Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Series / TheHauntingHour

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/haunting_5106.png]]''R. L. Stine's The Haunting Hour: The Series'' is a horror series that aired on The Hub (now called Creator/DiscoveryFamily). Like the TV adaptation of ''Series/Goosebumps1995'' and the short-lived series, ''Literature/TheNightmareRoom'', it is a horror GenreAnthology series featuring a different story every week filled with [[WeirdnessMagnet kids facing off against ghosts, monsters, and other supernatural beings...]]
2
3Compared to ''Goosebumps'', the stories are much, ''[[DarkerAndEdgier much]]'' [[DarkerAndEdgier darker]]. There was even [[ContentWarnings a disclaimer about its content]] before the episodes began! Some of the episodes were adapted from R.L. Stine's works, mainly from the ''Literature/NightmareHour'' and ''Literature/TheHauntingHour'' short story collections.
4
5[[FourIsDeath After just four seasons on the air]], [[WordOfGod R.L. Stine confirmed]] that Discovery Family [[https://twitter.com/RL_Stine/status/541279154583650304 removed the show from their schedule]], making the last season the shortest one with [[CutShort only ten episodes]]. The last episode aired was the ChristmasEpisode "Goodwill Toward Men".
6
7Has a [[Recap/TheHauntingHour Recap page]] and a [[http://rlstinesthehauntinghour.wikia.com/wiki/ wiki]].
8
9Continuity-wise, it's unrelated to the made-for-TV movie ''Film/TheHauntingHourDontThinkAboutIt''.
10
11----
12!!This show provides examples of:
13[[foldercontrol]]
14
15[[folder:A-G]]
16* AbusiveParents:
17** Melvin's father in "Spores". Although he isn't physically abusive, he ''is'' emotionally and psychologically abusive towards his family. He guilt-trips everyone else into coming along on ''his vacation'' and constantly tries to defend his actions.
18** Jason's father from "Bad Egg" constantly belittles his son and calls him a loser. He eventually gets so fed up with Jason disappointing him that he threatens to ship him off to military school if he so much as screws up one last time. He even cherishes his ''dog'' more than his own children.
19** Jeffrey's parents in "The Walls" [[spoiler: are revealed to have known about the monster living in their son's walls the whole time, but they kept it a secret and tried to [[{{Gaslighting}} gaslight]] him so they wouldn't have to share all their good luck coming from the monster with him. That is to say, "sufficient" good luck, as they do tell him if they would receive good luck as would he, but obviously, they [[{{Greed}}wanted much more than he would have]] and did not want him telling anyone else at risk of ruining the good luck.]]
20* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: Happens to Gracie in "Headshot". Though if [[{{Satan}} Cassandra]] is to be believed, [[spoiler: Gracie [[BitchInSheepsClothing had always been that way]], and Cassandra merely pushed her to the point of revealing her true colors.]]
21* ActOfTrueLove: Eric must perform one to save Hanna from the mirror, as only those who truly love someone can make take them with them across Mary's tear-soaked river back to the real world.
22* ActorAllusion: In "Uncle Howee", the titular character asks Jared if he wants to be his friend. When Jared mumbles a "Yes", [[Creator/TomKenny Uncle Howee]] shouts [[WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants "I can't hear you!!!"]]
23* AdaptationalAlternateEnding: In the short story "My Imaginary Friend", David repeatedly tells his younger brother Shawn that he has to give up his ImaginaryFriend Travis, who is constantly getting him into trouble. In the final scene of the story, [[spoiler: it is revealed that Shawn is likewise imaginary.]] The ending of the television adaptation differs in that [[spoiler: it reveals that Shawn is real and David is his imaginary brother]]. The story ended with [[spoiler: David still talking to Shawn and Travis, with Travis still wanting to put him in danger. The episode has Shawn letting go of David, which is more of a BittersweetEnding compared to the story.]]
24* AdaptationExpansion: Justified: many of the stories are based off short stories.
25* AdaptationNameChange: ''Pumpkinhead'' changes the name of the little brother from Mike to Scott.
26* AdaptationalAttractiveness:
27** Jake Skinner from "The Dead Body" is not an elderly, bearded man, but rather a young, attractive bad boy with nice hair.
28** Walter from "Alien Candy" was originally a fat, shy kid with no friends, but his show counterpart Walt is an adorable ginger kid.
29** Downplayed with Farmer Palmer in "Pumpkinhead" since he's still a filthy farmer, but he doesn't look like a rotting pumpkin like he does in the original short story.
30* AdaptationalBadass:
31** In "The Dead Body" short story, Will Johnston was a ShrinkingViolet who was afraid of everything and couldn't stand up for himself. While this trait is used for the most part in the adaptation, he later grows into a brave BullyHunter who stands up to his vicious ghost bully by partaking in a fistfight with him. Then again, in the original story, Jake complained Will got too rough while pretending to fight him off. Remember in this version, Jake is a grown man while Will is just his nephew.
32*** On a related note, Jake from the original story needed a mask to pose as a zombie. In the series, he's capable of shapeshifting and time-travel.
33** In "Alien Candy", Walt is a BadassAdorable action survivor who slays aliens instead of being TooDumbToLive like in the book.
34* AdaptationalHeroism: In "The Most Evil Sorcerer", Ned is a decent person who merely gets too obsessed with wanting to do magic, while in the original story, he was a prankster who kept that nature even in the end.
35* AdaptationalIntelligence: In the short story version of "Alien Candy", Greg and Bonnie were both immature children, but on the show they are diabolical masterminds who orchestrate numerous misdirections against Walt.
36* AdaptationalVillainy:
37** In "The Dead Body":
38*** Jake Skinner was actually Will's loving uncle who helped the kid out with his bullying problems out of the goodness of his heart, but in the show, he is a sadistic monster who gleefully harms his enemies and grows into Will's archenemy.
39*** Downplayed with [[TheBully Travis]], who was a FalseFriend towards Will and at least [[BitchInSheepsClothing pretended he was a nice guy]]. In the television version, he's a malicious bully who doesn't hide his love for picking on people.
40** The [[spoiler: aliens]] Greg and Bonnie were originally just dim-witted jerks on "Alien Candy", but on the show, they were actively sadistic in their villainous misdeeds.
41* AdaptationDyeJob: In the original "Ghostly Stare" story, Lauren and Mark were identical twins with red hair. In the episode version, the two are noticeably quite different, including that Lauren is blonde and Mark is brunette.
42* AdaptedOut:
43** On "Alien Candy", there were 2 other members named Evan and Natasha in the alien club, but on the show they are nowhere to be seen.
44** Valerie from "Black Mask" is not in the show's adaptation.
45* AdoringThePests: In the "Best Friends Forever" episode, Jack adopts a zombie as a pet. [[spoiler: Though it turns out the zombie viewed their relationship the other way around.]]
46* AdultsAreUseless:
47** In "Really You", the mother is more concerned with the fact that there was a camera in her room as opposed to the fact that ''someone sneaked into her room and took the video card at some point'' and brushes off her son when he points this out.
48** The adults in "Mascot" have this, too. The basketball coach is too busy working out to realize that several of the kids ''he's responsible for''--including the team's manager and the previous mascot--have disappeared.
49** And the mother in "Red Eye," who didn't notice or care that her daughter may be right about what's happening to Grace's father.
50** Averted in "Grandpa's Glasses." Carolyn, Bo's mother, outright states that she believes him when he tells her that something supernatural is happening in her father's old house (though at first she doesn't believe him. She starts to believe him when he ends up locked in the room with Grandpa's ghost and the demon who turns out to be Carolyn's resentment over her father leaving her). Later, when Bo is trapped in a locked room, she ''grabs an ax from the woodpile'' and is [[MamaBear prepared to break through the door if it means saving him.]] The finale of the episode, too, reveals that only she has the power to release the evil in the house by forgiving her father for abandoning his family.
51** "Mrs. Worthington" has Nate's mother, who sides with Molly whenever Nate tries to tell her that his sister is being a bully. Mrs. Worthington even tells Nate that his mom is worse than Molly, as she allows the bullying to happen and needs to be taught a lesson. Sadly, this doesn't happen, but given that the episode ended with Mrs. Worthington's disembodied hand sketching herself so she can be alive again, it's implied that Nate's mom will also get her comeuppance.
52** Sam's parents in "Argh V," who [[WackyParentsSeriousChild act like irresponsible teens, while Sam herself is the sane and mature one]]. Sam immediately figures out that something is wrong with the RV her parents buy, and repeatedly attempts to warn them that something is suspicious, but they are too busy planning a "life of adventure" to listen or care. What makes it even worse is that this ends up killing the family and dooming them to an eternity travelling on the highway.
53** Notably averted in "Lotsa Luck," as Greg's mother and her side of the family have dealt with Seamus the leprechaun in the past and the mother is afraid that Seamus will come for Greg because he caught him and already made two wishes with him. ([[spoiler:Seamus still gets Greg anyway, because his mother's great-grandfather wished that his next male descendant would be targeted by Seamus instead of him]]).
54** [[RichBitch Missy's parents]] in "Goodwill Toward Men". They make fun of Missy for showing kindness to the gardeners they hired, tell her that the hired help have no business mingling with the upper-crust because it disrupts the "natural balance of things", favor their son Henry over her (because Henry is just as selfish as his mom and dad), and, even when they're poor, cold, and starving, all they care about is contacting their former connections (lawyers, credit card companies, etc.) so they can get their old lives back.
55** Inverted in "Afraid of Clowns." Chris's father repeatedly tries to tell him that [[spoiler: he'll be transforming into a clown on his thirteenth birthday]], but Chris refuses to talk about it. Presumably, if he had listened, it might have softened the blow.
56* AerithAndBob:
57** Gooch and Kelly from "Game Over".
58** "Detention" has Kate, Audrey, and Halftime. Although {{Subverted}} when [[OnlyKnownByTheirNickname Halftime's real name]] is revealed to be Henry.
59* AffectionateParody: The film scenes in "Creature Feature" are these to 1950s sci-fi B-movies.
60* AlienAmongUs: "Alien Candy" (the Alien Club members), "Sick" (though this is debatable, as the creature that infected Alex is never shown and can be interpreted as a lot of things, like a living cold bacteria or flu virus that just looks alien in appearance), and "Poof de Fromage" (both Jean-Louis and the alien cheese puffs that attack the family).
61* AllJustADream: "Sick" (though this was ''possibly'' subverted when Alex sees the morning news-show hosts telling him that he wasn't dreaming at all and he's also about to die).
62** Same thing with "I'm Not Martin," only the one thing that turned out to be true was Martin's roommate targeting him for his foot to replace the one that got removed.
63* AllPartOfTheShow: Everything that went wrong during ''Hansel and Gretel: TheMusical'' on ''Stage Fright''
64* AllTrollsAreDifferent: "The Most Evil Sorcerer" features a troll in the woods, and trolls are listed along with dwarfs as enemies of the Fey Folk in "Intruders".
65* AlphaBitch:
66** Steffani in "Wrong Number", with the emphasis on "bitch." Even ''an old woman'' isn't spared her bad attitude!
67** Kate the homecoming queen in "Detention." Though when she, Audrey, and Halftime discover that they're dead and their actions at the homecoming parade led to their early demise, Kate [[JerkassRealization realizes how awful her behavior is]] and she is willing to go to Hell to spare the lives of Audrey and Halftime. Thankfully, Audrey and Halftime are having none of it and are able to talk her out of it in a legitimately touching scene.
68* AmbiguousEnding:
69** In "Flight", Jeremy and Death have a farewell to which Death replies, "without a doubt". Whether this means [[WeAllDieSomeday that he'll see her when he finally dies]] or that he has a short lifespan, it's never revealed.
70** In "Cast", [[spoiler:we never find out if the crazy old lady actually placed a curse on the main character or he's hallucinating it the entire time.]]
71** In “Seance”, [[spoiler: Carla and Cyrus turned out to have been the ones who were pranking Naomi and her friends for bullying her while he was turned out to be RealAfterAll in which he then takes out his axe in an attempt to cut one of the bullies legs off to use as his own. It doesn’t reveal on which one of the children’s he took away from.]]
72* AmbiguouslyJewish: It's implied in "Golem" that Jeremy's family is of Russian-Jewish heritage (or are into the mystical side of it), given how Jeremy's grandmother and a group of people from her village were the ones who created the Golem (a humanoid creature found in Jewish folklore and mysticism made of stone, dirt, or mud and brought to life by a Hebrew incantation used to protect villagers from invaders) to use against the Nazis ([[NoSwastikas no signs of swastika armbands or Nazi regalia, but you can tell it was them, given the time period]]) during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.
73* AnArmAndALeg:
74** [[spoiler: The CruelTwistEnding has the ghost of Cyrus proving to be RealAfterAll and demanding one of the kids provide him with a new leg, showing off his hatchet to prepare for surgery.]]
75** The majority of "I'm Not Martin" revolves around a kid attempting to escape a hospital that wants to hack off his foot.
76* AndIMustScream: Boy oh boy, does the show ''love'' this trope.
77** In "Pumpkinhead" and its sequel, nearly every character is decapitated and has a pumpkin placed on their heads, turning them into zombies.
78** Will in "The Dead Body" is forcibly transformed into a ghost and must watch as Jake takes over his life.[[note]]this trope was averted, though, in the sequel episode "Dead Bodies," as Will was able to defeat Jake and get his body and old life back.[[/note]]
79** In "Mascot," Willie and the teen in the wolf suit are eaten alive by Big Yellow, who digests them. ''Slowly.'' And they're alive for the entire experience.
80** "Scarecrow": Bobby is transformed into a scarecrow and made to watch the end of the world.
81** In "Lovecraft's Woods," the trio become stuck in a GroundhogDayLoop and are doomed to make the same journey over and over again.
82** Jared, from "Uncle Howee", is [[ForcedTransformation transformed into a giant marionette]] on the Uncle Howee Show, where it's implied that he'll be a smiling, vapid character on the program forever.
83** Alice, of "My Old House," tries to gently break up with the titular building. [[spoiler:Unfortunately, it goes full {{Yandere}}, sucks her into its depths, and permanently traps her as part of its walls. It's unclear if she's still conscious.]]
84** In "Argh V," Sam and her parents end up [[DeadAllAlong dying in a truck crash]] and find themselves doomed to wander the highways forever, like the Flying Dutchman.
85** The whole family in "Spores," as they're slowly turned into mindless fungal zombies, seemingly aware enough of their fates to know what's happening but unable to stop it.
86** Although not a permanent example, [[spoiler:Lilly from "Really You", after being forcefully turned into a doll, is heavily implied to be fully aware of what's going on around her, as her doll form sheds a tear after seeing how much her parents prefer her replacement.]]
87* AndThenJohnWasAZombie: [[spoiler: Ranger Jackson when he infects Melvin]] in the end of "Spores".
88* AngerIsHealthyAesop: The episode "Funhouse" is about a teenager named Chad who's reeling from his parents' divorce, but refusing to share his feelings. When the titular funhouse comes to town, he discovers that the final portion is a kitchen filled with robotic mannequins that have an argument; a sledgehammer is provided to smash up the room and everything in it. Chad quickly becomes addicted to letting his anger out through destruction — at one point outright telling the carny that runs the place "I need more!" — and he's soon warped into a literal monster by his rage. His younger sister ultimately saves him by encouraging him to express his emotions in a healthy way before they destroy him.
89* ArcVillain: Lilly D ("Really You" and "The Return of Lilly D"), Jake Skinner ("The Dead Body" and "Dead Bodies"), and Old Man Palmer and his pumpkinheads ("Pumpkinheads" and "The Return of the Pumpkinheads"), though for the last one, just the pumpkinheads appear, as Old Man Palmer was said to have died, but his monstrous creations live on in the pumpkin patch.
90* AssholeVictim: Quite a few of them really.
91** [[spoiler: Steffani in "Wrong Number"]] was a {{Jerkass}} AlphaBitch who picked on ''everyone''. Nobody feels sorry for her when [[spoiler: she's trapped in her own phone as a video and deleted by the girl she bullied the most.]]
92** [[spoiler: Meg in "Dreamcatcher"]] was an [[AttentionWhore attention]] [[SpoiledBrat brat]] who spooked Lisa with a scary story, cut her and Amelia's dreamcatchers, and left them to die in the claws of the titular Dreamcatcher. [[spoiler: She finally gets her comeuppance when she's stuck in his web, about to be eaten]].
93** [[spoiler: Gracie in "Headshot"]] is revealed to be a BitchInSheepsClothing who tossed away her own friends just to be famous. [[spoiler: She later gets her face permanently disfigured while her human face hangs on the wall of Cassandra's office at ''Teen Teen'' Magazine studios.]]
94** [[spoiler:Maggie from "Terrible Love"]] can be seen as an asshole victim, considering that her insecurity drove her to force Cupid to give Brendon another hit of the love arrow (which causes very obsessive and deranged behavior in the name of love). Cupid even told Maggie while she was hiding out from Brendon's rampage that, ordinarily, he wouldn't intervene because he's doing what Maggie asked him to do and this is exactly what she wanted.
95** [[spoiler:Melvin's abusive father, Jack Dixel, in "Spores"]] is a huge {{jerkass}} who treats Melvin like dirt and forces his family on a vacation they don't want all because Jack wants to beat his co-worker at a hiking record.
