->''. . . if you tell somebody to do something, nine times out of ten he will do it.''
-->-- '''Will Cuppy''', ''The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody''
A favorite SocialEngineering tactic of ParkerLewisFerrisBueller and {{MacGyver}} type characters is to get what you need done (or just confuse the hell out of people) by shouting that it's an emergency and enlisting them in your StoneSoup or FencePainting project. In some series, all you need to do is look like you're in charge and know what you're doing.
Commonly used to criticize modern culture as overly sheeplike, and/or show the main character as cool, intelligent, and rebellious. The idea is, if you push the [[ImpersonatingAnOfficer Authority Button]] on the drones, they'll do whatever you tell them to, no matter how absurd.
See also RefugeInAudacity. [=~It's For A Book~=] is often a subtrope of this. Often TruthInTelevision.
----
!!Examples
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder:Comic Books]]
* John Constantine of ''{{Hellblazer}}'' is fond of doing this from time to time.
* In AlanMoore's ''TopTen'' series, a character who legitimately ''is'' a high and feared official uses these tactics in pursuit of a decidedly unofficial personal agenda.
* [[{{Transmetropolitan}} Spider Jerusalem]] uses one of these to see the president, busting into the men's room brandishing a crucifix and claiming to be an accredited exorcist.
* Tommy Monaghan, from ''Hitman'', pulled this off in order to gather intel and save his friend Natt the Hat. He simply went up to the last man in line on the string of Mafia goons leading Natt's apartment and pretended to be another guy sent by the boss. Upon learning 'they' were going to get Tommy next, gunfire ensued.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Film]]
* Rusty Ryan pulls this in the remake of ''Ocean's Eleven'', rescuing another character from arrest by barging onto the scene and acting like a detective, taking charge of the arrest and getting rid of the officer by ordering him to go find someone who didn't exist.
** Also in Ocean's series; the Malloy twins frequently showed up as waiters, hotel security, casino patrons (it makes sense when you think about it); Dell as an electrician (also as a 911 operator); Tess, as ''[[CelebrityParadox Julia Roberts]]''; Saul as a high roller in the first film, and a hotel reviewer in the third.
* ArnoldSchwarzenegger pulled this in ''Jingle All the Way'', showing a fake badge and ordering cops around during the raid on Santas' counterfeit toy factory.
* A tactic used by pretty much every character ever played by Eddie Murphy; [[BeverlyHillsCop Axel Foley]] being the best known.
* In ''DiamondsAreForever'' James Bond donned a lab coat, grabbed a clipboard and masqueraded as "Klaus Hergesheimer, G Section" (whom he had met earlier) to explore the secret installation where the KillSat was being created.
** In ''TheManWithTheGoldenGun'', Bond attempts (and succeeds) to masquerade as the villain, Scaramanga, to a Thai entrepreneur -- by actually ''pasting a third nipple on himself'' and hanging out proudly by the pool. He's gambling on the idea that that the entrepreneur and Scaramanga have never actually met in person, and that the entrepreneur would only know Scaramanga by his identifying physical oddity. The plan actually works [[spoiler:but then Bond gets found out and used for practice by a ''Thai KARATE school''. Best. Bond flick. Ever.]]
** Also used and then subverted in ''TheWorldIsNotEnough''. The bad guys have kidnapped and killed an elderly official from Russia's Atomic Energy Authority, planning to replace him to aid their theft of plutonium. Bond kills and replaces their replacement (fooling the bad guys into getting him transport), and apparently successfully bluffing his way into the nuclear disarmament site that is going to be robbed. [[spoiler:The subversion comes from the fact that Dr Christmas Jones, the film's GirlOfTheWeek, apparently saw straight through it, and let Bond through while she grabbed security. She arrives just as Bond is trying to foil TheDragon's ''actual'' theft]].
* [[strike:[[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] and]] Parodied with Kramer's alter ego, Dr. Von Nostrand.
--->'''{{Seinfeld}}:''' He's not fooling anyone.
* In the 1987 film ''The Secret Of My Success'', twenty-something Brantley Foster -- a whiz kid business school graduate given a charity mailroom job by his uncle when the company he was supposed to got to work for went under the day he started -- pretends to be a new executive in his uncle's company simply by taking over an unoccupied office, requisitioning supplies, and getting a secretary from the company pool.
