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[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_twilight_zone_eye_of_the_beholder.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:320: Once unwrapped, she'll enjoy a nice TomatoSurprise.]]

->'''Creator/RodSerling''': Suspended in time and space for a moment, your introduction to Miss Janet Tyler, who lives in a very private world of darkness. A universe whose dimensions are the size, thickness, length of the swath of bandages that cover her face. In a moment we will go back into this room, and also in a moment we will look under those bandages. Keeping in mind of course that we are not to be surprised by what we see, for this isn't just a hospital, and this patient 307 is not just a woman. This happens to be the Twilight Zone, and Miss Janet Tyler, with you, is about to enter it.

Air date: November 11, 1960

Janet Tyler, a young woman born with a hidesously disfigured appearance, is confined to a hospital, her face wrapped in bandages as she awaits the outcome of her latest medical procedure. This procedure is her eleventh thus far, and is also the last attempt to correct her appearance that her society will allow. If it fails, she will be forced to spend the rest of her life in a village full of similar "freaks". The result of the medication isn't what Janet expects, but it teaches her and the hospital staff that beauty is simply in the eye of the beholder.
----
!! Tropes of the Beholder:
* AmbiguousSituation: Rod Serling's ending narration raises the questions of what this world is, where it's supposed to be, and why it is what it is, before saying that the answers make no difference.
* AnAesop: Beauty is relative, and we should accept people for who they are instead of how they look.
* BandagedFace: Janet, until the end of the episode.
* BigBrotherIsWatching: When the doctor wonders aloud why Janet and others with her deformity can't simply be allowed to be different, the nurse warns him to be careful, as what he's talking about is considered treasonous.
* BittersweetEnding: Janet is unsuccessful in getting her face fixed, but she's allowed to live in a community of people who share her "deformity". At the very least, she'll be happy not to be alone anymore.
* BrokenAesop: Not within the episode, but real-life merchandise based on it tends to feature the medical staff as gruesome ghouls intent on mutilating a beautiful woman... ''just because they're ugly to us''. In the episode itself, it's made clear that in this world, Janet's appearance is considered horrific and terrifying, and the intention of the medical procedures is to repair a deformity in order to make her look normal, just as any real-world doctor might do. It just ''seems'' wrong to the viewer because the standard of what's "normal" and what's "deformed" is reversed from the human norm. Furthermore, there's clearly no malice involved whatsoever; the doctors and nurses are compassionate and worried about what will happen to Janet if her operation is unsuccessful, and in the end, they're deeply saddened by her having to live with what is, in-universe, a permanent and terrible deformity in a society that ''legally'' persecutes disfigured people. One of the doctors even has tears in his eyes as he watches her leave.
* CrapsackWorld: The episode is set in a kind of fascist state where the Leader goes on rants about how there is only one standard for behavior, and everyone must conform to it under threat of severe consequences. Anyone who doesn't fit the Leader's standards for physical appearance, for example, will be banished to distant villages for "freaks", as we hear him rant about "glorious conformity". Say what you will about American beauty standards, but at least we don't ''drive people into exile'' for falling short. And if all that isn't bad enough, the doctor makes a reference to the "extermination of undesirables", and raises the possibility that this might happen to Janet.
* DarkAndTroubledPast: While laid up in bed, Janet talks about how her earliest memory is someone screaming in terror over seeing her face.
* DramaticDrop: The doctor drops his scissors as he says "no change at all" following Janet's unveiling.
* EmergingFromTheShadows: The doctors do this when they reveal this mystery society's difference in beauty standards.
* TheFaceless: Everyone (excluding Rod Serling) until the last few minutes.
* {{Foreshadowing}}: The fact that the near-entirety of the episode is carefully filmed not to show the doctor and nurses' faces suggests that something's being hidden about their looks.
* HopeSpot: Janet is coming off the last procedure she is allowed before being exiled to a distant village. She spends her recovery so desperately hoping to be considered normal at long last, so she is crushed when the surgery fails like the others did.
* IAmNotPretty: Being as "hideous" as she is, Janet remembers hearing a child scream at seeing her face, and when she sees that her medical procedure has failed, she bursts into tears.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: Janet has had 10 previous procedures over the years to try and fix her face. The episode concerns the last one she's legally permitted to have before being sent away to a community of "freaks". She tells a nurse tending to her that she never wanted to be beautiful, only for people to not scream in horror when they looked at her.
* {{Irony}}: Janet's panicked run through the hospital ends up taking her right to Walter Smith, a representative of the community she'll be sent to. The main doctor comments on the oddity of this turn of events.
* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times she receives medical treatment for her deformity. The doctor explains that her unique bone structure won't allow him or his nurses to surgically change it, so they're forced to try to cure her with medications and shots, to which she proves unresponsive.
* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: While the faces of "normal" people look sort of like pigs (to us, anyways), the male faces are biased to the right while the females are to the left.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: The Leader is based on UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler. In his speeches, he continually stresses the importance of ensuring "glorious conformity", abiding by a single norm, proclaiming about how all that is different must be cut out like a cancerous filth, as differences weaken the state.
* NothingIsScarier: Janet's face isn't revealed till the end of the episode, but everyone keeps talking about how horrible and nauseating it is.
* PersecutionFlip: On a meta level. To us, the viewers, this episode is about a world where our idea of beauty is seen as so freakish it's socially disabling. In-universe, Janet has a severely disturbing facial deformity, and has had it since she was born.
* ReleasedToElsewhere: Janet evokes this just before her bandages are taken off, asking the doctor if instead of being sent to live in a community of other deformed people, she can be "put away" if her treatment hasn't worked. The doctor replies that while the state sometimes permits "extermination of undesirables," it wouldn't be allowed for Janet due to her young age and record of good health apart from her disability.
* TheReveal: Janet is strikingly beautiful. It's ''everyone else'' who's ugly. (From ''our'' perspective, anyway.)
* SceneryCensor: When the nurse enters the doctor's office, her face is hidden by a desk lamp. For the rest of that scene the doctor's face is hidden by placing the camera directly behind the nurse.
* ShutUpHannibal: PlayedForDrama. While Janet is running throughout the hospital in devastation, the televisions in the halls broadcast the Leader's speech to the state about conformity. At one point, Janet is facing a particularly giant screen. She throws an object at the screen to break it, not out of defiance, but emotional duress, because it reminds her too much of how she'll never fit in.
* SympathyForTheHero: The doctors and nurses have nothing but sympathy for Janet and her "condition". At the end, when Janet is taken to the community, they all have looks of pity and sadness on their faces, devastated that they couldn't help her.
* TitleDrop: Near the end of the episode, Walter Smith, a representative from the "freak" community Janet is being sent to, teaches her about a very old saying: "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder."
* TomatoSurprise: One of the most famous examples. As it turns out, Janet is actually conventionally beautiful... to us. In ''this'' world, she's as disfigured and hideous as we perceive the "normal" doctors and staff. When she meets Walter, who will take her to the community of people like her, she screams in horror, just like she described children reacting to her face.[[note]]Sadly, truth in television- many disabled or disfigured people have a difficult time with other disabled or disfigured people who have different conditions than themselves, and occasionally even people with the same condition. It's not hypocrisy, only a result of being brought up with the same standards as people who don't fall on the wrong side of them.[[/note]].
* WhamShot:
** After we're told that Janet's last procedure has had no effect, we finally get to see her face... and it's that of a beautiful woman.
** As Janet has a FreakOut over continuing to look "ugly", the doctor has the lights turned on and turns to a nurse to ask for a sedative needle... revealing that he looks like a cross between a caveman and a pig.
----
-->'''Creator/RodSerling''': Now the questions that come to mind: "Where is this place, and when is it?" "What kind of world where ugliness is the norm, and beauty the deviation from that norm?" You want an answer? The answer is: it doesn't make any difference, because the old saying happens to be true. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. In this year or a hundred years hence. On this planet or wherever there is human life, perhaps out amongst the stars. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Lesson to be learned in the Twilight Zone.

