->'''Homer:''' ...You're selling what now?\\
'''Apu:''' I'm ''selling'' only the concept of karmic realignment.\\
'''Homer:''' You can't sell that! Karma can only be portioned out by the cosmos! ''(slams door)''\\
'''Apu:''' ''(beat)'' He's got me there.
-->--'''{{WesternAnimation/The Simpsons}}''', ''[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS5E13HomerAndApu Homer and Apu]]''

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''This trope covers cases where the word or concept of "karma" is used incorrectly compared to the original meaning of the term; see {{Karma}} for the more traditional religious use of the term. Frequently paired with {{Reincarnation}}.''

{{Karma}} is a complex spiritual concept whose [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karma disambiguation]] is perhaps best left not to Website/TVTropes or Website/{{Wikipedia}}, but to actual religious study.

Originally, the term ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karma Karma]]'' was a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanskrit Sanskrit]] word for a rather specific spiritual concept, but over the centuries the word has been borrowed by countless languages, cultures, subcultures, religions, works of fiction, and even video games. Over time the word has [[{{flanderized}} evolved]] to such an extent that many who consider it to be part of their everyday vocabulary are almost entirely unfamiliar with its original definition. In everyday terms, Karma has often been simplified as a direct cause-effect EquivalentExchange reaction to a characters actions, both good and bad.

More generally, much like a sufficiently clever IceCreamKoan can seem like a perfectly executed {{Koan}}, the use of the word "karma" to describe something that isn't really karma as understood by spiritual teachings outside a work can look and seem like actual in-universe {{Karma}}, especially if done subtly rather than {{Anvilicious}}ly. While this may sometimes be a case of oversimplification because ViewersAreMorons or the author simply didn't know better, it can also be the result of the author looking for a term to borrow to use for their own concept, much as the authors of this site, seeing phenomena in fiction, seek to provide a terminology for it.

To illustrate, Call It Karma will have a beautifully poetic ironic death where a killer dies at the hands of a "victim" [[HoistByHisOwnPetard wielding his own knife]]... while capital K {{Karma}} would have him [[{{Reincarnation}} reincarnated]] into a lower caste of Hindu society. Therein lies the problem, whereas the former is significantly easier to be inserted in a narrative, the latter [[OccamsRazor needs several specific elements to be present]].

Compare DudeNotIronic.

On [[RunningGag this very wiki]], the term "karma" is used for several tropes of this nature:
* KarmaMeter: The use of a simple scale to track a PlayerCharacter's morality.
* KarmicDeath: Evil acts will bring about a character's certain and {{Irony}}-laden death.
* KarmaHoudini: An evil character shrugs off any bad karma he has and gets away mostly scot free with all the bastardly deeds he's done.
** IdiotHoudini: A character gets away for doing incompetent things.
* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: An evil character who has eluded punishment has all their bad karma catch up to them. Variation: the evil character (or LovableRogue) tries to go good, but has all their bad karma catch up to them ''because'' they want to change.
* KarmicJackpot: One tiny good deed creates a cascade of overwhelming good fortune.
* KarmicProtection: Not being overtly evil means the universe can't be overly bad to you.
* KarmicTransformation: Detesting a group or species means you will turn into one of them.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Doing a bad thing will get you promptly and neatly whacked by celestial forces.
* NeutralityBacklash: Choosing to be neither good nor evil will bite the character in the arse.
* SexualKarma: When being good gets you goodies, and being bad gets you... [[BlackComedyRape boned.]]

No relation to the Music/{{Silverstein}} song of the same name.
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!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Advertising ]]

* In 2008, UsefulNotes/{{Melbourne}}'s public transport brand Metlink threw an ad campaign to dissuade "fare evaders" (i.e. people who ride without buying tickets) by telling the tales of the CoolAndUnusualPunishment suffered by various rule breakers, such as being forced to buy 97 boxes of girl scout cookies as well as wonderful windfalls happening to people who played by the rules. It even had a web page where you could point at people in a crowd, and a terrifying "Karma Llama" would pop up and tell you what happened to them as a consequence. In keeping with this trope, absolutely nothing were actual real consequences of their fare evading.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Film ]]

* The [[TropeNamers Trope Namer]] is ''Film/{{Ghostbusters 1984}}'', where Peter Venkman is saying these 3 words when he, Ray, and Egon are booted out of Weaver Hall after the dean claims that their research is nonsensical.
-->'''Venkman''': For whatever reasons, Ray... call it fate, call it luck, call it karma, I believe everything happens for a reason.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Live Action TV ]]

* ''Series/TheAmazingRace'' runs on Call It Karma.
** In Season 15 of ''Series/TheAmazingRace'', Zev & Justin explained Call It Karma to a cabdriver in Cambodia, who was probably laughing inside when comparing it with the real concept of Karma that he was probably raised with. Later in that same season, Brian even stated his opinion that the race is a game of who can collect the most Karma Points.
** From the very beginning, many Racers have operated on the basis of "Cab Karma", the idea that attempting to screw over a cabbie (or even just not tipping one properly) early in the Race would lead to the team getting a bad cabbie or not being able to get a cab at all at a later point often in a situation where how good the cabbie was, or how fast the cab was gotten made the difference between surviving the leg and being eliminated.
* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': After murdering the late king's bastard children in the previous episode (and his betrayal of Ned Stark before that), Janos Slynt is stripped of his rank and titles and banished to the Wall by Tyrion to make room for his own man. Soon afterwards, he is then executed for insubordination by the newly elected Lord Commander of the Night's Watch, Jon Snow—-Ned Stark's bastard son.
* ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'' is all about Karma, a concept developed by ''Carson Daly'', where every action is dictated by Karma which provides instant gratification to good deeds and equally opposite effects.
** Lampshaded in "The Professor", where the titular college professor briefly explains ''genuine'' Karma to Earl, before admitting that she prefers his version.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Tabletop Games ]]

* The ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' card [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=49011 Karma]]. The flavor appears to be that because your enemy draws dark power from the swamp, they are cursed to be strangled to death by branches in the swamp. It's probably just best to think of it as a slow-acting BoltOfDivineRetribution.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Web Comics ]]

* In ''WebComic/TheAdventuresOfShanShan'', [[http://shanshan.upperrealms.com/view.php?pageid=037&chapterid=1 they speak of the balance between virtue and karma.]]
* ''WebComic/{{DDG}}'' has Off World, which is where you go to work off Karmic debt if you weren't outright good or bad enough for heaven or hell.
* In ''WebComic/{{Drowtales}}'', Vaelia's religious views:
-->"Karma is Aura... is soul judgement.
-->Fail means bad rebirth. Victory Good. Mean nice rebirth.
-->[[YouNoTakeCandle Must do good actions for Karma go better.]]"
* In ''WebComic/TheOrderOfTheStick'', [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0848.html in a discussion of a death, and a scolding.]]

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Western Animation ]]

* From the ''WesternAnimation/DanVs'' episode "New Mexico":
-->'''Dan''': Hey, you date a married woman, [[DisproportionateRetribution you get hit by a bus]]. Karma.\\
'''Chris''': I'm not sure that's how karma works.
* Lampshaded in ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' episode "Homer and Apu". After Homer causes Apu to be fired from the Kwik-E-Mart for selling tainted meat, Apu goes to his house. Initially Homer thinks he's there to sell something, but Apu replies that the only thing he's selling is "karmic realignment". [[SmartBall Homer replies]] that karma cannot be sold, but "only be portioned out by the cosmos".
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