Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Main / ConvenienceStoreGiftShopping

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** In one episode, Dorothy's ex-husband Stanley comes over with a gift in hand to butter up Dorothy to ask for a favor. Dorothy's initially touched, until she reads the card that states: "Merry Christmas, ''Sports Illustrated'' Subscriber."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Literature/ASeriesofUnfortunateEvents'': Book 3 (''The Wide Window'') features the second type, of the "trying, but clueless" variety. The well-meaning Aunt Josephine gives Violet a baby doll, Klaus a model train set, and Sunny a rattle, not realizing that Violet (at fourteen) is not interested in dolls, that Klaus has never liked model trains, and that Sunny finds rattles irritating. They wind up trading gifts after Josephine leaves the room, with Sunny getting the doll to chew on and Violet getting the train so she can examine its mechanical insides. Klaus is left with the rattle, which Violet points out still does him no good and so the swap isn't fair to him; he responds that given everything else that's happened to them, this isn't something worth complaining about, which the others admit is true.
* ''Literature/TalesOfAFourthGradeNothing'' by Creator/JudyBlume has Peter being given a picture dictionary, more suitable for a preschooler than the preteen that he is. Ugh. At least he has enough tact to pretend to be enthused. Fudge, on the other hand, brings out their old copy of the same book.

to:

* ''Literature/ASeriesofUnfortunateEvents'': ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'': Book 3 (''The Wide Window'') features the second type, of the "trying, but clueless" variety. The well-meaning Aunt Josephine gives Violet a baby doll, Klaus a model train set, and Sunny a rattle, not realizing that Violet (at fourteen) is not interested in dolls, that Klaus has never liked model trains, and that Sunny finds rattles irritating. They wind up trading gifts after Josephine leaves the room, with Sunny getting the doll to chew on and Violet getting the train so she can examine its mechanical insides. Klaus is left with the rattle, which Violet points out still does him no good and so the swap isn't fair to him; he responds that given everything else that's happened to them, this isn't something worth complaining about, which the others admit is true.
* ''Literature/TalesOfAFourthGradeNothing'' ''[[Literature/{{Fudge}} Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing]]'' by Creator/JudyBlume has Peter being given a picture dictionary, more suitable for a preschooler than the preteen that he is. Ugh. At least he has enough tact to pretend to be enthused. Fudge, on the other hand, brings out their old copy of the same book.



** Played with in another episode, where Willow gives Joyce one of those beers hats while she was in the hospital. It ''seems'' like this trope, but Willow actually did put thought into picking it out...but when she actually gives it, admits that in hindsight she doesn't understand ''why'' it seemed like a good idea.

to:

** Played with in another episode, where Willow gives Joyce one of those beers hats while she was in the hospital. It ''seems'' like this trope, but Willow actually did put thought into picking it out... but when she actually gives it, admits that in hindsight she doesn't understand ''why'' it seemed like a good idea.



* ''WebVideo/NightmareTime:'' In the episode "Yellow Jacket," Lex forgets about her sister, Hannah's birthday until late at night - after the party store has closed, so her only option is to shop at the local liquor store. She ends up with a cupcake and a single, sad balloon.

to:

* ''WebVideo/NightmareTime:'' In the episode "Yellow Jacket," Lex forgets about her sister, Hannah's birthday until late at night - -- after the party store has closed, so her only option is to shop at the local liquor store. She ends up with a cupcake and a single, sad balloon.



* Invoked in the ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatiansTheSeries'' episode “A Christmas Cruella”. Cruella has a Christmas Carol Intervention and decides to get gifts for everyone. But, since nothing is open on Christmas except the ‘House Of Devil’ (her fashion house), she gives everyone office supplies.

to:

* Invoked in the ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatiansTheSeries'' episode “A "A Christmas Cruella”.Cruella". Cruella has a Christmas Carol Intervention and decides to get gifts for everyone. But, since nothing is open on Christmas except the ‘House 'House Of Devil’ Devil' (her fashion house), she gives everyone office supplies.



* In ''WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman'', back when they were still dating, Bojack once offered Princess Carolyn a ball of crumpled up paper in a box. For a split second the audience interprets this as an instance of this trope...but since [[FurryReminder PC is a cat]], she immediately goes "How did you ''know?''" and plays with it delightedly.

to:

* In ''WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman'', back when they were still dating, Bojack once offered Princess Carolyn a ball of crumpled up paper in a box. For a split second the audience interprets this as an instance of this trope... but since [[FurryReminder PC is a cat]], she immediately goes "How did you ''know?''" and plays with it delightedly.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* This a bad habit of the Taylor boys in ''Series/HomeImprovement'', with Jill highlighting two presents in particular; a year-old rock hard candy necklace and a pair of fuzzy dice earmuffs. Tim takes the hint and challenges his sons to actually ''build'' something for their mother.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/Persona4'' comic. Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out.

to:

* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/Persona4'' comic. Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out. Note that this is exactly the opposite of what happens in the game, where Nanako is almost scarily ''obsessed'' with Junes and adores getting a T-shirt from it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


-->-- '''Creator/EddieIzzard''', ''Glorious''

to:

-->-- '''Creator/EddieIzzard''', '''Creator/SuzyEddieIzzard''', ''Glorious''



* The page quote from Creator/EddieIzzard's skit on the Nativity. Jesus was delighted with his Christmas presents of gold, frankincense, and myrrh, but when he asks "...and now for my birthday presents?" they're stumped. Of course, [[InsaneTrollLogic since it's Christmas Day, the only shop that's open]] is the 24-hour petrol station...

to:

* The page quote from Creator/EddieIzzard's Creator/SuzyEddieIzzard's skit on the Nativity. Jesus was delighted with his Christmas presents of gold, frankincense, and myrrh, but when he asks "...and now for my birthday presents?" they're stumped. Of course, [[InsaneTrollLogic since it's Christmas Day, the only shop that's open]] is the 24-hour petrol station...

Changed: 991

Removed: 760

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
** One Christmas special had Homer at a Secret Santa exchange at work where, after receiving a DVD player from Carl and being asked by Lenny where ''his'' present was, he says to Lenny, "Your present is right in the other room." He then goes offscreen to the other room and is clearly heard saying [[VengefulVendingMachine "C'mon, machine, take my dollar! ... Fine, we'll play it ''your way!''" He then tackles the machine (still offscreen) and]] returns with a tube of Certs breath mints. Lenny is understandably disgusted. (After watching ''Mr. [=McGrew=]'s (a WesternAnimation/MrMagoo parody) Christmas Carol'' on late-night TV later, he experiences an Ebenezer Scrooge-style turnaround and gives Lenny a photo cube with pictures of both of them plus Carl.)

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
** One Christmas special had
''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': Homer at a Secret Santa exchange at work where, after receiving a DVD player from Carl is virtually incapable of remembering holidays, and being asked by Lenny where ''his'' present was, he says will invariably resort to Lenny, "Your present is right in the other room." He then goes offscreen to the other room and is clearly heard saying [[VengefulVendingMachine "C'mon, machine, take my dollar! ... Fine, we'll play it ''your way!''" He then tackles the machine (still offscreen) and]] returns with a tube of Certs breath mints. Lenny is understandably disgusted. (After watching ''Mr. [=McGrew=]'s (a WesternAnimation/MrMagoo parody) Christmas Carol'' on late-night TV later, he experiences an Ebenezer Scrooge-style turnaround and gives Lenny a photo cube with pictures of both of them plus Carl.)this for almost every occasion:



** Homer is virtually incapable of remembering holidays, and will invariably resort to this for almost every occasion;

to:

** Another ChristmasEpisode, "'Tis the Fifteenth Season", had Homer is virtually incapable of remembering holidays, at a Secret Santa exchange at work where, after receiving a DVD player from Carl and will invariably resort being asked by Lenny where ''his'' present was, he says to this for almost every occasion;Lenny, "Your present is right in the other room." He then goes offscreen to the other room and is clearly heard saying [[VengefulVendingMachine "C'mon, machine, take my dollar! ... Fine, we'll play it ''your way!''" He then tackles the machine (still offscreen) and]] returns with a tube of Certs breath mints. Lenny is understandably disgusted. (After watching ''Mr. [=McGrew=]'s (a WesternAnimation/MrMagoo parody) Christmas Carol'' on late-night TV later, he experiences an Ebenezer Scrooge-style turnaround and gives Lenny a photo cube with pictures of both of them plus Carl.)



** Another episode set on Valentines Day has Homer desperately looking for a gift for Marge, and Apu offers him a heart-shaped box of chocolates... for $100. With no other choice, Homer pays but angrily vows to never shop there again. Apu, realizing that if Homer finds the much cheaper store across the street his business is doomed, offers him a small discount on damaged canned food, and wins him back.

to:

** Another episode set on Valentines Day "I Love Lisa" has Homer desperately looking for a Valentine's Day gift for Marge, and Apu offers him a heart-shaped box of chocolates... for $100. With no other choice, Homer pays but angrily vows to never shop there again. Apu, realizing that if Homer finds the much cheaper store across the street his business is doomed, offers him a small discount on damaged canned food, and wins him back.



** A Musical Episode had Homer frantically driving around town on Christmas Eve, singing "I need a present for my wife, or I'll have no sex for life." It turns out Marge knew he would forget, so her present for him was a present he could give to her. This time even the Kwik-E-Mart fails him as its inventory had been cleaned out during the [[ChristmasRushed Christmas rush]] and Apu only had jerky made from trout left in stock.

to:

** A Musical Episode "The Nutcracker...Sweeeeet" segment of "Simpsons Christmas Stories" had Homer frantically driving around town on Christmas Eve, singing "I need a present for my wife, or I'll have no sex for life." It turns out Marge knew he would forget, so her present for him was a present he could give to her. This time even the Kwik-E-Mart fails him as its inventory had been cleaned out during the [[ChristmasRushed Christmas rush]] and Apu only had jerky made from trout left in stock.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* In ''Literature/MySistersKeeper'', oldest brother Jesse recounts a Christmas where all of the gifts were from the hospital gift shop. Somewhat {{justified|Trope}} in that they didn't leave things to the last minute intentionally, but rather were sidetracked by a medical crisis.

to:

* In ''Literature/MySistersKeeper'', oldest brother Jesse recounts a Christmas where all of the gifts were from the hospital gift shop. Somewhat {{justified|Trope}} in that they didn't leave things to the last minute intentionally, but rather were sidetracked by a medical crisis.crisis; however, Jesse uses this to illustrate the way that his entire family's life is perpetually in turmoil due to his middle sister Kate's cancer.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/13811070/1/Christmas-2002 Christmas 2002]]'' mentions that for last year's Christmas Hermione received paper clips from Harry and an auto-soak mop from Ron.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* A GagDub of one ''LightNovel/DirtyPair'' episode in which Yuri almost gets married had all the wedding guests reveal that they'd given the happy couple toasters. The MadScientist at least gave them a toaster that shoots laser beams.

to:

* A GagDub of one ''LightNovel/DirtyPair'' ''Literature/DirtyPair'' episode in which Yuri almost gets married had all the wedding guests reveal that they'd given the happy couple toasters. The MadScientist at least gave them a toaster that shoots laser beams.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding an example

Added DiffLines:

* ''WebVideo/NightmareTime:'' In the episode "Yellow Jacket," Lex forgets about her sister, Hannah's birthday until late at night - after the party store has closed, so her only option is to shop at the local liquor store. She ends up with a cupcake and a single, sad balloon.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[caption-width-right:270:[[VideoGame/{{Persona4}} And he got his nephew a speedo.]]]]

to:

[[caption-width-right:270:[[VideoGame/{{Persona4}} [[caption-width-right:270:[[VideoGame/Persona4 And he got his nephew a speedo.]]]]



** The final chapters of volume 15 has Shirogane bought two Christmas gifts at a very last minute while trying to make it for the Christmas Eve party at Fujiwara's house ([[JustifiedTrope justified]] as this was due to him being hospitalized from overwork in the day before). During the exchange gift party, he gave Moeha a handkerchief and personally an expensive Kendama to Kaguya. To his relief, the two girls didn't mind about it (the former due to her MundaneObjectAmazement and the latter already [[WartsAndAll accepted Shirogane for all of his flaws]]).

to:

** The final chapters of volume 15 has Shirogane bought two Christmas gifts at a very last minute while trying to make it for the Christmas Eve party at Fujiwara's house ([[JustifiedTrope justified]] ({{justified|Trope}} as this was due to him being hospitalized from overwork in the day before). During the exchange gift party, he gave Moeha a handkerchief and personally an expensive Kendama to Kaguya. To his relief, the two girls didn't mind about it (the former due to her MundaneObjectAmazement and the latter already [[WartsAndAll accepted Shirogane for all of his flaws]]).