to:

[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_twilight_zone_eye_of_the_beholder.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:320: Once unwrapped, she'll enjoy a nice TomatoSurprise.]]

->'''Creator/RodSerling''': Suspended in time and space for a moment, your introduction to Miss Janet Tyler, who lives in a very private world of darkness. A universe whose dimensions are the size, thickness, length of the swath of bandages that cover her face. In a moment we will go back into this room, and also in a moment we will look under those bandages. Keeping in mind of course that we are not to be surprised by what we see, for this isn't just a hospital, and this patient 307 is not just a woman. This happens to be the Twilight Zone, and Miss Janet Tyler, with you, is about to enter it.

Air date: November 11, 1960

Janet Tyler, a young woman born with a hidesously disfigured appearance, is confined to a hospital, her face wrapped in bandages as she awaits the outcome of her latest medical procedure. This procedure is her eleventh thus far, and is also the last attempt to correct her appearance that her society will allow. If it fails, she will be forced to spend the rest of her life in a village full of similar "freaks". The result of the medication isn't what Janet expects, but it teaches her and the hospital staff that beauty is simply in the eye of the beholder.
----
!! Tropes of the Beholder:
* AmbiguousSituation: Rod Serling's ending narration raises the questions of what this world is, where it's supposed to be, and why it is what it is, before saying that the answers make no difference.
* AnAesop: Beauty is relative, and we should accept people for who they are instead of how they look.
* BandagedFace: Janet, until the end of the episode.
* BigBrotherIsWatching: When the doctor wonders aloud why Janet and others with her deformity can't simply be allowed to be different, the nurse warns him to be careful, as what he's talking about is considered treasonous.
* BittersweetEnding: Janet is unsuccessful in getting her face fixed, but she's allowed to live in a community of people who share her "deformity". At the very least, she'll be happy not to be alone anymore.
* BrokenAesop: Not within the episode, but real-life merchandise based on it tends to feature the medical staff as gruesome ghouls intent on mutilating a beautiful woman... ''just because they're ugly to us''. In the episode itself, it's made clear that in this world, Janet's appearance is considered horrific and terrifying, and the intention of the medical procedures is to repair a deformity in order to make her look normal, just as any real-world doctor might do. It just ''seems'' wrong to the viewer because the standard of what's "normal" and what's "deformed" is reversed from the human norm. Furthermore, there's clearly no malice involved whatsoever; the doctors and nurses are compassionate and worried about what will happen to Janet if her operation is unsuccessful, and in the end, they're deeply saddened by her having to live with what is, in-universe, a permanent and terrible deformity in a society that ''legally'' persecutes disfigured people. One of the doctors even has tears in his eyes as he watches her leave.
* CrapsackWorld: The episode is set in a kind of fascist state where the Leader goes on rants about how there is only one standard for behavior, and everyone must conform to it under threat of severe consequences. Anyone who doesn't fit the Leader's standards for physical appearance, for example, will be banished to distant villages for "freaks", as we hear him rant about "glorious conformity". Say what you will about American beauty standards, but at least we don't ''drive people into exile'' for falling short. And if all that isn't bad enough, the doctor makes a reference to the "extermination of undesirables", and raises the possibility that this might happen to Janet.
* DarkAndTroubledPast: While laid up in bed, Janet talks about how her earliest memory is someone screaming in terror over seeing her face.
* DramaticDrop: The doctor drops his scissors as he says "no change at all" following Janet's unveiling.
* EmergingFromTheShadows: The doctors do this when they reveal this mystery society's difference in beauty standards.
* TheFaceless: Everyone (excluding Rod Serling) until the last few minutes.
* {{Foreshadowing}}: The fact that the near-entirety of the episode is carefully filmed not to show the doctor and nurses' faces suggests that something's being hidden about their looks.
* HopeSpot: Janet is coming off the last procedure she is allowed before being exiled to a distant village. She spends her recovery so desperately hoping to be considered normal at long last, so she is crushed when the surgery fails like the others did.
* IAmNotPretty: Being as "hideous" as she is, Janet remembers hearing a child scream at seeing her face, and when she sees that her medical procedure has failed, she bursts into tears.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: Janet has had 10 previous procedures over the years to try and fix her face. The episode concerns the last one she's legally permitted to have before being sent away to a community of "freaks". She tells a nurse tending to her that she never wanted to be beautiful, only for people to not scream in horror when they looked at her.