* In ''BigTroubleInLittleChina'', Jack and Wang bluff their way through the front office of the Wing Kong Exchange by pretending to be telephone repairmen, walking right past the guards without being stopped by talking about various telephone-related problems they'd supposedly been called in to fix.
** Considering that Jack and Wang walk right into a trap immediately afterwards, apparently the guards were only acting fooled.
* A version of this is pulled in the movie ''{{Hackers}}'', where the male lead talks a guard on night watch at the local tv station into handing over the number to the modem by claiming to work in accounting.
* Mildly in ''{{Heat}}'', where McCauley merely needs to look and sound like he belongs in order not to be challenged by the hotel staff.
* Done effectively in ''Midnight Run''.
* This is done by ''real'' police officers in ''{{Superbad}}''. They turn on their siren just to get other drivers out of the way and so they can go through red lights. Unfortunately, this is actually fairly common in RealLife as well.
* Near the beginning of the movie ''CatchMeIfYouCan,'' Frank Abagnale pretends to be the substitute teacher for the French class at his new high school. It took a week for the faculty to catch on, during which time he already held a parent-teacher conference and was planning a field trip.
* In ''{{Sneakers}}'', Robert Redford claims (and demonstrates!) that all you need to get into any building in the world is a clipboard and a confident wave.
* ''The Yes Men'' is a documentary of a group of activists who went around the world pulling off stunts like these, getting to hold speeches at all sorts of institutes, universities, and getting on news broadcasts. Selection of topics their Straw Man alter ego's supported are recycling "human waste" into food in the third world, and reinstating slavery for the benefit of the clothing industry.
* In ''RaceToWitchMountain'', Dr. Friedman pulls one of these on the people studying the spaceship to get them to leave.
* In ''The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer'', the titular character managed to sucessfully become part of an advertising agency by going in with a clipboard, looking like he knew what he was doing and saying he was with "efficiency", and everyone perfectly buys it!
* In ''The Devil's Rejects'', Captain Spaulding commandeers a car by giving the driver the line "I've got to borrow your car, ma'am. Official clown business."
** This actually backfires, so he has to headbutt her and steal the car. Also scares the shit out of her son.
-->"What's the matter, son? Don't you like clowns?! Aren't we fuckin' funny?!"
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Literature]]
* The title character from DouglasAdams' ''DirkGently's Holistic Detective Agency'' cons his way onto the site of a murder investigation simply by acting confident and official, and orders the cops to do several strange and useless things in order to get them out of the way. A detective who knew Dirk recognised he'd been present upon finding one cop disassembling a wastepaper basket and another defending a sofa immovably stuck halfway up the stairs with a handsaw.
** In the sequel, ''Long Dark Teatime of the Soul'', Dirk employs another technique: Falling into step with a policeman entering the crime scene and offhandedly saying "It's okay, he's with me" to the officer stationed at the entrance.
* In ''[[TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy So Long and Thanks For All the Fish]]'', Ford Prefect helps Arthur and Fenchurch board a flying saucer through a crowd of curious onlookers by wearing a lab coat and "randomly" choosing the couple to help him carry his "scientific equipment".
* The trope's name comes from the ''{{Illuminatus}}!'' trilogy, where Simon Moon used it to illustrate how most people will follow even nonsensical orders if given in a tone of authority; he stops several cars in the middle of traffic, shouting, "BavarianFireDrill! Everyone out! Stay in line!", getting the perplexed drivers to follow him in marching in a circle around their cars before then getting back in as if nothing had happened. The name itself is a reference to the old prank of a "Chinese fire drill", where the passengers in a car stopped at a sign or light all get out at once and get back in different seats.
** And that name in turn comes from a messed up fire drill by the Chinese Navy, where a miscommunication caused the bucket brigade to fill up buckets on one side of the ship and toss them out on the other side.
* Several characters in the ''{{Discworld}}'' novels have gotten their way simply by acting like they're in charge or that they belong where they're not supposed to be. Victor Tugelbend does it to get into a "clicks" studio in ''[[Discworld/MovingPictures Moving Pictures]]'', where the narration states "No-one with their sleeves rolled up who walks purposefully with a piece of paper held conspicuously in their hand is ever challenged." Moist von Lipwig is rather fond of this in ''[[Discworld/GoingPostal Going Postal]]'' and ''[[Discworld/MakingMoney Making Money]]''. And Granny Weatherwax has passed for nobility in both ''[[Discworld/WitchesAbroad Witches Abroad]]'' and ''[[Discworld/{{Maskerade}} Maskerade]]'' by simply dressing the part and being her usual bossy know-it-all self, since many folks on the Disc "confuse bad manners with good breeding". Nanny Ogg, on the other hand, gets through crowds by acting like a servant. Even Corporal "Nobby" Nobbs, who has to carry around papers proving his species, manages to pull this off with ease in ''[[Discworld/MenAtArms Men at Arms]]''.