* One Series/MADtv [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCb07gXx6kE sketch]] has a couple forgetting to get Christmas presents for their children, forcing them to scrounge through their closet and bathroom. The kids received toothbrushes, used aftershave, high-heeled shoes, and a tie.

to:

* One Series/MADtv ''Series/MadTV1995'' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCb07gXx6kE sketch]] has a couple forgetting to get Christmas presents for their children, forcing them to scrounge through their closet and bathroom. The kids received toothbrushes, used aftershave, high-heeled shoes, and a tie.



* Subverted in ''VideoGame/Persona4'', despite the Hiimdaisy comic in the example: while Dojima does indeed purchase a shirt for his daughter Nanako at the local supermarket Junes, she ''loves'' the local supermarket, to the point that when he asks her where she wants to go for a vacation, she states that she wants to go to Junes. Dojima's gift is actually exactly what she wants.

to:

* Subverted in ''VideoGame/Persona4'', despite the Hiimdaisy ''Hiimdaisy'' comic in the example: while Dojima does indeed purchase a shirt for his daughter Nanako at the local supermarket Junes, she ''loves'' the local supermarket, to the point that when he asks her where she wants to go for a vacation, she states that she wants to go to Junes. Dojima's gift is actually exactly what she wants.



[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Nelson 're-gifts' presents from his office Christmas party (such as a hot cocoa sampler pack) to his fellow gamers in ''WebComic/FullFrontalNerdity''.
* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}'' comic. Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out.

to:

[[folder:Web Comics]]
[[folder:Webcomics]]
* Nelson 're-gifts' presents from his office Christmas party (such as a hot cocoa sampler pack) to his fellow gamers in ''WebComic/FullFrontalNerdity''.
''Webcomic/FullFrontalNerdity''.
* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}'' ''VideoGame/Persona4'' comic. Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''VideoGame/ZniwAdventure'': The plot kicks off when Zniw realizes she doesn't have a gift for her mother's hatchday. Zniw goes to a shop across the street and tries to buy a bouquet of flowers, but another dinosaur buys it first.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
RL Examples Cleanup Thread.


[[folder:Real Life]]
* In the US, the Chia-Pet is usually seen as this, since they're ultimately useless and not that exciting, seeing as it's merely an animal-shaped pot you smear seed paste on and wait for it to grow. Getting one is usually code that the giver either forgot about getting you a gift or doesn't like you very much. They're frequently sold in drug stores, which are sometimes the only things open (sometimes by law) after all the good stores have closed for Christmas.
* Some stores seem to have certain items placed by the registers specifically for this reason, such as shoddy, kid-friendly movies and video games that are exclusively stocked in this area of a store.
* In at least some parts of the world, this isn't quite so embarrassing anymore, as many convenience stores and drugstores usually carry a large spread of major-brand gift cards (Apple, Sears, Victoria's Secret, Zynga... okay, it gets a bit odd) so it's usually easy enough to find something someone will like. And in any country or state where it's not specifically against local law, almost every convenience store or gas station has a liquor license.
** Unfortunately said gift cards are now thought of as a lazy gift idea, though others argue that it's better for the person to have the money given to buy something they'd want in that store, rather than getting something they wouldn't want. A well-chosen gift card can also convey that at least some thought was put into what the recipient would want while just giving plain cash is seen as ultimately lazy.
** Gift cards aside, many chain drugstores are still attempting to avert this. In the past, since prescription medications, despite taking up incredibly little space, provided the majority of a drugstore's income, it left them not all that motivated to try all that hard with the rest of their merchandise. However, sensing the possibility of another revenue stream (and taking advantage of their requirement to be open by law even after everything else closes,) many chain drugstores such as Walgreens have started updating their merchandise to stuff comparable to what you can find in other department stores (toys and action figures for kids, perfume for women, etc.)
** Supermarkets also have ''their own'' gift cards which place things at an even greater remove (the recipient putting it towards their basic needs like food and toilet paper means they're left with more disposable income).
* Economists have studied how much value is lost by these transactions. For example, if someone buys a brand new item that the gift receiver doesn't like and donates to charity, which then sells the item at 20% of the original price, then 80% of the original value has been lost. Or if you estimate that the receiver values the gift at 80% the cost (a loss of 20%), then that amounts to a loss of $28 billion a year worldwide. Moral: just ''ask'' what someone would want. Or give them cash/a check/a money order/a gift card, and let ''them'' decide what they'd like to get.
* ''The Stranger'' (a UsefulNotes/{{Seattle}} based alt-weekly known best for being the home of Creator/DanSavage's advice column) had a variation of Convenience Store Holiday Dinner where they sent writers in with $20 to get ingredients, then turned those ingredients over to high-end restaurant chefs in a ''Series/{{Chopped}}''-style contest to see if they could make a decent meal out of the junk provided.
[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Examples should not mention that they provide the image.


* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}'' comic (seen above). Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out.

to:

* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}'' comic (seen above).comic. Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Series/That70sShow'': [[ForgottenBirthday Red and Eric forget Kitty's birthday]] and tried to pretend it was a case of NotSoForgottenBirthday, buying her a few balloons and a funnel from the gas station at 11:40 P.M. She sees through it, and they have to take her square dancing to make up for it.

to:

* ''Series/That70sShow'': In "Kitty's Birthday (That's Today?!)", [[ForgottenBirthday Red and Eric forget Kitty's birthday]] and tried to pretend it was a case of NotSoForgottenBirthday, buying her a few balloons and a funnel from the gas station at 11:40 P.M. She sees through it, and they have to take her square dancing to make up for it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* On ''Series/That70sShow'', in a case of NotSoForgottenBirthday, Red and Eric buy Kitty a few balloons and a funnel from the gas station at 11:40 P.M. She is somewhat unimpressed, and they have to take her square dancing to make up for it.

to:

* On ''Series/That70sShow'', in ''Series/That70sShow'': [[ForgottenBirthday Red and Eric forget Kitty's birthday]] and tried to pretend it was a case of NotSoForgottenBirthday, Red and Eric buy Kitty buying her a few balloons and a funnel from the gas station at 11:40 P.M. She is somewhat unimpressed, sees through it, and they have to take her square dancing to make up for it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


''Is that a DVD of Fists Of Fury?'']]

to:

''Is that a DVD of Fists Of Fury?'']]Fury?''\\

Added: 19671

Changed: 14895

Removed: 20595

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


%%
%%
%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
%%
%%



* ''Zan Manga/SayonaraZetsubouSensei'', when devoting one of its ThreeShorts to discussing emergency measures, had the entire class partake in this kind of gift-giving for Nami's birthday.
* In ''Manga/SoulEater'', Maka's father wants to give her a present for passing her exams with top marks. He's actually savvy enough to realize that she'd prefer a book, but he doesn't know which ones she already has, so asks [[CatGirl Blair]], who's been living with Maka, to use his money to make the purchase. [[MsFanservice Blair]] gets distracted and spends the money on something ''she'' wants, naughty underwear. Remembering her actual mission too late to go back to the store, [[TheDitz Blair]] simply uses her magic to shrink the undies to Maka's size. This naturally gives Maka the wrong idea about her father's intentions.



* ''Manga/{{Gals}}'': Ran frequently forgets to buy gifts for her boyfriend for his birthday, anniversary, etc., and would usually try to cover her blunder by giving him prizes she won from a raffle or an UFO catcher. The first time she does this, he's unaware of the fact and is very happy with the gift (a monkey doll). When she does this again near the end of the series, however, he was actually in vicinity when she makes the "purchase" and gets very angry about her apparent disregard towards him and their relationship.



* ''Zan Manga/SayonaraZetsubouSensei'', when devoting one of its ThreeShorts to discussing emergency measures, had the entire class partake in this kind of gift-giving for Nami's birthday.
* In ''Manga/SoulEater'', Maka's father wants to give her a present for passing her exams with top marks. He's actually savvy enough to realize that she'd prefer a book, but he doesn't know which ones she already has, so asks [[CatGirl Blair]], who's been living with Maka, to use his money to make the purchase. [[MsFanservice Blair]] gets distracted and spends the money on something ''she'' wants, naughty underwear. Remembering her actual mission too late to go back to the store, [[TheDitz Blair]] simply uses her magic to shrink the undies to Maka's size. This naturally gives Maka the wrong idea about her father's intentions.



* ''Film/OneCrazySummer'' has the sister being given a tiny teddy bear as a present. This apparently isn't received well, for she promptly feeds it to her dog.
* In ''Dieu seul me voit'' (by Bruno Podalydès, 1998), the main character needs to buy a gift at the last moment and grabs a table lamp from the nearest store. That lamp ends up being repeatedly given around as a way for every recipient of the gift to get rid of it.



* In ''Film/{{Scrooged}}'' we see a typical Christmas present Frank got as a child from his father: A five-pound lump of meat. Courtesy of his AbusiveParent dad. Frank himself gives bath towels to employees and even his brother, with expensive gifts like [=VCRs=] being reserved for people he's trying to impress.

to:

* In ''Dieu seul me voit'' (by Bruno Podalydès, 1998), the main character needs to buy a gift at the last moment and grabs a table lamp from the nearest store. That lamp ends up being repeatedly given around as a way for every recipient of the gift to get rid of it.
* ''Film/OneCrazySummer'' has the sister being given a tiny teddy bear as a present. This apparently isn't received well, for she promptly feeds it to her dog.
* In ''Film/{{Scrooged}}'' we see a typical Christmas present Frank got as a child from his father: A five-pound lump of meat. Courtesy of his AbusiveParent dad.AbusiveDad. Frank himself gives bath towels to employees and even his brother, with expensive gifts like [=VCRs=] being reserved for people he's trying to impress.



* ''Literature/TalesOfAFourthGradeNothing'' by Creator/JudyBlume has Peter being given a picture dictionary, more suitable for a preschooler than the preteen that he is. Ugh. At least he has enough tact to pretend to be enthused. Fudge, on the other hand, brings out their old copy of the same book.
* Robert Fulghum writes about a White Elephant gift exchange at an office party. One grouchy guy gets the proverbial piece of junk and grumbles that too many people hide behind the "good thoughts" excuse.



* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** In ''Literature/{{Mort}}'', when Death gives Mort and Ysabell a pearl of congealed reality as a wedding present, Mort says he thought his gift was the toast-rack. Death explains [[AC: That was Albert. I'm afraid he doesn't have much imagination]].
** Part of the wizards' litany of complaints about [[YouMeanXmas Hogswatchnight]] in ''Literature/{{Hogfather}}'':
--->'''Chair of Indefinite Studies''': And don't forget the presents. How ... how full of potential they seem in all that paper, how pregnant with possibilities ... and then you open them and basically the wrapping paper was ''more'' interesting and you have to say "How thoughtful, that ''will'' come in handy". It's not better to give than to receive, in my opinion, it's just less embarrassing.\\
'''Senior Wrangler''': I've worked out that over the years I have been a net exporter of Hogswatch presents...\\
'''Chair of Indefinite Studies''': Oh, everyone is. You spend a fortune on other people and what you get when all the paper is cleared away is one slipper that’s the wrong colour and a book about earwax.
* In ''Literature/DoomsdayBook'', Mr. Dunworthy notices that all the presents his friend Mary has gotten her great-nephew Colin are sweaters and the like, so he tries to get better presents... unfortunately, between it being Christmas Eve and the quarantine, the only place open is a convenience store. He does manage to buy some interesting candy and between that and a well-picked book, he gives Colin a satisfactory bunch of Christmas presents.
* Robert Fulghum writes about a White Elephant gift exchange at an office party. One grouchy guy gets the proverbial piece of junk and grumbles that too many people hide behind the "good thoughts" excuse.
* The protagonist of Douglas Coupland's ''Girlfriend In A Coma'' does this. Justified because Christmas isn't currently his top priority, what with [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin his girlfriend being in a coma]].



* The protagonist of Douglas Coupland's ''Girlfriend In A Coma'' does this. Justified because Christmas isn't currently his top priority, what with [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin his girlfriend being in a coma]].
* It happens in ''[[Literature/LittleHouseOnThePrairie By the Shores of Silver Lake]]'' when Mr. and Mrs. Boast show up unexpectedly on Christmas Eve. Ma gives Mr. Boast a pair of wristlets she had made for Pa and Mrs. Boast her Sunday handkerchief. The wristlets sound fine, but one hopes Ma considered the handkerchief too nice to actually use.
* ''Literature/ASeriesofUnfortunateEvents'': Book 3 (''The Wide Window'') features the second type, of the "trying, but clueless" variety. The well-meaning Aunt Josephine gives Violet a baby doll, Klaus a model train set, and Sunny a rattle, not realizing that Violet (at fourteen) is not interested in dolls, that Klaus has never liked model trains, and that Sunny finds rattles irritating. They wind up trading gifts after Josephine leaves the room, with Sunny getting the doll to chew on and Violet getting the train so she can examine its mechanical insides. Klaus is left with the rattle, which Violet points out still does him no good and so the swap isn't fair to him; he responds that given everything else that's happened to them, this isn't something worth complaining about, which the others admit is true.
* Swedish musician and comedian Povel Ramel mentions in his memoirs how he once did this kind of shopping on Christmas Eve in the only store he found that was still open -- a ''pet store''. Among other things, his then-girlfriend got a monkey for Christmas...