* {{Irony}}: Janet's panicked run through the hospital ends up taking her right to Walter Smith, a representative of the community she'll be sent to. The main doctor comments on the oddity of this turn of events.
* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times she receives medical treatment for her deformity. The doctor explains that her unique bone structure won't allow him or his nurses to surgically change it, so they're forced to try to cure her with medications and shots, to which she proves unresponsive.
* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: While the faces of "normal" people look sort of like pigs (to us, anyways), the male faces are biased to the right while the females are to the left.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: The Leader is based on UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler. In his speeches, he continually stresses the importance of ensuring "glorious conformity", abiding by a single norm, proclaiming about how all that is different must be cut out like a cancerous filth, as differences weaken the state.
* NothingIsScarier: Janet's face isn't revealed till the end of the episode, but everyone keeps talking about how horrible and nauseating it is.
* PersecutionFlip: On a meta level. To us, the viewers, this episode is about a world where our idea of beauty is seen as so freakish it's socially disabling. In-universe, Janet has a severely disturbing facial deformity, and has had it since she was born.
* ReleasedToElsewhere: Janet evokes this just before her bandages are taken off, asking the doctor if instead of being sent to live in a community of other deformed people, she can be "put away" if her treatment hasn't worked. The doctor replies that while the state sometimes permits "extermination of undesirables," it wouldn't be allowed for Janet due to her young age and record of good health apart from her disability.
* TheReveal: Janet is strikingly beautiful. It's ''everyone else'' who's ugly. (From ''our'' perspective, anyway.)
* SceneryCensor: When the nurse enters the doctor's office, her face is hidden by a desk lamp. For the rest of that scene the doctor's face is hidden by placing the camera directly behind the nurse.
* ShutUpHannibal: PlayedForDrama. While Janet is running throughout the hospital in devastation, the televisions in the halls broadcast the Leader's speech to the state about conformity. At one point, Janet is facing a particularly giant screen. She throws an object at the screen to break it, not out of defiance, but emotional duress, because it reminds her too much of how she'll never fit in.
* SympathyForTheHero: The doctors and nurses have nothing but sympathy for Janet and her "condition". At the end, when Janet is taken to the community, they all have looks of pity and sadness on their faces, devastated that they couldn't help her.
* TitleDrop: Near the end of the episode, Walter Smith, a representative from the "freak" community Janet is being sent to, teaches her about a very old saying: "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder."
* TomatoSurprise: One of the most famous examples. As it turns out, Janet is actually conventionally beautiful... to us. In ''this'' world, she's as disfigured and hideous as we perceive the "normal" doctors and staff. When she meets Walter, who will take her to the community of people like her, she screams in horror, just like she described children reacting to her face.[[note]]Sadly, truth in television- many disabled or disfigured people have a difficult time with other disabled or disfigured people who have different conditions than themselves, and occasionally even people with the same condition. It's not hypocrisy, only a result of being brought up with the same standards as people who don't fall on the wrong side of them.[[/note]].
* WhamShot:
** After we're told that Janet's last procedure has had no effect, we finally get to see her face... and it's that of a beautiful woman.
** As Janet has a FreakOut over continuing to look "ugly", the doctor has the lights turned on and turns to a nurse to ask for a sedative needle... revealing that he looks like a cross between a caveman and a pig.
----
-->'''Creator/RodSerling''': Now the questions that come to mind: "Where is this place, and when is it?" "What kind of world where ugliness is the norm, and beauty the deviation from that norm?" You want an answer? The answer is: it doesn't make any difference, because the old saying happens to be true. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. In this year or a hundred years hence. On this planet or wherever there is human life, perhaps out amongst the stars. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Lesson to be learned in the Twilight Zone.
[[redirect:Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S2E6TheEyeOfTheBeholder]]
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Added DiffLines:

* ReleasedToElsewhere: Janet evokes this just before her bandages are taken off, asking the doctor if instead of being sent to live in a community of other deformed people, she can be "put away" if her treatment hasn't worked. The doctor replies that while the state sometimes permits "extermination of undesirables," it wouldn't be allowed for Janet due to her young age and record of good health apart from her disability.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Janet's procedures to cure her deformity aren't surgical. They consist of medicines, shots, and other unspecified techniques. The doctor explains that her specific deformity can't be corrected with surgery.


Janet Tyler, a young woman born with a hidesously disfigured appearance, is confined to a hospital, her face wrapped in bandages as she awaits the outcome of her latest operation. This operation is her eleventh thus far, and is also the last attempt to correct her appearance that her society will allow. If it fails, she will be forced to spend the rest of her life in a village full of similar "freaks". The result of the operation isn't what Janet expects, but it teaches her and the hospital staff that beauty is simply in the eye of the beholder.

to:

Janet Tyler, a young woman born with a hidesously disfigured appearance, is confined to a hospital, her face wrapped in bandages as she awaits the outcome of her latest operation. medical procedure. This operation procedure is her eleventh thus far, and is also the last attempt to correct her appearance that her society will allow. If it fails, she will be forced to spend the rest of her life in a village full of similar "freaks". The result of the operation medication isn't what Janet expects, but it teaches her and the hospital staff that beauty is simply in the eye of the beholder.



* HopeSpot: Janet is coming off the last surgery she is allowed before being exiled to a distant village. She spends her recovery so desperately hoping to be considered normal at long last, so she is crushed when the surgery fails like the others did.
* IAmNotPretty: Being as "hideous" as she is, Janet remembers hearing a child scream at seeing her face, and when she sees that her operation has failed, she bursts into tears.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: Janet has had 10 previous surgeries over the years to try and fix her face. The episode concerns the last one she's legally permitted to have before being sent away to a community of "freaks". She tells a nurse tending to her that she never wanted to be beautiful, only for people to not scream in horror when they looked at her.

to:

* HopeSpot: Janet is coming off the last surgery procedure she is allowed before being exiled to a distant village. She spends her recovery so desperately hoping to be considered normal at long last, so she is crushed when the surgery fails like the others did.
* IAmNotPretty: Being as "hideous" as she is, Janet remembers hearing a child scream at seeing her face, and when she sees that her operation medical procedure has failed, she bursts into tears.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: Janet has had 10 previous surgeries procedures over the years to try and fix her face. The episode concerns the last one she's legally permitted to have before being sent away to a community of "freaks". She tells a nurse tending to her that she never wanted to be beautiful, only for people to not scream in horror when they looked at her.



* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times it's surgically altered. The doctor explains that her unique bone structure won't allow him or his nurses to change it.

to:

* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times it's surgically altered. she receives medical treatment for her deformity. The doctor explains that her unique bone structure won't allow him or his nurses to surgically change it.it, so they're forced to try to cure her with medications and shots, to which she proves unresponsive.



** After we're told that Janet's last surgery has had no effect, we finally get to see her face... and it's that of a beautiful woman.

to:

** After we're told that Janet's last surgery procedure has had no effect, we finally get to see her face... and it's that of a beautiful woman.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* DarkAndTroubledPast: While laid up in bed, Janet talks about how her earliest memory is someone screaming in terror over seeing her face.


