http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bwi-bus.jpg
[[caption-width:400:Bye, bye! See you again someday ... [[LongBusTrip maybe]].]]
A character is written out of a series in such a way that they can easily be returned later, if the producers so choose. They are Put On A Bus.
A staple of the PrimeTimeSoap and particularly SoapOpera where casts are large and actor turnover is frequent. Conveniently, when such a character is brought back, it can be with a case of {{SORAS}} or TheOtherDarrin.
If the character doesn't return, this becomes a LongBusTrip. If they just abruptly vanish from the series and aren't even mentioned again, it's a BrotherChuck. If there's obvious malice involved in the character's departure, then they've been PutOnABusToHell. Of course, there's always the chance of a BusCrash, or [[DiedOnABus dying on the bus]].
The polar opposite of DroppedABridgeOnHim. Compare with LongBusTrip, CommutingOnABus, and AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence. When the character is a villain, it's VillainOnABus. The bus in question may be a ConvenientComa. See also AbsenteeActor, for when a character disappears for only an episode or two.
----
!!Examples:
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* Misty/Kasumi in ''[=~Pokémon~=]'', replaced by May/Haruka, who later got put on a bus to make way for Dawn/Hikari and, if an interview with the anime director is anything to go by, she'll be put on a bus too once the next Pokémon generation comes out.
** Brock experienced this a while back as well. Unfortunately, [[ReplacementScrappy his replacement was poorly received]] so he was put on a bus himself and Brock was brought back with arguable success.
** This trope also applies to most of Ash's Pokémon. Some, like Squirtle and Charizard, are left with other trainers but will occasionally reappear, while others, like Pidgeot, Butterfree, Primeape, and Lapras, disappear entirely. In fact, Ash has made it a habit to leave behind all of his Pokémon except Pikachu in Professor Oak's lab when he travels to each new region.
** Also applies to many of Team Rocket's Pokémon, such as Weezing, Arbok, and Dustox.
** In the most recent season of ''Pokémon'', [[spoiler:Ambipom]] is ''literally'' put on a bus.
* ''SailorMoon'' did this to Chibiusa whenever they sent her back to the future, though after the first time the reasoning was dubious. Mamoru was literally put on a vehicle for an entire season (a plane, not a bus), and whose fate remained unknown until the final showdown with the BigBad. The [[SixthRanger Outer Senshi]] themselves have a habit of showing up for arbitrarily specific dangers, mostly so the writers can prune down the cast manageably.
* Tenma went overseas and essentially out of the mainstream storyline of ''SchoolRumble''.
* In ''{{Mai-HiME}}'', [[spoiler:Akane Higurashi]] gets PutOnABus after her boyfriend and [[spoiler:MIP Kazuya is killed as a side-effect of Miyu destroying Akane's CHILD]]. She's shown twice afterwards in a particularly heartbreaking HeroicBSOD state, which she doesn't recover from until the end of the series... when [[spoiler:Mashiro revives Kazuya and restores her powers just in time for her and the defeated [=HiME=]s to join Mai and Mikoto in the last battle.]]
** It happened to [[spoiler:her ''{{Mai-Otome}}'' counterpart]], as well. She disappears after the midway point of the series to run off with her [[spoiler:newfound lover]], only to return for the final showdown.
* The military structure of the [[HeroesRUs Space-Time Administration Bureau]] in ''MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha'' makes this easy. Don't need someone for now? Just ship them off to a post that the current arc isn't focusing on. Need them back? Either reassign them to the main characters' branch or have their department help out on the current crisis.
* Happens quite a few times in ''[=~Jojo's Bizarre Adventure~=]''.
** The most blatant example would be Fugo leaving Giorno's group in the middle of Part 5 (because he thought their mission was suicide) and never gets mentioned again. (The real life reason being that Araki made his Stand [[SuperpowerLottery too cheap to write good fights for]].)
** Joseph after leaving Morioh at the end of Part 4 is never so much as mentioned again. Now, seeing as he was about 80, it's safe to assume he's dead, but it's still pretty odd that it's never been brought up for a main character.
** Giorno is last shown at the end of Part 5 and was later stated by WordOfGod to be in Florida during Part 6 after Pucci gained the Joestar birthmark. He should have been drawn to Pucci by the bloodline connection, but still doesn't appear.
*** If this editor remembers correctly, he wasn't necessarily stated to be there, just implied: "''Maybe'' he is already in Flordia??!!" or something similar. As for why the birthmark didn't bring them together, this editor also remembers some nonsense about how since Giorno had already "fulfilled his destiny," Pucci didn't draw Giorno to him. Or something to that effect.
* In ''{{Hitohira}}'', Mugi's best friend Kayo announces out of the blue that she will be studying photography abroad--which is a bit strange, since she didn't even finish her high school education yet. No further details are given, not even ''where'' she will be going, and her disappearance is obviously used as a device to cause Mugi large amounts of angst.
* In the ''CardCaptorSakura'' anime, Meiling returns to Hong Kong just before the climax of the first arc. She makes guest appearances near the end of the second arc and in the [[TheMovie movie epilogue]].
* Daichi/Bastion Misawa of ''Yu-Gi-Oh GX'' got... er... spectacularly... PutOnABus. He left the school (and series) in a parody of the original eureka moment... [[BrainBleach complete with streaking through campus]]. (Edited in the dub -- he stripped his uniform, but left on his boxers.)
** He returned next season to give some ExpoSpeak and a little TechnoBabble... and got PutOnABus all over again. [[IsntItSad And he started out as a major character, too...]]