96** The end of "Stage Fright" reveals that [[spoiler: the story of Hansel and Gretel really happened...but the witch did ''not'' attempt to eat Hansel and Gretel and get killed by them as a result. She instead took pity on them and ate their parents, who had abandoned them to die in the woods to start with.]]
97** [[spoiler: Travis and Chang]] the bullies in "The Dead Body". Chang mauled to death by a ghost, but considering how he proudly admits that he loves beating people up, nobody cared. Travis comes close to this trope too, but he's merely [[MindRape mind raped]] instead of outright murdered.
98* AttentionWhore: Big Yellow in ''Mascot''. The central conflict of the episode is that Willie and Drake (mostly Willie) want to replace him with a new mascot named Wolfie, but Big Yellow isn't willing to let his role as school mascot go without a fight...
99* {{Autocannibalism}}: "Afraid of Clowns" has Chris dream about a clown serving him a piece of cake ''that was part of his hand''. It's lessened by the fact that Chris's hand appeared to turn into cake (and that it was AllJustADream) but it still has this vibe and is genuinely unsettling.
100* BabyDollBaby: In the episodes "Really You" and "Really You 2", Lilly's mom starts treating Lilly D (the doll) more like her daughter than the real Lilly.
101* TheBadGuyWins: Since this is a horror show after all, expect the villain to sometimes succeed in haunting their targets.
102** "My Old House": [[spoiler: The house gruesomely murders Alice (or [[AndIMustScream something worse]]) and gets away with it. To make it all the more disturbing, a new girl moves into the house and it gives a big SlasherSmile to show us [[FridgeHorror that it plans to take her next]].]]
103** "Mascot": [[spoiler: Big Yellow kills Willie and keeps his job as school mascot, with nobody the wiser.]]
104** "Catching Cold": [[spoiler: The ice cream truck abducts Marty and drives off with him trapped inside it forever.]]
105** "Headshot": [[spoiler: Cassandra owns Gracie's soul forever, leaving the transformed girl hideously scarred for life.]]
106* BadHumorTruck: In "Catching Cold", the ice cream truck that Marty tries to catch is [[spoiler:run on the souls of those obsessed with ice cream and was behind the disappearance of a child who, like Marty, was obsessed with ice cream and tracking down the Kreamy Kold truck so he can get his fill.]]
107* BalancingDeathsBooks: Or "Balancing a Leprechaun's Books". In "Lotsa Luck", Greg's mother explains that whenever a mortal earns three wishes from a leprechaun, the cost of the final wish is always the soul of the wisher. Her great-grandfather Daniel is the only person who's ever escaped this fate, and ever since, Seamus (and, it is implied, the entire leprechaun race) has been attempting to gain a soul from his descendants to make up for his loss.
108* BaldOfEvil: Fear in "Fear Never Knocks."
109* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor:
110** "Best Friends Forever," "A Creature Was Stirring" (the first episode with this trope that [[{{Reconstruction}} has a more-or-less happy ending]] as [[spoiler:Timmy's parents decide not to divorce after losing their house to the Krampus as the children need love and support from both of them while they try to find a new place to live]]), "Headshot," "The Red Dress," "The Girl in the Painting," "Terrible Love," "Worry Dolls," "Long Live Rock and Roll" (another episode that has a happy ending as [[spoiler:Holden defeated Sir Maestro in the guitar duel and was able to save his friends]]), and "Mrs. Worthington" (another episode with a more-or-less happy ending as, while Nate and his sister begin to be more civil towards each other, they don't notice that Mrs. Worthington's hand is still in the attic and has drawn herself so she can come back to life).
111** "Lotsa Luck" is a variation: it's revealed from the very start that leprechaun wishes come at a hefty price (health, wealth, and soul, just like the spell on "My Sister, The Witch"), and that dealing with them inevitably goes badly!
112* BewareTheNiceOnes: Natalie in "The Return of Lilly D." She takes care of injured animals and fixes up the titular doll when she finds some boys dragging it around with their bikes. When Lilly D. tries to drown the bird Natalie found and '''''pushes her wheelchair-bound grandfather down the stairs''''', Natalie [[LetsGetDangerous decides to kill her]].
113* BewareTheQuietOnes: The scariest villains are the ones who speak the least...
114** Lilly D can't speak, but she's a completely insane murderer.
115** Big Yellow from "Mascot" never has a single line of dialogue but he is by far one of the show's darkest villains.
116** The "Scarecrow" never speaks, [[spoiler: but can while he's in his human form]].
117** The Kreamy Kold truck from "Catching Cold" is incapable of speech but it's still a creepy monster.
118* BewareTheSillyOnes:
119** Uncle Howee; whatever you do, don't accept the deal to be his friend else you want to be transformed into a puppet for the rest of your life.
120** The Mangler from "Near Mint Condition" is a children's toy that's massacred a bunch of people.
121** Seamus the Leprechaun from "Lotsa Luck" is a LargeHam, but he loves collecting souls.
122* BigBrotherBully:
123** Jared in "Uncle Howee". This ranges from insulting his little sister and her favorite show, bossing her around so he can go sneak out of the house to see a movie, and taking the pizza money left by their mother and giving his sister two measly fish sticks for dinner. [[spoiler: Is there any reason karma bit him in the ass at the end of the episode?]]
124** [[BigSisterBully Naomi]] in "Séance" arranges a fake séance to bring out an AxCrazy ghost ''just'' to scare her little sister when they're staying home alone. [[spoiler: What she didn't realize was, the ghost she was bringing back "had a mean sister too" and is looking for a fresh new leg...]]
125** Molly from "Mrs. Worthington" is another BigSisterBully, tormenting her little brother and deliberately getting him into trouble for no particular reason--that is, until the titular babysitter shows up...
126* BigBrotherInstinct: While Brandon from "Really You" acts like a standard AloofBigBrother at first, he turns out to be the OnlySaneMan and is inclined to believe that Lilly isn't the one responsible for what the doll's been doing, even going as far as to sneak into the company with his friend to figure out how Lilly D works.
127* BitchInSheepsClothing:
128** In "The Dead Body", [[spoiler: Jake]] turned out to be this when Will found out that [[spoiler: he's really a ghost who only helped him with his bully problem to gain his trust, so he could trick Will into taking his place the day he was killed in 1961.]]
129** [[spoiler: Bonnie and Greg]] in "Alien Candy", also turned out to be this when it's revealed that [[spoiler: they're real aliens who only wanted Walt to join their fake club so they could eat him]]. However, [[spoiler: both Walt and his friend Tim managed to defeat them before it was too late.]]
130** In "Headshot," Cassandra tells Lexi that "Gracie has become what she's always been, or she would have deleted that headshot long ago," meaning that, while Cassandra is the Devil (posing as a teen magazine modeling scout and photographer) who steals the souls of girls who want to be known for their beauty and turns them into ugly monsters, she didn't drive Gracie into being evil, just captured her soul in a headshot photo and encouraged her to do what she could to make it so she'd be the winner, even if it meant hurting and alienating everyone she's ever known and loved. After all, it was Gracie who disobeyed her mother, set up Dylan to get suspended for cheating on a math test, spiked Flynn's milkshake with Red Dye #3 (which makes her break out in hives), and alienated Lexi (her best friend and the one who knew that Cassandra was evil and using Gracie for her own gain) by calling her a "ButterFace" and telling her that (paraphrased), "When good things happen, your friends are the first ones to bail."
131** Phillip in "My Robot," when it's revealed that his plans to electrocute the robot was really a plot to foist the robot on his friend Tim by making Tim the first thing the robot sees when he reboots. What's worse is that [[KarmaHoudini Phillip doesn't get any comeuppance for it]].
132** [[spoiler: The House]] from "My Old House" initially acts as a welcoming, dependable friend to Alice. When [[spoiler: Alice tries to leave to be with her parents again, the House has a VillainousBreakdown and (possibly) kills the terrified girl after revealing itself as a {{Yandere}}.]]
133* BittersweetEnding:
134** "A Creature Was Stirring" ends with [[spoiler:the family's home destroyed, leaving them with little but the clothes on their backs. However, they got through the episode alive and were brought closer together, with the parents canceling their divorce.]]
135** "Nightmare Inn" ends with Jillian saved by the Green Eyed werewolf [[spoiler:but the revelation that he is her father means he can never be a part of her life, as he mournful howls while watching her and her mother.]]
136** “Checking Out” ends with * Jeremy and Chelsea escaping with their parents after reconciling with them after burning down the painting. Sadly however, the children (including Todd) weren’t able to return or escape from the painting.
137* TheBlank: In "Scary Mary", chanting Mary's name three times in front of a mirror will summon the MirrorMonster Scary Mary, who will send her three faceless servants through the mirror to drag the summoner back so Mary can steal their face.
138* BodyHorror:
139** In "Dead Bodies", [[spoiler: Jake Skinner's]] body decays after being touched by Death, but the worst part is that he's ''still alive'' as his skin slowly chips away.
140** The mutants in ''Spores'' are half-human, half-plant and ''still alive, but can't think of their own free will''.
141* BolivianArmyEnding: ''Intruders'' ends with [[spoiler: TheFairFolk emerging from the forest and menacingly approaching Eve's home.]]
142* BookEnds: ''Uncle Howee'' begins and ends with Cynthia watching "The Uncle Howee Show" while giggling and waving at the television.
143* BookOfShadows: Used in ''Walls'' and ''Lotsa Luck''.
144* BottleEpisode: ''Uncle Howee'' takes place inside a house and has only four (human) characters.
145* BrattyTeenageDaughter: Eve in ''Intruders''.
146--->'''Eve:''' ''(after getting in trouble)'' "[[SarcasmMode Oh, no, please don't ground me]]--- Oh, wait, I'm already grounded.'"
147* BreakTheHaughty:
148** PlayedForDrama in ''Wrong Number'' when it [[spoiler:kills Steffani, by zapping her into a video file on her cell phone and sending the file to Adriana, a Goth girl whom Steffani bullied, who promptly deletes it]].
149** Also PlayedForDrama in "Goodwill Toward Men", where Missy and her family are cursed to become poor and homeless thanks to the angel statue she received, even though, unlike her parents and older brother, Missy actually cares about the less fortunate (even when she herself is in the same boat as the homeless people). She ends up [[spoiler:in a new reality where the gardener, his wife, and his son are the rich family and have Missy as their daughter/sister, while her former selfish, money-grubbing family are the hired help with no memory of ever having a daughter/sister.]]
150** The "Really You" two-parter is one big HumiliationConga for the SpoiledBrat of a main character being framed for things the doll's been doing ([[FridgeLogic some regardless if it even made sense]]).
151* BreakThemByTalking: This is how Ethan defeats Mad Dog [=McCoy=] in "Coat Rack Cowboy," by telling him of all the lives he ruined with his outlaw ways (even though most of what Ethan said were lies, though there could be some truth to it, given the fact that Mad Dog never cared about the lives he affected with his outlaw ways until Ethan said so. He most likely was stalling, but when he saw that Mad Dog [=McCoy=] was beginning to lose his nerve, he ran with it).
152* BrokenAesop: The goth girl who was bullied by the protagonist in "Wrong Number" gets the ghost of her dead grand-mother to magically transform the protagonist into a video file on a phone ([[NoodleIncident don't ask]]) and then personally ''deletes her from existence''; essentially the equivalent of kidnapping and murdering her. The moral of the episode is supposed to be that "you shouldn't be mean and horrible to people", but it's ''way'' more horrible to murder someone in cold blood than it is to make fun of a classmate!
153* BrokenPedestal: In "Brush with Madness", Alan Miller becomes this to the main protagonist after getting into a fight with him at a Comic Con.
154* CallingTheOldManOut: Missy does this to her parents and brother in "Goodwill Toward Men" when, after the angel curses them to live like the less fortunate, they continue to act selfishly and refuse to help the other homeless people they are staying with. She points out that they have never truly known what it's like to be cold, hungry, or in pain nor have they been in a situation where their wealth and connections couldn't bail them out.
155* CanonForeigner: In "My Imaginary Friend", Shawn has a crush on his neighbor Amy. She does not appear in the short story. [[spoiler: This is {{Justified}} as, in the short story, it is Shawn and not David who is imaginary.]]
156* CarFu: The ending to ''Really You Part 2''.
157* CassandraTruth: Delivered by a [[MeaningfulName character named Cassandra]], no less! In "Headshot," Lexi confronts photographer Cassandra and demands that she undo whatever dark magic she's placed on Gracie. Cassandra flat-out tells Lexi that she hasn't done anything to corrupt her friend's soul; rather, Gracie was always a [[BitchInSheepsClothing cruel, petty person despite her nice demeanor]] (otherwise, she would have either deleted the headshot or turned down Cassandra's offer to have her photo taken), and the magazine photoshoot contest simply provided an opportunity to let her true colors show. True to this trope, Lexi refuses to believe Cassandra and tries to save Gracie herself. It doesn't end well. As the ending narration revealed: "But the choice wasn't mine to make. It was Gracie's and Gracie's alone."
158* CellPhonesAreUseless: The main advantage the children of this show have over those in ''Goosebumps'' is that they always have access to cell phones (considering that this show was made during a time when children as young as twelve can have a cell phone and ''Goosebumps'' was made during a time when cell phones weren't that mainstream). Too bad said phones tend to die out at the worst possible time (as seen in "Big Yellow"), the person they're trying to contact doesn't pick up (which is TruthInTelevision, but still), they can be used to trap you in a video file and be deleted ("Wrong Number"), or, in the case of "Uncle Howee," a reality-warping TV character can easily hack your calls.
159* ChangelingTale: ''Intruders''.
160* ChekhovsClassroom: The science lessons on chemical reactions (and how human emotions are connected to them) prove to be the basis for the episode "Terrible Love".
161* ChekhovsGun: The main character's silver necklace in "Nightmare Inn" was given to her by her father specifically to ward off [[spoiler:other werewolves.]]
162* ChildHater: The Benefactor and his cult from "Checking Out" despise children so much that they ''kill them'' and brainwash their parents into joining them on their sick crusade to remove even more.
163* ChristmasEpisode: "A Creature Was Stirring" and "Goodwill Toward Men", making for a nice {{Bookends}} for the series, as it started with a Christmas episode and ended with a Christmas episode ("Really You" was a pilot/series sneak peek, and doesn't count as an official episode).
164* {{Clownification}}: In "Afraid of Clowns", Chris decides to try to [[FaceYourFears get over his fear of clowns by going to the circus]], but the evil clowns trap him in a jack-in-the-box. When he escapes, he's dressed in clown getup and he unsuccessfully tries to take it off. His parents reveal to him that clowns are an actual species of humanoids and that they've always been clowns. To Chris's horror, [[DownerEnding he's stuck as a clown forever]].
165* ColdIron: In "Intruders", iron is shown to burn fairies. Lyria tells Eve that it is a preferred metal among the trolls and dwarfs.
166* ColdOpen: Starting with seasons three and four, the episodes have a short scene before the opening sequence. The earlier episodes (seasons one and two) didn't have it, making for a case of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness if you're used to seeing the third and fourth season episodes and have never seen seasons one and two.
167* TheComplianceGame: In "Uncle Howie", the titular character comes up with the game for Jared. He has to find his little sister, Cynthia, in under a few minutes. [[spoiler: Jared lost the game and is forced to become Uncle Howie's new friend, as well as a new character of his show.]]
168* CreepyChild:
169** "Swarmin' Norman" is treated as such due to his fascination with insects and desire for vengeance on those who treated him like a weirdo.
170** Cynthia in "Uncle Howee" gives off this vibe, seeing how she doesn't mind the fact that her brother has been transformed into a puppet for her favorite show (or perhaps is oblivious to Uncle Howee's true self).
171* CreepyDoll: Always a staple of a horror show.
172** Lilly D, who is a twisted life-sized mannequin based off of a real human girl who won her in a contest, but she proves to be one of the most monstrous villains of the series. Her specialties include manipulating others, plotting wicked deeds against people she hates, and attempting to murder anyone who stands in her way.
173** The Mangler, who was a toy designed to be the greatest children's collectible ever suffered from a programming error where it would assault and slaughter children since it literally thought it was the ''real'' character.
174** The Worry Dolls, who seem to randomly appear whenever Jordanna worries about something or sees a problem that can be easily solved.
175** In "Lovecraft's Woods", the kids find a keychain of a creepy goth girl [[spoiler: which matches their own.]]
176** The miniatures from "Toy Train" certainly have a foreboding feel around them. [[spoiler: However, the toy conductor is revealed to be a good guy despite his scary appearance.]]
177* CreepyMonotone: Ranger Jackson in ''Spores''.
178* CruelTwistEnding: At least ''half'' of the episodes end in these...
179** "The Dead Body" ends with [[spoiler: Will ending up dead in the 1961 explosion while Jake Skinner takes his life and his girlfriend]]. The sequel episode "Dead Bodies" (or "The Dead Body 2," as it's informally called) was created for those who thought the ending was too depressing.
