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Animal Occupation Stereotypes

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Because of Animal Stereotypes, a simple way to show a character's personality is to give them characteristics of — or even portray them as — an animal. However, many works will take things a step further and associate entire occupations with animals.

This is very common in World of Funny Animals settings, but human-focused stories may simply focus on giving the characters Animal Motifs depending on their job as well. People in a certain profession may have some specific animals as pets or mascots. This may be done as a way for the author to express their feelings about certain occupations; animals considered likable may be used as positive representations of certain jobs, while animals considered unlikable may be used for negative representations. Sometimes, associating an animal with a job is done more neutrally, often as a comparison to the real species' ecological niche and behavior.

This is often an opportunity to utilize Good Animals, Evil Animals. "Good" animals may be portrayed in heroic or noble jobs, while "evil" animals will often be portrayed as criminals. The exact level of criminality can differ depending on the individual animal, too. For instance, raccoons and weasels are commonly depicted as crooks, but are usually thieves, con artists, or otherwise part of the Quirky Miniboss Squad as opposed to serious criminals.

Many animal job stereotypes will be Visual Puns as well. For example, a Loan Shark may be depicted as an actual shark, or an Amoral Attorney / Hanging Judge may be a kangaroo, as a pun on Kangaroo Court. References to the collective nouns of the animal's species are also fairly common, such as a businessman that's a ferret (in reference to a group of ferrets being called a business), or a fish that's either a student or a teacher (in reference to a group of fish being called a school).

It is also very common to portray animals working in jobs that their real-life equivalents are often involved in, such as dogs that work as police officers, rabbits and farm animals that work as farmers, or dalmatians that are firefighters.

For general examples of animals being hardworking, see Busy Beaver, Diligent Draft Animal, and Virtuous Bees. For animals that are typically not portrayed as hardworking, see Cats Are Lazy, Sluggish Seal, Laid-Back Koala, and Sluggish Sloths. Compare Powersuit Monkey for cases of non-anthropomorphic animals (especially primates, as the trope name suggests) working in human jobs, often for comedy. Also compare literal versions of All Drummers Are Animals.

For mythical creatures being associated with certain occupations, see Corporate Dragon and Vampires Own Night Clubs.

This is a sub-trope of Animal Stereotypes. Compare with National Animal Stereotypes, Stock Animal Behavior, and Stock Animal Diet, which this can also have some overlap with.

For more coherent list of jobs that animals are commonly portrayed as working in, see the analysis page.


Sub-tropes:

This is a super-trope to the following tropes and is meant to collect miscellaneous examples. If your example fits better under one of these tropes, add it to that one instead:
  • Angry Guard Dog: Dogs as aggressive guards.
  • Apes in Space: Primates as astronauts or other space adventurers.
  • Boxing Kangaroo: Kangaroos as boxers or kickboxers.
  • Cat Ninja: Cats as ninjas.
  • Delivery Stork: Storks that deliver babies. This is traditionally represented by them bringing a baby to a couple, but anthropomorphic storks may also be depicted working in delivery wards.
  • Fighting Panda: Pandas (both red and giant) as martial artists.
  • Firehouse Dalmatian: Dalmatians as firefighters, or associated with firehouses.
  • Frog Ninja: Frogs as ninjas.
  • King of Beasts: Lions as monarchs or other leaders.
  • Mole Miner: Small burrowing mammals, such as moles and gophers, have jobs relating to digging underground.
  • Pirate Parrot: Parrots associated with, or portrayed as, pirates.
  • Policeman Dog: Dogs as law enforcement officers, investigators and guards.
  • Police Pig: Pigs as law enforcement officers, often in a satirical/derogatory way.
  • Rabbit Magician: Rabbits as witches or wizards. Rabbits are also commonly depicted as stage magicians.
  • Semiaquatic Species Sailor: Semi-aquatic animals, such as ducks, otters, and seals in nautical jobs, such as sailors, pirates, and fishermen.

Examples:

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    Advertising 
  • A famous commercial for Cadbury Dairy Milk chocolate features a gorilla playing "In The Air Tonight" by Phil Collins on the drums.
  • Elefun and Friends "Gator Golf" features an anthropomorphic alligator playing golf in at least one commercial.
  • McGruff the Crime Dog is an anthropomorphic bloodhound mascot intended to raise awareness about crime prevention. He's styled like a detective or private investigator, wearing a trenchcoat with a high collar, so it's likely that he's meant to be a detective in-universe.
  • Tommy McAnairey: Tommy's ancestors including his late Uncle Pat worked detecting carbon monoxide fumes in coal mines.

    Anime & Manga 
  • Aggretsuko: Washimi is a secretary bird, as well as the company's secretary.