* ''ChocottoSister'' has [[spoiler:Ayano]] written out so seamlessly that Haruma's heartbreak over her [[ShaggyDogStory seems rather pointless]] in the end.
* In ''NeonGenesisEvangelion'', when [[spoiler:Pen-Pen]] literally gets put on a bus, you know that the show [[ShooOutTheClowns won't have any more comic relief]].
* Yasuko from ''AoiHana'' conveniently starts studying in England, after she fulfilled her role of causing Fumi lots of heartbreak and teenage angst.
* Koromo from ''{{Saki}}'' simply doesn't attend the individual tournament, limiting her displays of {{Mahjong}} prowess to a few scenes in the team tournament arc.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Comics]]
* Between the late 1960s and his return in the early '80s, J'onn J'onnz, the MartianManhunter of the JusticeLeague, went off to find "New Mars" with the rest of the Martian people. This has since been [[RetCon retconned]] -- along with the existence of [[LastOfHisKind other Martians in general]].
* Two female human pilots left [[XWingSeries Rogue Squadron]]. Elscol, a guerrilla leader before Wedge recruited her, left because of command issues and because she believed she could do better working on the ground. Plourr, a BoisterousBruiser who turned out to be a princess, left because revolutions had torn up her homeworld and she needed to rule and bring it back under control. Oddly, it's Plourr who was written back in, and ''very'' quickly. A drop-in commando character recurred, but Elscol did not. Well, not in the comics. She did have a role in one of the novels.
* Karolina was put on a spaceship right after the "True Believers" arc of ''{{Runaways}}''. To make a very long story short, she had to go back to her home planet with Xavin in order to help end a war. However, they returned before the end of that volume.
* A ''ScoobyDoo'' comic features a subplot where Scrappy goes to a gambling table and begins winning hotels. At the end, he declares that he has won hotels and vanishes from the Mystery Machine, where the gang discovers he was using the solid hologram device from that story. The last panel has Scooby leave the van to go back to Las Vegas to get him, but by the next comic, Scrappy isn't anywhere to be seen, so presumably the gang left him there to run his hotels.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Film]]
* The exit of [[spoiler:Scarecrow]] in ''BatmanBegins'' was pretty much putting him on a bus until the director could find out if he was reusable for the next installment.
** He's pretty much [[VillainDecay reduced to]] a cameo for [[spoiler:the BatmanColdOpen]], and then sent straight to jail.
* In the movie ''There Will Be Blood'', the main character's son is Put On A Train by his own father (however, he does return).
* Major subversion: the end of the first ''{{Godfather}}'' movie has Michael pretending to put his brother in law Carlo on a bus, but he's actually just getting him into a car with his assassin.
* An offhand line in ''{{Hellboy}} II'' mentions that Myers, TheWatson in the first film, has been reassigned to Antarctica.
* In the movie ''TheTrumanShow'', about a man whose entire life is run by TV executives (see "{{Hell}}"), Truman's father supposedly dies. However, he eventually shows up again as an extra, and just as Truman recognizes him a pair of generic men in suits grab the old man and actually put him on a bus. Since Truman saw him, though, the producer decides to reveal that, the whole time, HesJustHiding.
* The ending of ''Ghost World''.
** With a '''literal''' bus, no less
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Literature]]
* In ''HarryPotter'', Cornelius Fudge is never seen again after the first chapter of the Sixth book, and the Dursleys are literally put on a bus (well, all right, ''a car'', to be exact, but same thing) in the third chapter of the final book.
** As it's the final book, it doesn't really count as being "Put on a bus" since that technique is used so they can bring them back later.
*** Not to mention that they never appear after the first couple of chapters of ''any'' book in the series anyhow. Getting rid of them in the third chapter had pretty much no effect.
** Cornelius Fudge ''does'' come back at the end of the sixth book to attend [[spoiler:Dumbledore's funeral.]]
* This happens to many different characters in ''{{War and Peace}}'', as [[LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters there are so many of them]], but the one who stands out most is Dolokhov, who is PutOnABus after crushing Nikolai Rostov and stripping him of nearly forty thousand roubles, only to return later after having [[TookALevelInBadass taken a level in Badass]].
* [[spoiler:Bean]] at the end of ''[[EndersGame Shadow of the Giant]]'' is put on a relativistic spaceship with [[spoiler:his genetically modified children]] so that they can live until the development of [[spoiler:a cure]].
* Father Callahan from the StephenKing novel ''Salem's Lot'' went off on a literal bus near the end of the book, and rather unexpectedly reappeared years later in the loosely related The Dark Tower series as a church pastor in another dimension. It is explained he spent a lot of the intervening time killing vampires.
* In ''{{A Song of Ice and Fire}}'', the character Rickon [[spoiler:gets put on a bus -- or sent off with a wildling woman of dubious allegiance -- at the end of Book 2 and hasn't been heard from since, mainly because the author found writing for a four-year-old difficult. It is anticipated he will return, possibly badassed up, with his psychotic direwolf, in later installments.]]
