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misuse of trope


# Sit quietly, wait for Bob and Charlie to leave and [[{{Wangst}} cry in the stall]], so that Dorothy can come to [[LesYay console her]].

to:

# Sit quietly, wait for Bob and Charlie to leave and [[{{Wangst}} cry in the stall]], stall, so that Dorothy can come to [[LesYay console her]].

Changed: 275

Removed: 739

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* The first kind sort-of happens in the second installment of ''PiratesOfTheCaribbean.'' (So it was a kiss on a boat, but Will still acted like a teenage girl about the whole thing, even well into the third movie.)
** Interestingly, it is being treated in the third film as kissing another man be worse than murder, which is what she was really planning. ValuesDissonance, anyone?



* It's how EddieMurphy finds out about the plot in ''TradingPlaces.'' Plus one of the guys refers to him as the N words, so insults are included in this scene.
** When the Dukes are talking about how well their plan worked, they refer to Valentine as a useless psychopath.

to:

* It's how EddieMurphy finds out about In ''TradingPlaces,'' the plot Duke Brothers conclude their bet in ''TradingPlaces.'' Plus one of the guys refers executive washroom, revealing their ploy to him as the N words, so insults are included EddieMurphy, who is in this scene.
** When
a stall. One of the Dukes are talking about how well their plan worked, they refer even drops an N-bomb, revealing the brothers to Valentine as a useless psychopath.be total scumbags.



* Used in ''RoboCop'' when young corporate upstart Bob Morton mocks CorruptCorporateExecutive Dick Jones, claiming his reputation of being utterly ruthless is just "a smokescreen". Not only does Dick then confront him (after everyone else has fled the bathroom in fear), but he later has Morton brutally murdered in his home.
** But not before grabbing Morton by the back of the head -- ''without washing his hands first''!
*** That was bigger problem for Dick himself - he was sitting on the toilet, so he didn't need to touch anything dirty, but ''he didn't wipe himself!''

to:

* Used in ''RoboCop'' when young corporate upstart Bob Morton mocks CorruptCorporateExecutive Dick Jones, claiming his reputation of being utterly ruthless is just "a smokescreen". smokescreen." Not only does Dick then confront him (after everyone else has fled the bathroom in fear), but he later has Morton brutally murdered in his home.
** But not before grabbing Morton by the back of the head -- ''without washing his hands first''!
*** That was bigger problem for Dick himself - he was sitting on the toilet, so he didn't need to touch anything dirty, but ''he didn't wipe himself!''
home.

Added: 561

Changed: 657

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None


* ''GashBell'' - A [[{{Delinquents}} delinquent]] threatening Gash tells him Kiyomaro won't save him because he [[InsufferableGenius thinks everyone else isn't worth spit]], which is true enough to demoralize Kiyomaro. It then becomes an inversion when Gash forcefully declares his faith in Kiyo. But this doesn't happen in a bathroom but instead Kiyomaro is hiding behind the door to the school roof ''but'' he is supposed to be in bathroom instead of listening. He only makes his entrance when Gash gets imaginative explaining what could be taking him so long.

to:

* ''GashBell'' - In ''EdenOfTheEast'', the main character Saki overhears two employees gossiping about the idiot that sat in the lunch room for two hours after a job interview, so the company had someone spill soup on her to get her to leave... while she is cleaning soup that someone spilled on her.
* ''GashBell'':
A [[{{Delinquents}} delinquent]] threatening Gash tells him Kiyomaro won't save him because he [[InsufferableGenius thinks everyone else isn't worth spit]], which is true enough to demoralize Kiyomaro. It then becomes an inversion when Gash forcefully declares his faith in Kiyo. But this doesn't happen in a bathroom but instead Kiyomaro is hiding behind the door to the school roof ''but'' he is supposed to be in bathroom instead of listening. He only makes his entrance when Gash gets imaginative explaining what could be taking him so long.
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A Double Subversion is when it looks like it\'ll be subverted, but is utlimately played straight


* ''GashBell'' - DoubleSubversion (played straight until subverted) - A [[{{Delinquents}} delinquent]] threatening Gash tells him Kiyomaro won't save him because he [[InsufferableGenius thinks everyone else isn't worth spit]], which is true enough to demoralize Kiyomaro. It then becomes an inversion when Gash forcefully declares his faith in Kiyo. But this doesn't happen in a bathroom but instead Kiyomaro is hiding behind the door to the school roof ''but'' he is supposed to be in bathroom instead of listening. He only makes his entrance when Gash gets imaginative explaining what could be taking him so long.

to:

* ''GashBell'' - DoubleSubversion (played straight until subverted) - A [[{{Delinquents}} delinquent]] threatening Gash tells him Kiyomaro won't save him because he [[InsufferableGenius thinks everyone else isn't worth spit]], which is true enough to demoralize Kiyomaro. It then becomes an inversion when Gash forcefully declares his faith in Kiyo. But this doesn't happen in a bathroom but instead Kiyomaro is hiding behind the door to the school roof ''but'' he is supposed to be in bathroom instead of listening. He only makes his entrance when Gash gets imaginative explaining what could be taking him so long.
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Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlotte and Bobbie. Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:

to:

Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlotte Charlie and Bobbie.Bob. Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom. [[GenderBlenderName Unless it's Charlotte and Roberta]]) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:

to:

Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom. [[GenderBlenderName Unless it's Charlotte and Roberta]]) Bobbie. Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:

Added: 199

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None

Added DiffLines:

[[AC:Webcomics]]
* ''{{Bobwhite}}'': [[http://www.bobwhitecomics.com/?webcomic_post=20090709 As Ivy is washing her hands]], she hears some other employees from the place she interns talking about her.
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** Interestingly, it is being treated in the third film as kissing another man be worse than murder, which is what she was really planning. ValluesDissonance, anyone?

to:

** Interestingly, it is being treated in the third film as kissing another man be worse than murder, which is what she was really planning. ValluesDissonance, ValuesDissonance, anyone?

