Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / TheMafia

Go To

1%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1522517166033650200
2%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
3%%
4[[quoteright:350:[[Film/Scarface1932 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/scarface_7.jpg]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:350:[[IronicEcho Say hello to his little friend!]]]]
6
7->''"Who is to say we should obey the laws they make for their own interest and to our hurt? And who are they then to meddle when we look after our own interests? ''Sonna cosa nostra'', these are our own affairs. We will manage our world for ourselves because this is our world, ''cosa nostra''."''
8-->-- '''[[TheDon Don Corleone]]''', ''Literature/TheGodfather''
9
10Hard-nosed, gun-toting, [[RambunctiousItalian take-no-prisoner Italians]] (and the ethno-linguistically separate UsefulNotes/{{Sicil|y}}ians, but it's rare for gangster-centric media to make such a distinction). Part tight-knit community, part protection racket, these ''paesani'' live by a code -- which just happens to include ''vendetta'' (killing anyone who wrongs ''La Famiglia'') and ''omertĆ '' (going to your [[TheDon Don]], rather than the cops, when you have trouble with a fellow Italian or Sicilian). Classically known as ''Cosa Nostra'' ("[[BuffySpeak our thing]]") for the Sicilians, and also called "wiseguys". Although the power of the Mafia (at least, the American Mafia) has diminished sharply since such heights as the Prohibition Era, thanks to most of its bigger players either getting stuffed into prison or simply becoming too old to participate in the game, the mystique surrounding these organizations is so strong that they have almost replaced other established historical figures, such as knights or cowboys, as [[DamnItFeelsGoodToBeAGangster carriers of a romantic ideal]].
11
12While the Italian Mafia has [[UsefulNotes/TheMafia an obvious basis in fact]], it has remained a staple of entertainment even as the [[{{Yakuza}} Japanese Yakuza]], former [[TheMafiya Soviet-bloc Bratvas]], [[TheTriadsAndTheTongs Hong Kong Triads]] and [[TheCartel Latin American drug cartels]] lapped it for sheer scare value in the real world (they may or may not share some of the Mafia's traditional features in fiction, such as the sharp suits or the loyalty to family). Note that this trope can also include similar Italian criminal organizations such as the Neapolitan Camorra or the Calabrian Ndrangheta which are also fairly prominent at home and overseas just like the Mafia. For the [[TheThemeParkVersion laughably inept, PG-rated version]], see TheFamilyForTheWholeFamily. If present as a global player, the Mafia may evolve into TheSyndicate. See also MafiaPrincess and TheDon. It is TotallyNotACriminalFront at all, as it is [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial just a fine Italian restaurant]] that has two 300 pound {{bouncer}}s in front.
13
14Compare TheMafiya, TheCartel, TheTriadsAndTheTongs, {{Yakuza}}, TheIrishMob, LondonGangster, the KosherNostra (which the Mafia sometimes employs), GangBangers (who often fill the same role, but fit into a different archetype), WhiteGangbangers, TheYardies, and GenericEthnicCrimeGang. For more information about the real organizations, see the UsefulNotes page, UsefulNotes/TheMafia.
15
16Compare and contrast CriminalFoundFamily. For stereotypes related to Italian-American characters that are ''not'' in the Mafia, please refer to ItalianAmericanCaricature.
17----
18!!Examples:
19
20[[foldercontrol]]
21
22[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
23* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureGoldenWind'' injects the series's signature AgentPeacock design scheme into this trope, resulting in a ruthless Italian mafia whose super-powered assasins wear absurdly flamboyant outfits ripped straight out of a fashion magazine.
24* In ''Manga/DeathNote'', Mello joined the mafia after leaving Wammy's House.
25* ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'' takes place during the American Prohibition era. It prominently featured a Camorra organization known as the Martillo Family. In RealLife, by that time all the Camorra groups in the United States had merged with the Mafia. Of course, real life Camorra groups didn't have an immortal working for them. [[spoiler:Or an EldritchAbomination. And later on, a whole bunch of immortals, including the head of the Martillo family and all three (official) Gandor brothers.]]
26* In one of the ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'' ending songs for the anime series, there are about a dozen maskless arrancar dressed up in black-colored suits, ''reminiscent'' of the Mafia, maybe even a ShoutOut or parody, with three of the '''only''' female Arrancar introduced (Menoly, [[ClingyJealousGirl Loly]] and [[DarkActionGirl Cirucci]] [[ElegantGothicLolita Sanderwicci]]) are wearing Chinese-style or Western-inspired dresses, leaning seductively on the old, wrinkled and fat "Godfather", [[AGodAmI Baraggan]] Luisenbarn. The "mobsters" surrounding Baraggan are Gantenbainne [[PowerFist Mosqueda]], [[StupidSexyFlanders Ggio]] [[ViewerGenderConfusion Vega]], [[BoisterousBruiser Avirama]] [[WalkingShirtlessScene Redder]], [[ArrogantKungFuGuy Choe Neng Poww]], [[TheBrute Nirgge]] [[DumbMuscle Parduoc]], [[DragQueen Charlotte]] [[LargeHam Cuuhlhourne]], Findor [[GratuitousSpanish Carias]], and three unnamed background stand-ins.
27* The ''Manga/Golgo13'' story "Wiseguys" has Duke Togo called in by a Mafia don over a matter of a blood feud. It opens with an FBI presentation that attempts to strip away most of the romantic myths surrounding the Mafia, and does a decent job at presenting organized crime as just prettied-up hooliganism. In fact, organized crime members are probably the most common {{mooks}} Golgo takes out, and any member whose loyalty to their boss extends to trying to take out Golgo is universally depicted as an idiot.
28* Verrocchio's gang in ''Manga/BlackLagoon''; in a reversal of the common portrayals, they come off as more brutal and overall worse people than [[TheMafiya Balalaika's]] or [[TheTriadsAndTheTongs Chang's]] gangs.
29* [[PsychoLesbian Goldie Musou]], the nemesis of Rally Vincent from ''Manga/GunsmithCats'', and her people. She's from Sicily.
30* Interestingly, given that it's set in Italy, ''Manga/GunslingerGirl'' has never shown any ''genuine'' Mafiosi. Mostly, this is because almost all of the stories happen on the ''boot''. The Camorra do show up quite often and are either called by their proper name or ''The Naples/Napoli Mafia'' depending on whether exact accuracy or quick description is called for.
31* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'': Although not obvious at first glance, Team Rocket, especially in the games (see below), may be based on the Mafia with {{Yakuza}} elements. It's masked by the fact that the [[GoldfishPoopGang three]] you see in the anime so often are the bottom rung of the team and none of the higher-ups really give a damn about them (in fact, in one episode another member tells them their memberships have all expired), though this is not applicable in the ''Best Wishes'' series. In the games, you break into their bases and disrupt or (more commonly) shut down several major operations, among them two hostage situations and a (quite popular) casino, scenarios that are more or less recreated in [[Manga/PokemonAdventures the manga]] at a grander scale. Even in the anime, the protagonists occasionally stumble across a full-scale operation. Also, you know, Giovanni (although this name was deliberately given to him in the English version).
32* ''Manga/Reborn2004''. A series about a mafia boss who gets shot in the head. A lot. Him and his {{Harem}} of {{Bishonen}}. Although they're the Girlscout Mafia. The good guys, at least (I'm looking at you, Yamamoto Takeshi!). The antagonists have plans like possessing the body of the thirteen year old wimp and using him to cause World War III.
33** We later meet the Millefiore Family, which is possibly even worse than any instance of the mafia around ''today'', mainly because they control the world, and their leader seems [[CloudCuckoolander wacky enough]], [[CuteAndPsycho but]] [[EvilOverlord he's quite unpleasantā€¦]] [[white: Or used to beā€¦]]
34* In ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers'', when S. Italy was rushing to save Spain, he ran into the mafia, who demanded that he give them Spain's imports. S. Italy just beat them up and continued on his way. He also blames his cold (which is an in universe representation of a recession) on the Mafia.
35* In ''Anime/{{Noir}}'', the Sicilian Mafia is the enemy of the eponymous assassin duo in the "Intoccabile" arc. Also, one of the protagonists, Mireille, is the sole survivor of a massacred Corsican Mafia family. In RealLife the Corsican Mafia does exist and is actually quite powerful and influential in France and even in other countries (though it is divided into several gangs and families). "Bouquet" isn't a Corsican name though.
36* Appears in ''Manga/JapanInc'' when the Japanese have to do business in Italy.
37* The Mafia is all over the place in ''Manga/AcidTown''. Roughly half of them appear to be decent as far as mafia go (we're not talking Reborn here) while the other half are creep scumbags.
38* ''Anime/NinetyOneDays'' takes place in TheRoaringTwenties Middle America and focuses on three mafia families: the Vanettis, the Orcos, and the Galassias, and protagonist Avilio Bruno's quest for vengeance against the Vanettis.
39* The initial premise of ''Manga/{{Nisekoi}}'' is that {{Yakuza}} heir Raku and MafiaPrincess Chitoge are forced to date, despite their dislike of each other, to prevent a MobWar from breaking out between their families' gangs.
40* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
41** Capone Bege, who dresses, looks, and (even in the Italian dub) ''sounds'' like a typical Sicilian gangster, even though the rest of the setting is a sort of pseudo-Japanese/Age of Piracy hodgepodge. It's confirmed that the West Blue, where he comes from, is ruled almost entirely by five Mafia families.
42** Donquixote Doflamingo used to dress the part when he started his criminal career (with the unique addition of the nifty pink feather mantle). Even though he doesn't anymore, he still acts it.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Card Games]]
46* In ''TabletopGame/{{Illuminati}}!'', the Mafia is one of the most powerful groups in the game.
47* ''Mafia''. Where the mafia are the informed minority versus an uninformed majority.
48* TabletopGame/SentinelsOfTheMultiverse has Graham Pike, also known as the The Chairman. He is the undisputed kingpin of the Rook City crime circles. Gameplay wise, his deck features many Underboss and Thug minions to attack and disrupt the heroes while he and his right hand assassin The Operative penalize the heroes for fighting back.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Comic Books]]
52* Mafiosi are ComicBook/ThePunisher's first of ''many'' victims. The original version has his family being gunned down by gangsters for stumbling onto a gangland execution, while the version told in the one-shot [[ComicBook/ThePunisherMAX MAX comic]] ''The Cell'' has [[spoiler:an attempted coup go bad with a hitman and the target's bodyguards killing the Castle family in the crossfire]].
53** Frank actually was part of a Mafia family for a while under the alias Johnny Tower, where he put his experience of killing mafiosi to good use (fortunately for him, they only used him against rival mobs) and even sleeping with a don's daughter (she was ''not'' happy when she found out).
54* Many of Franchise/{{Batman}}'s non-Cape villains are mafiosi; Carmine "The Roman" Falcone, Salvatore "Boss" Maroni, [[ComicBook/Robin1993 Henry Aquista]], Rupert Thorne and Carl Grissom qualify. Also, the ComicBook/{{Huntress}}' main target when she was reintroduced ComicBook/PostCrisis is the Mafia. She was a MafiaPrincess growing up, until the Mafia had [[OrphansOrdeal her family]] [[YouKilledMyFather killed]] [[HarmfulToMinors in front of]] [[DistaffCounterpart her]] [[Franchise/{{Batman}} eyes]].
55* In Creator/MarvelComics, organized crime has traditionally been represented by a CaptainErsatz syndicate called "The Maggia." Also, the Kingpin, head of New York City's criminal empire, functions as a Mafia-style figure, complete with the sharp suits, though he's not Italian.
56* In both the original comics [[VideoGame/TheDarkness and game]] of ''ComicBook/TheDarkness'', the main character begins as a mafia hitman. [[spoiler:And in the comics has had a time as both an informant gone straight, and the Don.]] A good portion of the supporting cast and villains are connected as well.
57* In ''ComicBook/AstroCity'', the main crime syndicate is run by The Deacon.
58** During TheSeventies, a gang war raged between The Deuce, "Tommy" Gunn, Brian "Braintrust" Rusk, Kuo "Bamboo" Tseh-Shi, and Josef "The Platypus" Platapopulous.
59** Another seventies gang boss was Dominic "Junior" Forgione.
60** And before their time, there was The Scarlet Snake, Mister Drama, and the Underlord.
61* Almost every bad guy in ''ComicBook/SinCity'' is a part of one Mafia organization or another.
62* ''ComicBook/RoadToPerdition'' deals with the Looney mob, the Capone mob, and one soldier who seeks revenge against his former bosses for betraying him and murdering his family.
63* ''ComicBook/{{Superlopez}}'': Al Trapone's gang, and others.
64* ''ComicBook/{{Family}}'': The Odysseus Family are a Sicilian crime family with [[SuperpowerfulGenetics superpowers because of their bloodline]].
65* One of the ongoing subplots in ''ComicBook/{{Chassis}}'' is Chassis' attempts to break the control of the Mob over the sport of Aero-run. The comic is set an AlternateHistory 1940s, and the mobsters are portrayed as stereotypical 1930s gangsters.
66* In ''ComicBook/{{Diabolik}}'' many one-shot organized crime groups have one or more elements of the trope, [[JustifiedTrope as expected by an Italian comic all too familiar with the real thing]], but two stand out:
67** Natasha Morgan's organization, featured in the prequel issue "I Am Diabolik", is very close to the trope, with Natasha being a female take on TheDon and effectively ruling Clerville's organized crime. The issue depicts Natasha using Diabolik's help to retire, hinting that the mafia aspects of Clerville's organized crime derives from her controlling it for years.
68** The ''actual'' Mafia shows up in the issue "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Mafia]]", where Diabolik enters in conflict with them during a vacation abroad and both he and [[SympatheticInspectorAntagonist Ginko]] (who arrived due the Mafia killing a judge friend of his) end up foiling their plans with the help of a deputy minister of the central government [[spoiler:[[DownerEnding who is a member of]] ''[[DownerEnding another]]'' [[DownerEnding Mafia family and used Diabolik and Ginko to defeat his rivals]]]].
69[[/folder]]
70
71[[folder:Eastern Animation]]
72* Julico Banditto and De La Voro Gangsteritto from ''Animation/AdventuresOfCaptainVrungel'' are the two most direct threats against the protagonists as they constantly chase them around the world to take the Venus de Milo statue (which one of the main characters had stolen under duress), and the two serve under their boss who's only known as "Chief", a SoftSpokenSadist who has enough influence to [[spoiler: organize a global sea regatta so that the Venus could be smuggled around any national borders that were tightened upon its theft.]]
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Fan Works]]
76* AlternateUniverseFic where characters are members of organized crime (often called Mafia fic or Mafia AU) is quite popular in fanfiction circles.
77* ''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/19309885 An Offer Luthor Can't Refuse]]'' has Lex Luthor meeting [[spoiler:Blackfire]] while she dresses and acts like a mobster.
78* ''Fanfic/MegaManRecut'' has the Steel Crescent Syndicate.
79* ''Fanfic/TheHeadhunt'' features the (fictional) Famiglia Motta, a member of La Cosa Nostra that branched out into space after humanity went FTL. They've reportedly formed alliances with alien organized crime such as the Orion Syndicate, and seemed to have dropped the male domination used in present day settings (Dul'krah interrogates a female, [[HalfHumanHybrid half-Orion]] capo). They're powerful enough that they can stand up to Starfleet directly on a limited basis, including [[spoiler:stealing the decommissioned USS ''Enterprise''-A from the breaker yards over a century ago]], and orchestrating the break-in at [[TheAlcatraz Facility 4028]] that sets off the plot.
80* In ''Series/WhoseLineIsItAnyway'' fanfic ''Fanfic/IProopedMyPants'', a major plot arc involves the Mafia kidnapping [[spoiler:Tiffany Zharjek]]. [[spoiler:Her]] ransom is eventually paid off by a [[spoiler:Go Fund Me campaign]].
81* In the ''Fanfic/AftermathOfTheGames'' universe, this is what the human version of the Changelings are. They specialize in creating fake identities and profit off of them so they can pull off crimes. Sunset admits she paid them off with gems she brought from Equestria when she ran away so she could get documents to register at Canterlot High and so nobody would question her origins. The group is the BigBad of the sequel ''Integration'', as they're interested in [[TheMagicComesBack the growing Equestrian Magic]] because they can harvest it to dominate the criminal underworld. It's heavily implied that they've been spying on the Rainbooms for a quite a while, and they're not above committing [[spoiler:kidnapping, forced experimentation, and murder ([[KilledToUpholdTheMasquerade even with their own people]])]] to get what they want.
82* In the ''Making Fiends'' oneshot, ''Fanfic/PaintItGreenBlueBlack'', Charlotte's parents were brutally murdered by the mafia when they couldn't pay back a debt. Charlotte [[HarmfulToMinors accidentally saw it]] but [[RepressedMemories repressed]] it all for years, instead preferring to believe her parents were astronauts in space.
83* In ''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/14997911/chapters/34760702 The Horsewomen Of Las Vegas]]'', the Italian mafia is led by Wrestling/BrunoSammartino and represented in Vegas by underbosses Wrestling/TommyDreamer and Wrestling/ChuckPalumbo, as well as TheConsigliere, Wrestling/JoyGiovanni.
84* A mafia group called the Firearms of Furness, led by Reginald Marklin and allied with a group of villainous engines and humans called the Barrow Union of Diesels, is among the villainous factions in the ''WesternAnimation/ThomasAndFriends'' DarkerAndEdgier fanfic ''Fanfic/SodorsLegendOfTheLostTreasureBadEnding''.
85* ''Fanfic/GymLeaderWiki'': A rumor is that Giovanni was born into a mafia family, but it's been disputed.
86[[/folder]]
87
88[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
89* Spoofed in ''WesternAnimation/TheTripletsOfBelleville'' -- the otherwise entirely stereotypical mobsters are actually French, and obsessed with cycling.
90* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeagueCrisisOnTwoEarths'' casts [[MirrorUniverse the Crime Syndicate]] as a supervillain Mafia. The core members refer to themselves as 'family heads', and their most trusted lieutenants are given superpowers to become 'made men.' Ultraman is the most blatant example, as he's basically a Tony Soprano knockoff in a cape.