Added DiffLines:

* HopeSpot: Janet is coming off the last surgery she is allowed before being exiled to a distant village. She spends her recovery so desperately hoping to be considered normal at long last, so she is crushed when the surgery fails like the others did.


Added DiffLines:

* {{Irony}}: Janet's panicked run through the hospital ends up taking her right to Walter Smith, a representative of the community she'll be sent to. The main doctor comments on the oddity of this turn of events.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


A woman, Janet Tyler, is confined in a hospital, her face wrapped in bandages as she awaits the outcome of an operation. This operation, the last allowed after multiple experimental treatments for her condition, is the only thing that might allow her to live in normal society, rather than being sent to a village of "freaks".

to:

A woman, Janet Tyler, a young woman born with a hidesously disfigured appearance, is confined in to a hospital, her face wrapped in bandages as she awaits the outcome of an her latest operation. This operation, operation is her eleventh thus far, and is also the last allowed after multiple experimental treatments for attempt to correct her condition, is the only thing appearance that might allow her society will allow. If it fails, she will be forced to live spend the rest of her life in normal society, rather than being sent to a village full of "freaks".similar "freaks". The result of the operation isn't what Janet expects, but it teaches her and the hospital staff that beauty is simply in the eye of the beholder.



!! The Tropes of the Beholder:
* AmbiguousSituation: Rod Serling's ending narration raises the questions of this world and why it is, before saying the answers make no difference.
* AnAesop: Beauty is relative, and we should accept people as they are.
* BandagedFace: Miss Tyler, until the end of the episode.
* BigBrotherIsWatching: When the doctor wonders aloud why Janet Tyler and the others with her deformity can't simply be allowed to be different, the nurse warns him to be careful as he is speaking treason.
* BittersweetEnding: Janet is unsuccessful in getting her face fixed. But is allowed to live in a community of people who also share her "deformity". Where, presumably at least, she'll be happy.
* BrokenAesop: Not within the episode, anyway, but in real life merchandise based on this episode tends to feature the medical staff as gruesome ghouls intent on mutilating a beautiful woman... ''just because they're ugly to us''. In the episode itself, it's made clear that in this world, her appearance is considered horrific and terrifying, and the intention of the medical procedures is to repair a deformity in order to make her look more normal, just as any real-world doctor might do -- it just ''seems'' wrong to the viewer because the standard of what's "normal" and what's a "deformity" is reversed from the human norm. Furthermore, there's clearly no malice involved whatsoever; the doctors and nurses are compassionate and worried about what will happen to Janet if her operation is unsuccessful, and in the end, they're deeply saddened by her having to live with what is, in-universe, a permanent and terrible deformity, in a society that ''legally'' persecutes disfigured people. One of the doctors has tears in his eyes as he watches her leave.
* CrapsackWorld: The episode is set in some kind of fascist state where the Leader goes on rants about how there is only one standard for behavior and everyone must conform to it. Anyone who doesn't fit the Leader's appearance standards gets banished to distant villages for "freaks". We hear him rant about "glorious conformity". Say what you will about American beauty standards, at least we don't ''drive people out'' for falling short. And if all that isn't bad enough, the doctor makes a reference to the "extermination of undesirables" and raises at least the possibility that this might happen to Janet.
* DramaticDrop: The doctor drops his scissors as he says "no change at all!" following Janet's unveiling.
* EmergingFromTheShadows: The doctors do this when they reveal the difference in beauty standards.

to:

!! The Tropes of the Beholder:
* AmbiguousSituation: Rod Serling's ending narration raises the questions of what this world is, where it's supposed to be, and why it is what it is, before saying that the answers make no difference.
* AnAesop: Beauty is relative, and we should accept people as for who they are.
are instead of how they look.
* BandagedFace: Miss Tyler, Janet, until the end of the episode.
* BigBrotherIsWatching: When the doctor wonders aloud why Janet Tyler and the others with her deformity can't simply be allowed to be different, the nurse warns him to be careful careful, as he what he's talking about is speaking treason.
considered treasonous.
* BittersweetEnding: Janet is unsuccessful in getting her face fixed. But is fixed, but she's allowed to live in a community of people who also share her "deformity". Where, presumably at At the very least, she'll be happy.
happy not to be alone anymore.
* BrokenAesop: Not within the episode, anyway, but in real life real-life merchandise based on this episode it tends to feature the medical staff as gruesome ghouls intent on mutilating a beautiful woman... ''just because they're ugly to us''. In the episode itself, it's made clear that in this world, her Janet's appearance is considered horrific and terrifying, and the intention of the medical procedures is to repair a deformity in order to make her look more normal, just as any real-world doctor might do -- it do. It just ''seems'' wrong to the viewer because the standard of what's "normal" and what's a "deformity" "deformed" is reversed from the human norm. Furthermore, there's clearly no malice involved whatsoever; the doctors and nurses are compassionate and worried about what will happen to Janet if her operation is unsuccessful, and in the end, they're deeply saddened by her having to live with what is, in-universe, a permanent and terrible deformity, deformity in a society that ''legally'' persecutes disfigured people. One of the doctors even has tears in his eyes as he watches her leave.
* CrapsackWorld: The episode is set in some a kind of fascist state where the Leader goes on rants about how there is only one standard for behavior behavior, and everyone must conform to it. it under threat of severe consequences. Anyone who doesn't fit the Leader's appearance standards gets for physical appearance, for example, will be banished to distant villages for "freaks". We "freaks", as we hear him rant about "glorious conformity". Say what you will about American beauty standards, but at least we don't ''drive people out'' into exile'' for falling short. And if all that isn't bad enough, the doctor makes a reference to the "extermination of undesirables" undesirables", and raises at least the possibility that this might happen to Janet.
* DramaticDrop: The doctor drops his scissors as he says "no change at all!" all" following Janet's unveiling.
* EmergingFromTheShadows: The doctors do this when they reveal the this mystery society's difference in beauty standards.