    Comic Books 
  • Blacksad:
    • Zigzagged overall: Some animals have a profession their species make them suited for (a beaver architect, bear, rhino and crocodile henchmen, German Shepherd cop), others that are unexpected (a koala ringmaster, a jackal FBI agent, a (heroic) hyena lawyer), and some are on either side (Blacksad and Hitler are both cats, one fox is a cop and another is a racist murderer)... Further muddying the waters is the fact that discrimination seems based more on origin than species: The Klan's equivalent has all sorts of (white-furred) animals like polar bears, owls, goats...
    • The In-Universe B-Movie Blacksad has to watch while waiting for a witness playes it straight: the president is a bald eagle, the general is a lion, the scientist is an anteater...
  • Sonic the Hedgehog (Archie Comics) features a duck doctor named Doctor Quack.

    Comic Strips 
  • Some early strips of Pearls Before Swine showed a pair of hyenas invoking this trope by pretending to be funeral directors, while repeatedly asking Zebra to send them any dead relatives of his so that they could eat them.

    Fan Works 

    Films — Animated 
  • The Aristocats: Scat Cat is a jazz musician.
  • Az Erdő Kapitánya:
    • The eponymous Kapitány is a dog police chief.
    • Zéró and his henchman Piroska are literal cat burglars.
    • Rita Canari is a canary bird opera singer.
    • Professor Arara is a professor of linguistics due to parrots being good at learning languages.
  • Cars does this with vehicles. For example, Lightning McQueen is a race car, Sheriff is a police car, Sarge is an army jeep, Fillmore is a hippie van, the pit crew members are all forklifts, etc.
  • The Rescuers and The Rescuers Down Under: Orville and Wilbur are albatrosses who run their own airline business. Fittingly, they don't so much fly planes as they are planes themselves.
  • Robin Hood (1973):
    • The titular character, Robin Hood, is a fox. He's portrayed as a crafty thief who steals from the rich to give to the poor.
    • Some of Prince John's heralds are elephants, trumpeting with their trunks.
    • Prince John's guards are rhinoceroses.
    • The Sheriff of Nottingham and many of his soldiers are wolves.
    • Allan-a-Dale is a rooster who works as a singer/minstrel.
  • Rock-A-Doodle: Chanticleer the rooster is portrayed as an Elvis-like rock'n'roll singer.
  • Sing:
    • Two common jobs associated with gorillas are played straight regarding Marcus and his son, Johnny. Marcus and his gang of fellow gorillas are imposing criminals. However, Johnny wants to be a musician.
    • A few of the cops in the movie are portrayed as anthropomorphic rhinos.
  • Zootopia:
    • Played straight with Judy Hopps' parents, as well as many of the other residents of Bunnyburrow, who are rabbits that work as farmers. Judy herself averts this, however, as she aspires to be a police officer.
    • The Zootopia Police Department is almost entirely made up of large and intimidating animals, both predators and prey. Some of them include rhinos, an elephant, a buffalo, a lion, a tiger, a bear, and a wolf. When Judy first joins the force, she struggles to be taken seriously among them, due to being a small rabbit.
    • Some minor characters seen at one point are construction worker beavers.
    • Duke Weaselton is a weasel that is portrayed as a thief and bootlegger.
    • Nick Wilde, a fox, is portrayed as a crafty con artist. Played for Drama when it's revealed that he turned to this lifestyle after getting bullied in his childhood just for being a fox, and decided that he was going to be a con artist if that's how the world saw him.
    • Played for Laughs with Zootopia's Department of Motor Vehicles (or rather, DMZ — it's not clear what the acronym stands for, but it is clearly legally distinct), an institution that in real life has a reputation for agonizingly slow service forcing people to wait for hours — so it's staffed by sloths who waste Nick and Judy's time.

    Films — Live-Action 

    Literature 
  • In a number of Ivan Krylov's fables, the fox is the one serving as the Amoral Attorney.
  • In the kids' book Felix Feels Better, the doctor is a duck.
  • Sam Pig features a fox who is a Con Man.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Grimm: One of the Wesen species is the Eisbiber, or "Beaver", depicted as a hard-working laborer, usually involved in plumbing or construction trades. The recurring character Bud, a plumber who accidentally discovered his customer was the Grimm protagonist, was terrified at first, but eventually became an ally and helper.
  • The Sarah Jane Adventures: The episode "Death of the Doctor" introduces the Claw Shan Sheeth, a race of alien vultures who serve as morticians to the universe. They claim to be bringing The Doctor's body to Earth for burial. In reality, they are tired of the death and destruction they witness regularly and want to steal the TARDIS to change all of time and prevent it.

    Mythology and Religion 
  • Egyptian Mythology: Anubis is the god of death, mummification, and the underworld, and is portrayed as a jackal-headed man (or an actual jackal).
  • In Hinduism, Kali is often depicted riding a tiger. She is also the goddess of power and destruction.

