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6[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ghostbustersreal01.jpg]]
7[[caption-width-right:350:"Who ya gonna call?"]]
8
9Within a few years, Creator/ColumbiaPictures decided there was money in an AnimatedSeries based on the supernatural comedy ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'' and [[AndTheAdventureContinues the further adventures]] of its four paranormal investigators. Columbia partnered with Creator/DICEntertainment to make it happen.
10
11The problem was that there was already a Creator/{{Filmation}} cartoon in development called ''Ghostbusters'', a sequel to the 1975 live-action series ''[[WesternAnimation/FilmationsGhostbusters The Ghost Busters]]'' about a pair of noir-style detectives (and their gorilla?) who battle supernatural forces. Filmation's ''Ghostbusters'' was a flop, the victim of mistiming: kids were upset that these guys weren't the 'real' Ghostbusters. In response, [=DiC=] launched ''The Real Ghostbusters'', both to [[WritingAroundTrademarks distinguish it]] from the Filmation property and to [[DuelingWorks imply that the Filmation Ghostbusters were phonies]]. The two animated series debuted in the same year, furthering the confusion.
12
13The main characters from the film (with the [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse notable exception]] of Creator/SigourneyWeaver's character) are all present. To get around having to buy the rights to Creator/BillMurray's likeness et al., the mortal characters are each given [[{{Expy}} new faces]]: Egon has a spectacular blond pompadour, Ray is a stocky redhead, Winston is clean-shaven, and Venkman is overhauled to make him into a devilishly handsome twenty-something instead of a middle-aged, balding Bill Murray. Janine's [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles1987 April O'Neil]]-esque makeover was so steamy, her hair color, makeup, and hipper clothes were [[RetCanon incorporated]] into the live-action ''Film/GhostbustersII''. Aside from their new [[ColorCodedForYourConvenience color-coded uniforms]] and slightly-redesigned equipment (their old ones were [[CoveredInGunge damaged]] in the fight with Gozer), the team retain their personalities, at least in the beginning. Slimer, {{the unintelligible}} green ghost who "slimed" Venkman in the first film,[[note]]His original nickname in the first movie was "Onionhead".[[/note]] was included in the regular cast as a comic relief NonHumanSidekick.
14
15The cartoon focuses on the day-to-day busting that the movie relegated to a [[HardWorkMontage montage]] in the manner of a PoliceProcedural; there is no over-arching villain or hint of larger forces at work, although some of the ghosts come back for a second try. Not all the ghosts and other supernatural entities are evil: On occasion, the heroes "bust" the ghosts simply by helping them complete their UnfinishedBusiness, while others enlist the Ghostbusters' help or actually ''want'' to be busted, as the Ghostbusters' containment unit approximates 'resting in peace' enough to satisfy them.
16
17Voice actors include Creator/LorenzoMusic as Venkman, Creator/DaveCoulier as Venkman [[TheOtherDarrin in later seasons]], Creator/ArsenioHall as Winston, and Creator/MauriceLaMarche as Egon, Creator/FrankWelker ([[ActingForTwo as Ray and Slimer]]), and Creator/LauraSummer as Janine (in early seasons), eventually replaced by Creator/KathSoucie. The writers included Creator/JMichaelStraczynski, Creator/DavidGerrold, Creator/BobSchooley, and Creator/MarkMcCorkle.
18
19Despite the mega-success of its first few seasons, things began to fall apart during the build-up to ''Ghostbusters II''. Thanks to [[invoked]] ExecutiveMeddling, the cartoon was renamed ''[[SpotlightStealingTitle Slimer and]] the Real Ghostbusters'' (executives had fallen in love with the cuddly cartoon version of Slimer) and [[LighterAndSofter the show's horror was downplayed]] and replaced by {{slapstick}} humor, while Janine's appearance and personality were softened. Later episodes would incorporate trappings from the second movie, including [[HeroWithBadPublicity the Mayor's injunction against the team]]. Louis Tully returned as a supporting character at this time.
20
21Creator/DataEast released [[VideoGame/TheRealGhostbustersDataEast an arcade game based on the show]] in 1987, and Creator/{{Activision}} published a UsefulNotes/GameBoy version in '93. Funnily enough, both games were [[DolledUpInstallment dolled-up installments]].
22
23In 1997 it received a SequelSeries, ''WesternAnimation/ExtremeGhostbusters'', with a new team and Egon as their mentor.
24
25Starting in February 2021, the series was uploaded to the official Ghostbusters Website/YouTube [[https://www.youtube.com/c/Ghostbusters/videos channel]].
26
27----
28!!''The Real Ghostbusters'' provides examples of:
29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31[[folder:Tropes A-M]]
32* SixtyFiveEpisodeCartoon: A daily Syndicated edition aired in the Fall of 1987. Averted due to the fact that it aired concurrently with the ABC Saturday morning episodes.
33* AbhorrentAdmirer:
34** Slimer to Janine on occasion. He clearly finds her attractive enough to repeatedly kiss her on the lips, but her grossed-out reaction says it all.
35** "Partners in Slime" had a ghost flirting with Peter, to his disgust.
36* AbsurdlyHighStakesGame:
37** "Night Game" has a [[BaseballEpisode baseball]] match between the forces of Good and Evil with the fate of a human soul on the line.
38** "The Devil To Pay" has a demonic game show between the Ghostbusters and the devil host with the fate of the guys' own souls on the line (and an all-expense paid trip to Tahiti).
39* AbsurdlySharpBlade: In the episode "Boo-Dunit", Peter triggers a booby trap in the form of a suit of armor that drops a heavy ax, cleaving a wooden desk neatly in two. While the others investigate the desk's contents, Peter drops a stack of papers on the ax, and the blade splits them just as easily on their way down to the floor.
40* AccidentalGoodOutcome: In the "Slimer" short "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersSlimer10StickyFingers Sticky Fingers]]", Slimer tries to re-paper the walls, only to not be able to due to a series of mishaps. However, the Ghostbusters and Janine prefer the walls without wallpaper anyway.
41* AccidentalTimeTravel:
42** Occurs in "It's About Time," when a faulty ghost trap sends the Ghostbusters plus Slimer all back to [[TheFifties 1959.]] Unfortunately they tear a hole in the time fabric in the process, allowing a GhostInvasion through to terrorize a completely unprepared New York.
43** In "Xmas Marks the Spot", the Ghostbusters end up accidentally walking into Victorian Britain via a temporal rift.
44* AccordionMan: Used in "Stay Tooned", where Sammy K. Ferret flattens his guest into an accordion-like form by dropping an anvil on her head and then plays her like a real accordion.
45* AcidRefluxNightmare: In the episode "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Ghost?", the ghost of Olivia Stewart's uncle Horace mentions that rarebit always gave him the strangest dreams.
46* ActorAllusion:
47** Peter's love-hate relationship with Slimer is very similar to [[WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends Garfield's]] relationship with Odie. Both Peter and Garfield are voiced by Creator/LorenzoMusic.
48** In "Victor the Happy Ghost," Peter refers to ''Series/TheBobNewhartShow'' as his favorite TV show. Lorenzo Music co-created the series.
49** The episode "Ghostbuster of the Year" (a WholePlotReference to ''Film/CitizenKane'') seems to have been produced solely to showcase Creator/MauriceLaMarche's impersonation of Creator/OrsonWelles (which he would later put to good use as [[WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}} The]] [[WesternAnimation/PinkyAndTheBrain Brain]]).
50** In "A Fright at the Opera", before the Diva selects Peter as her bodyguard, she states "I hate Mondays". Lorenzo Music's (Peter's voice actor) most famous role, [[WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends Garfield]], also has a distaste for that particular day.
51** In "Kitty-Cornered", one of Slimer's wishes results in a shape-shifting toy robot called a Transmogrifier being brought to life, with Ray Stantz gushing over how cool it is. Ray Stantz and Slimer were both voiced by Creator/FrankWelker, who voiced Megatron, Soundwave, Wheelie, and others in ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers''.
52* ActuallyPrettyFunny: In "Stay Tooned," Peter and Egon can't help but make some wisecracks when Winston [[ForcedTransformation got turned into a cartoon dog]]. Winston is not impressed.
53-->[[LamePunReaction Very funny, guys]].
54* AdaptationalAttractiveness: Pretty much everyone in the core cast:
55** Peter Venkman is slimmer, far-younger looking, and has a nicer jawline than Bill Murray. He also has a lush mop of hair, unlike Bill's notcibly receding hairline.
56** Egon Spengler is far more conventionally attractive than Harold Ramis.
57** Winston Zeddmore is younger, slimmer and generally better-looking than Ernie Hudson.
58** Janine Melnitz. While Annie Potts was by no means unattractive, she definitely was not the taller, bustier, redheaded bombshell seen in the series.
59** Notably averted with Ray Stantz. The cartoon counterpart is noticibly heavier, with a round face. Surprising, since Dan was widely considered the best-looking of the bunch.
60* AdaptationDyeJob: Egon becomes blond. Ray and Janine both become redheads.
61* AdaptationExpansion: Compared to the films, we actually got more of a look into the personalities and histories of the main cast, as well as some actual character development for one-time characters. Ernie Hudson expressed dismay that while his live-action Zeddmore was a TokenMinority, the Winston in the animated series had real CharacterDevelopment.
62* AdaptationalFriendship:
63** In the movie, Winston only worked with the other Ghostbusters simply for the money. Here, he's just as much as their best friend as they are to each other.
64** In the movie, Janine didn't see her employers as friends in any way, except Egon, on whom she had a crush. In the cartoon, while she's still a bit [[SassySecretary unamused to their antics]], she still sees them as her friends, and in fact, in "Janine, You've Changed", they're said to [[PlatonicDeclarationOfLove love her]].
65** Overlapping with AdaptationalHeroism, in the movie, Slimer was just a nuisance and was trapped by the Ghostbusters. Here, he's their pet and while he [[TroublesomePet does annoy]] them sometimes (especially Peter), they also see him as a beloved pet (especially Ray). This includes Janine, who, in the movie, never even met him. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] by the episode "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS1E11CitizenGhost Citizen Ghost]]", a WholeEpisodeFlashback that explains, by means of an interview Peter is giving to a reporter, how the team decided to let Slimer stay with them after he helped them defeat some spectral copies of themselves.
66* AdvanceNoticeCrime:
67** In "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS7E4TwentyThousandLeaguesUnderTheStreet 20,000 Leagues Under the Street]]", Aphsai describes in great detail his scheme to make the insects [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt destroy the humans]] and then TakeOverTheWorld.
68** In "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS3E7HalloweenTwoAndAHalf Halloween II 1/2]]", when Samhain ties three children up, he explains to them that he plans to kill the Ghostbusters when they come to rescue them.
69* AesopAmnesia: In the earlier seasons, Peter had to learn more than once that Slimer wasn't so bad or useless.
70%%** And Slimer with not eating everything.
71* AllMythsAreTrue: With an occasional subversion, pretty much every myth or legend is shown in the series to have at least some basis in reality.
72* AmbiguouslyHuman:
73** In "Nobody Comes to Lupusville", pretty much any resident of the eponymous Lupusville who is neither a vampire nor a werewolf is this -- most of them are either ridiculously small, or big, leaving it unclear whether they're just oddly-sized humans, or dwarfs and [[OurGiantsAreBigger giants]].
74** In "Ain't NASA-Sarily So", the NASA people keep mentioning an old science officer who had PointyEars, in reference to ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'', which had someone of that description named Spock. Spock was half-alien, but the show generally doesn't deal with aliens.
75* AmbiguouslyJewish: Egon and Janine both have Jewish-sounding surnames. Egon also has a mother who ''behaves'' like a JewishMother but it's unstated if she's Jewish.
76* AmusementParkOfDoom:
77** In "The Bogeyman Is Back", the titular villain turns an ordinary amusement park into one of these. He makes it specifically to produce [[NightmareFuel nightmare fuel]] by the ton, complete with [[MonsterClown monster clowns,]] [[AlienGeometries alien geometries,]] [[MirrorMonster mirror monsters,]] and a roller coaster from Hell.
78** "Ghostworld" was one, too. It featured an amusement park that was haunted and run by a demon.
79** "Rollerghoster" features a rollercoaster haunted by GhostlyAnimals.
80* AmusingAlien: One of the "Slimer" shorts involves Slimer being kidnapped by a pair of wacky aliens who try to study him.
81* AndADietCoke: Peter has a ton of junk food in his bed, and one bag of health food chips.
82-->'''Peter:''' See? Living proof I don't just eat fast food!
83** Ironically, the "health food" turned out to be anything but, giving all four of the Ghostbusters a severe [[spoiler: ghost allergy]].
84* {{Angrish}}: Slimer can completely lose his tenuous grasp of the English language when he's angry or terrified, such as when he spots a legion of Heck House ghosts massing to attack and tries to warn Peter with a string of gibberish.
85-->'''Peter:''' What's that, Franchise/{{Lassie}}? [[TimmyInAWell A tree fell on Ranger Bob?]]
86* AnimationBump: The episodes that are done by Creator/TMSEntertainment, notably for Kazuhide Tomonaga's "The Halloween Door". The ''Slimer'' segments are also more fluidly animated (if not simplified, design-wise) than the rest of the show. [[note]]Interesting fact: the director for those segments went on to do several segments of ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures''.[[/note]]
87** Some season 2 episodes, such as "Knock Knock" and "Janine Melnitz, Ghostbuster" are of higher quality than others in the season.
88** The Grundle resembled the kind of characters that wouldn't be seen until the late 90s.
89* {{Animesque}}: Like many cartoons from TheEighties, it was produced in America but animated by many Japanese studios (like Creator/ToeiAnimation, Creator/TMSEntertainment, Creator/AnimeR and Creator/KKCAndDAsia just to name a few). The design is reminiscent of ''Anime/MyNeighborTotoro'' or anything done by Creator/HayaoMiyazaki, and visual tropes such as {{face fault}}s, SphereOfDestruction and {{kaiju}}-style monsters often show up.
90** The American production company didn't care about character designs, so they left it to the Japanese animation studio, with the stipulation that they don't look like the actors from the film. They ended up liking the designs they got back.
91*** Although the initial test animation pilot used to sell the show had different character models: Peter looked a bit closer to Bill Murray, Ray was fatter and Winston had a rounder face (the latter two examples being seen in the action figures). Additionally, they all wore beige jumpsuits as seen in the movies - in the finished series only Ray would wear the beige jumpsuit while the other three received color coded jumpsuits (probably to make it easier to differentiate them for the audience and animators). Ray also had the odd habit of riding ''on top'' of the Ecto-1 rather than inside it.
92*** The suits were ultimately justified in the Episode "Citizen Ghost", which had them change out of the brown suits right after fighting Gozer because they had absorbed loads of psychokinetic energy in the battle.
93** Not only the animation but also the sound effect design was done by the Japanese studios; the Proton Pack's iconic charging up sound in particular can be heard in various Anime even up to this day.
94** For a pretty good example of the show at its' most Animesque look no further than the whole of the episode "Ragnarok and Roll"; not only is the design of the original characters pretty on par for 80's anime, but so is the dramaturgy, the flute music, the cuts, the expression and the destruction.
95* AnimeHair:
96** Egon has a naturally forming pompadour that resembled this trope.[[note]]This was a side-effect of the artists not being able to use the likenesses of the actors in the movie.[[/note]]
97** Also, appropriately enough, in "Attack of the B-Movie Monsters", where they go to Japan to fight ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin, they ''all'' get anime hair from being exposed to static electricity.
98* ArbitrarySkepticism: Played with. Non-regulars will sometimes express disbelief in the supernatural, only to be quickly proven wrong. However, there are times where the Ghostbusters fall victim to this. In "Poultrygeist," Peter initially dismisses the idea of a [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent werechicken]] - after having already encountered bonafide [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]].
99** They all four fall victim to this in "If I Were a Witch Man." Peter and Slimer laugh when Winston asks about them doing witches and goblins, and Egon actually goes on a rant in Ecto about them selling out their principles.
100** In "The Boogieman Cometh" Venkman states he can get behind the idea of ghosts, but not the Boogieman. He is later proven wrong.
101** In "The Scaring of the Green," Egon finds the notion of a FourLeafClover providing luck absurd, as opposed to ghosts, monsters, ancient curses or magic.
102** In "The Cabinet of Calamari", Egon dismisses the concept of magic. Seriously now, Egon.
103** In "The Ghostbusters Live! From Al Capone's Tomb", not only does the "Egon not believing in magic" thing show up again, but the civilians don't believe in the [[EldritchLocation Netherworld]] despite clearly seeing Slimer.
104* ArtisticLicenseLinguistics: The [[AnthropomorphicPersonification ghost of Halloween]], Samhain, has his name pronounced "Sam-hain" rather than the proper Gaelic pronunciation "Sah-win". This would seem to be a case of SadlyMythtaken (i.e. a pagan holiday being demonized for a Christian audience) except that the imagery (jack-o'-lantern head) and overall personality (DarkIsEvil) have more in common with the [[OlderThanTheyThink modern-day]] [[PopculturalOsmosis conception]] of Halloween as a dark, scary, sinister holiday ([[LighterAndSofter when it isn't all about parties and candy]]) than as a pagan holiday in honor of the dead and the ending of the year. [[FridgeBrilliance So the mispronunciation may be intentional--because this is the ghost of what people have come to associate with Halloween, rather than its original meaning.]] On the other hand, the later installments of the ''Halloween'' film franchise did the exact same thing and the writers may have been using that as a reference. This pronunciation is also used in ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''.
105* ArtisticLicensePaleontology: "Play Them Ragtime Boos" features the group being transported back in time to the Cenozoic Era right in the middle of the ocean, where a hungry [[SeaMonster Megalodon]] eyes them for dinner. While the time period is accurate to a point, and the Megalodon does first show up with a giant fin cutting through the water, when the creature is actually shown under the water, it looks less like a giant shark and more like a Mosasaur.
106* AscendedExtra: Janine as she had several episodes centered around her.
107* AscendedFanboy: Winston in "Night Game" and "Boo-dunit," where he gets to play baseball and work on his favorite author's last mystery novel, respectively.
108** He also gets to be TheWatson to Franchise/SherlockHolmes himself in "Elementary, My Dear Winston."
109** Ray as well. He gets to team up his favorite comic book and animated characters, respectively, in "Captain Steel Saves The Day" and "Who're You Calling Two Dimensional".
110* AteTheSpoon: In ''If I Were a Witch Man'' Ray mixes up an anti-possession potion and ladles it into a glass jar with a metal spoon. He doesn't get very far before most of it vanishes with a volatile hiss, leaving him holding the smoking handle.
111%%* AttackOfThe50FootWhatever: Stay Puft and Murray The Mantis, to name but two.
112* AuthorTract: Creator/JMichaelStraczynski wrote "The Halloween Door" as a huge TakeThat to the MoralGuardians who kept complaining about the show and the AnimationAgeGhetto he [[CassandraTruth felt was coming]] as a result.
113* AwesomeBackpack: The Proton Packs are the ultimate in badass backpacks.
114* AwfulTruth: Averted when Egon reveals he discovered just how many ghosts there are in Heck House; instead of saying something like YouDoNotWantToKnow, he has no qualms whatsoever about relaying information that would terrify anyone in their right mind.
115-->'''Egon:''' By way of comparison the Watley House in Arkham had thirteen, the Vincent Mansion had ten, and the most haunted house on record, the Crowley House in London, had twenty-five.
116-->'''Peter:''' OK Egon, so tell us, how many ghosts are in this house?
117-->'''Egon:''' Two-thousand four-hundred and thirty-six.
118-->'''Slimer:''' Yaaaahhhhhh! <flies out of the room, smashing through the wall>
119** On the upside, it ''did'' get a terrified Slimer to stop clinging to Peter's leg.
120--->'''Peter:''' Good job!
121--->'''Egon:''' Wait 'til you get my bill.