91-->'''Ultraman:''' You think you can come to my place of business, an' call me out?
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
95* ''Film/TheGodfather'' trilogy is the TropeCodifier. The genesis of the modern media portrayal, though the actual word 'mafia' was [[NotUsingTheZWord notably absent]] from the first film. (Ironically, it would go on to influence real-life Mafia culture, particularly the [[DamnItFeelsGoodToBeAGangster glamorous self-image]] that would be aspired to, and the word "godfather" itself.) The producers of ''The Godfather'' worked with the Italian-American Civil Rights League (which was known to have Mafia connections) to ensure that the movie was acceptable to the Mafia; they gave their blessing, with some conditions, notably that the script not use the terms "Mafia" (only used twice in the original script) or "La Cosa Nostra" (not used in the original script, although the novel credits the fictional Don Corleone with coining the term). The ''Godfather'' franchise made the Mafia an UnbuiltTrope, as it depicts the inherent weakness of the Mafia, leading up to its downfall. It also unbuilds some mafia-related tropes, such as NothingPersonal and ShameIfSomethingHappened. And the first two films also feature the place of origin of the historical Mafia, UsefulNotes/{{Sicily}}.
96* ''{{Film/Goodfellas}}'', a drama [[BasedOnATrueStory inspired by the real-life tale]] of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Hill Henry Hill]], an associate of the Lucchese crime family. Unlike ''The Godfather'', it concerns itself more with the "working-class" mob, rather than the bosses, with several of the protagonists aspiring to get "made" as full members.
97* ''Film/AWedding1978'': Luigi, the father of the groom, is rumored to be a mobster, which is part of why almost no guests attend the reception. Actually, Luigi is a former busboy who met his wife while waiting on her. His wealthy mother-in-law allowed them to get married, but forbids him from seeing any of his Italian relatives or from telling people about his real former occupation, with his secrecy making people assume he's a gangster.
98* ''Film/{{Hoodlum}}'', a [[VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory semi-biography]] of "Bumpy" Johnson and his [[GenericEthnicCrimeGang African-American associates']] attempt to take over the drug and numbers business in [[BigRottenApple NYC,]] [[{{Gangsterland}} specifically Harlem,]] during TheGreatDepression, uses Lucky Luciano and his associates as something of a buffer between Bumpy and Dutch Schultz's KosherNostra.
99* ''Film/AFineMess.'' Tony Pazzo is TheDon who orchestrated the horse-doping that launched the whole story into motion in the first place. This being a comedy film, TheFamilyForTheWholeFamily are, to quote Tony, "those two numbskulls, Binky and Turnip."
100* ''Film/TheBlackHand'' is about the first Italian gangs in America during the GayNineties.
101* The Yakavetta family in ''Film/TheBoondockSaints''.
102* ''Film/{{Bullitt}}'' has the eponymous cop going after Mafia hitmen.
103* The main antagonists of ''Film/TheCandyTangerineMan'' are a group of Mafiosi trying to ruin the protagonist's pimping business.
104* Mafia boss Tony T and his henchmen act as the main antagonists of ''[[Film/CarlitosWay Carlito's Way]]'', opposite [[GenericEthnicCrimeGang Puerto Rican]] Charlie Brigante.
105* ''Film/{{Casino}}'' concerns the mob's relationship with UsefulNotes/LasVegas.
106* ''Film/CodeOfSilence'': A Mafia wiseguy steals drugs and drug money from TheCartel, starting a MobWar.
107* ''Film/CorkyRomano'': The Romanos are Italian-American gangsters (save Corky) involved with illegal gambling, prostitution and racketeering.
108* They don't get a lot of screen-time but, along with TheMafiya, they're a major driving force in the plot of ''Film/TheDarkKnight''. Mostly because they were unwise enough to [[EnemyMine attempt to collaborate against Batman]] with ''The Joker.'' [[EvilIsNotAToy That turned out about how you'd expect.]]
109* ''Film/DonnieBrasco.'' BasedOnATrueStory of a ''very'' deep undercover FBI agent in the 1970's NYC Mafia.
110* In ''Film/{{Eraser}}'', Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger talks to a Mafia boss when he needs allies to stop a weapons deal. The Mafia boss initially thinks that [[BystanderSyndrome it's somebody else's problem]], but [[spoiler:changes his tune when he finds out that [[NeighborhoodFriendlyGangsters the deal is going down on]] ''[[NeighborhoodFriendlyGangsters his]]'' [[NeighborhoodFriendlyGangsters dock]]]].
111* Deconstructed in ''Film/GhostDogTheWayOfTheSamurai''. Ray Vargo has bankrupted his outfit by putting all the money in a trust fund for his daughter. The entire organization is made out of old men way past their prime and they are so low on both manpower and resources they can't even pay off a landlord asking for past due rent payment.
112* ''Film/{{Gomorrah}}'' takes a rather more realistic view of the Camorra clans in Naples and Caserta, showing how they create a climate of fear, murder and corruption that infects all levels of society.
113* ''Film/InnocentBlood'': [[VampireTropes Vampires]] [[JustForFun/XMeetsY Vampires meet the Mafia]].
114* ''Film/TheIrishman'': Although Frank Sheeran is [[TheIrishMob a mobster of Irish descent]], he is an associate of the Mafia and many of his colleagues in crime such as Russell Buffalino are Italian.
115* ''Film/KickAss'': Frank D'Amico is an Italian-American mob boss in New York City. However, while most of his men are Italian-American, he's also got many non-Italians working for him too.
116* ''Film/KingOfNewYork'': The Mafia is one of the organizations Frank White must take on to achieve his dream of becoming the "royalty" of the title.
117* ''Film/LastActionHero'': Vivaldi, the BigBad of ''Jack Slater IV'', is a Sicilian mobster who's seeking control over drug trafficking on the US West Coast. To that end, he's made peace with his rivals the Turelli Mob (another example) while [[spoiler:actually plotting their murders]].
118* ''Film/TheMafiaKillsOnlyInTheSummer''. It's in the title! The film is a dramedy about the life of a Sicilian guy whose entire life, from birth to adulthood, is influenced both by the mafia and the men who bravely fought (and often lost) against it.
119* The book of ''Film/ManOnFire'' and the first film had the Mafia being behind the kidnapping that Creasy seeks vengeance for, but the 2004 film with Denzel Washington removed them from the picture.
120* ''{{Film/Malavita}}'' (aka ''The Family''): The Manzonis were in a Mafia family. Giovanni/Frank turning state's evidence on his boss got him into the witness protection program and sent to France along with his family under new identities. However, while they aren't formally Mafiosi anymore, they're still in the same mindset throughout the film. The group they left also are hunting for all of them in revenge.
121* In ''Film/MarriedToTheMob'', a mafia wife tries to escape the life after her husband is bumped off.
122* ''Film/{{Mobsters}}'' follows Lucky Luciano, Frank Costello, Meyer Lansky, and Bugsy Siegel from childhood to their rise to power and famous reforms of the Mafia structure into the organization known today.
123%%* ''Film/TheNorthAvenueIrregulars''
124* The Prizzi family of ''Film/PrizzisHonor'', although they sometimes hire a non-Italian for hits they don't want traced back to them.
125* While they are not the main focus of the story, the Mafia is very much present in ''Film/TheProfessional'' with two of its main characters Leon and Tony as members of the organization
126* ''Film/AProphet'': El Djebena becomes involved with the Corsican mob when he's in prison.
127* The original ''Film/{{Scarface|1932}}'' (1932) was about Tony Camonte, an Italian, and [[VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory to a certain extent based]] off the life of UsefulNotes/AlCapone.
128* ''Film/TheUntouchables1987'' deals with the Capone organization in UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}} from the point of view of Eliot Ness, the Treasury agent who battles him. Even more VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory than the above-mentioned original ''Scarface''.
129* ''Film/TheValachiPapers'' was created from interviews and testimony of Joe Valachi, the first major mob informant.
130* In the ''Franchise/JohnWick'' universe, various Mafia factions such as the Ndrangheta form a large power bloc within the "High Table", a loose underworld governing organization. ''Film/JohnWickChapter2'''s plot is launched because John owes a blood debt to Santino D'Antonio, a high-ranking member of the Camorra and he is forced to intervene in an internal power struggle.
131* ''Film/{{Alto}}'': Nicolette's father Caesar is a mobster, and takes over the local family on the old boss's death. [[spoiler:It turns out Frankie's father is a bookie working for him, and she's very upset to learn this.]]
132* These are the main antagonists in ''Film/TheEqualizer3''. While living in Italy, [=McCall=] ends up facing them when he finds out his new friends are under their control.
133* The Patrovita crime family from ''Film/RawDeal1986'' is Mark's target, and the MobWar between Patrovita and Lamanski gives him the necessary opening for his infiltration.