Added: 17910

Changed: 151

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Restoring possible vandalism.


[[Bong milk is good for the brain.:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/werewolf_9693_8856.jpg]]

to:

[[Bong milk is good ->''You can hear everything if you're in there long enough.''
-->--'''Janeece Bryant''', ''WaterlooRoad''

Whether it's a school, office, courtroom or even ''space ship'', people love to TrashTalk about co-workers, peers or "[[UnspokenPlanGuarantee the plan]]" in bathrooms. Of course, [[ContrivedCoincidence who else]] should be sitting quietly in the stall nearby than the [[ExactEavesDropping person being discussed]]?

The usual set up
for this goes like so:
Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in
the brain.:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/werewolf_9693_8856.jpg]]women's bathroom. [[GenderBlenderName Unless it's Charlotte and Roberta]]) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:
# Sit quietly, wait for Bob and Charlie to leave and [[{{Wangst}} cry in the stall]], so that Dorothy can come to [[LesYay console her]].
# Wait for Bob and Charlie to leave, then storm out angrily while plotting revenge, or,
# Storm out and accuse Bob and Charlie of being two-faced, or,
# Yell at Bob and Charlie for being in the women's bathroom, then run out red-faced as she realizes she's in the ''[[HouseAmnesia men's]]'' bathroom.
----
!!Examples

[[AC: {{Advertising}}]]
* In the UK, there was an ad for a financial planning service that showed two men in an office bathroom talking about a colleague's forthcoming redundancy (which he hadn't been informed about yet.) He comes out of an occupied bathroom stall, but because of his financial plan he remains unfazed, leading the other men to wonder if he has heard something about ''their'' jobs.

[[AC: {{Anime}}]]
* In ''DigimonAdventure'', Taichi and Agumon talk about Ogremon in the bathroom of a "hotel" they stay at. In this case, Ogremon merely suppresses giggles as he is about to ambush them.
* Played with in ''SlamDunk''. Hisashi Mitsui is just done taking a dump right before the Shoyo match and overhears one of the Shoyo players saying out loud that Mitsui will only score ''five'' points in the game. An upset Mitsui gets outta the stall to find out who unknowingly insulted his skills, but only sees the player's back (just enough to know he wears the #5 jersey). He still takes it in the ItsPersonal way, and when he finally remembers who is the guy who said crap about him ([[spoiler:his old rival Kazushi Hasegawa, who unlike others ''knows'' Mitsui is an ex-delinquent]]), he engages in a sports duel with him.
* ''GashBell'' - DoubleSubversion (played straight until subverted) - A [[{{Delinquents}} delinquent]] threatening Gash tells him Kiyomaro won't save him because he [[InsufferableGenius thinks everyone else isn't worth spit]], which is true enough to demoralize Kiyomaro. It then becomes an inversion when Gash forcefully declares his faith in Kiyo. But this doesn't happen in a bathroom but instead Kiyomaro is hiding behind the door to the school roof ''but'' he is supposed to be in bathroom instead of listening. He only makes his entrance when Gash gets imaginative explaining what could be taking him so long.
* ''BunnyDrop'' had Daikichi just about to enter the bathroom when he hears employees from the department he's about to transfer out of badmouth him and say he's abandoning them. Daikichi considers calling them out and knows he's well within his rights to but decides to just let it drop.
* ''BitterVirgin'' had a variation of the concept - Yuzu overheard Kazuki bullying Aikawa from behind a bathroom stall.
* In KimiNiTodoke, this is how rumours are found out about. Sawako's first appearance is in the girl's bathroom, even.
* In ''WithTheLight'', Sachiko is in a bathroom stall when she overhears two parents complaining about a disruption caused by one of Hikaru's panics.

[[AC: {{Film}} -- Animated]]
* In ''MonstersInc.'' Randall almost catches Sulley and Mike with Boo hiding in the bathroom when his lackey Fungus shows him the newspaper story of the kid entering the monster world. From Randall and Fungus' dialogue, Sulley learns that Randall is working on some sort of machine. (Not an overheard insult really, but close enough to merit a mention.)