** It's also been noted on at least one occasion that tenure at Unseen University is a matter of finding an empty office, turning up for dinner on time, and hoping you don't attract students. I believe the most explicit example was in ''[[Discworld/TheLastContinent The Last Continent]]''.
* In the Tom Clancy novel ''The Sum of All Fears'', a group of German marxist/Arab sympathizers armed only with about ten stolen Russian colonel's uniforms manage to convince the entire Russian East Berlin garrison to launch an attack on their American counterparts. Though to be fair, disobedience in Soviet Russia was hardly the most healthy pastime.
** So, so Clancy-esque fake. Unlike privates' and [=NCOs'=] uniforms, Soviet officers' uniforms were ''not'' standard issue and were their own responsibility to order. Custom-made from any tailor who knew and was able to follow the regulations concerning their design. Furthermore, except for rank insignia, colonels' uniforms in no way differed from the lowly junior lieutenants'. Thus, a uniform was ridiculously easy to come by, and all that was left was to create the rather simplistic rank insignia (just simple metal stars, really, in most generations of the uniform). Anyone truly wanting to wear an officer's uniform could acquire one with a day's effort and no theft involved.
*** They didn't steal the uniforms, they bought them, as "officer's uniforms, with colonel insignia."
* [[VorkosiganSaga Miles Vorkosigan]] pulls these off with remarkable skill. In ''The Warrior's Apprentice'', he parleys an old freighter, a bodyguard, a friend and a couple of losers into a mercenary fleet -- with him as its Admiral, a persona/disguise he would use on occasion for over ten years -- in a matter of weeks, mostly by force of personality. Not only was he ''seventeen'' at the time, but the entire thing was a series of [[IndyPloy scrambling improvisations]] started by his impulsive effort to keep the pilot of said freighter (then docked at his mother's homeworld) from doing something stupid because it was about to be scrapped.
** And then keeps said mercenary fleet (mostly) fooled until he was ''thirty.'' Miles Vorkosigan: Galactic Champion of Making Shit Up.
*** He called it "Forward Momentum."
**** Other characters often called Miles "that hyperactive little shit" for it, however. When he could not hear.
* Inverted in ''The Inspector General'' via MistakenForSpecialGuest when the townspeople were expecting an authority figure in disguise.
* This is the way [[HonorHarrington Victor Cachat's]] {{Indy Ploy}}s usually work. During that memorable snafu in ''Crown of Slaves'' he managed to enlist a Manticoran agent (two, actually), a group of neutral Solarian officers (with their squadron), a bunch of local nobles/dignitaries (who he was actually courting all that time, trying to pry them from Manticoran Alliance) and Royal Manticoran Navy Captain -- all willingly and with their full support. They all knew who he was, but followed him anyway. His feat in ''Fanatic'' was no less impressive, but there he had some ''real'' authority, just subverted it to his needs.
* Subverted in ''[[SixteenThirtyTwo 1635: The Cannon Law]]''. Ruy Sanchez tells several Spanish soldiers that he is a captain in the Spanish army, and gets valuable information from them. The Americans think he's pulled a BavarianFireDrill, until Sharon informs them that Ruy ''is'' a captain in the Spanish army. He left out the part where he's working for the Americans, though.
* When he wasn't being a OneManArmy, Mack Bolan (from ''TheExecutioner'' series by Don Pendleton) would often pull this stunt on both the local police and the Mafia, usually by posing as an outside Fed or elite hitman sent from New York to kill Bolan.
* So, we are approaching the climax of the ''SherlockHolmes'' pastiche, ''The Seven-Per-Cent Solution''. Hot on the trail of the BigBad, Holmes is in need of transportation. He employs a fairly illegal technique to do so ([[spoiler: i.e. hijacks a train at gunpoint]]), while a police sergeant is standing right behind him. The sergeant starts to protest, whereupon Holmes turns around, gives the man orders in his masterful way -- and the sergeant runs off to execute them just on the strength of Holmes' delivery. It wasn't even a ''British'' policeman.