134* ''Film/WilliamShakespearesRomeoAndJuliet'': While they're never actually described as such, the Montague and Capulet families operate like mafia clans, to fit the setting update to 1990s California.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Literature]]
138* Mario Puzo is essentially synonymous with the Mafia novel, including ''Literature/TheLastDon,'' ''Literature/TheSicilian,'' and of course [[Film/TheGodfather the one that started it all.]] It is perhaps a sad irony that most of his novels were ''not'' about the Syndicate, but none of them (including his personal favorite, ''The Fortunate Pilgrim'') are nearly as successful as his Mob works.
139* The Mafia was the major villain in the early stories of ''Literature/TheExecutioner'' starring Mack Bolan. The first novel was specifically entitled ''War Against The Mafia.'' Bolan would be a major [[{{Expy}} inspiration]] for ComicBook/ThePunisher above.
140* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' has 'Gentleman' Johnny Marcone, Kingpin of Chicago, especially after Dresden incinerates Bianca and her fellow vampires. A cold, calm, savvy, and ruthless BadassNormal, he rises to become (with Dresden's help) the Accorded Baron of Chicago under the Unseelie Accords, the first pure mortal Freeholding Lord, meaning that he's effectively its acknowledged ruler under supernatural law. He arguably rules the mundane side of things as well. He doesn't fall into any of the clichƩs, save for presenting a front as a legitimate businessman - and it's suggested that he does own significant legitimate business holdings as well - and a cold sense of honour, manifesting as a [[IGaveMyWord strict adherence to his given word]], a protectiveness of children which was sparked by [[spoiler:a little girl getting caught in the crossfire of a gang shooting in which a young Marcone was involved - the consequences of which, incidentally, are directly responsible for the events of the first, fifth and tenth books, and indirectly responsible for part of the ninth]]. He responded by swiftly ascending to the top of the Chicago underworld [[spoiler:(disposing of the shooter, the son of the previous Kingpin, in the process)]], "putting the 'civil' back in 'civil offender'", and personally executing any drug dealer or pimp who tries to exploit children in Chicago. This determination, ruthlessness, as well as a willingness to accept the supernatural and employ people to counter it (he tries to buy Dresden several times in the first two books, before moving on), makes him by far one of the most dangerous characters in the series, despite being entirely human (probably). Dresden can't pigeonhole him as 'scum, criminal' (to his immense irritation) and they frequently pull an EnemyMine, with the constant awareness that they are eventually going to go head to head and only one of them will walk away. As of the end of ''Literature/SkinGame'', it seems that all bets are off.
141* In Creator/StephenKing's novel ''Literature/TheDrawingOfTheThree'', the gunslinger Roland has a shoot out with drug smuggling mafia.
142* In Creator/JohnGrisham's book ''Literature/TheClient'', mafia members play a large part.
143* In ''Literature/SnowCrash'', the Mafia has become a public company and is one of many organizations competing in the marketplace of a corporate-run America. One of their most successful enterprises is Uncle Enzo's Cosa Nostra Pizza, which uses TheDon as their mascot. The company guarantees delivery in [[ThirtyMinutesOrItsFree 30 minutes, or you get your pizza free]]. Uncle Enzo flies down to your house, apologizes, and gives you a free trip to Italy. It's implied that the failed deliveryman suffers fatal consequences.
144* Key figures in the ''Literature/StephaniePlum'' books, along with possibly all of the other organized crime outfits mentioned above.
145%%* ''Literature/TheUntouchables''
146* ''Literature/JamesBond''
147** In Creator/IanFleming's ''Literature/DiamondsAreForever'' the mafia was the "bad guy" and Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd are ruthless mob assassins, not at all like the camp fools in [[Film/DiamondsAreForever the movie]].
148** Bond comes across the Tempestas in ''Literature/{{COLD}}'', an old Mafia family that has ties to the eponymous NebulousEvilOrganization and which plans to usurp the organized crime in the United States with its help.
149* ''Literature/TheSaint'' takes on the Sicilian Mafia on its own turf in ''Vendetta for the Saint,'' written by Charteris and an uncredited Creator/HarryHarrison.
150* The Mafia forms a part of the setting of ''Literature/TimeScout''. They never explicitly show up, but their control of the construction industry is how they became so powerful after The Accident and helped make the present a CrapsackWorld.
151* Jackson's Whole in ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' is the Mafia RecycledInSpace.
152* In Creator/DorothyGilman's ''Literature/TheClairvoyantCountess'', Madame Karitska finds some things that lead Lt. Prudens and the police to realize that the Syndicate is moving in, which nearly causes them to miss that there is a significant change in tactics.
153* OlderThanTelevision, as the Mafia are the bad guys in the ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' story "The Six Napoleons". Creator/ArthurConanDoyle describes the Mafia as "a secret political society, enforcing its decrees by murder".
154* As in RealLife, The Mafia has a major presence in Literature/MickOberon's 1930s Chicago. The series also has an Unseelie equivalent operating in the Elphame version of Chicago.
155* There are three books called ''Malavita'' -- Italian both for "underworld" and "pest/annoyance". The first, by Tonino Benacquista, was made into film ''Film/{{Malavita}}'' which stars Creator/RobertDeNiro and Creator/MichellePfeiffer, and how the family deals with everyday annoyances. The second, by Wendy Newman, follows Sarah who moves to Florida to escape her Mafia ex. The third is a prequel to the Blood and Honor series, showing how Enrico's family was killed by Mafia associates and his rise to being the next Don.
156* ''Literature/TheNorthAvenueIrregulars''
157* Several of the antagonists in ''Literature/MasqueradeOfTheRedDeath'' are vampire members of the Mafia.
158* ''Literature/NickVelvet'': Nick (who is Italian-American) gets involved with the Mafia in "The Theft of the Mafia Cat". He notes that a number of guys from his old neighborhood ended up joining the Mafia.
159* ''The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight'' by Jimmy Breslin is a satirical depiction of the [[MobWar turf wars]] within the Profaci/Colombo crime family. It was [[Film/TheGangThatCouldntShootStraight made into a 1971 feature film]] with Creator/JerryOrbach playing "Kid Sally" Palumbo as a spoof character based on the real life mobster Joe "Crazy Joey" Gallo, who himself modeled his over-the-top persona after Tommy Udo, the BigBad of ''Film/KissOfDeath''. Since then, the term "gang that couldn't shoot straight" has come to define any organization that ends up dysfunctional due to general incompetence.
160* ''Literature/TheWitchOfKnightcharm'': One of the rookie witches at an evil WizardingSchool is noted to have a prominent mafioso as a father.
161[[/folder]]
162
163[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
164* ''Series/BabylonFive'': In the episode "[[Recap/BabylonFiveS04E21RisingStar Rising Star]]" the Mars Mafia is revealed to be a major player in the Martian underworld.
165* ''Series/MurdochMysteries'': Several seasons focus on the Black Hand, an Italian crime-syndicate that served as a precursor to the Mafia.
166* ''Series/TheSopranos'' revolves around the lives and affairs of the fictional [=DiMeo=] crime family in New Jersey, led by [[VillainProtagonist Tony Soprano]]. Due to being set in the 2000s, the show finally put an end to the popular cliche of mobsters acting like 1940s era gangsters from ''Film/TheGodfather'', and took much more influence from ''{{Film/Goodfellas}}''. The [=DiMeo=] crime family are junior partners of the much larger Lupertazzis, a fictionalized version of one of the five New York families. The [=DiMeo=]s have ties to another of the New York families, but they are rarely featured since their businesses aren't nearly as intertwined. Additionally, one episode features a Camorra clan led by Annalisa Zucca, a rare female example of TheDon.
167* ''{{Series/Oz}}'' featured the Italian Mafia as one of several prison gangs fighting for control of the [[HellholePrison Oswald State Penitentiary]].
168* In ''Series/EverybodyLovesRaymond'' there is an episode (''Mia Famiglia'') where a relative from Italy visits New York, the extended Barone family are speaking Italian around the dinner table. Debra Barone is excluded as she speaks no Italian at all. But she understands the word ''Mafia'' when it is spoken[[note]] -- the context is of a Barone ancestor who heroically fought ''against'' the Mafia. but Debra does not know this.[[/note]] and jumps to exactly the wrong conclusion.
169--> Why am I not surprised?
170** The exact status of Stefania's father is left ambiguous in the show, but he is portrayed as an unsmiling impeccably dressed guy who is treated with great respect in New York's Italian community. He is certainly able to make Nemo an offer he cannot refuse, and take over his pizzeria. He's also portrayed by David Proval, who played Richie Aprile in ''Series/TheSopranos.''
171* A British comedy show (''Series/{{KYTV}}'') ran a parody of the cross-European general knowledge quiz ''Going for Gold'',[[note]]This concept ran for quite a few years in the 1980's as a straight quiz show[[/note]] where the premis was that English-speaking Europeans competed against each other, nominally for national pride, but mainly for points and prizes. The chauvinistic British compere (Creator/AngusDeayton) subjects contestants of various nationalities to patronising abuse and jokes based on ethnic stereotyping. Until he asks the Italian contestant questions about the Mafia. She obligingly reveals she knows a ''lot'' about the Mafia, largely gleaned from her uncle, who loves her very much and is sitting in the audience remembering what your face looks like. Unsurprisingly, she ends up winning the show.