* {{Foreshadowing}}: The fact that it's carefully filmed to not show the doctor and nurses' faces suggests something's being hidden about their looks.
* IAmNotPretty: Janet remembers such things as hearing a child scream at seeing her face, and when she sees that the operation has failed, she bursts into tears.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: Janet Tyler has had 10 previous surgeries over the years to try and fix her face. The episode concerns the last one she's allowed to have before being sent away to a community. She tells the nurse that she never wanted to be beautiful, only for people not to scream when they looked at her.
* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times they try to alter it. The doctor explains that her bone structure won't allow them to change it.
* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: While all the "normal" faces look sort of like pigs (to us, anyways), all of the male faces are biased to the right while all the females are to the left.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: The Leader is based on UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler. In his speech, he continually stresses the importance of ensuring "glorious conformity" and abiding by a single norm. He says that all that is different must be cut out like a cancerous filth as differences weaken the state.
* NothingIsScarier: Miss Tyler's face isn't actually revealed till the end of the episode, but everyone keeps talking about how horrible it is.
* PersecutionFlip: On a meta level, anyway. To us, the viewers, this is about a world where our idea of great beauty is seen as so freakish it's socially disabling- but in-universe, Janet has a severe, disturbing facial deformity from birth.
* TheReveal: Janet is strikingly beautiful -- it's ''everyone else'' who is ugly. (From ''our'' perspective, anyway.)

to:

* {{Foreshadowing}}: The fact that it's the near-entirety of the episode is carefully filmed to not to show the doctor and nurses' faces suggests that something's being hidden about their looks.
* IAmNotPretty: Being as "hideous" as she is, Janet remembers such things as hearing a child scream at seeing her face, and when she sees that the her operation has failed, she bursts into tears.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: Janet Tyler has had 10 previous surgeries over the years to try and fix her face. The episode concerns the last one she's allowed legally permitted to have before being sent away to a community. community of "freaks". She tells the a nurse tending to her that she never wanted to be beautiful, only for people to not to scream in horror when they looked at her.
* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times they try to alter it. it's surgically altered. The doctor explains that her unique bone structure won't allow them him or his nurses to change it.
* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: While all the faces of "normal" faces people look sort of like pigs (to us, anyways), all of the male faces are biased to the right while all the females are to the left.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: The Leader is based on UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler. In his speech, speeches, he continually stresses the importance of ensuring "glorious conformity" and conformity", abiding by a single norm. He says that norm, proclaiming about how all that is different must be cut out like a cancerous filth filth, as differences weaken the state.
* NothingIsScarier: Miss Tyler's Janet's face isn't actually revealed till the end of the episode, but everyone keeps talking about how horrible and nauseating it is.
* PersecutionFlip: On a meta level, anyway. level. To us, the viewers, this episode is about a world where our idea of great beauty is seen as so freakish it's socially disabling- but in-universe, disabling. In-universe, Janet has a severe, severely disturbing facial deformity from birth.
deformity, and has had it since she was born.
* TheReveal: Janet is strikingly beautiful -- it's beautiful. It's ''everyone else'' who is who's ugly. (From ''our'' perspective, anyway.)



