurant'': Dr. Puppy was added to the game in March 2020, and his appearance and dialogue are a reference to the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic. He wears a hazmat suit and goggles and carries a bottle of spray sanitizer.
143-->'''Dr. Puppy:''' This is a protective suit, I'm here to sanitize the restaurant. Recently, there has been an infectious virus spreading in the human world.\
144'''Eggy:''' Oh my! Dori, let's call it a day and go home!\
145'''Dr. Puppy:''' Don't worry, at this moment, cats will not contract the virus. However, everyone should take care of their hygiene and wash their hands regularly at all times!
146
147* WordOfGod is that the classic ''VideoGame/{{Choplifter}}'' was inspired by the Iranian Hostage Crisis of The70s.
148* ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}} V: Gods and Kings'', released in 2012, added the Maya civilisation into the game, and included several references to the various "2012 Mayan apocalypse" conspiracies.
149* ''VideoGame/CrazyTaxi'', wherein you play as a hilariously [[DrivesLikeCrazy reckless]] cabbie in downtown San Francisco, was inspired by the chaos created by the SFO "Short Run" cab system, allowing cab drivers to move to the front of the airport taxi line if they dropped off earlier passengers within a certain time, getting a time limit extension to half an hour in the late 1990s. This incentivized drivers to speed and otherwise flagrantly violate traffic laws in order to get passengers to the downtown hotels and return to the airport within the 30 minute window, with predictable results.
150* ''VideoGame/{{Control}}:'' In Dead Letters and the Mail Room, several documents describe an AWE taking place at the US Embassy in Havana, in which several members of diplomatic staff experience symptoms such as eardrums popping. Tommasi's propaganda spins it to put the blame on sonic weaponry. This is based on an [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Havana_syndrome actual incident which occurred in late 2017]].
151* ''VideoGame/Disgaea6DefianceOfDestiny'': Piyori Nijino is the newest leader of the recurring [[{{Sentai}} Prism Rangers]] [[JokeCharacter Joke Characters]]. She fights evil in the TV World hoping that it will improve the sagging ratings of the show since it gets cancelled, the entire world will be destroyed. ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' has been on a steep decline in both TV ratings and ([[MerchandiseDriven more importantly]]) toy sales for years, to the point that there were some credible rumours back in 2019 that the franchise would be canned or at the very least put on hiatus if the situation didn't improve.
152* The ''VideoGame/{{Emergency}}'' series has a few of these. In the first game, the aerobatic plane crashing into a diner was allegedly based on the Ramstein Air Show disaster. ''Emergency 2'' includes a collision involving a nuclear submarine.
153** ''Emergency 4'' features pseudo-Palestinian activists abducting a plane and forcing it to land on the airport of a pseudo-Arabian country, only for the player to storm it with German special forces. Then there are also deluxe missions involving an earthquake in pseudo-Afghanistan, a level 7 nuclear accident in pseudo-Ukraine, and a humanitarian escort operation in pseudo-Sierra Leone.
154* ''VideoGame/HotlineMiami2WrongNumber'' provides an in-universe example with the filming of ''Midnight Animal'', a schlocky, B-grade slasher film loosely based on the events of the first game and made while [[spoiler:Jacket's trial for said events is underway]]. It presents Jacket as a huge, emotionless killer who merely hallucinates the phone messages telling him to kill and rape, and makes the blonde into an ActionGirl.
155* Numerous events in ''VideoGame/HypnospaceOutlaw'' are clearly inspired by real events. One subplot involves a soda company reviving an 80s soda that's become nostalgic online, which WordOfGod [[https://twitter.com/jaytholen/status/983130278276358144 implied]] is the same as the ''WesternAnimation/RickAndMorty'' Schezuan Sauce debacle.
156* ''VideoGame/PeretEmHeruForThePrisoners'' was released and set in 1998, with a major plot point being the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luxor_massacre Luxor Massacre]] that happened a year earlier. More specifically, in the game, [[spoiler:Professor Tetsuya Tsuchida's daughter Shizumi was one of the victims -- and the whole expedition is a pretext to [[FailureToSaveMurder punish his assistant for failing to save her life]]]].