[[AC: {{Film}} -- Live Action]]
* The third kind happens in ''[=~She's the Man~=]''.
* The first kind sort-of happens in the second installment of ''PiratesOfTheCaribbean.'' (So it was a kiss on a boat, but Will still acted like a teenage girl about the whole thing, even well into the third movie.)
** Interestingly, it is being treated in the third film as kissing another man be worse than murder, which is what she was really planning. ValluesDissonance, anyone?
* Happens at the fan convention in ''GalaxyQuest.''
* It's how EddieMurphy finds out about the plot in ''TradingPlaces.'' Plus one of the guys refers to him as the N words, so insults are included in this scene.
** When the Dukes are talking about how well their plan worked, they refer to Valentine as a useless psychopath.
* In the movie ''{{Scream}}'', Sidney goes to the bathroom and hears two classmates speculate in the stalls on how she may be the killer. Actually, it's one classmate -- the other is against that idea and calls it "pathetic," a conclusion that Sidney draws when she leaves the bathroom.
* In the adaptation of ''MuchAdoAboutNothing'' in ''{{ShakespeaRe-Told}}'', Beatrice, sitting on the toilet smoking a cigarette, overhears her friends gossiping about how she really can't afford to be so rude to men considering how unattractive she is.
* A DoubleSubversion appears in ''NineToFive'': early in the movie, Violet advises Judy to check the bathroom stalls before gossiping in the ladies' room, lest Roz, the boss' prime stooge, be listening in. Later in the film, Violet, Judy, and Doralee discuss Violet's accidental near-poisoning of their boss, after Violet assures the others that she's already checked the stalls for Roz's shoes. Cut to Roz in one of the stalls with her feet pulled up out of view, taking notes on a roll of toilet paper.
* Used in ''RoboCop'' when young corporate upstart Bob Morton mocks CorruptCorporateExecutive Dick Jones, claiming his reputation of being utterly ruthless is just "a smokescreen". Not only does Dick then confront him (after everyone else has fled the bathroom in fear), but he later has Morton brutally murdered in his home.
** But not before grabbing Morton by the back of the head -- ''without washing his hands first''!
*** That was bigger problem for Dick himself - he was sitting on the toilet, so he didn't need to touch anything dirty, but ''he didn't wipe himself!''
* Happens to Kate Bosworth's character in ''Blue Crush'', where she overhears random women referring to her rich football-player boyfriend as a guy who likes to slum. The girl who looks embarrassed to be caught gossiping gets her shoes.
* In ''The Great Outdoors'', Dan Akroyd's character claims to have overheard John Candy's character drunkenly insult in him in a bathroom, but the story is actually a lie used to guilt Candy into giving him money.
* At the end of ''The Emperor's Club'', the grown-up Sedgewick Bell [[spoiler: cheats at a rematch of a trivia contest he's already cheated at the first time around, when he was a kid at school. His old teacher, who thought he'd changed, confronts him about it in the bathroom afterwards and he starts babbling away about how no one cares about morals in the real world, nice guys finish last, etc. A toilet flushes and Sedgewick's young son emerges from the stall, thoroughly disillusioned.]]
* In a movie called ''SororityRow'' two of the girls start talking about [[spoiler: the dead friend no one was supposed to know about]] in the middle of the bathroom. Surprisingly, they weren't alone. All this led to [[spoiler: the death of the unlucky eavesdropper]].
* ''{{Odd Girl Out}}'': In this Lifetime original movie, a large group of teens, after one has seen Vanessa in a bathroom stall, are insulting her while Vanessa is hiding in the stall.
* ''LeanOnMe''. The mayor and the fire code director discuss how to get the principal out of his position in the bathroom. A teacher (a nerdy white guy no less) manages to avoid being caught by keeping his feet off the floor and make it appear no one is in the bathroom but them.
* ''[[ShesAllThat She's All That]]'': [[BlondGuysAreEvil Dean]] [[JerkJock Sampson]] tells his friends of his plan to score with [[CoolLoser Laney]], unaware that her best friend Jesse is in the stall listening.

[[AC: {{Literature}}]]
* ''HarryPotter/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets'' has a case of "Bathroom Stall of Overheard ''Death"''. Moaning Myrtle overheard Tom Riddle open the way to the Chamber of Secrets in parseltongue, but when she opened the door to confront him over being in the girls bathroom she ended up doing some literal [[strike:Gorgon]] err, [[GorgonGazing Basilisk Gazing.]]
* In one of Robin Jones Gunn's Christy Miller books, Christy is in the bathroom when she overhears the popular girls who've been trying to win her over discussing (between bathroom stalls) the fact that they've been lying about smuggling liquor on a high school ski trip, and are using Christy as their dupe.
* In TheClique, Dylan feels the need to gossip about the two stars of a movie at a TV talk show set. The only problem? The co-host's mic was on in the bathroom and '''everybody heard it'''.
* In one of the BabySittersClub books, Claudia is accused of cheating on a math test that she did well on. Later, while sitting in the bathroom, the girl she supposedly cheated off of comes in with her friends. Claudia over hears her bragging about cheating since she knew Claudia's genius sister had been helping her study.
* In the book ''katie.com,'' Katie hears two girls gossiping about her in the bathroom, one girl claiming that she saw a positive pregnancy test belonging to her, and another claiming Katie aborted the child with a coat-hanger. (Neither of which are true, of course.)
* ''What Happened to Lani Garver'' features the protagonist in a bathroom overhearing others non-malevolently referring to her as "that cancer girl".
* In Lois Duncan's ''Don't Look Behind You,'' April/Valerie ducks out of the movie the kids are seeing and visits the bathroom. While she's in there, two girls from the group come in gossiping about her, take the stalls on either side of the one she's in, and continue to talk. Despite the theater only showing one movie and having one set of restrooms, and despite a stall being occupied when they come in right after they saw April/Valerie ''leave the single theater,'' it never occurs to them that they might want to be discreet.