180** "The Red Dress" ends with [[spoiler: Jamie keeping the dress, but going blind when the shopkeeper steals her glasses, and, by proxy, her eyesight. Though it isn't all that cruel when you realize that Jamie didn't pay for the dress and kept stalling in giving it back to the owner of The Raven's Chest]].
181** "Ghostly Stare" ends with [[spoiler: the sister revealed to have been replaced by a ghost after losing a staring contest with her brother.]]
182** "Game Over" ends with Kell-Raiser [[spoiler: beating the game, but getting sucked into it and made the new boss and taking in a new player.]]
183** "Best Friend Forever" ends with [[spoiler:Jack getting clubbed in the head by Cheeky the zombie and taken back to his underground lair, where Cheeky begs his mom to let him keep his new human pet.]]
184** "Afraid of Clowns" ends with [[spoiler: the main character being told by his parents that he's a clown and the circus was his rite of passage in growing up.]]
185** "Catching Cold" ends with [[spoiler:Marty catching the mysterious ice cream truck and finding the missing boy -- now a fat, insane adult man -- who tells him that he's been waiting 30 years for someone else to give their soul to the ice cream truck so he won't have to do it anymore.]]
186** "Mascot" has [[spoiler: Willie and the kid in the wolf costume be eaten by Big Yellow, who turns out to be an actual monster that just ''looks'' like a man in a cheesy monster costume. Drake later finds out that Willie was eaten by Big Yellow during the next game, via calling him on his cell phone, where we find out [[AndIMustScream Willie is still alive inside Big Yellow]] and slowly being digested.]]
187** "Headshot" combines this with DownerEnding: [[spoiler: Gracie's friend, Lexi, learns that Cassandra is the Devil and that Gracie inadvertently sold her soul to her to make her wish of being the prettiest girl in the world come true, so Lexi decides to reverse the spell by deleting Gracie's headshot from her cell phone -- which grows uglier as the real Gracie gets prettier. Sadly, Lexi didn't know that Gracie and only Gracie had the power to erase her own headshot and not go through with her DealWithTheDevil. On top of that, she had already won Teen-Teen's "Most Beautiful Face" contest, so there would have been no way to reverse it. Because of this, Gracie's human face is on Cassandra's wall of all the girls who sold their souls and their looks to her, and now wanders the Earth with her pretty face replaced by an even more hideous figure than her picture.]]
188** "The Girl in the Painting". [[spoiler:After Becky finally makes it to the world of The Girl in the Painting, the girl asks if she can stay with her forever. When Becky says yes, the clock strikes six, and Becky is fed to an unseen, but implied dragon-like creature. It's then revealed that the girl in the painting and her mother have planned this all along and use the painting as a trap to capture people who see their world as perfect and feed them to the dragon outside their window]].
189** "Terrible Love"'s ending is kind of a gray area. If you believe Maggie is an AssholeVictim because she forced Cupid to give Brendon another hit of the love arrow out of insecurity despite his warnings, then the ending [[spoiler:in which Stuart summoned Cupid too and made a deal with him to hit Maggie with one of his love arrows]] doesn't count as a cruel twist, as she's getting what she deserved. However, if you think Maggie learned her lesson and has suffered enough, especially after wishing the love-crazed Brendon would leave her alone and seeing him fall down the stairs and be sent to the hospital, then it is cruel, [[spoiler:as she's forced to love Stuart forever (it's heavily implied that, because Cupid's love arrows contain the human hormones of serotonin, dopamine, and adrenaline, ''and'' because it was a direct hit with the proper balance of hormones, the feelings of love you have for whoever you see when you wake up are permanent).]]
190** "My Old House": [[spoiler: After returning to the House that she loves so much, Alice sees her parents are sick with worry over her disappearance and decides that she should return to them. She finally says goodbye to the house, but the house has a VillainousBreakdown and [[AndIMustScream absorbs her into its walls so she'll never leave.]]]]
191** "Argh V": [[spoiler: Sam and her parents die when their RV hits an oncoming truck -- though it looked as if the truck passed them-- and they, along with the Applebaums--the previous owners of their RV--are reduced to slow-speaking, deathly zombies, doomed to drive on the highways forever.]]
192** "Lotsa Luck": [[spoiler: Greg uses his third wish to [[ResetButton wish he had never met Seamus the leprechaun]], thinking that this was the wish his great-great-grandfather Daniel made to save his soul. Seamus comes for Greg anyway and reveals that wishing for everything to turn back to normal wasn't the wish that defeated him; rather, Daniel wished to keep his own soul in exchange for that of his next-born male descendant.]]
193** "Spores" takes it higher in its ending. [[spoiler: Melvin, who didn't even want to join the camping trip, becomes infected by [[TheVirus spores]] and is doomed to be a mutant trapped in the forest.]]
194** "My Imaginary Friend" seems like it's heading to a typical happy ending, with Shawn having defeated Travis and saved David, and he finally agrees with his father and brother it's time for him to start growing up and leave the imaginary friend behind. David happily agrees, [[spoiler:only for him to start fading out of existence too. Shawn tearfully admits to David that he was also imaginary and will have to go away to let Shawn mature, with David's final words being a frightened and sad, "But I don't want to go...", before ceasing to exist.]]
195* DarkerAndEdgier: It's darker than Stine's earlier works ''Series/Goosebumps1995'' and the short-lived series ''The Nightmare Room'', and, while some episodes do have happy endings or come off as the kind of cheesy stories that R.L. Stine did in the 1990s, the majority of ''Haunting Hour'' episodes are darker and have endings that are either cruel or [[GainaxEnding don't make any sense, no matter how many times you watch it]].
196* DarkIsNotEvil: In "Funhouse," the Carny that runs the funhouse seems to be TheCorrupter who's getting Chad hooked on anger and destruction. He's actually genuinely trying to help Chad by showing him the consequences of that anger. It's [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] when Kelly confronts the Carny:
197-->'''Kelly''': Fix him!\
198'''Carny''': I'm ''trying'' to.
199* DarkFantasy:
200** The two-part episode "The Most Evil Sorcerer" does a good job of capturing this feel... Magic users are [[TheFairFolk capricious]] at best and [[MagicIsEvil outright evil at worst]], the child protagonists are slaves in all but title to a corrupt sorcerer, and "DontGoInTheWoods" is [[EverythingTryingToKillYou very good advice]]. [[spoiler: But that doesn't mean you can't EarnYourHappyEnding.]]
201** "Intruders" also counts (even though it takes place in the present), as it depicts TheFairFolk as they are in most fantasy works that haven't been toned down for children: as mischievous at best and evil at worst, who live in the woods, are weak to iron, and do human sacrifices.
202** "Lotsa Luck," like "Intruders," is a more contemporary take on the dark fantasy, but still features a fantastic creature (a leprechaun) and the repercussions of meeting one.
203* DefangedHorrors: The Klemit in "Walls," the zombie in "Best Friends Forever" (at least until he clubs Jack in the head and drags him home underground as his new pet) and the furry ostrich monster in "Bad Egg."
204* DeadAllAlong:
205** Seth in "Night of the Mummy."
206** Audrey, Kate, and Halftime in "Detention" -- until Audrey's apology to Kate reversed the events and made it so that way, the homecoming voting scandal and the parade accident that killed all three of them never happened.
207** [[spoiler:Sam and her family (along with the previous owners of the RV) at the end of "Argh V," although the time between the accident that Sam's family apparently avoided and TheReveal that they are actually dead after they pick up the family that turns out to be the previous owners of the RV (who also died when a truck ran them off the road) is very brief.]]
208* DeadGuyOnDisplay: [[spoiler: Alice from ''My Old House'' is killed and has ''her face'' mounted on the wall of her old room by [[{{Yandere}} the House]].
209* DeadpanSnarker:
210** The title character in "Mrs. Worthington". Her line "What a ''lovely'' greeting," spoken to the rude Molly, is an EstablishingCharacterMoment.
211** Sam in "Argh V," especially since she has to deal with her [[ChildrenRaiseYou parents who act more like children]] than she does.
212** Some of the fantastical creatures can be sarcastic (which is justified as they've dealt with foolish and selfish humans), such as Cupid in "Terrible Love," Uncle Howee and Loomis the rabbit on "Uncle Howee," and Seamus the leprechaun in "Lotsa Luck."
213* DealWithTheDevil:
214** "The Dead Body" sees Will make a deal with Jake Skinner: in exchange for getting revenge on his bullies, he'll do a Jake a favor in the future. [[spoiler:Jake's favor turns out to be being sent back in time to die in Jake's place, letting Jake steal his life.]] In the sequel "Dead Bodies", it turns out [[spoiler:Death never accepted the deal and curses Jake to decay. Jake tries to make a deal with Will's love interest Anna to extend his life, but Will's ghost saves her. Death then [[DraggedOffToHell claims Jake]] and returns Will's life, essentially undoing the deal.]]
215** Heavily implied in "Headshot" with Cassandra the photographer implied to be The Devil. Justified, as the episode is based on ''Literature/ThePictureOfDorianGray'', which followed a similar story of a vain protagonist selling his/her soul to be beautiful forever, only for it to backfire, though subverted as, while Cassandra steals the souls of girls who want to be beautiful and be the face of ''Teen-Teen'' Magazine, she doesn't warp their personalities to be evil, as the girls who take the offer are already shallow, vain, and cutthroat and the ones that delete the headshot are considered good.
216** "Long Live Rock and Roll" also has this, only instead of looks, a boy sells his soul for musical talent. The difference between this episode and "Headshot" in terms of story is that Sir Maestro told Holden that in exchange for the guitar, Sir Maestro gets his soul (or, as it's worded on the episode, "You get to play for me, forever.") and Holden was able to get out of it with ThePowerOfRock and his friends (who also signed away their souls to Sir Maestro) at his side.
217* DeathByAdaptation:
218** Played straight, but then subverted with [[spoiler: Will Johnston]] from "The Dead Body". In the novel, the kid achieved his happy ending, but on the show he gets killed off thanks to some trickery on Jake Skinner's part. However, in the sequel "Dead Bodies", the character is BackFromTheDead.
219** Farmer Palmer is still alive in the short story, but in "Return of the Pumpkinheads", he was stated to have been KilledOffscreen. Downplayed with the protagonist, as it's certainly ''implied'' they will be killed but it's left up in the air while the episode [[spoiler: has them become a pumpkinhead.]]
220** [[spoiler: Greg and Bonnie]] die in the show's version of "Alien Candy" instead of winning like they did in the end of their short story.
221** [[spoiler: Priscilla]] is killed off in "Nightmare Inn" whereas in the original short story there was a vague implication that she was alive and plotting her revenge.
222** David from ''My Imaginary Friend'' is an interesting example as [[spoiler: he turns out to be not even real to begin with, and then Sean gets rid of him, having grown past the need for imaginary friends. In the story, Sean was the imaginary one and he doesn't go away.]]
223* DeathOfAChild:
224** "The Dead Body": Will is tricked into dying in the boiler room explosion that claimed Jake's life. Likewise, Jake's original death at the hands of his bullies.
225** "Wrong Number": [[spoiler:Steffani gets sucked into a cell phone video, sent to the Goth girl she bullied and deleted forever.]]
226** "Swarmin' Norman": [[spoiler:Norman's insect pals attack him after they find out they're being used for evil.]]
227** "Pumpkinhead": [[spoiler:The kids who trespassed on Old Man Palmer's farm get murdered and turned into zombies.]] Similarly, the SequelEpisode [[spoiler:implies that Katie and her brother will die at the hands of their newly-transformed parents and the other pumpkinheads that just rose from the garden.]]
228** "Sick": [[spoiler:Alex discovers too late that his "fever dream" of the government putting him in quarantine and preparing to blow up the house to control the infection is real...[[MindScrew maybe.]])]]
229** "Mascot": [[spoiler:Willie is digested after finding out that Big Yellow is a monster that only looks like a man in a cheesy mascot costume.]]
230** "Ghostly Stare": [[spoiler: Lauren loses a staring contest against her brother and complains of feeling cold before her face briefly changes, meaning the real Lauren fell into the open grave and is now dead.]]
231** "The Girl in the Painting": [[spoiler:Becky is eaten by a dragon while living her new life in the painting she found.]]
232** "Dreamcatcher": [[spoiler:Meg gets trapped in the Dreamcatcher's spider web, and Lisa and Amelia are able to get out because they set their clock alarm. Meg, on the other hand, was asleep outside the cabin and couldn't hear the alarm, leaving her to be devoured by the Dreamcatcher and die in her sleep.]]
233** "Near Mint Condition": It's stated that Mangler (the robotic teddy bear) was recalled after a string of child deaths and mutilations at the hands of the bear.
234** "Argh V": [[spoiler:Sam discovers that the family her parents picked up during their RV trip were the same ones who died in the crash that she read about online, and now she and her parents met the same fate as them.]]
235*** It should be noted, however, that for every time they do show kids dying on this show, there are a few times where this is subverted and the kids are saved. Cases in point: "Detention" (Audrey, Kate, and Halftime do discover that they're dead, but when Kate and Audrey atone for the events that led to their death, they get their lives back and the voting scandal and parade accident are [[{{Retgone}} erased]]), "The Black Mask" (the three kids discover that the mask that showed the colonial kids dying in the past was actually a prediction of their own deaths and they stop it before it can happen), "A Creature Was Stirring" (Timmy and his family escape the house before the Krampus burns it down), and "The Weeping Woman" (Chi saves his friend and his friend's sister from being lured into the lake and drowned by La Llorona).
236* DepravedKidsShowHost: Uncle Howee, from the episode of the same name. Downplayed in that he's not a criminal or sexual deviant (or real, if you believe that Uncle Howee is an interdimensional being, a living cartoon character, Cynthia's imaginary friend, or the ghost of a long-dead children's entertainer whose show -- and, by proxy, his spirit -- lives on in syndication), he actually likes his kid fans (especially Cynthia, who truly believes that he's real and her friend), and he's more a KarmicTrickster who uses his powers for good.
237* DescentIntoAddiction:
238** In "The Girl in the Painting," Becky becomes increasingly hooked on the titular art. At first she just stares at it for hours, but then she starts rearranging her room to match its layout, talks as if the subjects are alive, and even fishes it out of the trash when her mother, who realizes that she's becoming obsessed, tries to get rid of it. Becky's addiction eventually gets so strong that she's pulled into the world of the painting, where she's [[EatenAlive almost immediately devoured by a monster.]]
239** In "Catching Cold," Marty gets more and more obsessed with catching the Kreemy Kold ice-cream truck, going so far as to sell his bike, lie to his family, and set up spike traps just so he can get as much as he wants. By the climax of the episode, he's a twitching mess waiting for the truck to show up on his street.
240** In "Funhouse," Chad goes from a quiet but polite teenager to a destructive, rage-fueled jerk as he continues to indulge his temper in the titular attraction. The [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything drug parallels]] are probably the most blatant in this episode, complete with Chad sneaking out of the house, shaking like an addict with bad cravings, and screaming, "I need more!"
241* DiabolusExNihilo: A few episodes when the creatures/supernatural events are completely unexplained, leaving viewers to wonder about what the protagonists are up against.
242** In "Mascot," it's never revealed [[spoiler: just what Big Yellow ''is''--we know he's a monster, but how he came to live in the school and be considered its mascot are totally unknown.]]
243** In "Uncle Howee", the home audience never finds out the truth behind the titular kiddie-show host. We know he has [[spoiler: powers including teleportation, directly interacting with his audience, the ability to slip from the TV to reality and back again, and transforming people into cast members of his show]], but what exactly is he? A wizard? A human who was literally cursed with TV magic? Cynthia's imaginary friend who can communicate with her through reflective surfaces, like the TV and the bathroom mirror? The ghost of a long-dead children's show host whose spirit is alive because his show is always on in reruns and always watched by children Cynthia's age[[note]]it does seem that way, given how outdated the show looks, as if it used to be on in the 1950s, when live-action kids' shows really did have character actors like "Uncle Howee" entertain children in front of a live audience[[/note]]? Some kind of monster or otherworldly creature posing as a human kids' show host? Is the television under some kind of curse? Has Cynthia's love and devotion to the show somehow make Uncle Howee and his friends real? Has Uncle Howee done this to other kids in the past? The answers are never even hinted at, making him all the more frightening.
244** It's not explained how Mangler in "Near Mint Condition" came to be evil (nor do we actually see the aftermath of Mangler's attacks). Was it a flaw in the robotics? Was it a mistake with the manufacturers? Or is there a toy creator out there so sociopathic that he can make a toy that injures and kills kids without feeling remorse or thinking of what that kind of stunt means for the toy company brand?
245** The House from "My Old House" is a sentient building with the ability to summon food, manipulate everything inside of it, communicate through dreams, [[spoiler: turn into a blood red snake made out of its wiring, and speak]], but we have absolutely ''no idea'' as to what the heck it actually is and how it even came into existence. Which makes its presence all the more horrifying if you realize that it's been watching the family for years. According to Website/TheOtherWiki, it's implied that it might be a demon.
246** The Alp from "Red Eye" is a shadow demon that has the ability to insert itself within photos, send threatening letters capable of altering themselves, haunt Georgia's nightmares, turn into a specter, and [[spoiler: can possess human beings]]. However, we have no clue how it exists, what its motivation is, or why it's even bothering with stalking a random little girl and her father.