122* BadBoss: Plenty of ghostly and demonic overlords viciously oppress their followers. Then there's [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters Mr. Tummel]] from "You Can't Take It With You", a human tycoon who wants to use a transportation beam to send his fortune to the afterlife ahead of him. He gleefully reneges on his promise to not use his device if there are any side effects and has the scientist who created it thrown out the front door. Later, the Ghostbusters find Tummel's butler, gardener, and French chef locked in a closet, and they reveal that Tummel is planning to send ''them'' through the portal against their will so they can continue serving him.
123* BadassBoast: Professor Moriarty gives a good one in the episode "Elementary, My Dear Winston".
124-->'''Moriarty:''' You think you're dealing with some petty ghost? I am the Napoleon of Crime!
125* BadassBookworm: Played straight with Egon and Ray. Subverted with Peter in that, while he has his doctorate, any ghostbusting equipment he builds tends to be unreliable at best. This is a nod to the movie, as Peter's [=PhD's=] were in psychology and parapsychology, not any technical field(Egon, and to a lesser extent Ray, were the techies). By the time of the new video game, Winston becomes this trope when he acquires a doctorate of his own.
126* BaffledByOwnBiology: In "Slimer, is That You?", Egon and Slimer swap bodies. While Slimer takes being in a human body in stride, Egon is perplexed by the [[BigEater hankerings]] he has, wonders why everything TastesLikeChicken, and is annoyed by the {{ectoplasm}} all over himself.
127* BalkingSummonedSpirit: "Chicken, He Clucked" has a man named Cubby calling on a demon named Morganan, and demands Morganan get rid of all the chickens in the world (Cubby lives over a Chicken restaurant and is tormented by the smell). Morganan is embarrassed by the request, and tries to talk Cubby into quite a few other ideas, but Cubby is firm. He wants rid of the chickens. Morganan offers to give him power to make things appear, and disappear at will. Morganan ends up enlisting the help of the Ghostbusters after word of the deal spreads through the underworld and ruins Morganan's reputation.
128* BankruptcyBarrel: "My Left Fang" featured this in a visual gag where the mayor of the German town laments the disappearance of their ghosts by saying that "coffers are bare" without money from tourists coming to see their ghosts. We then see a bunch of coughing men in their underwear, one of them wearing a barrel.
129* BaseballEpisode: "Night Game." Good and evil spirits always do battle on a specific area of land on a certain anniversary. Finding a baseball field there this time, they agree to play baseball. As he was there upon their arrival, Winston gets to play short-stop for the good team. The stakes are for the fate of one human soul: [[spoiler:Peter]]'s.
130* BedSheetGhost: While staying the night in [[HauntedHouse Heck House,]] Ray tumbled down the laundry chute into a basket of dirty linen, which promptly transformed into several angry ghosts and gave chase. Ray managed to shut them inside an electric dryer, turning it on for good measure.
131* BerserkButton: ''Never'' insult UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein when Egon is within earshot, as Vladimir Pavel Maximoff learned the hard way in "Russian About".
132* BigApplesauce: The Ghostbusters were based in UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity, where most of the hauntings took place, although they would also travel to other parts of the U.S. and other countries in some episodes.
133* BigBad: Averted. Unlike almost every action cartoon of its time, which would feature the heroes fighting the same big bad in every episode, the Ghostbusters almost NEVER fought the same ghost twice. Part of this was because it would kind of defeat the purpose of busting ghosts if they just came back every week, and also because the writers felt it gave the show more variety.
134** In later seasons, [[ExecutiveMeddling the network decided they wanted the boys to have a recurring nemesis]], which led to the creation of "Ghost Master", the supposed ultimate lord of ghosts. Unlike most other ghosts on the show, who were content to wreak random havoc, Ghost Master actively tried to destroy the Ghostbusters by sending hostile ghosts to kill them. Or that was the plan, anyway, but the writers must have gotten sick of him pretty quickly, as he only showed up a couple of times and was ultimately busted.
135** Samhain also considered them to be his enemies, though they were only required to fight him once a year.
136** Most any ghost that was previously busted appeared again later in some capacity. Most were [[VillainDecay barely a threat anymore]], perfectly content to sit around and play cards for eternity, and only put up a fuss if an outsider (usually Slimer) encroached on their turf. Some (like Gozer/Stay-Puft) were [[ReformedCriminal reformed baddies]], perfectly friendly and willing to lend a hand if need be. The Sleaze, a CanonImmigrant from the Slimer! shorts, was neither, and in fact had a brother named Glob who was an even worse MagnificentBastard than he. Even ObstructiveBureaucrat extraordinaire Walter Peck, who first appeared in the original film, got a callback in "Big Trouble With Little Slimer".
137** Professor Dweeb started as a recurring bumbling foil for Slimer in his own series of shorts and later migrated to the mainstream cartoons, where he is only moderately more threatening.
138* BigBadWannabe: Several ghosts weren't content to simply cause trouble and instead had total conquest on their minds. The Ghostbusters busting them right away is what plays the trope straight. Samhain is probably the most notable example, given his loyal and willing followers. Watt and Hob Anagarak also qualify, as they wanted to raise undead armies and conquer.
139* BigCreepyCrawlies: In "20,000 Leagues Under the Street", the Ghostbusters face an Ancient Egyptian insect god named Apshai, who amasses an army by enlarging ordinary insects into gigantic minions.
140* BigDamnHeroes: Slimer and a group of teenagers are cornered by a huge mob of barrow wights, before the Ghostbusters smash the door down and charge in. Cue the asskicking.
141* BigEater: Slimer is shown to have a tremendous appetite and often eats a buttload of food in one sitting, carried over from his first appearance in the movie chowing down on room service food.
142* BigThinShortTrio: Some episodes featured a trio of ghosts where one was huge and obese, one was very thin, and one was very short.
143** "Ghosts R Us" has the Ghostbusters fight a ghostly family of three named Slug (the short father), Snarg (the skinny mother), and Zunk (the fat kid).
144** While Egon, Ray, Peter, and Winston are busy fighting a giant imp monster in "Janine's Day Off", Janine and her temporary replacement have to deal with a fat ghost, a skinny ghost, and a short ghost accidentally beamed into the Firehouse who start wreaking havoc once they get their hands on a proton pack.
145** The titular pizza-loving troublemakers from "The Mean Green Teen Machine" consists of Guggenheim (big), Chicoloni (thin), and an unnamed third member (short).
146* BirthdayEpisode:
147** "Slimer, Come Home" takes place on Winston Zeddemore's birthday, the conflict starting when Slimer runs away after Peter Venkman chews him out for devouring Winston's birthday cake.
148** The ''Slimer!'' short "Cash or Slime" has Slimer go shopping to get a birthday present for his friend Chilly Cooper.
149* BitingTheHandHumor: Scattered throughout the series, but most evident in the episode "Station Identification," which casts the MonsterClown head of TV network [[FunWithAcronyms WBOO]] as the MonsterOfTheWeek.
150* BittersweetEnding: "Drool, the Dog-Faced Goblin" (where the Ghostbusters are forced to capture Drool along with the shape-shifting phantom, but they and Madame [=LaFarge=] take consolation in the fact that Drool will likely be happy among his own kind in the Containment Unit) and "Egon's Dragon" (where Egon is forced to make the dragon that's imprinted on him go into an eternal slumber, but is relieved to see the dragon sleep peacefully). Also, at the end of "Ghostworld", Egon has recovered from his cold, his coworkers and Slimer are no longer possessed, and the ghost who was possessing them has been locked up. On the other hand, the rest of the Ghostbusters, plus Slimer, have now caught Egon's cold.
151* {{Blackmail}}: When Bassingame, a phony spiritualist, winds up agitating the dormant spirits in the home of Ray's aunt, causing them to nearly wreck the place. Once the Ghostbusters resolve the issue, Bassingame had the nerve to demand payment for his "services", then smugly reminds the aunt of the contract she signed with him, which exempts him of any responsibility of whatever damages that might have been incurred. However, Peter and Ray turn it around by threatening to drop off all the ghosts they had just trapped at Bassingame's residence if he doesn't pay for all the damages himself.
152* BlindWithoutEm: Egon in "Scaring of the Green" after a lion knocks off his specs.
153** Also seen in "If I Were a Witch Man" when one of Kestrel's Demons steals his glasses
154--->'''Egon''': Nail him, Winston, I can't...I can't see him!
155** It appears that ItRunsInTheFamily. Egon's uncle Cyrus was similarly blind without his glasses, which became a problem since he didn't believe in ghosts, and his glasses broke during a Bust where the gang were trying to convince him they were real.
156* BlondeBrunetteRedhead: As noted above, the three white members of the team are a male version of this (in contrast with their live-action versions, who all had brown hair): Egon (blond), Peter (brunet), and Ray (redhead).
157* BorrowedBiometricBypass: Wat tries to open the containment unit by possessing Peter and having him open it.
158* BreakingTheFourthWall: In "Who Are You Calling Two-Dimensional?", when the Ghostbusters are sucked into a cartoon world. Winston asks Ray since they're in a cartoon, then where's the audience? Ray replies by pointing at the screen, where Winston proceeds to press his face on it while calling out if anyone's there. Coming back, Egon asks what happened, and he replied that "they changed channel".
159* BreakoutCharacter: Slimer. Got his own series and his name added to the series' title.
160* BroadStrokes: How the series treats the events of the movies. The guys battled Gozer and Vigo, just not exactly the same way as in the movies. The movies are treated as fictionalized versions of the "real" story. (See also CelebrityParadox, below)
161* BrokenPedestal: The episode "Sea Fright" has Ray Stantz admire a treasure hunter named Max Pilopolous, but lose respect for his hero because of how rude he was when the Ghostbusters asked to borrow the treasure he recently found to try and capture the ghost pirates plaguing New York.
162* BullyingADragon / MuggingTheMonster: The Ghostmaster's second and final appearance, "Revenge of the Ghostmaster", began with him beating up a gang of punks who dared to insult his appearance ''and'' try to mug him.
163* ButForMeItWasTuesday: "The Boogieman Cometh" averts this and is very unnerving about it.
164-->'''The Boogieman:''' ''[to Egon]'' I remember ''you''.
165* ButtMonkey: Most of the slapstick and physical comedy was provided via Peter, which he hated immensely...but the other members of the team found hilarious.
166* ByTheLightsOfTheirEyes:
167** Used in an interesting fashion in "Knock Knock". The Ghostbusters went onboard a possessed empty train and suddenly the lights went out. They figured out they were alone since the only things that could be seen were four pairs of eyes, but when the lights came back again they found themselves surrounded by a bunch of undead, skeletal passengers with no eyes whatsoever [[TheDeadHaveEyes that can see them perfectly well.]]
168** Used again in an interesting fashion in "Moaning Stones", where the Ghostbusters retreat from an army of reanimated museum skeletons into a dark closet. They could all see each other's eyes in the pitch darkness, plus an [[RedEyesTakeWarning extra pair of large glowing red eyes...]]
169---> '''Winston:''' That was close...
170---> '''Ray:''' (counting the eye pairs) Two, four, six, eight... ten...? [[OhCrap uh... fellas...?]]
171---> '''Peter:''' I don't mean to alarm anyone, but I keep coming up with an extra pair of eyes. Anyone got a match?
172---> (Egon lights a match, then turn to see the skeletal saber-tooth behind them)
173* ByWallThatIsHoley: When haunted girders threw a large hunk of building at the team.
174* CannotCrossRunningWater: This, as a weakness of vampires, was a plot point in "No One Comes to Lupusville", which dealt with a feud between a clan of werewolves and another of vampires. It was also a key plot point in "The Headless Motorcyclist" featuring the Headless Horseman from the Sleepy Hollow legend.
175* CanonImmigrant: A couple from the Slimer short toons made it to the main series late season: The insufferable Professor Dweeb made three appearances - looking not too different from his toon presentation. One appearance was "The Slob," which brought back the odorrific ghost Sleaze as the McGuffin for his older brother Glob.
176* CardboardPrison: Generally averted, as the Containment Unit was actually pretty secure. When a ghost did manage to escape, it was usually because another ghost opened the Unit from the outside to let them out. A few episodes centered around various ghosts and demons trying to open the Unit to free all the captive spirits (such as "Mrs. Rogers' Neighborhood"), while on a few occasions Egon or Slimer would actually go ''into'' the Unit to retrieve another ghost they actually wanted to free.
177** It's mentioned that after the Gozer incident they upgraded the containment unit to be larger (in the movie it was mounted on the wall while here it takes up most of the basement) and more resilient.
178--->'''Egon:''' [[LampshadeHanging "I think I'll make it bigger."]]
179** The threat of the containment unit shutting down, on the other hand, cropped up several times - like where the city power grid and the containment unit's backup generator became possessed, leading Peter to quickly improvise a backup backup generator made from a bike, and Ecto1's generator, with Janine pedaling for dear life (and being [[SomethingWeForgot forgotten about at the end of the episode]]).
180** There are also indications that the guys learn from past mistakes. In "Halloween 2½", two goblins are able to open up the Containment Unit within moments of trying. In "Elementary, My Dear Winston," we see a mechanism has been installed to force a time delay to give the guys time to get down there to halt the process.
181* CartoonlandTime: A family of ghosts starts up a phony ghostbusting business that outsells the Ghostbusters on the same day they started it up.
182* CastFromHitPoints: In "Citizen Ghost", the ghostly doubles of the Ghostbusters use packs that fire charged ectoplasm. Using them drains their own energy, so the more they fire the harder it becomes for them to maintain coherence.
183* CasualDangerDialogue: Occurs several times. One of the most prominent examples takes place during ''The Haunting of Heck House.'' After Ray [[spoiler: uses the house wiring to turn the place into one big ghost trap]], Egon casually points out a problem with the plan while Peter, Winston, and Slimer hold the doors shut against [[spoiler: a legion of ghosts]] battering their way in.
184-->'''Ray:''' Alright, that oughtta do it. Here we...
185-->'''Egon:''' (calmly interrupts) We're about to [[spoiler: turn the place into one big ghost trap]], and we're inside it.
186-->'''Ray:''' (replies calmly) So?
187-->'''Egon:''' So...we don't know if humans can survive inside [[spoiler: a ghost trap]].
188-->'''Ray:''' Huh...you know, you're right!
189-->'''Peter:''' Guys!
190-->'''Egon:''' We'll have to leave the mansion.
191-->''<[[spoiler: A ghost's claw]] reaches through the splintered door, getting a piece of Winston's pant leg before he jerks it away>''
192-->'''Ray:''' But...uhhh...we [[spoiler: can't leave, the door's bricked up]].
193-->'''Peter, Winston, and Slimer:''' Guyyyyyyyys!
194-->''<Ray and Egon turn and look before going back to their conversation, still casual as ever>''
195-->'''Egon:''' I guess we'll have to hope it disrupts the energy enough to [[spoiler: break out]].
196-->'''Ray:''' Yeah, I suppose you're right. Whelp, here goes!
197* CelebrityParadox: Averted: Creator/BillMurray and the other actors from the films still exist in ''The Real Ghostbusters'' universe, and they even play the same movie roles. Lampshaded when Venkman comments that Murray "doesn't look a thing like me".
198-->'''Winston''': Murray, Aykroyd and Ramis? Isn't that a law firm?
199* CharacterizationMarchesOn: The Stay Puft Marshmallow Man. In "Cry Uncle" (and the original intro and the unaired pilot), he's depicted as a malevolent ghost. In all other appearances, he's actually quite benign and acts as an ally twice - considering the guys and Slimer his friends. He doesn't even mind being trapped in the Containment Unit. (The change may be justified and {{Lampshaded}} in "The Revenge of Murray the Mantis" by Peter saying, "He's all better now... we think.")
200* ChristmasEpisode[=/=]YetAnotherChristmasCarol: In "Xmas Marks the Spot", the team accidentally busts [[Literature/AChristmasCarol Scrooge's ghosts]] and [[TimeParadox changes history.]] They then have to go back and fix the mess they made. The whole affair turns out to be [[spoiler:the ghosts' BatmanGambit to teach Peter the value of Christmas.]] Ironically, it crosses over with ItsAWonderfulPlot, as the changes caused turn the town essentially into Pottersville.
201* ClipShow: The series' single clip show episode was "Deja Boo," where Professor Dweeb captures Slimer and uses a machine to see his memories. The episodes footage was recycled from were "The Copycat", "Halloween II 1/2", and "Sticky Business". There was also an hour-long cut of the episode that used clips from the same episodes in the half-hour version in addition to the episode "The Two Faces of Slimer".
202* ClueOfFewWords: In "Ghostbuster of the Year", the Ghostbusters have to determine why a ghost keeps chanting, "Rosebud!" in reference to ''Film/CitizenKane''.
203* ColorCodedCharacters: As the page image indicates, each of the guys has different colored uniforms, despite the movie showing them all wearing the same color. The show justifies this by having them replace their marshmallow covered suits after fighting Gozer. The meta reason, according to WordOfGod, was that this was done to make it easier to tell them apart when shown at a distance; that it helped to make [[TheMerch the toys]] more distinct from each other was a happy bonus. Janine gained [[PinkHeroine a pink jumpsuit]] during her stints as an auxiliary Ghostbuster.
204* ComicBooksAreReal: Well supernatural energy can make comics into something real.
205* CompetencePorn: In the earlier seasons, every 'buster got a chance to come up with the plan or have the insight to capture the episode's ghost. This faded as SeasonalRot and {{Flanderization}} set in, though there were still flashes of this in specific episodes.
206* CompetitionCouponMadness: In the ''Slimer!'' short "Dr. Strangedog", Slimer eats enough Freaky Flakes cereal that he has 100 box tops to exchange for the Super Duper Spy Kit he wants.
207* ConformingOOCMoment: Most of Egon's NotSoStoic moments involve him being part of a group reaction:
208** In "Ghosts R Us", he joins in with the other Ghostbusters smiling upon receiving chocolate. Downplayed, since [[GeniusSweetTooth he has been known to like chocolate]].
209** In "Mrs. Rogers' Neighbourhood", he joins in with his coworkers and Slimer excitedly lunging for the phone when it rings, then with Winston, Ray, and Slimer in cheering and punching the air.
210** He laughs along with his friends in "Janine's Genie" when she chooses an old-fashioned lamp as her prize.
211** He gasps alongside the rest of the Ghostbusters in "Ghostbuster of the Year" upon seeing a huge mansion.
212* ConMan: Peter's father Pops is one, which doesn't exactly thrill Peter--especially when Mr. Venkman starts trading on the Ghostbuster name for his cons.
213** CoattailRidingRelative: More specifically, the elder Venkman uses his son's ghostbusting fame to move into selling phony "ghost repellers," claiming that he taught his son everything he knows about the supernatural. Later, he and another scam artist inadvertently resurrect an ancient demon. In both instances, Peter and his colleagues reluctantly step in to save him from himself...and to save his victims.
214* ContrivedCoincidence: In the episode "Slimer, Come Home," Ray tries using this to his advantage.
215-->'''Egon''': Why aren't you looking for Slimer?\
216'''Ray''': I'm trying out a new theory of mine. Have you ever noticed that when you go looking for someone, you almost never find them? I figured that if I stay in one spot for long enough, everyone I've ever met in my life will come to me sooner or later.\
217'''Egon''': Ray, just so you know, that's the most ridiculous thing I ever-\
218'''Woman''' Ray Stantz! Hello!\
219'''Ray''': Hey, that's Mrs. Milligan, my second grade teacher. Hi, Mrs. Milligan!\
220-({{Beat}})-\
221'''Egon''': Ray, I think one of us needs a nice, long vacation.
222* ContinuityNod: On a few occasions when we see the inside of the containment unit, we can see some of the ghosts the boys busted in earlier episodes. There are also more than a few references to their adventures depicted in ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'' and ''Film/GhostbustersII'', most often in the earlier seasons that [[RunningGag Peter uses defeating Gozer as a pickup line. It never works.]]
223** The boy in "The Grundel" is said to have kicked Mrs. Faversham's cat.