[[AC: LiveActionTV]]
* ''{{Ally McBeal}}.'' Just... ''Ally [=McBeal=].''
** And, even better, that was a unisex bathroom, so characters could overhear characters of the opposite sex as well (in nearly every freaking episode). With a unisex bathroom and a cluelessly misogynistic boss in an office full of mostly female lawyers, one expects they'd be drowning in sexual harassment suits.
** It gets to a point where characters automatically check the stalls when they go in there to have a private conversation. Once Ally did this to find the secretary had pulled her legs up.
** And co-owner of the firm had even built himself a secret room behind one of the stalls! Sure, he used it just to have a place to think about stuff by himself, but that still doesn't change the fact that the compartment would have been some serious lawsuit-material if a client or coworker ever sat in that stall while the guy got out...
* Twisted in the 2000s ''BattlestarGalactica''; Laura Roslin asks Baltar to become her vice president upon a chance encounter in one of Cloud Nine's bathroom. After their conversation, it's revealed that one of Baltar's groupies was waiting for him in a stall. Did we mention that the Galactica has co-ed bathrooms?
** She wasn't "waiting". They were having sex when Roslin entered. Did we mention she is a reporter? Talk about a scoop.
** Later, in the final season [[spoiler: Boomer, while escaping ''Galactica'', knocks Athena out and dresses up as her, then leaves her bound and gagged in a bathroom stall. Helo shows up, wanting to give Athena a [[IfYouKnowWhatIMean "gift"]] before she goes on a six-day recon. Athena wakes up just in time to watch the show.]]
* ''MySoCalledLife'': In the bathroom, two girls debate (well, one talks and the other tries to respond, but gets word stampeded) on whether to tell the main character something really shocking, when who should walk in on the debate but...the main character.
* ''{{Seinfeld}}'' does an odd variation with Jerry's deaf girlfriend.
* In the pilot of ''SlingsAndArrows'', Oliver overhears a gay couple in the next stall giggling about how old he is.
* Okay, it wasn't in a TV episode, but in the online comic of ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' this happens to Candice during her backstory, back when she was in high school and less than pretty.
* ''VeronicaMars'' has the girls' bathroom at Neptune High being Veronica's "office" - unfortunately, this doesn't stop other girls from coming in and trash-talking her occasionally (as befits her status as the local outcast).
* ''InPlainSight'': a bit of an inversion. Marshall is guarding a witness who's using the bathroom. From inside the stall, the witness starts complaining about Mary. Unbeknownst to him, while he's ranting, Mary has quietly come up to the open bathroom door and heard everything.
* In ''CrossingJordan'', Nigel and Bug are caught gossiping about their coworkers on countless occasions, usually by the object of said gossip.
* {{Scrubs}} has an interesting variation. Elliot winds up in the men's room because the women's room is out of order. While in the stall she overhears Dr. Kelso talking on his cellphone and complaining about how her public revealing of his age has caused the hospital board to force him to retire. Elliot resolves to help him keep his job, but he claims he doesn't want her help. Later on she learns that cellphones can't get reception in that particular bathroom, and that the conversation was a ruse, Kelso's way of indirectly pleading for her help.
* In an episode of ''FullHouse'', the entire family has a secret meeting in DJ's room to complain about Danny's neat freak sensibilities. Little did they know that Danny was in DJ's closet the whole time installing shelf paper.
* In the second season premiere of ''Terminator: TheSarahConnorChronicles'' [[spoiler:a T-1001 disguises herself as a urinal to eavesdrop on men's room gossip. The person who insults her doesn't live very long.]]
* ''ImportantThingsWithDemetriMartin'' takes this to the extreme, with two guys using urinals discussing their co-workers. As they bring up their names, the camera cuts to said co-worker (or boss!) in one of the stalls. The last stall has a ''pimp'' with two prostitutes, flashing lights and techno music.
** Not to mention the entirety of ''CirqueDuSoleil'' in another stall.
* More than once on ''{{Cheers}}''.
* In an episode of ''NewsRadio'', Dave ducks under his desk for a moment to fix the phone line. One of his underlings sees the empty desk and assumes Dave to be out of the office. Before Dave has a chance to make his presence known, the entire staff has gathered in his office to let out some steam by mocking and criticizing him.
* In ''HannahMontana'', Miley Stewart defies this trope by checking for feet under the doors before talking about stuff pertaining to her life as Hannah.
* An amusing variant in the pilot of ''City Homicide'': Detective Jen Mapplethorpe is reassigned to Homicide under a different superior, DSS Sparkes, who quickly reveals how much he respects her by assigning her to filing and [[YouGetMeCoffee getting him coffee]]. She walks into the bathroom complaining aloud about Sparkes, only to be overheard by his superior, Superintendant Waverley, in the bathroom stall. Waverley privately agrees with her, resulting in Jen returning to Stanley's squad.
* Happens on a semi-regular basis in ''WaterlooRoad'', as [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] in the page quote.
* Variation: In ''{{Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip}}'', Simon and Tom leave the room to discuss how Simon is ''so good'' at handling reporters and mention everything they don't want Martha, the reporter in the room, to know. When they walk back in, she reveals Simon was still wearing his microphone, and asks for more information.
* ''Cra$h & Burn'' had a very deliberate aversion. Jimmy is GenreSavvy enough to know that in his office coworkers would gladly eavesdrop on bathroom conversations and backstab you with the information. When he has to talk to Papo in the bathroom he opens every bathroom stall to make sure that it does not happen. [[spoiler: The topic of their conversation could not only get them fired and thrown in jail but also likely killed]]

[[AC: VideoGames]]
* Happened in the first of the ''PurpleMoon'' games, and again [[AllThereInTheManual in the books]].

[[AC: WesternAnimation]]
* A variation occurred in one episode of ''AsToldByGinger'': Macie overheard two high school girls plotting to deface Courtney at a party.
** Played straight in another episode, wherein the titular Ginger overhears Courtney and Miranda gossiping about how Miranda wants to hook up with Ginger's friend Darren, and that "[Ginger] will be the first to go".
* ''The Simpsons'' seems to have at least one of these in each of its 20+ seasons.

[[AC: RealLife]]
* The scene in ''GalaxyQuest'' was supposedly based on something that actually happened to Shatner at a ''StarTrek'' convention.
* [=McGill=] University has a [[MemeticMutation tradition]] of ''writing'' insults or other facts concerning the elusive and mysterious Sean Turner on bathroom walls.
* In general, this can become TruthInTelevision for you if you're not very, very careful...

----

Changed: 135

Removed: 17910

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


->''You can hear everything if you're in there long enough.''
-->--'''Janeece Bryant''', ''WaterlooRoad''

Whether it's a school, office, courtroom or even ''space ship'', people love to TrashTalk about co-workers, peers or "[[UnspokenPlanGuarantee the plan]]" in bathrooms. Of course, [[ContrivedCoincidence who else]] should be sitting quietly in the stall nearby than the [[ExactEavesDropping person being discussed]]?

The usual set up for this goes like so:
Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom. [[GenderBlenderName Unless it's Charlotte and Roberta]]) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:
# Sit quietly, wait for Bob and Charlie to leave and [[{{Wangst}} cry in the stall]], so that Dorothy can come to [[LesYay console her]].
# Wait for Bob and Charlie to leave, then storm out angrily while plotting revenge, or,
# Storm out and accuse Bob and Charlie of being two-faced, or,
# Yell at Bob and Charlie for being in the women's bathroom, then run out red-faced as she realizes she's in the ''[[HouseAmnesia men's]]'' bathroom.
----
!!Examples

[[AC: {{Advertising}}]]
* In the UK, there was an ad for a financial planning service that showed two men in an office bathroom talking about a colleague's forthcoming redundancy (which he hadn't been informed about yet.) He comes out of an occupied bathroom stall, but because of his financial plan he remains unfazed, leading the other men to wonder if he has heard something about ''their'' jobs.