* In ''{{The Wheel of Time}}'' the character Hurin, having played a major role in events in Book 2, disappears at the start of Book 3, cheerfully announcing he's heading home to the Borderlands to let people know what's been going on. The trope appeared subverted because [[spoiler:the Borderland rules are later revealed to have learned all about Rand al'Thor's adventures from Hurin, prompting them to raise a massive army and march south. The ensuing political and military chaos in the lands they pass through serves a critical plot arc in books 10 through 12.]] However, [[spoiler:the trope was ultimately not subverted because Rand and Hurin are reunited briefly in book 12, as the Borderland generals send Hurin as their emissary to the Dragon Reborn near Far Madding.]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* This is the standard way for ''{{Law and Order}}'' franchises to write out characters, especially over the last several years. Dick Wolf is said to regret that Jill Hennessy's Claire Kincaid was KilledOffForReal, and thus could not be brought back.
** More examples from the ''Law and Order'' realm: Jamie goes back to criminal defense, Alex goes into Witness Protection, Abbie goes to work for the feds, Serena is fired, etc.
*** Alex was then brought back in season ten of ''SVU'', and after a short stint in the Court of Appeals, Stephanie March had her name added to the opening credits once again in episode five of the eleventh season.
* Boner on ''GrowingPains'' went off and joined the Marines. He never did return, and was never even mentioned again.
* ''DoctorWho''
** In "The War Machines" Dodo is sent off to the country to recuperate after being brainwashed in London, and is never seen again.
** In "Age of Steel", Mickey decides to stay in the AlternateUniverse and fight the Cybermen. He comes back in "Army of Ghosts", and, along with entire supporting cast, is put back on a bus in "Doomsday".
*** Happens in the next season with [[spoiler: the return of Rose.]]
** This is also the standard way that companions have exited the series throughout its existence. Exceptions include Katarina and Adric, who were [[KilledOffForReal killed off for real]].
*** In the case of Leela, Louise Jameson found her character Put on a Bus against her will -- Jameson wanted to leave, and at the time had no real interest in returning sometime down the line, and so asked that her character die at the end of her last serial. The producers decided the event might be too traumatic for children (more likely, they were concerned about the increasing violence in the show -- the series was already being targeted by MediaWatchdogs), and so instead had a last-minute DeusExMachina romance occur between her and a capitol guard, prompting her to stay on Gallifrey.
** Having reintroduced K-9 in the PoorlyDisguisedPilot of ''TheSarahJaneAdventures'', the ''entire first season'' was then obliged to trap him in a black hole, since the RobotBuddy's creator had sold a ''K-9'' series elsewhere. (He gives a token appearance in the season finale and Comic Relief special though). [[spoiler:Also, K9 returned in "The Mad Woman In the Attic".]]
** Then there's Sarah Jane herself, who left DoctorWho for a total of 30 years. Longest. Bus. Ride. Ever.
*** ''TheSarahJaneAdventures'' is not immune either. Maria Jackson and her dad left for America as the former's actress was in her GCSE year and wanted to concentrate on her studies (However, the fact she appears in "Mark Of The Beserker Part 2" suggests that they have simply been downgraded to minor characters).
* Jack Harkness was put on a very short bus ride at the end of the first season of ''{{Torchwood}}''. He runs off to catch [[DoctorWho the Doctor]] and returns the next season in episode one. [[spoiler:At the end of season 3 he goes off on another one.]]
* In ''{{Lost}}'', the character of Walt had to be written out of the show because the actor who played him, 12-year-old Malcolm David Kelley, would have aged several years while his character would have only aged three months. Walt and his father Michael were written out of the show after Michael sold out his friends to get off the island at the end of season 2. However, Michael returned for Season 4, and Walt has made guest appearances in every season since.
* ''{{The OC}}'' actually cleverly subverted this (believe it or not). Everyone knew Mischa Barton was leaving the show at the end of the third season, and the episode had the plotline that she was going away to live with her dad, seemingly being PutOnABus. However, on her way to the airport, she was in a car accident and died.
** This troper hears that this was quite a surprising twist when it originally aired in the US. For some reason, the Australian station on which the OC was playing felt that instead of allowing the viewers to experience this shock twist, it should start having ads three weeks before the finale saying "MARISSA... WILL... DIE". [[TrailersAlwaysSpoil Thanks, channel 10]].
** Cleverly subverted for a given value of clever. Many fans (even those who didn't especially care for Mischa) found it [[McLeaned needlessly vindictive]].
** In Season 2, Zach was Put On A Plane (to Italy). He returned a handful of episodes later, and Seth Lampshaded the subversion:
--->'''Seth:''' Hey, man, you came back! People ''never'' leave and come back.
* Pete Ross on ''{{Smallville}}'' was sent off this way. Interesting because he was the show's sole prominent [[TokenMinority black]] character, and because, despite being a main character, he hasn't been missed by the viewers. This may be because TelevisionWithoutPity calls him "ProductPlacement Pete" for his annoying tendency to shill stuff.
** Interesting. This troper hadn't noticed it while Pete was a regular, but the episode in which he visits is basically an hour-long commercial for Stride gum.
** Don't forget Whitney Fordman, who is literally PutOnABus at the end of Season One.
*** Of course, they then [[spoiler:DroppedABridgeOnHim]] in Season Two...
** [[TheWesley Lana Lang]] was PutOnABus at the end of season seven. {{And there was much rejoicing}}.
* Rimmer went off to become the next "Ace Rimmer"(What A Guy!)in series seven of ''RedDwarf''. The Rimmer seen in series eight is a clone created via nanotechnology, and the original Rimmer was never heard from again.
* Andie of ''DawsonsCreek'' was written off the show by sending her to Italy. She returned only once, for the gang's high school graduation.
** Similarly KidGenius Janice on ''Head of the Class'', who between seasons 3 and 4 got a scholarship to MIT, but showed up in the series finale because she forgot to pick up her high school diploma.