224*** Ironically, when the show was rebranded as ''Slimer and the Real Ghostbusters'' and featured many reviled changes, Continuity Nods actually ''improved''; particularly with regard to the movies. Among other things, the Ghostbusters reminisce about their first case when they visit New York Public Library, Zuul is in the new intro, Vigo and the psychokinetic slime from the second movie are mentioned, and Louis is added to the cast.
225*** The episode-long flashback of how Slimer came to be the TeamPet starts with the 'Busters returning home from their defeat of [[BigBad Gozer the Gozerian]], still in their original khaki jumpsuits covered in marshmallow gunk.
226*** The changes were made in the series to capitalize on the popularity of the second movie. In turn, the second movie itself recognized that the Ghostbusters were a big hit with children, thanks in part to the cartoon. The adult humor was toned way down, while Slimer (identified by the name which the cartoon had given him, and redesigned to look more like his cartoon self) made a cameo as a bus driver.
227** In ''The Halloween Door,'' the disaster of the [[{{Film/Ghostbusters 1984}} first movie]] happens all over again. Ray is a great distance away from the firehouse when it blows up, but he knows it when he hears it.
228-->'''Ray:''' I've only heard it once before, but that sounded like a containment unit exploding!
229%%* CoolCar: The Ecto-1.
230* CosmicHorrorStory: An episode entitled "The Collect Call of Cathulhu" [sic] paid an extensive - and surprisingly accurate - homage to the Franchise/CthulhuMythos of Creator/HPLovecraft.
231** This was later revisited in the episode "Russian About" where they fight a monster which looks like [[VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft Yogg'Saron]], in the Soviet Union.
232** The entity from "Ragnarok and Roll".
233* CoveredInGunge: The guys get slimed on a regular basis.
234** Used as the main weapon of the Peoplebusters in middle-season episode "Flip Side."
235* CrazyPrepared: Ecto-1 gets dropped into a body of water with the guys inside, which would be a problem -- until they activate the inflatable raft on the bottom of the car which both floats them to the surface and allows them to hydroplane back to dry land.
236** In "The Two Faces of Slimer," after facing off with a troublesome spook, Peter tells the others to utilize "Plan 55-A."
237* CreepyFamily: Several examples:
238** An [[Series/TheAddamsFamily Addams family]] expy in the Mycawbs in episode "Loathe Thy Neighbor" (although the daughter looks more like [[Series/TheMunsters Marilyn Munster]]).
239** A family of tourist ghosts in "Transcendental Tourists"
240** A cute baby ghost being searched for by her much more menacing parents in "Baby Spookums"
241** The Grungys, a parody of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' in "Guess What's Coming to Dinner"
242* CripplingOverspecialization: UsefulNotes/AlCapone and his competitors are still at war in the ghost world, but although their [[FingerGun finger guns]] and other weapons can't really hurt each other (those that get shot transform into goofy forms for a second or two before turning back) they keep at it anyway. Ray and Egon discuss it after taking cover in the middle of their firefight.
243-->'''Ray:''' I don't get it...they're firing but it doesn't seem to hurt 'em!
244-->'''Egon:''' I suppose that's all they knew how to do in life, so that's all they know how to do now!
245* CuttingTheKnot: The crew find a locked chest where Ray attempts to open it by picking the lock with a hairpin. As he fiddles with it, Peter simply shoots the lock with his proton gun, opening the chest.
246* DancingTheme: The ending, where the ''[[EverybodyDotheEndlessLoop move]]'' in question was taken from the original Ghostbusters theme music video. The only person missing from the music video's line-up is musician Ray Parker Jr himself.
247* DarkIsNotEvil: Not all the supernatural beings the Ghostbusters encountered were evil; some wished merely to rest in peace, and others needed the Ghostbusters' help against entirely human villains.
248* DartboardOfHate: In at least one episode Venkman had one of this cop who kept hassling them.
249* ADayInTheLimelight: Janine gets ''several'' episodes like this, most notably "Janine's Genie" and "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Janine Melnitz, Ghostbuster]]". "Janine, You've Changed" might be one of the most hilarious meta-examples in the entire medium.
250* DeadpanSnarker: Peter and Janine, just like in the movies. Egon gets in on the act pretty regularly, too.
251-->'''Peter:''' Egon, I just had a thought.\
252'''Egon:''' You had a thought?\
253'''Peter:''' Yes.\
254'''Egon:''' Here. Have a cookie.\
255'''Peter:''' Why?\
256'''Egon:''' It's how they train seals, Peter. Unfortunately, I'm all out of fish.
257* DealWithTheDevil:
258** "Chicken, He Clucked" features a man who hates chickens so much that he wants to make a deal with a demon to get rid of them. Embarrassed by being summoned for such a silly request, the demon gives him the power to send anything away as a compromise. Soon, every chicken on Earth is sent to another dimension and (after annoying the man) so are the Ghostbusters. The demon agrees to help the Ghostbusters, though, because his colleagues found out about the deal and won't stop mocking him. The demon reveals a loophole that the Ghostbusters manage to exploit to cancel the deal.
259** Done by accident by Ray and Winston in "The Devil to Pay" where they unknowingly sign a contract that had them soul-bound to take part in a demon's game show where they have to play for their lives. They win, but the demon tries to pull a fast one--leaving them to die in the final challenge. After escaping, Peter threatens bodily harm to the demon host to give them the all-expense-paid trip for four to Tahiti he promised them, which he had no choice but to grant.
260* DeathByDeaging: In "Three Men and an Egon", Egon gets caught in the proton beams along with a ghost that ages in reverse, causing them to exchange aging processes. As a result, Egon begins to de-age from an adult to a baby at an alarming rate. Ray, Peter, Winston and Slimer have to find the ghost and reverse the process before Egon disappears.
261* DeathGlare: "Slimer, Come Home" has one.
262-->'''Ray''': ''(about Slimer's farewell letter)'' Janine, you can read this?\
263'''Janine''': I'm a secretary; I can read anything. ''[[HintDropping Someone]]'' wanted him to go.\
264''(Egon and Winston angrily glance at Peter, who looks confused)''
265* DefeatingTheCheatingOpponent: Enforced in the "Night Game" episode. A war between the forces of Good and Evil is played as a game of baseball, with the fate of a human soul on the line. The Busters go in to rescue Winston, who is playing on Team Good. At one point, the Busters note that Team Evil is cheating, and the umpire replies "Evil cheats; that's why we call them 'evil'" to the Busters. Only Team Good is not allowed to cheat; if they do, then Team Good loses. Winston and Team Good still win the baseball game anyway in spite of Team Evil cheating, and the human soul is spared.
266* DemonDevilDistinction: "The Devil to Pay" establishes that there are many demons (which may be "minor" or "major") but only one Devil. This is revealed when Winston says that he's sold his soul to the Devil, and Egon corrects him that Dib (who they all sold their souls to) is only a minor demon, not the Devil.
267* DemonicPossession:
268** The WickedWitch Kestrel possessed at least two people, [[GrandTheftMe including Egon.]]
269--->'''(After Kestrel has been exorcised)'''
270--->'''Peter:''' You feeling OK?
271--->'''Egon:''' Actually...I feel like...I need a [[ShowerOfAngst looooong shower.]]
272** There were also some minor spooks in "Janine, You've Changed" that took over vases and...scarier things:
273--->'''Peter:''' They get into things, make them real big, and attack us. [[TemptingFate So what can they get into that's that bad?]]
274--->''(Cue demonic swarm)''
275--->'''Peter:''' Yaaaaaaahhhh! [[WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes Cockroaches!]]
276** Wat in "Mrs. Rogers' Neighborhood" forcefully possesses Peter in order to use his body's prints and voice to unlock the containment unit.
277** Averted with Vanna in "The Cabinet of Calamari". Due to her spaced out mannerisms and Egon not detecting any traces of ghostly possession on the PKE meter, he deduced she was hypnotized.
278* DenserAndWackier: The ''Slimer!'' shorts were typically more zany and cartoonish than the regular episodes, complete with having a more simplified art style.
279* DevilButNoGod: The heroes have visited quite a few hellish dimensions and fought demons from them, but if a heavenly version of the afterlife exists, it has never been seen.
280* DidYouJustFlipOffCthulhu: When ''don't'' they?
281** Slimer does this to Samhain ''twice''. In "When Halloween Was Forever," after Samhain demands that he renounce the Ghostbusters and join him, Slimer blows raspberries in his face. In "Halloween II 1/2," as part of the Ghostbusters' plan to stop Samhain, Slimer slimes him in the face.
282** In "The Halloween Door," the little girl Emma essentially does this to Boogaloo.
283--->'''Emma:''' ''(laughing)'' You're funny.\
284'''Boogaloo:''' Wh-what's wrong with you? Aren't you afraid of me?\
285'''Emma:''' Nope.
286** Ironically, in the episode where they confront the ''actual'' Cthulhu, they don't try this; they just open fire.
287* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: The aforementioned "Collect Call of Cathulhu", although it was specifically stated that the Ghostbusters only managed to banish Cthulhu, rather than truly harming him.
288** Appropriately, though, the Ghostbusters only managed to do so by reading Creator/HPLovecraft's original story. (Lampshaded by saying that Lovecraft researched the Necronomicon for story ideas.)
289*** They also required a force of nature to do so; Cthulhu was unharmed by anything they themselves could throw at him and took a couple of lightning bolts to defeat.
290---> '''Winston:''' Cthulhu? I've heard of him. He's bad, right?
291---> '''Egon:''' He makes Gozer look like Little Mary Sunshine.
292* DisappearedDad: Peter's dad apparently spent more time on his cons than being at home with the family. It's a sore point for Peter, especially in "X-Mas Marks the Spot."
293** Winston was also found to suffer this. He and his father had a falling out when he became a Ghostbuster rather than stay in construction. The two did patch things up on-screen, though.
294** It's curious that Egon's mother appears in two episodes, but there's never any mention made of his father.
295* DisguisedInDrag: When the boys need to go undercover to investigate spectral readings at [[OneGenderSchool Lewiston Girl's Academy,]] Ray is disguised as a male janitor and Winston as a male substitute coach. Egon and Peter draw the short straws and have to "blend in" as students.
296-->'''Peter:''' Do I have too much eye-shadow?
297-->'''Egon:''' The problem is the color, Peter, it has to compliment your lip gloss. [[CrazyPrepared I have a color chart...]]
298-->'''Peter:''' Forget it! Winston and his bright ideas. I just wish he had to wear these pantyhose; they're murder, man!
299** Venkman wears a tutu and wig when he needs to stand in for the Ghost of Christmas Past.
300* DisneyDeath: [[spoiler: Slimer in "Big Trouble With Little Slimer".]]
301* DogsLoveFireHydrants:
302** In "It's a Jungle Out There", Winston says that dogs are excited by fire hydrants, unlike humans.
303** In "Stay Tooned", when Winston [[{{Animorphism}} turns into]] an [[FunnyAnimal anthropomorphic dog]], he tells his friends not to joke about fire hydrants.
304** In the "Slimer" short "Dog Days", a dog training school has fire hydrant statues as decorations.
305* DramaticIrony: In ''Knock Knock'', as they're trying to stop the end of the world underneath New York, the Ghostbusters wonder if they'll be on the news, but ultimately shrug off the idea given their track record. For once, the news IS wondering where they are.
306* DrivenToMadness: One of Ray's former paranormal studies professors investigated Heck House, becoming the only one to spend half the night there and survive, but at a cost.
307--->'''Ray:''' <sadly> He was a...brilliant man.
308--->'''Winston:''' Was? What's he do now?
309--->'''Ray:''' Drool a lot...
310--->'''Winston:''' Got it.
311** Ray and Winston themselves come pretty close when they go.
312---->'''Egon:''' What's wrong with them?
313---->'''Peter:''' I dunno, I think they saw something upstairs.
314---->'''Ray:''' <frozen in wide-eyed shock> ...and it...it had two-hundred eyes, I know...I...I counted...
315* EekAMouse: "Stay Tooned" has a scene where Janine gets scared by a cartoon mouse and a cartoon cat chasing each other and leaping out of the TV set. Before she gives the full details to the Ghostbusters, they initially think that she was frightened by a regular mouse.
316* ElSpanishO: Used in ''Spacebusters'' when Janine tries to drive her point home to Winston in three languages.
317-->'''Janine:''' I'm '''positive.''' You have had ''no calls'' this morning.
318-->'''Winston:''' I don't understand...
319-->'''Janine:''' Then Winston, let me put it this way: El telefono no ding-a-ling-a pour vous, capisce?
320* EldritchAbomination: Not only the aforementioned C(a)thulhu, but also the Mee-krah, a horrible octopus-like entity who awakened every few millennia and left complete destruction wherever it went (it is said in the episode that the Gobi and Sahara deserts were results of its activity). It fed upon the spiritual energy of ghosts, who practically ''begged'' to be captured by the Ghostbusters.
321* EldritchLocation: Many of the dimensions the Ghostbusters get sucked into, the Bogeyman's domain and the New Jersey Parellelogram (an Expy of the Bermuda Triangle) being two prime examples.
322* EpisodeTitleCard: Seasons 1-4 had them, but seasons 5-7 superimposed the episode title with the first scene.
323* EroticDream: Cut short in "Mean Green Teen Machine." Egon demonstrates his [[HomemadeInventions dream-reader]] on a sleeping Peter, who fantasizes about romancing Kim Basinger as Film/{{Batman|1989}}. After a KissingDiscretionShot Egon unplugs the machine. Peter wakes up to the firehouse alarm and immediately gets a ribbing from his giggling compatriots.
324-->'''Winston:''' We've got a call, Caped Crusader.
325-->'''Peter:''' But I was right in the middle of a sensational dream!
326-->'''Winston:''' Yeah...
327-->'''Ray:''' You sure were!
328* EnemyMine: In "Chicken, He Clucked", the demon that granted Cubbie’s wish to get rid of every chicken, Morganon, ends up working with the Ghost Busters (even saving them from the world Cubbie sent them) when the sheer ridiculousness of the wish starts affecting his work, denying him any more deals and making him a joke to the other demons.
329* EveryManHasHisPrice:
330** When a lawyer arrives at the firehouse with a proposition to "clean up" Heck House, Egon and Ray refuse. Before they can leave, the lawyer stops them in their tracks with just three words.
331--->'''Egon:''' We've faced demons, monsters, Gozer, multi-dimensional invasions, but there is nothing that will get me within a ''mile'' of Heck House.
332--->'''Lawyer:''' [[PunctuatedForEmphasis One...million...dollars.]]
333** Another more benign example occurs in "Sticky Business" when the heroes are trying to raise money for an orphanage. The president of the company that makes Stay Puft marshmallows asks to borrow Mr. Stay Puft for an advertising campaign, and they don't think it's a good idea... They all change their minds when he says how much he'll pay them.
334** Then there's this exchange in "No-One Comes to Lupusville":
335--->'''Winston:''' Forget it. I've seen enough movies to know that you don't mess with vampires unless you know what you're doing. We ''don't''.
336---->'''Gregor:''' That is unfortunate. I could have made it eminently worth your while...(''pulls out a chest laden with gold'')
337--->'''Winston:''' However, I ''am'' a fast learner.
338** In "Loathe Thy Neighbor" the heroes are hesitant to take the Micawbs' case, seeing as the Micawbs are stranger than most of the ghosts they tend to bust. Then Mr. Micawb says that cost is not an option and they'll pay any price; the guys change their mind quickly.
339* EveryoneHatesMimes: Mimes are listed in Ghost Master's ''Book of Annoying Beings'', one page after the Ghostbusters.
340* EvilIsNotAToy: Alan Favish and Charles Faversham found that out the hard way.
341* EvilKnockoff:
342** "Citizen Ghost" had the heroes fighting evil spectral doubles of themselves caused by ectoplasmic energy combining with their original beige jumpsuits, which had been contaminated by their fight with Gozer.
343** A CorruptCorporateExecutive creates a robotic ghost eliminator in "Robo-Buster" by making copies of design specs for the team's equipment. Only his version seemingly ''destroys'' ghosts, which Egon states is fundamentally impossible. And then is proven correct when all the dispersed ghost energy recombines into a really nasty (and humongous) specter.
344%%* ExorcistHead: Dixie does this in "Til Death Do Us Part".
345* ExplosiveInstrumentation: Everything from proton packs to PKE meters and calculators, though [[TheSmartGuy Egon's]] HomemadeInventions seemed to be the most volatile.
346** In "Ragnarok and Roll" Egon's PKE meter starts to spark and smoke within a second of scanning a [[ReadingsAreOffTheScale particularly powerful]] ancient parchment, forcing him to hurl it like a live grenade, smashing it through a closed window. Everyone in the room hits the deck before it [[ReadingsBlewUpTheScale blows a crater in the sidewalk]] about the size of a VW Beetle.
347--->'''Cindy:''' Is ''all'' your equipment this dangerous?
348--->'''Peter:''' Oh no no...well...[[ByNoIMeanYes actually it is,]] but we're all very well-trained. [[NotHelpingYourCase We haven't blown up a house in... days.]]
349* ExplosiveOverclocking: In "Ragnarok and Roll" when their best shot doesn't even dent the being trying to bring about the end of the world, Egon says this is the only option.
350--> '''Egon:''' There's only one way. We'll have to set our proton packs on simultaneous overload.
351--> '''Ray:''' Oh great, Egon. We do that and it'll take Jeremy out all right. And the building. There'll be a blast crater half a mile wide!
352--> '''Winston:''' And since we'll have to keep hold of 'em until they blow, to make sure they aren't turned off...oh man.
353--> '''Egon:''' We take out everything within a quarter mile, [[HeroicSacrifice ourselves with it]], and hope it's enough to destroy him too before he can destroy the rest of the world.
354** The Ghostbusters also wire their packs to overload to power up a bomb and take out the Boogeyman, though they don't intend to go with it on that occasion.
355* {{Expy}}: A few are noted in the TakeThat section, but to sum up:
356** There are characters who are less than kind jabs at ''WesternAnimation/FilmationsGhostbusters'', ''WesternAnimation/HeManAndTheMastersOfTheUniverse1983'', ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' and ''Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles''.
357** Speaking of TMNT, Janine's redesign is probably intended to mirror April O'Neil.
358** In the toy line, the ghost toy "Sludge Bucket" was [[Franchise/StarWars Jabba the Hutt]] with a giant mouth full of slime and larger eyes.
359** One episode featured [[Franchise/{{Superman}} Captain Steel]] and his archenemy [[ComicBook/LexLuthor Dr.Destructo]], [[ComicBooksAreReal comic book characters]] created by comic book artist [[Creator/MarvWolfman Len Wolfman]].
360* EyeCatch:
361** On the first two ABC seasons, the "No Ghost" logo, underneath the shows' title, flipped around to announce that the show was back. This bumper was always used to start Act 2, and Arsenio Hall voiced him.
362** The Syndicated episodes had a big "No Ghost" logo running towards it, one flipped around, one scared, one sawing, and one whistling. Usually, Frank Welker voiced the "No Ghost", but some of them had Arsenio Hall voicing them.
363** After the show became ''Slimer! And The Real Ghostbusters'', the eyecatch was now Frank Welker saying that the show was back. The half-way bumper for hour-long broadcasts were narrated by Welker in his normal voice, and in his Slimer voice.
364* FailedAttemptAtScaring: The ghost of a dead gangster tells the Ghostbusters they'll never take him alive. They point out he's already dead. He acknowledges that, then makes a hideous, ghoulish face to try and scare them. Their response?
365--> '''Venkman:''' You don't scare us Vinny. Take away those supernatural powers and you're just another two-bit dead hood.
366* FamilialFoe:
367** After failing to kill [[Literature/TheLegendOfSleepyHollow Ichabod Crane]] centuries before "The Headless Motorcyclist," the Headless Horseman/Motorcyclist has made regular attacks on Ichabod's son, distant niece, and other family members.