157* ''VideoGame/RAGE2'': The subplot where Clay Clayton, an {{Expy}} of UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump serves as TheMole reflects the scandal of Trump asking UsefulNotes/VladimirPutin to spy on UsefulNotes/HillaryRodhamClinton for him during a debate.
158* The plot to ''VideoGame/SpyFox in Dry Cereal'' was fueled by California's ''Advertising/GotMilk'' campaign. [[BigBad William the Kid]] even mocks it in the intro.
159-->'''William the Kid''': Got milk? Not anymore!
160* ''VideoGame/TerraInvicta'': The GrandStrategy game's starting year is 2022, and sees the Russian Invasion of Ukraine, with Russia's most elite 1st Guards Division getting annihilated by the Ukrainians at the start of each campaign.
161* ''VideoGame/{{Terranigma}}'': [[spoiler:[[BigBad Doctor Beruga]] successfully unleashing the [[ThePlague Asmodeus virus]] in Neotokyo, killing the entire population of the city save for a young girl has been compared to the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_subway_sarin_attack Tokyo subway sarin attack]] that took place early on the same year that the game was published]]. It's been theorized that, along with the religious overtones and some [[FamilyUnfriendlyDeath rather disturbing deaths]], are the reasons as to why the game never made it to America despite being released in Europe.
162* ''[[VideoGame/TonyHawksProSkater Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1+2]]'' became the first major game to acknowledge the UsefulNotes/Covid19Pandemic, with a few background details showing that the game takes place during it. There's a facemask accessory, a billboard in "School" mentions learning from home, and other billboards in "Downtown" display COVID-related PSA's. [[SerendipityWritesThePlot Helpfully]], this does a good job of explaining why the game's environments are devoid of bystanders and pedestrians.
163* ''VideoGame/TsukiAdventure'': One of Crush's lines while reading his newspaper is a reference to the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic:
164-->'''Crush:''' Oh wow these are some crazy times... An entire country on lockdown...
165* The plot of ''VideoGame/YIIKAPostModernRPG'' kicks off with the mysterious death of a beautiful young Asian woman who is last seen on an elevator security camera video. Creator Brian Allanston has admitted this was based on the highly publicized death of Elisa Lam, which many people [[OvershadowedByControversy denounced as disrespectful]] (predictably so to anyone familiar with Allanston's life and work).
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168[[folder:Visual Novels]]
169* A significant amount of the plot of ''VisualNovel/ApolloJusticeAceAttorney'' involves the introduction of the Jurist System in the ''Franchise/AceAttorney'' universe. At the time of the game's release, Japan was undergoing a similar process and having the first jury trials in decades.
170* Similarly, ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorneyDualDestinies'' is set in what's called "the Dark Age of the Law," where people have largely lost faith in the legal system, and attorneys on both sides have adopted a motto of "the end justifies the means" to get the verdict they want. This was based on cases from the real-life Japanese legal system a few years prior to the game's release that exposed many Japanese prosecutors for being shockingly corrupt. The most famous case involved a man's innocence being proven decades after he was convicted when it came to light that not only had prosecutors hidden evidence but had [[ColdBloodedTorture outright tortured the suspect into signing a false confession]]. And that wasn't the only case.
171* ''VisualNovel/MyTwoFirstLoves'' has this happen in Chapter 41 if both Mason and/or Noah are black or Latino. The game even provides a {{Content Warning|s}} to outright skip the scene since it's just about a re-enactment of the George Floyd arrest in May 2020.
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174[[folder:Webcomics]]
175* In ''Webcomic/{{Educomix}}'', the American government [[https://web.archive.org/web/20190717223256/http://educomix.webcomic.ws/comics/308 apparently]] has software to collect information from everyone's computers, like the real-life NSA scandal.
176* [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] in Webcomic/MonsterOfTheWeek:
177->'''Mulder:''' Man, how'd we get roped into raiding this suspiciously Waco-like cult?
