->'''Hobbes:''' What about the noodle incident?\\
'''Calvin:''' ''[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial No one can prove I did that!]]''\\
-- ''{{Calvin and Hobbes}}''
->'''Airplane Pilot:''' Have you ever been in a cockpit before, Father?\\
'''Father Dougal:''' Ah, no. But this one time I was on the bridge of a Sealink ferry, and it was funny, I was looking at the controls and--\\
'''Father Noel:''' (coughcoughcough)\\
'''Father Dougal:''' -- oh, um, nothing happened at all.\\
-- ''FatherTed''
The NoodleIncident is something from the past that is sometimes referred to but never explained, with the implication that it's just too ludicrous for words, and the reality that any explanation would fall short of audience expectations. Questions about it are often met with "[[YouDoNOTWantToKnow You Don't Want To Know...]]"
Commonly introduced to the audience through a WikiWalk.
Named for an (unexplained, of course) incident referenced by the characters of ''{{Calvin and Hobbes}}''.
Compare SecondHandStorytelling, TakeOurWordForIt, NoodleImplements, WhatsASecretFour, and WhatDidIDoLastNight. Reminiscing about a NoodleIncident by the people involved can result in LostInTransmission for an outsider. Compare and contrast MissingMomentOfAwesome, where the off-screen incident would have been better on-screen. See also CowTools. Enough such incidents create a character who has SeenItAll. If a NoodleIncident is essential to solving a mystery, it's a RiddleForTheAges. If it results in the person/people involved being banished from wherever it happened, they've been BannedFromArgo.
----
[[foldercontrol]]
!!Examples
[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* In ''AzumangaDaioh,'' Yukari occasionally brings up a [[LoveLetterLunacy Love Letter]] incident involving Minamo from when they were in High School, which usually prompts Minamo to scramble to get her to shut up. Once, she ''sang'' "love letter" whilst flitting down the hallway, just before Minamo could relate a juicy detail about Yukari to the students. Watch the anime version of the scene, as it must be heard to be appreciated.
** IIRC, the time that Yukari sang about it was the ''very first time'' the love letter was brought up. And the subbed version has her singing it in GratuitousEnglish.
*** '''RUV RETTA, RUV RETTA, RUV RUV RUV RUV RUV RETTA!'''
** We see [[DrivesLikeCrazy Yukari's driving skills]] first-hand towards the end of the series, but only hear references to it early on.
--->'''Chiyo:''' ''(recalling her first ride in Yukari's car)'' ... ''The lights are still red... look out for that old lady!''
* ''[=~Pokémon~=]'''s LovableSexManiac Brock, during the Orange Islands [[StoryArc sub-arc]], seems to legitimately settle down with the Island's female Pokémon Professor, actually leaving the group for a while to pursue the relationship. When he returns, it's clear that something happened to turn the relationship sour, but he refuses to elaborate, instead going into a deep, brooding, BlueWithShock depression whenever anyone even mentions the relationship or the Professor's name.
* In the ''[=~D.Gray-man~=]'' manga, Allen recalls an incident involving his mentor Cross Marian's stash of alcohol-filled chocolates. What happened after he ate them is never explained, but the incident pissed Cross off enough that he punished Allen big-time and forced him to promise to never touch a drop of booze again.
** Almost nothing concerning Allen's time with Cross is outright shown or explained; Allen gets too traumatized remembering. In fact, when he was playing cards against Tyki and his friends, he mentions he had to gamble (and therefore cheat) to survive, and off to the side, we see something saying "a typical day", where we see only dialogue talking about Cross owing money....
** It is impliedly explained. In the "Kuro no Bansankai" Special Drama CD, we find out how Allen behaves when drunk. He [[spoiler: gets VERY vicious and destructive, and when it wears off, can't even remember he was the one who caused all the massive property damage.]] As a result, Lavi is able to take a very, very good guess as to why Cross banned him from ever touching alcohol again.
* ''CodeGeass R2'' has this exchange:
-->'''Kallen:''' This reminds me of Aomori.\\
'''C.C.:''' It isn't as bad as that was. At least everyone here is wearing their clothes.
** An image released with a special edition DVD for the end of the series depicts C.C., Kallen, and another soldier running from searchlights while wearing nothing but towels, explaining this incident and rendering it no longer noodle.
** Also, in the final episode, Nina asks what happened between [[RivalScienceTeams Lloyd and Rakshata]]. Cecille just said it was "such a minor thing."
* Played with in ''CromartieHighSchool'': the rather upstanding Kamiyama refused to explain exactly why in the hell he's in a school full of {{delinquents}}. However, he tells the audience several times that if they want to know they should read the manga (in which it actually ''is'' explained).
* In ''{{Tsukihime}}'''s side-story game, ''Kagetsu Tohya'', Shiki occasionally refers to the haunted house his class did last year, in which he and his friend were responsible for ''something'' that resulted in their student government making an amendment that strictly prohibits tea kettle monsters, mushroom monsters, and any pot that uses the aforementioned things. The specifics are left up to the imagination.
-->'''Shiki:''' Yes, we did a haunted house my freshman year, too. Well, Arihiko did his part so ardently that we were forced to stop in the morning.\\
'''(To himself):''' ''The Inuidake Children Kidnapping. It's an event that will forever remain in the annals of the student government.''
* [[AllThereInTheManual The second Sound Stage]] of ''MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha [=StrikerS=]'' had [[WrenchWench Alto]] and the school toilet incident back when she was seven and thought she was a boy ([[IHaveBrothers Only having brothers probably had something to do with that last part]]), which she always interrupted before anyone could elaborate.
* Lina Inverse in ''TheSlayers'' references the horrible punishments her sister used to put her through quite a few times, even though they are never actually explained. It leads one to wonder what she really could do, granted that Lina could put up with being electrically shocked while saying it was nothing compared to that torture. That, and Lina constructed a pyramid atop herself in order to merely get away from a ''letter'' sent by her sister.
** One of the less harsh punishments Lina suffered involved [[spoiler:a whole lot of ''slugs'', a fact which she tearfully reveals after a near-total fear-induced breakdown in the second season.]]
** An unspoken Noodle Incident is whatever it was that caused Naga the Serpent, Lina's self-proclaimed rival (and whom Lina publically called "Goldfish Poop" in the novels, due to her habit of following Lina), to stop following Lina by the time the anime started.
*** The most common fan speculation is that it involved casting the Giga Slave.
**** First time this troper has even heard of THAT explanation...
* ''MahouSenseiNegima'' has a minor one involving Chizuru and "[[http://www.onemanga.com/Mahou_Sensei_Negima!/165/12/ A large number of spring onions]]" (in the lower-left panel). Pretty much became a RunningGag. Whatever it is, even [[BigBadassWolf Kotarou's]] afraid of it.
** It WAS explained; it consisted of shoving the spring onion up one's ass. The funniest thing is that Spring Onion means "Negi-bozou" in Japanese, so Chizuru might [[YaoiFangirl support Negi/Kotarou]] with Negi as seme and Kotarou as uke.
** Yes and no... the shoving the onion up one's butt thing was apparently supposed to cure a fever or something, and that involved only ''one'' onion. It's still left up to the readers to figure out how a ''large number'' of onions could be applied, especially when Natsumi was apparently perfectly healthly.
** There's also [[http://www.onemanga.com/Mahou_Sensei_Negima!/203/17/ this incident]], which involves the first time that [[PlayfulHacker Chisame]] ever went on the Internet.
* In the ''{{Mai-Otome}}'' anime, Shizuru and Youko recall a mishap that occurred during Natsuki and [[spoiler:Mai]]'s attempt at the survival exam. Shizuru notes that when she heard Natsuki's distress signal, she rushed to the scene as quickly as she could, only to find the two girls [[LesYay in a "most improper" position]], at which point Natsuki angrily cuts her off and tells her to "forget about it" before she gets to the juicy parts.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Comics]]
* Averted in the ''{{Batman}}'' story arc "Prodigal"... eventually. Dick Grayson assumed the role of Batman while Bruce Wayne left Gotham to work on a case, the details of which were not made clear for some time. Several years later, in ''No Man's Land'', the "case" was revealed as an excuse for him to secretly set up several mini-Batcaves throughout Gotham.
* The purpose of [[DonRosa Don Rosa's]] ''{{The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck}}'' was intended to round up all of the Noodle Incidents mentioned in the stories by CarlBarks and create a biography for the character out of them. Rosa refers to these as "Barksian facts", and he has only had to leave out very few that are completely against the rest of the story.
* In the comic book ''{{Transmetropolitan}}'', "The Terrible Night of the Telephone" is an apocryphal story of how journalist Spider Jerusalem caused half a dozen politicians in Prague to commit suicide over the telephone. No other details are given, but the incident is referred to several times over the run of the comic.
** This is almost repeated on screen, as he also manages to talk a TV show host into attempting suicide in a live broadcast. One presumes that the original incident was something similar, or else he simply threatened to reveal some serious dirt on the politicians.
* In the comic book ''AstroCity'' it remained unexplained for a long time why the statue of the Silver Agent was inscribed "To our eternal shame" It was finally revealed in "Astro City, the Dark Ages" that he had been unjustly executed for a murder he committed under mind control because the government wanted to make people know they still had control over the metahumans.
* The British newspaper strip ''{{Bristow}}'', set in an office, often included references to "the great tea-trolley disaster of '66".
* Bill Watterson may, at one point, have intended to visit the Noodle Incident someday, but in the Tenth Anniversary ''{{Calvin and Hobbes}}'' collection, he explains that the reason he never did was because nothing he could come up with would ever be as fantastic or as interesting as anything the readers would be able to come up with while trying to work out exactly what happened.
-->'''Hobbes:''' What about your explanation of the noodle incident?\\
'''Calvin:''' '''''That wasn't a story! That was the unvarnished truth!'''''\\
'''Hobbes:''' Oh, don't be so modest. You deserved a Pulitzer.
** Half the fun of the NoodleIncident is watching how flustered and angry Calvin gets whenever Hobbes brings it up.
** A "Salamander Incident" was referenced in an earlier strip.
** Also, in one strip, Calvin complains to Hobbes about how much trouble he got into that day in school, but when Hobbes asked what happened, Calvin says he doesn't even want to talk about. When Hobbes asks if it had "anything to do with those sirens [he] heard around noon", Calvin repeats, louder this time, "I '''SAID''' I don't want to talk about it!"
*** Moderate concensus among fans is that this is indeed ''the'' specific date/strip that the NoodleIncident occurred, as no other school exploit of his ever got all the way up to the level of emergency sirens.
** In similar fashion, we are given very few details about Calvin's favorite bedtime story, ''Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie''. As noted in the Tenth Anniversary Collection, "''Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie'' (like the "Noodle Incident" [Watterson's] referred to in several strips) is left to the reader's imagination, where it's sure to be more outrageous."
*** Even more interesting would be the "new version" his dad comes up with when he finally gets fed up with reading the story every night. We know it ends with the townfolk searching for Hamster Huey's head...
*** In a later strip Calvin even mentions an upcoming sequel to ''Hamster Huey'' (written by [[IncrediblyLamePun Mabel Syrup]]), titled ''Commander Coriander Salamander and Her Single-Hander Bellylander''. [[UnnamedParent Calvin's Dad]] had a less-than-joyous reaction.
* The unspecified "incident" that caused Brian to swear off [=GMing=] ''Hackmaster'' in ''KnightsOfTheDinnerTable''.
** A few other "incidents", like the Bag War, are expanded into full story arcs as extras for the back issue collections.
* In the popular comic strip ''PearlsBeforeSwine'', Pig is enemies with a sea anemone due to an unknown event that occurred years in the past.
* In ''AlphaFlight'' #5, Puck mentions the affair of the Brass Bishop. Never explained further by the original creator, but two different (and contradictory) Brass Bishops have shown up since. (The original story still isn't told, though.)
* Brian Michael Bendis likes to use the line "You still owe me eight dollars from that thing that time."
* Watchmen does this a little bit in the early chapters, like Hollis's reference to the Screaming Skull, but some references (like "Rorschach's nuts. He's been nuts ever since that kidnapping he handled three years back.") are revealed in full later on and are downright horrifying.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Fan Works]]
* In one ongoing ''{{Daria}}'' FanFic series, the characters occasionally make mention of "the Porterhouse Challenge", which may be related to the VERY large steak that a number of restaurants offer (hilariously large, in some cases) with the caveat that if a person can eat it in one sitting, the meal is free.
* Interestingly enough, one of best uses this troper ever saw of this was in a Harry/Ginny [[http://www.sugarquill.net/read.php?storyid=413&chapno=1 fanfic]] [[http://www.sugarquill.net/read.php?storyid=418&chapno=1 duology]]. Who knew bolding and italicizing a pronoun could be so effective...
* From ''[=~I'm a Marvel... And I'm a DC~=]''
-->'''{{Spider-Man}}:''' ''(about Green Goblin)'' Honestly, who's stupid enough to get that drunk?\\
'''IronMan:''' Look, Comic-Con went really well, all right? I've been very good, everybody was celebrating, everyone was doing it, we ''thought'' we could make it to Tijuana, they dropped the charges, so just ''shut up'', okay?!\\
''(awkward silence)''
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Films]]
* Whatever it was that happened "This one time, at band camp..." in the [[{{Bowdlerise}} broadcast TV version]] of ''AmericanPie''. Those who watched the film elsewhere got to hear about it [[CargoShip in more detail.]]
* In ''StarWars'' Episode 3, Anakin and Obi-wan have one listed under their adventures.
-->'''Obi-Wan:''' Anakin, let's be fair. Today you were the hero and you deserve your glorious day with the politicians.\\
'''Anakin Skywalker:''' All right. But you owe me one, and for not saving your skin for the tenth time.\\
'''Obi-Wan:''' ''Ninth'' time. That business on Cato Neimodia doesn't... doesn't count.
** The novel ''Labyrinth of Evil'' describes the event in question. Basically, Obi-Wan accidentally inhales gas during a battle that causes him to go ga-ga. Much to his embarrassment, HilarityEnsues.
*** It wasn't just any [[HilarityEnsues hilarity]], either. Turns out Obi-wan is a DrunkenMaster with a [[LaserBlade lightsaber]]. Guess that explains why he felt comfortable enough to stop for a drink when they chased the bounty hunter Zam Wessel into a bar in Episode II....
** The Original Trilogy had a bounty hunter on Ord Mantell sometime between ''A New Hope'' and the ''Empire Strikes Back''. It's been explained at least three different ways in the expanded universe.