172* The Mafia makes several appearances in ''Series/{{CSI}}'', unsurprisingly considering [[UsefulNotes/LasVegas the location]]. Early on, any Mafia episode usually contains a [[BlatantLies "...but the Mafia haven't been active in Las Vegas since the 80s"]] line. Don't want to [[TheMasquerade scare away the tourists]], after all.
173* ''Series/{{CSINY}}'' also dealt with a New York branch, and particularly, The Tanglewood Boys, a gang of Mafioso youth.
174* The Mafia battles the Yakuza on the fifth episode of ''Series/DeadliestWarrior''. Al Capone's gang battles the James-Younger gang in the third episode of the second season.
175* On ''Series/{{Caprica}}'', the Tauron Ha'la'tha is an example of this, with elements of TheCartel. Oh, and they speak Ancient Greek.
176* The intimidating, social club-dwelling recipients of a huge roulette wheel cake on ''Series/CakeBoss'' (filmed in New Jersey) are ''heavily'' implied to be the Mafia.
177* Mary's first husband in ''Series/{{Soap}}'' was a mobster and, after his death, his son, Danny, joins. The boss, Lefkowitz, is Italian and so are a number of the other higher-ups and [[CloudCuckoolander Danny starts believing he is too]]. After Danny refuses to kill his father's murderer (his step-father, Burt), Danny goes into hiding (aka. remaining where he is but changing into a series of ridiculous outfits) and Lefkowitz eventually lets him live and leave the Mafia if he agrees to marry his daughter, Elaine.
178* Parodied in a ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'' sketch where the Vercotti brothers visit an Army base and try to intimidate the colonel by threatening to set fire to his troops. Luigi Vercotti made a few subsequent appearances.
179* A few have appeared in episodes of ''Series/WhiteCollar''.
180** In "Book of Hours," a mob boss asks for the FBI's aid in recovering a stolen bible.
181** In "Copycat Caffrey," [[spoiler:Peter]] poses as an enforcer for the Detroit mob.
182* ''Series/TheUntouchables'', once they took down Capone, encountered [[CouldSayItBut individuals of Sicilian extraction engaged in systematic illicit activities]] on a regular basis; so regular, in fact, that a pressure group called "The Federation of Italian-American Democratic Organizations" picketed the Creator/{{ABC}} network's headquarters. When sponsors stared abandoning the show, ABC and Creator/DesiluStudios worked with the "Italian-American League to Combat Defamation" and issued a formal manifesto that scrubbed this aspect of the show. It is, of course, [[ThereAreNoCoincidences just a coincidence]] that the "Federation" was led by Anthony Anastasio, mobster/union racketeer and brother to Albert Anastasia of MurderInc fame, and the "League" was founded by Joseph Columbo Senior, TheDon of the [[UsefulNotes/TheMafia family that bears his name.]] Completely a colossal coincidence. MoveAlongNothingToSeeHere, folks...
183* ''Series/BoardwalkEmpire'' has the D'Alessio Brothers, an Italian gang (and a literal crime family composed of brothers and cousins) trying to move in on the rackets in Atlantic City. Important Mafia figures like 'Lucky' Luciano, Johnny Torrio, UsefulNotes/AlCapone and Joe Masseria also feature prominently. The main Gang boss, Enoch "Nucky" Thompson and many of his allies are Irish-American whilst the often forgotten but very powerful [[KosherNostra Jewish Mafia]] are represented by New York Boss Arnold Rothstein and his protegƩ, Meyer Lansky.
184* The ''Franchise/LawAndOrder'' universe includes the Masucci and Dosso crime families, and the police and prosecutors cross swords with other, unnamed Mafia crooks a few times too.
185** In the two-part episode "The Torrents of Greed", Ben Stone seizes on a low-level Mafia hit to try and bring down Karl Masucci, TheDon of the Masucci crime family. Before it's over, Stone's original target is dead, along with several others including Masucci himself, and a new gang war has started over who gets to replace Masucci.
186** In "House Counsel," the police start with a seemingly random murder and follow the clues back to Vincent Dosso, leader of the Dosso crime family. DA Jack [=McCoy=]'s desire to bring down Dosso proves very costly on a personal level, as it pits him against a very old friend who has become Dosso's defense attorney.
187* The Sonozaki Family from ''Series/KamenRiderDouble'' act as this. Just replace drugs with [[TransformationTrinket Gaia Memories]].
188* ''Series/MarriedWithChildren'': Bud Bundy borrows money from a man named Capone (who operates a bank from his car) to produce a workout video.
189* In ''Series/{{Community}}'' episode [[Recap/CommunityS1E21ContemporaryAmericanPoultry "Contemporary American Poultry"]] the study group becomes the community-college-chicken-finger-running equivalent thereof.
190* The long-running Italian drama ''Series/LaPiovra'' (''The Octopus'') deals with organized crime in Italy. The title is a metaphor, comparing the Mafia to an octopus whose tentacles are in everything. Interestingly, the show gives equal time to the heroes affected by its dealings, including Detective Carrado Cattani [[spoiler:who is killed in a hail of gunfire at the end of Series Four]].
191* ''Series/Tracker2001'' had 'A Made Guy', where the alien Zin uses the Earth Mafia to reach some of his goals, and Cole goes undercover as a mobster.
192* While they certainly feature, Italian novel-based crime drama ''Series/RomanzoCriminale'' ("Crime Novel") is about a group of non-Mafia criminals.
193* ''Series/ElleryQueen'': "The Adventure of the Wary Witness" concerns the murder of the son in a prominent crime family. Mobsters also figure prominently in the plots of "The Adventure of the Sunday Punch" and "The Adventure of Caesar's Last Sleep". [[spoiler:In both cases, it's a red herring, as said mobsters have no involvement in the deaths of either victim.]]
194* On ''Series/PersonOfInterest'' Elias is the illegitimate son of a Mafia Don and plans to unite the New York City Mafia families under his leadership so he can defeat the competing Russian mob and and make the Italian Mafia as influential and powerful as in the 'old days'. His adherence to old school Mafia values gets him a loyal following among both old traditional mobsters and new up-and-comers who detest the current Mafia leadership, and the heroes consider him something of a NobleDemon: he's a bad man, but there's actually been ''less'' violence in the city since he took over. In season 4 he gets into a bloody gang war with the Brotherhood, a multiracial alliance of rival organized crime and run-of-the-mill {{gangbanger}}s, and some of his subordinates defect.
195* When ''{{Series/Gotham}}'' began, as with Batman's comics, above, Don Falcone basically ruled the city, including the cops. After that, one MobWar after another between (and within) the Falcone Family, the Maroni Family, the Mooney mob and (especially) the Cobblepot conglomerate (on top of all the ''other'' Gotham insanity) did their part to make Jim Gordon's life miserable.
196* ''Series/{{Daredevil 2015}}'': The Italian Mafia used to run the organized crime rackets in Hell's Kitchen, but their power has been declining for years. Wilson Fisk has created an alliance between the Russian gangs, the Chinese Triads and the Japanese Yakuza, and they are forcing the Italians out. Most of the old mafioso have chosen to retire and skip town, while Fisk kills off the few remaining holdouts.
197* ''Series/{{Crossing Lines}}'' has Niccolo Conti and his brutal gun thug, Gian Carlo, the latter of whom leaves a trail of human wreckage -- including 42 dead -- behind him in an afternoon's rampage through Italy and Slovenia.
198* ''Series/TheDeuce'' is focused on the sleaze and corruption around Times Square in the 1970s, so the mob plays a big part. Rudy, the area's local capo, oversees the mob's interests in bars, porn and sex clubs. Several other characters get taken under his wing to run the mob's various businesses.
199* Played for laughs in the ''Series/EverybodyHatesChris'' episode "Everybody Hates Gambling", in which young Creator/ChrisRock decides to participate in gambling and proves to be very good at predicting probabilities. Unfortunately, he draws some unwanted attention and implied threats from an Italian-American bookkeeper who calls himself "Paulie the Bookie" (played by Steve Schirripa, [[ActorAllusion better known as the gangster Bobby Bacala from]] ''Series/TheSopranos'').
200* ''Series/MissFishersMurderMysteries'': The Series 3 episode "Murder and Mozzarella" involves a family feud between Southern Italian families in c.1929 Melbourne with connections to organised crime. This being Australia, where Sicilians were relatively thin on the ground, the relevant Italian gang is the Neapolitan Camorra rather than the Mafia, but all the classic Mafia tropes (family connections, blood feuds, smuggling, sharp suits, Catholicism, great food and wine) are played to the hilt.
201* ''Series/{{Monk}}'':
202** The episode "Mr. Monk Meets the Godfather" revolves around the Italian Mafia, [[ShoutOut just like the]] [[Film/TheGodfather title would suggest]]. The titular godfather has requested [[DefectiveDetective Adrian Monk's]] help investigating a barbershop shooting where several mobsters were killed. The FBI in turn asks Monk to investigate the Mafia family itself while he is working for them, pointing out that it will be safer for Monk than other undercover officers because the family already knows that he's a former cop who still works with the police. It ultimately turns out that [[NotMeThisTime none of the rival gangs or mafia members were behind the shooting]], it was a completely unconnected criminal who just happened to pick the wrong barbershop to try to stash some stolen goods. It should be noted that in real life, there was indeed [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Francisco_crime_family a branch of the Mafia in San Francisco]], but they had already become powerless and defunct by the time this episode aired.