368** In "Scaring of the Green," every St. Patrick's Day where there's a fool moon, the current head of the O'Malley clan is DraggedOffToHell by a bog hound as punishment from a leprechaun who was vengeful after being robbed by a family member.
369* FamilyFriendlyFirearms: Averted and played straight. Some ghosts of gunslingers can merely use FingerGuns to fire. A few other ghosts and human authority figures are seen wielding firearms.
370* FanService:
371** "The Devil In The Deep" took place on an exceptionally hot day, leading Janine to show up to work in a revealing bikini. [[NotDistractedByTheSexy However none of the gang pay attention to this and talk normally with her as usual]].
372** There was also an episode where Janine was in the shower, carefully showing only her face and legs and carefully avoiding the rest. Ghosts begin to bug her and she spends the next few moments running around in nothing but a towel. As the scene ends, Janine walks off screen and the towel is suddenly thrown off as she's out of frame.
373** That's not counting all the times the guys are shown shirtless, in the shower, or even just in their boxers.
374* FantasyLandmarkEquivalent: In "Flip Side", the Ghostbusters arrive in a ghostly BizarroUniverse, where the counterpart of New York is called Boo York. There, the Statue of Liberty is replaced with a giant statue of a witch.
375* FatBastard: There are several unpleasant and overweight characters on the show.
376** The syndicated episodes occasionally had the Ghostbusters confronted by an obese cop named Lieutenant Frump, who was very mean to them.
377** The episodes "Short Stuff" and "Revenge of the Ghostmaster" featured the Ghostmaster, a tremendously fat and powerful ghost who wishes to destroy the Ghostbusters.
378** The ''Slimer!'' shorts frequently had Slimer having to avoid capture by Professor Norman Dweeb, an eccentric scientist who is a little on the chunky side and obsessed with proving he's smarter in the field of paranormal studies than the Ghostbusters.
379** "Partners in Slime" had a morbidly obese gangster ghost named Pozo as the villain, who vaguely resembled [[Franchise/StarWars Jabba the Hutt]] in mafia duds.
380* FearIsNormal: In "The Bogeyman is Back", Egon is scared after a fall from a building, but doesn't want to admit it since he's worried his friends will no longer see him as brave. However, his reluctance to admit his fear [[SpaceWhaleAesop leads to]] the [[ThingsThatGoBumpInTheNight Boogieman]] emerging, so Egon has to admit he's scared.
381%%* FingerGun: Used by the ghosts of the Earps and the mobsters in Al Capone's ghost world.
382* FireBreathingDiner: In "Treasure of the Sierra Tamale", Slimer breathes fire after eating some spicy burritos.
383%%* FirstNameUltimatum: "SLIME-''ERR!!!''"
384* FlashBack: As part of an EvilCounterpart episode, it showed the team discarding their old, evil-marshmallow-encrusted uniforms and building replacements for the equipment damaged in the first film's climax. And as a result of being encrusted with ectoplasm, the originals then became the team's ghostly {{Evil Twin}}s.
385* FollowTheChaos: In "Stay Tooned," Sammy K. Ferret can't quite keep his [[RealityWarper reality warping]] cartoon powers in check when he enters the real world.
386--> '''Peter''': ''(frustrated)'' No sign of the little runt ''anywhere''.\
387'''Winston''': ''(also feeling it)'' With a million hiding places in this town, we'll never find him.\
388'''Egon''': On the contrary, Sammy should be easy to locate. We just have to follow his trail ''(pointing out the parts of New York City Sammy already turned into cartoon characters)''.
389* ForcedTransformation:
390** "Poultrygeist" featured Egon turning into a [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent werechicken]].
391** In "Short Stuff," a spell accidentally turns Peter into a mouse. The change lasts only a few moments, though.
392** In the episode "Stay Tooned", Ray, Egon and Winston are turned into cartoon animals as a result of TV cartoon character Sammy K. Ferret gaining ghost-like powers and entering the real world. Interestingly, in Ray's case, it gets combined with a slow PainfulTransformation, whereas Winston and Egon transform right away.
393* ForcefulKiss: Slimer likes giving these to Janine - naturally, since it leaves her mouth covered in ectoplasm, she’s less than enthused. It’s enough of a RunningGag that it features in the first opening.
394* FormulaBreakingEpisode:
395** In the episodes "Dairy Farm", "The Cabinet of Calamari", "Last Train to Oblivion", "The Man Who Never Reached Home", "Boo-Dunnit", and "Ghostbuster of the Year" end on the ghost being made to pass over to the afterlife instead of being trapped.
396** "The Bird of Kildarby" ended with the ghosts not being trapped ''or'' made to pass over, but instead ''staying'' (but agreeing to [[NocturnalMooks confine their haunting to the night]]). Similarly, in "Trandscendental Tourists", the Ghostbusters negotiate with the ghosts and allow them to stay in the human world.
397** "Follow That Hearse" had a HeroAntagonist, of a Native American Earth deity who had been transformed into a monster [[SpaceWhaleAesop because]] of [[GreenAesop pollution]].
398** "Xmas Marks the Spot" had NoAntagonist; the conflict was about trying to return the ghosts from ''Literature/AChristmasCarol'' to [[TimeTravelEpisode restore the timeline]].
399** In "'Til Death Do Us Part" and "Guess What's Coming to Dinner", the Ghostbusters don't trap the ghosts or make them pass over but instead trick them into going away.
400** The villains of "Chicken, He Clucked", "You Can't Take it With You", and "Ragnarok and Roll" are humans, while most of the show's villains are ghosts or demons. In "Chicken, He Clucked", in fact, a demon asks the Ghostbusters for help in dealing with the human antagonist, while it's the other way round in most episodes.
401** Most of the "Slimer" shorts are just Slimer doing wacky things and avoiding being caught by bumbling villains, however, "Don't Tease the Sleaze" was more similar to an episode of the main show in that involved a group of characters attempting to trap a ghost. Also, "The Dirty Half-Dozen" was a lot higher-stakes than most of the "Slimer" shorts, as it involved the Ghostbusters being kidnapped.
402* FountainOfYouth: In the episode "Three Men and an Egon," an incident with a ghost causes Egon to begin regressing, and threatens to reduce him to nothingness unless the process is reversed.
403* FreakyFridayFlip: In "Slimer, Is That You?", a mishap with one of Egon's inventions causes him and '''Slimer''' to switch bodies. Egon wants to fix this ASAP before Slimer "eats [his] body into a butterball coma".
404* ForeseeingMyDeath: In "Future Tense," once Ray is able to convince the rest of the Ghostbusters their new TV can see the future, they plug it in to see what it forecasts next. Unfortunately, the next prediction shows them fighting a water elemental on the firehouse roof in a lightning storm, showing "The End" on screen before dissolving into static. [[spoiler: Luckily for them, the water elemental that had been growing like a "supernatural fungus" in their new TV the whole time was NotSoOmniscientAfterAll, and the prediction becomes a SelfDefeatingProphecy.]]
405-->'''Peter:''' What happened?\
406'''Winston:''' Yeah, what's it mean, "The End?"\
407'''Ray:''' I think we just witnessed...our own deaths!\
408''<Slimer begins to sob, crying into Peter's chest>''\
409'''Peter:''' ''<pats Slimer comfortingly>'' Well the good news is we can see the future but the bad news is...it's gonna be real short!
410* FoulMedicine: In "Ghost World", Egon catches a cold, and his mother tries to cure him by feeding him an old remedy from her husband's side of the family. The remedy is a blend of [[SoupIsMedicine chicken soup]], orange juice, tea, [[StockYuck prune juice]], and garlic. When Egon drinks it, he jokes that he's lucky to have survived it, and when [[HereWeGoAgain Peter, Ray, Winston, and Slimer catch his cold]], she tries to make more of it for them.
411* FourIsDeath: The four ghost cowboys in "Ghost Fight at the O.K. Corral".
412* FourTemperamentEnsemble: Ray: sanguine, Peter: choleric, Egon: melancholic, Winston: phlegmatic
413* FunnyPhotoPhrase: In "Three Men and an Egon", the Ghostbusters have a group photo and Winston asks them to say, "Ghostbusters!". However, no one does -- Peter and Ray remain silent, and Egon, who had [[MerlinSickness turned into a baby]], just [[BlowingARaspberry blows a raspberry]].
414%%* FurAgainstFang: The plot of "No One Comes to Lupusville".
415* FurIsClothing: The ''Slimer!'' short "Cruisin' for a Brusin'" had a gag where Bruiser barked so loud that Fred's fur came off to reveal boxer shorts.
416* FusionDance:
417** The episode "Slimer Come Home" featured a massive poltergeist who was absorbing the energy of many smaller ghosts to increase its power, while "Robo-Buster" pitted the boys against a colossal ghost that had been created by the dissipated energies of dozens of smaller ghosts broken up by Robo-Buster's modified proton beams.
418** In "The Slob", the Sleaze and his brother the Glob were able to merge into a more powerful ghost called the Slob.
419* GeekPhysiques: Averted by the two geekiest Ghostbusters. Ray is, at worst, only a bit overweight, while Egon is quite fit.
420* GeniusLoci: In "Egon's Dragon", Egon's ancestor Zedekiah tried to use magic to restore water back to his well in the 1700's, only to summon the spirit of the well, which took the form of a dragon (the term "Genius Loci" is referenced directly). In Zedekiah's case, it was the size of a horse, and was put back to sleep after it started stealing his neighbor's livestock as presents for him. When Egon accidentally awakens it in the current day, it's grown to the size of a house, and is bringing Egon Rolls Royces and cruise ships. Egon ends up a little reluctant to bust the dragon, because he knows it's just trying to impress its "Daddy".
421* GenreSavvy: The Ghostbusters, natch, but not always enough to avoid close calls. In "No One Comes to Lupusville," when told they don't know if proton packs will work on vampires, Winston wants to leave. "I've seen enough movies to know you don't face vampires without knowing what you're doing, and ''we'' don't." The promise of a hefty payment causes him to ignore his better judgment.
422* GhostInvasion: In the episode "You Can't Take It With You," a dying billionaire builds a machine to open a portal to the afterlife so he can take his vast fortune with him. Unfortunately, this causes a rupture in the separation between the human and spirit worlds, causing ghosts to invade the land of the living.
423** In "It's About Time" the Ghostbusters accidentally [[TimeTravel travel back to 1959,]] tearing a hole in the time fabric and allowing ghosts to invade TheFifties.
424* GhostlyAnimals:
425** The Rollerghoster was a group of ghostly circus animals who took 10 people hostage and can animate an amusement ride. It consists of an elephant, a horse, a bear, a snake, a monkey, and a gorilla.
426** Another episode had Simon Quegg's cruelty manifest as a powerful horse spectre and buggy bonded to him.
427** Ghost horses also feature in "Ghost Fight at the OK Corral".
428* GhostPirate: The boys had to deal with a crew of these who invaded New York to recover their buried treasure after it was discovered and put on display in a city museum.
429* GilliganCut:
430** Overlapping with SomethingWeForgot: In "Killerwatt", Janine is left to run a pedal powered generator when the power goes off. Fast forward--monster defeated, power back on, heroes are celebrating, but "Wait--we forgot to tell Janine to stop, she must still be pedaling the generator.. nah she'd have figured out she can stop by now right?" GilliganCut to Janine STILL pedaling.
431** In "Beneath These Streets"
432---> Peter: "Yeah, I'm not going on a wild goose chase at this hour. Mama Venkman didn't raise no fools!" (cut to the Ghostbusters searching in the sewers)
433---> Winston: (to Peter) "Say, Fool!"
434* GirlinessUpgrade: Janine went from a snarky secretary with a stereotypical Jersey Girl accent (Egon referred to it as an "annoying Brooklyn accent" in ''Janine, You've Changed'') and hairdo with triangular glasses to a softer spoken woman with straight hair and round glasses over the series, thanks to ExecutiveMeddling from Creator/{{ABC}}, but also started going out in the field as a Ghostbuster herself.
435* GladIThoughtOfIt: The ''Slimer!'' short "The Dirty Half-Dozen" has Goolem take credit for Zugg's idea when he suggests that they lure Slimer into a trap by holding the Ghostbusters prisoner.
436* GlamourFailure: Dixie has some ghost-like traits in "Til Death Do Us Part", but she looks human.
437* GlassShatteringSound: Used in the ''Slimer!'' short "Slimer's Silly Symphony", where Slimer at one point asks his friend Chilly Cooper if she can sing. When she shows her ability to sing, her singing causes several glass objects around her to shatter.
438* GodzillaThreshold: Comes up quite often, involving threats that far outclassed the Ghostbusters' equipment. Usually this required [[SummonBiggerFish releasing larger entities like the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man]] or ExplosiveOverclocking of their equipment.
439* GoneSwimmingClothesStolen: In "Surely You Joust", the Ghostbusters disguise themselves in order to take Orlox by surprise by taking armor from some ghost knights while they're bathing in a river.
440* GrailInTheGarbage: In one episode, Ray finds himself in possession of the shears belonging to the Three Fates, finding them on the ground just as he needs to cut something. He keeps them, forcing Clotho to chase him all over New York to try to (discreetly) get them back, because she's the one who dropped them in the first place. As far as he can tell, they're just a pair of scissors, but they're really awesome scissors.
441* GrandTheftMe: Happened to Egon most of the time, the two best-known cases being:
442** "If I Were A Witch Man", being possessed by a witch-like ghost.
443** Another time was in "Egon on the Rampage", when his soul was sucked out due to a machine malfunction, and a demon escaped and took his body for a ride, turning him into a purple Hulk expy.
444** The demon Watt possessed Peter in "Mrs. Rogers' Neighborhood" in an attempt to open the Containment Unit.
445** Everyone including Janine and Slimer (don't ask) ''except'' Egon gets possessed in "Ghostworld".
446* GratuitousSpanish: In "Something's Going Around", Slimer answers the phone with "Ghostbusters, se habla Espanol?" Later on, Peter exclaims "¡Que pasa!" when Slimer gets up in his face and makes it swell--[[spoiler:A reaction to ectoplasmic energy caused by eating some strange chips given to them by a ghostly doctor.]]
447* GreatBigBookOfEverything: Tobin's Spirit Guide, Egon's go-to resource for learning more about the MonsterOfTheWeek.
448* GreaterScopeVillain:
449** There is the infrequent reference (such as in "Chicken, He Clucked," "Hanging by a Thread" or "The Devil to Pay") to a {{Satan}} or "Lord of evil"-type character.
450** Gozer could also be considered an example since the show featured several instances of the Ghostbusters mentioning him and the possibility for him returning.
451* {{Greed}}: Mr. Tummel in “You Can’t Take It With You” is a miserly old man who is so greedy he plotted to send all his money into the ghost world so that he could take it with him after death. This causes ghosts to flood into the real world, which doesn’t concern him as long as he gets to keep his fortune.
452* HalloweenEpisode: Four examples:
453** "When Halloween Was Forever": A pair of ghosts free Samhain, the Spirit of Halloween, whose goal is to create a permanent Halloween night.
454** "Halloween 2½": Samhain is freed from the Containment Unit and tries to again achieve his goal, while also seeking revenge against the Ghostbusters.
455** The ''Slimer!'' short "Sweet Revenge": Slimer plans to go trick-or-treating with his friend Fred the Dog, having to watch out for his nemesis Professor Dweeb attempting to capture him as usual as well as Goolem and Zugg seeking revenge against the spud for sending them to the South Pole.
456** "The Halloween Door": Seeking to end Halloween forever, a Moral Guardian steals Ghostbuster tech to use for his machine. Doing so, however, breaks an ancient, ghostly contract--allowing hordes of supernatural terrors to invade New York City. The only one not to feature Samhain, a choice on [=JMS=]'s part owing to the previously mentioned AuthorTract.
457* HammyVillainSeriousHero: Downplayed for the [[ThingsThatGoBumpInTheNight Boogieman]]. He's certainly hammy (with lines like "What's that? FEAR! [[EmotionEater Delicious, delicious fear!"]]), but out of his enemies the Ghostbusters, only one of them (Egon) is stoic (the others are a DeadpanSnarker, a GenkiGuy, and a normal guy). That said, Egon is the one who bumps heads with him the most due to him having met the Boogieman as a kid.
458* HauntedHeadquarters: The Ghostbusters share their home with thousands of entities they've caught. Although the ghosts are isolated in their basement containment unit, there's always the threat of a jailbreak that can turn the firehouse into Spook Central.
459* HauntedHouse: Several, with Heck House as the great-granddaddy of them all.
460-->'''Egon:''' That place chews up paranormal investigators like [[BigEater Slimer]] goes through jelly beans.
461* HauntedTechnology: One episode featured a ghost trapped in a vat of molten steel. Every object made with the ghost's steel wound up coming to life and wreaking havoc.
462** Basically all the ghosts in "Killer-Watt" are possessed appliances and power tools.
463* HeWhoFightsMonsters: Invoked in "The Halloween Door" after [[MoralGuardians Dr. Crowley]] turns on his anti-Halloween machine and finds to his horror that [[TheIgor Fairweather]] [[spoiler: was a demon all along, manipulating him to break the Halloween contract.]]
464-->'''Fairweather:''' You forgot The First Rule of Fanatics: When you become obsessed with the enemy, you ''become'' the enemy!
465* HeadlessHorseman: "The Headless Motorcyclist" featured a descendant of Ichabod Crane cursed by a headless apparition on a motorcycle who chases her.
466* HeelFaceTurn: Slimer and Stay-Puft (Although in the latter's case, whether he was good or evil could be DependingOnTheWriter). Robo-Buster also counts once Egon reworked its proton guns so they fired the same types of beams as the Ghostbusters' weapons and it helped our heroes clean up the mess its creator had caused.
467* HellOnEarth: Heavily implied to be the result of breaking the Halloween contract in "The Halloween Door." While it could qualify as a GhostInvasion the invaders are explicitly stated to be demons, not ghosts.
468* HeroicSacrifice: The title character of the episode "Drool the Dog-Faced Goblin" did this to save a group of humans that were trapped by a murderous shape-changing phantom. Drool's biting the phantom forced it to let up on its attack and gave the Ghostbusters time to zap it, but Drool was caught by the proton beams too and couldn't escape. When the boys hesitated about using the traps for fear of taking Drool with the phantom, he told them to go ahead and do it.
469** There have been a few of episodes where the boys themselves very nearly have to pull a HeroicSacrifice to save the world. Fortunately, they always seem to get a reprieve.
470* HiddenDepths: Given the way he behaves, you'd almost forget that Peter has a doctorate. He actually comes up with several good plans against ghosts, such as capturing Nexa (a primordial god). He's also a softie at heart, which could lead one to consider that he actively employs a {{Jerkass}} facade.
471* HistoricalInJoke: An Amelia Earheart-alike is stranded in another dimension.
472* HollywoodDensity: The ending of "You Can't Take It With You" has not just paper money falling from the sky on the Ghostbusters but also gold bars. In reality, gold is very heavy. Falling gold bars would make dents in the ground and would be heavy to lift.
473* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The boys did this to themselves when they became the Crimebusters. After they nailed the Crimelord and destroyed his rackets, they essentially put an end to all the criminal activity in New York and ran themselves out of business. Fortunately, that was about the time when [[StatusQuoIsGod ghosts began crawling out of the woodwork again...]]
474** Egon also has a tendency to do this to himself whenever he gets too complacent about his own genius. Lampshaded by himself in at least one episode.
475---> '''Egon''': Sometimes I think the universe just waits for me to get cocky.
476%%* {{Hunk}}: Peter, surprisingly.
477%%* HybridMonster
478* HypocriticalHeartwarming: Peter comes to Slimer's defense in "When Halloween Was Forever":
479-->'''Peter''': Leave him alone! Nobody picks on the spud but me!
480* IgnoredExpert: Ray's aunt invites him and the other Ghostbusters to her house for a seance by a sketchy "spiritualist", who is actually a con artist. Despite her nephew and his friends' extensive knowledge of dealing with spirits, she chooses to trust the con artist's methods, waving off the Ghostbusters' warnings. It went as well as one would think.