*** Had a bounty hunter? Doing what to whom? You accidentally the whole what? Elaborate, please.
**** Go play ''StarWars Shadows Of The Empire'' on N64 to understand.
** When Han and crew are attempting to land at Cloud City in ''The Empire Strikes Back'' and the security cloud cars are giving them a hard time, Chewie suggests something that is, as usual, [[TheUnintelligible unintelligible]]. Han responds, "Well, that was a long time ago. I'm sure he's forgotten about that." This, too, has been explained in the [=EU=]. Lando believed Han double-crossed him, even though he actually didn't. For more, read ''Star Wars: The Han Solo Trilogy'', probably this troper's favorite from the EU. Unlike some, it really gets the spirit of ''Star Wars'' and Han Solo particularly.
** Much of ''StarWars'' is based on events and places that are referred to but never explained, designed to give it the feel of this being an actual, other galaxy. Han's mention of the "Kessel Run", Luke and Obi-Wan mentioning "The Clone Wars" (which of course is elaborated upon in the prequels). Of course, the sheer scope of the ExpandedUniverse ensures that ''StarWars'' has few Noodle Incidents left. To the point where the Noodle Incidents raised ''by'' the EU get their very own explanation books. ''OutboundFlight'', for example.
*** The Kessel Run is explained in the ''JediAcademyTrilogy''. It's explained that the Kessel run involves going past a cluster of black holes, and the 12 parsecs of distance being the shortest route ever taken (resulting in the fastest time, of course), meaning the ''Millenium Falcon'' traveled closer to the cluster than anyone else, allowing them to make the run in less distance, as opposed to others who swung out further from the cluster to go around the long way.
** The novelization of the first film also included a scene where Han explains that he can't be lost aboard the Death Star, because "Corellians can't get lost; when [[TheUnintelligible Chewie]] expresses scepticism, Han's reply is "Tocneppil doesn't count -- he wasn't a Corellian. Besides, I was drunk."
*** ''TheThrawnTrilogy'' has an in-universe example -- one of the "we are a couple" things Han and Leia have is "I am ''not'' a committee." Luke's been wondering about that some six years, but hasn't gotten around to asking.
*** That one is actually a reference to, I believe, a scene in ''The Empire Strikes Back'' in which the following exchange takes place:
---->'''Han:''' We don't have time to discus this in committee!
---->'''Leia:''' I am '''''not''''' a committee!!!
* ''AustinPowers: Goldmember'' makes use of this, when Austin and his father speak about a certain incident, using subtitles and British colloquialisms, regarding an insane maid. The actual gist of what happens is a barrage of unintelligible gibberish (with no subtitles), though apparently it ends with "... and then she shat on a turtle!"
* ''{{Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow}}''. HotScoop Polly Perkins is visibly annoyed when Sky Captain shares a hilarious recollection with fellow AcePilot (and implied ex-lover) ActionGirl "Franky" Cook.
-->'''Sky Captain:''' Franky, you remember our milk run over Shanghai, don't you?\\
'''Franky:''' We had the target buttoned up and he was jinxing in the flak...\\
'''Sky Captain:''' Pops a rivet, thinks he's taken a hit...\\
'''Franky:''' And started yelling...\\
'''Both simultaneously:''' "Protect the rabbits! Protect the rabbits!"
* In ''SisterAct'': "There was a hooker living next door named Buckwheat Bertha, who..."
* In Disney's ''TheGreatMouseDetective'', Ratigan mentions "the Big Ben Caper" and "the Tower Bridge Job" in his VillainSong. The latter was apparently a major jewel theft.
* In ''{{Ghostbusters}}'', Ray Stanz mentions being present at an "unexplained mass sponge migration", to which Peter Venkman retorts, "Ray, the sponges migrated about a foot and a half." Later, Venkman reminds Egon of the time the latter tried to drill a hole in his own head, to which Egon responds "That would have worked if you hadn't stopped me." Vinz Clortho also unleashes a barrage of Noodle Incidents about Gozer: "He will come in one of the pre-chosen forms. During the rectification of the Vuldrini, the Traveler came as a large and moving Torg! Then, during the third reconciliation of the last of the [=McKetrick=] supplicants, they chose a new form for him: that of a giant Slor! Many Shuvs and Zuuls knew what it was to be roasted in the depths of the Slor that day, I can tell you!"
* ''MenInBlack'': Agent K tells Agent J, "You should've been here for the Zeronion migration in 1968."
* ''{{This is Spinal Tap}}'': Talking about the band's first drummer's death:
-->'''David St. Hubbins:''' He died in a bizarre gardening accident...\\
'''Nigel Tufnel:''' Authorities said... best leave it... unsolved.
* ''{{Pirates of the Caribbean}}'' has a number of them:
** Jack Sparrow's list of charges at the end of ''Curse of the Black Pearl''. When the charge of "Impersonating a cleric of the Church of England" is read, Jack even gives a smirk.
*** As Elizabeth is falling into the water in the first film, Jack says, "... and then they made me their chief." In the writers' commentary, they explain that this is one of the ''many'' stories about how Jack survived his being marooned.
*** It's also a reference to one of Johnny Depp's favourite shows, ''The Fast Show'': "And then they made me their chief. Which was nice."
*** Jack's line, "Clearly you've never been to Singapore."
*** "Said crimes being numerous in quantity and sinister in nature, the most egregious of these to be cited herewith: piracy, smuggling, impersonating an officer of the Spanish Royal Navy, impersonating a cleric of the Church of England, sailing under false colors, arson, kidnapping, looting, poaching, brigandage, pilfering, depravity, depredation, and general lawlessness." Every one of those is a NoodleIncident. Except the piracy, of course. And, I suppose, the depravity, considering how many times he seemed to be suggesting getting drunk as the appropriate course of action.
* ''[[TheViewAskewniverse Dogma]]'' had this in the scene where Loki and Bartleby were judging the board members of the Mooby's franchise. Everyone's big, revolting sin is mentioned, except for board head Whitland:
-->'''Bartleby:''' But you, Mr. Whitland, you have more skeletons in your closet than the rest of this assembled party. I cannot even mention them aloud.\\
''(Bartleby whispers something in Whitland's ear)''\\
'''Loki:''' [[{{Squick}} You're his]] ''[[ParentalIncest father]]'', [[{{WordofGod}} you sick fuck!]]\\
''(Whitland starts crying)''
** ''{{Mallrats}}'' features a smaller example when T.S, Brodie and Gwen were talking about a high school costume party the three were at:
--->'''Brodie:''' How many chances do you get to see Smokey fuck the Bandit?\\
'''Gwen:''' Didn't I look just like Burt Reynolds?\\
'''Brodie and T.S.:''' Except for the moustache.
** In ClerksII, the whole Pillow Pants conversation. KevinSmith was told he needed to film a pussy troll, and he said nothing he could film would be half as funny as what the audience is picturing.
* ''[=SlapShot=]'': The hockey team which is the star of the movie becomes a vicious bunch of goons, so the other team brings out the worst of the worst hockey players to challenge them, including ones that had retired, such as one who's "been living in semi-seclusion running a donut shop in Moosejaw, Saskachewan, ever since the famed ''Denny Pratt Tragedy''."
* In ''Super Troopers'', references are made frequently to Farva's "School Bus Incident", giving that as the explanation for his relegation to deskwork instead of active duty. The trope is subverted at the end of the film, when during the credits they play a clip of "archived footage" recorded from the police car, detailing said incident.
* ''[[OceansEleven Ocean's Eleven]]'':
-->'''Reuben Tishkoff:''' Look, we all go way back and uh, I owe you from the thing with the guy in the place and I'll never forget it.\\
'''Danny Ocean:''' That was our pleasure.\\
'''Rusty Ryan:''' I'd never been to Belize.
* Similarly, in ''{{Hackers}}'': "It's in that place where I hid that thing that time."
* In ''KangarooJack'': "How was I supposed to know those dalmatians were being used to smuggle diamonds?"
* In ''{{The Way of the Gun}}'', Dr. Allen Painter is reminded of "what happened in Baltimore," an apparently shameful incident that is never elaborated upon.
* In ''{{Predator}}'', soldiers occasionally remind each other of past operations, referencing them by their locations such as "that little job in Libya."
* Sheriff Hague from ''PlanetTerror'' doesn't trust Wray at all, and won't allow him to carry weapons despite a ZombieApocalypse going on. The movie [[PaintingTheFourthWall randomly cuts out at one point]] and flashes forwards a few hours later; Hague's opinion of Wray has done a complete 180.
-->'''Sheriff Hauge:''' Sorry, I didn't know you were... ''(melodramatic tone)''... ''El Wray''. Give him the guns. Give him all the guns!
* ''The Hangover'' can be seen as a variant on this trope, where it starts off a noodle incident, and it becomes clearer as the movie goes on. Only two things are never explained: [[spoiler:why that one chair is smoking and where they got a chicken.]]
* ''Atlantis: The Lost Empire'' had one, as well.
-->'''Milo:''' What's Mole's story?\\
'''Dr. Sweet:''' Trust me on this one. You don't wanna know. Audrey, don't tell him. You shouldn't have told me, but you did. And now I'm tellin' you: ''(Points at Milo)'' You don't wanna know.
**In the sequel, it was revealed that Mole was raised by naked mole rats. Kida comments "That explains so much..."
* ''RushHour 3'' has an interesting conversation between Lee and Carter which alludes to an incident (Carter's fault) which causes Lee to break up with his girlfriend. Apparently it involved Carter shooting her in the neck -- nonfatally but causing her one eye to be droopy -- and leading to her working for some time at El Poco loco and then returning to the FBI as soon as she was able. Lee is shown to be very unhappy about this as he feels that had the accident not happened, they would have eventually slept together.
* ''Undercover Blues'' may be legitimately considered as a series of noodle incidents connected by a script, including several subversions of the trope.
* ''Scary Movie 3'' does this; Tom says "I'm not a stoner anymore" and the flashback almost starts before his friend says "Goodbye Tom", before driving away as quickly as he can
* ''{{Buckaroo Banzai}}'': "Why is there a watermelon there?" "I'll explain later." Answer revealed in a DVD easter egg.
* ''{{Unforgiven}}''. Will and Ned often talk about their past exploits as well as members of their old gang.
* There is a brief mention of a NoodleIncident in the first ''SpiderMan'' film. While Peter's class is visiting the laboratory at the beginning of the film, several of the students are screwing off, prompting their teacher to say, "Remember, it is a privilege to be here. We're guests of Columbia University's Science Department, so behave accordingly. Let's not have a repeat of our trip to the planetarium."
* A kind of HistoricalInJoke in {{Oscar}}: "You were in Chicago. It was St. Valentine's Day?"
* In the movie {{Broadcast News}} Albert Brooks's character is speaking to Holly Hunter's character over the phone when he tells her, "Ok, I'll meet you at the place near the thing where we went that time."
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Literature]]
* TerryPratchett's ''{{Discworld}}'' books occasionally refer to the unlucky Mr. Hong, who disappeared in mysterious circumstances after opening The Three Jolly Luck Takeaway Fish Bar on the site of an old fish-god temple on Dagon Street during a full moon (some references also state that said full moon was on the Winter Solstice; thankfully, that's where the chain of unfortunate coincidences end -- there's no "after a delivery of a rare kind of squid" to make it worse). No one knows quite what happened, but it wasn't pleasant: one of the references mentions that he left behind "one kidney and half an earhole". Note that Dagon is the name of a Philistine fish god, and is also a malevolent deity in the [[CosmicHorror Lovecraft mythos...]]
** A more sinister example is given just enough detail that the reader can figure out the likely story. Sybil Vimes nee Ramkin is reflecting on how she worries about Sam. There was one case, involving someone who "took a little girl's shoes", where if Detritus hadn't been in the interrogation room the troll was pretty certain only Vimes would have walked out of it...
*** Oh, it's worse than that. They didn't ''take'' the shoes, they ''kept'' the shoes afterward. One of them, anyway.
** And on a similar note, the last king of Ankh-Morpork, Lorenzo the Kind, was said to be "very fond of children", and had various "devices" in his dungeons. The fact that he was apparently so bad even the notoriously corrupt and apathetic people of Ankh-Morpork wanted him dead speaks volumes.
** In ''Discworld/SoulMusic'', the wizards at Unseen University are eating and it is mentioned that the [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Bursar]] has to have wooden utensils instead of metal ones after what they have since refered to as "the Unfortunate Incident at Dinner".
** ''Discworld/NightWatch'' has Vimes threatening a recalitrant prisoner with the "Ginger Beer Trick", aproximated by a finger popped from the mouth, a hissing noise and a blood curdling scream.
*** This one's not really a mystery. You shake a glass bottle of soda or mineral water and spray it straight up the victim's nostrils, leveraging the pressure with the thumb. It hurts like hell and leaves no marks on the victims body. It is commonly done by drugdealers and corrupt cops in latin america. For an on-screen example, you can watch it happen on a recent {{Dexter}} episode.
**** And it doesn't have to be a nostril, either...
** And then there's Bloody Stupid Johnson, a, ah, "unique" designer/architect who is always mentioned in passing (along with his creations which work, just not the way you expect them to)... and it is hinted in ''Jingo'' that an ancestor of Lady Sybil's had something to do with said passing, as well.
**A specific noodle incident occurs in ''Discworld/{{Hogfather}}'' with Johnson's custom bathroom 'Typhoon Superior Indoor Ablutorium with Automatic Soap Dish' which was found boarded up hidden behind a bookcase in the University. The Archchancellor used until there was an unfortunate incident, after which he solemnly ordered it sealed up again, only more thoroughly and with extra warning notices. It's implied that it involved an interaction between the shower and the university's pipe organ, which was also designed by Johnson and was being played by the Librarian at the time. It's also stated that "they never did find the soap".
** And another is [[Discworld/ThiefOfTime Jeremy Clockson]]'s reaction to a fellow clockmaker who ''deliberately'' kept his watch fast. All we're told is that people are very understanding when it comes to genius, at least once they've cleaned up the mess and taken the hammer away.
* As students of the ''SherlockHolmes'' canon know well, Dr. Watson liberally sprinkles various Noodle Incidents in his narratives of Holmes's cases, making it OlderThanRadio. Sherlockians have long been tantalized by references to such matters as "the shocking affair of the Dutch steamship ''Friesland'', which so nearly cost us both our lives," the case of Wilson the notorious canary-trainer, the repulsive story of the red leech, the story of "the Giant Rat of Sumatra, for which the world is not yet prepared," and the Curious Experience of the Patterson Family on the Island of Uffa; for some reason, Dr. Watson never got around to writing these adventures up for publication. These references have been a fertile ground for amateur Sherlockian FanFic and professional SherlockHolmes pastiches alike for years.