178->'''Scully:''' I hate missions ripped from the nation's headlines.
179* Elizabeth Thatch's [[https://elizthacharchives.tumblr.com/post/725682024364556288/twintails-comic-by-elizabeth-thach "Twintails"]], a short comic in which an aspiring artist's idea [[PlagiarismInFiction is stolen and aired on TV without her involvement]], has heavy similarities to the incident involving Creator/{{CINAR}} stealing a proposal from animator Claude Robinson to create ''WesternAnimation/RobinsonSucroe''.
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182[[folder:Web Original]]
183* One write-up in ''Roleplay/AHWorldCup'' is about the controversy of the tournament ball and how some players have difficulty playing with it. A similar controversy to the Jabulani ball controversy in the [[UsefulNotes/TheWorldCup 2010 World Cup]].
184* In Website/{{Cracked}}'s ''WebVideo/ATrailerForEveryAcademyAwardWinningMovieEver'', the disease that InspirationallyDisadvantaged Guy suffers from is said to be "the most topical disability of the present year".
185* ''Website/ChannelAwesome'''s ''WebVideo/ToBoldlyFlee'' takes a lot of jabs at SOPA and other anti-web freedom acts that have been circulating. One of the minor villains wrote the fake act and [[spoiler:the head of the MPAA is one of the major villains of the story]]. Though due to various delays, some fans accused these references of being outdated, as SOPA was long dead by the time the series was released. [[Creator/DougWalker Doug]] and Rob countered that while that particular act might have been defeated, the fight to keep the Internet free will still go on, with more effort on the part of people like them than most people probably realize.
186* ''WebVideo/DharMann'': The events of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2SAw68Yt_4 Prosecutor Sends Innocent Black Man To Jail, Lives To Regret It | Dhar Mann]] is based on the RealLife case of Juan Catalan. Catalan, who was accused of murder, couldn't back up his alibi of being at a Dodger game and was arrested. His lawyer learned that Series/CurbYourEnthusiasm was filming that day[[note]]Specifically, scenes for Season 4 Episode 6: "The Car Pool Lane".[[/note]] and requested the B-roll footage. It proved that his client was at the game and led to a dismissal of all charges. The real killer was eventually caught, and Catalan and his lawyer are good friends to this day. According to one [[https://collider.com/curb-your-enthusiasm-prison-juan-catalan/ article]], Catalan even became a fan of the show afterwards! The Netflix documentary, ''Film/LongShot2017'', is also based on this incident.
187* ''WebOriginal/HabitualLineCrosser'': Consists of skits where personified countries and their military equipment argue over recent geopolitical events.
188[[/folder]]
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190[[folder:Western Animation]]
191* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'': They use this once every two episodes. They can put an episode together in a mere couple of hours so they can be very topical. Notable is [[Recap/SouthParkS5E9OsamaBinLadenHasFartyPants the episode just after 9/11 where the boys travel to Afghanistan]], [[Recap/SouthParkS9E4BestFriendsForever the episode about Kenny being kept on life support when God wanted him to die because the devil would attack heaven and Kenny was the only one able to stop him]], and [[Recap/SouthParkS12E12AboutLastNight the episode]] featuring an ''Film/OceansEleven''-style heist by 2008 the presidential candidates & their running mates that aired '''the day after''' Obama was elected.\
192\
193WordOfGod says that they had planned to have Obama win anyways. They thought it would have been funny if [=McCain=] had won. They referred to it as a potential "[[FailedFutureForecast Dewey Defeats Truman]]" situation. And they did the same thing with the aptly named title "Obama Wins" which had the episode title announced the day before the election and aired the day after. Thankfully they managed to evade the Dewey/Truman situation twice but this backfired in season 20, when [[RealLifeWritesThePlot Donald Trump's victory in the presidential election]] forced massive rewrites to the StoryArc that had been written when most assumed that Hillary Clinton would win, resulting in [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse dropped plotlines]] and a BrokenBase.
194* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
195** Homer Simpson's mother was based on a member of the far left group The Weather Underground.
196** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS7E23MuchApuAboutNothing Much Apu About Nothing]]" was inspired by news reports about Proposition 187 and of bears being sighted prowling the streets of Southern California.
197** The $378.53 phone bill that Lisa ran up from the phone calls she made to the Corey hotline in "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS4E14BrotherFromTheSamePlanet Brother From The Same Planet]]" is based on [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8FJn0nAIFU#t=1m46s this]] [[BasedOnATrueStory true story]].
198** In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS10E23ThirtyMinutesOverTokyo Thirty Minutes Over Tokyo]]", the "Battling Seizure Robots" scene is a reference to the controversy over the ''Anime/PokemonTheOriginalSeries'' episode [[Recap/PokemonS1E38ElectricSoldierPorygon "Electric Soldier Porygon"]], which gave nearly 700 viewers seizures.
199** In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS15E22FraudcastNews Fraudcast News]]", the Squeaky-Voiced Teen committing suicide by jumping after ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' was cancelled is likely based on actual accounts of a 13-year-old boy doing the same after ''Series/BattlestarGalactica1978'' was cancelled.
200* ''{{WesternAnimation/Futurama}}'''s instances of this are noteworthy (particularly post-revival) because the writers mine present-day controversies for material, despite the show taking place a thousand years from now.
201** "[[Recap/FuturamaS7E13Naturama Naturama]]" is a non-controversy-related example. One of the fake documentary segments involves Professor Farnsworth as the last Pinta Island Tortoise, known as "Lonesome Hubert". It aired only months after Lonesome George, the last Pinta Island Tortoise in real life, died.
202* Princess Cadence of ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'', being essentially Kate Middleton with hooves, has had two stories ripped from the headlines, albeit several months late due to production schedules: the Royal Wedding, and [[spoiler:her pregnancy]].
203* The "Hank After Dark" episode of ''WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman'' is about [[spoiler:a beloved TV personality who habitually sexually assaults women he meets in the industry, with overt similarities to the rape accusations against Creator/BillCosby and Creator/DavidLetterman's sexual relations with female subordinates]].
204* ''WesternAnimation/TheClevelandShow'' episode "All You Can Eat" is based on the 2010 Itawamba County school prom controversy.
205* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'': The episode "The D in Apartment 23" in which Brian becomes a pariah after posting a racist tweet, is based on the online shaming Justine Sacco suffered when she did the same. The tweet itself even is paraphrased from Sacco's.
206-->'''Sacco's tweet:''' Going to Africa. Hope I don't get AIDS. Just kidding. I'm white!
207-->'''Brian's tweet:''' About to see the new Creator/KevinHart movie. Just kidding. I'm white and went to college.
208* ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'': The premise of "Operation: U.N.C.O.O.L." is about zombie nerds attacking the Kids Next Door because one operative stole a trading card from them. According to Mr. Warburton, the episode was inspired by a news headline about grown men ripping each other off in ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' trading card scams.
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211[[folder:Other]]
212* [[http://kfmonkey.blogspot.com/2009/04/case-against-universal-health-care.html This blog post]] by one of the writers of ''Series/{{Leverage}}'' discusses this trope.
213* The first round of ''Series/EightOutOfTenCats'' is a poll of the news stories that the public has been talking about over the last week- as this tends to be more populist than the more politics-orientated ''Series/HaveIGotNewsForYou'', if the week sees something that might be in bad taste to joke about (such as the earthquake in Haiti in 2010), then the episode is replaced with a themed special (in that particular case, movies).
214* An odd [[SubvertedTrope subversion]] / [[InvertedTrope inversion]] of the trope: While it is believed by some that ''Film/Joe1970'' was based on the HonorRelatedAbuse killing by Arville Garland of his 17-year-old daughter Sandy, her boyfriend and two of their friends, it was actually an instance of a horrible RealLife CoincidenceMagnet. The Garland murders occurred while the film was in post-production. The film became a low-budget box office smash because of the Garland murders.
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