247* DirectorsCut: Two episodes have reran with alternate endings:
248** "Scarecrow": In the original version, the scarecrow salesman turns back to his true form and is burned at his stake by Bobby, who walks off into the empty world. In the director's cut version, the scarecrow salesman turns Bobby into a scarecrow and the two are the only things left in an empty world. The director's cut ending is the ending that now airs in reruns on TV and on Netflix, but, if you comb Website/YouTube or any video site, you might find the original ending.
249** "Spaceman": In the original version, Aaron volunteers to play Spaceman with Ms. Hollinger's dead son as he felt sorry for her loss and Aaron finally had a friend who liked space travel. In the director's cut, the spirit of Ms. Hollinger's son forces his mother to make Aaron his new friend. Aaron tries to escape, but ends up locked in his room. Ms. Hollinger's line, "I'll leave you two spacemen alone" goes from being sweet and part of the game to being bitter and spiteful. "Spaceman" also has an extra scene where the voice over the helmet explains to Aaron that his helmet has advanced technology, which is why he can hear him, despite the helmet not having batteries in it.
250* DirtyCoward: Greg's great-great-grandfather ''didn't'' outsmart Seamus in "Lotsa Luck". [[spoiler:All he did was save his own hide by allowing the leprechaun to claim the soul of his next male descendant. Greg was unlucky enough to be born a boy.]]
251* DistinguishingMark: Lilly has a mole on the back of her neck which helps identify her as the real Lilly rather than the doll just as the mom was about to dump her in the trash.
252* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything:
253** Phillip's visible terror at his robot doing "what's good for him" in "My Robot" is strongly reminiscent of a child with an abusive, controlling parent (or someone with an abusive, controlling spouse).
254** Jake forcing Anna to shake his hand so he can steal her life is very akin to date rape. His guilt-tripping to force her to do it--"Don't you love me?"--also sounds a lot like someone in an abusive relationship trying to convince their partner to stay.
255** Marty's behavior in "Catching Cold" is disturbingly similar to that of a drug addict: In one scene, he's shown repeating "Kreamy Kold" to himself like a MadnessMantra and a few scenes later, he casually sells off a bike that his dad got him for twenty bucks so he can buy ice cream. Exactly one scene later, he blatantly lies to his parents about where he's going so he can sneak out to buy ice cream. Cut to him repeating, "Come on, come on, come on" as he waits for the truck to show.
256** Similarly, Chad's actions in "Funhouse" after he gets his taste of violence and revenge have drug parallels. He's shown rocking back and forth and shaking as he sits alone in the hallway, and eventually sneaks out to get his fix. He even tells the carnie "I need more!"
257** Alice's obsessive devotion to the titular building in "My Old House" seems rather like someone idealizing a romantic partner (who turns out to be abusive) and deciding to stay with them, despite protests from loved ones who realize that what looks like love is actually obsession. The house itself shows traits similar to how a pedophile targets its victim.
258* DontFearTheReaper:
259** In "Flight", TheGrimReaper takes the form of a nice old lady and is good-natured, but still has a job to do and will kill everyone on-board an airplane if the spirit doesn't come with her.
260** [[spoiler:Gabe/Mr. Kane/the Janitor]] from "Detention" isn't exactly the Grim Reaper, but an analogous figure who guides people after their death.
261** In "Dead Bodies", [[spoiler:Death takes Jake Skinner to Hell and brings back to life Will, who was sacrificed by Jake to prolong his own.]]
262* DontGoIntoTheWoods:
263** In ''Spores'', this is the case with Melvin's family.
264** In "Lovecraft Woods", the titular woods [[spoiler:imprison whoever enters them in a GroundhogDayLoop.]]
265* DraggedOffToHell: The fate of Jake Skinner in ''Dead Bodies''. The end of the episode implies he broke out -- but only to get his comb back.
266* {{Dreamweaver}}: Implied to be one of Fear's powers in ''Fear Never Knocks''. Also "Dreamcatcher".
267* DullSurprise:
268** In "Uncle Howee," Jared takes it in a little too well that a fictional children's show host has come to life outside the TV, broken into his house, abducted his sister, and is threatening his life while holding him hostage.
269** In "My Old House," Alice looks a lot less intimidated than she should be upon seeing [[spoiler: the house's true demonic form readying to kill her. Though, [[SoundOnlyDeath her screams definitely make up for it.]]]]
270** In "Intruders," Eve doesn't look as frightened as she should be when she notices [[spoiler: the army of evil fairies charging up at her front door.]]
271* EarnYourHappyEnding: If an episode has a happy ending, chances are the main characters are going to have to go through hell to get it (cf. "Really You," "Game Over"[[note]]in that Kell-Raiser learns that his friends are worth more than being the best at a video game. Sadly, he doesn't return to the real world with them, as he won the video game and is forced to be the new game master until another player defeats him, which could take forever, depending on how good the next player is[[/note]] "Bad Feng Shui," "Flight," the original cut of "Spaceman," "Creature Feature," "The Golem," "Grampires," "The Weeping Woman," "Checking Out," "Detention," "Funhouse," "Coat Rack Cowboy," "Dead Bodies," "Toy Train," "Grandpa's Glasses," and "Goodwill Toward Men").
272* EatenAlive: The fate of the main characters in [[spoiler:"Mascot" and "The Girl in the Painting"]].
273* ElderlyImmortal: "Grampires" features an entire neighborhood of vampire senior citizens.
274* EldritchAbomination: The alien-monster creature from "Sick," though it's hard to tell since he's rarely shown (all we see of him are tentacles, and it's implied that he's not of this Earth and that blowing up the house is the only way that he can be destroyed).
275* EnemiesWithDeath: Jake Skinner, due to cheating it. Death is ''not'' happy and comes back with a vengeance.
276* EpisodeOnAPlane: "Flight."
277* EquivalentExchange: This is how leprechaun magic works in "Lotsa Luck." Any wish that is granted comes at a price. For instance, protagonist Greg wishes to be lucky; Seamus, the leprechaun who he catches, gives him incredible luck, but gives Greg's father horrible luck as a trade (he gets fired from his job and breaks his hand while fixing his car).
278* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Farmer Palmer from the Pumpkinhead episodes and his pumpkinhead children genuinely seemed to love each other.
279* EvenEvilHasStandards:
280** Sir Maestro (from "Long Live Rock and Roll") may steal the souls of anyone who wants to be a music star, but he feels that the mainstream music industry is worse than he is in exploiting musical talent (he calls them "the real evil" and blames them for his bitterness, cynicism, and the competitive streak that [[spoiler:would be his downfall when Holden challenges him to a guitar duel]]).
281** Cassandra in "Headshot" is similar. [[spoiler: While it's heavily implied that she's ''literally'' the Devil]] and steals the souls of girls who want to be pretty, she doesn't warp their personalities to do so. Rather, the girls who take up her offer are already shallow, cutthroat, and competitive (even if they don't show it), and befitting her [[spoiler: Satanic]] nature, she merely tempts them to act on this.
282** The carnie on "Funhouse" may have a sideshow attraction that warps people into bringing out the evil inside them, but his funhouse isn't to scare people or turn them into monsters nor is the carnie himself evil[[note]](though Chad and Kelly do find it weird that he knows about their family dinners and it's not explained how he knows)[[/note]]. The whole idea of his funhouse to help people get over their inner demons. When Chad's sister, Kelly, confronts the carnie about Chad, the carnie is genuinely concerned about Chad, tells Kelly that he didn't do anything (and meant it), and outright declares that he's trying to fix him (which seems to be why he is repairing the toys outside the attraction).
283** The Christmas angel in "Goodwill Toward Men" may have been cruel enough to send a family to live on the streets with homeless people (not that [[JerkassVictim most of them didn't deserve it]]. [[WhiteSheep Missy]] didn't, though this can be interpreted as a [[SecretTestOfCharacter test to see if she really is a good person]]), but when she warps reality so that [[spoiler:Missy now lives with the Donaldsons (the now-wealthy family that used to be her original family's gardeners), she makes Missy's former selfish and elitist family the hired help who are humbler, kinder, and don't have a daughter rather than leave them to rot on the streets, as "even the rich deserve Christmas cheer, too."]]
284* EvilAllAlong: The antagonist of "My Old House".
285* EvilFeelsGood: In "Funhouse," Chad is encouraged to let out his anger by taking a mallet to a display featuring an arguing mannequin family. Initially, Chad feels great that he's unleashing his anger, but soon he gets hooked on it, and the anger begins warping his personality and his appearance. The only way out is to destroy the mirror that reflects what he's become.
286* ExactWords:
287** Uncle Howee has Jared be his friend to see his sister again. [[spoiler:Turns out Jared will see his sister whenever she watches the ''Uncle Howee Show'' since Jared has become one of his new puppets.]]
288** In "Game Over," the game master tells Kelly that he can choose any weapon he likes for the final battle. Kelly chooses his ''friends'', who had [[HeroicSacrifice sacrificed themselves]] earlier, bringing them back to life--after all, they're something he can use to cause damage against the boss.
289* {{Expy}}:
290** As obvious as it sounds, the title character in ''Fear Never Knocks'' seems to be one for [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet Freddy Krueger]] (it would explain the whole "worst fears coming to life" premise of the story).
291** Sir Maestro from "Long Live Rock 'n Roll" looks and sounds like Keith Richards from The Rolling Stones, though the top hat is more on par with either Music/TomPetty back in the 1970s or Slash from Guns 'n Roses.
292** Alan Miller from "Brush with Madness" is a mash-up of real-life graphic novelists Alan Moore (best known for ''V for Vendetta'', ''Watchmen'', and ''From Hell'') and Frank Miller (best known for ''Sin City'', ''300'', and ''The Dark Knight Returns'').
293** Uncle Howee (from the episode of the same name) seems to be a mix of Series/CaptainKangaroo and [[Series/PeeWeesPlayhouse Pee-Wee Herman]] if either of them dressed as an old-timey carnival barker.
294** The fungal mutants in "Spores" are ''obviously'' the [[VideoGame/TheLastOfUs clickers]] (except the other way around).
295* EyeScream: In "The Most Evil Sorcerer, Part 2," the sorceress performs a spell to pull out Ned's eyes and then places them in a jar.
296* FacialHorror:
297** [[spoiler: Gracie's fate at the end of "Headshot".]]
298** Also, Chad when his anger begins to overtake him on the episode "Funhouse"
299* FailedASpotCheck: In "My Old House," Alice runs away from her new home and goes back to the titular building instead of heading for school. While her parents do think to search for her there, they only spend about five minutes looking and miss the fact that their daughter is hiding ''literally five feet away from them'' in a closet.
300* TheFairFolk:
301** Seamus the leprechaun in "Lotsa Luck".
302** Lyria and the forest fairies in "Intruders." In their case, it's somewhat played with in terms of appearance; while Lyria is outfitted like a fairy from Victorian/Edwardian-era illustrations (think Arthur Rackham and Ida Outhwaite), her motives and personality are much, ''much'' more akin to earlier legends. Eve technically counts as well, being a changeling.
303** The Alp in "Red Eye". The [[http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alp_(folklore) Alp's]] name is a variation on "elf," pointing to darker, earlier legends wherein elves/fairies were to be feared.
304* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: Naturally, as an R.L. Stine work there's a ton of brutal child death featured.
305** "Brush With Madness": [[spoiler: In the end, our two kid heroes are violently butchered by a MadArtist wielding a chainsaw as they scream in pain before the episode closes out.]]
306** "Mascot": [[spoiler: The episode ends showing us that Big Yellow gobbled up Willie and he's slowly and painfully digesting inside of the monster's stomach. Made even worse when we see the Wolf mascot's corpse not moving behind our protagonist, already dead from his imprisonment.]]
307** "Dreamcatcher": [[spoiler: The dreamcatcher demon takes innocent girls into its webs where it then mauls them to death and eats them alive while they scream in horror.]] Heck, this episode outright shows blood from a girl having claw slashes on her wrist.
308** "Swarmin' Norman": [[spoiler: Norman is eaten alive by millions of insects.]]
309** "Dead Bodies": [[spoiler: Jake Skinner is brutally murdered by the grim reaper through having his flesh melt off as he's dragged down to Hell.]]
310** "My Old House": Although nothing is outright shown onscreen, we do see [[spoiler: Alice's severed face melded into the House's walls, implying that her death wasn't pretty.]]
311* {{Fanservice}}: "Pool Shark" is full of it. The episode has a greater emphasis on romance than usual and the main cast spend at least half their time walking around, soaking wet, in swimwear.
312* FootprintsOfMuck: In "Near Mint Condition", Mangler runs through some spilled food and Mark and Ted uses its footprints to track it from the kitchen to their mother's scrapbooking room.
313* {{Foreshadowing}}: As each episode is only 22 minutes, it's hard to keep the secrets secret, but there are occasionally hints dropped:
314** In "Uncle Howee," watch closely when Jared turns off the TV for the first time. Just before he does, Uncle Howee and Loomis -- who were talking about carrots -- pause and look at him with upset expressions, proving that they're aware of what's going on.
315** In "Terrible Love," Cupid tells Maggie that she's "not [his] only client." [[spoiler: Turns out that other client is Stuart.]]
316** In "Detention", someone says something about the "powers that be", [[spoiler: possibly referring to God and such due to the reveal of the detention being purgatory]].
317** In "The Girl in the Painting," a shot of the titular artwork after Becky turns away reveals not only that it's a CreepyChangingPainting, but that one of the changes is a giant yellow reptilian eye glaring through the window. Guess what ends up eating Becky at the end of the episode?
318* FormulaBreakingEpisode:
319** ''The Most Evil Sorcerer'', in which the entire plot (except for the last scene of the evil sorceress waking up in the modern day after a jogger thinks she needs medical attention) takes place in medieval Europe and is more like a DarkFantasy than a horror story.
320** Some episodes are more comedy-horror than straight horror. "Terrible Love" plays out like a supernatural, [[RomanticComedy romantic]] BlackComedy, "Best Friends Forever" and "Bad Egg" parody the sitcom story of "Kid keeps a pet in the house under wraps from his parents who forbid him from having a pet", "Uncle Howee" is more of a BlackComedy with scary elements and social commentary about how television is too often used as a babysitter, and "Near Mint Condition" is a [[TakeThat satire]] against obsessive toy collectors, 1980s nostalgia, and online auction addicts.
321** "Headshot": It's ''Literature/ThePictureOfDorianGray'' set in the world of teen modeling. Much like "Terrible Love", the fears are more based in reality. In this case, it's the promises of fame and glamor bringing out a person's worst qualities, how the famous often have to sacrifice what really matters to them in order to succeed only to lose everything when their star fades, and how evil lives in all mankind and only comes out if a person chooses to surround themselves with evil influences.
322** "Funhouse" is similar to "Headshot," as the traveling carnie isn't the evil one; he merely encourages Chad to vent his anger over his family. Chad's anger and frustration over his father never being around (and his mother not doing anything about it) turns Chad into a monster. Unlike "Headshot," Chad breaks the spell his anger has over him by smashing the mirror that reads, "To Get Out, You Must Face Yourself" and distorted his face.
323** "The Cast": Gives more psychological scares, despite having a CrazyCatLady who may or may not be a witch or have godlike powers over her cats. Lex's guilt over not telling the truth about what he did to the cat lady's house is what drives him crazy (as symbolized by the rats making a nest in his cast). It's been described as an homage to ''The Telltale Heart'' (only instead of a beating heart under the floorboards, it's rats making a nest in a boy's arm cast).
324** "Goodwill Toward Men": While there is a supernatural character (the Christmas angel statue), it's more of a morality tale (akin to what ''Franchise/TheTwilightZone'' puts out) and the scares are more based in reality than fiction (Missy and her family become poor and are forced to live on the streets, while their gardener and his family are as rich and selfish as Missy's family used to be).
325* TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou: In-universe for "Uncle Howee". When Jared turns the TV off after telling Cynthia that ''The Uncle Howee Show'' is a sucky kids' show, Cynthia turns it on again, and Uncle Howee and Loomis the rabbit start talking directly to Cynthia, telling her how much they miss her and how they love her more than Jared. [[FromBadToWorse Then it goes downhill for Jared]], when Uncle Howee begins talking to him and moving his piano from the TV to the real world.
326** Also, just before Jared turns the television off, you can see Uncle Howee and Loomis stop talking and looking in surprise, foreshadowing what is to come.
327* FriendToBugs: Norman in "Swarmin' Norman"...[[spoiler:until he abuses them and [[TheDogBitesBack they fight back against all mankind (or at least Norman)]].]]
328* FriendlyNeighborhoodVampire: Grandpa Walt Montgomery in ''Grampires'', who refuses to feed off people (especially his grandchildren, whom he loves, despite being a vampire) and instead eats rats.
329* TheGameComeToLife: "Game Over", only it's a video game, not a board game or a trading card game, like in most examples.
330* GamesOfTheElderly: In the "Grampires" two-parter, the vampiric retirement community capture the protagonists, Mike and Cristen, but rather than have the residents fight over who gets to feed on them. The lead vampire decides to have them as prizes for the bingo game.