** ''Exploits of Sherlock Holmes'', written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's son Adrian Conan Doyle, is a short-story collection consisting entirely of cases Watson referenced in the original works.
** Likewise, a number of these ''Sherlock Holmes'' incidents were transferred almost word-for-word into one of the ''Star Trek'' novels, with Spock reminding Kirk of them.
** The ''DoctorWho'' ExpandedUniverse novel "All Consuming Fire" attempts to explain these "missing" ''Sherlock Holmes'' adventures by cramming them all into the ''same'' adventure, to the point where it's really not funny.
** FredSaberhagen takes on "the giant rat of Sumatra" in his novel ''The Holmes-Dracula File''. Of course, the title of that novel rather implies a few other Noodle Incidents along the way.
** The Firesign Theater's ''Sherlock Holmes'' parody, "The Giant Rat of Sumatra" refers to the eponymous rodent (and contains [[HurricaneOfPuns more puns per square inch]] than are strictly healthy).
** In an author's note by Dennis L. [=McKiernan=], [=McKiernan=] refers to this Holmesian trait of cases that never were and tells of imagining a reference of the case of the "red slipper" -- i.e. a case or item that you'll only be teased about and never get to see what it was all about. [=McKiernan=] also has the habit of sprinkling his epilogues heavily with these "red slippers".
** The BBC radio series has created episodes from references made by Watson once they ran out of Canon stories to adapt. Example: The Ferrers Documents, from a line in The Priory School.
** The later stories seemed to have more of these and sounding increasingly ludicrous. I've always wondered if they were Doyle's little sarcastic jokes, as by this point he'd been pushed into writing more Holmes books after (trying to) killing Holmes off.
* Similarly, AgathaChristie often inserted references in her ''{{Poirot}}'' novels to other cases solved by the famed detective; occasionally, these are subtle references to other books in the series, but they are usually mere snippets of information.
** Example: Poirot makes reference, in one of the short stories, to a man he once arrested -- a soap manufacturer in Liège who was guilty of the poisoning of his wife. This is all the information we ever hear about that particular case.
* This shows up occasionally in the ''NeroWolfe'' novels by Rex Stout. Occasionally, Archie will throw in a reference to previous cases that he'll either "write about later" or "can't be revealed due to privacy / security reasons".
* This is actually done in a ''lot'' of mystery and PrivateDetective fiction. It's especially prevalent in short stories, as it's a quick and easy way to bring in a new character and explain how/why they've come to seek the main character's services without having to waste limited space on unnecessary details.
* In ''{{A Song of Ice and Fire}}'', many of the events of the Great Tourney at Harrenhal before the War of the Usurper take quite a few books to come to light but are referred to from various perspectives fairly frequently before they do, if they are explained at all.
** And when we finally do get an explanation, it's a second hand account disguised as a fairy tale. And the aspect that has the most relevance on the plot of the books (i.e. the details of Rhaegar and Lyanna's hook up) are left "for next time."
* Happens often in ''WarAndPeace'', to the point that it's left up to modern [[OnceMoreWithEndnotes endnotes]] to explain what the characters are talking about. The trope is most clearly used when characters refer to Dolokhov's [[TookALevelInBadass Persian adventures]].
* Used with great effect in the original novel of ''ThePrincessBride'' (which predates the movie by almost fifteen years). Author William Goldman claims to be abridging the original novel by S. Morgenstern, which was really just a literary device that allowed him to write only the "good parts" of the story. In the scene where the mostly-dead Westley is to be revived by Miracle Max, Goldman writes about how Max sent Inigo and Fezzik out to collect different ingredients for the miracle pill -- but doesn't actually show the trouble they run into in the process. Note that this was completely dropped in the movie, probably for purposes of time more than anything else.
** The author actually does this throughout the book, stopping at various points to put on his italic typeface and explain that when his father read the "original" to him as a child, the man would do the exact same thing, but far more efficiently because instead of stopping to point out he was editing for readability, he'd just make a glossing-over comment and skip a massive whack of the book. He'll usually give a general idea what goes on and then get on with the swashbuckling and [[RodentsOfUnusualSize ROUSes]], but he subverts it at least twice: he'll describe how his father made the shortest glossing-over of all, and then describe in detail what his father skipped; the things that went on in those pages, how many pages were devoted to each, and all that. Then he'll describe how it was all the incredibly boring lengths to which Morgenstern liked to go to in order to satirize the upper crust. The whole thing takes two pages minimum each time.
* Played with in ''{{The Big Over Easy}}'' by Jasper Fforde, in which numerous previous cases are referred to, including the KarmaHoudini pigs who 'deserved to fry' for what they did to that wolf, and DCI Jack Spratt constantly having to defend himself against a reputation for being a giant killer ("Technically, only ''one'' of them was a giant; the others were just tall."). Whilst no further details are given, any reader who is familiar with fairy tales might spot certain similarities.
* William Hope Hodgson's ''{{Carnacki the Ghost Finder}}'' stories had a number of "unwritten cases" examples:
** ''Gateway of the Monster'': The Black Veil and the Moving Fur;
** ''House Among the Laurels'': The Steeple Monster;
** ''The Horse of the Invisible'': "The Black Veil case, when young Aster died. You remember, he said it was a piece of silly superstition and stayed outside. Poor devil!"
** ''The Searcher of the End House'': The Three Straw Platters, the Dark Light case, and the "trouble of Maaetheson's".
** ''The Whistling Room'': the Buzzing Case, the Grey Dog, the Yellow Finger Experiments, the Silent Garden, and the Nodding Door. The "Grunting Man" case was probably the story titled ''The Hog''.
* ''[[TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'' has the Great Collapsing Hrung Disaster of Gal./Sid./Year 03758, which wiped out almost everybody on Ford Prefect's ancestral planet Betelgeuse Seven. {{Lampshaded}} by mentioning that nobody (least of all Ford Prefect) knows what a Hrung is or why it should collapse on Betelgeuse Seven. Furthermore, Ford apparently earned the name "Ix", meaning "boy who is unable to satisfactorily explain what a Hrung is, or why it should collapse on Betelgeuse Seven"...
** Zaphod Beeblebrox refuses to explain why his father is Zaphod Beeblebrox II and his grandfather is Zaphod Beeblebrox III -- apparently, it involved a contraceptive and a time machine.
** In ''Life, The Universe and Everything'', Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged is said to have gained his immortality after "an unfortunate accident with an irrational particle accelerator, a liquid lunch and a pair of rubber bands." The details are apparently unimportant as no-one has managed to duplicate the events, with everyone who has tried ending up looking very silly. Or dead. Or both.
* In ''MobyDick'' a character mentions "that deadly skrimmage with the Spaniard afore the altar in Santa." This may be why {{God}} is pissed at Ahab.
* Mercer, the protagonist of Cordwainer Smith's ''A Planet Without a Name'', has committed a horrendous "crime without a name". We never learn more than that.
* There is a whole paragraph devoted to this in [[RobertAHeinlein Robert Heinlein's]] ''Double Star'':
-->"He mentioned a couple of details in my past that I would have sworn were buried and forgotten. All right, so I did have a couple of routines useful for stag shows that are not for the family trade -- a man has to eat. But that matter about Bebe; that was hardly fair, for I certainly had not known she was under age. As for that hotel bill, while it is true that bilking an 'innkeeper' in Miami Beach carries much the same punishment as armed robbery elsewhere, it is a very provincial attitude -- I would have paid it if I had had the money. As for that unfortunate incident in Seattle -- well, what I am trying to say is that Dak did know an amazing amount about my background but he had the wrong slant on most of it."
* The {{Flashman}} novel ''Royal Flash'' begins, "If I had been half the hero everyone thought I was, or even a half-decent soldier, Lee would have won the battle of [[TheAmericanCivilWar Gettysburg]] and probably captured Washington." He only says this to illustrate how [[ForWantOfANail history can turn on trifling events]], and as a story for another time, never mentions it again.
** [[AuthorExistenceFailure Now we'll never know the details of Flashman's Civil War service]]. He was an officer in the US army in 1862, the CS army in 1863, and received the Congressional Medal of Honor... somehow.
* There's the "Incendiary Cat Plot", mentioned at least once in LoisMcMasterBujold's VorkosiganSaga...
** This may in fact be a reference to the classic filk song "Never Set the Cat on Fire" by Frank Hayes. The song itself is rules for children living aboard a spaceship including the rule mentioned in the title.
* The ''{{Warhammer 40000}}: CiaphasCain'' books are full of vague references to past events. Some are covered in the short stories, but most go unexplained. Thus far.
** There is also the growing list of accidents involving the Guardsmen Penlan, which gained her the nickname Jinxie.
-->"... or the time I found myself charging a [[LegionsOfHell daemon of Khorne]] with just a rusty bayonet and a vial of holy water..."
* Jim Butcher peppers his ''TheDresdenFiles'' books with these. Harry will periodically refer back to cases that had happened previously. Sometimes, these are the events covered by previous books (his remarks along this vein are a good way to deduce that the books generally happen a year or so apart), but now and again he drops a name, date, location, or supernatural threat that doesn't come up in any of the chronicles ''we've'' seen.
** One of these actually becomes a plot point about 3 or 4 books after he drops the reference. "You should have seen the look on the stormchaser's face when he realized the tornado was chasing us" is implied to have the Summer Queen owing Harry a favor. [[spoiler:Which he transfers to Charity later in a bit of maneuvering to let the Summer Knight and Lady help him through her, since they couldn't do so directly]]
* In the first ''ArtemisFowl'' book, Root mentions how Holly screwed up, causing "The Hamburg Incident". One of her perps tried to bargain with the humans for asylum. "Four mindwipes, a time stop, and a retrieval squad" were needed to sort it out. All the comic book adaptation shows us is an elf smiling at the camera as the POLIZEI car he's in the back of pulls away.
** It has never been called "The Hamburg Incident". I don't know about the comic book adaptation, but in the original book, it was never referred to as anything but "the Hamburg affair". Wonder if it was a tragic love story...
*** As of Book Six, we now know more of the details. One of Holly's fugitives locked himself into a car in Hamburg. She tried to unlock it, but her omnitool had been stolen by Mulch Diggums a few hours before. The target was apprehended by humans, and he tried to bargin with them for political asylum. This is what we know so far
*** The rest is easy to piece together. Thinking he's a confused kid, they take him to the police station. A daytime raid on a police headquarters - a retrieval squad needing a time stop, with four mind wipes for all the humans involved.
* In the ''TimeWarpTrio'', the three titular kids sometimes meet up with their granddaughters, who are both [[KidFromTheFuture kids from the future]] and [[DistaffCounterpart Distaff Counterparts]] of themselves. Their granddaughters explain that they're wealthy because in their near future, the boys experience an accident involving a bowl of cereal that leads to them inadvertently discovering anti-gravity technology. They don't want to explain just how this happens, so as not to cause a paradox. But it causes them to wonder -- how the hell could cereal and antigravity possibly be related?!
* In the third book of the ''Bartimaeus'' trilogy, ''Ptolemy's Gate'', the djinni Bartimaeus mentions twice the Case of the Anarchist and the Oyster that he helped his master Nathaniel solve. Upon bringing it up, Nathaniel winces and tells Bartimaeus to please not talk about it.
** This is possibly also a RuleOfThree situation, since the Anarchist and the Oyster is the third of three such situations, the first two being the plots of the two previous books.
* ''TheNeverendingStory'' is littered with these; you can't go more than a half-dozen pages before the author mentions that such-and-such a character did x, y, or z, then adds, "But that's another story and shall be told another time."
** It became a plot point later on -- Bastian nearly couldn't leave Fantastica because he had to finish all those stories.
* ''HarryPotter'' is likewise full of those. Mostly it's in the form of books mentioned, of which three (''Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them'', ''Quidditch Through the Ages'', and ''Tales of Beedle the Bard'') are actually made -- but there are many which aren't, such as Hermione's favorite go-to, ''Hogwarts: A History''. There are goblin uprisings, house-elf history, and all those creatures -- even vampires, [[OurVampiresAreDifferent which judging by HBP are not openly hostile]].
** Also a nice twist and version with Grindelwald. When in first book we hear that "Dumbledore... is famous for his victory over the dark wizard Grindelwald", we imagine it being a simple story -- that no one could beat Grindelwald, until young Dumbledore duelled the Dark wizard to the death and killed him. In the last book it is revealed that the story is [[HoYay much]] [[DownerEnding more]] [[HeroicBSOD complicated]]...
** In the first book, there's a passing reference to a time when Harry "had to take a school report home to the Dursleys saying that he'd somehow turned his teacher's wig blue."
** Aberforth Dumbledore's incident involving using illegal charms on a goat counts as this, seeing as what the charm was is never mentioned, and that Aberforth generally likes goats, enough for one to serve as his patronus, anyway.
* Lazlo Woodbine, hard-boiled PrivateDetective in RobertRankin's ''FarFetchedFiction'', has a long string of Noodle Incidents in his past, all of which cost him a loved one, a body part, and a valuable artifact.
* Pongo Twistleton and his uncle, Fred, who always pulls his nephew into his complicated schemes are recurring characters in {{PG Wodehouse}}'s novels. In every story that mentions them, they always recall when they were arrested at the Dog Races, but it's never revealed why.
** Likewise, in Wodehouse's ''Blandings'' series, repeated references are made to the never-actually-recounted "Story of the Prawns" which relates a humiliatingly hilarious incident in the youth of stuffed shirt Sir Gregory Parsloe-Parsloe.
* Stella Gibbons' ''ColdComfortFarm''. Apparently, there was something nasty in the woodshed.
* Occurs in ''Tsukihime, Plus Period Talk''. At least two incredibly epic battles are glossed over. One, between the Wind mage Forte and Satsunjiki, and one, the big final battle between a sentient forest, Ciel, and Shiki at full power. The first is only seen when the viewpoint enters. Forte is totally, completely defeated. The second, "What happened after that would be needless to say. Since it would be what anyone would imagine."
* In Dorothy Sayers' ''LordPeterWimsey'' novels, the Attenbury Emerald case is referenced a number of times, but takes place before any of the books are set.
* Every once in a while, this is completely serious. For instance, the narrator of ''The Monsters of Morley Manor'' by Bruce Coville [[DemonicPossession possesses]] a {{Mook}} at one point, and starts to remember parts of the mook's TrainingFromHell. He "still can't talk about" when four trainees were locked in a room with only enough water for two of them to survive until they were scheduled to be released.
* ''EthanBrand'' by Nathaniel Hawthorne does this with the Unpardonable Sin, the one act {{God}} is incapable of forgiving. The title character, who committed the sin makes occasional references to the woman he apparently did it to, but the act itself is never described, presumably because it's best left to the imagination.