[[AC: {{Anime}}]]
* In ''DigimonAdventure'', Taichi and Agumon talk about Ogremon in the bathroom of a "hotel" they stay at. In this case, Ogremon merely suppresses giggles as he is about to ambush them.
* Played with in ''SlamDunk''. Hisashi Mitsui is just done taking a dump right before the Shoyo match and overhears one of the Shoyo players saying out loud that Mitsui will only score ''five'' points in the game. An upset Mitsui gets outta the stall to find out who unknowingly insulted his skills, but only sees the player's back (just enough to know he wears the #5 jersey). He still takes it in the ItsPersonal way, and when he finally remembers who is the guy who said crap about him ([[spoiler:his old rival Kazushi Hasegawa, who unlike others ''knows'' Mitsui is an ex-delinquent]]), he engages in a sports duel with him.
* ''GashBell'' - DoubleSubversion (played straight until subverted) - A [[{{Delinquents}} delinquent]] threatening Gash tells him Kiyomaro won't save him because he [[InsufferableGenius thinks everyone else isn't worth spit]], which is true enough to demoralize Kiyomaro. It then becomes an inversion when Gash forcefully declares his faith in Kiyo. But this doesn't happen in a bathroom but instead Kiyomaro is hiding behind the door to the school roof ''but'' he is supposed to be in bathroom instead of listening. He only makes his entrance when Gash gets imaginative explaining what could be taking him so long.
* ''BunnyDrop'' had Daikichi just about to enter the bathroom when he hears employees from the department he's about to transfer out of badmouth him and say he's abandoning them. Daikichi considers calling them out and knows he's well within his rights to but decides to just let it drop.
* ''BitterVirgin'' had a variation of the concept - Yuzu overheard Kazuki bullying Aikawa from behind a bathroom stall.
* In KimiNiTodoke, this is how rumours are found out about. Sawako's first appearance is in the girl's bathroom, even.
* In ''WithTheLight'', Sachiko is in a bathroom stall when she overhears two parents complaining about a disruption caused by one of Hikaru's panics.

[[AC: {{Film}} -- Animated]]
* In ''MonstersInc.'' Randall almost catches Sulley and Mike with Boo hiding in the bathroom when his lackey Fungus shows him the newspaper story of the kid entering the monster world. From Randall and Fungus' dialogue, Sulley learns that Randall is working on some sort of machine. (Not an overheard insult really, but close enough to merit a mention.)

[[AC: {{Film}} -- Live Action]]
* The third kind happens in ''[=~She's the Man~=]''.
* The first kind sort-of happens in the second installment of ''PiratesOfTheCaribbean.'' (So it was a kiss on a boat, but Will still acted like a teenage girl about the whole thing, even well into the third movie.)
** Interestingly, it is being treated in the third film as kissing another man be worse than murder, which is what she was really planning. ValluesDissonance, anyone?
* Happens at the fan convention in ''GalaxyQuest.''
* It's how EddieMurphy finds out about the plot in ''TradingPlaces.'' Plus one of the guys refers to him as the N words, so insults are included in this scene.
** When the Dukes are talking about how well their plan worked, they refer to Valentine as a useless psychopath.
* In the movie ''{{Scream}}'', Sidney goes to the bathroom and hears two classmates speculate in the stalls on how she may be the killer. Actually, it's one classmate -- the other is against that idea and calls it "pathetic," a conclusion that Sidney draws when she leaves the bathroom.
* In the adaptation of ''MuchAdoAboutNothing'' in ''{{ShakespeaRe-Told}}'', Beatrice, sitting on the toilet smoking a cigarette, overhears her friends gossiping about how she really can't afford to be so rude to men considering how unattractive she is.
* A DoubleSubversion appears in ''NineToFive'': early in the movie, Violet advises Judy to check the bathroom stalls before gossiping in the ladies' room, lest Roz, the boss' prime stooge, be listening in. Later in the film, Violet, Judy, and Doralee discuss Violet's accidental near-poisoning of their boss, after Violet assures the others that she's already checked the stalls for Roz's shoes. Cut to Roz in one of the stalls with her feet pulled up out of view, taking notes on a roll of toilet paper.
* Used in ''RoboCop'' when young corporate upstart Bob Morton mocks CorruptCorporateExecutive Dick Jones, claiming his reputation of being utterly ruthless is just "a smokescreen". Not only does Dick then confront him (after everyone else has fled the bathroom in fear), but he later has Morton brutally murdered in his home.
** But not before grabbing Morton by the back of the head -- ''without washing his hands first''!
*** That was bigger problem for Dick himself - he was sitting on the toilet, so he didn't need to touch anything dirty, but ''he didn't wipe himself!''
* Happens to Kate Bosworth's character in ''Blue Crush'', where she overhears random women referring to her rich football-player boyfriend as a guy who likes to slum. The girl who looks embarrassed to be caught gossiping gets her shoes.
* In ''The Great Outdoors'', Dan Akroyd's character claims to have overheard John Candy's character drunkenly insult in him in a bathroom, but the story is actually a lie used to guilt Candy into giving him money.
* At the end of ''The Emperor's Club'', the grown-up Sedgewick Bell [[spoiler: cheats at a rematch of a trivia contest he's already cheated at the first time around, when he was a kid at school. His old teacher, who thought he'd changed, confronts him about it in the bathroom afterwards and he starts babbling away about how no one cares about morals in the real world, nice guys finish last, etc. A toilet flushes and Sedgewick's young son emerges from the stall, thoroughly disillusioned.]]
* In a movie called ''SororityRow'' two of the girls start talking about [[spoiler: the dead friend no one was supposed to know about]] in the middle of the bathroom. Surprisingly, they weren't alone. All this led to [[spoiler: the death of the unlucky eavesdropper]].
* ''{{Odd Girl Out}}'': In this Lifetime original movie, a large group of teens, after one has seen Vanessa in a bathroom stall, are insulting her while Vanessa is hiding in the stall.
* ''LeanOnMe''. The mayor and the fire code director discuss how to get the principal out of his position in the bathroom. A teacher (a nerdy white guy no less) manages to avoid being caught by keeping his feet off the floor and make it appear no one is in the bathroom but them.
* ''[[ShesAllThat She's All That]]'': [[BlondGuysAreEvil Dean]] [[JerkJock Sampson]] tells his friends of his plan to score with [[CoolLoser Laney]], unaware that her best friend Jesse is in the stall listening.