* In his book, ''My Life In The Mafia'', mobster-turned-informant Vincent Theresa tells of how he stole a load of blank driver's licenses. He walked into the factory, asked someone where they kept the blank licenses, picked up a box of them and walked out. Everyone he encountered just assumed he worked there.
* A couple of Tom Holt's characters try this. Case in point: resurrected mercenary Kurt Lundqvist manages to hijack a plane by pretending to ''turn up to stop a hijacking'', complete with using a library card to prove his identity.
* In ''DragonLance'', the kender have a saying: "Don't change color to match the walls. Act like you belong there and the walls will change color to match you!"
* In ''Inferno'' by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, the narrator and his guide Benito [[spoiler:Mussolini]] blag their way into the Administrative Centre of Hell by looking like badly-dressed officials (who will be assumed to be secret police).
* In ''WatershipDown'', the rabbit hero El-ahrairah (a Trickster god) does this in some of his adventures. Similarly, several protagonist rabbits imprisoned in another warren pull this to distract a guard.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* This is standard operating procedure for both the good and bad guys on ''[[TwentyFour 24]]''.
* In the vein of faking out Nazis, ''AlloAllo'' did this a few times.
* ''{{Angel}}'' has, at least once, gotten on to crime scenes and pumped the cop on the scene for information by playing the bossy plainclothes detective, no badge needed.
* One running subplot on ''ArrestedDevelopment'' involved the character of Maeby who, despite being only 16 years old, gets a job as a movie producer simply by acting like she already was one. This, in turn, is based on an apocryphal story that StevenSpielberg got his first job at a movie studio by simply occupying an empty office and pretending he was supposed to be there.
** It's unclear whether she was ever able to actually get on the payroll at her "job," but she does manage to get a couple of movies greenlit, so it still counts for the purposes of this trope.
* Done on ''BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' by Rupert Giles, ineptly impersonating an agent of Interpol to get information out of a cop. It worked, but only because the cop was under a spell.
** He wouldn't really have had any right to be involved even if he really was an Interpol agent.
* Used to Michael's advantage in many episodes of ''BurnNotice''.
** He also mentions that some marks are just too smart to fall for tricks like this, and therefore he has to use much more inventive methods. In one rather impressive example, he uses "reverse interrogation", setting himself up as a snitch to be interrogated by the bad guy, noting that while skilled interrogators are good at asking questions without revealing anything, bad interrogators will always tell you more than you tell them.
* Happens a lot in ''DoctorWho'', partly because of narrative necessity, partly because the Doctor seems commanding and often knows what to do.
** In one episode he gets out of being held at gunpoint by a room full of armed soldiers by using this -- when a scream sounds from another room he yells, "Defense plan Delta! Come on!" and runs out of the room, and they all instinctively follow his orders, even though he's presented no identification at all.
*** Although as UNIT soldiers they were probably shocked that he actually knew a legitimate command to give. Apparently they haven't updated their jargon in the decades since the Doctor worked for them.
** Assisted in the revival seasons by a new sample of AppliedPhlebotinum known as 'Psychic Paper', which the reader sees as whatever form of credentials they think the Doctor needs... unless the viewer happens to be psychic enough to see through the illusion, like everyone working for Torchwood, or intelligent enough, like WilliamShakespeare.
*** It helps to know what psychic paper ''is'' and to be on the lookout for newbies being sneaky.
*** You also need to pay attention otherwise you can accidentally hand a cute woman a piece of paper saying that you're single.
** Used in ''The War Games'' to get into a military prison.
* In an episode of ''GetSmart'', Max managed to order ''soldiers about to execute him'' to turn around just before their boss (who was standing right behind them) orders them to fire. The reason? They were {{Ruritania}}n soldiers, and Ruritanian soldiers are always more-or-less brainwashed into "obeying orders" without thinking.
* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'': Sylar ([[strike:technically]] a wanted SerialKiller) in the Volume 3 episode "One of Us, One of Them". He fakes being an FBI agent, and gets the cops to 1) pull back their barricades, giving him and [[spoiler:Bennet]] room to work, and 2) [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome get him some coffee.]]
* ''[[HogansHeroes Hogan's Heroes]]'' ''ran'' on this trope.
* The guys on ''{{Hustle}}'' do so. Usually Ash.
** Likewise, spin-off ''The Real Hustle'' uses this, most notably to [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-CHdukO7to steal someone's car -- as he's getting into it]].