* ''7th Heaven'' was famous for this, writing characters off by putting them on buses (sometimes literally) to New York (Mary, Matt), college (Simon), etc., only to continue the characters' plotlines offscreen.
* Kate in ''{{Slings and Arrows}}'' is put on a limo to Hawaii at the beginning of the second season.
* Jack O'Neill from ''{{Stargate SG-1}}'' gets put on a bus by being promoted out of the SGC (this was so actor Richard Dean Anderson could spend more time with his family). He still made a few appearances later in the series and in its spinoff ''StargateAtlantis''. General Hammond also gets put on a bus the same way.
** Jonas Quinn (yes, that JonasQuinn) was put on a bus after season 6 (he returned to his home planet) and was never mentioned again at all after season 7.
* When Peter [=MacNicol=] did a stint on ''[[TwentyFour 24]]'', his ''NUMB3RS'' character was Put On A Space Station.
* Sara Sidle of ''{{CSI}}'' was recently PutOnABus, leaving with the possibility that she'll return if actress Jorja Fox and CBS change their minds.
** Jorja Fox and show execs virtually guaranteed in interviews that she would be popping in for a guest spot sometime in the near future - and did just that in season 9.
*** And Grissom followed her off of CSI, too. Since both roles have been {{Jonas Quinn}}'d by new rookie [=CSIs=] it's probably safe to assume that the bus will not be returning anytime soon.
* In the original ''MightyMorphinPowerRangers'', Tommy was depowered and sent off, as per the arc of his Japanese counterpart, though [[spoiler:Dragon Ranger died]]. When Haim Saban ordered an extra half-season of footage, Tommy came back, a change probably also required by the ratings.
** Similarly the original Red, Yellow, and Black Rangers, Jason, Trini, and Zack, were sent to a peace conference. The joke among the cast and crew of the show was that if you ever saw in a script that your character was going to a peace conference, you were never coming back. Jason did, however, becoming the SixthRanger of ''PowerRangersZeo'' and making a couple more guest appearances. Trini, sadly, DiedOnABus.
*** Also note that in this case, the three actors had been in the process of leaving the show since around the first appearance of the White Ranger- at first they continued to play themselves outside of fight scenes, with their Ranger forms voiced by [[TheOtherDarrin Other Darrins]], then they left the show entirely and were given excuses not to be around, or played by body doubles or StockFootage from earlier episodes, while the replacement Rangers were introduced, before finally being written out.
* Oz of ''{{Buffy the Vampire Slayer}}'' put ''himself'' on a bus... twice in one season.
** Buffy puts herself on a bus at the end of season 2, setting up her self-exile at the beginning of season 3.
** Also in Buffy, Faith [[spoiler: gets put in a coma, then later rides the back of a truck (which is almost a bus).]]
** Cordy and Angel shared a bus to ''{{Angel}}''.
** After Tony Head expressed a desire to spend more time with his family in England, Giles was put on a plane in Season 6. The character's flimsy reasoning for this departure was Buffy's need to grow into a stronger, more stable person and Slayer, and he cited his presence, the fact that she often relied on him, as a hindrance to her self-reliance. Given it was his job as her Watcher to let her rely on him and the mountain of trauma she had recently suffered, many fans let out a collective "Huh?!" at his decision to abandon her "for her own good". This departure did allow him to be a [[BigDamnHeroes Big Damn Hero]] at the end of the season, but Buffy and the team would suffer for his absence for the rest of the series. The character played a somewhat larger part in Season 7, but he was still constantly [[CommutingOnABus on and off the bus]] in the form of searching the world for Potential Slayers, leaving the rest of the team to try (and fail) to carry on effectively in his absence.
* This is the fate of the Number Three Cylons in the ''BattlestarGalactica'' remake. After a Number Three Cylon disobeys the consensus of the other Cylon models, it's decided that the Number Three models are inherently flawed. The Number Threes are then "boxed up" and their memories and consciousnesses downloaded into cold storage indefinitely. [[spoiler:At least one number three is "unboxed" later on in season 4.]]
* In the ''BattlestarGalactica'' Miniseries (2003), Boomer rescues Boxey and brings him into the pilot's quarters. He then appeared in only one other episode.
* In ''EastEnders'' characters are regularly ''Put On A Train'' and go to live in Manchester or Spain so that the writers can bring them back. That's not to say that dead characters can't be brought back anyway, such as Den, who was shot and drowned 14 years previously. Sometimes they're Put On A London Black Cab, or (in the case of OfficialCouple Kat and Alfie in 2005) Put On A Ford Capri.
* In ''Neighbours'' this happens all the time... characters leave very suddenly on a long holiday (eg Rosie and Frazer), to visit family (Sienna), to take a job elsewhere (Riley) or to have long-term medical care (Nicola, Kirsten). The worst example of this has got to be Lou Carpenter's mother-in-law Marlene, who 'went on a cruise' in 1997 and hasn't been seen since.
* The second season of ''{{Charmed}}'' introduced Jenny Gordon, neighbor to the main characters. Beyond living with her hot uncle (a convenient love interest for Piper), she was apparently important enough to get mentioned in the opening credits, but moved away to live with her parents before she actually did anything important, while her uncle remained a recurring character throughout the rest of the season (after season two, he also inexplicably disappeared).
* In ''[[BabylonFive Babylon 5]]'', commander Ivanova was put on a bus (given her own ship to command) when the actress left the show. She appeared a year later in the last episode, which was however filmed as the last episode of the season when the actress was still part of the cast.