[[AC: {{Literature}}]]
* ''HarryPotter/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets'' has a case of "Bathroom Stall of Overheard ''Death"''. Moaning Myrtle overheard Tom Riddle open the way to the Chamber of Secrets in parseltongue, but when she opened the door to confront him over being in the girls bathroom she ended up doing some literal [[strike:Gorgon]] err, [[GorgonGazing Basilisk Gazing.]]
* In one of Robin Jones Gunn's Christy Miller books, Christy is in the bathroom when she overhears the popular girls who've been trying to win her over discussing (between bathroom stalls) the fact that they've been lying about smuggling liquor on a high school ski trip, and are using Christy as their dupe.
* In TheClique, Dylan feels the need to gossip about the two stars of a movie at a TV talk show set. The only problem? The co-host's mic was on in the bathroom and '''everybody heard it'''.
* In one of the BabySittersClub books, Claudia is accused of cheating on a math test that she did well on. Later, while sitting in the bathroom, the girl she supposedly cheated off of comes in with her friends. Claudia over hears her bragging about cheating since she knew Claudia's genius sister had been helping her study.
* In the book ''katie.com,'' Katie hears two girls gossiping about her in the bathroom, one girl claiming that she saw a positive pregnancy test belonging to her, and another claiming Katie aborted the child with a coat-hanger. (Neither of which are true, of course.)
* ''What Happened to Lani Garver'' features the protagonist in a bathroom overhearing others non-malevolently referring to her as "that cancer girl".
* In Lois Duncan's ''Don't Look Behind You,'' April/Valerie ducks out of the movie the kids are seeing and visits the bathroom. While she's in there, two girls from the group come in gossiping about her, take the stalls on either side of the one she's in, and continue to talk. Despite the theater only showing one movie and having one set of restrooms, and despite a stall being occupied when they come in right after they saw April/Valerie ''leave the single theater,'' it never occurs to them that they might want to be discreet.

[[AC: LiveActionTV]]
* ''{{Ally McBeal}}.'' Just... ''Ally [=McBeal=].''
** And, even better, that was a unisex bathroom, so characters could overhear characters of the opposite sex as well (in nearly every freaking episode). With a unisex bathroom and a cluelessly misogynistic boss in an office full of mostly female lawyers, one expects they'd be drowning in sexual harassment suits.
** It gets to a point where characters automatically check the stalls when they go in there to have a private conversation. Once Ally did this to find the secretary had pulled her legs up.
** And co-owner of the firm had even built himself a secret room behind one of the stalls! Sure, he used it just to have a place to think about stuff by himself, but that still doesn't change the fact that the compartment would have been some serious lawsuit-material if a client or coworker ever sat in that stall while the guy got out...
* Twisted in the 2000s ''BattlestarGalactica''; Laura Roslin asks Baltar to become her vice president upon a chance encounter in one of Cloud Nine's bathroom. After their conversation, it's revealed that one of Baltar's groupies was waiting for him in a stall. Did we mention that the Galactica has co-ed bathrooms?
** She wasn't "waiting". They were having sex when Roslin entered. Did we mention she is a reporter? Talk about a scoop.
** Later, in the final season [[spoiler: Boomer, while escaping ''Galactica'', knocks Athena out and dresses up as her, then leaves her bound and gagged in a bathroom stall. Helo shows up, wanting to give Athena a [[IfYouKnowWhatIMean "gift"]] before she goes on a six-day recon. Athena wakes up just in time to watch the show.]]
* ''MySoCalledLife'': In the bathroom, two girls debate (well, one talks and the other tries to respond, but gets word stampeded) on whether to tell the main character something really shocking, when who should walk in on the debate but...the main character.
* ''{{Seinfeld}}'' does an odd variation with Jerry's deaf girlfriend.
* In the pilot of ''SlingsAndArrows'', Oliver overhears a gay couple in the next stall giggling about how old he is.
* Okay, it wasn't in a TV episode, but in the online comic of ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' this happens to Candice during her backstory, back when she was in high school and less than pretty.
* ''VeronicaMars'' has the girls' bathroom at Neptune High being Veronica's "office" - unfortunately, this doesn't stop other girls from coming in and trash-talking her occasionally (as befits her status as the local outcast).
* ''InPlainSight'': a bit of an inversion. Marshall is guarding a witness who's using the bathroom. From inside the stall, the witness starts complaining about Mary. Unbeknownst to him, while he's ranting, Mary has quietly come up to the open bathroom door and heard everything.
* In ''CrossingJordan'', Nigel and Bug are caught gossiping about their coworkers on countless occasions, usually by the object of said gossip.
* {{Scrubs}} has an interesting variation. Elliot winds up in the men's room because the women's room is out of order. While in the stall she overhears Dr. Kelso talking on his cellphone and complaining about how her public revealing of his age has caused the hospital board to force him to retire. Elliot resolves to help him keep his job, but he claims he doesn't want her help. Later on she learns that cellphones can't get reception in that particular bathroom, and that the conversation was a ruse, Kelso's way of indirectly pleading for her help.
* In an episode of ''FullHouse'', the entire family has a secret meeting in DJ's room to complain about Danny's neat freak sensibilities. Little did they know that Danny was in DJ's closet the whole time installing shelf paper.
* In the second season premiere of ''Terminator: TheSarahConnorChronicles'' [[spoiler:a T-1001 disguises herself as a urinal to eavesdrop on men's room gossip. The person who insults her doesn't live very long.]]
* ''ImportantThingsWithDemetriMartin'' takes this to the extreme, with two guys using urinals discussing their co-workers. As they bring up their names, the camera cuts to said co-worker (or boss!) in one of the stalls. The last stall has a ''pimp'' with two prostitutes, flashing lights and techno music.
** Not to mention the entirety of ''CirqueDuSoleil'' in another stall.
* More than once on ''{{Cheers}}''.
* In an episode of ''NewsRadio'', Dave ducks under his desk for a moment to fix the phone line. One of his underlings sees the empty desk and assumes Dave to be out of the office. Before Dave has a chance to make his presence known, the entire staff has gathered in his office to let out some steam by mocking and criticizing him.
* In ''HannahMontana'', Miley Stewart defies this trope by checking for feet under the doors before talking about stuff pertaining to her life as Hannah.
* An amusing variant in the pilot of ''City Homicide'': Detective Jen Mapplethorpe is reassigned to Homicide under a different superior, DSS Sparkes, who quickly reveals how much he respects her by assigning her to filing and [[YouGetMeCoffee getting him coffee]]. She walks into the bathroom complaining aloud about Sparkes, only to be overheard by his superior, Superintendant Waverley, in the bathroom stall. Waverley privately agrees with her, resulting in Jen returning to Stanley's squad.
* Happens on a semi-regular basis in ''WaterlooRoad'', as [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] in the page quote.
* Variation: In ''{{Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip}}'', Simon and Tom leave the room to discuss how Simon is ''so good'' at handling reporters and mention everything they don't want Martha, the reporter in the room, to know. When they walk back in, she reveals Simon was still wearing his microphone, and asks for more information.
* ''Cra$h & Burn'' had a very deliberate aversion. Jimmy is GenreSavvy enough to know that in his office coworkers would gladly eavesdrop on bathroom conversations and backstab you with the information. When he has to talk to Papo in the bathroom he opens every bathroom stall to make sure that it does not happen. [[spoiler: The topic of their conversation could not only get them fired and thrown in jail but also likely killed]]

