http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/poochie.gif
[[caption-width:238:I'm Poochie the rockin' dog! (Now with 10% more Rasta.)]]
-->''I have to go now. My planet needs me.''\\
— '''Poochie''', ''TheSimpsons''
A character is introduced into a show with a lot of fanfare, and almost at once moves up to main character status (if not necessarily the credits). He/she will often form a close relationship with the existing main characters, and may even have a prior history with a main character, even if this has [[RememberTheNewGuy never been mentioned before]]. Sometimes the character is a result of ExecutiveMeddling.
For some reason the character doesn't gel. Maybe [[TheScrappy the audience takes against him/her]], maybe the actor over- or underperforms, maybe the writers realize they have no idea what to do with him/her. Whatever it is, the character will end up [[PutOnABus leaving the show setting]], often for a fairly contrived reason (and they [[BusCrash probably won't be back]], even if logically they should be at certain points).
Different from a BrotherChuck in that the character's disappearance will be explained, even if in a fairly flimsy manner.
The easiest way to distinguish the Poochie is if he is written out in a clumsy manner - if his departure or death makes no sense it's usually him.
Compare with AbortedArc and BrotherChuck. Contrast with TheArtifact.
Not to be confused with [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtMkti7hSUA this]] [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sepu2wJvapU Poochie]].
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!!Examples:
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[[folder:Comic Books]]
* ''Gambit'' from the ''X-Men'', early on, was pretty much designed to be repeat the success of Wolverine. He had an awesome destiny with the X-Ternal, he was a total anti-hero and he wore a trenchcoat. Fortunately, thanks to some good characterization by subsequent writers, he managed to become popular by his own merits.
* In a similar vein, IDW Comics decided to introduce a Poochie character named Drift in their ''Transformers'' comic. A albino-japanese-streetracer-taciturn-former-Decepticon-honorbound-samurai-ninja who has three swords, one of which can only be used in the most dire of times. And he was given that sword by a special secret third faction of Cybertronians who decided not to do war (and who also taught him to not be a murderous evil Decepticon). His appearances beyond his own specially-dedicated Spotlight issue have been mostly harmless, but IDW's editor-in-chief and the current Transformers writer have referred to him as "their Wolverine", so yeah.
** There is even a small meme among Transformers fandom of referring to Drift with quotes from "The Itchy & Scratchy & Poochie Show." It looks like he may just get [[BrotherChuck Brother Chucked]], but fans are hoping that like the original Poochie, his home planet needs him and he dies on the way back.
**And even worse, an issue of All Hail Megatron even features the "Where's Poochie" joke actually happening while Drift is off-panel!
** In Drift's defense, however, he isn't regarded particularly well by most of the Autobots or Decepticons, and actually does have some fans. BrokenBase indeed.
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[[folder:Live Action TV]]
*''[[BabylonFive Babylon 5]]'' Poor Keffer, he was actually utilized fairly effectively during season 2 and was really quite likable not to mention it made more sense for there to be dedicated starfury squadron commander in Keffer rather than the senior command staff constantly jumping into fighters. Unfortunately for him though his creation was actually the result of executive meddling (they wanted a "hotshot Top Gun kind of pilot") and the series creator/head writer J. Michael Straczynski never forgave him for that and subsequently killed him off even though he was fitting in just fine.
* Several characters in ''TheOC'' suffered this, but Lindsay Gardner was an especially glaring example as she was introduced as a love interest for Ryan and turned out to be a blood relative of three other main characters. She didn't even return for [[spoiler:Caleb's funeral]], despite discovering [[spoiler:he was her real father]].
* Likewise ''DawsonsCreek''. Nikki Green notably, who after a major initial appearance as a rival/potential love interest to Dawson was dropped only a few episodes later.
** In fact ''DawsonsCreek'' might have used this trope more than any other series. Many secondary characters vanished in between seasons, with flimsy reasons given for their disappearance. Gretchen Witter for instance, [[RememberTheNewGuy was introduced in Season 4 as Pacey's sister and Dawson's childhood crush]]. After spending the entire season as practically a main character she moved away and was never seen or mentioned again.
* ''ThatsLife'' (the American dramedy, not the British consumer protection show) featured a variation with one of the original cast as The Poochie: Candy Cooper, one of the protagonists best friends was written out half-way through the first season.
* Megan Donner of ''CSIMiami'' had the same fate.
* ''HappyDays'' (Pinky Tuscadero and the "black drummer" from the band were both hyped in promos as new characters, but neither appeared for more than an arc before disappearing. Pinky's sister "Leather" was a stand-in for Pinky- whose actress apparently caused problems- but was again not common. Other examples include down-home hick cousin K.C. Cunningham and Fonzie's temporary girlfriend and her daughter for the first post-Richie season)
* Nikki Carpenter from season 3 of ''{{MacGyver}}''. She was written as a potential love interest for {{MacGyver}} only for the producers to discover that female fans did not want Mac to have a regular girlfriend. About halfway through the season, she is mentioned as being on assignment in South America and is then never heard from again.