* In ''Literature/DoomsdayBook'', Mr. Dunworthy notices that all the presents his friend Mary has gotten her great-nephew Colin are sweaters and the like, so he tries to get better presents... unfortunately, between it being Christmas Eve and the quarantine, the only place open is a convenience store. He does manage to buy some interesting candy and between that and a well-picked book, he gives Colin a satisfactory bunch of Christmas presents.
* Averted in ''Literature/ThePrincessDiaries'' series; Mia encounters this situation with her Secret Snowflake Tina, but manages to get her a last-minute gift that's both heartfelt and appropriate.

to:

* In ''Literature/DoomsdayBook'', ''Literature/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'': It happens in ''By the Shores of Silver Lake'' when Mr. Dunworthy notices that all the presents his friend Mary has gotten her great-nephew Colin are sweaters and the like, so he tries to get better presents... unfortunately, between it being Mrs. Boast show up unexpectedly on Christmas Eve and the quarantine, the only place open is a convenience store. He does manage to buy some interesting candy and between that and a well-picked book, he Eve. Ma gives Colin Mr. Boast a satisfactory bunch pair of Christmas presents.
* Averted in ''Literature/ThePrincessDiaries'' series; Mia encounters this situation with
wristlets she had made for Pa and Mrs. Boast her Secret Snowflake Tina, Sunday handkerchief. The wristlets sound fine, but manages one hopes Ma considered the handkerchief too nice to get her a last-minute gift that's both heartfelt and appropriate.actually use.



* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** In ''Literature/{{Mort}}'', when Death gives Mort and Ysabell a pearl of congealed reality as a wedding present, Mort says he thought his gift was the toast-rack. Death explains [[AC: That was Albert. I'm afraid he doesn't have much imagination]].
** Part of the wizards' litany of complaints about [[YouMeanXmas Hogswatchnight]] in ''Literature/{{Hogfather}}'':
--->'''Chair of Indefinite Studies''': And don't forget the presents. How ... how full of potential they seem in all that paper, how pregnant with possibilities ... and then you open them and basically the wrapping paper was ''more'' interesting and you have to say "How thoughtful, that ''will'' come in handy". It's not better to give than to receive, in my opinion, it's just less embarrassing.
--->'''Senior Wrangler''': I've worked out that over the years I have been a net exporter of Hogswatch presents...
--->'''Chair of Indefinite Studies''': Oh, everyone is. You spend a fortune on other people and what you get when all the paper is cleared away is one slipper that’s the wrong colour and a book about earwax.

to:

* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** In ''Literature/{{Mort}}'', when Death gives Mort
Swedish musician and Ysabell a pearl of congealed reality as a wedding present, Mort says he thought comedian Povel Ramel mentions in his memoirs how he once did this kind of shopping on Christmas Eve in the only store he found that was still open -- a ''pet store''. Among other things, his then-girlfriend got a monkey for Christmas...
* Averted in ''Literature/ThePrincessDiaries'' series; Mia encounters this situation with her Secret Snowflake Tina, but manages to get her a last-minute
gift was that's both heartfelt and appropriate.
* ''Literature/ASeriesofUnfortunateEvents'': Book 3 (''The Wide Window'') features
the toast-rack. Death explains [[AC: That was Albert. I'm afraid he doesn't have much imagination]].
** Part
second type, of the wizards' litany of complaints about [[YouMeanXmas Hogswatchnight]] in ''Literature/{{Hogfather}}'':
--->'''Chair of Indefinite Studies''': And don't forget the presents. How ... how full of potential they seem in all
"trying, but clueless" variety. The well-meaning Aunt Josephine gives Violet a baby doll, Klaus a model train set, and Sunny a rattle, not realizing that paper, how pregnant Violet (at fourteen) is not interested in dolls, that Klaus has never liked model trains, and that Sunny finds rattles irritating. They wind up trading gifts after Josephine leaves the room, with possibilities ... Sunny getting the doll to chew on and then you open them Violet getting the train so she can examine its mechanical insides. Klaus is left with the rattle, which Violet points out still does him no good and basically so the wrapping paper was ''more'' interesting and you have swap isn't fair to say "How thoughtful, him; he responds that ''will'' come in handy". It's not better given everything else that's happened to give them, this isn't something worth complaining about, which the others admit is true.
* ''Literature/TalesOfAFourthGradeNothing'' by Creator/JudyBlume has Peter being given a picture dictionary, more suitable for a preschooler
than to receive, in my opinion, it's just less embarrassing.
--->'''Senior Wrangler''': I've worked out
the preteen that over he is. Ugh. At least he has enough tact to pretend to be enthused. Fudge, on the years I have been a net exporter of Hogswatch presents...
--->'''Chair of Indefinite Studies''': Oh, everyone is. You spend a fortune on
other people and what you get when all hand, brings out their old copy of the paper is cleared away is one slipper that’s the wrong colour and a book about earwax.same book.



* ''Series/BrooklynNineNine'', "[[Recap/BrooklynNineNineS3E10YippieKayak Yippie Kayak]]": Jake forgets to get a Christmas gift for Charles. Gina suggests he go to Goodwin's. He begs her to go shopping with him to help him choose, and Charles tags along too because he overhears them, but is told that Jake forgot a gift for his girlfriend. He gets him cologne (his brand), but the store is being robbed and they get into real life ''Die Hard'' situation.
-->'''Gina:''' Jake, just go to Goodwin's. They're open late, and they have everything.
* The Scooby Gang on ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' managed to avert the "thoughtless and/or impersonal" part of this trope despite the exigency of circumstances, when rushing to the airport to see Giles off. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in this case -- he purposefully didn't tell them he was leaving to prevent a painful goodbye.
-->'''Anya''': Um, we, uh, brought you some lovely parting gifts. [offering prepackaged snack pie] It's American. Get it? Apple pie? To remind you of all the good food you won't be eating.\\
'''Tara''': A-and a monster. [offering little rubber finger puppet] Sort of a Sunnydale souvenir, we thought. [[VanityPlate Grr! Argh!]]\\
'''Giles''' (smiling): Thank you.\\
'''Xander''': And I wanted to buy you a can of Old English 800, 'cause, you know, England, and you, and because at the time it sounded really funny. But the guy who lives in the box in front of the store, he, uh, wouldn't buy it for us.\\
'''Dawn''': We got your presents at the gas station. We were kind of in a hurry.
** Played with in another episode, where Willow gives Joyce one of those beers hats while she was in the hospital. It ''seems'' like this trope, but Willow actually did put thought into picking it out...but when she actually gives it, admits that in hindsight she doesn't understand ''why'' it seemed like a good idea.
* ''Series/CornerGas'':
** In "Road Worthy," Oscar tells Wanda that he can't decide on a gift for Emma, to which she says, "Well, coming to the gas station was a great start. There's motor oil, antifreeze, two-liter bottles of pop ..." Oscar says that Emma likes pop, but Wanda tells him, "Don't get her pop."
** In another episode, it's revealed that the bracelet Wanda bought Emma is from the dollar store... when they go shopping together at that same dollar store and the clerk accuses Emma of stealing it. Emma is not pleased.
* In the first episode of Series 2 of ''Series/DerryGirls'', the girls are supposed to bring a welcome gift for their Protestant buddies, but they all forgot until the day of. They try to buy something at a convenience store but are thwarted by a belligerently sectarian clerk and their lack of funds, and end up gifting their partners random stuff they had on them: a key chain and a package of Rollos. Jenny Joyce further shows them up by offering ''her'' partner an electric piano.
* In ''Series/FamilyTies'', Alex did the Christmas shopping at a gas station and his family ended up getting presents like motor oil and a car air freshener.
* ''Series/{{Frasier}}'' uses this a couple times, of the 'grab whatever's nearby' variety. Roz gives Frasier a book that had been hers (complete with the usual incriminating inscription), and in a later episode, Niles gives Roz a broken old cheese crock with a dead bee in it.



* In ''Series/FamilyTies'', Alex also did the Christmas shopping at a gas station and his family ended up getting presents like motor oil and a car air freshener.
* ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'' (birthday variant): One hundred eighty-two dollars exactly (plus a terribly worded card). Elaine says: "What are you, my uncle?" Earlier in the episode, Jerry told George to only spend half as much on his gift since Jerry and Elaine are back in a relationship, so George gives her ninety-one dollars. (Kramer, miraculously, gives her not only the unusual gift she wanted but a poetic and thoughtful card.)
* On ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' Carla tells Turk NOT to do this as a relationship test. He comes up with a nice pen since she likes to write letters by hand. Admittedly, he grabbed it out of a box of items [[AssShove extracted from patients' rectums]] as he had zero prep time, but his heart was in the right place. (When he confesses this, she decides his desire to be honest with her even if he fails the test gets him points anyway.)
* ''{{Series/Psych}}'': Shawn and Gus have brought baby gifts for DaChief (Gus' is a stuffed toy, Shawn's is a ''pineapple''), but Lassie and Juliet haven't, and they have to find gifts at a minute's notice. Juliet gives Da Chief a box of Tic-Tacs, and Lassie brings The Club from his car.
* On one of the ''{{Series/Monk}}'' Christmas specials, Monk's truck driver father is ordered to drive around the country by his boss and give "presents" fitting this trope (such as dreidels and other misc objects) to orphanage children. [[spoiler:The boss wanted to overwrite the memory of the truck's GPS by maxing out the miles it could store so it would overwrite evidence of him killing someone by shoving them into the engine. For some reason he forgot to clean the engine itself...]]
** It was also implied that this trope was at least one of the reasons why Monk hated all the Christmases in his ''life'' barring those during his years with Trudy. In 1964, his father gave him only one walkie talkie -- not a ''pair'' of walkie talkies, but literally just ''one'' walkie talkie out of a set. The stinger? He knew it was a useless gift, but gave it to him because Monk doesn't have any friends anyway.

to:

* In ''Series/FamilyTies'', Alex also did One episode of ''Series/FullHouse'' had D.J. forgetting best friend Kimmy's birthday because it happens to coincide with D.J.'s anniversary with boyfriend Steve. She appeals to her family for help, and they throw Kimmy a spontaneous surprise birthday party, doing things like using toilet paper for streamers and making the Christmas only cake they have on hand -- a large pan of hashed brown potatoes. Kimmy is obliviously delighted until she realizes what actually happened.
* ''Series/GameOn2015'': When Toby forgets his mother's birthday, he sneaks out of the house and down the block to the only business in the neighbourhood open early on a Sunday morning: the gas station. He winds up buying her an umbrella hat, and wrapping it in a free road map. He manages to salvage the situation by linking the hat a childhood memory of spending time with his mom.
* ''Series/TheGoldenGirls'':
** Sophia's son Phil gives her dental floss.
** The girls decide to avoid
shopping at a gas station and his family ended up getting presents like motor oil give each other gifts they made themselves. Rose takes back a set of earrings Dorothy fell in love with and instead gave her a car air freshener.
* ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'' (birthday variant): One hundred eighty-two dollars exactly (plus
hand-whittled maple syrup spigot (Dorothy first thinks it's a terribly worded card). Elaine says: "wooden brooch in the shape of a turkey's head.")
** Dorothy mentions how she always tries to buy her grandchildren better gifts than she got from her grandparents, mentioning a set of soap in the shape of the Seven Dwarves (Dorothy:
"What are you, my uncle?" Earlier in the episode, Jerry told George kid wants to only spend half as much on his gift since Jerry and Elaine are back in a relationship, so George gives her ninety-one dollars. (Kramer, miraculously, gives her not only the unusual gift she wanted but a poetic and thoughtful card.)
* On ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' Carla tells Turk NOT to do this as a relationship test. He comes up
play with soap? Besides, after a nice pen since she likes to write letters by hand. Admittedly, he grabbed it out couple of a box of items [[AssShove extracted from patients' rectums]] as he had zero prep time, but his heart was in the right place. (When he confesses this, she decides his desire to be honest with her even if he fails the test gets him points anyway.)
* ''{{Series/Psych}}'': Shawn and Gus have brought baby gifts for DaChief (Gus' is a stuffed toy, Shawn's is a ''pineapple''), but Lassie and Juliet haven't, and
baths, they have to find gifts at a minute's notice. Juliet gives Da Chief a box of Tic-Tacs, and Lassie brings The Club from his car.
* On one of the ''{{Series/Monk}}''
looked like Seven Suppositories.")
** Sophia says later Phil's traditional
Christmas specials, Monk's truck driver father gift is ordered to drive around a Nativity Scene made out of cheddar cheese (Sophia: "I'm Catholic, I can't spread a wise man on a Ritz cracker.")
* In
the country by first episode of ''Series/HoldTheBackPage'', Ken Wordsworth forgets his boss son's birthday and give "presents" fitting this trope (such as dreidels and other misc objects) to orphanage children. [[spoiler:The boss wanted to overwrite so hands him the memory of the truck's GPS by maxing out the miles it could store so it would overwrite evidence of him killing someone by shoving them into the engine. For some reason he forgot to clean the engine itself...]]
** It was also implied that this trope was at least one of the reasons why Monk hated all the Christmases in
dictionary his ''life'' barring those during his years with Trudy. In 1964, his father co-workers gave him only one walkie talkie -- not as a ''pair'' of walkie talkies, but literally just ''one'' walkie talkie out of a set. The stinger? He knew it joke present at his farewell party earlier that day (he was a useless gift, journalist leaving an upmarket paper to work at a tabloid). He did this mostly so his ex-wife wouldn't realise he had forgotten, but gave it to him because Monk doesn't have any friends anyway.turns out the son quite appreciates the dictionary.