* ShutUpHannibal: PlayedForDrama. When Janet is running throughout the hospital in devastation, all the while, the televisions in the hospital are broadcasting the Chancellor's speech to the state about conformity. At one point, Janet is facing one such giant television screen. She throws an object at the screen to turn it off, not out of defiance, but rather out of the emotional duress that it reminds her too much how she'll never fit in.
* SympathyForTheHero: Downplayed as they aren't really bad guys but the doctors and nurses have nothing but sympathy for Janet and her 'condition.' At the end, when Janet is taken to the community, you can see the looks of pity and sadness on their faces, seemingly very saddened that they couldn't help her.
* TitleDrop: Near the end of the episode, Walter Smith, a representative from the "freak" community, tells Janet that there is a very old saying: "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder."
* TomatoSurprise: One of the most famous examples of this trope. As it turns out, Janet is actually conventionally beautiful. To us, anyway. In ''this'' world, she's as disfigured and hideous as we perceive the "normal" doctors and staff. And, when she meets Mr. Smith, who will take her to the community of people like her, she has a minor freak-out, just like she described children reacting to her[[note]]Sadly, truth in television- many disabled or disfigured people have a difficult time with other disabled or disfigured people who have different conditions than themselves, and occasionally even people with the same condition. It's not hypocrisy, it's simply a result of being brought up with the same standards as people who don't fall on the wrong side of them.[[/note]].

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* ShutUpHannibal: PlayedForDrama. When While Janet is running throughout the hospital in devastation, all the while, the televisions in the hospital are broadcasting halls broadcast the Chancellor's Leader's speech to the state about conformity. At one point, Janet is facing one such a particularly giant television screen. She throws an object at the screen to turn it off, break it, not out of defiance, but rather out of the emotional duress that duress, because it reminds her too much of how she'll never fit in.
* SympathyForTheHero: Downplayed as they aren't really bad guys but the The doctors and nurses have nothing but sympathy for Janet and her 'condition.' "condition". At the end, when Janet is taken to the community, you can see the they all have looks of pity and sadness on their faces, seemingly very saddened devastated that they couldn't help her.
* TitleDrop: Near the end of the episode, Walter Smith, a representative from the "freak" community, tells community Janet that there is being sent to, teaches her about a very old saying: "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder."
* TomatoSurprise: One of the most famous examples of this trope. examples. As it turns out, Janet is actually conventionally beautiful. To us, anyway.beautiful... to us. In ''this'' world, she's as disfigured and hideous as we perceive the "normal" doctors and staff. And, when When she meets Mr. Smith, Walter, who will take her to the community of people like her, she has a minor freak-out, screams in horror, just like she described children reacting to her[[note]]Sadly, her face.[[note]]Sadly, truth in television- many disabled or disfigured people have a difficult time with other disabled or disfigured people who have different conditions than themselves, and occasionally even people with the same condition. It's not hypocrisy, it's simply only a result of being brought up with the same standards as people who don't fall on the wrong side of them.[[/note]].



** After we're told Janet's last surgery had no effect, we finally get to see her face... and it's that of a human's...
** As Janet has a FreakOut over continuing to look "ugly", the doctor has the lights turned on and turns to a nurse to ask for the sedative needle... revealing he looks somewhere between a caveman and a pig.

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** After we're told that Janet's last surgery has had no effect, we finally get to see her face... and it's that of a human's...
beautiful woman.
** As Janet has a FreakOut over continuing to look "ugly", the doctor has the lights turned on and turns to a nurse to ask for the a sedative needle... revealing that he looks somewhere like a cross between a caveman and a pig.



-->'''Creator/RodSerling''': Now the questions that come to mind: "Where is this place and when is it?" "What kind of world where ugliness is the norm and beauty the deviation from that norm?" You want an answer? The answer is it doesn't make any difference because the old saying happens to be true. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. In this year or a hundred years hence. On this planet or wherever there is human life, perhaps out amongst the stars. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Lesson to be learned in the Twilight Zone.

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-->'''Creator/RodSerling''': Now the questions that come to mind: "Where is this place place, and when is it?" "What kind of world where ugliness is the norm norm, and beauty the deviation from that norm?" You want an answer? The answer is is: it doesn't make any difference difference, because the old saying happens to be true. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. In this year or a hundred years hence. On this planet or wherever there is human life, perhaps out amongst the stars. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Lesson to be learned in the Twilight Zone.
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* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times they try to alter it.

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* MagicPlasticSurgery: Inverted. Janet's face stays beautiful no matter how many times they try to alter it. The doctor explains that her bone structure won't allow them to change it.
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* BrokenAesop: Not within the episode, anyway, but in real life merchandise based on this episode tends to feature the medical staff as gruesome ghouls intent on mutilating a beautiful woman... ''just because they're ugly to us''. In the episode itself, the doctors and nurses are compassionate and worried about what will happen to Janet if her operation is unsuccessful- in the end, they're deeply saddened by her having to live with what is, in-universe, a permanent and terrible deformity, in a society that ''legally'' persecutes disfigured people. One of the doctors has tears in his eyes as he watches her leave.