* While Julie Miller hasn't been seen since season 3 of ''{{Scrubs}}'' or given an explanation as to why she left (what with being TheWesley and garnering lots of dislike) her name has been seen on an assignment chart in a season 4 episode.
* The Applewhite family from season 2 of ''DesperateHousewives''.
** And Kayla Scavo from season 4
* ''TheMuppetShow'' had Fleet Scribbler, tabloid journalist. One show, a few mentions later, and he vanished. The critics loved him. The writers hated him.
* ''JustShootMe'' had Vicki Costa, a brash hairdresser whom Jack brought in to help make the magazine hipper. She barely lasted half a season.
* Nikki and Paulo from ''{{Lost}}'' were series regulars with a long arc planned out for them, but then they were killed off in their only [[CharacterFocus centric]] episode thanks to [[TheScrappy intensely negative reception]] due to their abrupt introduction, irritating nature (especially how they manage to figure out the Pearl cameras when Locke, Desmond and freaking '''[[TheProfessor Sayid]]''' didn't), and for stealing camera time in a season that already had ''fourteen'' other regulars and multiple recurring characters who actually had importance to the plot.
* West in ''Series/{{Heroes}}''. His much-trumpeted relationship with Claire ended in the final episode of Series 2, leaving a way for him to be left out in the future because he was [[TheScrappy poorly received by fans]]. The show's creator has stated in an interview that one of the mistakes he made with this series was writing the romance badly.
** West did, however, appear in the graphic novels that run concurrent to the television show, as [[spoiler:one of the freedom fighters working with Rebel]]. He's not nearly as annoying when he's not around Claire, but he probably won't reappear on the show.
* Tori on ''SavedByTheBell'', whose presence was so jarring that Zack, Lisa, Slater and Screech went through their senior year again. (The producers wised up and brought Tiffani Amber Thiessen back for the College Years.)
* After the death of James Beck (Private Walker), ''DadsArmy'' attempted to JonasQuinn the character by bringing in Private Cheeseman, who was part of a major storyline in which he joined the platoon so he could report on them for the newspaper he wrote for. He was not well liked by either viewers or some of the cast (John Laurie is on record as saying that both the actor and character were fast approaching SpotlightStealingSquad status) and was written out after the seventh series.
* ''DoctorWho'' had one early in its long run. In the final part of ''The Myth Makers'' saga (set during the Trojan War) a Trojan handmaiden named Katerina snuck on board the TARDIS and became the First Doctor's latest companion. She was promptly killed off in the following adventure, the 12 part epic, ''The Daleks' Master Plan''...in part four. According to the actress who played Katerina, her death scene was ''the very first scene she was filmed in''. This means that the writers created the character, tried her out, decided she wasn't working, and [[DroppedABridgeOnHim dropped a bridge on her]] before ''a single scene of her had been filmed'' (and possibly before the character was even cast).
** It's also possible that they deliberately wrote the character in so that they could surprise people by killing her.
* Lauren Graham played efficiency expert Andrea for a few episodes of ''{{NewsRadio}}''. With [[WriterRevolt that writing staff]], the character was probably doomed to begin with.
* The Ferrera family on ''EastEnders'' was introduced to compensate for the lack of SE Asian characters on the show. They were introduced with a great deal of hype but became immensely unpopular despite at least one storyline that threatened to elevate them to SpotlightStealingSquad status. Viewers complained that these characters were deathly boring and the writers DidNotDoTheResearch into the Ferreras' ethnic background. Finally, one actor had to leave the show because of problems with his permit to work in the UK, and the rest of the family was then written out due to their unpopularity.
* Sadie from [[GreysAnatomy Grey's Anatomy]] is almost too perfect an example of everything mentioned at the top of the page: she shows up out of the blue in Season 5, where it's revealed that she was apparently Meredith's BFF in med school, despite having never been so much as mentioned by Meredith prior to this. Originally intended to become another major intern character as well as a lesbian romantic foil for one of the series regulars, she stuck around just long enough for her to prove she was not only crazy incompetent but also just plain crazy. Promptly [[PutOnABus quit her job at the hospital]] before the end of the season.
**And also an actual "Poochie" in season 2 with Doc. It seems that the only reason he [[spoiler: died from SoapOperaDisease]] was simply because the writers didn't want to deal with him anymore.
* Cousin Pam on [[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheCosbyShow The Cosby Show]]
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[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* Uncle Max in ''CalvinAndHobbes'', who had a brief storyline and then left the strip permanently, because Bill Watterson found it too awkward to write dialogue in which he never called [[http://www.calvin-and-hobbes.org/information/characters/calvins_parents Calvin's parents]] [[UnnamedParent by their names]].
* Somewhat prophetically, in 1973 a character named Poochie debuted in ''{{Peanuts}}''. She was a little girl who used to live in the neighborhood, who supposedly was the first to refer to Charlie Brown by his full name and who almost adopted Snoopy before choosing another dog. After appearing in a few Sunday strips, she disappeared without a trace.