481* ImagineSpot: Peter conjures up a whole music video in "Banshee Bake a Cherry Pie?"
482* ImpliedDeathThreat: From ''Egon'' of all people, played for laughs in "Who are you Calling Two-Dimensional?" after Peter mocks his latest backfired experiment.
483--> '''Peter''': "Incalculable value to science," eh Egon?
484--> '''Egon''': Peter. Do you know how to set your proton pack on explosive overload?
485--> '''Peter''': No.
486--> '''Egon''': I ''DO''.
487--> '''Peter''': ...... Now that I think about it, it was a good effort, Egon. A really, really good effort. Heh, science would be proud.
488* ImNotAfraidOfYou: The team's mantra: "If you're not afraid, then it can't hurt you".
489* IncredibleShrinkingMan: In "Short Stuff", the Ghostbusters get shrunk by one of the Ghostmaster's bounty hunters. They then spend the remainder of the episode trying to evade the bounty hunter while Janine and Slimer look up a spell to return the Ghostbusters to normal size.
490* InformedSpecies: In "Stay Tooned", the Ghostbusters confront a slapstick cartoon character named Sammy K. Ferret. In spite of the SpeciesSurname, Sammy looks more like a fox than a ferret.
491* InkSuitActor: Walt Fleischman from "Who Are You Calling Two-Dimensional?” is a caricature of his voice actor Creator/DonMessick.
492* InsaneTrollLogic: Venkman, at times. One notable example is in "Citizen Ghost", where Egon catches Peter mindlessly answering "Check" to each of Egon's queries of how every part the Containment Unit is by asking how the transwarp drive is. When told that there isn't a transwarp drive, Peter reasons that if there isn't a transwarp drive, then the Containment Unit can't malfunction and is therefore in top condition. Egon replies that he's going to avoid talking to Peter for at least a week.
493-->[[LampshadeHanging "Hey, don't make fun. This is how I got through college."]]
494* InTheBlood: Winston is a possible example. In a previous life, he was an African shaman who battled supernatural monsters. He's doing it again in 20th century New York, only now he uses proton packs and ghost traps instead of magic spells.
495* ItsAWonderfulPlot: Kinda, sorta, as an unreformed Scrooge turns London into his version of Pottersville.
496* ItsPersonal: Egon says this word for word when Peter asked him why he took on the job of taking on the Boogieman. He states the Boogieman was the reason why Egon immersed himself in the supernatural.
497* IWantMyMommy: In the episode "Look Homeward, Ray", Alan Favish can be heard yelling, "Mommy" while being chased by the Winged Puma of Morrisville.
498* JekyllAndHyde: Slimer undergoes this in "The Two Faces of Slimer", where an ectoplasmic leak from the Containment Unit causes him to transform into a larger, uglier, and more vicious ghost (dubbed "Big Green" by the Ghostbusters) whenever he goes to sleep.
499* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Peter Venkman, period. He complained the most, got freaked out the most, and was somewhat of a douche at times, but if any of his friends, or even any civilians were in danger, he'd be the first one to jump into it to save them.
500** This is particularly evident in his relationship with Slimer. Peter would normally yell at or threaten Slimer if he was being annoyed. However, Peter was not one to tolerate anyone harming Slimer, as seen in "Citizen Ghost." ("You zapped my little buddy!")
501* JerkassHasAPoint: On the other hand, as mean as Peter can be towards Slimer, the fact is that Slimer eats every scrap of food he sees without a second thought, up to the point of stealing it out of someone's hands, as well as the fact he gets slime on everything he touches, does make Slimer a rather annoying pet. Despite the fact Slimer is intelligent enough to speak and understand things, he never seems to try to improve his behavior even when acknowledging he crossed the line.
502* JewishMother: Egon's mom. Not explicitly stated, but the stereotype is there, right down to feeding him a special mix of chicken soup, tea and a bunch of other stuff, when he falls ill with a cold. When the other boys fall sick in the same episode, just as she's about to leave, she decides to stick around until they're back to full health. Also does the, "my son the suchandsuch" thing frequently.
503* JokerJury: "Jailbusters" has the ghostbusters kidnapped into the Ghost World and facing a trial for their "crimes" against the ghost kind.
504* JokersLoveJunkFood: Slimer will eat almost anything, but he seems to have a preference for things like soda, cakes, pizza, and potato chips, and is introduced having eaten ''four'' large boxes of custom chocolates that the guys had brought to the firehouse as a gift for Janine.
505* JumpScare: The episode ''Knock Knock'' is filled with random nonsensical horror right out of ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'', and this lends itself to a large number of these that largely disappear after the scare is done:
506** We have a mysterious woman who's just standing there with her back to the camera while the Ghostbusters survive a monstrous living train. Arriving at the stop, the figure just continues to stand there. When the Ghostbusters approach her, offering their help, she turns around, revealing a skeletal face, laughs at them insane, grows to giant size, then explodes.
507** Egon finds a stone that basically explains the plot of the episode... and ''after'' they've walked away and left, the camera zooms in at the stone... a face appears on it and it begins laughing evily. Cue commercial break.
508** Then they spot normal looking humans shackled to a skeletal boat, who tirelessly row. A well dressed skeleton with a cane and binoculars repeatedly comments on seeing dirt again and again. The rowers beg how all they've seen for centuries is dirt. The captain says not to row so fast, after all, they've got all eternity. At this point, the Ghostbusters pretend they didn't even see it.
509* JustifiedTitle: The show was called "The Real Ghostbusters" to legally distinguish itself from ''WesternAnimation/FilmationsGhostbusters'', due to Filmation owning the rights to the title "Ghostbusters". The slightly awkward title was justified in-universe in an episode where it was explained that the live-action movie was based on the exploits of the animated-characters, hence making them the "real" Ghostbusters.
510** A much earlier episode had 3 ghosts running around claiming that THEY were the Ghostbusters, hoping to discredit the business- which also justified the title in-universe.
511* KangarooCourt: In "Jailbusters," the guys are kidnapped to the Ghostworld and put on trial for crimes against ghostkind.
512-->'''Ray:''' I'd say we have two chances for a fair trial: zilch and none.
513* KillAndReplace: In the "Citizen Ghost" {{flashback}}, the doppelganger ghost take the form of the Ghostbusters, and also try to take their spot by killing off the originals.
514* KissingDiscretionShot: When Egon uses a [[HomemadeInventions homemade dream-reader]] to show Ray, Winston, and Slimer a blissfully unaware Peter's fantasy, we see a brief shot of a city skyline on the monitor before the "camera" turns to show their reactions to what we can't see.
515-->'''Ray:''' Hey, isn't that Peter in a Batman suit?
516-->'''Winston:''' And that's [[Film/Batman1989 Kim Basinger!]]
517-->'''Slimer:''' Ooooh! Ewwww, mushy...
518-->'''Egon:''' ''<shakes his head to dis-enthrall himself>'' I...ahem...think we've seen enough. ''<unplugs the machine>''
519-->'''Peter:''' ''<still asleep, hugging a pillow>'' Oh, come on Kim, don't leave! We're both Scorpios!
520* KnightTemplar[=/=]WellIntentionedExtremist: The titular antagonist in "Mr. Sandman, Dream Me a Dream" and Jeremy in "Ragnarok and Roll". Robo-Buster was this too, but his way of dealing with ghosts was unknowingly creating something ''worse''.
521* KnightOfCerebus: While the show was usually light-hearted in nature, there were many episodes featuring a ghost that was truly sinister, serious, and far more lethal than most threats the boys in gray faced. Notable examples include the Boogieman, who scared the living daylights out of children ForTheEvulz, and the Grundel, who's M.O. was corrupting kids to transform them into members of his own kind. One example that really stands out, though, is Mee-Krah from the episode "Standing Room Only". The episode in question was from one of the LighterAndSofter later seasons, but Mee-Krah was an EldritchAbomination that sought to devour every ghost it could find and had caused an alarming swath of destruction before the Ghostbusters succeeded in destroying it.
522* KnownByThePostalAddress: The 'Busters are called to investigate a haunted house, which Winston says is likely to be the real thing, unlike previous false alarms, because the address is 1313, 13th Street.
523* LampshadeHanging: Winston and Ray get up to a bit of this in "Ain't NASA-Sarily So", where they meet a spaceship crew that are blatant stand-ins for the cast of ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'':
524--> '''Winston:''' ''(upon meeting the crew of Space Station Galileo)'' "Do these people look familiar to you?"
525--> '''Ray:''' "I was just about to ask you that!"
526* LargeHam: Quite a lot of the ghost villains speak loudly and energetically, but the one that stands out the most is the Master of Shadows from "Slimer, Is That You?"
527* LaserGuidedKarma: When Ray's Aunt Lois hired PhonyPsychic Dr. Bassingame to hold a seance in her house, he angered the very real Domovoi spirits that lived in it. The Domovoi ran amuck and the Ghostbusters had to trap them before they wrecked the whole house. The Ghostbusters forced Dr. Bassingame to pay for the repairs to Lois's house by threatening to unleash the Domovoi on his house instead. One of the Domovoi who escaped the Ghostbusters also hitched a ride on Bassingame's car as he left.
528* LastOfHisKind: "Surely You Joust" had the Ghostbusters help out a ghostly dragon who states that she is the last of her kind. An evil wizard named Orlox intends to use her heart to create a magic potion enabling him to conquer the Realm of Fantasy, but the Ghostbusters help the dragon defeat him.
529* LastSecondJokeProblem:
530** At the end of "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS6E4Ghostworld Ghostworld]]", all the characters who'd been [[DemonicPossession possessed]] have been exorcised, Egon (who'd had a cold) has recovered, and the ghosts and their demon leader have been caught... however, the final scene reveals that the rest of the Ghostbusters ([[RidiculouslyAliveUndead and Slimer, somehow]]) have caught Egon's cold.
531** "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS5E2SomethingsGoingAround Something's Going Around]]" ends with the Ghostbusters' supernatural ailments cured and the ghosts caught. Unfortunately however, Janine has to stay at the firehouse while her apartment is being renovated and [[RightOnQueue the Ghostbusters and Slimer are made to wait in line]] outside the bathroom while she takes a bath.
532* {{Leitmotif}}:
533** The main theme tends to play whenever the Ghostbusters are doing something particularly impressive.
534** Slimer has his own theme, which mainly plays when he does something stupid.
535%%* LethalChef: Ray, although one time Egon fed them all sweat sandwiches.
536* LightningCanDoAnything: The Ghostbusters' proton beams don't faze Cthulhu at all, but they eventually get the idea to focus their beams on a nearby metal rollercoaster track. The sheer amount of electricity surging through the metal framework is enough to hold Cthulhu in place, attracting the lightning bolts to send him back to his infernal prison, although it's specifically mentioned that they only imprisoned the monster, rather than destroying him.
537* LikeASurgeon: In the episode "Three Men and an Egon",' after Egon gets turned into a baby, the other Ghostbusters treat his subsequent diaper change like they're doing surgery.
538* LimitedWardrobe: Surprisingly averted. The show focused on their job, so the boys were often in uniform, but they were often shown out of uniform as well, and appeared in multiple different outfits, both formal and casual. They were even shown to own multiple pairs of pyjamas.
539** Janine (at least initially) had a realistically varied wardrobe, and would make an attempt to dress properly for the occasion (saving her tank top/mini skirt combo for regular days at the office, perhaps in an attempt to impress Egon, and dressing more conservatively when she has to say, visit the boys in the hospital or have dinner with her family).
540* LivingDream: The Sandman's MO; he puts his victims to sleep, and their dreams come to life. Three of the Ghostbusters fall victim to this: Ray dreamed of a giant pizza (which fell on and covered Ecto-1), Peter dreamed of driving a solid gold car while being showered with all sorts of awards and prizes, and Egon dreamed of... UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein.
541** Winston managed to devise a plan based on this by having Janine fall victim to the sleep, where she dreamed herself as a Ghostbuster, assisting Winston to capture the Sandman and awaken everyone in the city.
542* LouisCypher: "The Devil To Pay" played with this, where the Ghostbusters encountered a demonic game show host named Dib Devlin, who tries to get their souls. It is clarified that Dib is actually a minor demon and not the Devil per se.
543* LuxuryPrisonSuite:
544** The Boo York Peoplebusters have their own containment unit. It's actually quite pleasant inside, simulating sunny green fields, shady trees, and singing birds.
545** Since everything in Boo York is reversed, it could imply that the interior of the Ghostbusters' containment unit is similarly pleasant for the ghosts they catch. (It is implied in one episode that a ghost who hates noise would be happy in there; convincing it to surrender is a problem, because even the sound of ''talking'' makes it angry.)
546* MadnessMantra: Winston after he realises he signed a contract with a demon that might forfeit his soul in "The Devil to Pay".
547-->'''Winston''': ''(horrified, and in a CreepyMonotone)'' I have sold my soul to the devil. I have sold my soul to the devil. I have sold my soul to the devil.
548-->'''Ray''': Actually, Winston, Dib is a minor demon, not the devil per se.
549-->'''Winston''': ... I have sold my soul to a minor demon. I have sold my soul to a minor demon...
550* {{Manchild}}: Ray is a more realistic version of this trope, in that he's fully mature but also possesses a childlike idealism and enthusiasm for life. This actually helps the Ghostbusters lure the Boogieman once they figure out a way to trap the monster.
551* ManOfAThousandVoices: Creator/FrankWelker (Ray, Slimer, numerous ghosts), Creator/MauriceLaMarche (Egon, the Umpire in "Night Game", numerous other ghosts), Laura Summer (Janine and occasional female ghosts).
552** Creator/KathSoucie was the second voice for Janine and did a number of supporting voices, as well.
553* MarriedToTheJob: Much like firefighters, the Ghostbusters are on-call 24/7, so it can be tough to maintain outside relationships.
554-->'''Janine:''' Ghostbusters are heartbreakers, kid. Don't get too close to 'em.
555* MeaningfulName: Ray gave Slimer his name "just to annoy Peter."
556* MerchandiseDriven: Despite being a 1980s cartoon series, and despite the fact Creator/{{Kenner}} had a MASSIVE line of toys to tie in with the cartoon... not really. Early series toys were based mostly on the initial test pilot with some changes to match the final product, leading to oddities like a fat Ray and "Green Ghost" being evil instead of a toy of Slimer, as well as the only toy of Stay-Puft being a measly 6" tall. Very few toys made their way into the cartoon and not many toys based directly on the cartoon were produced. Furthermore, the toys relied on a lot of oddball gimmicks which the show never bothered with. The Ecto-2 (a small helicopter) did show up a few times, although the animated version sat two people instead of one. Janine received a few toys though only one had a proper animation model face. Louis Tully got a few figures after ''Film/GhostbustersII'' and his introduction into the series. Slimer did not get a proper toy until later on when he was released with his own proton pack, and roughly twice the size he should've been to be to scale. Poor Samhain didn't get a toy until ''Extreme Ghostbusters'' (in which he never appeared) came around (and he was off-model).
557** Speaking of which, the ''WesternAnimation/ExtremeGhostbusters'' toys sort of subverted some of this by being closer to the animation. Two major ghost toys were in actual episodes and Slimer got two toys- one rather large, another as a pack-in accessory. Garrett was never made as the toy line ended due to poor sales before a second series was made.
558** We did not finally see new tie-in toys until many years later when Creator/{{Mattel}} released them in a series based on 1970s Mego toys. The 4 Ghostbusters are based on their animation models, a proper Janine figure in suit with proton pack was made, and an actual Samhain figure was produced, along with a proper scale Slimer.
559* MirrorUniverse: Our heroes once ventured into a parallel dimension where ''ghosts'' were the normal inhabitants, and ''the living'' were the ones that haunted them. This universe was protected by the Peoplebusters, who zapped living humans and trapped them in a "containment unit" that replicated the conditions of our own world.
560** This led to their undoing, as the overwhelming negative energy of the flip side prevented the Ghostbuster's weapons from functioning outside the unit, but when they found a way out and the Peoplebusters gave chase...
561* MissingMom: Peter's mother is implied to have died, and he is more serious than usual whenever the subject of her comes up.
562** "The Thing in Mrs. Faversham's Attic" practically waves on the audience's face that Peter's mom died and he regrets not having spent more time with her when he still had the chance. This leads to a tearjerker ending where Peter returns to Mrs. Faversham's place to visit the old lady, as she is completely alone in the world, just as Peter's mother was before she died.
563* MissingReflection: In "No One Comes to Lupisville", Egon notices that their "hosts" don't have reflections.
564* MistakenForOwnMurderer: In "Poultrygeist", when a woman named Maude turns into a "were-chicken", her husband believes it ate her. Later, she lays an egg, which hatches into another were-chicken, which bites Egon and he turns into a third were-chicken, causing Peter to think Egon was eaten.
565* MonsterInTheIce: In "Cold Cash and Hot Water", Jim Venkman finds one of these in Alaska; it turns out to be Hob Anagarak, a very powerful demon [[SealedEvilInACan encased in a block of black ice]]. The black ice can't be melted except with the use of special magic spells.
566* MonsterOfTheWeek: While some antagonists would return for another go at the Ghostbusters or at least an occasional cameo in the Containment Unit among the other imprisoned ghosts, the majority of episodes had the Ghostbusters facing a different supernatural threat that is never seen again after they defeat it.
567* MonsterTown: "No One Comes to Lupusville" features a town that has been conquered by vampires. When the Ghostbusters free the original inhabitants from the jail, [[spoiler:they turn out to be werewolves. A MeleeATrois rapidly commences between the Ghostbusters, the werewolves, and two factions of vampires (the rulers of the town and a benevolent group that has been trying to live in peaceful isolation)]].
568* MrAltDisney: Walt Fleishman in the episode "Who're You Calling Two Dimensional?" seems to be a cross between Walt Disney and Max & Dave Fleischer (hence the name), with some of his characters resembling Tex Avery's.
569** He is also voiced by Hanna-Barbera mainstay, Don Messick.
570* MrFanservice: A few episodes portray Peter as rather buff.
571* MsFanservice: It wasn't all the time, but there are several instances of Janine in skimpy outfits or playing with her shoes, and in "Janine Melnitz" Ghostbuster" there's even a scene of her in the shower. In another episode, Janine shows up to work in only a bikini due to a heat wave hitting the city.
572* MundaneSolution: When attempting to break into a skyscraper from the roof, Ray suggests rappeling off the side and crash through the window. He, Egon, and Winston barely manage to get in safely. Peter, however, surprised the others when he suddenly entered through the safety of the stairwell. He simply picked the rooftop door lock.
573* MundaneUtility: Slimer's ectoplasm makes great hair gel, though Peter wasn't all that happy about getting the treatment.
574* MysticalWhiteHair: When Ray gets pulled into a ghost dimension temporarily then flung back into the Earth realm, his hair turned white and stood on end. It reverts by next episode.
575* MythologyGag: "Egon's Ghost," "The Copycat" and "Jailbusters" feature terror dogs similar to Zuul.
576** In "Buster the Ghost," as in the first movie, the guys' TV commercial ends with them saying, "We're ready to believe you."
577** "I Am the City" recalls a memorable moment from the first movie (though uses Peter instead of Ray):
578--->'''Marduk:''' Are you going to stop me?! Are you gods?!\
579'''Peter:''' Uh--\
580'''Winston:''' ''(covers Peter's mouth)'' Yo, don't you say a word.
581** The episode "Partners in Slime" featured an appearance by the mood slime from the second movie, albeit colored yellow instead of pink. However, the slime turned pink like it was in the film at the end of the episode.
582[[/folder]]
583
584[[folder:Tropes N-Z]]
585* NakedPeopleAreFunny: In "Sea Fright", Captain Jack Higgins' crew steal the clothes off a cowboy. He's only seen from the waist up, but a woman ends up shrieking at the sight of his state of undress.
586->'''Cowboy''': Ma was right. I should've never left Houston.