331* GainaxEnding: The ending to "Sick" had a lot of viewers scratching their heads. ''Did'' Alex actually die when the government destroyed his house or is this like ''Inception'' where he's trapped in another dream plane (and possibly died in his sleep, if one were to interpret the story as the inner workings of someone's body as he or she fights off an infection)? What was real in this story and what wasn't?
332* GenericDoomsdayVillain: Quite a number of the monsters on this show can come across as this if they have no character or real motive for doing the villainous things they do.
333** The Alp from "Red Eye" is a shadow demon that has the ability to insert itself within photos, send threatening letters capable of altering themselves, haunt Georgia's nightmares, turn into a specter, and [[spoiler: can possess human beings]]. However, we have no clue how it exists, what its motivation is, or why it's even bothering with stalking a random little girl and her father.
334** "Scarecrow" features a literal one through the titular scarecrow. The monster wants to wipe out all life on the planet and bring an end to the world, but we don't know exactly why it wants to bring death to everything.
335** The pumpkinheads like to decapitate random people and replace their heads with pumpkins in order to generate more pumpkin people, but their end goal to why they're doing this is never brought up at all and we get zero explanation on how Farmer Palmer was capable of bringing them into this world outside of him being evil.
336* GenderFlip:
337** "Pumpkinhead" changes the male protagonist to a girl.
338** The sorcerer Ned teams up with in ''The Most Evil Sorcerer'' was a man named Shamandra in the book, but is a woman named Gresilda in the episode.
339* GenreAnthology: In the same vein as the 1990s adaptation of ''Goosebumps'', in which every episode is a different story (including the episodes that are sequels to earlier ones, like "The Return of Lilly D", "Dead Bodies", and "Return of the Pumpkinheads")
340* GenreBlind:
341** Jamie from "The Red Dress" really would have benefited from checking out a couple of horror movies before she decided to steal the eponymous dress. If [[TheLittleShopThatWasntThereYesterday a mysterious shop you've never seen before suddenly appears in town]] and is run by a creepy proprietor, then you can be damn sure that you are going to pay for anything you take, one way or another.
342** Greg from "Lotsa Luck" thinking that the "I wish everything turned back to normal" wish would work on a leprechaun, who (a) has probably heard that wish 1000 times before, (b) knew that wasn't the wish Greg's great-great grandfather used to defeat him, and (c) is said to be a ManipulativeBastard. It should be noted that, prior to the ending, Greg was somewhat GenreSavvy about Seamus' tricks (when Seamus offers to tell Greg about how he knows Greg's mother and her side of the family, Greg immediately refuses, as he knows it's a trap and demands that Seamus give him the three wishes owed to him).
343* GettingSmiliesPaintedOnYourSoul: Implied to be the case with Jared at the end of "Uncle Howee". After Jared agrees to be Uncle Howee's friend, he's later seen on the show as a blissed-out wooden marionette with a smile literally painted on his face and greeting the kid audience, including his sister.
344* AGodAmI: The eponymous protagonist of "Swarmin' Norman" becomes this when he realizes that he can control bugs, but [[{{Deconstruction}} it comes back to bite him]] [[spoiler:when he crushes some bugs and they retaliate by eating him alive in bed.]]
345* GoIntoTheLight:
346** This is what happens to [[spoiler: the spirit of the dead passenger]] in "Flight" when [[spoiler: he decides to follow the GrimReaper]].
347** It almost happens to Will at the end of "Dead Bodies" until he realises [[spoiler: he's not supposed to die yet]].
348* GoodAngelBadAngel: With FridgeBrilliance. The twist ending in "My Imaginary Friend" makes more sense when you rethink Dave and Travis as Shawn's conscience trying to help him out, and Shawn's decision to get rid of his imaginary friends is really his decision to TakeAThirdOption and think for himself.
349* GoodAllAlong:
350** [[spoiler: The carny]] from the "Funhouse" was actually trying to help the siblings the whole time despite his creepy behavior.
351** [[spoiler: The switchman]] from "Toy Train" was actually revealed to be a victim of tragedy rather than a vengeful ghost like the episode played him up as.
352** The ghosts in "Lights Out" were trying to protect the kids the whole time, locking them in a room because any patient caught out of bed after dark was subjected to the mad doctor's experiments.
353* GoodIsNotNice: The angel in "Goodwill Toward Men" has more in common with Old Testament depictions of angels than the cheerful, more forgiving ones everyone is familiar with, whether or not they're religious. She marks the bedroom doors of the [[RichBitch wealthy, obnoxious]] Mr. and Mrs. Jordan and their son Henry with large swaths of fire, then puts the whole Jordan family (including Missy, who was [[WhiteSheep the only one who showed any semblance of goodness]]) through hell by trapping them in a reality where they are homeless and poor.
354** The end of the episode is something of a subversion, though. After Missy pleads with the angel to make things right because her family has suffered enough, the being [[spoiler: creates a reality where Missy is a member of the Donaldson family--the gardeners in the old time stream. They are wealthy, kind, and generous, while the Jordans are ''their'' hired help, but much nicer and humbler than they were in their previous existence. The angel even lampshades this when she points out that some viewers probably wanted to see the Jordans suffer even more, but "even the rich deserve Christmas cheer too."]]
355* GoryDiscretionShot: Most of the deaths that occur are usually not fully seen. Justified, as this show aired on a family-friendly network and some of the violence had to be toned down to PG levels (which makes it ''more'' disturbing than just showing the gore and horror outright).
356* GothGirlsKnowMagic: There's a typical-looking goth girl in the episode "Wrong Number", but she actually has an uncle [[spoiler:and grandmother]] who use magic and such. She knows of this, and uses their help to eventually [[spoiler:delete a video that Steffani is trapped in, deleting Steffani forever]].
357* GreaterScopeVillain: The Really You Company is not only revealed to be an EvilInc, but they bought the business from a crazy old lady, hence why most of the dolls including [[CreepyDoll Lilly D]] are LivingToys.
358* GroundhogDayLoop: [[spoiler: The cursed forest creates this in "Lovecraft's Woods".]]
359[[/folder]]
360
361[[folder:H-M]]
362* HalloweenEpisode: "Pumpkinhead" and the sequel episode "Return of the Pumpkinheads"[[note]](though "Return of the Pumpkinheads" only touched on Halloween and didn't feature many characters in costume, a costume party, trick-or-treating, or any events/characters associated with the typical Halloween episode.[[/note]]. For a horror TV show based on Creator/RLStine's books (and given that ''Goosebumps'' had more), it's surprising that there are only two Halloween episodes in this series.
363* HappilyAdopted: Played with Eve in "Intruders". When she is first introduced, she's shown to have grown distant from her parents, is [[InfantSiblingJealousy jealous of her baby brother]], and is also unaware that she is adopted, being a changeling. [[spoiler:By the episode's end, she decides she'd rather stay with her adoptive parents if it means her brother will be safe.]]
364* HarmlessVillain: The twist ending of [[spoiler: "The Walls" reveals that the Klemit]] was nothing more than a pathetic, syrup-starved loser the whole time and was zero threat to the hero.
365* HateSink: Expect this trope to appear a lot in a show well known for its villains, especially if they're bullies.
366** Steffani Howard from "Wrong Number" is a sadistic bully who thinks she's better than everyone and treats others poorly for a cheap laugh. It's made very clear that she's a VillainProtagonist.
367** Meg from "Dreamcatcher" is a sociopathic, self-entitled brat who picks on Lisa and her former best friend Amelia for fun. [[spoiler: It makes her death at the claws of the dream catcher all the better.]]
368** Jared from "Uncle Howee" is a coldhearted BigBrotherBully who's willing to abandon his little sister to go hang out with his friends. However, when Uncle Howee decides to treat him a lesson about being kind, he ''still'' refuses to respect him even though he's freaking out over his sister's disappearance.
369** Cameron from "Pool Shark" is a JerkJock who feels entitled to his student's love and picks on Kai for his crippling phobia of sharks.
370* HeelFaceDoorSlam: [[spoiler: The protagonist of "My Old House" suffers a literal one when she reforms too late. She decides to return to her family after realizing how much they love her, only to be likely ''murdered and absorbed'' by the house she loved.]]
371* HeelRealization:
372** Molly goes through this in "Mrs. Worthington" when she discovers Nate's drawings of her suffering various tortures. She later asks him outright, "Am I really that mean to you?" Happily, the end of the episode shows her beginning a HeelFaceTurn.
373** Kate does this in "Detention," leading her to nearly go off in the hearse to Hell after Audrey and Halftime realize that they're dead and their underhanded actions led to their demise and the homecoming weekend being canceled.
374* HellHotel:
375** Subverted. The Nightmare Inn isn't awful. [[spoiler: The werewolves running it, however, are.]]
376** "Checking Out" plays it straight with a hotel run by a cult of adults who brainwash adults who come in with children into hating their children so they can sacrifice them to The Benefactor (a painting with a white void in the back of it).
377* HereWeGoAgain:
378** "The Hole" ends with the dad possessed by the man who went nuts in the video after he wears the Hawaiian shirt that the man in the video wore.
379** "Game Over": "Kell-Raiser" is the new video game master and he drags a new player into the video game world.
380** Implied to be the ending in "The Weeping Woman." Yes, Chi saved his friends from being drowned and the negative energy that brought the statue to life disappeared when Chi's friend's parents reunited, but the last image of the episode was the La Llorona statue being put in a yard sale (and no one, except for Chi and his friends, know who La Llorona is and what her powers are). [[SequelHook Who knows who will buy it, thinking that it's just a harmless statue of a woman to have around the house]]?
381** "Terrible Love": [[spoiler:Maggie finding out too late that Stuart made a deal with Cupid to make her his girlfriend and gets hit with a love arrow.]]
382** "Worry Dolls": One of the worry dolls Jordanna set fire to in the fireplace regroups and comes back to haunt her, as her worrying over the dolls actually being burned is what brings one back to life.
383** "Lovecraft's Woods": Erica, who has been scratched by an unknown creature in Lovecraft's Woods, is cursed to live in a cabin while the rest of her friends are doomed to repeat their ill-fated journey.
384** "Coat Rack Cowboy" is a minor example. Yes, Ethan does defeat Mad Dog [=McCoy=] and returns to the present, but two of the outlaws Ethan mentioned before look over his bed and comment that, now that Ethan defeated Mad Dog [=McCoy=], they want to challenge him to a shoot-out as well, since they heard he killed him without shooting him.
385** "My Robot": After the robot is rebooted, it imprints on Tim, which was Philip's plan the whole time so he would finally be rid of it.
386** "My Old House": It's implied that the House that sucked up Alice [[spoiler: will target a new girl moving into it.]]
387** "Mrs. Worthington": Nate is able to defeat his creation by ripping her picture to shreds, but doesn't realize that he didn't destroy her hand, which is now sketching herself back to life in the attic, meaning that Mrs. Worthington will be alive and able to wreak havoc on everyone in the family again.
388* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: A lot of the protagonists fail to see that the people they trust are EvilAllAlong or more powerful than them. These kind of characters don't last long against the villains.
389* HumanoidAbomination: The scarecrow salesman definitely looked human [[spoiler: when he is not in his scarecrow form.]]
390** It's implied that some of the other antagonists--including Mrs. Worthington, Uncle Howee, and the Carny--are ''something'' that isn't human despite looking like it. They don't appear to be witches or magic users, and have [[NothingIsScarier vaguely defined but still frightening powers]], so it's quite likely that they're a case of this trope.
391* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Many of the stories' antagonists (and protagonists, in the cases of "Headshot" and "Funhouse") are really messed-up people whose inner demons are scarier than any monster, ghost, vampire, or legendary creature you can name.
392** Cupid in "Terrible Love" even says as such when Maggie begs him to give Brendon another love arrow (cf. his speech on how he's sick of humans always asking for more love and more power, as it always leads to destruction and disaster and him [and other gods] getting blamed for it).
393** Cassandra and Sir Maestro also comment on how people can be more evil than they are in their respective episodes. Cassandra in "Headshot" says that the girls who get their pictures taken with her and don't delete their headshots are "who [they] truly are on the inside" while Sir Maestro blames the mainstream music industry for making him a JadedWashout and has been around for a long time, collecting the souls of anyone who wants power (not just musicians and creative people).
394** Jeffrey's parents in "The Walls" [[spoiler: were willing to gaslight their own son into insanity so they wouldn't have to tell him that the monster living in their walls is actually a good luck charm who is harmless and only brings good things to their family. Their son rightfully calls them out on this and they do get what they deserve in the end -- namely, Jeffrey gets their room with the new TV while his parents have to put up with the Klemit making noises in the walls and keeping them awake at night.]]
395** Meg in "Dreamcatcher" [[spoiler: is one of the few human kids who was completely on board with ''allowing her former best friend to die'' at the hands of the monster all because she felt abandoned by her.]]
396** Pretty much ever bully the show ever has is a sick, cruel monster who is just as bad if not ''worse'' than the monster of the week.
397* HumanSacrifice: Implied to be what the Fair Folk wanted to do to Eve's baby brother in ''Intruders''. Anyone familiar with the ballad "Literature/TamLin" would know that the sacrifice is meant to be a tithe to [[spoiler: Hell.]]
398* HypocriticalHumor: The titular Uncle Howee likes to teach kids about proper grammar and discourages slang, but the crux of his ThemeTune's lyrics is his PunnyName (a play on "Howie" and an abbreviation of "How are we").
399* IHaveYouNowMyPretty: [[spoiler: The CruelTwistEnding of "My Old House."]]
400* IgnoringBySinging: Played for horror in "The Girl in the Painting." When Becky finally enters the painting's world and meets the titular girl, they chat for a while, but then giant rumbling sounds start shaking the house. The girl pulls a rope to open the ceiling and says it's [[WhamLine "feeding time."]] She then covers her ears and sings as loudly as she can to drown out Becky's screams as a ''giant monster'' reaches in and eats her alive.
401* IgnoredEpiphany: Gracie in "Headshots" immediately regrets calling her best friend Lexi a "butterface". As she holds the strip of photos of her and Lexi taken during happier times, she briefly considers backing out of her deal with Cassandra by deleting her headshot. After another pep talk from Cassandra encouraging her to follow her shallow dreams of fame, Gracie promptly crumples up the photos and leaves the headshot on her phone.
402* IKnowWhatYouFear: ''Fear Never Knocks''
403* ImaginaryFriend: Travis [[spoiler:and Dave]] to Ryan on ''My Imaginary Friend''.
404** To some extent, Uncle Howee from the episode of the same name could be, as, prior to Jared seeing Uncle Howee, Loomis, and Mr. Clock escape from the TV, Cynthia was the only one who could see and interact with Uncle Howee, whether he was on TV or in the bathroom mirror, meaning that Uncle Howee and his show could be the product of Cynthia's imagination.
405* ImAHumanitarian: The witch in "Stage Fright" [[spoiler: who cursed the "Hansel and Gretel" musical because no one was able to tell her story right. She didn't eat the kids -- she made meals out of [[AssholeVictim their parents.]]]]
406* ImColdSoCold: The ghosts in "Ghostly Stare" are all ''so cold''.
407* ImpossiblyDeliciousFood: Kreamy Kold Ice Cream in "Catching Cold". One taste is enough to cause a boy to become obsessed with intercepting the BadHumorTruck that supplied it. He even spits out normal ice cream, claiming it is as hamburger compared to world's best steak compared to Kreamy Kold.
408* InexplicablyAwesome: Uncle Howee and his strange powers. It's not known whether Uncle Howee has inherent magical ability, if Cynthia's love for the show [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve empowered him]], if he's a supernatural being of any kind, if the TV has a curse on it, or if Cynthia's imagination is behind it, but all of that is moot, as he uses his powers for good.
409* InNameOnly: This series has no connection whatsoever with the movie ''The Haunting Hour: Don't Think About It.'' Instead, it's based on ''The Nightmare Hour'' and ''The Haunting Hour'' anthology books written by R.L. Stine (though most of the stories aren't based on the short stories from either books).
410** ''Creature Features'' is based on one of the books in the Literature/StrangeMatter series. The only thing it retains is the basic concept and a few character names.
411* ItIsDehumanizing: In "The Return of Lilly D.", Natalie starts referring to Lilly D. as "it" when she starts suspecting the latter of being alive and evil.
412* IWantMyMommy: PlayedForDrama in "Bad Feng Shui." Jessica, upon realizing that it was her own selfishness and cruelty toward her mother that summoned the snake demon which kidnapped her, breaks down in tears and starts screaming for her: "I NEED MY MOM!" Thankfully, she's able (with her mother's help) to defeat the demon.
413* JackassGenie: Seamus the leprechaun in "Lotsa Luck". The episode even references the trope, with Greg's mother pointing out that TheFairFolk are tricksters.
414* JerkassVictim:
415** As nightmarish and utterly [[DisproportionateRetribution disproportionate]] as their punishment was, the victims in "Checking Out" are heavily implied to have been [[spoiler:bratty kids who don't appreciate what their parents do for them]].
416** Jared on "Uncle Howee", if you believe that he's only being a jerk to Cynthia because his mom forced him to babysit which cut into his plans to see a movie with his friends, and not the theory that Jared is a bully who doesn't like his sister because she's annoying and constantly watches ''The Uncle Howee Show''.