* In Hugh Cook's ''{{The Wishstone and the Wonderworkers}}'', the Originator's manuscript is bowdlerized by members of a sinister organisation, effectively obscuring a number of improbable and unwholesome incidents.
* In Arthur C. Clarke's short story ''Wacky'', the protagonist mentions the "Case of the Elastic-Sided Eggwhisk", adding that he would almost certainly not have survived it had it ever actually occurred.
* In the epistilatory fantasy ''Sorcery and Cecelia'', by Patricia C. Wrede and Caroline Stevermer, there is repeated reference to a prank pulled by the titular characters that involved sneaking out at midnight to kidnap a goat belonging to Squire Bryant. No clarification is ever made beyond this fact.
* In ''Mishaps'', there is the 'school camp incident'. What exactly happened wasn't made clear, but Pen says that it involved her spending time in a decontamination chamber.
* British author/screenwriter John Mortimer perpetrated what was probably the greatest inverted NoodleIncident in the history of the trope. In every script/story from the beginning of his ''RumpoleOfTheBailey'' series of TV screenplays and short story/novel adaptations, the protagonist, barrister-at-law Horace Rumpole, would invariably make at least one reference to his greatest professional triumph, the case of "The Penge Bungalow Murders" (which Rumpole tried and won as a junior barrister "alone and without a leader). After nearly three decades of teasing viewers and readers with references to this case, Mortimer, nearing the end of his career, finally wrote a novel (titled, unsurpisingly, ''Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders''), which turned that epic NoodleIncident into an epic series of [[ContinuityNod Continuity Nods]].
* "The Jenna Thing" in ''Pretty Little Liars'', although it is revealed bit by bit throughout the first half of the second book, after which it turns into a gradual series of [[TheReveal Reveals]].
* ''MythAdventure'' likes this. How exactly a game of Dragon Poker led to Aahz's clothes being two floors below him at some point is never explained, although considering that [[CuteMonsterGirl a Trollop]] was involved, [[IfYouKnowWhatIMean it may not be that tough to understand why he wasn't wearing them.]]
* ''WorldWarZ'': Some truly chilling examples, as the novel is told through peoples' own experiences, and they don't necessarily take the time to explain the details. There was something about "those sick fucks at that weapons research facility at China Lake" that disgusted even a hardened war veteran.
* How has ''ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'' not been listed yet? The entire series is filled with these, especially the side books. [[spoiler:Even the ending is a noodle incident.]]
* The Selelvian-Tholian War from the ''StarTrekNewFrontier'' series (started due to the events of ''Gods Above'' and ''Stone and Anvil'') isn't shown, because we skip ahead three years to the next book. All we do know is that the Federation won, Admiral Jellico no longer hates Captain Calhoun, and Soleta was drummed out of Starfleet after her Romulan heritage was revealed after saving Captain Shelby from an Orion raiding party.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* Brilliantly done in one episode of ''{{Frasier}}''. The series' reputation for hilarity ensuing had one episode opening with dinner guests and the chef storming out of Frasiers apartment in disgust, Frasier attempting to save it by pretending to have Tourrettes syndrome, Martin entering the room dressed as an Italian Count, a flaming toupe in the middle of the room, and goats throwing up in the kitchen.
* An episode of ''{{Malcolm in the Middle}}'' has Reese being punished for a horrendous prank which the audience never really hears about. The only thing we learn about it is that it involved multiple cats, that a full evacuation of the school was required, and that Reese could name third world countries where it regularly happens.
** There is also an episode where Hal is put in charge of the living will of a neighbor who is in a persistent vegetative state. After hearing the man's relatives debate furiously as to whether or not he should be kept alive, Hal makes a decision that we are never shown. At the end of the episode, Lois tells Hal that he did a great job because he realized that there were more than just the two choices of life and death. Hal remarks that it was easy because, once he found out that the man was a bird lover, everything he needed was at the electronics store down the street, except for the hat. He then tells Lois that he would like to never discuss it ever again.
*** Obviously he turned the man into a cybernetic bird-feeder. With a great hat.
**** Don't you mean, NiceHat ?
** Another episode showed, if I recall, the older brother coming home at various different times trying to explain what havoc he and his siblings caused. Every time something more horrifying is happening behind them without explanation, including cars exploding, people running and screaming, fires...all at different instances. Whatever they were doing those times apparently caused World War 3 through 7!
* ''{{Friends}}'' had a "pictionary incident":
-->'''Monica:''' That was not an incident! I was gesturing and the plate... slipped out of my hand.
** In another episode Phoebe references the time a peacock bit Chandler in the zoo.
** Another has Ross and Chandler getting ready for a night out with their college buddy Gandalf. One of them states that he has Canadian money, a snakebite kit and an extra pair of socks. The other warns him that it won't be '''exactly''' the same as last time.
** "Vomit tux! '''VOMIT TUX!'''"
* "The Pinecone Incident" on ''DrakeAndJosh''. The only thing we're told is, "That squirrel had it coming!"
* Multiple instances in ''FatherTed'', including: Dougal's exile to Craggy Island following the "Blackrock Incident", never explained but involving "irreparably damaged" nuns; an incident on a SeaLink ferry possibly involving Dougal playing with the ferry's controls; Jack's exile to the island following a never-described but presumably disastrous wedding he performed in Athlone.
** Then there's "but [the money] was just resting in my account."
*** No, Bishop Brennon explained that one in one episode, that's why Ted's on the island.
---->'''Bishop Brennon:''' You shut up Crilly! You're not going back until all that money's accounted for. You were living it up in Vegas, while that girl should have been in Lourdes!
** Also subverted, when describing a strange off-screen incident in all its ludicrous detail:
--->'''Father Ted:''' Dougal, Dougal, do you remember Sister Assumpta?\\
'''Father Dougal:''' Er, no.\\
'''Ted:''' She was here last year! And then we stayed with her in the convent, back in Kildare. Do you remember it? Ah, you do! And then you were hit by the car when you went down to the shops for the paper. You must remember all that? And then you won a hundred pounds with your lottery card? Ah, you must remember it, Dougal!\\
''(Dougal shakes his head)''\\
'''Sister Assumpta:''' And weren't you accidentally arrested for shoplifting? I remember we had to go down to the police station to get you!... And the police station went on fire? And you had to be rescued by helicopter?\\
'''Ted:''' Do you remember? You can't remember any of that? The helicopter! When you fell out of the helicopter! Over the zoo! Do you remember the tigers?\\
''(Dougal shakes his head some more)''\\
'''Ted:''' You don't remember? You were wearing your blue jumper.\\
'''Dougal:''' ''(sudden flood of recognition)'' Ah, Sister Assumpta!
* Near the end of ''{{Angel}}'', Spike misunderstands Illyria's archaic use of the word "intimate" and alleges that he is safe because he and Angel have never been intimate, but then adds "There was that one time...." Enter drooling slashers...
** Also from ''{{Angel}}'' season 5: "El Diablo Robótico".
* In ''BlackBooks'', the characters return from a disastrous (unseen) holiday and allude to several unfortunate things that befell them. At a mention of sacrificing monkeys, Bernard cries "You said we wouldn't talk about Canada!"
* A rare subverted version in which the Noodle Incident is actually revealed: the "Gazpacho Soup" incident in ''RedDwarf'' which tormented Arnold Rimmer, who blamed it for stalling his career and ruining his chances of promotion to such an extent that his last words were "Gazpacho soup!" It turned out to be merely an incident where Rimmer, sitting at the captain's table at a formal luncheon, sent a bowl of Gazpacho soup back to the kitchen to be warmed up because he didn't know it was supposed to be served cold. Of course, the reality didn't live up to the imagination, but that was the point; both that it was an extremely minor embarrassment that the insecure Rimmer blew up to insane proportions, and that it was just yet another example of him [[FreudianExcuse blaming something else for his own screw-ups and failed life]].
** A straight example occurs in the first episode when Captain Hollister, in reference to smuggling animals on board spaceships, makes angry reference to what happened "on board the ''Oregon'' with the rabbits".
* In "The Five Doctors" on ''DoctorWho'', the Second Doctor, reminiscing with [[TheBrigadier Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]], refers to an unseen adventure the two shared with the Terrible Zodin and something 'that used to hop like kangaroos'. Although only referred to once again in the series itself (in "Attack of the Cybermen"), FanFic and the ExpandedUniverse have frequently played with what Zodin could be, with everything from an evil MonsterOfTheWeek to a terrible meal the Doctor once had being suggested.
** The Time War that destroyed Gallifrey and ([[JokerImmunity supposedly]]) the Daleks in the new series is also treated in this fashion; we're given lots of intriguing hints and abstract reveals as to what happened and who did what (with mentions of the Fall of Arcadia and the burning of the Cruciform -- neither of which were ever seen in the series -- and it being strongly implied, if not outright stated, that the Doctor himself was forced to destroy Gallifrey), but we've never seen what actually occurred.
** It's also been outright stated a few times that we haven't seen anywhere near the number of actual places each companion goes with the Doctor in the episodes themselves. Mostly this is because nothing exciting happened those times (like one flashback from the beginning of "Army of Ghosts") but the Children in Need special with the Tenth Doctor convincing Rose he's actually the Doctor did have him referring to a time they ended up "hopping for our lives."
** "Silence in the Library" plays with this trope by invoking a little "future nostalgia": River Song mentions several escapades ("Right, picnic at Asgard. Have we done Asgard yet?") which are supposedly to have happened in the Doctor's future.
** Similar to Zodin, there been several explanations outside the TV series about what the Perigosto Stick the Doctor mentions in "The Green Death" actually is, although I don't recall any about why you can't trust a Venusian Shanghorn with one.
** "Got to go, got a thing. Well, four things. Well, four things and a lizard."
** In one Third Doctor episode, it's mentioned that the Brigadier once somehow earned the gratitude of a woman named Doris; during the seventh Doctor's run, it's revealed "she finally caught him" and they are now married. (A comic explains this.)
** The Sixth Doctor serial "Timelash" references an unbroadcast adventure the Third Doctor (and Jo Grant) had on the same planet.
** "I told you we should have turned left!" (A phrase which takes on a deeper meaning a couple of series later, quite possibly on purpose, given the trend for significant words and phrases throughout the new series.
** There's also a humorous Sixth Doctor example:
--->'''Peri:''' You even managed to burn dinner last night!\\
'''Doctor:''' I never said I was ''perfect!''\\
'''Peri:''' If you recall, I was going to have a cold dinner last night.
* On ''{{Buffy the Vampire Slayer}}'', Willow and Xander have these sometimes, having grown up together:
-->'''Xander:''' Cordelia, man, she does love titles!\\
'''Willow:''' Oh, God! Remember in sixth grade with the field trip?\\
'''Xander:''' Right! Right! The guy with the antlers on his belt!\\
'''Willow:''' Be my Deputy!\\
'''Xander:''' And remember the, the hat?\\
'''Willow:''' Oh God! The hat!\\
'''Buffy:''' Gee, it's fun that we're speaking in tongues.
** Not to mention the fate of Miss Kitty Fantastico, which apparently involved an errant crossbow....
** There's also Xander's stripper experience...
--->'''Xander:''' Basically, I got as far as Oxnard and the engine fell out of my car, and that was literally. So I ended up washing dishes at the fabulous "Ladies Night" club for about a month and a half while I tried to pay for the repairs. Nobody really bothered me, or even spoke to me, until one night, when one of the male strippers called in sick, and no power on this earth will make me tell you the rest of that story. Suffice to say, I traded my car in for one that wasn't entirely made of rust, came trundling back home to the loving arms of my parents, where everything is exactly as it was, except I sleep in the basement and I have to pay rent. How's college?\\
'''Buffy:''' Male strippers?\\
'''Xander:''' No power on this earth!
** In the {{Buffy}} episode ''Him'' Anya (under the influence of some love charm) is shown in front of the Sunnydale Bank, dressed in black, carrying a sack, and wearing a ski mask. Later, when a radio station announces something involving robberies, Anya abruptly switches off the radio and changes the subject.
* And on ''{{Firefly}}'':
-->'''Early:''' You know, with the exception of one deadly and unpredictable midget, this girl is the smallest cargo I've ever had to transport, yet by far the most troublesome. [...]\\
'''Simon:''' What'd he do?\\
'''Early:''' Who?\\
'''Simon:''' The midget.\\
'''Early:''' Arson. Little man looooved fire.
** Another example occurs while Inara confronts Mal on lack of serious work as of late. Inara sarcastically asks Mal, "And what was our net profit on the famous wobbly-headed doll caper?"
*** That was a Noodle Incident? Inara mentions that they were hired to smuggle those bobble-heads to the frontier. (The ''real'' question is, [[FridgeLogic why would said toys be illegal in the first place]]?)
**** You can smuggle things that aren't, per se, illegal. For example, people smuggle cigarettes to avoid the nuisance taxes. Maybe these bobble-headed dolls are highly-taxed luxury items. Or maybe they make fun of a local despot....
***** Hey, people love those!
* John Astin's mentally-unstable character on ''NightCourt'' occasionally made comments along the lines of "... but then there was that regrettable incident with the Cheez Whiz..", always finishing with Astin's trademarked smile and "But I'm ''much'' better now!"
* On ''StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'', there were several references to a "Cardassian Neck Trick" that Odo could perform, but tantalizing hints of how amazing it is to see and a vague suggestion of what it might be are all the audience ever gets.
** We also know very little about what happened on Terok Nor before the series start. Or about O'Brien's past as a soldier.
** Almost as tantalizing as the [[RunningGag many mentions]] of bar patron Morn being quite the talker whenever a camera isn't on him.
** And a few mentions by Jadzia Dax about something that happened with Curzon Dax & Sisko. Usually involving a woman & liquor on some planet or space station.
** There's also the incident which [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] the sudden change in Klingons' appearance between the original series and the later series. Worf just says, "We don't talk about it with outsiders."
***** This was resolved in a 4th season episode of "Enterprise" where the change was due to the Klingons experimenting with genetic enhancements which nearly wiped them all out.
** In ''StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' we hear mention of a Federation-Cardassian war (Cpt. Maxwell is supposed to take revenge because of it), but in terms of details all we get is O'Brien's story how he accidentally killed a Cardassian soldier by overpowered phaser.
** During "Tin Man", the telepath reveals that in an earlier mission (which became known as the "Gorushda Disaster" due to having resulted in several deaths, including two of Riker's friends) he "was completely attentive, and if the captain had listened at me, it would have been fine".
** In "The Big Goodbye", the viewer never learns exactly what horrible thing(s) the insectoid Jarada did to a visiting Federation ship which offended the Jaradan sense of diplomatic protocol. Even though Data is ready and willing to share..