587* TheNameIsBondJamesBond: Peter Venkman pulls this off in the episode "Jailbusters".
588-->'''Peter Venkman''': The name is Venkman. Peter Venkman.
589* NatureTinkling: Brought up in "Camping It Up", when Slimer tells Winston that he has to go and Winston informs him that there are no bathrooms in the great outdoors and that he'll have to relieve himself behind a tree.
590* NeedleInAStackOfNeedles: When a ghost kidnaps Egon and the others go out to look for him, it's a difficult prospect.
591-->'''Ray:''' See anything suspicious?
592-->'''[[DeadpanSnarker Peter:]]''' Suspicious? In Lower Manhattan? At nearly midnight? [[SarcasmMode Naaaah!]][[note]]By "lower Manhattan", they hopefully mean the lower ''middle'' of Manhattan like Greenwich Village, Soho, etc., and not the Financial District or Battery Park, which are absolutely vacant and uninteresting at night.[[/note]]
593* NeverMyFault: Dr. Crowley in "The Halloween Door" winds up accidentally releasing a horde of demons upon Earth because of his idiotic self-righteous bid to rid society of Halloween. When it is resolved, not only does the bastard refuse to take responsibility for what he caused, he uses the event as an excuse to [[TooDumbToLive "redouble his efforts and try again"]].
594* NeverSayDie: Usually averted, as some cases explicitly involved ghosts of dead people. Played straight with "Egon's Ghost," where WordOfGod acknowledged that they had to tip-toe around the subject as best as possible.
595* NiceJobBreakingItHero: Paul Smart is a CorruptCorporateExecutive who steals the Ghostbusters' technology and tries to run them out of business by using their weapons to create a ghostbusting robot called Robo-Buster, stating that Robo-Buster could destroy ghosts rather than just capture them. Unfortunately, all the ghosts zapped by Robo-Buster simply have their energies dissipated, and all this ectoplasmic power simply combines into one gigantic ghost that threatens to destroy the whole city.
596** The Ghostbusters trapping [[Literature/AChristmasCarol the Ghosts of Past, Present and Future Christmas]], effectively changing history and turning Christmas into a hate day.
597* NiceJobFixingItVillain: An old miser on his deathbed uses a machine to transport all his wealth to the spirit realm in order to take it with him once he dies, not caring that in doing so, he's releasing hundreds of ghosts on the world. The Ghostbusters use his greed against him to make him overload his equipment in an attempt to transport his entire building to the spirit world because "there might not be any hotels there". He succeeds in transporting the building, but it also caused the spirit gate to pull back all the ghosts released before shutting. Oh, and because of the huge volume of the building, all the money the miser transported wound up being brought back to Earth again.
598* NiceKitty: When the shapeshifting MonsterOfTheWeek in "Drool, the Dog-Faced Goblin" transforms into a giant cockroach, Peter slowly backs away from it, saying that he loves cockroaches and always does nice things to them, like leaving dirty dishes in the sink and never cleaning the counters.
599* NightmareFace: The giant EldritchAbomination in the sky in "Ragnarok 'n' Roll" was a horrific disembodied face.
600* NobodyTouchesTheHair: Venkman doesn't like having his hair messed up. A RunningGag in the episode "Jailbusters", for example, has him whine "I hate that" whenever anyone tousles his hair.
601* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: The Ghostbusters encountered stand-ins for celebrities ranging from Creator/WaltDisney to Creator/AgathaChristie to Casey Jones to Creator/HarryHoudini. Some of them were ghosts who needed the boys' help to complete their UnfinishedBusiness, while others were innocent victims who needed to be rescued.
602** Unlike others in the cast, Creator/MauriceLaMarche was purposefully impersonating Harold Ramis. He was actually asked not to during his audition, but [=LaMarche=] couldn't think of any other appropriate way to do it. Fortunately, casting liked what they heard and hired him.
603** Dave Coulier's Peter was his Creator/BillMurray impersonation from his act.
604* NoGearLevel: "Play Them Ragtime Boos" where the guys [[BusmansHoliday run into a ghost on vacation]] and have to figure out how to save the day without their weapons.
605* NonSequiturThud: [[ItMakesSenseInContext A giant Al Capone forces Slimer to swerve the car he was driving,]] slamming it into a lamppost and ejecting Peter from the backseat. He lands hard on the pavement several yards away, and Egon rushes over to check on him.
606-->'''Egon:''' Peter! Peter, are you alright?!
607-->'''Peter:''' I'm fine dad...can I borrow the car for the prom tonight? I promise I'll bring it back in one piece this time...''<thud>''
608* NonstandardCharacterDesign: Professor Dweeb and his dog Elizabeth look quite out of place when they appear in anything other than the ''Slimer!'' segments.
609** One scene in "The Slob" alone makes it clear that he has the standard four fingers for cartoon characters - even though that's not the case for other human characters.
610* NoodleIncident: In "The Haunting of Heck House" Ray and Winston are the only ones to go upstairs to their rooms and wind up regretting it, discussing it later in the dining room.
611-->'''Ray:''' ...and it...it tried to grab me.
612-->'''Winston:''' I don't wanna remember, eat your dinner.
613-->'''Ray:''' Yeah, I'll eat my dinner, good idea. <picks up a sandwich with green lettuce> It was...it was ''green'', Winston...
614* NoPlansNoPrototypeNoBackup: In "Standing Room Only," because it never occurs to Peter Venkman to take notes or draw up plans for your invention.
615* NotAMorningPerson: Peter. He habitually sleeps in.
616* NotHelpingYourCase: A good example in "Ragnarok n' Roll"
617-->'''Cindy:''' (she and the other Ghostbusters look at a crater in the street caused by an exploding PKE meter) Is all of your equipment this dangerous?
618-->'''Peter:''' Oh no no no. Well, actually, it is. But we're all very well-trained. We haven't blown up a house in... days.
619** In "Adventures in Slime and Space" when Slimer gets broken into thousands of tiny Slimers, Ray calculates how long it will take for them to come back and reassemble himself.
620--->'''Ray:''' Slimer can't keep shattering forever. Past a certain point, he can't get any smaller! All we have to do is wait, and all the little Slimers will come home!
621--->'''Winston:''' How long?
622--->'''Ray:''' Oh... about four hundred and twelve years.
623--->'''Peter, Egon, Winston, and Janine:''' Four hundred and twelve years...!?
624--->'''Ray:''' Oh whoops, [[HopeSpot I've misplaced the decimal point.]]
625--->(Peter, Egon, Winston, and Janine sigh in relief)
626--->'''Ray:''' Four THOUSAND one hundred and twenty years.
627* NotSoAboveItAll: Egon has these moments, often in regards to Peter.
628-->"Really, Peter, such trivial things should be beneath you. Besides, it was my turn this time."
629* NumberOfTheBeast: In "The Devil to Pay"
630--> '''Egon:''' "Not yet. You still have a way out. You and Ray simply have to win his game show."
631--> '''Ray:''' "According to my data, the odds are only 666,000,000 to 1 AGAINST us."
632--> '''Egon:''' "See? I told you you had a chance."
633* OddFriendship: The Ghostbusters and Slimer.
634-->'''Reporter:''' Isn't it a bit strange for a bunch of Ghostbusters to have a ghost living with them?\
635'''Peter:''' Strange, weird, eccentric, sick - that about covers it.
636* OddReactionOut:
637** In "Ghostbuster of the Year", when the Ghostbusters are put in a contest to see who can trap a ghost named Charles Foster Hearse the first, and the winner will be put on the cover of a magazine called ''Spooks Illustrated'', most of them are excited and keen to be "famous". Winston, however, doesn't like the idea of working alone and believes that fame is overrated.
638** In "The Haunting of Heck House", the Ghostbusters and Slimer are offered to stay the night in a HauntedHouse and win a million dollars just for surviving. Most of them are keen, but Egon is very much not.
639** In "'Til Death Do Us Part", the Ghostbusters and Slimer meet their substitute secretary for when Janine is on vacation, Dixie. Most of them find her extremely attractive, but Egon pays her no heed.
640* OhCrap: Twice over after Cthulhu himself is summoned. First, the Ghostbusters try blasting him and cause only minimal damage, which heals up immediately anyway. When the Ghostbusters try again, Cthulhu looks directly at them.
641-->'''Winston:''' Uh-oh! I think we made it mad!\
642'''Egon:''' RUN FOR IT!
643* {{Omniglot}}: In addition to having multiple doctorates, Egon is fluent in Sumerian, Russian, English, Japanese, American Sign Language, and Troll.
644-->'''Winston:''' Can you read Sumerian?
645-->'''Egon:''' In my sleep, underwater, and with the lights off. Of ''course'' I can read Sumerian!
646* OnlyInItForTheMoney: Peter Venkman is usually the member most likely to only care about getting paid for busting ghosts, to the point of complaining whenever Ray tries to pressure him into taking care of supernatural disturbances free of charge, but there are occasional exceptions.
647** One of the exceptions to Peter's unwillingness to work for free is in "You Can't Take It With You," where after they trick a miser into putting his building into the Netherworld, gold and cash rain down on them. Peter, after an evil grinning look to the other Ghostbusters, reluctantly doesn't take the riches (the cops show up not too long after).
648** Yet another case of Peter willingly making an exception in getting paid is in "The Thing in Miss Faversham's Attic." The old woman doesn't have much money, and Peter assures her that "it'll only cost [her] a smile." He admits later that she reminds him of his mother; his voice has a tinge of sadness and regret.
649* TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou: After being freed from the Containment Unit in "The Slob", the Sleaze is revealed to desire revenge against Slimer, to the point that he doesn't want anyone else to capture the spud. The Ghostbusters end up using this to their advantage when they have Professor Dweeb pretend to capture Slimer in order to manipulate the Sleaze and the Glob into separating from their merged Slob form in order to make it easier to trap them.
650* OnlySaneMan: Every Ghostbuster has these moments throughout the series, but Winston being TheEveryman meant he usually led the pack.
651-->'''Winston''': Sometimes I think between the four of us we don't have the brains God gave a doorknob.
652* OnOneCondition: In ''The Haunting of Heck House'' the Ghostbusters stood to inherit millions of dollars as long as they stay in the most haunted house on Earth for a night--''without their proton packs.'' [[spoiler: To defeat the house they have to use the wiring inside to turn it into one big ghost trap. Unfortunately the house is SO haunted that spiritual energy takes up most of the structure, so it collapses in on itself and they're forced to leave it or be crushed inside. [[DownerEnding Sadly]], the lawyer sees this before time runs out, and is forced by the will to [[StatusQuoIsGod deny them the cash]] since there was no self-preservation escape clause provided in the will; they HAD to stay in the house ''even if doing so killed them.'']]
653* OpenMouthInsertFoot: Peter is usually the prime suspect, like in "Ragnarok N' Roll".
654--> '''Cindy:''' When we broke up, Jeremy tookit pretty hard. He went a little... well...
655--> '''Peter:''' Nuts? Bonkers? Monkeys? Loopy? Loony? Crackers?
656--> '''Egon:''' I think we get the idea. Go ahead. Pay no attention to him. We never do.
657* OriginsEpisode: "Citizen Ghost" consists mainly of flashbacks that take place shortly after the events of [[Film/Ghostbusters1984 the movie]] and explain why the Ghostbusters wore multi-colored jumpsuits, why the Containment Unit is larger and a different design, and how Slimer came to be their ally.
658* OrphanedPunchline: In ''Rollerghoster,'' Egon tells a joke over a plate of spaghetti.
659-->'''Egon:''' So then he says, "Where's my hydrogen cyanate?" Imagine his surprise when it turned out to be cadmium chloride!
660-->''<Ray and Egon laugh, but Peter and Winston don't>''
661-->'''[[DeadpanSnarker Peter:]]''' We've gotta get this boy on the Creator/DavidLetterman show.
662* OurBansheesAreLouder "Banshee Bake a Cherry Pie?" featured a banshee named Shanna O'Callahan posing as a rock musician who intended to utilize her fame to ensure that her voice causes destruction and chaos on a vast scale.
663* OurWerebeastsAreDifferent: The episode "Poultryergeist" features werechickens, who infect human beings through their bites. Egon turned into one when he became infected.
664* OutOfControlPopcorn: Slimer apparently ate a huge amount of corn kernels that when subjected to an experiment by Egon, it caused all the kernels in him to pop into popcorn. It was strong enough that it blew the room's door open, causing an avalanche of popcorn.
665* ParanormalInvestigation: Well they have to figure out what they're busting before they whip out the proton packs.
666* PhonyPsychic: Dr. Bassingame is a thoroughly sleazy example of this trope, a fake medium who claimed he could talk to spirits. His meddling with the supernatural often caused disaster, and the Ghostbusters had to clean up his messes.
667* PityTheKidnapper: In "The Ransom of Greenspud", three ghosts kidnap Slimer and try to use him as leverage to get the Ghostbusters to free their boss Spiderlegs from the Containment Unit. Until the Ghostbusters come to Slimer's rescue and capture the ghosts holding him hostage, Slimer drives the three ghosts crazy with his demands for food.
668* PlagueEpisode:
669** In "Nothing to Sneeze At", all of the Ghostbusters catch the flu, leaving Slimer in charge.
670** Downplayed in "Ghost World"-- for most of the episode, it's just Egon who's sick (with a cold), but at the end, Venkman, Ray, Winston, and even Slimer, have caught his cold.
671* PlotDrivenBreakdown: A few episodes introduced these to deprive the Ghostbusters of their equipment to force them to think their way out.
672* {{Poltergeist}}: There are alot of poltergeists in episodes like "Slimer, Come Home" and "Cry Uncle".
673* PortraitPaintingPeephole: A portrait of a woman with moving eyes is seen at one point in the episode "Boo Dunnit".
674* PostModernism: "Take Two" is about the actual ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'' movie being based on the Ghostbusters in this series, when they fought Gozer.
675* PostModernMagik: Part of the premise, and especially apparent when the Ghostbusters have to get creative against a supernatural enemy (such as charging up a roller coaster rail to briefly turn Cthulhu into a lightning rod).
676* PostVictoryCollapse: At the end of "Mr. Sandman, Dream Me a Dream," Winston falls asleep (while Janine can't blame him; everyone else had been sleeping thanks to the Sandman) after having to stay awake the entire episode.
677** SleepCute: Slimer cuddles up the sleeping Winston and goes to sleep himself, with the others going, "Aw..."
678* PottyEmergency:
679** Slimer has two potty emergencies in "Camping It Up". The first happens when the Ghostbusters start driving to the campsite, which has the Ghostbusters chide him for not going before they left. The second happens a little while after they've set up camp and has Winston inform Slimer that he'll have to go behind a tree.
680** Slimer has to go to the bathroom when the Ghostbusters return from their vacation in "Guess What's Coming To Dinner", his suffering exacerbated when the Ghostbusters find that the lock to the front door of the Firehouse has been changed by a family of ghosts moving in.
681* PowderGag: In [[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS5E8ThreeMenAndAnEgon "Three Men and an Egon"]], Egon is [[MerlinSickness aging backwards]], and once he becomes a baby, the rest have to [[TheDiaperChange change his diaper]]. When Slimer tries to powder him, he gets powder everywhere, and everyone (except baby Egon himself) starts coughing and sneezing, with Slimer even sneezing so hard, he launches himself into the trash.
682* PowerLevels: From 1-7 is standard, though there's always a few "stronger than Gozer" beasties that pop up from time to time.
683** Among others, Cthulhu and the antagonist of "Ragnarok and Roll" were stated to be so far off the scale nothing the Ghostbusters have can so much as scratch them.
684* ThePowerOfRock: The Ghostbusters used this & specially tuned instruments to defeat Malachi, a ghostly jazz trumpet player and his band.
685--> '''Winston''': "Egon, are you sure this is gonna work? Malachi's music is pretty powerful."
686--> '''Egon''': "We'll match his rhythms with something even more primal and powerful: Rock & Roll."
687* PoweringVillainRealization: In both encounters with the Boogeyman, the demon's nature on feeding on the fear of his victims is turned against him. In his first episode, the Carter kids decide that they aren't going to be afraid of him anymore, casting out such insults as his head is too big and he looks stupid. This allows the Ghostbusters to get past him and temporarily seal him in his own dimension. In his second appearance, a near fatal fall off of the World Trade Center has Egon in a state of primal fear, though he refuses to admit it. This allows the Boogeyman to free himself from his dimension, as Egon was one of the Boogeyman's former victims. But when the Boogeyman decides to go after the Junior Ghostbusters, Egon goes into PapaWolf mode, his anger and outrage overpowering his fear. He is thus able to free himself and his fellow Ghostbusters from the restraints that the Boogeyman had put them in, and whip up a plan to convert the Boogeyman from demon to ghost so that they could trap him in the Containment Unit once and for all.
688* PunnyName: What was the scientific name of the creature that changed Janine's appearance? Makeoveris Lotsabucks.
689* RageAgainstTheAuthor: A partial example occurs with cartoonist Walt Fleischman, who becomes trapped in his cartoon world when it becomes real. Walt is kidnapped by his villains, who plan to make him suffer all the slapstick abuse he put them through (Quite literally - they've counted precisely how many times he's dropped them down trap doors, hit them with pies, and so on, and are shown keeping track of how many times they've now returned the favor, and how many more they need to do). It's only a partial example because, when the Ghostbusters enter the cartoon world to save Fleischman, his heroes are more than happy to help them save dear old "Uncle Walt".
690%%* RagtagBunchOfMisfits: The Ghostbusters themselves.
691* ReadingsAreOffTheScale: [[InvokedTrope Invoked]] in various forms by Egon when the MonsterOfTheWeek is particularly powerful, usually followed by the PKE meter sparking, smoking, and/or [[ExplosiveInstrumentation exploding.]]
692* RealMenWearPink: Downplayed; the guys aren't over-the-top macho men, but they're far from InTouchWithHisFeminineSide as well:
693** Egon's pink shirt, and the salmon-pink trim on his blue overalls. Also, his love of opera. He's practically fanboying in "A Fright at the Opera."
694** Peter wore a pair of pink bunny slippers while suffering from a ghost allergy, though he may have borrowed them from Janine given that he was sleeping in her apartment. He's also a huge fan of stuffed animals (including a stuffed Stay-Puft that he still sleeps with).
695* ReedRichardsIsUseless: Averted since they do use their super-science equipment to make money. There was even "Ghost Busted", the episode where the guys became crime-fighters during a severe drought in ghost work, and made ''more'' money than they did busting ghosts. That same episode also demonstrated one of the reasons the trope exists; the guys did so well, they effectively made NYC ''crime free'', running themselves out of business. Thank goodness for the ResetButton.
696* RefugeeFromTVLand: During one episode, a comic book superhero was brought into the cartoon world and thought the Ghostbusters were supervillains.
697* ReTool: After the first network season, aspects of the show were changed to try to make the show more appealing, such as more Slimer scenes, making Janine more motherly, and... making the ghosts something other than ghosts.[[note]]The cast and crew are very vocal about their displeasure of this, as they felt it was trying to fix what wasn't broken.[[/note]]
698* ReversePolarity: This stock fictional science technique was used quite often.
699* RidiculouslyAliveUndead: Slimer is a ghost, yet in "Ghostworld", he somehow catches a cold off Egon. It's also shown that Slimer can use the bathroom when he suffers from [[PottyEmergency bathroom emergencies]] in "Camping It Up" and "Guess What's Coming to Dinner", and in "The Boogeyman is Back", he sleeps and later claims to be thirsty. He claims to be thirsty again in "Three Men and an Egon".
700* RidiculouslyLonglivedFamilyName: Two of Egon's ancestors (one seen in "Egon's Dragon" and the other seen in "If I Were a Witch Man") still have his last name, Spengler, despite being around in the medieval age.
701* RightForTheWrongReasons:
702** In "A Ghost Grows in Brooklyn", Ray is right when he says that plants respond to music, however, he thinks it's because they have feelings. Actually, the plants are just responding to the soundwaves and it's not an emotional response.