* On one episode of ''Series/{{Wings}}'', the gang throws an office party for Casey. Not wanting to go to any effort, Brian just takes a book off his bookshelf and gives it to her. Which he might have gotten away with, except the book turns out to be called ''101 Ways to Pleasure a Woman''. Roy, on the other hand, simply grabs a jar of charity money off of his counter and hands it to her as-is. (He then admits that it isn't a real charity anyway; he made it up.)
* On ''Series/ThreesCompany'', Stanley gives Helen some flowers.
-->'''Helen:''' Oh, they're beautiful! You even enclosed a card.
-->'''Stanley:''' I did?
-->'''Helen:''' ''(reads)'' 'To Granny, Rest in Peace'? You stole them from the cemetery!
* In "A Very Series/{{Supernatural}} Christmas" Sam doesn't want to celebrate Christmas because Dean's due to die within the year thanks to a DealWithTheDevil, and he thinks it will just be depressing. At the last minute they decide to celebrate anyway, and both turn out to have shopped for gifts at the local 7-11. Neither makes any fuss, though, considering they've been a little busy defeating the MonsterOfTheWeek and the gifts, while cheap, are at least somewhat practical (Dean got candy bars and motor oil; Sam got shaving cream and skin mags.) Flashbacks in the same episode show another example of this trope: one Christmas when Sam and Dean were kids, their dad didn't make it back for the holidays, so Dean breaks into someone's house, steals some presents, and tells Sam their dad brought them. Sam starts to get suspicious when he opens one and it turns out to be a Barbie.

to:

* On Subverted in one episode of ''Series/{{Wings}}'', ''Series/TheKingOfQueens'', where Doug and Carrie think another couple has given them this kind of gift (a gravy boat) for their wedding. Turns out it had a check for a few thousand dollars inside, but by the gang throws an office party for Casey. Not wanting time they finally discover this, the check has long since expired and they can't cash it.
* ''Series/LittleLunch'': In "The Nightmare Before Graduation", Rory is too involved in other events
to go to put any effort, Brian just takes a book off thought into his bookshelf Secret Santa gift (although he is not too busy to spend a lot of time trying to find out who his Secret Santa is). At the last minute, he wraps up the soap he was given last year and gives it to her. Which he might have gotten away with, except the book turns out to be called ''101 Ways to Pleasure a Woman''. Roy, on the other hand, simply grabs a jar of charity money off of his counter and hands it to her as-is. (He then admits that it isn't a real charity anyway; as his present. Unfortunately, he made it up.)
is Secret Santa to Debra Jo, who was the one who gave him the soap originally.
* On ''Series/ThreesCompany'', Stanley One Series/MADtv [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCb07gXx6kE sketch]] has a couple forgetting to get Christmas presents for their children, forcing them to scrounge through their closet and bathroom. The kids received toothbrushes, used aftershave, high-heeled shoes, and a tie.
* An episode of ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'' takes this literally; Lois
gives Helen some flowers.
-->'''Helen:''' Oh, they're beautiful! You even enclosed
the boys thirty dollars to buy her a card.
-->'''Stanley:''' I did?
-->'''Helen:''' ''(reads)'' 'To Granny, Rest in Peace'? You stole them
nice birthday present from the cemetery!
convenience store where she works. She drops a not-so-subtle hint that she might like a foot massager, currently on sale for thirty dollars. The boys end up buying her earplugs, generic cough medicine, and a dirt bike magazine (that Reese said he wanted to "borrow" when Lois was done reading it) so that they could spend twenty dollars on candy for themselves.
* On one of the ''{{Series/Monk}}'' Christmas specials, Monk's truck driver father is ordered to drive around the country by his boss and give "presents" fitting this trope (such as dreidels and other misc objects) to orphanage children. [[spoiler:The boss wanted to overwrite the memory of the truck's GPS by maxing out the miles it could store so it would overwrite evidence of him killing someone by shoving them into the engine. For some reason he forgot to clean the engine itself...]]
** It was also implied that this trope was at least one of the reasons why Monk hated all the Christmases in his ''life'' barring those during his years with Trudy.
In "A Very Series/{{Supernatural}} Christmas" Sam 1964, his father gave him only one walkie talkie -- not a ''pair'' of walkie talkies, but literally just ''one'' walkie talkie out of a set. The stinger? He knew it was a useless gift, but gave it to him because Monk doesn't want have any friends anyway.
* On ''Series/MurphyBrown'', the characters had agreed not
to celebrate exchange gifts at Christmas, but of course someone broke this promise, and so everyone rushed out late on Christmas because Dean's due Eve to die within the year thanks to a DealWithTheDevil, and he thinks it will just be depressing. At get something at the last minute minute.
* In the ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'' episode "White Lie Christmas," Earl is remembering how he never gave Joy any good gifts. His past presents included keys (they were Joy's already) and condoms ([[ComicallyMissingThePoint
they decide to celebrate anyway, were flavored!]])
* ''{{Series/Psych}}'': Shawn
and both turn out to Gus have shopped brought baby gifts for DaChief (Gus' is a stuffed toy, Shawn's is a ''pineapple''), but Lassie and Juliet haven't, and they have to find gifts at the local 7-11. Neither makes any fuss, though, considering they've been a little busy defeating the MonsterOfTheWeek minute's notice. Juliet gives Da Chief a box of Tic-Tacs, and the gifts, while cheap, are at least somewhat practical (Dean got candy bars and motor oil; Sam got shaving cream and skin mags.) Flashbacks in the same episode show another example of this trope: one Christmas when Sam and Dean were kids, their dad didn't make it back for the holidays, so Dean breaks into someone's house, steals some presents, and tells Sam their dad brought them. Sam starts to get suspicious when he opens one and it turns out to be a Barbie.Lassie brings The Club from his car.



* ''Series/{{Frasier}}'' uses this a couple times, of the 'grab whatever's nearby' variety. Roz gives Frasier a book that had been hers (complete with the usual incriminating inscription), and in a later episode, Niles gives Roz a broken old cheese crock with a dead bee in it.
* Two types used on ''Series/TopGear'', since the presenters buy each other useless "presents" all the time. One of the best was a tacky golden rooster which has since become the trophy for the coveted "Golden Cock Award." They also give each other fairly good, but inappropriate presents as well.
* In the first episode of ''HoldTheBackPage'', Ken Wordsworth forgets his son's birthday and so hands him the dictionary his co-workers gave him as a joke present at his farewell party earlier that day (he was a journalist leaving an upmarket paper to work at a tabloid). He did this mostly so his ex-wife wouldn't realise he had forgotten, but it turns out the son quite appreciates the dictionary.

to:

* ''Series/{{Frasier}}'' uses this ''Series/{{Roswell}}'': Michael tries to buy his on-off girlfriend Maria a couple times, Ladyshave for Christmas, and actually does buy her a car bumper. Luckily, Isabel knows how terrible he is at presents, and got Maria a lovely set of earrings in his name.
* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'':
** A sketch from TheNineties has one
of the 'grab whatever's nearby' variety. Roz gives Frasier a book Three Wise Men (guest host David Alan Grier) resort to this on the way to Bethlehem when he realizes his partners are bringing gold and frankincense to the Christ Child. Of the gifts that had been hers (complete with result from this, Baby Jesus likes the usual incriminating inscription), and in a later episode, Niles gives Roz a broken old cheese crock bubbles best.
** A parody of sparkly '90s Christmas ballads begins
with a dead bee in it.
* Two types used on ''Series/TopGear'', since
woman rummaging her closet for a present for a co-worker she barely knows, deciding upon a cheap unused candle. The second verse reveals that the presenters buy each other useless "presents" all the time. One recipient of the best was a tacky golden rooster which has since become the trophy for the coveted "Golden Cock Award." They also give each other fairly good, but inappropriate presents as well.
* In the first episode of ''HoldTheBackPage'', Ken Wordsworth forgets his
candle gave it away to her son's birthday girlfriend, then ''she'' chucked it onto one of her own acquaintances. According to the last verse, the candle was "...passed to every single woman, and so hands him most gays", providing them all with "the gift of having a gift to give away."
** A Valentine's Day commercial parody encouraged guys to "give their special someone -- some dumb little thing from CVS"
* ''Series/SchittsCreek'': Well-meaning bad gift-giver Johnny stops at
the dictionary church rummage sale to get gifts for his co-workers gave him family, including a tin for Moira's wig pins, a thousand yen for Japanophile David, and "stickers of old men" for Alexis (which are stamps).
* On ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' Carla tells Turk NOT to do this
as a joke present at his farewell party earlier that day (he was relationship test. He comes up with a journalist leaving an upmarket paper nice pen since she likes to work at write letters by hand. Admittedly, he grabbed it out of a tabloid). He did this mostly so his ex-wife wouldn't realise box of items [[AssShove extracted from patients' rectums]] as he had forgotten, zero prep time, but his heart was in the right place. (When he confesses this, she decides his desire to be honest with her even if he fails the test gets him points anyway.)
* ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'' (birthday variant): One hundred eighty-two dollars exactly (plus a terribly worded card). Elaine says: "What are you, my uncle?" Earlier in the episode, Jerry told George to only spend half as much on his gift since Jerry and Elaine are back in a relationship, so George gives her ninety-one dollars. (Kramer, miraculously, gives her not only the unusual gift she wanted but a poetic and thoughtful card.)
* In "A Very Series/{{Supernatural}} Christmas" Sam doesn't want to celebrate Christmas because Dean's due to die within the year thanks to a DealWithTheDevil, and he thinks it will just be depressing. At the last minute they decide to celebrate anyway, and both turn out to have shopped for gifts at the local 7-11. Neither makes any fuss, though, considering they've been a little busy defeating the MonsterOfTheWeek and the gifts, while cheap, are at least somewhat practical (Dean got candy bars and motor oil; Sam got shaving cream and skin mags.) Flashbacks in the same episode show another example of this trope: one Christmas when Sam and Dean were kids, their dad didn't make it back for the holidays, so Dean breaks into someone's house, steals some presents, and tells Sam their dad brought them. Sam starts to get suspicious when he opens one and
it turns out to be a Barbie.
* On ''Series/That70sShow'', in a case of NotSoForgottenBirthday, Red and Eric buy Kitty a few balloons and a funnel from
the son quite appreciates the dictionary.gas station at 11:40 P.M. She is somewhat unimpressed, and they have to take her square dancing to make up for it.