** This is almost becoming a DiscreditedTrope in the UK: thanks to that show, and the fact that the real Police are also perfectly willing to engage in this sort of activity if they find it useful, most younger British people lack much of a sense of social compliance.
* RippedFromTheHeadlines for the ''LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'' episode "Authority."
** Which ended up being surreal, as the target of the investigation railed against people following orders without question...and then proceeded to order people around without being questioned by those he was ordering. He went from being against the sheep mentality to being the shepard.
*** Not exactly, the people he was "ordering around like sheep" were all there and taking orders as part of a pre-planned demonstration showing how ridiculous doing so could get. Not just random people doing whatever some guy told them to.
* Done all the time in ''{{Leverage}},'' often by Hardison.
* In the old ''MissionImpossible'', the IMF regularly pretended to be part of the organization they were infiltrating.
* One ''{{MST3K}}'' skit has Pearl, Bobo and Observer putting on penguin costumes and using BavarianFireDrill tactics to try and trick Mike and the bots into dressing in a similar fashion. After laughing at Mike and the bots' pathetic attempts at costumes, Pearl, Bobo and Observer come to the sad realization that they themselves are even ''more'' pathetic thanks to the massive amount of effort they put into their lame joke.
* Shawn in ''{{Psych}}'' has a tendency to do this; partly because his 'psychic' abilities (read: keen observational skills and theatrical nature) tend to throw people off their guard and result in them buying anything he'll tell them, and partly because he's TheCharmer who can twist almost anyone around his little finger.
** The few times it hasn't worked (it's not foolproof), Shawn has literally been struck dumb.
** One particularly audacious example had Shawn pretending to be a chief resident doctor doing rounds with interns in order to figure out what was wrong with a comatose patient. When he couldn't understand their medical terminology, he told them to dumb it down ''for the comatose patients'', and they ''did''.
** Or the time he managed to convince multiple people at a comic convention that he was George Takei's personal assistant. Including George Takei himself.
* Often used by Frank Parker in ''SevenDays'', even when his status as an actual NSA agent could get him whatever he wants.
* Apparently people don't get any smarter about this in the future: in an episode of ''StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'', a group of {{Genius Ditz}}es managed to order their way onto the station to see Bashir simply because one was dressed as an admiral. When questioned, the "admiral" would simply act irritable and the cowed crewmember would back off.
** The "admiral" answered every question given to him with "That's a stupid question!" It worked perfectly.
* Almost every episode of ''{{Supernatural}}'' involves the brothers posing as police, FBI, or even priests to gain access to evidence or question witnesses.
** Not a strict example, however, as they have fake ID for everything and are more than willing to show it to anyone who asks.
** Played straight in one episode "Hollywood Babylon", where Dean gets mistaken for a PA on a movie set, and goes with it. He orginally does it just so he has unlimited access to check for EMF, but finds himself surprising good at it, and enjoying it.
** Also, in the episode "Something Wicked", while passing as a CDC agent, Sam is initially worried that they will get caught because his most relevent ID identifies him as a "Bikini Inspector". None of the hospital personnel notice.
**That's nothing, in one episode, while posing as [=FBI=] agents, they run into a pair of ''actual'' federal agents who start questioning the validity of the brothers' identities, and ask to talk to their superiors. Dean reluctantly ands them a number, the real agents call it, and the audience assumes that their cover's blown...Until we see that the number connects to [[TheObiWan Bobby]] who poses as their boss, chews out the agents, [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome and then turns around to finish making breakfast in his kitchen.]] Dean and Sam's skill at this trope is so ridiculous that it verges into RefugeInAudacity and CrazyPrepared at times.
* Very first episode of ''{{Titus}}''.
-->'''Erin:''' You guys know you're not allowed in the building anymore, how'd you get past security?\\
'''Titus:''' You walk in with confidence, nobody bothers you.
* In a flashback on ''TheWestWing,'' it is revealed that this is how Donna started working for the Bartlet campaign: she walked into the campaign office and started answering phones. Josh was pretty quick in catching her, but he liked her spunk and so kept her as his assistant.
* An episode of ''TheCloser'' centered around finding a man who had interfered with a murder investigation by pretending to be the lead detective in charge of collecting evidence and interviewing suspects. Notably, he not only fooled the suspects, he initially fooled the other cops, including the assistant chief. It probably helped that [[CloudCuckooLander he actually believed he was a cop]].