703** In "Poultrygeist", Peter thinks the farmer just imagined the [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent were-chicken]] because he watches "too many horror films". While the were-chicken is real, the farmer really does watch horror films.
704* RightOutOfMyClothes: Used in "Flip Side", where Egon, Ray, and Winston at one point run into a pair of ghosts moonbathing while fleeing the Peoplebusters. The two ghosts are so frightened by the sight of humans that they leap into the air in fright, leaving their bathing suits behind.
705* RoguesGallery: Downplayed. Villains like the Boogeyman, the Grundle, and Samhain returned for a second round with the Ghostbusters, even if they didn't exactly form a rogues gallery. Many C-list ghosts also reappeared, to prevent the animators from having to create new ones from scratch every episode. Even the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man got a reapperance.
706* RoguesGalleryShowcase: The retooled intro for ''Slimer And the Real Ghostbusters'' featured a number of enemies from earlier seasons, such as Samhain, being zapped by the Ghostbusters.
707* RunningGag:
708** Slimer kissing Janine on the lips, much to her disgust. Prominently features in the first opening to the show and reappears in “Killerwatt” and “Something’s going around”.
709** Peter trying to use the fact that he defeated Gozer as a pickup line. It never works.
710** “Jailbusters” has Venkman getting annoyed by people messing with his hair.
711* TheSandman: A sinister Sandman appeared in an episode, who wanted to put the entire world to sleep, creating a city populated by slumbering people and dreams run amok.
712* SayMyName: It's not the technology that gives away the decade the show was made so much as the characters' habit of saying each other's name just about ''every time'' they address each other.
713* ScrewTheRulesTheyBrokeThemFirst: Defied in ''Night Game'', where the forces of Good face the forces of Evil in a baseball game; Team Evil is clearly cheating, but Team Good is still beholden to the rules. Peter and Ray try to cheat on their behalf by blasting Evil's pitcher, but Egon stops them, because the Umpire told them there were no neutrals in this fight, so whether they knew it or not, they were on Team Good's bench. If they cheated, Good loses.
714* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: In "Adventures in Slime and Space," Peter, Winston, Janine, and even the mayor of New York all contemplate moving to Pittsburgh as millions of tiny Slimer clones leave goop all over New York City.
715* SealedEvilInACan: Quite a few episodes involved the Ghostbusters battling a supernatural being that was imprisoned for years before being recently freed.
716** In "The Boogieman Cometh", the Ghostbusters defeat the Boogieman by using a Ghost Bomb to seal him within his own realm. The Boogieman eventually breaks free in "The Boogieman Is Back" by feeding on Egon's fear after Egon was shaken from nearly falling to his death during a mission.
717** "When Halloween Was Forever" introduced Samhain, pumpkin-headed personification of Halloween, who was trapped in some ancient ruins from Ireland until he was set free by a pair of goblins. Those same goblins later free Samhain from the Containment Unit in "Halloween II 1/2".
718** Janine obtains a magic lamp in "Janine's Genie", the titular genie actually playing Janine for a sap so that he can use her to free the other ghosts imprisoned in the dimension he hails from.
719** "Knock, Knock" had the Doomsday Door, which loosed legions of ghosts and demons on New York City because of some construction workers ignoring the door's warning of "Do not open until Doomsday".
720** The titular creature in "The Thing in Mrs. Faversham's Attic", who was summoned decades ago by Mrs. Faversham's father and bound to the attic in an attempt to keep the entity from causing any harm.
721** "Apocalypse - - What, Now?" had the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, who were sealed inside a book called the Codex of Saint Theopilus until Peter accidentally bought the book at an auction and Janine opened the book after bringing it with her on her lunch break by mistake.
722** The episode "Hard Knight's Day" has Sir Breuse sans Pitie, who was imprisoned within a tapestry by Merlin.
723** "Cold Cash and Hot Water" had Peter Venkman's father and Dr. Bassingame free Hob Anagarak, an ancient demon who was imprisoned in a block of magic black ice.
724** "Moaning Stones" featured The Undying One, a bone demon who was sealed away by the three Moaning Stones of Tangalla and was freed when the stones were united and struck.
725** The antagonist of "It's a Jungle Out There" was an animal demon named Rall, who was imprisoned in a statue of himself.
726** In "The Joke's On Ray", Ray Stantz inherits a joke shop from his uncle Gaylord, which had a trunk containing a pair of mischievous imps among its inventory.
727** "If I Were a Witch Man" had the Ghostbusters summoned by a town called Lewiston to defeat Kestrel, a ghostly witch who was imprisoned in a crystal ball three centuries ago by an ancestor of Egon.
728** "Busters in Toyland" had a greedy demon named Lothgar, who was imprisoned in an enchanted clock and attempted to trick Louis Tully's nephew Lawrence into taking his place.
729** The Containment Unit [=Mk2=] itself qualifies as an example. Over the course of the series its storing away ''millions'' of angry ghosts and demons. If it explodes and they escape, [[EndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt the end result won't be pretty]]. To its credit, it's a ''significant'' improvement over the original [=Mk1=], in that it cannot get overcrowded and overflow, but it is still a machine [[LeakingCanOFEvil that requires constant repair and maintenance]].
730* SequelEpisode: The show would occasionally follow up episodes.
731** "The Boogieman Cometh" was followed by "The Boogieman is Back".
732** "When Halloween Was Forever" was followed by "Halloween II 1/2" and "The Halloween Door".
733* SeriesContinuityError:
734** In "Ain't NASA-Sarily So", the Ghostbusters traveled to a space station to deal with a ghost. However, in "Spacebusters" (which came a few seasons later), Winston mentions that he's always wanted to go into space.
735* SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong: In "It's About Time" [[spoiler: the Ghostbusters thwart a GhostInvasion in [[TheFifties 1959]] and return to find that their firehouse, once slated for demolition to make way for a new expressway, has been declared a national monument to the firefighters that repelled the invasion and can't be touched]].
736* TheShadowKnows: In the episode "Mrs. Rogers' Neighborhood", Peter gets possessed by a ghost/demon. His shadow when under its effect resembles the creature's shape (which by the way looked like a cross of a T. rex and a mole rat).
737* SharedFamilyQuirks:
738** Peter's father is a ConMan, and while Peter himself isn't usually a con man, he has scammed people in the past.
739** Egon's uncle Cyrus is a scientist like him, and apparently there have been other scientists in the family tree. Egon also has an ancestor named Zedekiah who had experience with the supernatural ([[CreatingLifeIsUnforeseen accidentally creating a dragon]]) while Egon himself is a [[WhoYouGonnaCall ghost hunter]].)
740* SheIsNotMyGirlfriend: Janine takes Egon to meet her parents, and later, on a tour of her old neighborhood, but when Venkman teases him about his "da-ate", he insists it wasn't a date. Despite letting Janine cling to his arm both times...
741* SherlockCanRead: A very literal example in "Elementary, My Dear Winston", when Sherlock's spirit starts referring to the team by name without being introduced... because their names are printed on their jumpsuits.
742* ShipTease:
743** "Janine, You've Changed" is ''packed'' with it for Egon and Janine. This crops up a little earlier as well (carrying forward what was in the original movie) but that episode stops just short of making them an OfficialCouple. It was even the last episode JMS wrote for the show, and you have to wonder if he was trying to give longtime fans some payoff...
744** The tease even went on to ''WesternAnimation/ExtremeGhostbusters'' as Egon and Janine (as well as Slimer) are the only original members of the group remaining to help with the new blood. ''Extreme Ghostbusters'' had several moments that blatantly imply and Egon and Janine ''are'' in a relationship, but are remaining private about it.
745* ShoutOut: One of the outros features the Ghostbusters dancing in a similar way as the 1984 Ray Parker Jr. music video.
746** On the other hand Ray Parker Jr. played a major role in the music for the first two seasons of the cartoon show. He wrote the songs that played in the chase scenes (the duo Tahiti performed then). He did the whining guitar solos for the background music. He even sung and reorchestrated the theme song for the intro and outro, playing the guitar along with the band.
747** In the episode "Ragnarok and Roll", there's a scene where the villain of the episode says 'magic words' to gain power. These words are "Ash nazg durbatuluk, ash nazg gimbatul, ash nazg thrakatuluk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul. Khazad-dûm!" The first sentence contains the words inscribed on the One Ring as read in the tongue of Mordor from ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings''. "Khazad-dûm" is the Dwarven name for the Mines of Moria.
748** One throwaway line mentions a guy named [[Literature/TheMetamorphosis Samsa who's been possessed by a cockroach]].
749** In "The Grundel," the Ghostbusters whistle the ''WesternAnimation/InspectorGadget'' theme.
750** As noted in TooDumbToLive below, the Doomsday Door in "Knock, Knock" warns the city workers "Do not open until doomsday!", a probable reference to the ''[[Series/TheOuterLimits1963 Outer Limits]]'' episode "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1963S1E17DontOpenTillDoomsday Don't Open Till Doomsday]]".
751** The episode "Dairy Farm" has the boys and Ray's cousin Samantha barricading themselves in a farmhouse to escape a horde of zombies. The episodes original title was "[[Film/NightoftheLivingDead1968 Dairy Farm of the Living Dead]]".
752** The Bogeyman looks a LOT like ComicBook/TheJoker if he were a mutated monster.
753** One of the show's funniest shout outs is in the second episode dealing with the [[EldritchAbomination Old Ones]]. Some cultists are trying to summon up one of the Old Ones with a special chant. What's the chant?
754--->''[[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Bricum bracka firecracker, shish boom ba! Old Ones, Old Ones, Rah! Rah! Rah!]]''
755** And then there's the episode "Ain't NASA-Sarily So", which has a host of shout-outs to ''Series/{{Star Trek|The Original Series}}'', including - but not limited to - a Scottish chief engineer, an African-American communications officer, and Dr. Venkman mentioning that the crew of Space Station Galileo have been "out exploring strange new worlds, seeking out new life and new civilizations."
756** In "Revenge of Murray The Mantis", when Egon calculates the amount of psychokinetic energy the titular creature is packing, the parade organizer asks what it means:
757--->'''Peter:''' It means if [[Franchise/StarWars Darth Vader]] were willing to loan us the Death Star we might have a chance. ''Might''.
758** In "Ghostbuster of the Year," Egon shouts, [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles1987 "Cowabunga!"]] (but not without some hesitation) before jumping onto the sled.
759*** Since the TV version of Ninja Turtles started after this episode and introduced the use of this phrase, it's unlikely to be a reference to that.
760** In "The Headless Motorcyclist," Egon mentions [[Series/DoctorWho "reversing the polarity of the neutron flow"]].
761** In "The Mean Green Teen Machine", Winston's dream depicts him as [[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration the bald captain of the Starship Exercise]].
762** In "The Collect Call of Cathulhu", Winston tells Peter "You knew the job was dangerous when you took it", a common line from the ''Super Chicken'' segment of ''WesternAnimation/GeorgeOfTheJungle''.
763** In "Knock, Knock", in what doubles as a bit of a CreatorInJoke, Japanese animation company Creator/AjiaDo's name can be seen on a manhole cover during the initial rampage of the subway graffiti.
764** Poso, the ghost gangster from "Partners in Slime", is named after Mario ''Puzo'', the writer of ''Film/TheGodfather''. Poso does want to become the "Ghostfather".
765** "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Ghost?" has a couple of shout outs. The title is one to ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?". And in the episode itself, when discussing the fact that Horace doesn't realize he's deceased, Egon says they had a smiliar issue with [[Film/MiracleOn34thStreet a heavyset apparition on 34th Street.]]
766** The Micawb family from "Loathe Thy Neighbor" is somewhat of a cross between Series/TheAddamsFamily'' (mother and father look like Gomez and Morticia, young son is an inventor) and Series/TheMunsters (teenage daughter is a normal-looking blonde girl in a family of weirdos).
767* ShownTheirWork: And not just the Franchise/CthulhuMythos. Whenever a ghost from another culture, such as Samhain, appears, you can be sure to check off the references to the original story.
768** This even went as far as justifying meeting the "ghost" of Franchise/SherlockHolmes, which RuleOfCool alone would have allowed to slide, by citing the occult concept of the egrigore, [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve a spirit created by faith in it]].
769** In addition to that the containment device and the process for unloading traps works ''exactly'' the same way it does in the movies, right down to the same buttons and lights.
770** In "The Collect Call of Cathulhu", Egon's explanation of how the proton beams are going to ionize the metallic superstructure of the rollercoaster and attract a lightning [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LabLee1My-A is scientifically sound and can even be tried at home on a smaller scale (skip to 3:04 in the video)]].
771* ShowdownAtHighNoon: In"Ghostfight at the O.K. Corral", the Ghostbusters have a classic face-off against four ghost Cowboys in the middle of an old west town. Only difference is it's a shootout with proton streams and ethereal beams instead of bullets.
772* SirenSong: The drownies—pale, waterlogged corpses of humans who drowned and then recovered and now reside in the Zee. They're explicitly described as siren-like in the way their eerie singing causes Zailors a strong urge to jump from their ships to join their number.
773* SkepticismFailure: Winston mentions in one episode that he didn't believe in the supernatural when he first became a Ghostbuster, and only applied with the organization because he was having trouble finding a job. Actually seeing the supernatural makes him a believer.
774** This is a CallBack to [[Film/{{Ghostbusters 1984}} the original movie]], where it's obvious that he's only humoring the Ghostbusters during his job interview:
775---> '''Winston:''' If there's a steady paycheck in it, I'll believe anything you say.
776* SlimeSnailsAndMutantTails: Like many late 80s cartoons, ''The Real Ghostbusters'' used repulsive slimy creatures to appeal to kids.
777* SmallNameBigEgo: Prof. Dweeb thinks he's a better scientist than the Ghostbusters, but he's actually a bumbling fool who always fails in his plans to capture Slimer.
778* SomberBackstoryRevelation: "The Boogieman Cometh"; while Egon isn't a Jerk, per se, he is TheStoic and typically more interested in the scientific aspect of everything, rather than any emotional ties. Until he hears the tale of two young children who explain that they're being terrorized nightly by the Boogeyman. After some prompting, Egon reveals to his fellow Ghostbusters that as a child, he himself was terrorized by the Boogeyman, which spurred his interest in the supernatural to begin with.
779* SomethingWeForgot:
780** In the episode "Killerwatt", Janine pedals a bike generator to power the containment unit. Later on, the ghost is defeated and the Ghostbusters are in an impromptu parade. They wonder if Janine is still pedaling, then dismiss the idea as ridiculous; GilliganCut to Janine still pedaling.
781** Also in the episode "Deadcon", the Staypuft Marshmallow Man was released to attend a ghost convention held (without permission) in a hotel which was currently having a costume party. Later, the 'busters exhausted every trap they had to capture all the ghosts. They then realize that they had forgotten one BIG thing... GilliganCut to the Staypuft Marshmallow Man still at the hotel, who even won an award for "best costume".
782* SoreLoser: Dib the demon tricks Ray and Winston into signing a contract where they are soul-bound to play in his hellish game show where losing means death. When the guys actually win, Dib gets angry and tries to kill them anyway. The Ghostbusters managed to escape, and Peter threatens physical harm on Dib if he doesn't keep his word of giving them an all-expense paid trip to Tahiti.
783* SpaceWhaleAesop:
784** "Janine, You've Changed": Don't try to change yourself to impress your crush, or else [[DemonicPossession a demon will possess you]].
785** "The Boogeyman is Back": Admit when you're scared, or [[ThingsThatGoBumpInTheNight the Boogeyman]] will emerge, wreak havoc on your city, kidnap you, and try to kill three children.
786* SparedByTheAdaptation: Pops Venkman, who was introduced as a PosthumousCharacter in the {{novelization}} of the original ''Film/{{Ghostbusters|1984}}'' film.
787%%* SpecsOfAwesome: Egon wears them.
788* SpinOff: ''Slimer!'' In addition to his increased role here, Slimer received his own show in 1988. The series had 15 minute episodes (later edited into a two shorts format for reruns) and boasted a more cartoony atmosphere aimed at a younger audience. The Ghostbusters and Janine regularly appeared, but Slimer had his own cast of characters to interact with (some of them are shown in the ''Slimer! and the Real Ghostbusters'' intro and Professor Dweeb appeared in three episodes here). It lasted one season.
789* SpoofsRUs: The first episode is called "Ghosts R Us", after a rival ghostbusting franchise formed by three ghosts.
790* SpotlightStealingSquad: Slimer in the later seasons. See SpotlightStealingTitle, below.
791* SpotlightStealingTitle: The later ''Slimer and the Real Ghostbusters''.
792** Just to hammer it home, for the new intro that accompanied the new title, Slimer shouts at the end, "And me! And me!"
793%%* SuperSargassoSea: [[http://ghostbusters.wikia.com/wiki/Land_of_Lost_Objects The Land of Lost Objects.]]
794* StingyJack: The recurring ghost villain Samhain.
795* StPatricksDayEpisode: "The Scaring of the Green" takes place around St. Patrick's Day and focuses on leprechauns, a stolen pot of gold, a curse, and a Bog Hound.
796* StylisticSuck: Crops up in "Take Two." What the producer ''claims'' is the inside of the Containment Unit looks like a set reused from a previous sci-fi movie.
797* SuddenlyShouting: From Egon of all people:
798--> '''Peter:''' Any more suggestions?
799--> '''Egon:''' Yes...'''''CHAAAAAAAAAAARGE!!!!'''''
800* SupermanSubstitute: The titular superhero of the episode "Captain Steel Saves the Day" is a rather obvious pastiche of Superman, with his codename a blatant allusion to Supes' nickname the Man of Steel, his costume being colored blue, red and yellow and having a cape, having most of the same powers, a secret identity by the name of Curt Clint being a play on Superman's secret identity as Clark Kent (along with [[ClarkKenting similar means of using only glasses as a disguise]]) and his archenemy Dr. Destructo being a clear analogue to Lex Luthor, right down to wearing armor that bears a resemblance to what Luthor wore in the comics at the time.
801* SupernaturalHotspotTown: Depicted in the episode "Nobody Comes to Lupusville", where the Ghostbusters investigate the titular town in the countryside. [[spoiler:It turns out to be in the middle of a FurAgainstFang conflict, with the original werewolf inhabitants having been imprisoned by vampires. The episode ends with vampires and werewolves biting each other, [[VampiricWerewolf creating hybrids]] and forcing the Ghostbusters to quarantine the town by bursting a dam, as vampires CannotCrossRunningWater]].
802* SurpriseJump: Ray falls victim to this trope in "Look Homeward, Ray".
803* TakenForGranite: After the ghostly wizard Orlox is captured in "Surely You Joust", his two minions turn to stone.
804* TakeThat:
805** The show's title is a pretty obvious shot at ''WesternAnimation/FilmationsGhostbusters''. Also, in the episode "Spirit of Aunt Lois", the fraud medium is dressed almost exactly like Jake Kong, the leader of the "other" 'busters.
806** There were many {{Take That}}s against other popular animated shows of the period: for example, in one episode the Ghostbusters' HQ was visited by a family of ghosts that looked like grotesque versions of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''. Another episode featured a group of TotallyRadical [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles1987 reptilian humanoids]], and another one where TV characters came to life had, among the others, a [[WesternAnimation/HeManAndTheMastersOfTheUniverse1983 dumb brute from planet Petunia]].
807** Morganon from "Chicken, He Clucked" wears a hat and coat looking like WesternAnimation/InspectorGadget's ones, which may be just a homage, but considering that he's a stereotypical horned, goat-legged demon...
808** In ''Banshee Bake a Cherry Pie'', a banshee planned to use her concert broadcast all across the continent (even New Jersey) to wreck everything on a larger scale. Egon comments that if that happens, it could be the end of America as they know it, then adds they could afford to lose New Jersey.
809%%* TeamPet: Slimer, along with the HeelFaceTurn Stay Puft.