** Also, we never actually see the Eugenic Wars.
** Nor do we learn the details of the Tomed Incident, a disaster which made the Federation decide to ban the use of cloaking devices and caused the Romulans to become quite isolationist for 50 years until they reappeared in TNG.
** One of the biggest incidents is how Picard and Guinan met; despite a lot of references to it, and the fact that Guinan says they're "closer than family", we never do hear about just how they met.
***** A much younger Guinan first met a time travelling Picard in the episode "Time's Arrow", in the 19th century. She was wounded and dying and Picard saved her life before he returned to the 24th century. Guinan simply made it a point to meet and get to know Picard in his youth at a future date.
*In the ''StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' pilot, ''Where No Man Has Gone Before'', after Gary Mitchell is zapped by the mysterious energy field on the edge of the galaxy and sent to sick bay, Kirk visits him, where they share this exchange:
-->'''Gary:''' Hello Jim! Hey, you look worried.
-->'''Kirk:''' I've been worried about you ever since that night on Deneb IV.
-->'''Gary:''' *laughs* Yeah, she was nova that one. Not nearly as many after-effects this time....
**No further references to the incident, the girl, or just what Gary meant when he said "nova" (or [[{{Squick}} after-effects]], for that matter) are made.
* ''{{Stargate SG-1}}'', episode "Emancipation":
-->'''Jack O'Neill:''' Remember that time on [=P3X-595=], and you drank that stuff that made you take off--\\
'''Samantha Carter:''' We won't get into that right now.
** Naturally, these lines have inspired a ''lot'' of [[FanFic fanfiction]].
* Parodied on ''{{Cheers}}''. Rebecca asked Woody to look after her pet and Woody replied that he loves animals, in fact he always used to look after pets for his friends, at least before... The Incident. Rebecca was naturally worried by this and decided to ask someone else. After she left, Norm congratulated Woody on this trick to get out of looking after the pet, Woody agreed that it was a great trick, he only wished that he had thought of it before... The Incident.
** Someone else asked Woody for help with something else as well between Rebecca's request and Norm's commentary, prompting a similar response. When ThisTroper saw that scene, I half expected "The Incident" to be Woody's move to Boston.
* In ''{{Special Unit 2}}'', Nick mentions a job he had waiting tables... until the pastrami incident, which got him banned from Rhode Island and a very limited number of neighboring states.
* In the sixth season of ''[[TwentyFour 24]]'', the mysterious "Denver Incident" follows Mike Doyle like a stray cat. In a break from the norm for the show, there is no {{Infodump}} explaining exactly what happened.
* The title character of the Canadian comedy series ''[=~Butch Patterson: Private Dick~=]'' occasionally had to deal with people who recognized him as "that guy from the petting zoo," expressing sympathy for "that poor llama." Exactly what happened is never fully explained, but one hint comes when Butch admits that he spent two years less a day in prison for indecent exposure over the incident... [[YouDoNOTWantToKnow and it's probably better for all concerned that we don't get any more details than that.]]
* On the episode of ''{{Married with Children}}'' where Steve and Marcy end up homeless and Kelly has a slumber party, there's a NoodleIncident where Al tells Kelly that she can't have another slumber party because of the one she had when she was eight. It's not clear what happened, but Al said "The judge wanted to try you [Kelly] as an adult" and in Al's promise letter, it mentioned that Al was shaved bald.
** We may have ''some'' idea however... later, in another episode, Kelly and Bud gave a party while her parents were in Washington DC, and it was occasionally referred to on the news during scenes in DC. First as a huge party... then as a riot... and then the National Guard was called in because basically an armed revolution had started! They even set up smaller parties to act as a firebreak... er, partybreak.
*** Really? I didn't know that.
** Then there was another Noodle Incident on ''MarriedWithChildren'', where Officer Dan (the black cop) becomes Al's friend in the later episodes after Officer Dan promised never to report Al for an unnamed incident that happened at a strip club.
* The {{Pilot}} of ''{{Action}}'' features a reference to Bruce Willis doing something unpleasant to a cat at a party.
* The title character of ''MurphyBrown'' did something at the 1980 Republican convention that not only got her banned from all future ones but is still being mentioned way into the 90's.
* From the ''{{Lost}}'' episode "Outlaws":
-->'''Hibbs:''' I figure that makes us even for the Tampa job.\\
'''Sawyer:''' What could possibly make us even for the Tampa job?
** They filmed a flashback for said incident, but decided it was too boring to use.
** Also, Juliet mentions that Sayid was involved in 'the Basra Incident' in season 3.
* The [[BabylonFive Babylon 5]] episode "A Distant Star"" has the following exchange:
-->'''Sheridan:''' Well there was that one time you took leave on Mars, and that dancer as I recall...\\
'''Maynard:''' Captain Sheridan?\\
'''Sheridan:''' Yes, Captain Maynard?\\
'''Maynard:''' July 12th, 2253?\\
'''Sheridan:''' Forget I said anything.
** There was also a carbon copy of that exchange going the other way before the end of the scene.
** There was also the story about the ship's cat that Sheridan told Delenn over dinner... all we hear is that there was a lot of mess involved.
** Throughout the series, we hear about the Dilgar War and Earth-Minbari war. The latter is shown in the movie "In the Beginning" (made way after the series), the former wasn't shown (as of yet).
* In the first season of ''{{Spaced}}'' we constantly hear about "The Deal" between Brian and Marsha, and at least once per episode Tim and Mike start to go into a childhood flashback about an incident involving them and a tree (utilising music reminiscent of the flashback themes in ''Final Fantasy VII'') before being interrupted. However, both get fully explained at the end of the season (Brian paid Marsha her rent in the form of sexual favours when his benefits were late and Tim encouraged Mike to jump from a high tree branch, resulting in his retinas detaching, preventing him from fulfilling his life's ambition of joining the army).
* In ''{{Are You Being Served}}?'', Mr. Humphries sometimes refers to an incident with a vicar (or possibly several incidents with different vicars).
* The ''{{Bottom}}'' episode Apocalypse has "the incident with the oven-ready chicken" and:
-->'''[[spoiler:Eddie]]:''' I'm Death, I know everything!\\
'''Richie:''' What, everything? Even about the...\\
'''[[spoiler:Eddie]]:''' Especially that, you naughty boy.
* When Wendy asks Lacey if she can keep a secret on ''TheMiddleman'', Lacey points out that she's never told anybody about "that thing with the blueberry pudding pops and the elliptical machine."
* The ''NotGoingOut'' episode with the art exhibition has Tim berating Lee:
-->'''Lee:''' It's not my fault!\\
'''Tim:''' Oh yeah. When my grandmother ended up in a ditch, it wasn't your fault. When my aunt could only eat soft fruit for a week, it wasn't your fault!
* What happened between Jason and Bryn on the fishing trip in ''GavinAndStacey'' is never described, but [[HoYay heavy]] [[IncestIsRelative hints]] are dropped.
* PowerRangers has the great war 10,000 years ago and a lesser, likewise unnamed war 3,000 years ago. Numerous unrelated characters in numerous unrelated seasons make reference to signifiant wars occuring on those two "dates", but no flashback or explanation is ever given for either.
**There is also a mass-depowering incident sometime between [[PowerRangersWildForce Forever Red]] and the beginning of [[PowerRangersDinoThunder Dino Thunder]] that left every ranger powerless except the holder of the Red Chronomorpher (unknown whether it is Wesley Collins or Commander Tate)
* On an episode of ''Richard Hammond's Blast Lab'', we are told that [[YouDoNOTWantToKnow You Don't Want To Know]] what the catapults from the game were originally designed for, but "Suffice it to say, the cats were not pleased."
* ''HowIMetYourMother'' has the "Pineapple Incident." In a way, it subverts the trope, as there's a whole episode explaining how the incident occurred. It does, however, have one detail missing: [[spoiler: How the pineapple got onto the bedtable.]]
** Another episode has the Story of the Goat. The first time it's mentioned, Ted gets almost to the point of the story, before mentioning a detail that causes him to realise that it must have happened later than he thought. The story is concluded a year later. [[spoiler: The goat beat Ted up.]]
* A fairly creepy example. Teen psychopath Luke from ''{{Heroes}}'', when asked about his powers, tells Sylar that he should "See what it does to pacemakers" the implication being that he spends his time killing people with heart conditions. Yeah, the kids got problems.
* ''{{Scrubs}}'': A recent exemple in the episode "My Absence", the episode is seen from another POV and when the regular hero (only heard on phone throughout the whole episode) goes through one of his visions, he only says about it "And that's why you can never trust camels".
** We'd need a whole bunch of gnomes.
* In ''{{Outnumbered}}'', 8-year-old Ben asks why they can't have the same babysitter as last time; "You ''know'' why," his dad says darkly. Later Ben's little sister says that the last babysitter "went home to Poland, where children are nice."
* ''{{House}}'':
-->'''Wilson:''' Every time I go to one of your parties, I end up embarrassing myself in some new and unexpected way.\\
'''House:''' That whole thing with the duck was hardly unexpected.
* ''{{Wings}}'' did this more than once:
-->'''Brian:''' Relax. I will take care of everything. Trust me.\\
'''Joe:''' Brian, the last time you said, "Trust me," I wound up naked on I-95 trying to flag down oncoming traffic.\\
'''Brian:''' But who pulled over for you?\\
''(...)''\\
'''Brian:''' I’m gonna make you my personal project.\\
'''Joe:''' No. No. No. Not again. The last time you had a project, I had to go to court.\\
'''Brian:''' Oh, yeah. Thanks a lot, Mr. Witness for the Prosecution.\\
''(...)''\\
'''Brian:''' What is your deepest, darkest secret?\\
'''Lowell:''' Once, when I was out of underwear... ''(Everyone in the airport protests)''\\
'''Brian:''' What is your fondest memory?\\
'''Lowell:''' Once, when I was out of underwear...
* It's actually a Noodle Reference, but in the ''{{NCIS}}'' episode "Silver War", Tony and Ziva reference a specific page of a fictional men's magazine, culminating in this line:
-->'''Ziva:''' You were thinking that you want to "page 57" me right now.
** We never do find out what it is.
** Actually, Ducky does this pretty much every time he rambles. It's usually because he gets interrupted, though sometimes he just doesn't elaborate. This troper's personal favorite is from the episode "Hiatus, Part 1":
--->'''Palmer:''' Who would sit on an explosive?\\
'''Ducky:''' ... I did it myself once-- no, twice. The first time, I was young; second time foolish.\\
'''Palmer:''' Why were you sitting on an explosive, doctor?\\
'''Ducky:''' I just told you: I was young and foolish. Haven't you been listening?
** This troper's personal favorite Ducky-rambling is from the season five episode "Family," when Tony has just discovered that a dead petty officer has been moonlighting as an exotic dancer:
--->'''Tony:''' I'm going with stripper.\\
'''Ducky:''' This is not an uncommon way for young servicemen to complement their incomes. In fact, when I was young, I used to...\\
'''Tony:''' Used to what?\\
'''Ducky:''' Oh, my.
* ''TheFastShow'' has Rowley Birkin QC, who speaks in nothing ''but'' noodle incidents, rambling incoherently before occasionally spouting out phrases such as "one girl was very badly burned" or "her husband had been entombed in ice", before always concluding with "I'm afraid I was very, very drunk."
* ''{{Gavin and Stacey}}'' had this in the "fishing trip" that Bryn and Jason took. We never found out what happened, just that it was the source of problems between the two.
* ''PressGang'' had several people making comments in its first episode about Spike's "incident at the school dance."
* In an episode of ''Superhuman Cyber Squad'', three of the protagonists kidnap their friend via stuffing him in a sack and hauling him off when they believe he is in love with an ugly substitute teacher. His response?
-->'''Amps:''' Help! I'm being abducted by aliens again! Someone call the air force!
* An episode of ''EdAndOuchosExcellentInventions'' has Ed declare they can make anything. Oucho then starts mentioning to Ed a couple of inventions they weren't actually able to build (in his tongue of Cactinese so the audience doesn't hear what they are). On the second one Ed cuts Oucho off saying they don't talk about it because of the "police investigation".
* ''UglyBetty'' has an episode where Daniel nearly kisses Molly in the Mode closet. Marc manages to acquire CCTV footage of the incident and tells Wilhelmina that she does not want to know what he did to get it. He then decides to start telling but Wilhelmina tells him to shush.
* ''MyFamily'', with Ben and Susan going over why Ben hates Christmas:
-->'''Susan''': We all had a lovely time.\\
'''Ben''': You did. I got beaten up by carol singers.\\
[...]\\
'''Ben''': Before that was the Year of the Turkey...\\
'''Susan''': OK, so it needed to be in for a bit longer.\\
'''Ben''': Susan, [[LethalChef it was still alive.]] Before that was the [[NoodleIncident Year of the Puppy]].\\
'''Susan''': Ooh, the puppy...yes, that was sad, wasn't it?
* In the first season of ''Psych'', the chief tries to dissuade Juliet O'Hara from throwing a surprise birthday party for her partner, Carlton Lassiter, because he doesn't like surprises. Further explanation includes the mention of a "Secret Santa Fiasco of 2005."
* In the 1000th episode of {{Attack Of The Show}}, Kevin makes reference to the first time he drove a backhoe, the first time he needed stitches, and the first time he caused 25,000 dollars in property damage. When Olivia points out that that sounds like one massive incident, Kevin replies by saying "Don't dig trenches drunk, kids!"
* SonsOfAnarchy featured one. [[spoiler: When one character is captured by Bounty Hunters, he finds out he's been grabbed for a warrant involving 'Indecent Exposure in a Livestock Conveyance'.]]
* ''{{Lie To Me}}'': "''Cal? Promise me you'll never go '''back''' to Vegas?''"
** There was also some really shady business in Northern Ireland that has been repeatedly referred to but never explained.
* ''TheDrewCareyShow''. He mentioned that Oswald's Mom is the first woman he ever saw naked.
-->That was one crazy cub scout meeting!
* In ''TheSarahJaneAdventures'' episode "Mona Lisa's Revenge" has Clyde mention to Luke he does not want to know how he was thrown out of Cub Scouts.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Music]]
* Guns N' Roses' album ''"The Spaghetti Incident?"'' was named for a food fight between Axl Rose and Steven Adler involving spaghetti. During Adler's resolution lawsuit after leaving the band, the food fight was brought up, dubbed "the Spaghetti incident" by Adler's attorney. Eventually, it was explained by band members Matt Sorum and Slash.
* There was a band named [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_Cheese_Incident The String Cheese Incident]].