** Well before this, the station's original commander, Jeffrey Sinclair, is put on a bus at the beginning of the second season by being reassigned to a diplomatic post on the Minbari homeworld, and is replaced by Captain Sheridan. Sinclair reappears to make guest appearances in seasons two and three.
* Chano Amengual was put on a bus on ''BarneyMiller'', but viewers weren't told for several seasons. Following his disappearance, no one mentioned him until a few years later when a new detective was transferred to the precinct to replace him, causing Barney to marvel at how long it took the department to send anyone.
** Also Barney's wife Liz, who had been [[HeWhoMustNotBeSeen unseen]] on the show for several seasons after being played by Barbara Barrie in Seasons 1-2. (The producers actually came up with the separation storyline as a way of bringing Barrie, whose character had been deemed as not "working" in the context of the show, back before the viewers.)
* On ''GreysAnatomy'', Addison Montgomery was put in a convertible to LA so that she could rediscover herself in her spin-off, ''PrivatePractice''. Theoretically she was going to involve herself in more mature things than hospital {{Love Dodecahedron}}s, but whether that actually happened is doubtful.
** Though since then Isaiah Washington ran off rather than marry Cristina Yang, Brooke Smith's newly lesbian character vanished the day after getting her first girl/girl orgasm from Callie O'Malley, then at the end of season five [[spoiler:TR Knight is hit by a bus because he complained too much about not getting enough screen time]].
* The first time Katey Segal (the actress who played Peggy Bundy) became pregnant during her time on ''{{Married With Children}}'', the producers worked it into the storyline, only to have to backtrack when Segal tragically suffered a miscarriage by [[spoiler:making the entire season six storyline of Peg and Marcy being pregnant a dream. And on a dream episode, no less, where Al is a private eye out to clear his name when he's accused of murder]]. When Segal became pregnant again later in the show's run, the writers didn't go back to the "Peg is pregnant" well again, and, instead, wrote off Segal's frequent absences from the show as a storyline where Peg is traveling the world to get her parents back together after her father walks out on her.
** David Garrison, who played Marcy's first husband, Steve, left the show in the fourth season to return to stage acting. Because of that, his character left Marcy to become a forest ranger at Yosemite National Park.
* This happens to Foreman, Cameron and Chase in the 3rd season finale of ''{{House}}''. Foreman later returns in season 4, while Cameron and Chase make cameo appearances. Interestingly enough, Amber is ''literally'' put on a bus in the 4th season finale, although this probably doesn't qualify for tolerably obvious reasons...
* In ''BluesClues'', to help its impressionable young viewers cope more easily with the resignation of host Steve Burns, he supposedly leaves ''to go to college'' and is quickly replaced by a brother, Joe.
* In the last season of ''TheAvengers'', writers dealt with [[MostCommonSuperpower Tara King]]'s uselessness by putting her in drugged sleep for an entire episode and sending her on vacation for another (in which she was replaced by a much more interesting character).
* After her actress' departure from the show at the end of the third series, '''AlloAllo!'' opted to explain why Maria had suddenly vanished when she was trapped in the prison camp for British soldiers with the majority of rest of the primary cast by explaining that she had attempted to escape by disguising herself as a package and getting mailed out. Unfortunately, she didn't have enough stamps and was as such "returned to Switzerland."
* First-Season character of the series ''{{Big Wolf On Campus}}'' Stacy Hansen is a prime example of this trope. It's revealed at the start of the Second Season that she had left for college. Though, she never did return and was never mentioned again. This is somewhat [[TruthInTelevision based on real life]] in that the actress who played Stacy really DID go to college.
* Stan in ''{{On the Buses}}'' departs the series to drive buses OopNorth. So he literally ''was'' PutOnABus.
* Alexis Meade of ''UglyBetty'' was recently put on a bus. Reportedly, Rebecca Romijn didn't like the way the character was being written.
** Also the fate of Ashley Jensen's character Christina.
* ''{{Heroes}}'' does this ''a lot''. Season 2 did it to the spouses and children of every married character, plus Matt's FBI partner. DL had a bridge dropped on him instead, though, in one of the show's biggest [[WallBanger wall bangers]]. Season 3 alone has:
** Sent [[spoiler:Molly]] off to India with a passing throwaway line
** Removed [[spoiler:Maya's power]] and had her depart for... somewhere, although she is later shown to be living in an apartment (likely in America, given how Mohinder tried to visit her).
** [[spoiler:Micah]] was after one episode, apparently not in the least curious after a woman [[spoiler:identical to his dead mother]] appears and asks for his help. [[spoiler:He returns in Volume 4, though....]]
** The one with the best execution was Claude's departure in Season 1: it's built into his character since he's {{invisible}}. After HRG and the Haitian attack him and Peter, he turns invisible and runs out of Peter's apartment and he hasn't been seen on screen since. But he did play a major role in one of the recent online graphic novels and they've subtly alluded to him a few times onscreen, so his fans are pretty sure that the writers are bringing him back.
* One of the most notorious and self-influential incidents in ''{{Beverly Hills 90210}}'s'' narrative history was putting Brenda Walsh, the show's powerhouse, on a plane to London after actress Shannen Doherty was fired for repeated unprofessional behaviour. Brenda was only supposed to stay in London for a year, but never reappeared in the original show. ''{{Charmed}}'', the next Aaron Spelling product that Doherty starred in, went one further when the actress was dismissed (again) and [[McLeaned killed off her character]].