* The Scooby Gang on ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' managed to avert the "thoughtless and/or impersonal" part of this trope despite the exigency of circumstances, when rushing to the airport to see Giles off. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in this case -- he purposefully didn't tell them he was leaving to prevent a painful goodbye.
-->'''Anya''': Um, we, uh, brought you some lovely parting gifts. [offering prepackaged snack pie] It's American. Get it? Apple pie? To remind you of all the good food you won't be eating.
-->'''Tara''': A-and a monster. [offering little rubber finger puppet] Sort of a Sunnydale souvenir, we thought. [[VanityPlate Grr! Argh!]]
-->'''Giles''' (smiling): Thank you.
-->'''Xander''': And I wanted to buy you a can of Old English 800, 'cause, you know, England, and you, and because at the time it sounded really funny. But the guy who lives in the box in front of the store, he, uh, wouldn't buy it for us.
-->'''Dawn''': We got your presents at the gas station. We were kind of in a hurry.
** Played with in another episode, where Willow gives Joyce one of those beers hats while she was in the hospital. It ''seems'' like this trope, but Willow actually did put thought into picking it out...but when she actually gives it, admits that in hindsight she doesn't understand ''why'' it seemed like a good idea.
* Subverted in one episode of ''Series/TheKingOfQueens'', where Doug and Carrie think another couple has given them this kind of gift (a gravy boat) for their wedding. Turns out it had a check for a few thousand dollars inside, but by the time they finally discover this, the check has long since expired and they can't cash it.
* ''Series/CornerGas'':
** In "Road Worthy," Oscar tells Wanda that he can't decide on a gift for Emma, to which she says, "Well, coming to the gas station was a great start. There's motor oil, antifreeze, two-liter bottles of pop ..." Oscar says that Emma likes pop, but Wanda tells him, "Don't get her pop."
** In another episode, it's revealed that the bracelet Wanda bought Emma is from the dollar store... when they go shopping together at that same dollar store and the clerk accuses Emma of stealing it. Emma is not pleased.
* On ''Series/That70sShow'', in a case of NotSoForgottenBirthday, Red and Eric buy Kitty a few balloons and a funnel from the gas station at 11:40 P.M. She is somewhat unimpressed, and they have to take her square dancing to make up for it.
* In the ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'' episode "White Lie Christmas," Earl is remembering how he never gave Joy any good gifts. His past presents included keys (they were Joy's already) and condoms ([[ComicallyMissingThePoint they were flavored!]])
* One Series/MADtv [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCb07gXx6kE sketch]] has a couple forgetting to get Christmas presents for their children, forcing them to scrounge through their closet and bathroom. The kids received toothbrushes, used aftershave, high-heeled shoes, and a tie.
* On ''Series/MurphyBrown'', the characters had agreed not to exchange gifts at Christmas, but of course someone broke this promise, and so everyone rushed out late on Christmas Eve to get something at the last minute.
* ''Series/{{Roswell}}'': Michael tries to buy his on-off girlfriend Maria a Ladyshave for Christmas, and actually does buy her a car bumper. Luckily, Isabel knows how terrible he is at presents, and got Maria a lovely set of earrings in his name.
* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'':
** A sketch from TheNineties has one of the Three Wise Men (guest host David Alan Grier) resort to this on the way to Bethlehem when he realizes his partners are bringing gold and frankincense to the Christ Child. Of the gifts that result from this, Baby Jesus likes the bubbles best.
** A parody of sparkly '90s Christmas ballads begins with a woman rummaging her closet for a present for a co-worker she barely knows, deciding upon a cheap unused candle. The second verse reveals that the recipient of the candle gave it away to her son's girlfriend, then ''she'' chucked it onto one of her own acquaintances. According to the last verse, the candle was "...passed to every single woman, and most gays", providing them all with "the gift of having a gift to give away."
** A Valentine's Day commercial parody encouraged guys to "give their special someone -- some dumb little thing from CVS"
* One episode of ''Series/FullHouse'' had D.J. forgetting best friend Kimmy's birthday because it happens to coincide with D.J.'s anniversary with boyfriend Steve. She appeals to her family for help, and they throw Kimmy a spontaneous surprise birthday party, doing things like using toilet paper for streamers and making the only cake they have on hand -- a large pan of hashed brown potatoes. Kimmy is obliviously delighted until she realizes what actually happened.
* ''Series/TheGoldenGirls'':
** Sophia's son Phil gives her dental floss.
** The girls decide to avoid shopping and give each other gifts they made themselves. Rose takes back a set of earrings Dorothy fell in love with and instead gave her a hand-whittled maple syrup spigot (Dorothy first thinks it's a "wooden brooch in the shape of a turkey's head.")
** Dorothy mentions how she always tries to buy her grandchildren better gifts than she got from her grandparents, mentioning a set of soap in the shape of the Seven Dwarves (Dorothy: "What kid wants to play with soap? Besides, after a couple of baths, they looked like Seven Suppositories.")
** Sophia says later Phil's traditional Christmas gift is a Nativity Scene made out of cheddar cheese (Sophia: "I'm Catholic, I can't spread a wise man on a Ritz cracker.")
* An episode of ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'' takes this literally; Lois gives the boys thirty dollars to buy her a nice birthday present from the convenience store where she works. She drops a not-so-subtle hint that she might like a foot massager, currently on sale for thirty dollars. The boys end up buying her earplugs, generic cough medicine, and a dirt bike magazine (that Reese said he wanted to "borrow" when Lois was done reading it) so that they could spend twenty dollars on candy for themselves.
* ''Series/GameOn2015'': When Toby forgets his mother's birthday, he sneaks out of the house and down the block to the only business in the neighbourhood open early on a Sunday morning: the gas station. He winds up buying her an umbrella hat, and wrapping it in a free road map. He manages to salvage the situation by linking the hat a childhood memory of spending time with his mom.
* ''Series/SchittsCreek'': Well-meaning bad gift-giver Johnny stops at the church rummage sale to get gifts for his family, including a tin for Moira's wig pins, a thousand yen for Japanophile David, and "stickers of old men" for Alexis (which are stamps).
* ''Series/BrooklynNineNine'', "[[Recap/BrooklynNineNineS3E10YippieKayak Yippie Kayak]]": Jake forgets to get a Christmas gift for Charles. Gina suggests he go to Goodwin's. He begs her to go shopping with him to help him choose, and Charles tags along too because he overhears them, but is told that Jake forgot a gift for his girlfriend. He gets him cologne (his brand), but the store is being robbed and they get into real life ''Die Hard'' situation.
-->'''Gina:''' Jake, just go to Goodwin's. They're open late, and they have everything.
* ''Series/LittleLunch'': In "The Nightmare Before Graduation", Rory is too involved in other events to put any thought into his Secret Santa gift (although he is not too busy to spend a lot of time trying to find out who his Secret Santa is). At the last minute, he wraps up the soap he was given last year and gives that as his present. Unfortunately, he is Secret Santa to Debra Jo, who was the one who gave him the soap originally.
* In the first episode of Series 2 of ''Series/DerryGirls'', the girls are supposed to bring a welcome gift for their Protestant buddies, but they all forgot until the day of. They try to buy something at a convenience store but are thwarted by a belligerently sectarian clerk and their lack of funds, and end up gifting their partners random stuff they had on them: a key chain and a package of Rollos. Jenny Joyce further shows them up by offering ''her'' partner an electric piano.

to:

* The Scooby Gang on ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' managed to avert the "thoughtless and/or impersonal" part of this trope despite the exigency of circumstances, when rushing to the airport to see Giles off. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in this case -- he purposefully didn't tell them he was leaving to prevent a painful goodbye.
-->'''Anya''': Um, we, uh, brought you some lovely parting gifts. [offering prepackaged snack pie] It's American. Get it? Apple pie? To remind you of all the good food you won't be eating.
-->'''Tara''': A-and a monster. [offering little rubber finger puppet] Sort of a Sunnydale souvenir, we thought. [[VanityPlate Grr! Argh!]]
-->'''Giles''' (smiling): Thank you.
-->'''Xander''': And I wanted to buy you a can of Old English 800, 'cause, you know, England, and you, and because at the time it sounded really funny. But the guy who lives in the box in front of the store, he, uh, wouldn't buy it for us.
-->'''Dawn''': We got your presents at the gas station. We were kind of in a hurry.
** Played with in another episode, where Willow
On ''Series/ThreesCompany'', Stanley gives Joyce one of those beers hats while she was Helen some flowers.
-->'''Helen:''' Oh, they're beautiful! You even enclosed a card.\\
'''Stanley:''' I did?\\
'''Helen:''' ''(reads)'' 'To Granny, Rest
in the hospital. It ''seems'' like this trope, but Willow actually did put thought into picking it out...but when she actually gives it, admits that in hindsight she doesn't understand ''why'' it seemed like a good idea.
* Subverted in one episode of ''Series/TheKingOfQueens'', where Doug and Carrie think another couple has given
Peace'? You stole them this kind of gift (a gravy boat) for their wedding. Turns out it had a check for a few thousand dollars inside, but by the time they finally discover this, the check has long since expired and they can't cash it.
* ''Series/CornerGas'':
** In "Road Worthy," Oscar tells Wanda that he can't decide on a gift for Emma, to which she says, "Well, coming to the gas station was a great start. There's motor oil, antifreeze, two-liter bottles of pop ..." Oscar says that Emma likes pop, but Wanda tells him, "Don't get her pop."
** In another episode, it's revealed that the bracelet Wanda bought Emma is
from the dollar store... when they go shopping together at that same dollar store and the clerk accuses Emma of stealing it. Emma is not pleased.
cemetery!
* On ''Series/That70sShow'', in a case of NotSoForgottenBirthday, Red and Eric buy Kitty a few balloons and a funnel from the gas station at 11:40 P.M. She is somewhat unimpressed, and they have to take her square dancing to make up for it.
* In the ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'' episode "White Lie Christmas," Earl is remembering how he never gave Joy any good gifts. His past presents included keys (they were Joy's already) and condoms ([[ComicallyMissingThePoint they were flavored!]])
* One Series/MADtv [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCb07gXx6kE sketch]] has a couple forgetting to get Christmas presents for their children, forcing them to scrounge through their closet and bathroom. The kids received toothbrushes,
Two types used aftershave, high-heeled shoes, and a tie.
* On ''Series/MurphyBrown'',
on ''Series/TopGear'', since the characters had agreed not to exchange gifts at Christmas, but of course someone broke this promise, and so everyone rushed out late on Christmas Eve to get something at presenters buy each other useless "presents" all the last minute.
* ''Series/{{Roswell}}'': Michael tries to buy his on-off girlfriend Maria a Ladyshave for Christmas, and actually does buy her a car bumper. Luckily, Isabel knows how terrible he is at presents, and got Maria a lovely set of earrings in his name.
* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'':
** A sketch from TheNineties has one
time. One of the Three Wise Men (guest host David Alan Grier) resort to this on the way to Bethlehem when he realizes his partners are bringing gold and frankincense to the Christ Child. Of the gifts that result from this, Baby Jesus likes the bubbles best.
** A parody of sparkly '90s Christmas ballads begins with a woman rummaging her closet for a present for a co-worker she barely knows, deciding upon a cheap unused candle. The second verse reveals that the recipient of the candle gave it away to her son's girlfriend, then ''she'' chucked it onto one of her own acquaintances. According to the last verse, the candle was "...passed to every single woman, and most gays", providing them all with "the gift of having a gift to give away."
** A Valentine's Day commercial parody encouraged guys to "give their special someone -- some dumb little thing from CVS"
* One episode of ''Series/FullHouse'' had D.J. forgetting
best friend Kimmy's birthday because it happens to coincide with D.J.'s anniversary with boyfriend Steve. She appeals to her family was a tacky golden rooster which has since become the trophy for help, and they throw Kimmy a spontaneous surprise birthday party, doing things like using toilet paper for streamers and making the only cake they have on hand -- a large pan of hashed brown potatoes. Kimmy is obliviously delighted until she realizes what actually happened.
* ''Series/TheGoldenGirls'':
** Sophia's son Phil gives her dental floss.
** The girls decide to avoid shopping and
coveted "Golden Cock Award." They also give each other gifts they made themselves. Rose takes back a set of earrings Dorothy fell in love with and instead gave her a hand-whittled maple syrup spigot (Dorothy first thinks it's a "wooden brooch in the shape of a turkey's head.")
** Dorothy mentions how she always tries to buy her grandchildren better gifts than she got from her grandparents, mentioning a set of soap in the shape of the Seven Dwarves (Dorothy: "What kid wants to play with soap? Besides, after a couple of baths, they looked like Seven Suppositories.")
** Sophia says later Phil's traditional Christmas gift is a Nativity Scene made out of cheddar cheese (Sophia: "I'm Catholic, I can't spread a wise man on a Ritz cracker.")
fairly good, but inappropriate presents as well.
* An On one episode of ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'' ''Series/{{Wings}}'', the gang throws an office party for Casey. Not wanting to go to any effort, Brian just takes this literally; Lois gives the boys thirty dollars to buy her a nice birthday present from the convenience store where she works. She drops a not-so-subtle hint that she might like a foot massager, currently on sale for thirty dollars. The boys end up buying her earplugs, generic cough medicine, and a dirt bike magazine (that Reese said he wanted to "borrow" when Lois was done reading it) so that they could spend twenty dollars on candy for themselves.
* ''Series/GameOn2015'': When Toby forgets
book off his mother's birthday, he sneaks out of the house and down the block to the only business in the neighbourhood open early on a Sunday morning: the gas station. He winds up buying her an umbrella hat, and wrapping it in a free road map. He manages to salvage the situation by linking the hat a childhood memory of spending time with his mom.
* ''Series/SchittsCreek'': Well-meaning bad gift-giver Johnny stops at the church rummage sale to get gifts for his family, including a tin for Moira's wig pins, a thousand yen for Japanophile David, and "stickers of old men" for Alexis (which are stamps).
* ''Series/BrooklynNineNine'', "[[Recap/BrooklynNineNineS3E10YippieKayak Yippie Kayak]]": Jake forgets to get a Christmas gift for Charles. Gina suggests he go to Goodwin's. He begs her to go shopping with him to help him choose, and Charles tags along too because he overhears them, but is told that Jake forgot a gift for his girlfriend. He gets him cologne (his brand), but the store is being robbed and they get into real life ''Die Hard'' situation.
-->'''Gina:''' Jake, just go to Goodwin's. They're open late, and they have everything.
* ''Series/LittleLunch'': In "The Nightmare Before Graduation", Rory is too involved in other events to put any thought into his Secret Santa gift (although he is not too busy to spend a lot of time trying to find out who his Secret Santa is). At the last minute, he wraps up the soap he was given last year
bookshelf and gives it to her. Which he might have gotten away with, except the book turns out to be called ''101 Ways to Pleasure a Woman''. Roy, on the other hand, simply grabs a jar of charity money off of his counter and hands it to her as-is. (He then admits that as his present. Unfortunately, it isn't a real charity anyway; he is Secret Santa to Debra Jo, who was the one who gave him the soap originally.
* In the first episode of Series 2 of ''Series/DerryGirls'', the girls are supposed to bring a welcome gift for their Protestant buddies, but they all forgot until the day of. They try to buy something at a convenience store but are thwarted by a belligerently sectarian clerk and their lack of funds, and end up gifting their partners random stuff they had on them: a key chain and a package of Rollos. Jenny Joyce further shows them up by offering ''her'' partner an electric piano.
made it up.)