417** Steffani in "Wrong Number" was a self-centered AlphaBitch who bullied practically everyone. [[spoiler: Nobody feels sorry when she's killed in the end by the elderly woman she mocked earlier in the story.]]
418** Missy's parents and brother in "Goodwill Toward Men", only they're more {{jerkass}} than victim. With Missy herself, it's the other way around (more victim than jerkass).
419** "Spores" has a similar breakdown of victims. Melvin and his mother are nice people who end up in a horrible situation, while Jack is a selfish AbusiveDad who led his family to their fates and Jack Jr. and Jacqueline are more a WellDoneSonGuy and [[BigBrotherBully Big Brother/Sister Bully combo]], respectively (although the latter are somewhat redeemed by their desire to save their parents rather than abandon them).
420* JerkJock: Cameron in "Pool Shark." He's a competitive swimmer with a huge ego and a condescending attitude.
421* JustFollowingOrders: Cupid in "Terrible Love": He's well-meaning, but he's obligated by ancient laws to do anything asked of him, even when he knows it isn't in the best interest of the one asking.
422* JustFriends: Alice tries telling this to [[spoiler: her house]] in "My Old House", but [[spoiler: it's NotGoodWithRejection and (possibly) murders her.]]
423* KarmaHoudini: Since this is a horror show, TheBadGuyWins almost all the time.
424** A particularly infuriating example occurs in "Lotsa Luck" where [[spoiler: the protagonist Greg's great-great-grandfather Daniel gets no comeuppance for landing Greg in the mess he is in and Seamus taking his soul to settle his debt as per Daniel's final wish. Greg was a decent person and Daniel screwed him over without consequence.]]
425* KarmicTwistEnding:
426** In "Wrong Number" ([[spoiler:in which a mean girl gets trapped in her cell phone, sent as a video message to the Goth girl whom she bullied, and ends up getting deleted]]). Unlike the Cruel Twist Endings listed above, the main character of this episode '''[[BreakTheHaughty deserved]]''' what happened to her, since the old woman she harassed was the grandmother of the Goth girl she and her "friend" bullied. The old woman even lets the "friend" go since she was at least nice to the Goth girl and meant no ill will to either her granddaughter or her, and was even going to let the bully go if she genuinely apologized (which she didn't). Nice to see some vengeful ghosts can be reasonable.
427** "Headshot". However, it also falls under CruelTwistEnding for some fans who thought Gracie was redeemable. Cassandra proclaims that Gracie has become [[BitchInSheepsClothing who she really is]] in the end so when [[spoiler: she becomes ugly beyond reality, not many feel sorry that her [[FacialHorror headshot]] has now become her permanent face.]]
428** "Swarmin' Norman". The [[CreepyChild main character]] is relentlessly picked on by bullies, and when he discovers he has godlike powers over bugs, he uses them to get his revenge. Fair enough, but [[spoiler:when Norman now proclaims he could crush the bully "like a bug" whenever he wanted to, he actually ''crushes'' several bugs ''just to make that point''. The other kids seem afraid of him the next day, suggesting that they're worried he'll sic the bugs on them too, and he becomes verbally abusive to the bugs he once loved. The bugs turn on Norman in response and swarm him, and it's implied that, because of what he did, the world is going to be overrun by them.]]
429** "The Walls": [[spoiler: The main character's parents get their good luck monster, but have to put up with the ''perpetual'' annoyance that comes with it, while their son takes their room and the big-screen TV in it.]]
430** "Dreamcatcher": At summer camp, Meg gets jealous of her former friend, Amelia, befriending another girl, Lisa. She doesn't care about the nightmares Lisa suffers after Meg cuts her and Amelia's dreamcatchers out of spite. When Amelia gets captured by a dream-lurking monster, Meg leaves Lisa to deal with it, pretends to come help in the dream land only to ditch her out of spite, and then shows up when the rescue fails to gloat a bit, steal their flashlight, and leave them to die at the hands of the spider creature, [[spoiler:before tripping and falling into a trap herself. Karma strikes hard when one of the girls' alarm clock goes off, waking up and saving Lisa and Amelia, leaving Meg to get eaten by the spider creature (she couldn't wake up because she slept by herself in the mess hall and couldn't hear the alarm).]]
431** "Terrible Love": [[spoiler:After Cupid grants Maggie's wish to have Brendon leave her alone (resulting in Brendon getting knocked out and having to go to the hospital after falling down the stairs), Maggie meets up with class nerd Stuart, and tells him that she's glad to see him after everything that's happened. Stuart reassures her she'll find love again...just as Cupid draws his arrow and hits Maggie, making her fall for Stuart.]] In a way, it is a karmic ending, as [[spoiler:Maggie didn't listen to Cupid's warning about what happens when someone gets hit twice with one of his love arrows, and is now paying the price for what she did to Brendon]].
432** "Uncle Howee": Jared, who has been a bully to his little sister throughout the episode, loses a bizarre game of hide and seek (called "Find Your Sister Before Mom Gets Home and Grounds You For the Rest of Your Life" by Uncle Howee) to Uncle Howee and, after Jared chews Uncle Howee for tormenting him for fun, Uncle Howee offers the chance to give Jared Cynthia back if he'll be his friend. Jared relents and [[spoiler: gets transformed into a full-size marionette and is seen hours later on the very show he hated by Cynthia and his mother.]]
433* KidsAreCruel / TeensAreMonsters: Used throughout the series. Notably played with in ''Swarmin' Norman'': The kids watching Norman get picked on by the school bullies laugh when they make fun of Norman's science project; they immediately ''stop'' laughing when the bullies proceed to beat Norman up.
434* KillerTeddyBear: In "Near Mint Condition", Ted is obsessed with buying collectable toys online, and spends $5000 (which he was supposed to use to buy a car) on a rare Robo-Bear toy from the 80's named Mangler with a mysterious link to accidents and deaths that occurred to the children that received the toys. Mangler comes alive that night, and goes after Ted's younger brother Mark and friend Jason for using him to mock Ted.
435* KillTheCutie: In "My Old House", [[spoiler: Alice is horrifically ''murdered'' by the House after she tries to part ways peacefully with it.]]
436* KnightOfCerebus: Most of the villains are incredibly dark even by the show's standards and the usual standards of an R.L. Stine children's horror story.
437** The Salesman in ''Scarecrow'' casually talks about death and the end of the world all the time, naturally freaking out the other characters. He follows around a little girl to sell a ScaryScarecrow to her, raising questions as to why he's following her around. [[spoiler: The fact that he is also revealed to be said scarecrow and is trying to make all of humanity disappear to invoke the end of the world only makes him more of a monster.]]
438* KnowNothingKnowItAll: In "Spores", Melvin's father acts like he's a natural in nature, but he's a total moron and a jerk.
439* LargeHam: Some of the villains on the Haunting Hour really enjoy ChewingTheScenery.
440** Fear from "Fear Never Knocks" relishes in the sound of children screaming and acts as over-the-top as the master of fears should do. Even his EvilLaugh is over-the-top.
441** Debbie Ryan's role as an AlphaBitch on "Wrong Number" is really taken advantage of.
442** Uncle Howee from the episode of the same name is loud and theatric every minute he's on-screen. Justified as he's played by Creator/TomKenny, who often plays hammy characters (usually cartoon characters like [=SpongeBob=] [=SquarePants=] and Heffer Wolfe from ''Rocko's Modern Life'').
443** Mad Dog [=McCoy=] from "Coat Rack Cowboy" loves showing off his badass bandit skills and like all Old West cowboys gloats about every one of his victories in gun-slinging.
444** Margot Kidder as "Mrs. Worthington" plays up the BabysitterFromHell aspect to an all-time high.
445* LifesavingMisfortune: In "Pumpkinhead", Allie's offscreen friend Patty was supposed to come over to hang out with her on Halloween. Unfortunately for the former, Patty's parents made her cancel out of fear of her going missing. Given what happens to Allie and her brothers, Patty's parents were completely in the right.
446* TheLittleShopThatWasntThereYesterday:
447** Inverted. The titular funhouse in "Funhouse" is shown arriving to town in the ColdOpen but [[spoiler: vanishes, owner and all, without a trace once Chad destroys his pent-up anger.]]
448** Played straight with "The Raven's Chest" in "The Red Dress".
449** Played with in "Long Live Rock and Roll." The music store has always been there, but the owner (Sir Maestro) wasn't.
450* LivingShadow: The Alp in "Red Eye" is a shadow demon.
451* LivingToy: ''Really You'', ''The Return of Lilly D,'' ''Toy Train'', ''Worry Dolls'', ''My Robot'' (if you want to include electronics as toys), and ''Near Mint Condition'' (which has a blue, cyborg teddy bear named Mangler who was recalled for hurting and killing children).
452* LoveMakesYouCrazy: What happens when Cupid hits the same target twice, as seen in "Terrible Love". See below as to why that happens.
453* LoveMakesYouEvil: [[spoiler: The House in "My Old House" killed/captured Alice because it didn't react well to the JustFriends line. [[IHaveYouNowMyPretty Now it has her]]...[[NightmareFuel forever]].]]
454* LovePotion: Played with, as the "potion" Cupid used in "Terrible Love" is a mix of serotonin, adrenaline, and dopamine, which are common hormones in the human body (as opposed to a magical potion with unexplained ingredients, like in so many other Cupid story variations) and associated with strong emotions like joy, anger, or, in this case, love. Accordingly, getting shot with too much of it has [[{{Yandere}} unpleasant]] [[LoveMakesYouCrazy effects]] on people.
455* MadArtist: The antagonist in "Brush With Madness".
456* MagicVersusScience:
457** "My Sister The Witch" sets its plot up to be this, [[spoiler: only to subvert it slightly when the main antagonist reveals that the scientific revolution allowed all magic users to thrive while the rest of the world was preoccupied. The conflict ends up being resolved with magic beating magic]].
458** "Terrible Love" explains that attraction is chemical and the potion in Cupid's love arrows is a balanced mixture of serotonin, adrenaline, and dopamine (common human hormones associated with strong emotions), which is why one hit is enough. Any more, and the target will [[{{Yandere}} go insane from love]].
459* MamaBear: In "Bad Feng Shui," Mrs. Cheng hears Jessica sobbing as the snake demon tries to attack her, and immediately flies into action. This is particularly notable since she's already been kidnapped by the demon--but her love is so strong that she ''reaches across time and space'' to overcome the demon and give Jessica the clue she needs to defeat it.
460** In "Grandpa's Glasses," Bo's mother wastes no time in trying to save her son from the vengeful spirit haunting her childhood home, going as far as to grab an ax from a woodpile and start chopping down the door that's separating them.
461* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: In "The Cast", it's never really confirmed whether the cat lady is actually cursing Lex or Lex's guilt is causing him to hallucinate.
462* MindScrew: The ending of "Sick". What was the fever dream and what wasn't?
463* MirrorMonster: In "Scary Mary", chanting Mary's name three times in front of a mirror will summon Mary, who will send her three faceless servants through the mirror to drag the summoner back so Mary can steal their face.
464* MonsterClown: A whole group of them in "Afraid of Clowns", [[spoiler: including [[TomatoInTheMirror the main character and his family.]]]] Arguably subverted as [[spoiler: while some of them are definitely creepy, they're never shown actually doing anything bad, though the main character is coulrophobic and thinks all clowns are scary, making this a case of YouAreWhatYouHate.]]
465* MoodWhiplash: Hoo boy, does "Near Mint Condition" run the gamut. The first act is largely silly, featuring Ted geeking out over the Mangler Robo-Bear, a [[StylisticSuck deliberately bad commercial]] for the toys, and Ted's younger brother Mark and his friend Jason teasing Ted over his collection. Then Mangler comes to life for the first time...and ''brutally attacks Jason'', leaving him comatose. Things remain grim when Ted and Mark travel to visit Mangler's previous owner's address: it turns out he was a toy collector so obsessed with his hobby that he spent money on them in place of things like food and heat. His sister is the only person who was able to put up with him--and even she's still bitter about how he ruined his life, and by extension hers, with his obsession. It's outright stated that Mangler killed the collector; the woman is also clearly mentally unstable from her brother's death and her unresolved anger toward him, leaving her miserable. Then the episode takes another sharp turn in the third act, with Ted and Mark teaming up to fight the monster and cracking jokes while they do it.
466* MyGodWhatHaveIDone:
467** In the second part of "Really You", [[spoiler:Jill, angry at Lilly seemingly acting out again, says she wishes Lilly D was her daughter instead. Afterwards, the doll forcibly switches places with the real Lilly. The next day just as Lilly is about to be taken away by the garbage truck, Jill and Brandon discover the switch when they notice that the doll has a mole on the back of her neck, just like the real Lilly. Jill hugs the doll Lilly as she begins crying, realizing that no doll -- especially not an evil one -- can take her flesh-and-blood daughter's place. Happily, this restores Lilly to her human form]].
468--->'''Jill:''' [[spoiler:[[ItsAllMyFault It's my fault.]] I should've known, I'm her ''mother''!]]
469** In "Bad Feng Shui," Jessica realizes that the snake demon didn't kidnap her mother because of the [[TitleDrop bad feng shui]] in her bedroom--rather, the monster manifested when Jessica acted like a selfish brat and wished that she didn't have a mother. As Mr. Ming puts it, the demon is "her ghost, eating what she serves."
470** Maggie in "Terrible Love" after she explains to Brendon that his attraction to her was brought on by a hyper-dose of chemicals from Cupid's arrows.
471** Nate in "Mrs. Worthington", who realizes that his imaginary punishments for his sister and desire to have the titular babysitter enact them are too extreme.
472** In "My Old House", Alice overhears her parents talking about how much they love and miss her after she runs away to live in the title building, which makes her see how silly her obsession with the house is. [[spoiler: Too bad the House doesn't agree.]]
473* MyCarHatesMe: In "Return Of The Pumpkin Heads", [[spoiler: Karen and Zach try to escape using a car, but it fails to start. And, to make matters worse, their parents (now transformed into Pumpkinheads) are sitting in the backseat...]]
474* MyLittlePanzer: Mangler the robot teddy bear from "Near Mint Condition." In the 1980s, the Mangler bear was part of a toy line from a MerchandiseDriven action cartoon, but parents complained that the toy was causing accidents and deaths, and public pressure led to it being recalled. There are seven left in the world and are considered high-priced collector's items.
475[[/folder]]
476
477[[folder:N-S]]
478* NeverMyFault:
479** In "Really You", when Jill calls her husband out on spoiling their daughter rotten, he clearly does not like it and brushes her off.
480** Melvin's father in "Spores" tries to defend himself for putting the family in a horrible situation and justifies that he wanted to bond with them on a vacation they didn't want.
481* NeverSayDie:
482** Averted in "Stage Fright". Sam tells the witch not to kill them.
483** Also averted in "Terrible Love" when Maggie tells Cupid that Brendon (who has been driven mad with a hyper-dose of the hormones associated with feeling love) is going to kill her after her botched attempt at breaking up with him. She probably didn't mean it literally, but considering his {{Yandere}} behavior, it's safe to say that she was right.
484** The show wasn't afraid of showing or mentioning kids dying. To name a few examples, "The Black Mask" had the visions of the three main characters dying allegedly at the hands of the handyman trying to fix the basement, the twist in "Detention" revealed that Audrey accidentally killed Kate the homecoming queen and Halftime the star football player by throwing a smoke bomb under a parade float, but [[HoistByHisOwnPetard also herself because the float went out of control and she was in its path when it swerved off the road]][[note]]though this might not count, since Audrey and Kate apologizing for their actions led to the entire detention/stay in limbo being erased[[/note]], Alex in "Sick" was obliterated in a house explosion to get rid of the creature that made him sick ([[MindScrew maybe]]), and Will was killed by Jake in "The Dead Body."
485** Season four is even more explicit with this trope: "Near Mint Condition" notes that several children have been killed by Mangler the Robo-Bear (including the original owner of one of the few remaining Mangler bears left in the world after the recall, as mentioned by that owner's mentally-unstable sister, who was obviously affected by his death and the fact that he was a toy-collecting geek who wasted his life), while "Argh V" goes a step further by actually showing the Applebaum children -- who look about eight and six at the oldest -- as zombies.
486* NiceJobBreakingItHero: Lexi in the end of "Headshot" tries to help Gracie [[spoiler: by deleting the cursed headshot on her phone for her to save her soul. Unfortunately, it was Gracie's choice to delete it herself and Lexi inadvertently doomed her friend to be as ugly as sin and sealed her fate in Hell.]]
487* NightmareFace:
488** "Headshot", first when Cassandra [[spoiler:reveals [[{{Satan}} her true nature]], and then in the ending, when Gracie is doomed to have a horrendously disfigured face for all eternity.]]
489** In "Funhouse," Chad's addiction to anger warps half of his face into a twisted, monstrous leer that never moves. It's implied that if he keeps on indulging his worst impulses, he'll transform completely and permanently.
490** In "My Old House", [[spoiler: ''what's left of Alice'' is shown mounted on the wall by [[{{Yandere}} the house.]]]]
491* NonMaliciousMonster: The eponymous dolls of "Worry Dolls" are honestly just trying to help resolve Jordana's worries...thing is, they tend to go overboard with it (getting rid of the housekeeper, making her parents psychotically obsessed with spending time with her, destroying a precious violin, etc.)