[[AC: VideoGames]]
* Happened in the first of the ''PurpleMoon'' games, and again [[AllThereInTheManual in the books]].

[[AC: WesternAnimation]]
* A variation occurred in one episode of ''AsToldByGinger'': Macie overheard two high school girls plotting to deface Courtney at a party.
** Played straight in another episode, wherein the titular Ginger overhears Courtney and Miranda gossiping about how Miranda wants to hook up with Ginger's friend Darren, and that "[Ginger] will be the first to go".
* ''The Simpsons'' seems to have at least one of these in each of its 20+ seasons.

[[AC: RealLife]]
* The scene in ''GalaxyQuest'' was supposedly based on something that actually happened to Shatner at a ''StarTrek'' convention.
* [=McGill=] University has a [[MemeticMutation tradition]] of ''writing'' insults or other facts concerning the elusive and mysterious Sean Turner on bathroom walls.
* In general, this can become TruthInTelevision for you if you're not very, very careful...
----

to:

->''You can hear everything if you're in there long enough.''
-->--'''Janeece Bryant''', ''WaterlooRoad''

Whether it's a school, office, courtroom or even ''space ship'', people love to TrashTalk about co-workers, peers or "[[UnspokenPlanGuarantee
[[Bong milk is good for the plan]]" in bathrooms. Of course, [[ContrivedCoincidence who else]] should be sitting quietly in the stall nearby than the [[ExactEavesDropping person being discussed]]?

The usual set up for this goes like so:
Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom. [[GenderBlenderName Unless it's Charlotte and Roberta]]) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:
# Sit quietly, wait for Bob and Charlie to leave and [[{{Wangst}} cry in the stall]], so that Dorothy can come to [[LesYay console her]].
# Wait for Bob and Charlie to leave, then storm out angrily while plotting revenge, or,
# Storm out and accuse Bob and Charlie of being two-faced, or,
# Yell at Bob and Charlie for being in the women's bathroom, then run out red-faced as she realizes she's in the ''[[HouseAmnesia men's]]'' bathroom.
----
!!Examples

[[AC: {{Advertising}}]]
* In the UK, there was an ad for a financial planning service that showed two men in an office bathroom talking about a colleague's forthcoming redundancy (which he hadn't been informed about yet.) He comes out of an occupied bathroom stall, but because of his financial plan he remains unfazed, leading the other men to wonder if he has heard something about ''their'' jobs.

[[AC: {{Anime}}]]
* In ''DigimonAdventure'', Taichi and Agumon talk about Ogremon in the bathroom of a "hotel" they stay at. In this case, Ogremon merely suppresses giggles as he is about to ambush them.
* Played with in ''SlamDunk''. Hisashi Mitsui is just done taking a dump right before the Shoyo match and overhears one of the Shoyo players saying out loud that Mitsui will only score ''five'' points in the game. An upset Mitsui gets outta the stall to find out who unknowingly insulted his skills, but only sees the player's back (just enough to know he wears the #5 jersey). He still takes it in the ItsPersonal way, and when he finally remembers who is the guy who said crap about him ([[spoiler:his old rival Kazushi Hasegawa, who unlike others ''knows'' Mitsui is an ex-delinquent]]), he engages in a sports duel with him.
* ''GashBell'' - DoubleSubversion (played straight until subverted) - A [[{{Delinquents}} delinquent]] threatening Gash tells him Kiyomaro won't save him because he [[InsufferableGenius thinks everyone else isn't worth spit]], which is true enough to demoralize Kiyomaro. It then becomes an inversion when Gash forcefully declares his faith in Kiyo. But this doesn't happen in a bathroom but instead Kiyomaro is hiding behind the door to the school roof ''but'' he is supposed to be in bathroom instead of listening. He only makes his entrance when Gash gets imaginative explaining what could be taking him so long.
* ''BunnyDrop'' had Daikichi just about to enter the bathroom when he hears employees from the department he's about to transfer out of badmouth him and say he's abandoning them. Daikichi considers calling them out and knows he's well within his rights to but decides to just let it drop.
* ''BitterVirgin'' had a variation of the concept - Yuzu overheard Kazuki bullying Aikawa from behind a bathroom stall.
* In KimiNiTodoke, this is how rumours are found out about. Sawako's first appearance is in the girl's bathroom, even.
* In ''WithTheLight'', Sachiko is in a bathroom stall when she overhears two parents complaining about a disruption caused by one of Hikaru's panics.