* In ''{{Hustle}}'' season 5, [[spoiler:Danny and Stacie are]] revealed to have gone to America after season 4, hence their absence from the gang. Though, given that the gang was in the US at the end of season 4 (more or less) this might be more a matter of "didn't catch the bus home".
* ''NewsRadio'' sent Catherine on a [[strike:bus]] plane to London in Season 4. She returned for the tribute episode following Phil Hartman's death.
* In ''{{MacGyver}}'', Pete Thornton casually comments at the start of one episode that Nikki Carpenter (ThePoochie of the series) is on assignment in South America. She is never heard from or mentioned again in the show.
* An ''{{NCIS}}'' example is Gerald, Ducky's first assistant who is shot in the shoulder, requiring several months of rehab. And just as he is about to come back, [[spoiler: he is kidnapped by the same man who shot him. He never returns and we don't find out what happened to him.]]
* In ''TheWire'', [[spoiler:Omar is literally put on the bus by [=McNulty=] at the end of Season 1 for the express purpose of him lying low in New York City after he helps the police bring down a major drugs ring. This was seen as a move to allow the writers to bring Omar back when they needed him.]]
** But [[spoiler:the last scene of the final episode of Season 1 is Omar's return. He's gone for all of two episodes. I really just don't think it counts.]]
* In ''BlakesSeven'' [[spoiler:the entire cast is scattered after having to bail out of their ship in the opening episode of Season 3 after a massive space battle involving thousands of ships. Most of the regular cast reunite, apart from Blake and Jenna. The characters spend much of the next two years trying to find Blake, but Jenna gets forgotten about. When Blake does return in the series finale, he says Jenna is dead. However, in the closing moments of the show he reveals that all of his actions in the finale were a morass of deception and lies to see if his old crewmembers were still loyal to his ideals and test their reactions, so the fate of Jenna is very much left up in the air. If she was still alive, that makes her the sole regular castmember of the show not to be killed off (with the possible exception of ORAC, who vanishes before the final scene).]]
** There was some ambiguity about all the deaths except that of Blake himself (the actor requested that it be clear that Blake be decisively killed), making it something of a BolivianArmyEnding
***Specifically, fanon has it that [[spoiler:Vila]] avoided getting killed by faking it, as his actor falls the wrong way.
* Requisite ''[[TheXFiles X-Files]]'' example: David Duchovny decided to leave after its seventh season. Like Gillian Anderson's pregnancy six years before, this decision changed the entire future of the show: Mulder went on the run, Agents Doggett and Reyes joined the cast, and Mulder and Scully finally get their happy ending (until the movie six years later, when they're both dragged out of hiding to help the [=FBI=], which Scully really doesn't want to do...)
* This trope ought to be named Mandyville, after ''[[TheWestWing The West Wing's]]'' Mandy Hampton, whose portraying actress displeased the producers enough that she vanished from the show literally overnight (the gap between the first and second seasons is a matter of minutes, during which the character vanishes and is never referred to again).
* In ''[[That70sShow That 70s Show]]'', main characters Eric Forman and Kelso are both written out due to their respective actors working on other projects. Eric leaves in the seventh season finale to teach in Africa; Kelso remains among the cast for the first few episodes of Season 8 before leaving for Chicago. Both make guest appearances in the finale episode.
* ''TheDukesOfHazzard'': When stars John Schneider and Tom Wopat held out in a salary dispute prior to season 5, their characters of Bo and Luke were (rather infamously) [[JonasQuinn Jonas Quinned]] by cousins Coy and Vance. Once Schneider and Wopat resolved their contracts, Bo and Luke were brought back to the show while Coy and Vance were quickly and unceremoniously shown the door.
** Sheriff Roscoe was also PutOnABus (back to the Police Academy) for a few episodes in season 2 due to James Best having his own dispute with producers. Ironically, one of the two men who replaced him at the time was the actual [[TheOtherDarrin Other Darrin]], Dick Sargeant.
* ''{{All in the Family}}'': Henry Jefferson was devised as a sort of "placeholder" character to stand in for George Jefferson until actor Sherman Helmsey (who had been offered the role of George but [[AbsenteeActor wasn't available]] due to his commitment to the Broadway show ''Purlie'') finally became available in season 4. Once that happened, Henry "moved upstate" and was never heard from again, either on ''All in the Family'' or the spinoff ''TheJeffersons''.
* On ''[[MASHTheSeries M*A*S*H]]'', Henry, Trapper, Frank, and Radar were all discharged and Put On A Plane back to the states. In Henry's case, of course, [[BusCrash the plane crashed]].
* On ''Spooks'', Zoe Reynolds is exiled to Chile. At the beginning of the next serious, a brief mention is made of Sam Buxton "being sedated" after the death of her love interest, [[spoiler: Danny]], and never reappears in the series. In the fifth season, Ruth is Put On A Boat when she's implicated in a murder.
* When actress Lynda Day George was pregnant during Season 7 of ''Mission: Impossible'', her character was said to be working "deep cover" in Europe. A character played by Barbara Anderson filled in for several episodes.
* Oscar Martinez from the American ''The Office'' was put on a bus for half of season 3, given a free vacation due to Michael's handling of Oscar's homosexuality. In his reappearance later in the season, he shows up to a Christmas party, but leaves before being noticed, claiming its "too soon". He returns for good three episodes later.
