'''Hollywood Ugly''' launched as HollywoodHomely: [[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/discussion.php?id=my23s72o14shkjijnfmhvblx&trope=HollywoodHomely From YKTTW]]
While I agree Lynda Carter is one of the most beautiful women in history, her Diana Prince character wasn't supposed to be homely exactly, she had plenty of men hitting on her in the series. Diana was supposed to be shy and romantically naive; Etta would often urge her to be more outgoing.
RedShoe: Really more of a HotLibrarian than HollywoodHomely I think.
->Agreed. Not only that, but on at least one occasion she had to pretend to fall in love with a slimy villain, exactly as mentioned in HotLibrarian. I took the liberty of moving the example there.
{{Andyzero}}: Would the main character from ''UglyBetty'' count? I haven't actually seen the show, though.
CameoAppearance: I don't think Mickey Smith was ever considered to be ugly or physically unappealing; he was something of a third wheel at times, but I don't recall anything to do with his looks ever actually coming up.
SevenSeals: Agreed. I've taken it out. Mickey was picked on plenty of times for being "stupid" (mostly by the Doctor), but nobody ever called him ugly.
{{Semiapies}}: I'm really not sure of the Willow example. She certainly should have gotten more attention for her looks, but she was always described as a nerdy social outcast in high school, not ugly.
{{Gus}}: Changed it to "plain", which (early) Willow is and Allyson Hannigan has to play. It fits.
{{Fly}}: Quickly corrected the Simpsons episode title - it's Pyg''moe''lion, not Pygmalion, as Moe was getting plastic surgery in the episode.
{{Seth}}: Actualy it was Pygmoel''ian''
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LickyLindsay: particularly with female characters, I don't know that they're supposed to be "unattractive" so much as comically unable to find a good man. Think about all the female sitcom characters who go from one loser (possibly CoolLoser) to another. These women aren't ugly (not even supposed to be ugly in the context of the show), or even HollywoodDateless, just cursed to date bozos. Maybe this is a whole separate trope?
{{Seth}}: That sounds related to UglyGuyHotWife
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RuthieA: I find this trope even carries over to ''books'' for me. Even when a character is described as plain or less than pretty, I tend to get a HollywoodHomely mental image of them. I guess this is just one of those tropes that's so ever present that it just gets ingrained in your mind.
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VampireBuddha: Should Willow from ''Buffy'' really be here? I always thought she was supposed to be a nerd who also happened to be hot, but happened to wear plain clothes and have a rather meek personality. Buffy certainly thought she was sexy in that episode where they turned into their Hallowe'en costumes.
SciVo: I agree. Early hacker!Willow is a perfect example of HollywoodNerd, not of HollywoodHomely.
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As a useless aside, "homely" actually means attractive in Britain. Not that any of us are confused by the title - indeed, those of us who learn from TV probably only know the American definition.
Jordan: I don't want to do a "justifying edit", but my impression of Betty in UglyBetty from the few episodes I've seen is that she is supposed to be HollywoodHomely- everyone around her is so shallow that they consider her ugly, but she is pretty by any normal standard.
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GuySmiley: Completely off-topic, but can someone find me the David Spade monologue mentioned?
{{Grimace}}: Wanted to see it myself - thankfully, I noticed Comedy Central has begun posting practically all its clips online now. It's called ''[[http://www.comedycentral.com/videos/index.jhtml?videoId=83820&title=there-i-said-it-ugly-betty There I Said It: Ugly Betty]]''. If that link doesn't work for some reasons, just go to their site (http://www.comedycentral.com) and search for "Ugly Betty", that'll get you sorted.
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{{KJMackley}}: I divided the page into media groups. One unique thing I did was specifically note the Subversions and Lampshades made, since I think those are much rarer then the straight examples. I also cut this because it wasn't really an example, just a troper tale.
* This troper, for lack of a concise and accurate term, once referred to a HollywoodHomely character in a movie he was describing as "the ugly friend," until the need of the listeners for clarification on the use of the term "ugly friend" forced him to clarify that she wasn't specifically ugly so much as she could have been about forty and was about as attractive as my mom, who isn't hot by any stretch of the imagination, but isn't actually ugly either.
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Prfnoff: Sorry, not an example of this trope. Also, you misspelled "millennium."
* The Millenium Falcon. To anyone from this planet, the Millenium Falcon is a thing of unparalleled beauty and power, the wish-fulfillment fantasy of several generations of mainly male fans who dream of owning their own go-anywhere, smuggle-anything, shoot-anyone, honest-to-goodness STARSHIP. But to pretty much everyone in the Star Wars universe, it's a heap of junk worthy only of derision. The implication seems to be that it's the in-universe equivalent of a twenty-year-old Reliant Robin.
SonofRojBlake: Fair enough on the spelling. But how is this not an example of the trope? Trope is: we're TOLD she's ugly, but we can SEE she's beautiful. Well, we're TOLD the Falcon is a heap of junk, repeatedly, and yet to me and pretty much anyone I know it looks GREAT. If that's not this trope, what is it?
{{Grimace}}: She. Is. A. Space. Ship.
{{Seed}}: It's not an example of this trope because you have no way of knowing what looks like a good ship in the Star Wars universe and what looks like a piece of junk. If every character in a world with starships thinks a particular star ship looks junky, you really can't argue with them, having never seen a starship in real life yourself.
{{JurassicMosquito}}: No. It's not an example of this trope because this trope is not about objects. It wouldn't matter if you could dredge up 50,000 examples of gorgeous ships being called ugly, they ''still'' wouldn't fit this trope, because this trope covers ''only'' humans. Period, ''fin'', end of story.
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{{Cat22}}: Just wondering if anyone agrees with me here. The examples of books that describe a character as "plain", while the movie adaptation makes them gorgeous is AdaptationalAttractiveness... not HollywoodHomely.
For instance, while Scarlett o'Hara was not supposed to be beautiful in the ''book'' GoneWithTheWind, in the movie that wasn't mentioned. We're never told that we're supposed to believe Vivien Leigh is "plain". That's just a plain old AdaptationalAttractiveness. The adaptation made the character prettier than they're supposed to be.
Meanwhile, in the book of LittleWomen, Jo describes herself as awkward and ugly. In the movie, Winona Ryder still uses this line, and expects us to believe it, even though it obviously doesn't apply to her. ''That'' is HollywoodHomely. Does anyone else follow me? Or am I being too picky?