    Puppet Shows 
  • Sesame Street: In an "Elmo's World" skit, one doctor features who is a duck, as a pun on "quack" meaning a phony doctor.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Part of the setting of Eclipse Phase is that there's plenty of uplifted animals around, whom the game treats in all seriousness as an occasionally-discriminated, occasionally-fetishized minority. It's remarked that animal stereotypes are one of many problems they have to deal with: people tend to assume orcas are creepy psychos, whales are puzzling mystics, dolphins are these funny playful fellas, bonobos are sex fiends, and so on. More often than not it's subverted (because, you know, these are stereotypes, not hard facts), but Stealthy Cephalopod is played more-or-less straight as there's a genuine mafia run by a bunch of creepy, secretive octopi.

    Video Games 
  • Animal Crossing:
    • Redd is a fox who sells the player various expensive goods. However, some of these items are just common items or forged art pieces sold at an inflated price, making him a fox con-man.
    • Booker and Copper are a pair of dogs who are either police officers or guards (depending on the game).
    • Orville and Wilbur are a humorous take on this trope; birds acting as pilots isn't unexpected… except these are dodo birds, birds that are famous for the fact that they can't fly.
    • Pelly, Phyllis, and Pete are pelicans who work at a post office.
  • Conker's Bad Fur Day: Don Weaso is a weasel, and is the head of the fittingly named Weasel Mafia. Funnily enough, Weasels also show up as the guards to the tank, Weaso sends Conker to rob.
  • Duolingo is an educational language-learning game. The mascot (as well as the instructor in the lessons) is an owl named Duo.
  • Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach: Montgomery Gator is the mascot of Monty's Gator Golf, a mini-golf course located at the Mega Pizzaplex.
  • In Pokémon Mystery Dungeon, several vendors are rooted in Pokémon stereotypes.
    • Makuhita, a pugnacious punching bag-like Pokémon, runs a dojo in the Rescue Team games.
    • Audino, a Pokémon known for healing others, works as a doctor in Super Mystery Dungeon.
    • Klefki is a Pokémon adorned with keys that don't serve much purpose. In Super Mystery Dungeon, he's hired to unlock treasure chests.
    • Pelipper is based on a pelican. In the Rescue Team games, a group of Pelipper run the post office.
  • Sly Cooper is a raccoon Gentleman Thief. As for his rouges' gallery and the like:
  • Sonic the Hedgehog:
    • Espio the Chameleon is a ninja who can turn invisible.
    • Big the Cat is a fisherman, which is based on the stereotype that cats eat fish.
  • Tail Concerto involves Dog Police chasing literal cat-burglars (whom are also Sky Pirates). Drama occurs when the top police dog and leader of the cat thieves, recognize eachother from their childhood and their old attraction starts reigniting!
  • Webkinz features a duck named Doctor Quack who works as a doctor.

    Web Animation 

    Webcomics 
  • Awful Hospital: Dr. Phage is obsessed with ducks as a reference to him being an incompetent doctor, or a quack doctor.
  • Carry On: Kathy is a hyena and a journalist who originally wrote obituaries before the plot advanced. Her father is a mortician who often, shall we say, brings clients home for dinner. Her older sister Sandy seems to buck the trend by being an EMT, except that she has been known to eat patients who didn't make it to the hospital. Later on though, we see a kingdom in Africa ruled by hyenas (Kathy and Sandy being third-generation Americans) and they seem to be more of a Proud Warrior Race who hire themselves out as mercenaries.
  • Litterbox Comics:
    • A recurring character in the webcomic is an owl that serves as the teacher to the family's older son.
    • One bonus panel of the strip shows a rhinoceros cop.
  • Pixie and Brutus features a former military dog — a German shepherd named Brutus — being sent to live with a suburban family after his time in the service is over. He's portrayed similarly to a human soldier with hints of being a Shell-Shocked Veteran.
  • Forestdale has a whole family of dalmatians, the Burnsides, in the firefighting business. Both parents and their eldest son are employed as fighter fighters while their youngest son's dream job is to follow in his family's footsteps and become a firefighter when he grows up.

    Western Animation 
  • Bojack Horseman makes plenty use of Animal Stereotypes for jokes and gags, so this particular subtrope naturally comes into play sometimes.
    • "Bojack Hates the Troops" revolves around Bojack's petty dispute with a man known as "Neal McBeal the Navy Seal"; just as that punny title implies, Neal McBeal is an anthropomorphic seal and US Navy veteran of the Afghanistan War. Though the Ambiguous Syntax makes it unclear about whether or not he was specifically a member of the Navy SEALs special forces unit.
  • Bonkers: The title protagonist is a toon bobcat who works as a cop for the LAPD with a human partner, either Miranda Wright or Lucky Piquel.
  • Martha Speaks: Professor Monkey is a monkey trained to work in a lab.
  • PAW Patrol: Chase is a police dog — more specifically, a German shepherd.
  • Quick Draw McGraw: The title character is a Funny Animal horse, whose job is that of a sheriff during The Wild West.
  • Zootopia+: The episode "Dinner Rush" shows an anthropomorphic pig chef/restaurant owner, who is named Gerald.

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