810* TheatrePhantom: In "A Fright at the Opera," the New York Metropolitan Opera House does have a Phantom, but he never appears until the end of the episode. [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere The guys only met him in passing, just as he was about to vacate the opera house: The appearance of the ghostly Valkyries was too much, even for him!]]
811* ThemeMusicPowerUp: The main theme often plays during an episode's climax and the Ghostbusters are about to save the day.
812* TheseAreThingsManWasNotMeantToKnow: PlayedForLaughs when Egon attempts to study Slimer's physiology for science. The radiation scanner he uses reveals only that Slimer has just gorged himself on uncooked corn kernels, which promptly explode and flood the lab to overflowing with popcorn. When Janine asks what happened, Ray (atop a pile of popcorn) replies, "We discovered that there are some things Man was not meant to know!"
813* TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodSandwich: This happens in the opening sequence; Winston is about to eat, but the siren goes off, and he leaves, leaving the sandwich on the table. (It isn't truly wasted, however; Slimer gobbles it up.)
814* ThreatenAllToFindOne: In one episode, the Ghostbusters are accidentally signed up for a game show run by a literal demon named [[LouisCypher Dib Devlin]]. Naturally, their souls, and lives, are on the line. During one round, Dib puts the Ghostbusters on a roulette wheel and tells them that he knows one of them has a secret, and that he's willing to bet that the person who has that secret is so ashamed of it that he'd let his friends die and take it to his grave, but that the wheel will stop ''if'' the person with the secret confesses. Each Ghostbuster confesses something, which Dib says is ''not'' the secret, until...
815-->'''Ray:''' [=OkayIadmititSlimeratehalfacookieandgotslimeallovertheotherhalfandbyaccidentwithoutthinkingaboutitI=]... I ate it.
816* ThisIsAWorkOfFiction: The cartoon disclaims any resemblance to persons "living, dead, or ''undead''".
817* ThreeShorts: The ''Slimer!'' spin-off had either two (7 and 14 minutes each) or three shorts (7 minutes each), with an episode of ''The Real Ghostbusters'' sandwiched in between the hour-long block. In season 5, the hour-long block would sometimes feature a 14-minute episode (there were twelve of them total), a full-length one, and a ''Slimer!'' cartoon.
818%%* TickertapeParade: The ending credits.
819* TitleDrop: A few times, most triumphantly in "Citizen Ghost":
820-->'''Ray:''' Say goodnight, fellas, cause the Real Ghostbusters are here to stay!
821** The first episode, "Ghosts Я Us", was something of an establishment as to why they're called ''The Real Ghostbusters'', when a rival ghost busting group tries to put them out of business.
822-->'''Janine:''' No mam. This is the REAL Ghostbusters! Not Ghosts 'R Us!"
823* TitleReadingGag: In Seasons 3-7, after reading the title in the opening sequence, Slimer would say, "And me! And me!".
824* ToiletHumor: Not in the show itself, but the Kenner toy line included a haunted toilet called [[http://ghostbusters.wikia.com/wiki/Ghost_Figure:_Fearsome_Flush Fearsome Flush]].
825* TomeOfEldritchLore: The Neconomicon and The Nameless Book both appear.
826-->'''Peter:''' I don't see what all the fuss is about. It's just a book!
827-->'''Ray:''' And an [[NukeEm atomic bomb]] is just a couple of rocks slammed together.
828* TooDumbToLive: The city workers digging for a new subway tunnel in "Knock Knock"; they stumble across a DoorOfDoom that warns them not to open it until the [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt end of the world.]] They open it anyway, because they ''refuse to let a talking door tell them what to do'', and release HellOnEarth.
829-->'''Doomsday Door:''' [[DontTouchItYouIdiot Do Not Open Until Doomsday!]]
830* TooSpicyForYogSothoth:
831** A massive water elemental demon swallows our heroes whole and it looks like the end... until he makes a disgusted face and spits Peter out. Needless to say, Peter was insulted.
832--->'''Peter:''' He spit me out... HE SPIT ME OUT! COME BACK HERE YOU OVERGROWN BATHTUB TOY!
833** "Chicken, He Clucked": A man with an unusual hatred of chickens summons a demon to get him to rid all the chickens on the planet. The demon was baffled at such a request since this is the first time someone didn't ask for something extravagant, so he instead gives him the power to make anything vanish. The man uses his newfound power to transport all the chickens in the world off the planet and into another dimension. The demon started to get constant ridicule from his fellow demon employees for making a deal over something so stupid. He decided that a soul wasn't worth this hassle and was reduced to asking the Ghostbusters for help to cancel the contract before his reputation is shot forever.
834* TrappedInTVLand: A few episodes featured this, including "Who're You Calling Two-Dimensional?" "Stay Tooned" inverted the trope: Sammy K. Ferret, a cartoon character, is freed from his show and enters the real world. His ToonPhysics prove extremely dangerous, and even mutate the population of New York (including Ray, Winston, and Egon) into "toon" animals.
835* TrivialTragedy: The episode "Captain Steel Saves the Day" opens with Ray bawling in despair. His friends naturally think that something catastrophic has happened, like the return of Gozer or the destruction of the ghost storage, but Ray says "it's worse than that", explaining that his favorite comic book has been cancelled.
836%%* TVGenius: Egon again.
837* UnclePennybags: Stay Puft Marshmallows president Marty Tillis from the episode "Sticky Business", who got to borrow the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man from the Ghostbusters for a commercial by offering to pay them the money they needed for the children at the hospital and even offered to let the children watch the commercial being filmed.
838* UnderworldRiver: "[[Recap/TheRealGhostbustersS2E23HangingByAThread Hanging by a Thread]]" features the River Styx itself, a river that runs through the Netherworld (an EldritchLocation full of ghosts and demons).
839* UnexpectedInheritance: One episode involved Ray inheriting a castle in Scotland from a distant relative he barely knew. The castle is haunted.
840* UnfinishedBusiness: Some of the ghosts weren't evil, and the Ghostbusters could get rid of them just by helping them accomplish their goals.
841* UnknownRival: Professor Dweeb thinks he's the most brilliant scientist in town and that the Ghostbusters are feeble-minded. He wants to one day outdo them at their own game. They never even met him until "The Slob" and when they do, they consider him an annoyance more than anything else.
842%%* UnluckyThirteen: Mrs. Rogers' address is nothing but this.
843%%-->'''Winston:''' Just check out the address! Thirteen... thirteen... thirteenth street!
844* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: In "The Ghostbusters in Paris", a janitor in the Eiffel Tower winds up accidentally breaking a device which kept a multitude of ghosts locked in the tower. Because of that, Paris gets flooded with ghosts.
845* UtilityMagic: When Al Capone pulls the busters into his ghost world their proton packs refuse to work. An opposing mobster explains that "their place works on science, this place works on magic. [[ScienceVersusMagic The two don't mix,]] but we can fix that." Utility Magic is so commonplace in their reality magical objects are mass produced.
846-->'''Mobster:''' Here, try these.
847-->'''Egon:''' What are they?
848-->'''Mobster:''' Magic Crystals.
849-->'''Egon:''' Get outta here!
850-->'''Mobster:''' Read the label!
851-->'''Egon:''' "Magic Crystals. Manufactured by Magic Crystals Inc. Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back..."
852* VanHelsingHateCrimes: On one memorable occasion, a vampire who had taken to eating synthetic blood and posed no threat to humans hired the Ghostbusters to help him deal with an overzealous vampire hunter.
853* VengefulVendingMachine: In "Transcendental Tourists", Slimer tries to get a milk carton from a vending machine. Much to his frustration, the vending machine refuses to work, so he resorts to using his ghostly powers to phase through the machine and consume a carton of milk from the inside.
854* ViewersAreMorons: Done in-universe when CorruptCorporateExecutive Paul Smart displays Robo-Buster's apparently superior ghostbusting abilities by seemingly ''destroying'' ghosts rather than just capturing them the way the Ghostbusters do. Egon protests that Smart's claims are impossible, because ectoplasmic physics don't work that way, but no one at the press conference where Smart is showing off Robo-Buster understands what he's talking about, and they don't believe him.
855* VillainousBreakdown: Several of the ghost villains would do this before the Ghostbusters busted them. Notable examples include the Master of Shadows shocked and confused at the revelation that Slimer and Egon had switched minds in "Slimer, Is That You?" and Sammy K. Ferret going into a LaughingMad fit and insisting that he is still funny in "Stay Tooned".
856%%* VitriolicBestBuds: Peter and Janine are Type 2.
857* VocalEvolution:
858** Originally, Creator/MauriceLaMarche performed as Egon by speaking in a deeper voice, that made him sound more like Harold Ramis. The pitch in his voice was raised higher afterwards.
859** Originally, Frank Welker performed as Slimer by speaking in unintelligible gibberish, not unlike his voicework in ''Germlins''. When the show changed after the first ABC season and Syndicated episodes, Slimer began speaking full sentences intelligently.
860* WackyFratBoyHijinx: One episode had the team sent to bust the ghosts of an unruly frat seeking revenge for being expelled. The Ghostbusters eventually convince them that they've talked the dean into graduating them, all they need to do is pose for some graduation pictures on a set of bleachers they've planted traps beneath.
861* WakingNonSequitur: At the end of "Mr. Sandman, Dream Me a Dream", Egon wakes up and attempts to continue an imaginary conversation with UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein, but stops when he notices people are staring at him.
862* WeaksauceWeakness: The aforementioned ghost in "The Headless Motorcyclist" was practically unstoppable, relentlessly chasing his targets and trying to bomb them with flaming cyclist helmets. However, when the Ghostbusters trick him into [[CannotCrossRunningWater driving onto a bridge over a river by camouflaging it with a hologram of a normal street, the ghost is instantly paralyzed]]. Capture went without a hitch.
863* WeaponizedLandmark[=/=]FamouslyMundaneFictionallyMagical:
864** "The Ghostbusters in Paris" revealed that the Eiffel Tower was actually a SteamPunk ecto-containment grid.
865** On a slightly lesser scale, the statue of Atlas at Rockefeller Center in "Janine Melnitz, Ghostbuster".
866* WeHelpTheHelpless: The Ghostbusters' clients have included everyone from elderly women who live alone to families and business owners to Detroit auto companies and the French government.
867** Though they operated a business and were often paid, the Ghostbusters would just as often have cases without any chance of payment.
868*** When Mrs. Faversham (a woman that reminds him of his mother) explains she doesn't have much money to pay them, [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold Peter]] says the only payment they require is a smile.
869*** Averted in "Xmas Marks the Spot", when [[spoiler: Ebenezer Scrooge]] refuses to pay the Ghostbusting bill, Peter actually threatens to release the ghosts again. Sure, its [[spoiler: Scrooge]], but he's still an elderly man [[spoiler: plus they didn't know it was him ''and'' it was Christmas]]. [[spoiler:The Ghostbusters not knowing it was him actually worked in his favor, if we consider what they did once they learned.]]
870*** In "The Boogieman Cometh," two kids terrified of the Boogieman want to hire the guys and offer up their piggybank. Peter shakes it and only hears loose change, but he says it qualifies for their new rate.
871*** Basically anything that could potentially lead to the end of the world, the Ghostbusters will resolve regardless of payment, such as in "Ragnarok n' Roll" and "You Can't Take It With You".
872----> '''Peter:''' Well hey, we can do a freebie every now and then. Let's get up there!
873%%* WeirdScience: The cornerstone of the ''Franchise/{{Ghostbusters}}'' franchise.
874* WellIntentionedExtremist: The Sandman, in "Mr. Sandman, Dream Me a Dream," is one. His race is responsible for helping people around the world sleep, but he's so fed up with humanity's warring and fighting that he decides that putting everyone in a five-hundred-year slumber is the only way to bring peace to the planet. Of course, his methods [[YourMindMakesItReal make sleeping people's dreams come to life]], but initially, those dream-creatures, for the most part, weren't trying to hurt anyone; it was only after the Ghostbusters annoyed the Sandman that he turned the beasts into nightmarish monsters.
875%%* WeOnlyHaveOneChance: Egon says this almost to the point of it being a CatchPhrase.
876* WeWillMeetAgain:
877** The Ghostmaster vows to get even with the Ghostbusters at the end of "Short Stuff" after they capture all of the ghosts he sent to catch them.
878--->'''Ghostmaster''': You win this time, but you haven't seen the last of me! I'll be back! I'll be back!
879** The ''Slimer!'' short "The Dirty Half-Dozen" ends with Goolem and Zugg being sent back to the South Pole, with both ghosts promising that they'll get even with Slimer the next time they return to New York.
880** At the end of "Slimer Streak", the Player states that the Ghostbusters have won this time, but he'll be back to play another game with them. Unlike the Ghostmaster, Goolem, and Zugg, the Player never appeared again in spite of promising his revenge.
881* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: As often as the show likes to make callbacks to the movies, it ''pointedly'' avoids making any mention of Dana Barett.
882** Interestingly enough, the {{Creator/Marvel}} UK comics based on the show featured Dana as TheUnseen -- she would never actually appear, but Peter would sometimes mention her, and he would occasionally be seen preparing for a date with her. (The Norwegian translation of the comic featured a surprisingly witty lettercolumn where Peter answered the kids' letters, and the kids would sometimes ask why Dana Barett never appeared in the comic. Peter's answer varied -- "She's too beautiful to appear in the comic," "Because my personal life can't interest anyone," "I asked but I think she's too shy.")
883** However, there was a comic adaptation of ''Film/GhostbustersII'' which used ''The Real Ghostbusters'' designs, which meant that the cartoon design for Dana was created specifically for that. Like the other stars of the movie, she did not look like [[Creator/SigourneyWeaver her actress]].
884** Lita, an odd girl in "No One Comes to Lupusville" who took a liking to Egon, informed them of the truth about the town they're in. She helps them out in exchange that they get her out of town. In the end, the Ghostbusters flee from the town to escape the ensuing chaotic fight between the vampires and werewolves. Lita was then revealed to have stowed away, sitting on the back of Ecto-1, but was never seen again after the episode.
885* WhatMeasureIsANonHuman: One episode deals with an enormous multitude of ghosts coming to find the Ghostbusters not to harm them but to find refuge against a creature that eats ghosts and destroys everything around itself. Eventually, the Ghostbusters think of a plan to defeat it but need to lead it somewhere, which they do by emptying their storage tanks and throwing hundreds of ghosts who only wanted to be kept safe at it to be eaten. Nobody gives sacrificing all these ghosts a second thought, but then again the Ghostbusters series as a whole rarely hits upon showing ghosts much compassion.
886* WhatTheHellHero: Delivered upon release from containment by the Three Ghosts of Christmas.
887* WholeEpisodeFlashback:
888** "Citizen Ghost", which details how Slimer came to live at the firehouse.
889** "The Haunting of Heck House", where Peter Venkman tells a class visiting the Firehouse on a field trip about how he, Egon, Ray, and Winston had to spend the night in Heck House.
890* WholePlotReference: "Ghostbuster of the Year", which the team are asked to capture the ghost of a [[Film/CitizenKane Charles Foster Kane]] {{Expy}}, complete with [[ItWasHisSled "Rosebud"]] and Creator/MauriceLaMarche doing his Creator/OrsonWelles inmpression.
891* WhoYouGonnaCall: Well, OBVIOUSLY, the show is about paranormal investigators.
892* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes:
893** Peter can stare down murderous ghosts, spirits and phantoms without fear, but he will FreakOut at the sight of a cockroach.
894** Egon can stare down Cthulhu and other powerful beings without wincing but the Boogeyman is enough to almost shut him down out of pure fear. While it's true that Egon was tormented by the Boogeyman as a child, there is a serious difference between it and Cthulhu. Egon handled himself very well in facing his childhood fears in "The Boogieman Cometh." He was freezing up in "The Bogeyman is Back," but he was coming off a nearly deadly fall off the World Trade Center. His fear grew because he wouldn't accept it, which Bogey later exploited.
895* AWizardDidIt: When Egon explains the legend of Hob Anagarik in "Cold Cash and Hot Water".
896-->'''Egon:''' When the humans came, Hob attacked them. They defeated Hob, sealed him in a block of black ice, and sank him to the sea bottom. With the fire demon gone, the heat went out of the land, the snow started, and the north became cold.\
897'''Ray:''' The Ice Age.\
898'''Egon:''' Essentially, yes.\
899'''Winston:''' Where'd the humans get that block of ice if the land was hot?\
900'''Egon:''' Magic, of course.\
901'''Winston:''' Oh... of course...
902* WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds: One of the more character-driven episodes "Ragnarok and Roll" deals with Jeremy, a man angry at the world over breaking up with his girlfriend, Cindy, and vowing to [[DisproportionateRetribution bring about the end of the world]]. He nearly succeeded as he brought Ragnarok into full swing and the Ghostbusters were unable to stop him. Had Cindy and Jeremy's companion, Dy Tillio, not talked sense into him, the Ghostbusters were ready to detonate their proton packs in an attempt to stop Jeremy and the end of the world.
903* WorldOfSnark: The driving force behind lots of the show's dialogue is that everyone's got a sharp tongue.
904* WriterRevolt: "Janine, You've Changed," in which Creator/JMichaelStraczynski gave an InUniverse explanation for Janine's FanservicePack, which was mandated by the network. It didn't have any lasting effect on her appearance, but an effort was made, at least.
905* WrongGenreSavvy: In "The Boogieman Cometh," a ghostly gangster tries using supernatural shape-shifting to scare the willies out of the Ghostbusters and make them run away. Would've worked if it had been anyone but these four guys. Other ghosts tend to try the same kind of thing with the same results.
906* YetAnotherChristmasCarol: In "Xmas Marks The Spot", the Ghostbusters go back in time somehow and accidentally bust the ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future, preventing Scrooge from ever learning his lesson and thus ruining Christmas in the present day. The team tries to play the role of the spirits for Scrooge themselves while Egon tries to rescue the real ones from the containment unit.
907* YouCanSeeThatRight: Peter has seen plenty of bizarre occurrences, so it takes quite a bit to astound him. However, in "Elementary My Dear Winston" when a ''real'' Literature/SherlockHolmes recruits Winston as a temporary Watson, magically dresses him in an appropriate outfit, generates a car ''out of thin air,'' and drives away with him ''through the firehouse wall,'' it defies belief.
908-->'''Peter:''' Did we see that, or has my brain finally snapped like a twig?!
909* YouDontLookLikeYou: Mild case, but obviously, the animated Ghostbusters don't resemble their motion picture counterparts. This is because the producers wanted to avoid rights fees. Also the more famous the actor, the less his character resembles him. An episode about someone making a {{biopic}} about the Ghostbusters used real footage from the movie to {{lampshade}} this.
910* YouHaveToBelieveMe: In "Future Tense" Ray has quite a bit of trouble convincing the rest of the Ghostbusters that their new TV predicts the future, mostly because it only does so in the wee hours when they're trying to sleep (and they think he's watched so much of it he's rotted his brain).
911-->'''Egon:''' You have to cut back on the TV time, Ray; you're starting to lose touch with reality.\
912'''Ray:''' But it was real! I saw it, we were all there!\
913'''[[DeadpanSnarker Peter:]]''' [[Film/TheWizardOfOz And you were the scarecrow, and you were the tin man.]]\
914'''Winston:''' Face it Ray, you fell asleep in front of the tube and had a [[AllJustADream bad dream.]]\
915'''Slimer:''' Poor Ray...
916* YourFavorite: Janine brings Egon some mushroom soup when he's in hospital. Could possibly also be considered ThroughHisStomach.
917* YourMindMakesItReal: In "Elementary, My Dear Winston," Franchise/SherlockHolmes, Doctor Watson and Moriarty appear as ghost-like beings even though they weren't real people. Egon theorizes that the sheer and consistent belief of fans all over the world enabled this.
918** Cartoonist Walt Fleischman not only unwittingly brings his cartoon characters to life, he becomes trapped in their world. His villains kidnap him, and when the Ghostbusters enter the world to save him they recruit his heroes to help them.
919[[/folder]]

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