492* NoOntologicalInertia: Largely [[AvertedTrope averted]] throughout the series. Defeating the MonsterOfTheWeek doesn't necessarily undo whatever havoc they wreaked.
493** In "Bad Feng Shui," a snake demon is held at bay by having objects arranged in a good feng shui balance; when [[NiceJobBreakingItHero Jessica angrily undoes this to spite her mother]], the monster is freed and immediately kidnaps Mrs. Cheng. Jessica replaces all of the curios and puts them back in their proper places, but it's not enough to banish the monster (it takes ThePowerOfLove to do that).
494** In "Headshot," Lexi tries to invoke this trope by deleting Gracie's ever-changing headshot, thinking it will be enough to bring things back to normal. But since Gracie [[DealWithTheDevil made a deal]] with Cassandra in the first place, it was up to ''her'' to make the choice to erase the photo, and the result... well, see NightmareFace above.
495* NotBrainwashed: In "Funhouse," Kelly accuses the mysterious Carny of putting a spell on her brother Chad that is warping him into a rage-fueled monster. The Carny remarks that this isn't the case at all: the funhouse is merely allowing Chad to indulge in his angry, violent impulses, not causing them, and only he has the power to choose to stop.
496-->'''Kelly''': What did you do with my brother?\
497'''Carny''': I didn't do a ''thing'' to your brother.
498** Similarly in "Headshot," Lexi orders [[LouisCypher Cassandra]] to undo whatever dark magic she put on Gracie to make her become a shallow AlphaBitch. Cassandra merely [[ShutUpKirk rolls her eyes]] and says, "Gracie's become what she's ''always'' been," explaining that, like any devil, she's only able to tempt people into pursuing dangerous things--they have to make the choice to actually do them on their own, and only [[BitchInSheepsClothing already-heartless people]] take her up on her offers.
499* NotGoodWithRejection: [[spoiler: The house in "My Old House" didn't like hearing the JustFriends line and wouldn't let Alice leave to reunite with her parents.]]
500* NotSoImaginaryFriend: [[spoiler: The House is really alive]] in "My Old House".
501* NothingIsScarier:
502** The slimy creature in the episode "Sick" is hardly seen in-view, which makes it ''seem'' scarier.
503** The same goes for the monster in "The Girl in the Painting."
504** The ending of "Intruders". [[spoiler: Hundreds of red eyes staring out from the woods is all we see of the Fair Folk.]]
505** The ending of "My Old House". [[spoiler: Alice became absorbed into the house and ended up as a ''facial imprint on the wall'' with the strong implication that the building will kill another girl moving in]].
506* ObviouslyEvil: [[spoiler: The House]] in "My Old House" has [[RedEyesTakeWarning glowing red eyes]], [[EvilSoundsDeep a deep voice]], [[LightIsNotGood a pale white color]] to it, and [[SlasherSmile always smiles]]. Unfortunately, [[HorribleJudgeOfCharacter Alice]] thinks of it as her best friend.
507* OhCrap: Usually present in the CruelTwistEnding.
508** One not related to the CruelTwistEnding: Jake Skinner has a ''big one'' upon being confronted with Death, who's ''not'' happy to have been cheated.
509* OnceForYesTwiceForNo: In "My Old House", this is how Alice communicates with [[spoiler: the House.]]
510--> '''Alice:''' We're still friends, right?\
511'''House:''' ([[OhCrap Lights flash two times]])
512* OneWingedAngel:
513** [[spoiler: In "My Old House", the titular building reveals its true form by ripping its wires and pipes out of the walls to ''form a blood red snake''.]]
514** {{Downplayed|Trope}} in "Intruders", with an extra dose of NothingIsScarier thrown in for good measure. Lyria, when angered, has [[RedEyesTakeWarning her eyes turn bright red]] while cursing Eve. [[spoiler: In the end, ''hundreds of red eyes'' are shown looking out from the forest, and it's implied that the Fair Folk have assumed more monstrous forms to confront Eve with.]] This is foreshadowed during the episode's climax, where Lyria ominously warns Eve that the Fair Folk aren't just "dancing lights and pretty flowers."
515* OneWordTitle: A few of the episodes, such as "Intruders", "Mascot", and "Spores".
516* OnlySaneMan: Brandon in "Really You". He's the only member of the Carbo family to [[LampshadeHanging acknowledge]] their dysfunction and try to solve their problems.
517* OrWasItADream:
518** The twist ending of "Sick" keeps it vague if everything Alex experiences was real or not.
519** "I'm Not Martin" reveals that the ghost boy targeting Sean was the only real person he encountered in his nightmares.
520** "Nightmare Inn" reveals that everything the protagonist suffered was [[RealAfterAll real]].
521* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: In "Uncle Howee", the titular character is a LargeHam extraordinaire, making horrible jokes and doing silly accents even when tormenting Jared. That's perfectly understandable for a kiddie show host...but when he gets quiet and serious, ''that's'' when you're in big trouble.
522* OurMonstersAreWeird:
523** For starters, Big Yellow from ''Mascot''. [[spoiler: He only looks like someone dressed in a crappy costume and can remove his head just like one]].
524** Some of which are based on actual monsters from different world mythologies, such as the Alp (from German folklore) in "Red Eye," the Krampus (from Bavarian German, Austrian, and Eastern European folklore) in "A Creature Was Stirring," the Nanaue (from Hawaiian and Polynesian folklore) in "Pool Shark," La Llorona (from Hispanic folklore, particularly Mexican) in "The Weeping Woman," the Golem (from Jewish folklore) in [[ShapedLikeItself "The Golem,"]] and a leprechaun (from Celtic/Irish folklore) in "Lotsa Luck".
525* OrpheanRescue: "Scary Mary (Part Two)" has [[spoiler: Eric going into Mary's world to rescue Hannah.]] Curiously enough, [[spoiler: Mary seems to be invoking this trope as a means for her to escape. Essentially, she kidnaps pretty girls hoping that a boy will be willing to pull this rescue, whereby she can use the girl's stolen face to impersonate her and escape the mirror world.]]
526* OutOfCharacterAlert: Scary Mary got HoistByHerOwnPetard because of this: Her plan to [[spoiler: trick Eric into taking her out of her world by making him think she was Hanna]] would have worked if she hadn't demanded that Eric tell her how beautiful and perfect she was.
527* PainfulTransformation: The main character's transformation into a tick monster in ''Creature Feature Part 2''.
528* PapaWolf: Or more like [[spoiler:Papa Werewolf. The Green-Eyed Werewolf that comes to save Jillian from Caleb and Priscilla at the end of "Nightmare Inn" is revealed to be her missing, thought to be dead, father.]]
529* PlayingWithSyringes: Dr. Sturgess in "Light's Out" was fond of this back when the asylum was open and he was alive. Death has not changed this.
530** Also, [[{{NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast}} Dr. Mangle]] in "Creature Feature".
531* PoliceAreUseless: In "Creature Feature", when a cop encounters a tick monster jumping him he...screams in fear. He doesn't even bother ''getting his gun'', he just screams at the monster slowly jumping him. Needless to say, the officer didn't help the protagonists and they ended up saving ''him''.
532* ThePowerOfLove: Works in both directions in "Bad Feng Shui." After Jessica's mother is kidnapped by an evil Chinese demon, she hears Jessica desperately crying for her and briefly overcomes the monster to form a connection with her, drawing the girl's attention to her violin. Similarly, it is Jessica's realization that her mother loves her (despite being harsh and urging Jessica to embrace her Chinese heritage) and subsequent playing of the violin--something her mother loves--that banishes the demon and restores Mrs. Cheng. In a bit of GeniusBonus, the piece Jessica plays to do this is Bach's "Lover's Concerto."
533* TheProblemWithFightingDeath: In "Dead Bodies" [[spoiler:Jake learns the hard way that Death never accepted him trading Will's life for his and wants Jake's soul back. His attempts to weasel his way out of it with another sacrifice are foiled, resulting in Death [[DraggedOffToHell taking him to Hell]].]]
534* PoorCommunicationKills: Throughout "Afraid of Clowns", Chris's father tries to give his son TheTalk but Chris refuses to listen. [[spoiler:Had he let his father explain it, it might've softened the blow about him becoming a clown once he hit puberty.]]
535* PoweredByAForsakenChild: [[spoiler: The Kreamy Kold truck in ''Catching Cold''.]]
536* ProductPlacement: Literally every kid, even the little little kids in this series, have smartphones. When a 10-year-old starts blathering on about getting her new life-sized plastic doll a "matching cell phone with a real phone number", it somehow isn't as disgusting as it should be, considering the prevelance of smartphones in everyone's hands.
537* PubertySuperpower: Eve's fairy powers in "Intruders" are presented as this.
538* PuppetPermutation: One of Uncle Howee's powers is the ability to transform people into puppets, which is what happens to Jared in the end.
539* RageAgainstTheReflection: The ending to "Funhouse" has Chad [[spoiler: shatter a mirror that reads, "The only way out is to face yourself" which helps him destroy his anger against his family problems.]]
540* RaisedByGrandparents: Appears to be Natalie's situation in "The Return of Lilly D.".
541* RealityWarper:
542** Corey when he uses Alan Miller's brushes on "Brush with Madness", even though the end of the episode reveals that [[spoiler:the entire story was just an unpublished work Allan Miller did as "therapy" after being hounded by fanboys at a comic book convention]].
543** Uncle Howee does have some reality warping powers, like making Cynthia disappear, appearing in many places at once, crossing over from the TV to the real world and taking people to and from there with ease (which explains how Loomis the rabbit and Mr. Clock also appeared in the real world and how Jared ended up on the show at the end), and making the real world as loud and cartoonish as his show.
544* RecycledInSpace:
545** The episode "Pool Shark"[[note]]about a Hawaiian boy who thinks a shark is haunting the school pool, only to learn that it's his estranged father, who is a mythical Hawaiian creature called a Nanaue, a man who turns into a shark when exposed to water[[/note]] can best be described as ''Twilight'' if Jacob was the main character and he was a half-man, half-shark creature.
546** The series itself is ''Goosebumps'' if the stories were darker and a little less {{Narm}}y (though "Le Poof de Fromage" played out like something R.L. Stine would have written in his ''Goosebumps'' and ''Ghosts of Fear Street'' days[[note]]which he did in the form of the ''Ghost of Fear Street'' book, "Body Switchers from Outer Space"[[/note]]).
547** "Terrible Love" is what happens when you mix a toned-down version of ''Film/FatalAttraction'' with ''Be Careful What You Wish For'' from the original ''Goosebumps'' book series (a ''Fear Street'' story about unrequited love driving someone into insanity) and add a sarcastic, middle-aged man as Cupid.
548** "Spores" can be best described as ''Film/InvasionOfTheBodySnatchers'' meets a "DontGoIntoTheWoods"-style horror flick and the infected fungal mutants from ''VideoGame/TheLastOfUs''.
549** The twist ending of "Spaceman" bears a disturbing resemblance to the famous twist of ''Film/{{Psycho}}'', but with a space theme thrown in for good measure.
550* RedEyesTakeWarning:
551** Happens in "Intruders": Lyria the forest fairy acts kind and generous to Eve, [[spoiler: but once Eve refuses to hand her brother over for the Fey Folk to sacrifice, in addition to harming Lyria with ColdIron, the fairy's eyes flash red as she swears to Eve that she will rue the day she defied the Fey. The episode ends with Eve holding her baby brother and looking out the window, where she sees ''hundreds of red eyes staring back at her from the woods'', and the Fair Folk beginning to descend upon her house...]]
552** The House from "My Old House" illuminates quite the pair of intimidating angry eyes when Alice is forced to leave.
553* RiddleForTheAges: From "Mascot": [[spoiler: Where did Big Yellow even come from? The closest explanation we get is Drake's speculation that Big Yellow's costume is a throwback to an older form of marsupial that may have existed in Yellow Valley, the episode's setting. Given that Big Yellow is ''not'' a costume, but a monster, there may be some truth to Drake's comments.]]
554* RockMeAsmodeus: "Long Live Rock and Roll (AKA Doom Metal)" involves a rock contest between the devil (or at least a being that is heavily implied to be the devil) and a teenage garage band.
555* TheRunaway: Eve in "Intruders". It's mentioned in a throwaway line by her dad that she tried to run away not too long before the episode's plot; this is why she is grounded during the story. When she goes out to find the source of the light in the woods, her dad follows her, afraid that she ran away again.
556* SapientHouse: The titular house in "My Old House."
557* {{Satan}}: Cassandra Hobbes (the photographer from "Headshot") and Sir Maestro (the rocker-turned-music store owner from "Long Live Rock and Roll"). Justified, as both of these stories are DealWithTheDevil stories, as well as commentary on how easily people give up what really matters to them in the name of fame.
558** The trope is also played with in the two episodes. "Long Live Rock 'n Roll"'s protagonist, Holden, is outright told this by Maestro ("I've had many names over the span of many years, but, lately, I go by, 'Sir Maestro'"), and later confirms it when he tells Holden that he's been collecting the souls of anyone who wanted power, not just musicians or even creative people. In "Headshot," it's Lexi, not Gracie, who discovers that Cassandra is the Devil (Cassandra answers Lexi's question of "What are you?" with "Haven't you already guessed?" before her face transforms into a screeching demon. Additionally, Cassandra reveals to Lexi that, while she does steal souls and offer encouragement to be evil, she doesn't warp her victims to be evil, as the girls who don't get rid of their headshots have already proven their true nature, which fits the Devil's traditional portrayal as one who ''tempts'' people into evil). Unfortunately, that means that only Gracie can reverse the effects of her deal with her--when Lexi tries to save her friend, it's already too late as Gracie needed to make the choice herself.
559* ScaryScarecrows: In "Scarecrow", a young farmer named Jenny has trouble ridding her crops of crows, so she buys a scarecrow from a mysterious salesman. Jenny soon discovers that the scarecrow is behind a chain of mysterious disappearances.
560* SchoolClubFront: The episode "Alien Candy" features the alien club, which is for actual aliens planning to take over the school instead of sci-fi fans, as the club advertised.
561* SealedEvilInACan: The snake demon in "Bad Feng Shui" haunts an antique cabinet, and placing items in proper feng shui arrangement keeps it locked away. Breaking the arrangement is enough to set it free, but it takes [[ThePowerOfHate hateful thoughts]] to let it kidnap people.
562* SequelEpisode: "Return of Lilly D" ("Really You"), "Dead Bodies" ("The Dead Body"), and "Return of the Pumpkinheads" ("Pumpkinheads").
563* SeriousBusiness: To most of the elderly vampires in ''Grampires'', bingo.
564** Sir Maestro takes contract deals very seriously. Justified in that he's actually Satan, [[LouisCypher or some kind of soul-stealing demon]]. In this particular form, he was once a talented rock guitarist who signed on (or, as he put it, "sold out") to a record company, and became a bitter, overly-competitive JadedWashout after seeing (and falling victim to) the manipulative nature of the mainstream music industry. He takes revenge against those who pursue fame in that industry by tricking them into signing contracts (in blood) before buying any of his instruments (which are ridiculously overpriced, but he always accepts whatever the customer has in cash along with signing his contracts), even though he tells Holden that he also collects the souls of anyone who wants power (not just musicians or even people in the creative/entertainment industry, though that's where most of his targets come from).
565* SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong: The basic plot of "Black Mask". [[spoiler: Subverted when it turns out the mask was actually showing the future and the apparent ObviouslyEvil villain was an innocent worker they had to save.]]
566* ShowWithinAShow:
567** ''The Uncle Howee Show'' on the episode "Uncle Howee."
568** "Near Mint Condition" also mentions a 1980s cartoon called ''Robo-Bears'' that introduced the Mangler character in the show's second season, but the only evidence viewers see of the show is the toy commercial for Mangler.
569* ShrinkingViolet:
570** Cruelly subverted with Gracie in "Headshot". She may seem nice at first, but with a little push, she becomes who she [[BitchInSheepsClothing really is.]]
571** Alice in "My Old House" is a downplayed example. She has [[FriendlessBackground no friends]], [[NoSocialSkills a lack of social skills]], and believes that her only true friend in the world is her house. [[spoiler: When the house is proven to really be alive, she immediately accepts the idea of being alone with it forever. Which makes the CruelTwistEnding all the more harsher when the House exposes itself as a {{Yandere}}.]]
572* ShoutOut:
573** The titular company from "Really You" is essentially a [[TakeThat satire]] on ''Toys/AmericanGirl'', complete with outrageously expensive prices.
574** Loomis sounds almost identical to [[WesternAnimation/AliceInWonderland the Disney version of the Mad Hatter]].
575** The retirement home in ''Grampires'' has a sign saying "For the [[Literature/TheTwilightSaga Twilight]] of your life"
576** In ''Mascot'', someone [[Film/TheGodfather wakes up to find a horse head in their bed.]]
577* ShutUpHannibal: Eve invokes this trope at the climax of ''Intruders'', [[spoiler: after refusing to give up her brother and threatening Lyria with ColdIron.]]