* In Music/OwlCity's "Peppermint Winter":
-->I rip off the wrapping and tear through the box
-->'Til I end up with forty-five new pairs of socks!
** However, he sounds overjoyed about it.

to:

* In Music/OwlCity's "Peppermint Winter":
-->I rip off
The Lancashire Hotpots song ''The Trafford Centre'' takes this from another angle: The main character did order presents for his family from Amazon, but they haven't been delivered on time so he has to participate in this at the wrapping and tear through the box
-->'Til I end up with forty-five new pairs of socks!
** However, he sounds overjoyed about it.
last minute.



* In relation to the literature entry above, Swedish musician Povel Ramel wrote the song "Don't Buy a Zebra", wherein the viewpoint character asks his acquaintances for advice on a proper gift for someone, but everyone gives him the unhelpful instruction in the title. Naturally he eventually runs out of time, all the good gifts get bought up... leaving only the zebra as an option.

to:

* In relation to Music/OwlCity's "Peppermint Winter":
-->I rip off
the literature entry above, wrapping and tear through the box\\
'Til I end up with forty-five new pairs of socks!
** However, he sounds overjoyed about it.
*
Swedish musician Povel Ramel wrote the song "Don't Buy a Zebra", wherein the viewpoint character asks his acquaintances for advice on a proper gift for someone, but everyone gives him the unhelpful instruction in the title. Naturally he eventually runs out of time, all the good gifts get bought up... leaving only the zebra as an option.



--> ''Hello there mate, how are you doing? I've got to buy some stuff or my Christmas will be ruined.''
--> ''I've got dirty mags, logs and coal, After Eights, and unleaded pet-rol.''
--> ''Is that a DVD of Fists Of Fury?''
--> ''No it's a double-disc set with ''Film/RunawayJury'', or ''Film/SilentRage'' and ''Film/DeltaForce 2'' in an action pack.''
--> ''That'll have to do... I'm not quite sure my Auntie Doris appreciates the ouvre of Creator/ChuckNorris. But I've left it late and it's starting to rain, and on Christmas day she can't complain.''
--> (Chorus) ''All-night garage, all-night garage, Christmas shopping at the all-night garage.''

to:

--> ''Hello there mate, how are you doing? I've got to buy some stuff or my Christmas will be ruined.''
-->
''\\
''I've got dirty mags, logs and coal, After Eights, and unleaded pet-rol.''
-->
''\\
''Is that a DVD of Fists Of Fury?''
-->
Fury?'']]
''No it's a double-disc set with ''Film/RunawayJury'', or ''Film/SilentRage'' and ''Film/DeltaForce 2'' in an action pack.''
-->
''\\
''That'll have to do... I'm not quite sure my Auntie Doris appreciates the ouvre of Creator/ChuckNorris. But I've left it late and it's starting to rain, and on Christmas day she can't complain.''
-->
''\\
(Chorus) ''All-night garage, all-night garage, Christmas shopping at the all-night garage.''



* The Lancashire Hotpots song ''The Trafford Centre'' takes this from another angle: The main character did order presents for his family from Amazon, but they haven't been delivered on time so he has to participate in this at the last minute.



* A ''ComicStrip/{{Zits}}'' strip has Jeremy and Sarah exchanging gifts for Christmas, but Sarah forgot. She quickly grabs the first thing she sees, wraps it, and gives it to Jeremy. Cut to Jeremy and Hector examining the very loud, wide necktie:
-->'''Jeremy:''' What do you think she's trying to say?\\
'''Hector:''' I heart geeks?
** A second strip has Jeremy's dad invoking the trope by walking up to Connie one early morning, kissing her, and wishing her a happy Mother's Day. Cue Jeremy panicking and dashing out to grab a gift. Turns out Dad was just messing with him.
* ''ComicStrip/FoxTrot'' has a running joke relating to this trope, although it is not strictly limited to Christmas as much as really any gift-giving holiday such as Mother's Day or Valentine's Day. ("Ever wonder why none of our kids have birthdays in November?")

to:

* A ''ComicStrip/{{Zits}}'' strip Played with in one ''ComicStrip/BabyBlues'', where Darryl bought deadbolt locks to Wanda specifically because he knew she would love it (it's for their bathroom door, thus giving Wanda some privacy from the kids whenever she takes a shower).
* ''Boomerangs''
has Jeremy and Sarah exchanging gifts for Christmas, but Sarah forgot. She quickly grabs the first thing she sees, wraps it, and gives it Jane (a single mother forced to Jeremy. Cut move back in with her parents) apply this to Jeremy and Hector examining the very loud, wide necktie:
-->'''Jeremy:''' What do you think
cooking as she's trying to say?\\
'''Hector:''' I heart geeks?
** A second strip has Jeremy's dad invoking the trope by walking up to Connie one early morning, kissing her, and wishing her a happy Mother's Day. Cue Jeremy panicking and dashing out to grab a gift. Turns out Dad was just messing with him.
* ''ComicStrip/FoxTrot'' has a running joke relating to
already late making supper. "Why is this trope, although it is not strictly limited to Christmas as much as really any gift-giving holiday such as Mother's Day or Valentine's Day. ("Ever wonder why none of our kids have birthdays in November?")fettuccini crunchy?" "Those are the Skittles."



* ''Boomerangs'' has Jane (a single mother forced to move back in with her parents) apply this to cooking as she's already late making supper. "Why is this fettuccini crunchy?" "Those are the Skittles."
* Played with in one ''ComicStrip/BabyBlues'', where Darryl bought deadbolt locks to Wanda specifically because he knew she would love it (it's for their bathroom door, thus giving Wanda some privacy from the kids whenever she takes a shower).

to:

* ''Boomerangs'' ''ComicStrip/FoxTrot'' has Jane (a single mother forced a running joke relating to move back in with her parents) apply this trope, although it is not strictly limited to cooking Christmas as she's already late making supper. "Why is this fettuccini crunchy?" "Those are the Skittles."
* Played with in one ''ComicStrip/BabyBlues'', where Darryl bought deadbolt locks to Wanda specifically because he knew she would love it (it's for their bathroom door, thus giving Wanda some privacy from the
much as really any gift-giving holiday such as Mother's Day or Valentine's Day. ("Ever wonder why none of our kids whenever she takes a shower).have birthdays in November?")



* A ''ComicStrip/{{Zits}}'' strip has Jeremy and Sarah exchanging gifts for Christmas, but Sarah forgot. She quickly grabs the first thing she sees, wraps it, and gives it to Jeremy. Cut to Jeremy and Hector examining the very loud, wide necktie:
-->'''Jeremy:''' What do you think she's trying to say?\\
'''Hector:''' I heart geeks?
** A second strip has Jeremy's dad invoking the trope by walking up to Connie one early morning, kissing her, and wishing her a happy Mother's Day. Cue Jeremy panicking and dashing out to grab a gift. Turns out Dad was just messing with him.



* In the ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho'' story "Return of the Rocket Men", Dodo (who the Doctor picked up in 1966) finds out it's Steven's birthday and the Doctor gives her free reign to find something in his collection to give him. She chooses a 1967 diary, because "it's next year's", without ever considering that Steven is from somewhere between the years 2200-3000 and both of them are now living in a time machine. Steven feels cheated and that the gift was insensitive and reacts with sarcasm, but the Doctor tells him to shut up and appreciate that Dodo thought of him.



* In the ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho'' story "Return of the Rocket Men", Dodo (who the Doctor picked up in 1966) finds out it's Steven's birthday and the Doctor gives her free reign to find something in his collection to give him. She chooses a 1967 diary, because "it's next year's", without ever considering that Steven is from somewhere between the years 2200-3000 and both of them are now living in a time machine. Steven feels cheated and that the gift was insensitive and reacts with sarcasm, but the Doctor tells him to shut up and appreciate that Dodo thought of him.



* Nelson 're-gifts' presents from his office Christmas party (such as a hot cocoa sampler pack) to his fellow gamers in ''WebComic/FullFrontalNerdity''.
* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}'' comic (seen above). Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out.



* Parodied in Webcomic/{{Hiimdaisy}}'s ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}'' comic (seen above). Dojima gives Nanako a gift for Children's Day, which turns out to be a T-shirt clearly labeled "baby boy". [[MyNewGiftIsLame Nanako tries to not sound disappointed]], all while Dojima says it was on sale. On the other hand, the protagonist is given a speedo with "cutie pie" written on it, creeping him out.
* Nelson 're-gifts' presents from his office Christmas party (such as a hot cocoa sampler pack) to his fellow gamers in ''WebComic/FullFrontalNerdity''.



* One [[http://www.bitstrips.com/ Bitstrips]] scene depicts the user's avatar doing their Christmas shopping at a convenience store.
* In the WebVideo/CommodoreHustle episode "[[http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/loadingreadyrun/2564-Santa-Secrets Santa Secrets]]", Morgan starts off by telling everyone that he doesn't plan to spend more than $5 on a gift. In the end, everyone ends up at a total loss for what to buy everyone else, so everyone, except Graham and James, gets ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' cards -- even Paul, who doesn't play. Graham gets a man-sized stuffed Grim Reaper that terrifies him, and James gets a $2 bag of tokens from a convenience store (which he had expressed interest in earlier in the episode).



* [[http://www.craigslist.org/about/best/lax/511745944.html This list]] of the 11 lamest "generic" gifts one can get.
* In the WebVideo/CommodoreHustle episode "[[http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/loadingreadyrun/2564-Santa-Secrets Santa Secrets]]", Morgan starts off by telling everyone that he doesn't plan to spend more than $5 on a gift. In the end, everyone ends up at a total loss for what to buy everyone else, so everyone, except Graham and James, gets ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' cards -- even Paul, who doesn't play. Graham gets a man-sized stuffed Grim Reaper that terrifies him, and James gets a $2 bag of tokens from a convenience store (which he had expressed interest in earlier in the episode).
* "[[http://whydidyoubuymethat.com Why Did You Buy Me That]]" revolves around this trope.
* One [[http://www.bitstrips.com/ Bitstrips]] scene depicts the user's avatar doing their Christmas shopping at a convenience store.




to:

* "[[http://whydidyoubuymethat.com Why Did You Buy Me That]]" revolves around this trope.



* An entire episode of ''WesternAnimation/SabrinaTheAnimatedSeries'' has her trying to find a better gift for Salem than a cheap picture frame. HilarityEnsues.
* The ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' episode "Cash For Gold" is dedicated to this trope, and also examines the moral and economic issues involved.

to:

* An entire ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' episode "The Spoon" has Richard sending his sons Gumball and Darwin to the convenience store to buy a gift for Nicole for her birthday because he forgot to buy her one. He would have gone himself, [[InsaneTrollLogic but he had to watch the kids, which Gumball and Darwin didn't have to do.]]
* In ''WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman'', back when they were still dating, Bojack once offered Princess Carolyn a ball of crumpled up paper in a box. For a split second the audience interprets this as an instance of this trope...but since [[FurryReminder PC is a cat]], she immediately goes "How did you ''know?''" and plays with it delightedly.
* In the Christmas
episode of ''WesternAnimation/SabrinaTheAnimatedSeries'' has ''WesternAnimation/{{Braceface}}'' Nina gives Sharon a large gift basket for her trying to Secret Santa gift. Inside it is little bottles of shampoo that you find in a better gift hotel room, a car calendar (her dad owns a dealership), and a little blue kitten toy which turns out to be the thing Maria gave to Nina for Salem than a cheap picture frame. HilarityEnsues.
* The ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' episode "Cash For Gold" is dedicated to this trope, and also examines the moral and economic issues involved.
Secret Santa last year.



* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
** One Christmas special had Homer at a Secret Santa exchange at work where, after receiving a DVD player from Carl and being asked by Lenny where ''his'' present was, he says to Lenny, "Your present is right in the other room." He then goes offscreen to the other room and is clearly heard saying [[VengefulVendingMachine "C'mon, machine, take my dollar! ... Fine, we'll play it ''your way!''" He then tackles the machine (still offscreen) and]] returns with a tube of Certs breath mints. Lenny is understandably disgusted. (After watching ''Mr. [=McGrew=]'s (a WesternAnimation/MrMagoo parody) Christmas Carol'' on late-night TV later, he experiences an Ebenezer Scrooge-style turnaround and gives Lenny a photo cube with pictures of both of them plus Carl.)
** In the very first episode, "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", Marge ends up spending her holiday savings getting a tattoo Bart got removed, hoping that Homer's Christmas bonus can make up for it. Unfortunately, Homer doesn't get his bonus (but can't admit it because he doesn't want to ruin things for his family) and is forced to buy cheaper gifts, including a dog chew toy for Maggie, pantyhose for Marge, and pads of paper for Bart.
** Homer is virtually incapable of remembering holidays, and will invariably resort to this for almost every occasion;
** "Mypods and Boomsticks" had the Simpsons each returning the identical kitty calendars Bart bought them at the last minute.
** Another episode set on Valentines Day has Homer desperately looking for a gift for Marge, and Apu offers him a heart-shaped box of chocolates... for $100. With no other choice, Homer pays but angrily vows to never shop there again. Apu, realizing that if Homer finds the much cheaper store across the street his business is doomed, offers him a small discount on damaged canned food, and wins him back.
** Another episode featured a store devoted entirely to last-minute gifts.
** A Musical Episode had Homer frantically driving around town on Christmas Eve, singing "I need a present for my wife, or I'll have no sex for life." It turns out Marge knew he would forget, so her present for him was a present he could give to her. This time even the Kwik-E-Mart fails him as its inventory had been cleaned out during the [[ChristmasRushed Christmas rush]] and Apu only had jerky made from trout left in stock.
** In the opening sequence of one post-movie episode, the billboard CouchGag is one from the Kwik-E-Mart with a smiling Apu which says: ''Last-minute gifts for people you don't like''.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
** One Christmas special had Homer at a Secret Santa exchange at work where, after receiving a DVD player from Carl
An interesting subversion in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Doug}}''. Doug has been invited to [[LoveInterest Patty's]] birthday party, and being asked by Lenny where ''his'' present was, he says agonizes over what to Lenny, "Your present is right in get her, as he knows her (but not well.) He knows she likes sports, so he tries to get her a Beet-Ball (for a game similar to softball, except the other room." He then goes offscreen to the other room and ball is clearly heard saying [[VengefulVendingMachine "C'mon, machine, take my dollar! ... Fine, we'll play it ''your way!''" He then tackles the machine (still offscreen) and]] returns with shaped like a tube of Certs breath mints. Lenny is understandably disgusted. (After watching ''Mr. [=McGrew=]'s (a WesternAnimation/MrMagoo parody) Christmas Carol'' on late-night TV later, he experiences an Ebenezer Scrooge-style turnaround and gives Lenny a photo cube with pictures of both of them plus Carl.)
** In the very first episode, "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", Marge ends up spending her holiday savings getting a tattoo Bart got removed, hoping
beet root), but that Homer's Christmas bonus can make up for it. Unfortunately, Homer doesn't get his bonus (but can't admit it because he doesn't want work out. He finally builds her a towel rack, but she thinks it's a caddy to ruin things for his family) and is forced to buy cheaper gifts, including a dog chew toy for Maggie, pantyhose for Marge, and pads of paper for Bart.
** Homer is virtually incapable of remembering holidays, and will invariably resort to this for almost every occasion;
** "Mypods and Boomsticks" had
hold the Simpsons each returning the identical kitty calendars Bart bought them at the last minute.
** Another episode set on Valentines Day has Homer desperately looking for a
Beet-Balls everyone else gave her, thus making it her favorite gift for Marge, and Apu offers him a heart-shaped box of chocolates... for $100. With no other choice, Homer pays but angrily vows to never shop there again. Apu, realizing that if Homer finds the much cheaper store across the street his business is doomed, offers him a small discount on damaged canned food, and wins him back.
** Another episode featured a store devoted entirely to last-minute gifts.
** A Musical Episode had Homer frantically driving around town on Christmas Eve, singing "I need a present for my wife, or I'll have no sex for life." It turns out Marge knew he would forget, so her present for him was a present he could give to her. This time even the Kwik-E-Mart fails him as its inventory had been cleaned out during the [[ChristmasRushed Christmas rush]] and Apu only had jerky made from trout left in stock.
** In the opening sequence of one post-movie episode, the billboard CouchGag is one from the Kwik-E-Mart with a smiling Apu which says: ''Last-minute gifts for people you don't like''.
she received.



* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'': In "The Dog And Piggy Show", after acquiring the Dog talisman in the opening, Jackie calls Jade from an airport in Bavaria, Germany, where his flight has been laid over. When Jade tells him that Uncle's birthday is tomorrow, he hurriedly goes into the nearest gift shop and buys a basket of chocolate and cheese. When he returns home, he gives Uncle the basket, but Uncle merely remarks "Chocolate stains my teeth, and cheese makes my... none of your business". Subverted when they find that the chocolates he purchased are seemingly modeled after the pig talisman.



* An interesting subversion in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Doug}}''. Doug has been invited to [[LoveInterest Patty's]] birthday party, and he agonizes over what to get her, as he knows her (but not well.) He knows she likes sports, so he tries to get her a Beet-Ball (for a game similar to softball, except the ball is shaped like a beet root), but that doesn't work out. He finally builds her a towel rack, but she thinks it's a caddy to hold the Beet-Balls everyone else gave her, thus making it her favorite gift that she received.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' episode "The Spoon" has Richard sending his sons Gumball and Darwin to the convenience store to buy a gift for Nicole for her birthday because he forgot to buy her one. He would have gone himself, [[InsaneTrollLogic but he had to watch the kids, which Gumball and Darwin didn't have to do.]]
* In the Christmas episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Braceface}}'' Nina gives Sharon a large gift basket for her Secret Santa gift. Inside it is little bottles of shampoo that you find in a hotel room, a car calendar (her dad owns a dealership), and a little blue kitten toy which turns out to be the thing Maria gave to Nina for Secret Santa last year.
* In the holiday special of ''WesternAnimation/TheWeekenders'' Tish is talking about her worst holiday experience. Her favourite cousin gave her a Lady Macbeth knapsack, but she didn't have anything to give her. Desperate, Tish simply grabs a sweater from her own closet, which happens to still have the price tag on it, and gives it to her cousin. The cousin isn't too happy about it as it turns out the sweater was ''their'' present to Tish from ''last year''.
* In ''WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman'', back when they were still dating, Bojack once offered Princess Carolyn a ball of crumpled up paper in a box. For a split second the audience interprets this as an instance of this trope...but since [[FurryReminder PC is a cat]], she immediately goes "How did you ''know?''" and plays with it delightedly.



* Exaggerated in the ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' episode "Kenya Be My Friend?". Pumbaa gets Timon a nice bug juicer to celebrate their "Bestest Best Friend Day", which Timon has forgotten about. First he tries giving Pumbaa a bunch of random things from the savanna like grass and a rotten log, but Pumbaa refuses to accept them because Timon has used all of them as emergency gifts before. Then Timon claims to have written a poem for Pumbaa and hastily makes up one. Pumbaa notices that the poem doesn't rhyme and finally realizes that Timon did forget the Bestest Best Friend Day. This leads to an argument that ends their friendship. After they reconcile, Timon ''still'' denies having forgotten Bestest Best Friend Day and manages to pass off the bug juicer he got as his gift to Pumbaa.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' episode "Dying For Pie", when told he needs to exchange gifts with [=SpongeBob=], Squidward says he’ll just “buy the little twerp a gumball” before Mr. Krabs informs him that he has to make the gift himself.
* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'': In "The Dog And Piggy Show", after acquiring the Dog talisman in the opening, Jackie calls Jade from an airport in Bavaria, Germany, where his flight has been laid over. When Jade tells him that Uncle's birthday is tomorrow, he hurriedly goes into the nearest gift shop and buys a basket of chocolate and cheese. When he returns home, he gives Uncle the basket, but Uncle merely remarks "Chocolate stains my teeth, and cheese makes my... none of your business". Subverted when they find that the chocolates he purchased are seemingly modeled after the pig talisman.


Added DiffLines:

* An entire episode of ''WesternAnimation/SabrinaTheAnimatedSeries'' has her trying to find a better gift for Salem than a cheap picture frame. HilarityEnsues.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
** One Christmas special had Homer at a Secret Santa exchange at work where, after receiving a DVD player from Carl and being asked by Lenny where ''his'' present was, he says to Lenny, "Your present is right in the other room." He then goes offscreen to the other room and is clearly heard saying [[VengefulVendingMachine "C'mon, machine, take my dollar! ... Fine, we'll play it ''your way!''" He then tackles the machine (still offscreen) and]] returns with a tube of Certs breath mints. Lenny is understandably disgusted. (After watching ''Mr. [=McGrew=]'s (a WesternAnimation/MrMagoo parody) Christmas Carol'' on late-night TV later, he experiences an Ebenezer Scrooge-style turnaround and gives Lenny a photo cube with pictures of both of them plus Carl.)
** In the very first episode, "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", Marge ends up spending her holiday savings getting a tattoo Bart got removed, hoping that Homer's Christmas bonus can make up for it. Unfortunately, Homer doesn't get his bonus (but can't admit it because he doesn't want to ruin things for his family) and is forced to buy cheaper gifts, including a dog chew toy for Maggie, pantyhose for Marge, and pads of paper for Bart.
** Homer is virtually incapable of remembering holidays, and will invariably resort to this for almost every occasion;
** "Mypods and Boomsticks" had the Simpsons each returning the identical kitty calendars Bart bought them at the last minute.
** Another episode set on Valentines Day has Homer desperately looking for a gift for Marge, and Apu offers him a heart-shaped box of chocolates... for $100. With no other choice, Homer pays but angrily vows to never shop there again. Apu, realizing that if Homer finds the much cheaper store across the street his business is doomed, offers him a small discount on damaged canned food, and wins him back.
** Another episode featured a store devoted entirely to last-minute gifts.
** A Musical Episode had Homer frantically driving around town on Christmas Eve, singing "I need a present for my wife, or I'll have no sex for life." It turns out Marge knew he would forget, so her present for him was a present he could give to her. This time even the Kwik-E-Mart fails him as its inventory had been cleaned out during the [[ChristmasRushed Christmas rush]] and Apu only had jerky made from trout left in stock.
** In the opening sequence of one post-movie episode, the billboard CouchGag is one from the Kwik-E-Mart with a smiling Apu which says: ''Last-minute gifts for people you don't like''.
* The ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' episode "Cash For Gold" is dedicated to this trope, and also examines the moral and economic issues involved.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' episode "Dying For Pie", when told he needs to exchange gifts with [=SpongeBob=], Squidward says he’ll just “buy the little twerp a gumball” before Mr. Krabs informs him that he has to make the gift himself.
* Exaggerated in the ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' episode "Kenya Be My Friend?". Pumbaa gets Timon a nice bug juicer to celebrate their "Bestest Best Friend Day", which Timon has forgotten about. First he tries giving Pumbaa a bunch of random things from the savanna like grass and a rotten log, but Pumbaa refuses to accept them because Timon has used all of them as emergency gifts before. Then Timon claims to have written a poem for Pumbaa and hastily makes up one. Pumbaa notices that the poem doesn't rhyme and finally realizes that Timon did forget the Bestest Best Friend Day. This leads to an argument that ends their friendship. After they reconcile, Timon ''still'' denies having forgotten Bestest Best Friend Day and manages to pass off the bug juicer he got as his gift to Pumbaa.
* In the holiday special of ''WesternAnimation/TheWeekenders'' Tish is talking about her worst holiday experience. Her favourite cousin gave her a Lady Macbeth knapsack, but she didn't have anything to give her. Desperate, Tish simply grabs a sweater from her own closet, which happens to still have the price tag on it, and gives it to her cousin. The cousin isn't too happy about it as it turns out the sweater was ''their'' present to Tish from ''last year''.