203** In "Mr. Monk is Someone Else", Monk goes on yet another undercover operation, in which he's [[DeadPersonImpersonation disguised as a recently-deceased]] [[ProfessionalKiller Mafia assassin]] named Frank [=DePalma=] ([[CriminalDoppelganger who is coincidentally an exact lookalike of him]]). Monk has to find out who [=DePalma=]'s intended target was, and save him from getting killed by the same crime family that hired the hitman in the first place.
204* You wouldn't expect Navy cops to get involved with the Mafia very often, but the ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' episode "The Bone Yard" puts Team Gibbs up against the local don, who was using a Navy practice-bombing range as a dumping ground for bodies.
205* ''Series/TheYoungIndianaJonesChronicles'': "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues" features {{Franchise/Ind|ianaJones}}y and his friends acting as amateur detectives, trying to investigate a murder that was apparently conspired by the Chicago Outfit gangsters UsefulNotes/AlCapone and [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Torrio Johnny Torrio]].
206* ''Series/StarCops'': In "This Case to be Opened in a Million Years", the Mafia frame Nathan Spring for drug trafficking.
207* ''Series/CrimeStory'' focused on both the mobsters and the police trying to put them away in 1960s Chicago and then moved to Las Vegas.
208* ''Series/{{Wiseguy}}'' began as an Italian American FBI agent going undercover in the Mafia. It explored other forms of organized crime later, but several subsequent arcs also dealt with the Mafia.
209* ''Franchise/TheTwilightZone'':
210** ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'':
211*** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S1E13TheFourOfUsAreDying The Four of Us Are Dying]]", Arch Hammer imitates Virgil Sterig, a gangster who was murdered on the orders of the mob boss Penell.
212*** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S2E3NervousManInAFourDollarRoom Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room]]", Jackie Rhoades is a gangster who typically performs comparatively minor jobs such as breaking and entering and the occasional mugging for his boss George. As the police are well aware that Jackie does not do the big jobs, George tells him to kill the old bartender in order to throw them off the scent.
213*** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S3E18DeadMansShoes Dead Man's Shoes]]", Dane and Bernie Dagget were gangsters who were partners in the running of a nightclub. When Dagget offered to buy him out, Dane refused. Dagget was unwilling to accept this and had him murdered so that he could take over the club.
214*** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S5E1InPraiseOfPip In Praise of Pip]]", Max Phillips has been working as a bookie for the gangster Moran for 20 years.
215** ''Series/TheTwilightZone1985'':
216*** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1985S1E3 Healer]]", Jackie Thompson worked for a mob boss named Joseph Rubello in the 1970s. After he botched a delivery, two of Rubello's thugs beat Jackie so severely that he ended up in hospital.
217*** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1985S3E28 Crazy as a Soup Sandwich]]", Arky Lochner owes $165,000 (at a daily interest of 750%) to Nino Lancaster, a mob boss who runs all of the criminal enterprises in the city and [[DirtyCop has many cops in his pocket]].
218* ''{{Series/Rome}}'': Erastes Fulmen and later Lucius Vorenus lead the collegia, gangs who are the {{ancient|Rome}} predecessors of the Italian Mafia.
219* ''Series/PennyDreadfulCityOfAngels'': It's mentioned that the Italians were run out of LA by [[KosherNostra Jewish gangsters]] working for Meyer Lansky.
220* ''Series/LawAndOrderOrganizedCrime'': The fictional Sinatra crime family is set up as a recurring antagonist to the Organized Crime Control Bureau, which isn't surprising in New York City.
221* ''Series/ZeroZeroZero'': The miniseries charts the purchase of a massive shipment of cocaine from TheCartel of Mexico by the 'Ndrangheta of Calabria, which is technically a different Italian criminal organization than the more-famous Mafia of Sicily, though the differences are not large.
222[[/folder]]
223
224[[folder:Music]]
225* Although never explicitly stated, Music/BruceSpringsteen's "Atlantic City" (off ''Nebraska'') clearly involves someone mixed up in Mafia business. The opening line about how "they blew up the Chicken Man in Philly last night" is a clear reference to the assassination of Boss [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Testa Philip Testa]] of the Philadelphia crime family; most interpretations hold that the perspective character is either going to AC for a hit or to distract himself before taking employment as a hitman. (Testa's assassination set off a mob war in Philadelphia; also note well that AC is roughly where the Philadelphia and New York Mob spheres of influence converge, although AC is much closer to Philly, and that Testa was backed by New York--long story.)
226* "Bust Your Kneecaps" by Pomplamoose is about a bride-to-be who has family in the mafia. After her fiancƩ Johnny runs off, she asks him to come back before her angry family maims or kills him.
227* There exists a variation of GangstaRap known as Mafioso Rap. Like how gangbangers fill the same role as the Mafia under a different archetype, mafioso rap is gangsta rap romanticizing a different type of gangster.
228* Bob Dylan's "Joey" Is a romanticized telling of the life and death of Joey "Crazy Joe" Gallo who was a member of the Profaci/Columbo mafia family.
229[[/folder]]
230
231[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
232* This was the original [[TheGimmick gimmick]] of Wrestling/CaptainLouAlbano's TagTeam the Sicilians with Tony Altimore, until ''the real thing'' got word of it and told them not to do it.
233* In December 1999, Wrestling/{{WCW}} introduced the tag team [[Characters/WCWFinalYears the Mamalukes]], Big Vito and Johnny the Bull, with their manager [[Wrestling/TonyMamaluke Tony Marinara]]. They had a Mafia gimmick and claimed to have come there because [[Wrestling/GlennGilbertti Disco Inferno]] had owed them money. Vito and Johnny would often say that they were [[InsistentTerminology "Paisans"]], not "Mamalukes."
234** Johnny, renamed Johnny Stamboli, would recycle this gimmick in WWE as a member of the ''[[Wrestling/{{WWESmackDown}} WWE [=SmackDown!=]]]'' version of the Full-Blooded Italians, with [[Wrestling/LittleGuidoMaritato Nunzio]] and Chuck Palumbo.
235* Also, WCW {{jobber}} Little Jeanne had a mafia gimmick.
236* At ''Wrestling/{{WrestleMania}} 22'', which was held in UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}, Wrestling/JohnCena had a dramatic Al Capone-themed entrance, with one of the gangsters being played by an uncredited Wrestling/CMPunk, who is from Chicago.
237[[/folder]]
238
239[[folder:Roleplay]]
240* In ''Roleplay/TheGamersAlliance'', the Matheson Crime Family is the oldest and most powerful crime syndicate in Maar Sul and is run by the House of Matheson who double as legitimate businessmen and nobles by day.
241* The Mafia shows up from time to time in ''Roleplay/SurvivalOfTheFittest'', along with other organized crime groups such as the gangs in [[WretchedHive Denton]], usually in the background but occasionally directly involved. For example, Antonio Franchini is the son of a Mafia Don, abducted to prove a point after the Don reneged on his part of a deal between him and Danya. In v2, Seth Mattlock's father is an enforcer for a Mafia family based in Denton, and Seth himself is not only friends with some of the mobsters but is considered an honorary member, and the mob family helps his gang when they need it (for example, when an all out gang war starts). In the former's file, Danya notes that the Mafia will probably go after him [[BadassBoast and they're welcome to try, because they won't be able to]] ''[[BadassBoast find]]'' [[BadassBoast him, let alone do anything to him.]]
242[[/folder]]
243
244[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
245* Even the ''TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness'' had its share, with a few branches of the [[http://whitewolf.wikia.com/wiki/Giovanni Giovanni]], a [[TabletopGame/VampireTheMasquerade vampire]] mob with necromantic power. As Gary puts it in ''VideoGame/VampireTheMasqueradeBloodlines'': "Spaghetti and corpses, boss." That said, the supplement for "Vampire" that dealt with organized crime pointed out that while the Giovanni (quite obviously, given who and what they are) have extensive underworld connections, their link to Italian organized crime specifically are exaggerated. The Giovanni home base has always been Venice, in northern Italy, and the big criminal networks like the Mafia, the Camorra and the 'Ndrangheta are all based in the southern parts of the country, which are by and large claimed by clans Ventrue and Lasombra.
246** ''TabletopGame/WerewolfTheApocalypse'' includes the urbane Glass Walkers, who developed strong footholds in Italy (there really is a breed of Italian wolf). And since ''Werewolf'' absolutely loves its cultural stereotypes, it played these connections up heavily. Later material (3rd edition and onwards) reversed course on the idea, however, because the idea of Mafia werewolves was, to quote the developer, a bit of a one-note joke.
247** The telekinetic Spooks' Guild in ''TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion'' were based on the Mafia, particularly in how they were organized.
248** There was a mortals supplement, too: ''World of Darkness: Mafia''.