578--->[[spoiler: '''Lyria:''']] [[spoiler:"Where's the child?!"]]\
579[[spoiler: '''Eve:''']] [[spoiler: ''(Holding the iron bar in defense)'' "[[DidYouActuallyBelieve You think]] that I would do that to the people who raised me, to the people who love me?! They're my family!"]]\
580[[spoiler: '''Lyria:''']] [[spoiler: "They are not your family! They can ''never'' be your family! ''You'' wanted to get away from them, I showed you what you could be!"]]\
581[[spoiler: '''Eve:''']] [[spoiler: "You showed me what really matters: the people who raised me. Now leave me and my family alone!"]]
582* SickEpisode and FeverDreamEpisode: The episode "Sick," though the "fever dream" side to this is debatable, as it's implied that Alex wasn't dreaming and that the government really was planning to kill him and his mom. See the YMMV page for more discussion.
583* SinsOfOurFathers: [[spoiler: The cause of Greg's unfortunate fate at the end of "Lotsa Luck." Specifically, his great-great-grandfather wished that, in exchange for getting to keep his soul, Seamus the leprechaun would take the soul of his next male descendant.]]
584* SlainInTheirSleep: "Dreamcatcher"; the Dreamcatcher can only get you while you sleep.
585* TheSociopath: Meg in "Dreamcatcher" starts out seeming like just a mean girl, but shows herself to be much more than that in the climax [[spoiler:when she prepares to callously and even gleefully leave two other girls to ''die'' at the hands of the titular creature. Fortunately, she is hit with LaserGuidedKarma immediately afterward and becomes an AssholeVictim.]]
586* SoundOnlyDeath:
587** In "My Old House", [[spoiler: the last time we see Alice alive, she screams just as the [[{{Yandere}} House]] closes in to kill her.]]
588** "Sick" ends with a sharp, beeping sound from an offscreen machine before everything goes white.
589* SparedByTheAdaptation:
590** The original ending to "Black Mask" [[spoiler: had the kids finding out too late that they were seeing the future and getting killed by the falling roof; the TV version had them alive and able to save the handyman (thought to be the villain) who was about to die]].
591** [[spoiler: Walt]] doesn't die at the end of "Alien Candy" like his novel counterpart did.
592** [[spoiler: Mark]] didn't die in the "Ghostly Stare" like he is heavily implied to have did in the short story.
593** Jillian's dad in "Nightmare Inn" died before the story began and stays that way. The episode reveals that [[spoiler: he actually just became a werewolf]].
594* SpecialGuest: Unlike most horror anthology's for its age demographic, each episode usually featured a well known, established child/teen actor in the lead, (Ariel Winter, Debbie Ryan, Dylan Minnette, Jean-Luc Bilodeau, China Ann-[=McLain=], Joel Courtney, Booboo Stewart, Mackenzie Foy, Bailee Madison, Joey King, Matthew Knight, so-on and so-on).
595* SpoiledBrat:
596** Lilly Carbo in "Really You", who makes her father spend exorbitant amounts of money on her and breaks another girl's doll over a petty insult.
597** Steffani Howard from "Wrong Number" acts like an entitled brat who can do whatever she wants without consequences.
598* StudentsSecretSociety: The episode "Alien Candy" features the alien club, advertised as a group for sci-fi fans... but is actually a club for actual aliens planning to take over the school.
599* SuddenlySpeaking: [[spoiler: The House can talk at the end of "My Old House".]]
600[[/folder]]
601
602[[folder:T-Z]]
603* TakeOverTheWorld:
604** Strongly hinted to be Fear's end goal in "Fear Never Knocks" due to him needing the magic box to both enhance his nightmare powers [[spoiler: and make sure that nobody else uses it to stop him.]]
605** Possibly the twist ending of "Swarmin' Norman" [[spoiler: after Manny and the other insects turn against Norman and mankind.]]
606** "Le Poof de Fromage" ends with an all out alien invasion.
607* TakenDuringTheEnding:
608** In Season 1 "A Creature Was Stirring", Timmy and his family have to deal with a Krampus-like monster that's terrorizing them on Christmas. After the monster burns their house to the ground and the family are able to escape, they're just happy that they're all together. At the end of the episode, [[spoiler:later that night, a SUV-limo drives up to the burned house and the window rolls down to reveal Santa Claus. He summons the monster back to him and drops a letter on the ground from Timmy, who wished his family would get along again. It's revealed Santa granted his wish by sending the monster to terrorize the family into doing so]].
609** In Season 1 "Game Over", Kelly and his friends are pulled into a video game and must beat the final boss, the Game Master, to escape. After they beat the Game Master, [[spoiler:[[YouKillItYouBoughtIt Kelly ends up becoming the new Game Master]] and he's trapped in the video game while his friends are free to leave and he can only leave when someone else beats him. The episode ends with an unnamed boy playing the [[HereWeGoAgain same video game, where a hand pulls him into the game when he accepts the Game Master's challenge]]]].
610** In Season 1 "Catching Cold", Marty tries to catch the Kreemy Kold ice cream truck so he can eat more of its ice cream and finally stops it using spike strip to pop its tires. After entering the ice cream truck, [[spoiler:he meets an adult man named Jimmy Jefferies, who was also obsessed with catching the truck when he was a kid and reveals he was trapped inside it for 30 years and has been waiting for someone else to catch the truck so he can finally leave. After Jimmy leaves the truck, the truck traps Marty inside, re-inflates its popped tires, and drives off with Marty trapped inside until the next kid tries to catch it again]].
611* TheUnreveal: A few hints are laid about the identity of the WickedWitch in ''Stage Fright''. It turns out to be... [[spoiler: none of the cast. It's a lady who has never appeared before. The cast members are equally surprised.]]
612* TheTalk: [[spoiler: Subverted]] in "Afraid of Clowns." Chris's father tries to have a conversation with his son about how, on his thirteenth birthday, his body might start going through some changes. [[spoiler: It's eventually revealed that Chris's father didn't mean puberty--he meant that Chris would be turning into a ''clown'' on that day.]]
613* TheyLookJustLikeEveryoneElse: The Mad Artist in "Brush With Madness". For a comic character come to life, he looks like a regular man in a black hat and trenchcoat. [[spoiler:And before he kills the main characters, he shows his face to be Corey's face!]] The overall mundanity makes for one of the most genuinely disturbing episodes.
614* ThisIsYourBrainOnEvil: "Funhouse" is essentially an anti-drug story with anger as the drug of choice. Chad becomes utterly hooked on letting out his rage by smashing up the final room of the attraction: we see him rocking back and forth as he waits for a "fix," sneaking out, and outright telling the Carny "I need ''more!''" after one round. Later, he declares that the funhouse is the only thing in his life that matters, and even his physical appearance starts warping as time passes, much like an addict's would (although in this case, half of Chad's face becomes a monstrous bald leer). The only thing that saves Chad is [[ThePowerOfLove his sister's love for him.]]
615* TitleDrop:
616** "Near Mint Condition" ends with Ted putting up the Mangler up for auction, with the last shot being him labeling it as such (due to [[spoiler:having decapitated it with his katana and duct-taped the head back on]] prior).
617** "So you're like my...''Grampire''!"
618* ToServeMan: The aliens in "Alien Candy".
619* TotallyRadical: Inevitable when you have adult scriptwriters writing characters who are at most young adults. To the show's credit, it's not as frequent as it could have been.
620* TooDumbToLive:
621** Steffani in "Wrong Number". [[spoiler: When the antagonist almost releases her to freedom after getting an obviously fake apology from her, Steffani ''insults her'' despite her friend's warning. She could have just let it go and left while she still could, but for some reason, Steffani just ''had'' to throw one more insult toward the old woman anyway. She suffers a KarmicTwistEnding for her trouble.]]
622** Melvin's family in "Spores" is even worse. The father vacations in a mysterious forest, where ''a large number of hikers disappeared'' and is overlooked by a park ranger who everyone describes as a SerialKiller. However, the real problem is [[TheVirus a spore cloud]] that turns everyone into [[{{Expy}} clicker expies]]. Still, it's his stupidity that causes all the horror in the episode to occur.
623** Both protagonists in "Brush with Madness". They eventually die because they chose ''not to call the police'' when they're being threatened by a MadArtist.
624** Alice's parents in "My Old House". They spend about ''five minutes'' hunting for their daughter in their former house. Her mom delivers a tearful monologue about how much she loves Alice...and then they leave. And they don't even bother to search the entire building! Alice herself qualifies for not immediately emerging from her hiding place when she hears her parents talking, stopping to say goodbye to the house (which at this point has clearly demonstrated sentience), and ''then'' trying the JustFriends route to a [[GeniusLoci living, breathing building]]. Come ''on'', Alice.
625** Basically, any protagonist who thinks it's a good idea to confront the MonsterOfTheWeek ''alone'' could qualify as being a total fool.
626* TomatoInTheMirror:
627** Josh ''and'' Matt in "The Perfect Brother".
628** Chris in "Afraid of Clowns."
629** David in "My Imaginary Friend."
630** Corey and Emma in "Brush with Madness" who evidently [[spoiler: are not the ''real'' Corey and Emma following the episode's first scene, and are actually comic versions of them drawn up by the MadArtist.]]
631* [[TrappedInTVLand Trapped In B-Movie Land]]: ''Creature Feature''.
632* TrappedInTVLand: Jared's fate at the end of "Uncle Howee." After Jared admits defeat and gives into Uncle Howee's demand to be his friend, Jared is found hours later on TV as a life-sized wooden puppet welcoming his new kiddie fans, including his sister, Cynthia.
633* TrappedInVillainy: In "The Girl in the Painting," it turns out that the titular girl and her mother are kept prisoner in their seemingly-perfect mansion by a gigantic reptilian monster. They have to lure in mortals to feed the creature, or it will eat them instead. The girl hates that she's sent so many people to their deaths, but her mother tells her "that's just the way our world is painted," and since they obviously can't defeat the monster, they're stuck in the pattern.
634* {{Troll}}: Lyria the fairy describes the Fair Folk as this in ''Intruders''. Eve decides to act like one towards her parents when she discovers she has magical powers.
635* TwinTelepathy: Jack Jr. and Jacqueline claim to possess this in "Spores." At first, it seems like they're just pretending to tease their brother Melvin--but in the end of the episode when [[spoiler: Jacqueline is hit by the mutating spores of the title, their link is somehow able to begin the process with Jack Jr. as well]].
636* UnrelatedInTheAdaptation: "The Dead Body" is somewhat of an InNameOnly adaptation of the original story, where Jake was Will's loving uncle, who pretended to be a corpse to play a prank on his nephew's bully. [[spoiler: As you may expect, the twist is that Jake was DeadAllAlong, but came back to help Will, who notes he was a "good friend."]] In the TV adaptation, Jake is the ghost of a murdered boy from Will's school [[spoiler: and is neither an uncle or friend to Will.]]
637* UsedToBeASweetKid:
638** Lilly in "Really You." According to her brother, "[she] used to be cute", until her father's constant showering of gifts made her a SpoiledBrat. [[spoiler: The ending, however, implies that she'll get better.]]
639** Eve in ''Intruders'' is also implied to have been this. Her parents, particularly her father, try to rein in her attitude and bond with her.
640* ValentinesDayEpisode: "Terrible Love," which takes a lot of Valentine's Day elements and makes them scary and/or funny in a sick way (cf. the part where Brendon gives Maggie a tarantula that wasn't defanged for Valentine's Day because he wanted to have something cute and fuzzy as a gift, Cupid being a sarcastic middle-aged man who tries to teach Maggie that she should trust herself and not pursue Brendon because he's not interested in her, and the end where [[spoiler:Stuart hires Cupid to make Maggie his girlfriend]]).
641* VegetarianVampire: Grandpa Walt Montgomery in ''Grampires'' only preys on rats. Justified in that he's a grandfather first and a vampire second, so, despite being a bloodsucker, he's very protective of his grandkids.
642* TheVirus: The spore cloud from "Spores".
643* WhamLine:
644** During "Sick", as Alex is proceeding to barricade his bedroom door, his TV comes back on, airing the same morning show that's been playing throughout the episode. Ignoring the broadcast, Alex proceeds to try and move his dresser.
645--->'''Male Host''': Mmm hmm, and then it's off to France, where a large children's choir- [[TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou Alex, that's not a good idea.]]
646** At the beginning of "Uncle Howee", the title character just seems to be a loud kiddy show host that Cynthia, Jared's little sister, likes. Then, after Jared turns off the TV, Cynthia clicks it back on, and we very quickly learn that [[TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou Uncle Howee's more than he appears]]...
647--->'''Uncle Howee''': Boy, did we miss you! And you know why? Because we're your friends! Isn't that right...''Cynthia?''
648** In "Lotsa Luck," Greg captures a leprechaun in secret, wishes for a pot of gold, and tries to hide it in the kitchen. His mother comes in and, after he stammers for a few seconds, reveals that she's a lot more aware of the situation than he expected:
649-->'''Kathleen''': Save yer breath. How many wishes have you made?
650* WhatMeasureIsANonhuman:
651** From "The Return of Lilly D.": Natalie rushes to Lilly D.'s aid when she sees two teenage boys dragging her with their bikes.
652--->'''Teenage Boy''': Chill out, kid, it's just a doll!\
653'''Natalie''': (rushes to Lilly D.'s side) It's still not right... You poor thing...
654*** Subverted later when Lilly D. reveals herself to be evil; by that point, Natalie has no qualms with taking her out.
655---->'''Natalie''': ''DIE!'' (beheads Lilly D. with a frying pan)
656** Inverted in "Intruders": Lyria tells Eve that, as a fairy, she shouldn't care about her baby brother, or any human, for that matter. [[spoiler: Eve disagrees with her, though.]]
657* WhenYouComingHomeDad: "Worry Dolls" is a unique case where the kids eventually figure out that the parents are simply trying their best to put food on the table and learn [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor the hard way]] that [[MyBelovedSmother the opposite extreme]] can be just as bad.
658* {{Wishplosion}}: Greg uses the classic "I wish I had never met you" to undo the effect of Seamus the leprechaun's magic in "Lotsa Luck." [[spoiler: Unfortunately, while this does save his parents and undo the magic of the episode, it's not enough to save ''him'', as his soul was forfeited by his great-great-grandfather's selfish final wish decades ago.]]
659* WouldHarmAChild: Many of the villains, especially those from ''Really You'' (Lilly D), ''The Dead Body'' ([[spoiler:Jake Skinner]]), ''Pumpkinhead'' ([[spoiler: Farmer Palmer]])[[note]]the SequelEpisode doesn't have Farmer Palmer around to harm kids, but his influence is strong enough for the pumpkinheaded zombies to claim more victims[[/note]], ''The Girl in the Painting'' ([[spoiler:The mother of the titular girl who is fine with feeding whoever loves their painting enough to go inside their world to a dragon/dinosaur outside their window, as well as the monster itself]]), ''Grampires'' ([[spoiler:the elderly vampires, except for Grampa Montgomery]]), ''Brush With Madness'' ([[spoiler:Alan Miller, if you believe that he trapped his biggest fan and his friend in his comic and shredded it, and not that Alan simply made them up as therapy for being hounded by fans who only like his work because it's "edgy" and "dark" and not because the stories are deeper than that]]), ''Checking Out'' ([[spoiler:the cult of [[ChildHater child-hating adults]] who live in the hotel]]), ''Coat Rack Cowboy'' ([[spoiler:Mad Dog [=McCoy=] challenging Ethan -- who doesn't know how to handle a gun -- to a shoot-out at high noon]]), and ''Mrs. Worthington'' (the title character).
660** Subverted with the witch in "Stage Fright". While she does tie up the cast and crew of the show (not to mention possibly breaking one girl's back and scaring all of the kids half to death), she doesn't kill the kids. [[spoiler: She eats their parents]].
661** The titular character on ''Uncle Howee'' is a gray area. On the one hand, he wouldn't hurt Cynthia (who's somewhere between five and seven years old) as he considers her his friend because of how much she loves ''The Uncle Howee Show''. On the other hand, [[PapaWolf he has no trouble going after Jared]], because of how poorly he treats Cynthia.
662* WritersCannotDoMath: As an ''Entertainment Weekly'' review pointed out, it takes Melvin and his family at least three days to reach the top of Lookout Point in "Spores." Yet in the ending, Melvin (who's stated in the episode to be the slowest member of the family) somehow manages to make it back to the beginning of the trail in what seems like less than an hour.
663* {{Yandere}}:
664** Brendon from "Terrible Love" is turned into one when dosed with love potion twice.
665** [[spoiler: The House from "My Old House" is revealed to be this. Unfortunately, Alice found out a little too late.]]
666** [[spoiler: Scary Mary becomes one for Eric who will haunt him for the rest of his life.]]
667* YourMindMakesItReal: Nate's drawing of Mrs. Worthington comes to life after he wishes she were real so his bullying older sister, Molly, would be put in her place.
668* YourSoulIsMine: [[spoiler: The CruelTwistEnding of "Lotsa Luck" has Greg lose his soul to the leprechaun after it's revealed that his [[SinsOfOurFathers great-great-grandfather]] exchanged it to Seamus the leprechaun in order to keep his own.]]
669* ZergRush: The aliens in "Le Poof De Fromage" kill the family this way.

Top