* Somewhat subverted in the the band members have admitted it's not in reference to anything, but this troper is particularly fond of Bowling For Soup's album, "The Great Burrito Extortion Case".
* [[http://www.google.com/search?q=%2B%22hillary+song%22+%2B%22Marlin+Spike+Werner%22 Hillary Song]] by Marlin Spike Werner never says what ''exactly'' happened in that Customs warehouse at Kathmandu. The only thing we can be certain of is that knocking the yak was most definitely not a good idea.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
* On one episode of ''TheMuppetShow'', everyone is talking about how hilarious the "Banana Sketch" is -- except for Kermit, who hasn't seen it, and no one will/can explain it to him. [[spoiler: he eventually realizes they're messing with him.]]
** There's also the "famous" Lonely Asparagus sketch that gets Carol Burnett to stay. Carol gets into the costume and can only get out the first line before the end of the show.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Radio]]
* In one episode of ''Radio/{{Adventures in Odyssey}}'', Ed tries to cut Marvin's hair and botches the job. He is reminded at least twice (before and after the botch job) "Remember the snowflakes?" as a reason as to why he souldn't be let near a pair of scissors. We never find out what exactly happened with snowflakes...
* This troper regularly listens to an Omaha station talk show called ''Todd & Tyler'', which is of course hosted by two guys named Todd and Tyler (they're mostly considered shock jocks, in that they do their best to offend as many people as possible). A couple years ago, they had a RunningGag where, whenever someone said the phrase "two weeks", they'd start laughing like crazy. They refused to explain why a period of time could incite such hilarity on air, though supposedly, if one met them in real life and asked for the meaning behind it, they would be kind enough to explain. Though nowadays they don't seem to find the phrase nearly as amusing.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Stand-up Comedy]]
* Jeff Foxworthy, famed for the You Might Be A Redneck If... jokes, has one go "If you've ever had to haul a can of paint up a water tower to defend your sister's honor, you might be a redneck." Awfully specific requirement in the test.
** According to the music video, it's "[sister's name] is a who". He's already painted over the rest.
*** The name in the video is "Dee Dee". I will now kill myself for remembering that. It's been great hanging with you guys.
** A lot of those jokes could vaguely be considered {{Noodle Incident}}s ("If you've been blacklisted by a bowling alley," "If you were ever too drunk to fish," etc.). Subverted on the ''Blue Collar Comedy Tour'' by Bill Engvall with "If you've ever popped a beer during a eulogy," after which he went on to explain about his uncle...
* Lewis Black's famous "If it wasn't for my horse, I wouldn't have spent that year in college" bit is based on him overhearing said remark. He advises the audience not to think about it too much, lest [[YourHeadAsplode their heads explode]].
* Steve Martin: I was sitting at home, doing ''horrible'' things to my dog with a fork...
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* During the second ''PennyArcade'' and PVP ''Dungeons & Dragons'' 4th edition podcast, the motive for Acquisitions Incorporated is recovering from "the Winterspire Incident." All we are told by the DM is that "it was pretty bad."
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Theater]]
* The ending of ''[[AgathaChristie The Mousetrap]]'' is one of these. At least, if you ask anyone with a sense of honor, damnit.
* In the live-stage version of Disney's ''{{Mulan}}'' Mushu has been demoted from his pedestal because of an incident involving "Confucius, a silk worm, and the near downfall of a dynasty!"
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''[[TombRaider Tomb Raider: Legend]]'': Apparently something very traumatic happened between Lara and Anaya, but we never find out what it was. Considering the scene is played for sympathy, it doesn't work since we don't know what it is exactly we're sympathising with the characters about....
* ''FZero'' has a "great accident" that is mentioned in every other character profile in GX.
* ''{{Half-Life}} 2'' has a "cat incident", involving two teleporters, Dr. Kleiner, Barney Calhoun and a cat.
-->'''Barney:''' You mean it's [the teleporter] working? For real this time? Because I still have nightmares about that cat.\\
'''Alyx:''' What cat?\\
'''Dr. Kleiner:''' Now, now, there is nothing to be worried about, we have made major strides since then. Major strides.\\
'''Alyx:''' ''(louder)'' What cat?!!\\
''(later as Alyx is stepping into the teleporter...)''\\
'''Dr. Kleiner:''' ''(checking the readings)'' Conditions could hardly be more ideal.\\
'''Barney:''' That's what you said the last time.\\
'''Alyx:''' ''(in the teleporter)'' Uh, yeah, about that cat...\\
''(even later)''\\
'''Barney:''' Did you hear a cat just now? Damn thing haunts me...
** ''{{Concerned}}'' [[http://www.hlcomic.com/index.php?date=2005-08-03 referenced]] this from BEFORE the incident.
** However, the "microwave" incident mentioned by Dr. Magnusson in ''Episode Two'' does not fit the trope, as it's something that you can do in the original ''HalfLife'' game.
* ''MetalWolfChaos'' gives us a Noodle ''War'' in the form of the Arizona Conflict/Insurrection that Michael, Richard, and several background characters are veterans of. Of course, this being ''Metal Wolf Chaos'', that's one of the more reasonable plot elements.
* In ''DungeonSiege II: Broken World'', Celeb'hel wants to cast a spell that will [[AGodAmI allow him to impose his will on the world]]. He says that this particular spell was cast twice before in the history of Aranna, but the Ancestor of the Azunites says that neither casting had the intended effect; [[TakeOurWordForIt we aren't told what exactly happened]]
* In the ''{{Castlevania}}'' mythos, the [[ChaosArchitecture titular castle]] was sealed within an eclipse, and its master was KilledOffForReal, in a climactic battle in 1999. However, that's all we know of the event -- it is only ever referenced in the ''Aria'' and ''Dawn of Sorrow'' games, where the reappearance of Castlevania is cause for much concern. As of this writing, [=IGA=] has expressed reluctance to tackle the issue, as fan expectations about exactly ''what'' happened in 1999 have only increased over the years.
* ''{{Sam and Max}}'', in the Telltale episodes, constantly refer to events that happen in other cases without getting into the specifics. Examples:
-->'''Max:''' Great, now what am I going to do with the buckets of Sea Monster Blood?\\
\\
'''Sam:''' Remember our old car, Max?\\
'''Max:''' I said I was sorry!
** This is also present in the first game, ''SamAndMax Hit The Road'', as early in the game you can...''not'' go upstairs. When you try...
--->'''Sam:''' We don't go upstairs.\\
'''Max:''' Not since the accident.
* In ''MonkeyIsland'', Guybrush Threepwood states that the Giant Monkey Head is the second largest monkey head he has ever seen. We never hear about the largest.
** Though it works on the same principle, this is actually stealing one of Maxwell Smart's catchphrases from ''GetSmart''
*** A better example in ''Monkey Island'' is the Carnival of the Damned misadventure, which is mentioned a few times but never in deatil.
* ''GrimFandango'' does it. It brings up "the Christmas Party" a few times, but never the details.
* In ''Conker's Bad Fur Day'', it's mentioned that the panther king did something to the weasel scientist, but all we get to know is:
-->'''Panther King:''' I don't want to have to get the duct tape out again.\\
'''Weasel Scientist:''' Yes, I mean no, I don't want you to get the duct tape out again
*** I always suspected that the "Duct Tape" was used for torture, didn't anyone notice the Weasel King was bald?
* Corporal "[[TechnoWizard Wizard]]" Reavers from the first ''{{Crusader}}'' games, when he [[FridgeLogic calls you up to talk to you about how hard it is]] for him to take control of the [[MegaCorp WEC]]'s telepads to safely extract you from the area, will sometimes reference past events that you never witnessed, i.e. "...back in Madrid," or "...just because I accidentally dumped Yo-Yo in the waste reclamation tank... *snicker*".
* The Orange Cat Incident in ''SSX 3'', which is brought up by radio DJ Atomika every now and then. Details are never explained (Atomika assumes everyone's heard of the story by now), but apparently a potentially lethal housecat responsible for extensive property damage around town and parents are advised to keep their children indoors until it can be detained.
** There's also the "infamous" snowboarding event held locally prior to the arrival of the SSX circuit. Boasting only one event, the three peak boardercross... it's implied that we don't want to know what happened.
** And the incident when two skiiers were trapped in a snow cave and survived for five days using only a match, a roll of toilet paper, and two shaken up cans of soda.
* Adachi in ''{{Persona 4}}'' mentions he is in Inaba because of a "small slip-up" that caused the police to put him there. This incident isn't explained further. [[spoiler: And given the fact he murdered and possibly raped two women, it's probably a ''lot'' less minor than he says.]]
* ''CallOfDuty 4'' features the following exchange:
-->'''Cpt. Price:''' Not so fast. Remember Beirut? You're with us.\\
'''Sgt. Kamarov:''' Hmm... I guess I owe you one.\\
'''Gaz:''' Bloody right you do.
* [[Left4Dead "You call this a 'zombie apocalypse'? Don't hold a candle to the Great Zombie Attack of '57!"]] Of course, two seconds later Bill reveals that this was (obviously) not true, but still.
* In PlanescapeTorment, there's whatever the First Incarnation's crime was. Evidently, it was [[MoralEventHorizon pretty horrific]]: [[spoiler:''Millennia'' of [[TheAtoner atonement]] haven't proven enough, and it's implied that the ''Multiverse'' is now slowly dying because of it.]]
* CommandAndConquer Tiberium Wars. Kane thanks the commander for his involvement in Honduras, Jericho and "The Great Rio Insurrection".
* ResidentEvil4 has [[AxCrazy Krauser]] introduce himself to a surprised [[EvenTheGuysWantHim Leon]] with "I died in the train incident two years ago... is that what they told you?" The incident is [[HandWave never explored or so much as mentioned]] for the rest of the game.
* In ''[[BackyardSports Backyard Basketball]]'', there was an incident where Barry Dejay broke his ankle. It is only mentioned once and never again.
* Oblivion has many of these if you listen to the random conversations of the NPCs. One in particular is in the Dark Brotherhood Sanctuary when you here them talk about the Orphanage Assignment. Later another will say something like, "...and the orphans actually tried to defend themselves!"
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Web Animation]]
* ''HomestarRunner'' drops these like toys on a kid's bedroom floor, an analogy chosen specifically because occasionally they pick it up again. They're usually a part of the series' infamous interrupted conversations.
* In ''RedVsBlue'', Grif mentions Simmons getting into an escape pod after saying, "I'm not going to the Vegas Quadrant." No explanation is further given on the subject, but it is based on something that Simmon's voice actor, Gustavo Sorola, did. In the commentary the cast explains how they had gotten together in Los Angeles (half the cast lived in Austin, Texas) and decided to Las Vegas. Drunk, he said the line above, got out of the van, and ran all the way back to the hotel. The group later found a note saying "See you back in Texas". Of course, no further explanation was given in the commentary either, leading to a double NoodleIncident.
** In a more serious example, it's never explained exactly how York lost his eye, just that it involved Tex, Omega, and Wyoming, and that Tex's influence on Omega is the only reason the wound wasn't fatal.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Web Comics]]
* The ''Calvin and Hobbes'' incident is [[http://freefall.purrsia.com/ff200/fv00125.htm referred to]] in ''{{FreeFall}}'', with Sawtooth reminding Sam of the incident, saying "You know, the one you blamed on the spiky-haired boy with the stuffed tiger." Florence apparently gets to hear the details, but readers aren't privy to that particular piece of conversation.
** This is actually fitting, because on at least one occasion Calvin has been framed by aliens for assorted mayhem.
*** At least if you take his word for it.
** Florence also found herself in such an incident in college: It involved herself, a forklift, and her go-to-sleep-instantly remote control.
** There is even a Noodle incedent with NoodleImplements, The royal family is not too happy with him due to an incident involving a zeppelin, a “Loop the loop” maneuver, and pudding. Lots and lots of pudding. This indirectly lead him to leave his home planet
* ''{{Dan and Mabs Furry Adventures}}'' had JerkWithAHeartOfGold Abel stuck with Dan at SAIA... with the former being unable to give him a tour of the library, as some incident had taken place there that was so bad he's permanently banned. Given the SAIA librarian's actual [[http://www.missmab.com/DLoads/DMFA_Wallpaper28_800.jpg identity and appearance]], one has to wonder just ''what'' happened....
** Note the Abel feather in the inkwell on the SAIA Librarian's desk. It is possible that we might discover the exact nature of Abel's Noodle Incident in Abel's Story, as Abel has arrived at SAIA in his side story.
*** WordOfGod says we wouln't. The Author intends to keep it as a Noodle Incident.
** There was also a RunningGag in earlier strips where Aslan would allude to his chaotic wife's many incidents.
--->'''Aslan:''' ... and that was the last time I took Neni to the [X].
** Another RunningGag involves Dan turning the lake pink.
** And the time Dan took out about a dozen Death Knights with a spork.
* ''ElGoonishShive'' had Tedd and Sarah's Catgirl Incident, which has made Sarah paranoid and nervous about transformation ever since. We eventually find out he got her stuck as a catgirl during [[PictureDay School Pictures week]].
** And "The Trip to France", when Nanase and Susan gained magical powers for as of yet unexplained reasons, is officially ''EGS''' new Noodle Incident.
* A common gag is to bring up Sodom and Gomorrah, mention "sodomy", and then imply "gomorrahmy" was even worse. If what "gomorrahmy" was is even hinted at, it's always done in vague terms. For example, the web cartoon ''The God and Devil Show'' had the Devil whisper the definition into Marilyn Manson's ear; [[NoodleImplements apparently it involved a petting zoo and toilet plungers]].
* In ''AcornGrove'', when Josh the joey had a puppy. [[http://acorngrove.comicgenesis.com/d/20050512.html]]
* The [[http://www.gunnerkrigg.com/archive_page.php?comicID=404 Cursed Teapot Incident]] in ''GunnerkriggCourt''.
** Also, Antimony calls Zimmy's science experiment an "abomination" and it is eventually taken away by men in hazmat suits, but it is never explained what she made.
* The [[http://www.darthsanddroids.net/episodes/0149.html Sashimi Incident]] in ''DarthsAndDroids''.
* ''{{Narbonic}}'''s Zeta briefly mentions a certain [[http://www.webcomicsnation.com/users/narbonic/082704And_meanwhile.jpg visit to the Mall of America]].
* ''GirlGenius'' loves this gag.
** Vanamonde makes a scheduled nightly [[SuperSoldier Jaegermonster]] fight sound tame compared to [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20080606 Poetry Slam Night]].
** We're [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20051017 never quite]] let in on [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20051026 what happens]] in the "risqué" play ''The Socket Wench of Prague'', but Agatha seems a bit shellshocked. All we know for sure is that it had a famous Mae West line in it:
--->'''Abner:''' ... I only had her rehearse ''her'' lines. There was no ''context''.\\
'''Agatha:''' ''(stunned)'' ... and when I asked him if that was a ''wrench'' in his pocket....