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* BrokenAesop: Not within the episode, anyway, but in real life merchandise based on this episode tends to feature the medical staff as gruesome ghouls intent on mutilating a beautiful woman... ''just because they're ugly to us''. In the episode itself, it's made clear that in this world, her appearance is considered horrific and terrifying, and the intention of the medical procedures is to repair a deformity in order to make her look more normal, just as any real-world doctor might do -- it just ''seems'' wrong to the viewer because the standard of what's "normal" and what's a "deformity" is reversed from the human norm. Furthermore, there's clearly no malice involved whatsoever; the doctors and nurses are compassionate and worried about what will happen to Janet if her operation is unsuccessful- unsuccessful, and in the end, they're deeply saddened by her having to live with what is, in-universe, a permanent and terrible deformity, in a society that ''legally'' persecutes disfigured people. One of the doctors has tears in his eyes as he watches her leave.
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None

Added DiffLines:

* ShutUpHannibal: PlayedForDrama. When Janet is running throughout the hospital in devastation, all the while, the televisions in the hospital are broadcasting the Chancellor's speech to the state about conformity. At one point, Janet is facing one such giant television screen. She throws an object at the screen to turn it off, not out of defiance, but rather out of the emotional duress that it reminds her too much how she'll never fit in.
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None


* ScienceMarchesOn: We get a glimpse of some of the nurses and doctors smoking cigarettes in the hospital hallways. At the time, the dangers of secondhand smoke weren't nearly as well-known as they are today.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* BrokenAesop: Not within the episode, anyway, but in real life merchandise based on this episode tends to feature the medical staff as gruesome ghouls intent on mutilating a beautiful woman... ''just because they're ugly to us''. In the episode itself, the doctors and nurses are compassionate and worried about what will happen to Janet if her operation is unsuccessful- in the end, they're deeply saddened by her having to live with what is, in-universe, a permanent and terrible deformity, in a society that ''legally'' persecutes disfigured people. One of the doctors has tears in his eyes as he watches her leave.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CrapsackWorld: The pig-people live in some kind of fascist state where the Leader goes on rants about how there is only one standard for behavior and everyone must conform to it. Anyone who doesn't fit the Leader's appearance standards gets banished to distant villages for "freaks". We hear him rant about "glorious conformity". Say what you will about American beauty standards, at least we don't ''drive people out'' for falling short. And if all that isn't bad enough, the doctor makes a reference to the "extermination of undesirables" and raises at least the possibility that this might happen to Janet.

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* CrapsackWorld: The pig-people live episode is set in some kind of fascist state where the Leader goes on rants about how there is only one standard for behavior and everyone must conform to it. Anyone who doesn't fit the Leader's appearance standards gets banished to distant villages for "freaks". We hear him rant about "glorious conformity". Say what you will about American beauty standards, at least we don't ''drive people out'' for falling short. And if all that isn't bad enough, the doctor makes a reference to the "extermination of undesirables" and raises at least the possibility that this might happen to Janet.



* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: While all the "normal" faces look like pigs (to us, anyways), all of the male faces are biased to the right while all the females are to the left.

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* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: While all the "normal" faces look sort of like pigs (to us, anyways), all of the male faces are biased to the right while all the females are to the left.



* PersecutionFlip: Looking beautiful is horrifying in this world.
* TheReveal: Janet is strikingly beautiful -- it's ''everyone else'' who is ugly. From ''our'' perspective, anyway.

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* PersecutionFlip: Looking beautiful is horrifying in On a meta level, anyway. To us, the viewers, this world.
is about a world where our idea of great beauty is seen as so freakish it's socially disabling- but in-universe, Janet has a severe, disturbing facial deformity from birth.
* TheReveal: Janet is strikingly beautiful -- it's ''everyone else'' who is ugly. From (From ''our'' perspective, anyway.)



* TomatoSurprise: One of the most famous examples of this trope. As it turns out, Janet is actually conventionally beautiful. To us, anyway. In ''this'' world, she's as disfigured and hideous as we perceive the "normal" doctors and staff. And, when she meets Mr. Smith, who will take her to the community of people like her, she has a minor freak-out, just like she described children reacting to her.

to:

* TomatoSurprise: One of the most famous examples of this trope. As it turns out, Janet is actually conventionally beautiful. To us, anyway. In ''this'' world, she's as disfigured and hideous as we perceive the "normal" doctors and staff. And, when she meets Mr. Smith, who will take her to the community of people like her, she has a minor freak-out, just like she described children reacting to her.her[[note]]Sadly, truth in television- many disabled or disfigured people have a difficult time with other disabled or disfigured people who have different conditions than themselves, and occasionally even people with the same condition. It's not hypocrisy, it's simply a result of being brought up with the same standards as people who don't fall on the wrong side of them.[[/note]].



** As Janet has a FreakOut over continuing to look "ugly", the doctor has the lights turned on and turns to a nurse to ask for the sedative needle... revealing he looks like a pig.

to:

** As Janet has a FreakOut over continuing to look "ugly", the doctor has the lights turned on and turns to a nurse to ask for the sedative needle... revealing he looks like somewhere between a caveman and a pig.

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