* In WhiteCollar this is [[TheCharmer Neal's]] ''modus operandi'' to the point that he uses it to walk right out of prison.
*In {{Firefly}} Simon does this twice. Once when he "impersonates" a doctor in the raid on St Lucy's hospital and in the Movie when he disguises himself as an imperious ObstructiveBureaucrat to get into the Academy.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Opera]]
* In Wagner's ''Götterdämmerung'', Hagen calls the Gibichung vassals to the wedding by bellowing about danger and woe. It ought to be mentioned here that RichardWagner was a Bavarian (by residence, at least, though a Saxon by birth).
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Video Games]]
* In ''[[ChzoMythos 7 Days a Skeptic]]'' [[spoiler:Dr. Jonathen Somerset is actually a completely different person; the main character posed as him to get onto a spaceship.]]
* In the ''AceAttorney'' series, specifically in ''Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Justice For All'', you meet a man in a hospital who claims to be the hospital's director. The illusion falls apart ''very'' quickly, however, as it rapidly becomes apparent he's just a lecherous mental patient in a lab coat, looking for an excuse to gawk at/fondle female patients/nurses. He's not trying very hard, though; he even admits it to you at one point. Eight years later, though, in ''Apollo Justice'', he's still at it.
* ''TeamFortress2'' has this as a ''game mechanic.'' Being a Spy consists entirely of pretending you're supposed to be there until you decide to shiv somebody. Consider this: spies carry around a device that shorts out Engineer buildings. When disguised as an Engineer, you can look as if you're carrying a wrench, even if you're ready to stab someone in the back. Most engineers spend the better part of their time loitering around their sentries and dispensers [[strike:doing absolutely nothing a Spy can't pretend to do]] whacking them furiously with their wrench, even when nothing is happening. Unfortunately, a spy can't pretend to swing his wrench without losing his disguise. So, the end result is that most engineers are wise enough by now to just spy-check anyone near their stuff.
** A better example may be when a disguised spy charges up to an enemy medic shouting for healing. Many medics will just start healing (or maybe even ubercharging you). There are even achievements for doing this.
* Referenced by Francis in ''Left 4 Dead'' at various times. "Most people will do anything if a cop tells them to."
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Referenced in [[http://www.fantasycomic.com/index.php?p=c515 this]] ''ChasingTheSunset'' strip.
* In ''[[http://www.pvponline.com/ PvP]]'', Brent, after discovering that working at an Apple store won't let him get a free iPhone, walks outside and tells everyone waiting in line on the opening day that they'll need to move a few feet back. After they do, he walks into the open space at the front of the line and quits his job so that he's first in line. This might have worked better if this plan hadn't required he then stand in front of several outraged customers until the store officially opened.
* I'm not sure what the [[TVTropesWillRuinYourVocabulary trope vocabulary]] is for [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2006/01/27/ this]] ''PennyArcade'' strip, but it's funny. Does that count?
** It's more {{Fence Painting}} than anything.
* Ethan from ''{{Shortpacked}}'' [[http://www.toynewsi.com/news.php?catid=242&itemid=15000 pulls this off]] semi-intentionally.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Web Original]]
* Fatebane's favorite tactic in ''AssociatedSpace''.
* {{Epic Tales}} has a story in which Shadow Hawk goes up to a cop, from behind so that the cop doesn't see him, and begins asking what's going on, in his most commanding voice. The cop answers his questions, and only after Shadow Hawk says that he can take care of the villain does the cop turn around to see who he's been giving information to.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In the ''StormHawks'' episode "A Little Trouble," Finn, disguised as a Cyclonian maintenance tech, evades capture when he accidentally steps on another tech's head by helping him with what he was working on. Then the squad is admonished by a passing supervisor for standing around when they should be working. No one ever notices until the Dark Ace recognizes their faces and points it out.
** This came as a surprise to the others, because, in a much straighter version of the "don enemy uniforms to infiltrate their base" strategy, they were trying not to be seen, and the uniforms were a flimsy backup in case they were spotted. It had never occurred to them that actually pretending to be maintenance techs might work.
* The Eds try to scam Johnny with one of these at the beginning of the ''EdEddNEddy'' episode "Urban Ed", disguising it as a game of CalvinBall:
-->'''Eddy:''' That's home plate, and here's the banana!\\
'''Johnny:''' Banana?
* The Mad Hatterbot in ''{{Futurama}}'''s insane robot asylum episode did this. Other characters do it too, but mostly without success.