* [[DresdenCodak "Remember when Reverse Moses parted the city to escape Aqua-Pharaoh?"]]
* [[MegaTokyo Piro and Largo's]] roadtrip to Canada: "Hey come on... we got handcuffed by real Mounties! That was cool."
* In ''QuestionableContent'', Sven's friend Wil leaves a pornographic piece of poetry in the coffee shop. Wil has the "brilliant" idea of getting Sven to go apologize for him, and the following conversation takes place.
-->'''Sven:''' What am I supposed to say? "I'm sorry that my friend is a creepy motherfucker, but will you please go on a date with him anyway?"\\
'''Wil:''' Remember '''Elenore'''?\\
'''Sven:''' Aw man, don't call in that favor now. Please.\\
'''Wil:''' I'm calling it in.
** Jeph of ''QC'' must like this one. Another one is used in a much earlier comic. Apparently, Pintsize has a large file in his hard drive of all the chaos he's caused. #472 is his favorite, because "Those preschoolers will remember that day for the rest of their lives." Knowing Pintsize, it's some kind of unholy wacky terror.
*** Not to mention the title of another one: [[http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=388 "To Say Nothing of the Crisco Incident"]]
*** A [[http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=530 guest strip]] also had another Pintsize NoodleIncident: "[[NoTimeToExplain There's not [sic] time to explain]] but we're out of eggs and the cops are on the way."
** And, of course, with the reappearance of Steve we have only vague hints into what secret agent-ish things he was doing while he was gone.
** Or [[http://questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=1499 #1499]].
* In the webcomic [[http://www.earthsongsaga.com/vol2/28.html Earthsong]], Zaebos threatens to tell of Felucca's role in a literal Noodle Incident.
* This is alluded to in an ''{{xkcd}}'' strip [[http://xkcd.com/410/ #410]]. If you hover over the comic, the AltText says "This is nothing. I once lost my genetics, rocketry, and stripping licenses in a single incident." How genetics, rocketry, and stripping can be combined ''at all'' boggles the mind.
** And again in [[http://xkcd.com/521/ the 2008 Christmas Special]].
** And yet again in [[http://xkcd.com/541/ TED Talk]]. ("The IAU ban came after the 'redefinition of "planet" to include the IAU president's mom' incident.")
*** Though that last one is so specific as to not leave much to the imagination.
** It also [[http://xkcd.com/496/ happened with Black Hat Guy]].
* [[http://houserules.org.uk/strips/2002/om20020206-c.jpg "There was that one about the baking soda, but I'm not supposed to remind you about that."]]
* Something happened to [[http://www.beaverandsteve.com/index.php?comic=149 Beaver and Steve]] last Halloween.
* Happens in ''SluggyFreelance'' when Riff [[http://www.sluggy.com/daily.php?date=010210 unveils his new robot]], the Mark-5, even though only the Mark-1 and Mark-2 had been shown previously.
-->'''Torg:''' Why did you jump to "Mark-5"? I don't remember Mark-3 and 4!\\
'''Riff:''' I don't want to talk about it.\\
'''Torg:''' And why are lots 189 through 205 closed for repair?\\
'''Riff:''' I don't want to talk about it.\\
'''Torg:''' And lot 206 looks like it's been partially liquefied!\\
'''Riff:''' ''Drop it already!''
** Happened again, with the Mark-19 robot.
* In ''{{The Order of the Stick}}'' [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0488.html #488]], an archon reviewing Roy's life mentions that Roy's grade school principal had quite a few choice things to say about him, leading Roy to exclaim, "It was just a joke! We didn't know Mrs. [=McNulty=] was allergic to weasels!"
** A few comics later, the scene cuts in on a story (an apparently humorous one to boot) that Roy is telling the same archon.
-->'''Roy:''' --so I'm like, "But you told me we didn't want to turn right!" and Durkon says, "No, I told ye we dinnae want ta turn '''wights'''!" Man, we had to make a lot of Fortitude saves the next day.
* Every single Comments On A Postcard strip from ''{{Mezzacotta}}'' is based on this principle.
* ''IrregularWebcomic'' made reference to the original NoodleIncident with their own, [[http://irregularwebcomic.net/418.html here]]
* There's a reason Virus in ''ExterminatusNow'' is officially prohibited from handling any vehicle larger than a pair of shoes. Not that the readers will ever know what it is.
* ''GirlsNextDoor'' makes use of this trope, with a never-elaborated upon Prom Night Incident.
* ''[=~8-Bit Theater~=]'' has a couple with Red Mage's book (in which he's writing, in ''D&D'' language, the things he's learning from the rest of the Light Warriors). The few pages we see begin with such things as "... my horse, I wouldn't have spent that year in college," and "that's when they made me their king."
** Black Mage also alludes to quite a few less-than-family-friendly events in the past during the comic strip:
--->'''[[HeroicSociopath Black Mage]]:''' Thief, your career as our leader reminds me of watching a blind child stumble through an uneven room filled with knives and tiger pits. Only not as interesting to watch because you can always push the kid if it looks like he'd make it. Who's mom's favourite '''now'''?!\\
'''Red Mage:''' Wait. You murdered your own blind brother?\\
'''Black Mage:''' It would have been '''cruel''' to let him live after what I did to his eyes.
* The Macaroni Incident in ''LegostarGalactica''.
* ''{{Sinfest}}'' suggests a slightly risque explanation of the original Incident, [[http://www.sinfest.net/archive_page.php?comicID=1562 here]].
* The Hyena adoption ceremony in ''{{Digger}}'' consists of several complicated steps, one of which is described by Boneclaw Mother as "that stupid thing with the cactus spines."
* What, exactly, the lyrics of "that one about the lady and the sausagemaker" are in ''YetAnotherFantasyGamerComic'' will likely remain forever a secret. All we know are the reasons it was written ([[spoiler:to slander a woman the songwriter hit on and failed to score with]]) and that it takes about two years to clear the mental images out of one's head.
* ''Sandusky'' has the [[http://sandusky.comicgenesis.com/d/20061204.html railroad bridge incident]].
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Web Original]]
* ''[=MaxterBexter=]'': "Max had a bad encounter with a mojito".
* ''TheOnion'' gives us "[[http://www.theonion.com/content/node/31001 Unspeakable happens in Area Town]]"
* There have been several in the ''Protectors of the Plot Continuum''.
** Agent Suicide was kicked out of the Department of Bad Slash after the "Roofing Nail Incident".
** Suicide was keeping all baking supplies away from Agent Rowan on account of an incident with gingersnaps.
** The Department of Internal Operations made Agents Tawaki and Dustin forget being [[PossessionSue thrown out of character]] by a PPC badfic, telling them they had simply gotten lost on their last mission. All we know about the badfic was that time travel was involved.
* The SCPFoundation has quite a few, most notably when [DATA EXPUNGED].
** [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-447 SCP-447]] is perfectly safe... just as long as you never let it near any dead bodies.
** [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-231 SCP-231]] is essentially a NoodleIncident that is used as NightmareFuel.
** Used for good dramatic effect in [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/085-romance-adult ''085, A Romance in 2.5 Dimensions'']]
* In ''SlightlyDamned'', Rhea's friend J had a NoodleIncident [[http://raizap.com/sdamned/pages.php?comicID=155 involving an explosion at his previous job.]] No one knows what happened other than that J got fired in the aftermath.
* Unanswered questions abound in ''TheSagaOfTuck'', but given the author's tendency to withhold information until the last second, these are probably the safest to mention:
** Just what did Travis do as a favor for Lisa?
** What happened during Mike and Tuck's last dual babysitting job?
** Why were panties found under Brian's desk?
** Where did the missing air compressor go?
* In ''VoidDogs'', Galatea was bounced from the casino station for doing something that took more than seventeen pages for the station security to describe, as that's how much of the report was redacted from it.
* In ''WhateleyUniverse'', there's a particular incident that's been mentioned several times. At the end of spring and fall terms, the students in the SuperHeroSchool Whateley Academy have to participate in what is called the Combat Finals. In Chaka's first term at school, when everyone else was fighting one-on-one battles, the instructors pitted her against THREE opponents (a super-strong brick, a giant, and a badguy wizard/manifester), and threw in a series of massive disasters including (apparently) an earthquake and a tornado. All that the readers know is that she totally kicked ass. But people keep bringing it up....
** And it's been officially verified by one of the Canon Cabal that it will NEVER be seen in detail. (Forum, Questions and Answers, Fey's combat final.)
** They have a literal Noodle Incident as well.
*** All they've told us about it is that those were not really noodles, and Generator was behind it. But since Generator can animate pretty much anything she touches, the idea of what happened is starting to move from HilarityEnsues to NightmareFuel.
** Oh, and don't forget Belphegor's Disco Ball of Doom. And much of Belphoebe's shopping trip is not actually described, we only hear the dialogue.
** A DRAMATIC example is used in ''Against Ill Chances'', where suddenly the main character's personality changes subtly, and he can't remember what happened on the second day of testing, and one of his friends is missing...
*** http://www.crystalhall.org/merry3.html
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''TheFairlyOddparents'' has Super Toilet, the wish that prompted the "no more wishes with 'super' in the name" rule. Cosmo tends to start babbling "So... much... clogging..." and curl up in the fetal position when Super Toilet is brought up.
**Potentially subverted, as when Wanda wishes up Super Toilet, Cosmo falls in and is flushed.
** For reasons unknown, Crocker can never return to Cincinatti
* The Backwash Incident in ''DannyPhantom''. Apparently it was bad enough that Vlad lists it as one of the three reasons he wants to make Jack die oh so very painfully.
** Also, from the same episode as the above, just as Maddie is about to walk out the door, this exchange with Jack occurs:
-->'''Maddie:''' Please try not to trash the house while I'm gone.\\
'''Jack:''' ''(sighs)'' Suck the house into a parallel dimension ONE TIME, and you just can't let it go, can you?
* Done plenty of times with the favours ''KimPossible'' calls in for her rides, and of course "The Chess Club Incident" because, "The first rule of Chess Club is: [[FightClub You do not talk about]] Chess Club." Many emerge. Particularly in Season 4:
-->'''Kim:''' Like that time you cleaned your room.\\
'''Ron:''' We promised never to speak of that dark day.
** Or:
---> '''Barkin:''' Don't let them tell you they're supposed to have class outside. We put a stop to that after "the jellyfish incident".\\
'''Shego/Ms. Go:''' Oh, that's so sweet! You took the class to the beach?\\
'''Barkin:''' No beach. Just jellyfish. Don't ask.
** And who could forget the "Paper Machete" incident?
--->'''Kim:''' You mean paper maché, right?\\
'''Ron:''' I wish I did.
** Or the story about how Ron learned to use the potty....
** Another episode has Ron look for a job in the paper and sees one about puppies and thinks he might like to work with them. Rufus disagrees. Ron then agrees with him saying something about "The Fetch Incident".
* ''CodeLyoko'': Jim, the gym teacher, is a man of Noodle Incidents. He'll frequently exclaim, at some weird event, "Oh! This reminds me of the time I [some incredible activity or profession]!" Whenever one of the other characters asks him about it, though, he'll just reply with a mute, [[CatchPhrase "I'd rather not talk about it."]] The show makes fun of this at one point when Odd guesses "But you'd rather not talk about it?" to which Jim replies "Actually, I'd love to! But I don't have time right now."
** In one episode, Odd has been firmly ordered by Ulrich and Yumi never to mention "what happened at the swimming pool" (which may or may not refer to [[KissOfLife an incident]] seen on-screen), and by Jérémie and Aelita never to mention "what happened in the gym," which still remains a total mystery. The same episode includes the moniker "Big Fat Cheesehead", an unexplained "private joke" between Aelita and Jérémie.
** The only time Jérémie entered the virtual world (rather than being stuck as MissionControl Guy) was never shown, but was apparently very funny to everyone else.
* ''{{Rugrats}}'':
** When Tommy asks Chuckie, "When was the last time I ever got you lost?", Chuckie rattles off a list of "adventures" [[ContinuityNod seen in previous episodes,]] except for the last one: "... and the time I got stuck in the tomato bush, and that dog thought I was a tree..."
** Also, when Tommy gets sick and Grandpa suggests "the Applesauce Cure": "Just hold him upside down and get some applesauce and an old sock big enough for his head...." Nobody's willing to try it again. "I remember that. There was applesauce everywhere!"
** In the very first episode, Stu and Drew decide to put on a puppet show for Tommy's birthday party. When Grandpa reminds them "Don't you remember what happened the last time you two put on a show?", Stu replies "Come on dad, my arm healed and Drew sees almost perfectly out of that eye now."
** When Chuckie's "gardening angel" appears in WonderfulLife episode, Chuckie demands to know, "Where was ya' the time I got my tongue stucked on that ice cube? Or the time I got my head caught in the back of that weird-looking chair? Or the time I trapped myself in the birdcage?!"
* An amusing occasion in ''TheSimpsons'' has Mr Burns going through his checkbook, appearing to find out about his (drugged-up) five-hundred-dollar check for Homer's bowling team, only to be corrected:
-->'''Smithers:''' Uh, sir, that's a check for your ''boweling''.\\
'''Burns:''' Oh, yes. That's very important.\\
'''Smithers:''' Yes, sir. Remember that month you didn't do it?\\
'''Burns:''' Yes, that was unpleasant for all concerned.
** ''TheSimpsons'' has used this joke several times, such as when we find out that Homer is banned from the downtown library. Last time he was there, there was some... unpleasantness. And he can never go back!
** One of this troper's favorites:
--->'''Burns:''' Do you think we could dig up Al Jolson?\\
'''Smithers:''' Don't you remember? We did that once before.\\
'''Burns:''' Oh yes, he's dead. And rather pungent. The rest of that night is something I'd like to forget.
** Don't forget the part on the season five episode, "Homer and Apu", where Lisa plays an Indian instrument called a shenai and Homer comments that it's "worse than the album Grampa released" (with no flashback or further information about the matter). Or how about the season eight episode, "My Sister, My Sitter" where Lisa is trying to get her brother medical attention at a clinic and Smithers won't let Lisa in front of her because of a serious injury that makes it painful for him to sit down (though this could be taken as a DoubleEntendre, considering Smithers's closeted homosexuality)? And my favorite, from the season ten episode where Lisa joins Mensa and Homer becomes a model for a boudoir photographer: Homer asks the photographer over the phone if he'll have to pose nude for some erotic photos. The photographer says yes, unless the model has issues about revealing his/her body. Homer then says, "Well, I don't, but the block association seems to. ''They'' wanted a 'traditional' Santa!"