Added: 762

Changed: 642

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The ''WebVideo/ScottTheWoz'' episode "It's A Bargain Bin Christmas" has Scott giving his friends cheap bargain bin video games for Christmas because he ran out of money, complete with a song about how cheap they were. His friends, who are still recovering [[DeathIsCheap from being murdered]], are understandably upset at him.
-->'''Rex:''' WHAT THE F--K?!

to:

* The ''WebVideo/ScottTheWoz'' episode ''WebVideo/ScottTheWoz'':
**
"It's A Bargain Bin Christmas" has Scott giving his friends cheap bargain bin video games for Christmas because he ran out of money, complete with a song about how cheap they were. His friends, who are still recovering [[DeathIsCheap from being murdered]], are understandably upset at him.
-->'''Rex:''' --->'''Rex:''' WHAT THE F--K?!
** "The Gifts Of Gaming" gets into full-on exaggeration, with the crew's round of Secret Santa turning into a mess of absolutely disastrous gifts. Jerry Attricks gets a present box full of water. Target Employee is gifted "something from Target", that turns out to be a receipt. Terry gets an empty box, because "what's more vegan than ''nothing''?". Jeb gets a bunch of garbage (from his own dump, no less). Scott actually gets a game... but it's one he already owns several dozen copies of. Then it veers into GiftGivingGaffe when Target Employee's present for Rex, the notorious hater of all things sexual, was Viagra... as in, ''all'' of the Viagra, [[SubvertedTrope screwing up the entire supply chain for months]].
--->'''Rex:''' ... You stopped sex for me?
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''WesternAnimation/ThePatrickStarShow'': Exaggerated in "[[Recap/ThePatrickStarShowS1E10 Just in Time for Christmas]]" with the last-minute "gifts" Patrick gave his family for Christmas last year: chewed-up candles and petrified underwear pulled directly out of his trash can. He considers doing it again until his pet SeaHurtchin reminds him.
-->'''Patrick''': You're right, Ouchie. I gave everyone the same garbage ''last'' year.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire'', after receiving an unexpected Christmas gift from Dobby, Harry scrambles to find something to give in return, in an effort to be polite and pretend he already had something as a gift. He ends up settling on an old pair of Uncle Vernon's socks, which were lying in the bottom of his trunk. In a subversion, Dobby loves them so much [[note]]Dobby used to be a slave, and one of the dehumanizing conditions of his servitude was that he wasn't allowed to own or wear actual clothing.[[/note]] that Ron throws in his own Christmas socks and promises Dobby the next sweater his mother gifts to him.

to:

** In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire'', after receiving an unexpected Christmas gift from Dobby, Harry scrambles to find something to give in return, in an effort to be polite and pretend he already had something as a gift. He ends up settling on an old pair of Uncle Vernon's socks, which were lying in the bottom of his trunk. In a subversion, Dobby loves them so much [[note]]Dobby [[note]]Like all house elves, Dobby used to be a slave, and one of the dehumanizing conditions of his their servitude was that he wasn't is not being allowed to own or wear actual clothing.clothing. Moreover, Harry had freed Dobby by tricking Lucius Malfoy (Dobby's owner) into [[ItMakesSenseInContext giving him a dirty sock]].[[/note]] that Ron throws in his own Christmas socks and promises Dobby the next sweater his mother gifts to him.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** On one occasion, Chandler gave the group letters saying, "A donation has been made in your name to the New York City ballet." Bad enough on their own, at least for someone who doesn't care to support the ballet, but the act earns double trope points due to the fact that he took the letters from the Christmas bonus pile at work. In his defence, he hadn't expected to be back from Tulsa for Christmas, and had just quit in order to do so.

to:

** On one occasion, Chandler gave the group letters saying, "A donation has been made in your name to the New York City ballet." Bad enough on their own, at least for someone who doesn't care to support the ballet, but the act earns double trope points due to the fact that he took the letters from the Christmas bonus pile at work.work (and yes, it's a pretty crappy Christmas bonus as well, especially if you live in Tulsa). In his defence, he hadn't expected to be back from Tulsa for Christmas, and had just quit in order to do so.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[folder:Film - Animated]]

to:

[[folder:Film - -- Animated]]



[[folder:Film - Live-Action]]

to:

[[folder:Film - -- Live-Action]]



* ''[[Literature/ASeriesofUnfortunateEvents The Wide Window]]'' features the second type, of the "trying, but clueless" variety. The well-meaning Aunt Josephine gives Violet a baby doll, Klaus a model train set, and Sunny a rattle, not realizing that Violet (at fourteen) is not interested in dolls, that Klaus has never liked model trains, and that Sunny finds rattles irritating.
* Swedish musician and comedian Povel Ramel mentions in his memoirs how he once did this kind of shopping on Christmas Eve in the only store he found that was still open - a ''pet store''. Among other things, his then-girlfriend got a monkey for Christmas...

to:

* ''[[Literature/ASeriesofUnfortunateEvents The ''Literature/ASeriesofUnfortunateEvents'': Book 3 (''The Wide Window]]'' Window'') features the second type, of the "trying, but clueless" variety. The well-meaning Aunt Josephine gives Violet a baby doll, Klaus a model train set, and Sunny a rattle, not realizing that Violet (at fourteen) is not interested in dolls, that Klaus has never liked model trains, and that Sunny finds rattles irritating.
irritating. They wind up trading gifts after Josephine leaves the room, with Sunny getting the doll to chew on and Violet getting the train so she can examine its mechanical insides. Klaus is left with the rattle, which Violet points out still does him no good and so the swap isn't fair to him; he responds that given everything else that's happened to them, this isn't something worth complaining about, which the others admit is true.
* Swedish musician and comedian Povel Ramel mentions in his memoirs how he once did this kind of shopping on Christmas Eve in the only store he found that was still open - -- a ''pet store''. Among other things, his then-girlfriend got a monkey for Christmas...



** It was also implied that this trope was at least one of the reasons why Monk hated all the Christmases in his ''life'' barring those during his years with Trudy. In 1964, his father gave him only one walkie talkie - not a ''pair'' of walkie talkies, but literally just ''one'' walkie talkie out of a set. The stinger? He knew it was a useless gift, but gave it to him because Monk doesn't have any friends anyway.

to:

** It was also implied that this trope was at least one of the reasons why Monk hated all the Christmases in his ''life'' barring those during his years with Trudy. In 1964, his father gave him only one walkie talkie - -- not a ''pair'' of walkie talkies, but literally just ''one'' walkie talkie out of a set. The stinger? He knew it was a useless gift, but gave it to him because Monk doesn't have any friends anyway.



* The Scooby Gang on ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' managed to avert the "thoughtless and/or impersonal" part of this trope despite the exigency of circumstances, when rushing to the airport to see Giles off. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in this case - he purposefully didn't tell them he was leaving to prevent a painful goodbye.

to:

* The Scooby Gang on ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' managed to avert the "thoughtless and/or impersonal" part of this trope despite the exigency of circumstances, when rushing to the airport to see Giles off. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in this case - -- he purposefully didn't tell them he was leaving to prevent a painful goodbye.



** A Valentine's Day commercial parody encouraged guys to "give their special someone - some dumb little thing from CVS"
* One episode of ''Series/FullHouse'' had D.J. forgetting best friend Kimmy's birthday because it happens to coincide with D.J.'s anniversary with boyfriend Steve. She appeals to her family for help, and they throw Kimmy a spontaneous surprise birthday party, doing things like using toilet paper for streamers and making the only cake they have on hand - a large pan of hashed brown potatoes. Kimmy is obliviously delighted until she realizes what actually happened.

to:

** A Valentine's Day commercial parody encouraged guys to "give their special someone - -- some dumb little thing from CVS"
* One episode of ''Series/FullHouse'' had D.J. forgetting best friend Kimmy's birthday because it happens to coincide with D.J.'s anniversary with boyfriend Steve. She appeals to her family for help, and they throw Kimmy a spontaneous surprise birthday party, doing things like using toilet paper for streamers and making the only cake they have on hand - -- a large pan of hashed brown potatoes. Kimmy is obliviously delighted until she realizes what actually happened.



* In the WebVideo/CommodoreHustle episode "[[http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/loadingreadyrun/2564-Santa-Secrets Santa Secrets]]", Morgan starts off by telling everyone that he doesn't plan to spend more than $5 on a gift. In the end, everyone ends up at a total loss for what to buy everyone else, so everyone, except Graham and James, gets ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' cards - even Paul, who doesn't play. Graham gets a man-sized stuffed Grim Reaper that terrifies him, and James gets a $2 bag of tokens from a convenience store (which he had expressed interest in earlier in the episode).

to:

* In the WebVideo/CommodoreHustle episode "[[http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/loadingreadyrun/2564-Santa-Secrets Santa Secrets]]", Morgan starts off by telling everyone that he doesn't plan to spend more than $5 on a gift. In the end, everyone ends up at a total loss for what to buy everyone else, so everyone, except Graham and James, gets ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' cards - -- even Paul, who doesn't play. Graham gets a man-sized stuffed Grim Reaper that terrifies him, and James gets a $2 bag of tokens from a convenience store (which he had expressed interest in earlier in the episode).



** Taken to extremes when Cleo gives Abe his own knork - which he had ''created himself'', AND which he had ''thrown out'', so she literally gave him the first thing she found in the trash outside.
** Principal Scudworth, meanwhile, is delighted when the shadowy organization funding the school gives him ... "A toy robotic dog? The perfect present! Clearly expensive, yet something I would never buy for myself. It shows you care but don't really know anything about me - I love it!"

to:

** Taken to extremes when Cleo gives Abe his own knork - -- which he had ''created himself'', AND which he had ''thrown out'', so she literally gave him the first thing she found in the trash outside.
outside.
** Principal Scudworth, meanwhile, is delighted when the shadowy organization funding the school gives him ... "A toy robotic dog? The perfect present! Clearly expensive, yet something I would never buy for myself. It shows you care but don't really know anything about me - -- I love it!"
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


# Gifts clearly chosen with little or no thought about what the recipient might like. This can range from quite nice but not suited to the personality (a pink frilly dress for the {{Tomboy}}) through decent but generic ("everyone's getting Enya [=CDs=] this year; they were on special") to WhatWereYouThinking (dental floss.) Special bonus points if it's obviously just been picked out of the garbage or the neighbor's yard. Even more bonus points if the present is completely useless, harmful, or even spiteful to the recipient (giving a music player to a deaf man, giving a roasted ham to a kosher-keeping Jewish woman, etc.)

to:

# Gifts clearly chosen with little or no thought about what the recipient might like. This can range from quite nice but not suited to the personality (a pink frilly dress for the {{Tomboy}}) through decent but generic ("everyone's getting Enya [=CDs=] this year; they were on special") to WhatWereYouThinking (dental floss.) floss). Special bonus points if it's obviously just been picked out of the garbage or the neighbor's yard. Even more bonus points if the present is completely useless, harmful, or even spiteful to the recipient (giving a music player to a deaf man, giving a roasted ham to a kosher-keeping Jewish woman, etc.)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Often overlaps with MyNewGiftIsLame. If the giver is especially confused they may give a ShoddyKnockoffProduct as part of this trope. The recipient might say "You shouldn't have!" as a result. Contrast CrappyHomemadeGift. See also GiftGivingGaffe. Compare to LastResortTakeout.

to:

Often overlaps with MyNewGiftIsLame. If the giver is especially confused they may give a ShoddyKnockoffProduct as part of this trope. The recipient might say [[UnwantedGiftPlot "You shouldn't have!" have!"]] as a result. Contrast CrappyHomemadeGift. See also GiftGivingGaffe. Compare to LastResortTakeout.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Occurs again in ''Film/AntManAndTheWasp'', when Scott received a trophy from Cassie that reads "World's Best Grandma", because that was the only one available at the store. He loves it and uses it [[spoiler:to hide Hank's spare costume]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Often overlaps with MyNewGiftIsLame. If the giver is especially confused they may give a ShoddyKnockoffProduct as part of this trope. The recipient might say "You shouldn't have!" as a result. Contrast CrappyHomemadeGift. See also GiftGivingGaffe.

to:

Often overlaps with MyNewGiftIsLame. If the giver is especially confused they may give a ShoddyKnockoffProduct as part of this trope. The recipient might say "You shouldn't have!" as a result. Contrast CrappyHomemadeGift. See also GiftGivingGaffe. Compare to LastResortTakeout.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'': In "The Dog And Piggy Show", after acquiring the Dog talisman in the opening, Jackie calls Jade from an airport in Bavaria, Germany, where his flight has been laid over. When Jade tells him that Uncle's birthday is tomorrow, he hurriedly goes into the nearest gift shop and buys a basket of chocolate and cheese. When he returns home, he gives Uncle the basket, but Uncle merely remarks "Chocolate stains my teeth, and cheese makes my... none of your business". Subverted when they find that the chocolates he purchased are seemingly modeled after the pig talisman.

Top