**Roy and Karen also receive this treatment eventually. Roy is fired near the end of Season 3 after reaching his emotional climax, while Karen is gone by the beginning of Season 4 (both due to Jim and Pam's increased closeness). Since then Karen has made a few guest appearances while Roy was only seen again once in Season 5.
* American soap {{Days of Our Lives}}, which has a habit of making departing characters get {{Killed Off for Real}} ([[OrIsIt or do they?]]), allowed {{fan favorite}} Caliope to move to New York City (and even come back to visit occasionally).
* In ''Degrassi'', Darcy supposedly goes to Africa as some sort of missionary, when in reality Shenae Grimes was really working on ''90210''.
** Craig and Ashley were put on buses as well
*** Ashley was put on a bus ''twice''
* ''SpinCity'' had this happen to both Michael J. Fox (when his Parkinson's Disease grew unmanageable in light of filming a weekly sitcom) and his girlfriend for the first season.
* GossipGirl has done this a few times. Background character Kati Farkas was said to have moved to Israel halfway through the first season. This was also used twice to explain Georgina Spark's absence; when she first appears on the show, she is said to have been in boarding school in Switzerland all this time. Then, in the season one finale, she is hauled off to reform school in some undisclosed location, where she remains until the last half of season two. Used again earlier in season two when Marcus and Lady Catherine returned to England and haven't been seen since.
* Dr. Crusher from ''StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' pulls a offscreen stint at Starfleet Academy for Season 2, [[ReplacementScrappy Dr. Pullaski]] filled her position during that time.
* Adam Cartwright. Just... Adam Cartwright.
* On ''Weeds'' Celia Hodes' older daughter Quinn was Put On A Bus to Mexico for most of the first four seasons.
* The entire Tanner family (i.e. every regular human cast member) was painfully put on the bus for the TV movie ''[[{{ALF}} Project ALF]]'', dismissed by a line of dialogue as having been [[ReassignedToAntarctica relocated to Iceland]]. Since the movie was made in order to wrap up the series storyline, the bus never came back.
* Charlie in ''{{Privileged}}'' who left in the penultimate episode of Season 1. There was talk of him returning in Season 2, but since the show was cancelled that never got to happen.
* Catalina in {{Space Cases}} is put on a space ship, where she avoids certain doom by being put in a parallel dimension. This was so the actress that played her could work on another show. However, it was implied that she might come back, if the show hadn't been [[thefireflyeffect cancelled soon thereafter]].
* Subverted in 30Rock, when Kenneth broke his promise to his mother that New York would not change him and decided to move back home to Georgia, but returned a few minutes later because he missed the train.
* On ''{{Bonanza}}'', Adam Cartwright moved to Australia when Pernell Roberts left the show.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Radio]]
* The character of Trillian got a one-sentence send-off at the start of the second series of ''[=~The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy~=]''. Thanks to a ResetButton, she was brought back for the three much-belated series made after Douglas Adams' death.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Video Games]]
* In the end of ''{{Half-Life}}: Opposing Force'', G-Man stores the main character, Adrian Sheppard away for an undisclosed period of time. This allows for reinstating the character in any future story, even if it is in a completely different era.
** Similarly, Gordon Freeman, the hero of the original ''Half-Life'', is put away in the end of ''Half-Life'', and in the end of ''Half-Life 2''.
*** Although he swiftly returns for another couple of episodes, with a third on the way...
*** One could almost say ''the player'' is put on a bus at the end of the first game, as a great many significant events occur in the game's narrative between the first and second game, but events in the ''Half-Life'' universe are only ever viewed through Gordon's eyes(well, [[{{Portal}} mostly.]])
* Played near-literally yet reversed in ''MegaManZero 4''. The ones who are written off the script are the majority of the RedShirtArmy LaResistance, while the main characters now travel around by a truck convoy, which acts as the new PlayerHeadquarters for the game.
* In ''Sims3'', the game will randomly choose NPCs to be involved in bus accidents.
** An actual quote from a mod to the game "Sims will no longer be 'killed on a bus' TVtropes-style by Story Progression: All kills must actually happen from real in-game events."
* In ''CrashBandicoot 2'', Tawna (Crash's girlfriend from the original game) was written out by having her dump Crash for Pinstripe Potoroo in a "Dear John" letter. She later returned in ''Crash Boom Bang!''.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Web Animation]]
* Spoofed on ''HomestarRunner'' with the ShowWithinAShow ''Cheat Commandos''. In the short "The Next Epi-snowed", voice actor Crack Stuntman gets bossy and uncooperative while recording an episode of Cheat Commandos, and director A. Chimendez eventually gives up and has Gunhaver sent "on a secret mission to the moon for an undisclosed period of time", replacing him with AuthorAvatar Agent Chimendez. It's also mentioned that "when [Gunhaver] gets back, [[TheOtherDarrin his voice might have changed.]]"
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Happens a lot in ''SluggyFreelance'' due to the [[LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters sheer number of characters]] it's introduced over its [[LongRunner long run]]. Characters very rarely ''stay'' on the bus, however. Even if it takes over a decade, it seems like every character who isn't explicitely killed off is bound to make a second appearance.