249** ''TabletopGame/MageTheAscension'' has the Syndicate, which controls all the Technocracy's economic aspects, and is tasked with overseeing the global economy. Their Enforcers branch get involved where commerce and violence flow into one another, which includes organized crime. (The Syndicate in general, however, tends more towards CorruptCorporateExecutive.)
250* ''Mafia'', the {{parlor game|s}}, which was later adapted for Western audiences as ''TabletopGame/Werewolf1997''. According to its creator Dmitry Davydov, its original ''mafioso'' theme was inspired by the Italian CrimeDrama ''La piovra'' (see above), which began airing in the USSR in 1986 -- the same year that the game was first played in public.
251* The Mafia is an important group in organized crime in ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}''. The 4th Edition supplement book ''Vice'' covered them in depth and even had rules for a 'Runner who was a Made Man.
252* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' has the Aspis Consortium, which is basically a combination of a fantasy Mafia and evil [[AdventureArchaeologist adventure archeologist]] group.
253* ''TabletopGame/SentinelsOfTheMultiverse'' has The Organization, under the control of the Chairman. They combine a mixture of street thugs, hitmen, Dirty Cops, informants, thieves, and other lowlifes to make your life hell.
254[[/folder]]
255
256[[folder:Theatre]]
257* The Chandler family has loose ties with a stereotypically Italian mob boss in ''Theatre/TheFix''.
258[[/folder]]
259
260[[folder:Video Games]]
261* ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'': Ann can occasionally run into mafiosi soldiers throughout the Noctis City docks that act as [=NPCs=].
262* ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes'' has the Family, who are Italian mobsters in nice suits and bowler hats. ''VideoGame/CityOfVillains'' also has the Mooks, who are just the same, except less well-dressed. Both are hilariously anachronistic as well, even the Mooks wear 20s-style fashion outfits in a TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture world, and wield tommy guns equally as effective as modern assault rifles and lasers. RuleOfCool, folks.
263* In ''VideoGame/CoffeeTalk Episode 2: Hibiscus and Butterfly'', Hyde claims to know some dwarves whose grandkids are currently running the mafia like "some sort of start-up". He wishes to go back to being chased by them [[spoiler:once he permanently moves back to Seattle]] He wishes to go back to being chased by them [[spoiler:once he permanently moves back to Seattle]] because he remembers stealing Gala's car with them.
264%%* In ''VideoGame/ConkersBadFurDay'', Don Weaso and his men.
265* ''VideoGame/TheDarkness'' and its sequel, based on the [[ComicBook/TheDarkness comic series of the same name]], stars Jackie Estacado, a mafia hitman who inherits an ancient evil and uses it to help him fend off his crazy Uncle Paulieā€¦ who happens to be the Don.
266* ''VideoGame/DeadConnection'' is an arcade game where your player character, a tough-as-nails private investigator, cleans the city of the Mafia, gunning down mooks in suits for the entirety of the gameplay.
267* ''VideoGame/DoubleSwitch'': Mobsters serve as one of the main antagonists of the game. A group consisting of four gangsters are trespassing into the apartment complex to find and kill Brutus, a former associate who failed to pay back his loan from them. You must use traps to keep them from killing Brutus and keep them out so they don't hurt the other tennants.
268* The "Gotham Memoirs" book of ''VideoGame/DressUpTimePrincess'' involves an IntrepidReporter taking on crime and corruption in New York City in the early '30s. No matter what direction her investigation takes, the Mafia turn out to be deeply involved - in one branch of the story she teams up with Vittorio Puzo, a particularly principled mob boss, to take down a rival mafioso who's responsible for human trafficking and quite a bit of other nastiness.
269* In ''VideoGame/EndlessSpace2'', the Lumeris faction is what happens when you combine the Mafia with FishPeople and ProudMerchantRace. The Lumeris evolved on a tropical ocean planet and have long organised their society into families, clans and dynasties; they have long since grown past aristocracies, but still the real power brokers behind their civilisation are the so-called Four Families who control the agricultural, construction, shipbuilding and politics sectors. Though unfortunate infighting and backstabbing still happen from time to time, the Lumeris recognise the galaxy as both a grave threat and a great prize, so they have all sworn off stealing the fish from each other's plates, if only for the time being.
270* ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'':
271** Gizmo in ''VideoGame/Fallout1'' was the owner of the Junktown casino and boxing ring, operating several illicit side businesses while controlling the local gang calling themselves the Skulz and using them as muscle in assassination attempts against the town's mayor.
272** ''VideoGame/Fallout2'' has 4 different criminal families vying for control over [[WretchedHive New Reno]], with 2 based in family-owned casinos, one in a bar, and the last in an out-of-ways mansion overlooking the old railway station. You can do quests for more than one at a time, so long as they don't involve killing members of the other crime families you work for. Pledging your full allegiance with one by accepting a final quest to test your loyalty will have the others permanently gunning for you. Given that this last quest tends to involve eliminating a rival family wholesale, it's not too big of a deal unless you're aiming for HundredPercentCompletion.
273** Invoked by Mr. House in ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' when he made over a local tribe into the Omertas, who run the Gomorrah casino. He states that he did so due to nostalgia for the way Vegas was before the war, claiming that having a shady criminal element makes New Vegas feel more authentic. Aside from being the chief supplier of vices in the Strip, [[spoiler:they are collaborating with Caesar's Legion to bring down Vegas from within]].
274** The Triggermen in ''VideoGame/Fallout4'' are a loosely-connected faction of independent organized crime syndicates that all style themselves after Prohibition-era gangsters, wearing suits or suspenders and fedoras while using tommy guns almost exclusively in combat.
275* For the first time in... '''ever''', the main cast of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXV'' are all citizens of the Lucis kingdom ruled and defended by the Caelum Mafia family. The main character, Noctis Lucis Caelum, is effectively (and literally) a [[MafiaPrincess Mafia Prince]].
276* In ''VideoGame/{{Gangland}}'', player character comes after his three brothers, all leaders of their own families. While doing so, the player establishes his own gang.
277* ''VideoGame/GangstersOrganizedCrime'', Player leads his own gang that [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial isn't any way Mafia]] in Prohibition Era.
278* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAuto'':
279** ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoIII'' revolves around one Mafia family, the Leones, for the first portion of the game, and the group also shows up in important roles in the other parts of the series. In fact, ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoLibertyCityStories'' has you play as Toni Cipriani, a mobster who's of some importance in ''3''.
280** ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoViceCity'': Tommy Vercetti himself is a former capo for one of the other Liberty City families, the Forellis. They ultimately become the main antagonists and final enemies of the game.
281** ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoSanAndreas'' has the Leones, as well as the Sindaccos, as antagonists during the Las Venturas missions, and are the arch-rivals and competitors of TheTriadsAndTheTongs Carl is working with.
282** In ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoIV'', by contrast, the families don't really show up until the latter parts of the game and are comparatively [[BigBadWannabe weak and racked by infighting]], ultimately being played for fools by [[BigBad Dmitri]].
283*** In ''[[VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoIVTheBalladOfGayTony The Ballad of Gay Tony]]'', they are secondary antagonists who effectively fade into the background when Luis offs the [[TheMafiya main antagonist]] in spectacular fashion.
284** They're surprisingly absent in ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoV''--the closest you get to encountering them is Enzo Bonelli, a mobster-turned-real estate tycoon who serves as the target of the final assassination mission. [[spoiler:Rocco Pelosi returns from ''The Ballad of Gay Tony'', but he's left the mob and now works in show business.]]
285* ''VideoGame/AHatInTime'' has the Mafia of Cooks, a [[TheFamilyForTheWholeFamily rather goofy example]]. They still rob people and punch seagulls who eat their fish, though.
286* ''VideoGame/KingdomOfLoathing'' has the Penguin Mafia. The reason they're penguins is probably partly the resemblance between penguins and men in fine black suits, and partly that penguins are inherently funny.
287%%* The Revache & Co from ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsFromZero''
288* ''VideoGame/MafiaTheCityOfLostHeaven'' is all about La Cosa Nostra, with inspirations drawn from many works on this page. [[VideoGame/MafiaII The first in]] [[VideoGame/MafiaIII a trilogy]].
289* ''VideoGame/MafiaWars'' lets you play a Mafia don and do all sorts of illicit stuff for cash and prizes.
290* The Punchinellos are similar to the Mafia and play a somewhat major role in the [[VideoGame/MaxPayne1 first]] [[VideoGame/MaxPayne2TheFallOfMaxPayne two]] ''VideoGame/MaxPayne'' games as {{Mooks}}. There's also the De Marcos, a New Jersey-based mob who appear as enemies in a few chapters in ''VideoGame/MaxPayne3'' and end up going to war with the Punchinellos sometime after Max leaves for Brazil.
291* ''VideoGame/OmertaCityOfGangsters'' places the player in a role of a mob boss in Prohibition era.
292* They're one of your questgivers in ''VideoGame/OmniBus2016'', [[VerbalTic see?]] They ask you to demolish the town bank so they can get the loot, see? [[spoiler:And when the heat from that heist gets too bad on Earth, they help you escape to the moon, see?]] It's a weird kinda' game... see?
293* ''VideoGame/PaperMarioTheThousandYearDoor'' has the Pianta Syndicate, who rule over the western side of [[WretchedHive Rogueport]] and engage in frequent turf wars with the Robbo Gang in the east.
294* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'':
295** ''VideoGame/PokemonRedAndBlue'' has Team Rocket. They're more based on the {{Yakuza}} in the Japanese version, but were [[CulturalTranslation adapted]] to be more like the Mafia in the international releases, as best evidenced by the name of their boss, Giovanni.
296** There's also the {{Mon}} Honchkrow, a crow that looks like it's dressed like a Mafia Don. Appropriately enough, Giovanni of Team Rocket uses one in his appearance in ''VideoGame/PokemonHeartGoldAndSoulSilver''.
297* Parodied in ''VideoGame/SamAndMaxFreelancePolice'' with the Toy Mafia, who all wear colorful grinning teddy bear heads and use a SuckECheeses-style restaurant as [[TotallyNotACriminalFront a thinly-disguised front]] for their operations.
298* ''VideoGame/{{Skullgirls}}'' features the Medici family, who are a particularly nasty bunch. [[PerkyFemaleMinion Cerebella]] is the only playable character who is a part of the Mafia, but several characters have histories tied to them. Ms. Fortune and the band of thieves she was in were murdered by Medici assassins, but [[ImmortalityInducer she survived]]. Peacock and [[spoiler:Marie]] were captured by slavers funded by the Medici, and Squigly was killed by the Medici when they attacked her family due to her mother obtaining the [[MacGuffin Skull Heart]]. Finally, there is [[spoiler:Filia Medici, granddaughter of the current head of the family and the default protagonist of the game]].
299* One of the bonus levels in ''VideoGame/SyphonFilter: The Omega Strain'' has you playing as Gary Stoneman to assassinate a Mafia boss in Pescara, Italy with a [[OneBulletLeft one-bullet]] [[SnipingMission sniper rifle]].
300* ''VideoGame/TownOfSalem'', a flash based web browser game, has Mafia as one of the random alignments to play as. There are three members in Classic Mode (the Godfather, the Mafioso, and the Framer), Custom, Rapid and All Any mode can have up to five members (role selection being the previous three, Blackmailer, Janitor, Consigliere, Consort, Disguiser, and Forger) and Rainbow Mode can have a max of three (the Godfather, the Mafioso, and possibly a third random role if it's the 'Any' role). Amnesiacs can also remember that they were in the mafia and join in.
301* In one chapter of ''VideoGame/Uncharted4AThiefsEnd'', Nate and Sam infiltrate the Rossi Estate, a mansion in Italy that hosts an annual {{black market}} auction where stolen artifacts are traded. The place seems to be owned by a local crime family, as the premises are patrolled by mob enforcers serving as armed security.
302* ''VideoGame/UrbanRivals'' has their own Mafia group known as the Montana, who make money by terrorizing the citizens of Clint City.
303[[/folder]]
304
305[[folder:Visual Novels]]
306* In ''VisualNovel/LuckyDog1'' the main characters are part of a mafia group called CR-5. The main character, Gian, starts out as a man who is very good at breaking in and out of prison and his first job of the game is to break out himself and the four captains who all got locked away at the same time. He soon learns if he succeeds in breaking them out he gets to become the new boss.
307* ''Franchise/AceAttorney'':
308** In ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorney'', TV series director Dee Vasquez is known to have connections with the Mafia ({{Yakuza}} [[CulturalTranslation in the original Japanese version]]). She uses these connections to [[spoiler:make an attempt on Phoenix's and Maya's lives after they confront her with some crucial evidence, and it's only thanks to a BigDamnHeroes moment from Detective Gumshoe that she doesn't get away with it.]]
309** In the third case of ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorneyTrialsAndTribulations'', fear of the Cadaverini crime family is what drives the case's true culprit, [[spoiler:Furio Tigre,]] to murder the victim.
310** ''VisualNovel/ApolloJusticeAceAttorney'' has the son of the Don of the Kitaki family as Apollo's second client. Despite being even more obviously based on the {{Yakuza}} than the previous examples in the series, the [[CulturalTranslation English version still treats them as the Mafia.]]
311* In ''VisualNovel/TheHouseInFataMorgana'', Jacopo Bearzatti is an italian man who grew up in a mafia background; he's not shown actively committing crimes or taking part in the organization proper, but he is still tied to it, as one of his old associates comes by asking him for money.
312[[/folder]]
313
314[[folder:Web Comics]]
315* ''Webcomic/LaCosaNostra'', unsurprisingly [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin given the title]].
316* Many of the characters in ''Webcomic/{{Fishbones}}'' are in the mafia, and the protagonist's father is a sort of business partner/associate of theirs.
317* The Morgia family in ''Webcomic/MissMorgue'' runs everything in Fortune Waters for gambling/racketeering, and its members are constantly eyeing other crime syndicates for possible opportunities to eliminate competition or make partnerships.
318* In ''Webcomic/RustyAndCo'', run by illithid (mind flayer) -- who else did you expect in illithid activities?
319* In ''Webcomic/SonicTheComicOnline'', there is The Family a group of bugs from the Special Zone lead by a spider called Don Long-Legs that control the Casino Night Zone and employ Max Gamble a gangster and an old enemy of the Freedom Fighters as a "legitimate" front man.
320[[/folder]]
321
322[[folder:Web Original]]
323* They play a significant role in ''Literature/NineteenEightyThreeDoomsday'', the families effectively turning post-apocalyptic Sicily and Southern Italy in general into their defacto empire.
324* ''Literature/AnExaminationOfExtraUniversalSystemsOfGovernment'': The Republic of Greater New Jersey is run by the Five Families, who migrated to the region after New York City was nuked by the Confederacy at the end of the Second Great War. Since the pre-war Union government had fled to Canada, the Families took over efforts to maintain order, eventually striking a deal with the Confederates to become the government of their new PuppetState. As a result, the country is an oligarchy headed by the mob dons, who decree all legislation and appoint all government officials to handle day-to-day matters.
325* A somewhat magical variant of this occurs in ''Literature/SixChances''. The families and crime organizations run an underground trafficking ring of magical WeaponsOfMassDestruction. One of the main characters is a swindler who often takes jobs for one of the families at the behest of the five she shares a sudden PsychicLink with. The dialogue is straight out of the ''Series/TheSopranos''.
326* In ''WebAnimation/SonicForHire'', Franchise/{{Mario}} is in charge of the video game mafia, [[AdaptationalVillainy taking out any who jeopardizes the business]] or anyone who becomes more popular than him.
327[[/folder]]
328
329[[folder:Web Videos]]
330* [[FunWithAcronyms The Mothers And Fathers Italian Association]] appeared in ''WebVideo/StupidMarioBrothers''.
331* They're the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDNzzhCpqxA food of choice]] for ''WebVideo/TheVelociPastor''.
332[[/folder]]
333
334[[folder:Western Animation]]
335* ''WesternAnimation/ArloTheAlligatorBoy'': Tony's family are a long line of, as Tony describes, "con artists, thieves, crooks, scammers, cheaters, tricksters, hustlers, swindlers, grifters, charlatans, conterfeiters, absconders, and flimflammers".
336* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'': In "Jack and The Gangsters", Jack joins a group of gangsters after overhearing they are planning to steal the [[RockOfLimitlessWater Neptune Jewel]], a gem capable of controlling water and give it to Aku.
337* The Springfield Mafia from ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' is an Italian-American mob family based in [[WhereTheHellIsSpringfield Springfield]], and run by [[TheCaptain Fat Tony]] and [[TheDon Vittorio DiMaggio]].
338* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' has the [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots Robot]] Mafia, which is composed of [[TerribleTrio only three members]], though Bender has served as their occasional associate. Passing mention is also made of "Sicily 8, the Mob Planet."
339** A gangster planet is destroyed by "love radiation" in the episode where [[ItMakesSenseInContext Bender dates the delivery ship]].
340* In ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks'' episode "The Fundraiser", while Riley confronts the head of a candy fundraising organization (who acts more like a [[LondonGangster British crime boss]] than anything) who's attempting a hostile takeover of Riley's [[GRatedDrug chocolate]] [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything trafficking]] business, a bunch of Italian-American mobsters randomly show up [[spoiler:and they get into a deadly shootout with the British gangsters and the {{UsefulNotes/FBI}}.]] There's also this {{shout out}}:
341-->'''British mob boss:''' What is this, a casting call for ''Series/TheSopranos'' reunion?!
342* ''WesternAnimation/TheMoonAndTheSonAnImaginedConversation'': The narrator's father was a low-level hoodlum who sometimes worked for the Mafia. Back in Italy he trafficked in stolen goods and was briefly imprisoned. In America, he sold bootleg Prohibition gin for the mob until he was caught and briefly imprisoned. Later he takes money from Mafia loan sharks to buy a hotel bar, only to conspire with the mob to burn the hotel down for the insurance when he can't repay the loan.
343* ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'' has the titular character and ISIS save the Pope from an assassination plot by Camorra goons.
344[[/folder]]
345----
346''That's a real nice trope page you got here. Lots of work building this thing up. [[ShameIfSomethingHappened It'd be a shame if something were to happen to it...]]''

Top