** There's an in-episode one for Treehouse of Horror XI: Homer gets through the day without dying, even though it is predicted by his horoscope. He tells Marge to stop worrying, as the only threats to his life that day were a nasty paper-cut, a tree felled by lightning, a giant globe rolling down the street, a pickaxe to the forehead, a snake bite, and "the testicle thing" (which was never shown).
** Some of Bart's blackboard punishment lines could be considered "Noodle Incidents" (like "I will not teach others to fly," "I am not a licensed hairstylist," "Science class should not end in tragedy," "Organ transplants are best left to the professionals," "The boys' room is not a water park," and "Next time, it could be me on the scaffolding.") since what Bart did to get detention during the opening credits is only implied.
*** The "the boys room is not a waterpark incident" '''''COULD''''' be referring to the time Bart dropped a cherry bomb down the toilet in the boys room, causing an explosion that was only felt in the girl's room when Agnes Skinner was sitting on the toilet.
** The season 1 episode "Homer's Odyssey" has Ms. Krabappel mention an infamous trip to the Springfield State Prison, to which Bart replies, "Ms. Krabappel, I didn't open that door!"
** Another episode features a scene that skips ahead a year to the Simpsons riding in the car, and they all discuss events that happened during that year.
** In yet another episode at the dinner table, Homer says, "It's not like anything interesting happened to anyone else today." We then pan to Bart studying a rock under a microscope, Lisa with a broken arm, and Maggie wearing a "Cutest Baby" sash.
* ''FamilyGuy'' averts the trope continually, by showing what happened "that time [Peter] forgot how to sit down", for example... to the point that when they play the trope straight once, during (as this troper recalls) the "Saving Private Brian" episode, Stewie breaks the FourthWall to [[LampshadeHanging hang a lampshade]] on the fact.
** Actully played straight in one episode when Chris and Peter are at a whale exhibit
--->'''Chris:'''Dad what do whales use their blowholes for?\\
'''Peter:''' I'll tell what they're not for son, and then you'll understand why I can never return to Sea World.
** If you listen to the commentary for that episode, Seth [=McFarlane=] (in Peter Griffin's voice) bluntly states EXACTLY what Peter did at Sea World.
** Also, there's Brian's anti-pot song at the end of "Episode 420" All we hear is "...and that's why pot is bad!"
** In another episode, Lois blackmails her father by bringing up the "nice Filipino boy who looks an awful lot like..."
* In ''FriskyDingo'', something happened in Phoenix, AZ involving Simon and pet store that ensures Killface and co "can ''never'' go back to Arizona!"
-->'''Killface:''' ''(after Simon runs away and steal all the knives, he starts to worry)'' Call all the pet stores. My god, it's Arizona all over again!
** Funny thing is, Simon ''was'' going to a pet shop.
* On the pilot episode of the short-lived MTV cartoon ''3South'', Cindy (Sanford's sister) visits her brother in his new dorm. Upon seeing Joe's skeleton for anatomy class, she yells, "What are you doing here? I thought I killed you!"
* On a season two episode of another MTV cartoon, ''{{Daria}}'', called "Pierce Me": while Daria and Trent are looking for a birthday present for Jane, Trent tells Daria that he can never set foot in a bookstore, and adds, "Don't ask me why, Daria, I just don't wanna talk about it!"
* In ''TheRoadToElDorado'', as they are ready to meet certain doom, Miguel whispers to Tulio, "I just want you to know, I'm sorry about that girl in Barcelona", at which Tulio becomes angry.
* ''TransformersGeneration1'': Kup was famed for having a war story every time something reminded him of the events... and he was [[SeenItAll reminded of a lot of things]]. We never actually hear the details, but Grimlock is very interested in the Petro-rabbits that reminded Kup about the current air raid taking place. It was a good story.
* ''TransformersAnimated'': This trope seems to have a great liking for Captain Fanzone, technophobic head of the Detroit Police Department. Professor Isaac Sumdac mentions at the unveiling of his latest line of police robots that, as he has updated the machines' recognition systems, there will hopefully be no repeats of "that unfortunate incident with the Captain's wife," to which Fanzone scowls visibly. Fanzone himself also mentions a different incident which befell his mother-in-law, presumably also having to do with robots/machines gone haywire.
* When [[ChipAndDaleRescueRangers Monterey Jack]] goes to see if Geegaw Hackwrench is in, he expresses mild concern that Geegaw might still be mad about... something that happened in Zanzibar involving cheese bread.
* In ''TheDCAU'', several things like this are tossed out every once in a while. You do ''not'' want to know why Batman needed to freeze the Gotham river and stop asking about the near-apocalypse of '09. Ironically, one NoodleIncident -- a Future-Version Superman mentioning to BatmanBeyond's Batman that the original Batman hated traveling through boom tubes -- actually was shown in ''JusticeLeague'', where Batman (BATMAN!) appears ready to throw up after going through one.
** Wasn't the reason that Batman froze the Gotham river the entire point of the episode ''Cold Comfort'' and therefore not an incident.
** This Troper's favorite ''JLU'' NoodleIncident are the creatures from the Decoran Nebula that WonderWoman insisted had their beat down coming. Apperently they weren't misunderstood, they just thought we were food.
** The episode "TheGreatestStoryNeverTold" is full of these. Since the story is from the POV of BoosterGold, who was not involved with the main fight with Mordru, we only catch insane clips of the fight while Booster evacuates people. We never learn why they needed Elongated Man ("Maybe they need a vase") or how he ended up stopping the "BigBad" nor do we get any details into the merging of Superman and Batman into one being (with WonderWoman's voice) other than Batman giving a look of "You will never speak of this again."
* This trope is why, in Togo, biscuits are known as [[{{Duckman}} duckmen]].
* The "stupid ski accident" that put ''DarkwingDuck'' in a wheelchair. "[[CrowningMomentOfFunny Well, I told you things got rough at those ski shop sales]]. You're lucky only your legs were broken."
** Gosalyn's infamous pranks:
--->'''Gosalyn:''' I don't know anything about a pig, and I was nowhere near the boys bathroom at the time!\\
'''Mrs. Cavanaugh:''' What pig?\\
\\
'''Gosalyn:''' Dad's never grounded me without a reason before!\\
'''Honker:''' Gee, Gosalyn, maybe he found out about that sewer gas incident in the boys' locker room.\\
'''Gosalyn:''' Nah, it's too soon.\\
'''Honker:''' Um, the UFO hoax at the convent?\\
'''Gosalyn:''' No way, I wore gloves.
* In the ''TotalDramaIsland'' episode "Camp Castaways", [[TroubledButCute Duncan]], [[TheLibby Heather]] and [[PerkyGoth Gwen]] have been confessing their sins to each other:
-->'''Gwen:''' Whoa! So that's what you went to juvie hall for.\\
'''Duncan:''' ''(visibly depressed)'' Yeah, but at least it's not as bad as what Heather did.\\
'''Heather:''' I admit, it was a little unorthodox, but it doesn't come close to what Gwen did, if that's even your real name.\\
''(Gwen looks away nervously)''
* In an episode of ''{{King of the Hill}}'', Hank says that Joe Jack due to the incident at Taco Bueno he is not allowed to play for the company softball team and everyone agrees that it was a stupid thing that he did, the details surrounding the event were never explained.
* In ''{{Ed Edd N Eddy}}'', Edd has an extreme fear of physical activity due to an unmentioned "Dodgeball Incident" that occurred sometime beforehand and apparently led to him being exempt from Gym Class.
**This troper (mariic) has discovered a comic about the incident [[spoiler:where Edd got beaned with a dogeball and the coach said, "Hey you, in the sock hat, you're out!" while the victim (Double Dee) wonders if he could be exempt from PE.]] I personally wonder why something like that would scare someone away from PE.
** In TheMovie, [[spoiler:this is the entire driving force behind the movie, as we never find out just what kind of scam the Eds must have pulled on the kids for them to so determinedly chase after them for ninety minutes, only that somehow, Ed and Eddy screwed it up.]]
*** This troper (mariic) wants to point out that Kevin called the Eds theives, leading him to think that the scam involves using something stolen, or they stole something from them or someone else.
* In an episode of ''InvaderZim'':
-->'''Prof. Membrane''': Son! There'd better not be any walking dead up there!\\
'''Dib''': I'm not, Dad! And I said I was sorry!
** That seems to happen a lot to Dib. In the first episode, they went through a list of all the crazy things Dib has done, including seeing Bigfoot in his garage "He was using the belt sander." It is never revealed whether these things really happened or if it was just Dib being crazy. There was also the election episode, where Dib jammed a receiver into his ear. Miss Bitters shooed him away saying "Dib! What did I tell you about jamming things in people's ears?"
** Dib's whole life seems to be either a series of Noodle Incidents, or one big one. There was also the episode "Mysterious Mysteries" where not only was there a whole closet full of the stuff Dib sends in (Though a lot of it is probably about Zim, who knows what else could be in there), but the host (And, seemingly the creator) of the show said "No! Not after what happened last time.." he then stroked his scar and Dib flashed on the screen for a frame or two. Not to mention the size of his school records, and occasionally his father, sister, or school kids would mention some of the events of his life. The only time we saw more of his past was when Zim tried to alter it.
--->'''Professor Membrane:''' Son, I think it's time you know the truth about where you came from. You see... *watch beeps; takes off*
** And then there's the bit with the school counselor:
--->'''Dib:''' What happened to the ''old'' counselor?\\
'''Counselor''' Something... terrible.\\
'''Voice from vents''' ''Help... meee...''
** Dib called the FBI in "Zim eats waffles".
--->'''Greg''': [laughing] Hey, wait. You're... Dib, right? Did you ever get that ninja ghost out of your toilet?
--->'''Dib''': Yes, no thanks to you!
* ''{{SeaLab 2021}}'', "Radio Free Sealab". A heavily censored exchange has an FCC agent telling another agent about such an incident. All we know is that it involved an orangutan and that it was "legal in Tijuana."
** The DVD release has a much less censored version of the exchange as an extra. Like Watterson and the original Noodle Incident, the writers realized that the scene was much funnier when more was left to the imagination.
* In an episode of ''{{Ren and Stimpy}}'' Adult Cartoon Party, Stimpy is terribly upset at the horrible thing Ren did to him and every time he brings it up he bursts into tears, later Mr. Horse who's portraying a psychologist asks him what he did him and he loudly whispers something unintelligible to him and he calls him a lunatic and says he needs to be locked up for it, but we never find out the details behind it.
** This is a ShoutOut to an old Nickelodeon episode where Ren told a psychologist that he "smacked" Stimpy. The reaction is the same.
* ''MightyMax'' has the unfortunate events in... ''Rangoon''.
* The ''{{Fosters Home for Imaginary Friends}}'' episode "Squeeze the Day" ends with the entire house (except for Mac and Bloo, who were purposely left behind) returning from the beach with Frankie yelling the following at Wilt:
-->"One day, Wilt-- that's all I ask for! One day to rest and relax and ''you'' have to go and mess it up! Now I have to '''go clean up all that sand''' and ''somehow'' find '''homes for all those jellyfish!'''
** She then says that the ''governor'' has ordered them all ''banned from the beach.'' Yeesh, and Wilt was supposed to be the good guy of the group...
** He's also TheWoobie. He's designed to suffer.
* ''CodenameKidsNextDoor'': The one time Sector V let The Delightful Children From Down The Lane oppress a kid, they made Numbuh 1 bald. No one knows exactly how this happened.
* In the ''PhineasAndFerb'' episode "The Chronicles of Meap", part of Dr. Doofensmirtz's BackStory for that episode involved him not having friends as a kid because he smelled like pork all the time, because of ''another'' traumatizing back story that he didn't want to get into.
** PhineasAndFerb has a number of these(the time Candace got her head stuck in the sink, and one can only wonder why Doofenshmirtz has a problem with underwater welders). Of course, it having been created by one of the directors of FamilyGuy, it has its share of aversions as well(Dr. Coconut, anyone?).
* "That was one crazy Yom Kippur!" practically became DrawnTogether's CatchPhrase.
* The animated movie based on Scary Godmother has one. Just like in the original book, it involves glitter and a dog. In the original book, it also was mentioned to be the reason the neighborhood had to evacuate for a week.
* ''TheOblongs'' combines this with PandaingToTheAudience: in one scene, we cut in on the end of a conversation between one of the children and their mother, which is never really concluded or explained. It goes like this:
--> ...so THAT'S how the panda bears broke into the Dairy Queen, and THAT's why I need a laywer!
* Subverted in the ''MoralOrel'' when Orel tells his dad he'll "never do THAT with THOSE, in THERE, for that LONG ever again!" and a later episode explains what happened. (See main article.)
* Subverted in an episode of ''TeenTitans''. When Cyborg disguises himself as a member of HIVE academy, his "initiation" involves a pink dress and a unicycle. However, it's quickly explained, if absurd ("Don't laugh, ya have to ''eat'' the unicycle"). The end of the episode has a straighter example, which involves [[NoodleImplements pink shorts, a tutu, and a rubber chicken.]]
--> ''Oh Cyyyyborg~!''
--> '''Robin:''' ''You left the Titans.''
--> '''Beast Boy:''' ''That means you have to be initiated.''
--> '''Raven:''' ''Aaaaal over again.''
--> '''Cyborg:''' *is dragged away, screaming for mercy*
* Many [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qg6OTTbKsmQ responses Pinky has]] to Brain asking "AreYouPonderingWhatImPondering" in ''PinkyAndTheBrain''. ...Actually, pretty much they all fit, since Pinky's logic and train of thought has only been followed once.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Real Life]]
* Something (possibly an incident) that RichardNixon repeatedly refers to as "the whole Bay of Pigs thing" in the Watergate tapes, and is presumably related to the CIA and of blackmail potential, has never been properly explained. The infamous 18-minute gap is in close proximity to discussions of this subject, possibly obscuring a clarification.
** What about the whole botched CIA-sponsored invasion of Cuba in 1961? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_of_Pigs_Invasion. I'm willing to bet money that Nixon is referring to that little disaster of an invasion and not something.
** Since the Bay of Pigs was conceived under Eisenhower at a time in his term when Nixon was quite powerful as VP, it's likely that it is at least related to that incident.
** The exact details of what Nixon is referring to, and how it could possibly come back to bite him, however, have never been revealed.
[[/folder]]
----
<<|AbsurdityAscendant|>>
<<|BornInTheFunnyPapers|>>
<<|ComedyTropes|>>
<<|IndexOverdosed|>>
<<|NarrativeDevices|>>
<<|LaconicWiki|>>