** Recently, [[spoiler:Sasha, who had moved away]] seven years ago, made a return to the comic.
* ''{{Kevin and Kell}}'' has done this with several of its supporting characters over time. Candice and her family were once nearly as important to the strip as Kevin and Kell themselves, but eventually she was outsourced to New Zealand and hasn't been heard from since. The Ursuls, of whom Marjorie was Kell's best friend for the early years of the strip, moved to Florida and new best friend Aby moved into their house -- they've also not been seen since. Lindesfarne's best friend Tammy Tussock and her husband Ray moved to a lighthouse, and while they were important to one more storyline after the move, they have been MIA since. Then again, longtime readers of Bill Holbrook's two syndicated strips should be well aware of his tendency to rotate the cast - both of those strips have managed almost a complete cast turnover, including their main characters.
* Done to pretty much every character at the end of ''BoyMeetsBoy'', to make room for two side characters who got their own spinoff in ''FriendlyHostility''.
* In ''[[{{Ptitle6tiifl5njuo5}} 8-Bit Theater]]'', Dragoon was teleported to the Moon and has not been seen since.
* In ''QuestionableContent'', it looked like this was going to happen to Steve. Turns out, he's back. However, the side characters Dave and Meena caught that bus. Also, Ellen, Amir, and Natasha. Looks like Raven is on that bus too.
* In ''DarthsAndDroids'', one of the players, Sally, wants her character Jar Jar to be hit by a bus. In the next strip she is playing Guitar Hero, and has mostly been playing bit part {{NPCs}}.
* [[http://girlyyy.com/go/83 Done literally]] in ''{{Girly}}'' when Officer Policeguy gets fed up with Detective Clampjaw.
* In ''GeneralProtectionFault'', Trish goes into a coma after being attacked by her impostor, who proceeds to impersonate her until she is unmasked.
* Pretty much half the cast of ''{{Concession}}'' is on a bus and will potentially return some day. But they're pretty much OutOfFocus.
* Happened to a lot of the cast in ''NFansTheSeries''. At some point, characters wee either put in confinement, captured, in a coma (in the case of Ran Cossack), or simply OutOfFocus. Van for example was put in jail for a majority of the comic's arc, only appearing to mention his beloved "Goth girl", while the rest of the mettaurs and a giant robot went through a portal. Christopher Blair was also fighting Ganondorf for a very long while. Team Lalala was once stranded on the exact same screen for about a year of real-time. Eventually though, some characters were written out of the comic. (Van went home, Piney had simply chosen to return home due to having a fallout with the author at the time)
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Western Animation]]
* The Earth king in ''{{Avatar the Last Airbender}}'' goes off to explore the world with his pet bear between Seasons 2 and 3. More details on ''why'' are given [[AllThereInTheManual in a comic bridging the gap between seasons 2 and 3]].
** One could say the entire story starts with the Avatar himself coming off the bus. When the Fire Nation starts the war, he goes and gets stuck in a glacier...and comes out 100 years later when the war is finally starting to take over the world and trying to stop it would be more impressive.
* ''JusticeLeague'' features a perfect example of this trope in its second season finale when Hawkgirl resigns from the Justice League and flies off to go soul searching. Sure enough, she returns at the end of season three when she discovers Solomon Grundy may have come back from the dead.
** More permanently done with A.M.A.Z.O, who's still out on the edge of the universe trying to figure out how to beat Solomon Grundy.
* ''[[HarveyBirdmanAttorneyAtLaw Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law]]'' takes this to the extreme by having the character, Phil Sebben, not only be PutOnABus, but be hit by it as well.
** You should see what he does when he's done being hit by it.
*** You mean [[spoiler:hijacking the bus and driving it back to Sebben & Sebben? In reverse?]]
**** Ha ha ha! Bus.
* William Dunbar of ''CodeLyoko'' gets put on a very interesting (and painful) sort of bus. After being attacked and possessed by XANA on his first mission as a Lyoko Warrior, he's [[NotHimself effectively put out of commission]] for the entire season. He does return, but only just in time for the series to end two episodes later. There's no real explanation as to why this happened, though the conspiracy theorist within this troper suspects it was because he was... erm... [[ThePaolo disliked]] [[DieForOurShip a bit]].
* ''TransformersAnimated'' has a rather weird use of the bus. At the end of the third season opener "Transwarped" Sari [[spoiler: is shut down by Ratchet in a desperate attempt to keep her over-upgraded body from destroying both herself and the city.]] Not only did she not appear for the next four episodes, no one even seemed to think about her -- including her own father.
** As of Human Error she's back off the bus, [[spoiler: now taller, more mature, and able to make blue balls of floating electric... stuff. The coma hasn't been mentioned again.]]
** [[spoiler: Ultra Magnus]] was also put on the bus in season 3. [[spoiler: If by 'bus' we mean the ICU.]]
* The ''TheSimpsons'' episode ''The Principal and the Pauper'' centres on the revelation that [[spoiler: "Principal Skinner" is a phony who assumed the identity of the ''real'' Skinner on assuming that the latter was dead in action]]. Unfortunately, his rival turns up and takes over, only to become so hated by the townspeople that, at at the end of the episode, he is Put On A Railcar and the people agree to forget the episode.
*** It's funnier when you realize that most real Simpsons fans hated this episode for screwing up Principal Skinner's character and continuity (much like the townspeople hate the "new" Seymour Skinner because they were used to the old one), and, as a result, most have forgotten about the show past season nine.
* Tigatron and Airazor went off to scout the extent of the Vok's damage to the planet at the start of the second series of ''BeastWars'' to make room for the Fuzors. When they returned, the ended up being abducted by the Vok, and would not return until partway through series 3.
* Buster Baxter on {{Arthur}}.
[[/folder]]
----
<<|CharacterizationTropes|>>
<<|TropesOnABus|>>