The line was used as an Insistent Terminology joke the the first time, so isn't it likely that the writers wanted to make a combined Funny and Awesome moment when they used it for the second time? The entry read like a complaint about a joke that some troper didn't like.
Edited by 88.91.157.174
I deleted this bullet:
- The Princess And The Frog: Quick question; a mad witch-doctor has you pinned to the ground and transformed into a frog, has all but won the plot, and is gloating about how, had you taken his previous offer, you wouldn't remain a slimey frog all your life. But you have a plan to take him down. What is your pre-asskicking one-liner? If you answered; "It's not slime, it's mucus!" as a reference to an earlier inside joke which wasn't really funny to begin with, you have made your victory narmy.
The line was used as an Insistent Terminology joke the the first time, so isn't it likely that the writers wanted to make a combined Funny and Awesome moment when they used it for the second time? The entry read like a complaint about a joke that some troper didn't like. Edited by 88.91.157.174