* In one of the episodes of ''WackyRaces'', Dick Dastardly and Muttley use a fire engine horn and the other racer's respect for authority to pass right by them to the front of the pack. Dastardly even calls it the "Old Phony Fire-Engine Routine".
* ''StarWars: TheCloneWars'': Of all the characters to pull off a BavarianFireDrill, especially those with Force powers, CP30 manages to get a pair of Battle Droids to stop guarding a room he was trying to get into by warning about a incoming Jedi and just continuing to walk on past them when they dash off.
** The same episode features Jar Jar Binks being mistaken for a Jedi because of his robe and he plays the role for all it's worth.
* An episode of ''SouthPark'' spoofing ''24'' had various federal agencies busting into Kyle's rooms, taking over control of the situation, to where the first agency head would claim "I'm in command here!" the other would state "Not anymore you're not!" Towards the end, after becoming a running gag, Kyle arbitrarily says "Not anymore you're not!" to the last guy, prompting him to go "Aw snap..." and walk away.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Real Life]]
* Less unrealistic than it seems, really. Everyone assumes that if you're trying to get into someplace you shouldn't be, the answer is to remain unseen. No one ever thinks to make it look like you belong there.
** Except when someone [[{{PullTheThread}} starts asking the wrong questions]] and being insistently helpful, as at least [[TroperTales/BavarianFireDrill one would-be thief found to their chagrin]].
* Frank Abagnale, the notorious con artist on whom the book and film ''CatchMeIfYouCan'' are based, used this to pull off many of his cons. In one instance, he purchased a security guard's uniform and stood at a bank's overnight depository, telling patrons who pulled up to make their deposits that the depository was broken, but that he would be more than happy to secure their money.
** [[OrSoIHeard According to IMDb]], they planned to include the same scam in the movie, but during filming people came up to Leonardo [=DiCaprio=] in costume and tried to give him their money.
* Germany was united in the 19th Century by the Prussians, whose aristocracy was arguably the most militaristic in Europe. Their obsession with things military spread across the country. At one point, a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Voigt con artist dressed in the uniform of a German army captain]] entered a good-sized town claiming to be an "inspector," began ordering the mayor and officials around, and essentially ran the town for ''three days'' before anyone thought to check on his credentials. When emperor Wilhelm II learned about this, he even was proud: "Such things can only happen here!"
* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strip_Search_Prank_Call_Scam A particularly heinous prank]] involving [=McDonald's=], a master manipulator, and a telephone.
** This was made into an episode of ''LawAndOrder: SVU''
* In 1948, a Japanese male in uniform entered the Teikoku Imperial Bank and, using this trope, managed to get the entire bank staff to swallow poison. In unison. Detailed in the book ''Flowering of the Bamboo'' by William Triplett.
* In Australia, the Chasers are best known for their APEC stunt: they rented a limo, stuck miniature Canadian flags on it and marched clean through a AU$4,000,000 security perimeter. It may be found in all its glory [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdnAaQ0n5-8&feature=fvst here]].
* The [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment Milgram experiment]] (granted, run back in the 70s) strongly suggests that yes, in fact, one ''can'' bluster and bluff people through faked authority.
** It's related, but it's more about people obeying authority no matter what than about anyone faking it.
* On 2 July 2000, 15 men dressed in senior officers' uniforms, driving civilian jeeps painted up to look like military vehicles, entered a Malaysian army base using this method. They apparently convinced the base armoury personnel to hand over more than 100 assault rifles and grenade launchers to them, and left before anyone realized something was wrong. See [[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/818403.stm BBC News.]]
* Convicted cracker Kevin Mitnick used this as his primary criminal method. Among crackers and computer security professionals, this is called [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_engineering_(security) social engineering]].
* "I once had a fellow network geek challenge me to try to bring down his newly installed network. He had just installed a powerful and expensive firewall router and was convinced that I couldn’t get to a test server he added to his network just for me to try to access. After a few attempts to hack in over the Internet, I saw that I wasn’t going to get anywhere that way. So I jumped in my car and drove to his office, having first outfitted myself in a techy-looking jumpsuit and an ancient ID badge I just happened to have in my sock drawer. I smiled sweetly at the receptionist and walked right by my friend’s office (I noticed he was smugly monitoring incoming IP traffic using some neato packet-sniffing program) to his new server. I quickly pulled the wires out of the back of his precious server, picked it up, and walked out the door. The receptionist was too busy trying to figure out why her e-mail wasn’t working to notice me as I whisked by her carrying the 65-pound server box." -- From the CompTIA A+ Certification All-in-One Exam Guide by Michael Meyers.
