Miami Guns is a parody cop show about... well, we're not sure, actually. All we can say for sure is that it's a 13-episode parody Anime based on a Manga by Takeaki Momose.The story focuses on Sakurakoji Yao and Amano Lu, two cops from a relatively fictional version of Miami City, and the ragtag bunch of misfits they belong to that is the Miami Police Force. Other than that... the show's pretty random with its gags, though manages to stay funny enough to sit through.
Miami Guns provides examples of the following tropes:
Attention Whore: YAO. A good number of incidents pretty much stemmed from her tendency to grab the spotlight.
Battle Butler: Jii, apparently. According to Yao's flashback, he's served in the army, won Oscars, played in a band, been a Buddhist monk - with his hair and sunglasses intact, and a secret service agent. To his credit, the guy is The Ace incarnate, a ladies' man, and according to episode #9, essentially made of iron!
Black Comedy: The fake clip show episode (#2) plays with the tragic death of Yao's mother. Turns out she's making it up.
Episode #2 is a faux-Clip Show presented with footage that never appeared in the series, Though it did throw in some explanations on a few characters (and Miami City's backstory... maybe).
Bleached Underpants: While the original Manga is (supposedly) not Hentai, it's pretty bold with its fanservice. The Anime, in comparison, is milder.
Chief Amano: That idiot girl! I really want to see what kind of creature has it as its child. (cut to Mr. Sakurakoji's room) Mr. Sakurakoji: So, you came to see what kind of creature has Yao as its child? Chief Amano: Uh, no sir. I didn't mean it like that.
The Gunslinger: Julio Peacemaker, the second best gunman in the world.
Episode 1: "How do you watch TV?" "At a distance in a brightly lit room."
Yao's dad is directly channeling the GendoPose. 24/7.
Episode 4
The title is a play on "Mach Go Go Go", or Speed Racer in the West.
It also has CGI car chases, as a Shout Out to Initial D. Not only that, the culprit is the son of a tofu shop owner and an "underground racer", a reference to Fujiwara Takumi, its protagonist.
Episode 6: FBI Special Investigator Bruce Tsuji, the die-hard bomb expert.
The Speechless: Subverted with Mr. Sakurakoji. He speaks all right, but is always in the Gendo Pose that nobody ever sees his mouth. Not once through the series. He even keeps one hand covering his mouth in a hold-up.
Unknown Rival: Nagisa Tojo, the girl who Yao befriends in the girl's school episode. Despite constantly trying to sabotage and betray Yao, Yao unwittingly foils Nagisa's plans. Lu's suspicious, but doesn't do anything about it. Yao eventually reveals that she may have known more about Nagisa than she let on. "She won't do anything wrong -- I won't let her!"
Wire Dilemma: Episode 6's climax scene. Played with, as with many other things.
Whack A Mole: The plot of the Western parody episode (#5), where Lu and Yao join a group of bounty hunters trying to find the mysterious Maria Rose before he/she can kill them all. "Lu" and "Yao" were actually a pair of gunwomen hiding in plain sight as our heroines, without letting the audience in on it.