** There was also Charlotte Braun, who appeared in a dozen strips in the 1950's before evaporating. She had [[NoIndoorVoice a loud voice]] and ... that's about it. Originally she was to be a female foil for Charlie Brown, but was no more interesting in the role than Lucy was. There's a hilarious [[http://www.cagle.com/hogan/webextras13/charlotte/home.html response letter]] that Schulz wrote to a fan who didn't like the character, featuring Charlotte with an axe in her head.
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[[folder:VideoGames]]
* As much as [[UnpleasableFanbase fans complain]] about [[LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters all the additional]] ''SonicTheHedgehog'' characters the newer games have added, Sonic Team seemed to learn their lesson with [[TheScrappy Silver]]; after his debut in ''SonicTheHedgehog2006'' and prominent role in ''Sonic Rivals 2'', he's been demoted to extremely minor roles and is not missed. He has appeared in [[Comicbook/SonicTheHedgehog the Archie comics]], [[RescuedFromTheScrappyHeap but done much better]] (kind of like [[MarvelUniverse Cable]] with a worse hairdo).
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Webcomics]]
* Parodied in [[http://www.missmab.com/Comics/Vol_188.php this]] {{DMFA}} strip. The character lasts 2 panels, maybe 2 and-a-half.
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[[folder:Western Animation]]
* Named after Poochie from ''TheSimpsons'' - yes, he is a parody, but he really isn't that far removed from reality.
** Sadly, what made Poochie's ''TheItchyAndScratchyShow'' episode so bad wasn't the character himself. It was the derailing of a potentially [[strike:exciting]] violent story. (Okay, by Poochie.)
** The same episode got all meta and dropped a cool guy named Roy into the Simpson house, with no explanation. At the end, he moved into [[ThreesCompany an apartment with two sexy ladies]].
**Poochie leaves in his second episode by interrupting the plot with a quick "I must go. My home planet needs me." Not even spoken by his normal voice actor (much to the dismay of his normal voice actor, none other than Homer Simpson). His cell is then lifted off the screen and a quickly drawn page reads [[BusCrash "PS Poochie died on the way to his planet."]] Krusty then announces Poochie's [[DeaderThanDead official death]], with a Lawyer presenting official documents stating he can never return.
***During the recording session for the Itchy and Scratchy episode in question, Homer attempts a WriterRevolt by recording a speech for Poochie that [[RealLifeWritesThePlot apologizes for him being proactive and wishing that people would accept him]]. Homer even got a warm reception from the I&S producers and writing staff, which makes things more upsetting as Homer witnesses his character being flimsily PutOnABus and the subsequent BusCrash in the finalized episode.
**As for Roy, he was written to be essentially mocked by the other characters. Literally moments before Roy's first appearance, Lisa expressed the announcement of Poochie's debut by saying, "Adding a new character is often [[ExecutiveMeddling a desperate attempt to boost low ratings]]." Later, after Homer promises, "I won't let them treat Poochie like dirt anymore just because he's the new guy," he proceeds to tell Roy to shut up after a line of encouragement. Finally, after Poochie's removal from the cartoon is broadcast, Bart tells Homer, "I guess people just weren't ready for Poochie. Maybe in a few years." Just then Roy comes in to announce that he's leaving, and Marge responds by saying, "Maybe we'll see you in a few years."
** Poochie himself actually states (well, [[TotallyRadical raps]]) that he's based heavily on JoeCamel and [[TheFonz Fonzie]], exemplifying his '[[TotallyRadical this is totally what the kids are into these days]]' vibe.
** Considering the average age of TheSimpsons writers, cryptomnesia may have been involved.
* Ms. Choksondik from ''SouthPark'' is slightly unusual in actually being killed off, but otherwise a pretty good example of this trope.
** Well, [[MeaningfulName just look at her name.]]
* Parodied in an episode of ''PinkyAndTheBrain'', with Larry, who got an awkward PromotionToOpeningTitles, and generated a {{Retool}} into a ''Three Stooges'' knock-off. And plenty of AndZoidberg moments. In a LampshadeHanging, he left specifically ''because'' Brain pointed out that he didn't gel.
** Then, at the very end, just as it looked like that Pinky and the Brain will carry on as a duo again, a scientist placed another mouse into their cage, and the mouse introduces himself as Zeppo. The ending reprise of the theme song was then reworked to have Zeppo's name in it in the same manner as Larry. Unlike Larry, however, Zeppo was promptly {{Brother Chuck}}ed out of the cartoon since his purpose was served.
** They're Pinky, Elmyra, and the Brain Brain Brain Brain Brain~
* Dil and Kimmy from Rugrats. Especially Dil since he was a baby that couldn't talk...in a show about TALKING BABIES! What were they thinking?! Kimmy, meanwhile, was just a female version of Tommy Pickles.
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