* Mexicans may remember this one very well, a person impersonating Sven-Goran Eriksson fooled ''each and every'' soccer manager, players and press he crossed and nobody actually knew until they were told. Here have a [[http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_2932440.html?menu=news.quirkies.sportingquirkies link]]
** Parodied by Ant and Dec in the [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4NzmMycZIM video]] to their novelty World Cup tie-in single.
* [[http://telstarlogistics.typepad.com/telstarlogistics/2006/09/what_is_telstar.html Telstar Logistics]] can park ''anywhere.''
** That... is awesome.
* [[{{Dilbert}} Scott Adams]] said that he'd tell women he was interested in that he was an expert on handwriting analysis. He'd get them to write their name and ask them to write the things they liked about him. Once they were in the mindset of thinking appreciative things about him, some would include a phone number.
** Not the only time Adams has taken advantage of this tendency, either. Wearing only a toupee and a fake mustache as a disguise and peddled as a consultant by Logitech's co-founder, he got into a high-level meeting at the company and spouted a wide load of nonsense. Everyone nodded along and he succeeded in getting them to create a completely meaningless mission statement before the hoax was revealed.
* [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phishing Phishing]]. By far the biggest reason why any online service tells you that representatives will ''never'' ask for your password.
* A story of a kid trying to do this with Steam on an online chat client: http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/10/31/1655259
* Dave Barry and a few cartoonists once got into the 2000 Democratic National Convention by dressing up in dark suits with sunglasses, and sticking phone cords in their ears to pretend they were the security detail for Richard Riordan, then-mayor of Los Angeles. (The mayor was in on it, but the convention's security detail and doormen were not.)
* The story of Pacific Tech's [[http://www.nucalc.com/Story/ Graphing Calculator]], in which a couple of ex-contractors managed to get Apple to release their software by pretending they still worked there. One of the best examples from the article: "[Greg] told his manager that he would start reporting to me. She didn't ask who I was and let him keep his office and badge. In turn, I told people that I was reporting to him. Since that left no managers in the loop, we had no meetings and could be extremely productive."
* Many of Joey Skaggs' greatest pranks are predicated on the BavarianFireDrill. The best of these was The Solomon Project, where Skaggs (as Dr. Joseph Bonuso) actually got on CNN to shill a computer that could replace judges. Even better, though, was the fact that ''this was the fifth time Skaggs had snowed CNN this way''.
* A somewhat famous theft from the Hudson's Bay Company building in downtown Winnipeg involved two people walking in, taking a canoe, putting it over their heads as though they were simply moving the display, and walking straight out the door with it, never to be seen again.
* A german Newsmagazine tested this with an actor. He would stop cars while talking into a normal cellphone and claim to be a police officer, needing the car for an ongoing chase, as his partner is already pursuing the criminal with their patrol car. Even more disturbing than the number of people immediately giving their keys where the ones handing over the car after checking the ID. It was a cheap plastic card, the picture badly glued on it, and the word "Police" misspelled.
** This is actually justified in Germany: When you deal with a police officer in full uniform, you have no right to see his ID, ask him for his name or even express reasonable doubts about his authority. Many people have been punished for Resistance against Law Officers, with Germany's highest courts backing this up.
* In the British version of ''CandidCamera'' the crew once successfully (pretended to have) closed an entire county, only allowing vehicles in as others came out.
* Way, way too many cases of people hijacking a helicopter and simply flying into the prison yard to pick up allies. So many guards assume the helicopter is there officially.
* Zug.com's self-described "[[http://www.zug.com/pranks/super/index01.html Most ambitious prank in history]]" where the site's owners broke into the Super Bowl, conned security -- including a Federal agent -- into believng they were there on official business from [=PepsiCo=] and placed an advertisement for their website ''into the middle of Prince's halftime show.''
* According to many anectdotes, it was possible before around 1960 to gain a professorship at Harvard, simply by finding an empty office, showing up a faculty meetings, and acting like you know what you're talking about.
** This seems remarkably similar to the Terry Pratchett Discworld example above?
-->"It's also been noted on at least one occasion that tenure at Unseen University is a matter of finding an empty office, turning up for dinner on time, and hoping you don't attract students."
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