[[AC: {{Film}} -- Animated]]
* In ''MonstersInc.'' Randall almost catches Sulley and Mike with Boo hiding in the bathroom when his lackey Fungus shows him the newspaper story of the kid entering the monster world. From Randall and Fungus' dialogue, Sulley learns that Randall is working on some sort of machine. (Not an overheard insult really, but close enough to merit a mention.)

[[AC: {{Film}} -- Live Action]]
* The third kind happens in ''[=~She's the Man~=]''.
* The first kind sort-of happens in the second installment of ''PiratesOfTheCaribbean.'' (So it was a kiss on a boat, but Will still acted like a teenage girl about the whole thing, even well into the third movie.)
** Interestingly, it is being treated in the third film as kissing another man be worse than murder, which is what she was really planning. ValluesDissonance, anyone?
* Happens at the fan convention in ''GalaxyQuest.''
* It's how EddieMurphy finds out about the plot in ''TradingPlaces.'' Plus one of the guys refers to him as the N words, so insults are included in this scene.
** When the Dukes are talking about how well their plan worked, they refer to Valentine as a useless psychopath.
* In the movie ''{{Scream}}'', Sidney goes to the bathroom and hears two classmates speculate in the stalls on how she may be the killer. Actually, it's one classmate -- the other is against that idea and calls it "pathetic," a conclusion that Sidney draws when she leaves the bathroom.
* In the adaptation of ''MuchAdoAboutNothing'' in ''{{ShakespeaRe-Told}}'', Beatrice, sitting on the toilet smoking a cigarette, overhears her friends gossiping about how she really can't afford to be so rude to men considering how unattractive she is.
* A DoubleSubversion appears in ''NineToFive'': early in the movie, Violet advises Judy to check the bathroom stalls before gossiping in the ladies' room, lest Roz, the boss' prime stooge, be listening in. Later in the film, Violet, Judy, and Doralee discuss Violet's accidental near-poisoning of their boss, after Violet assures the others that she's already checked the stalls for Roz's shoes. Cut to Roz in one of the stalls with her feet pulled up out of view, taking notes on a roll of toilet paper.
* Used in ''RoboCop'' when young corporate upstart Bob Morton mocks CorruptCorporateExecutive Dick Jones, claiming his reputation of being utterly ruthless is just "a smokescreen". Not only does Dick then confront him (after everyone else has fled the bathroom in fear), but he later has Morton brutally murdered in his home.
** But not before grabbing Morton by the back of the head -- ''without washing his hands first''!
*** That was bigger problem for Dick himself - he was sitting on the toilet, so he didn't need to touch anything dirty, but ''he didn't wipe himself!''
* Happens to Kate Bosworth's character in ''Blue Crush'', where she overhears random women referring to her rich football-player boyfriend as a guy who likes to slum. The girl who looks embarrassed to be caught gossiping gets her shoes.
* In ''The Great Outdoors'', Dan Akroyd's character claims to have overheard John Candy's character drunkenly insult in him in a bathroom, but the story is actually a lie used to guilt Candy into giving him money.
* At the end of ''The Emperor's Club'', the grown-up Sedgewick Bell [[spoiler: cheats at a rematch of a trivia contest he's already cheated at the first time around, when he was a kid at school. His old teacher, who thought he'd changed, confronts him about it in the bathroom afterwards and he starts babbling away about how no one cares about morals in the real world, nice guys finish last, etc. A toilet flushes and Sedgewick's young son emerges from the stall, thoroughly disillusioned.]]
* In a movie called ''SororityRow'' two of the girls start talking about [[spoiler: the dead friend no one was supposed to know about]] in the middle of the bathroom. Surprisingly, they weren't alone. All this led to [[spoiler: the death of the unlucky eavesdropper]].
* ''{{Odd Girl Out}}'': In this Lifetime original movie, a large group of teens, after one has seen Vanessa in a bathroom stall, are insulting her while Vanessa is hiding in the stall.
* ''LeanOnMe''. The mayor and the fire code director discuss how to get the principal out of his position in the bathroom. A teacher (a nerdy white guy no less) manages to avoid being caught by keeping his feet off the floor and make it appear no one is in the bathroom but them.
* ''[[ShesAllThat She's All That]]'': [[BlondGuysAreEvil Dean]] [[JerkJock Sampson]] tells his friends of his plan to score with [[CoolLoser Laney]], unaware that her best friend Jesse is in the stall listening.

[[AC: {{Literature}}]]
* ''HarryPotter/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets'' has a case of "Bathroom Stall of Overheard ''Death"''. Moaning Myrtle overheard Tom Riddle open the way to the Chamber of Secrets in parseltongue, but when she opened the door to confront him over being in the girls bathroom she ended up doing some literal [[strike:Gorgon]] err, [[GorgonGazing Basilisk Gazing.]]
* In one of Robin Jones Gunn's Christy Miller books, Christy is in the bathroom when she overhears the popular girls who've been trying to win her over discussing (between bathroom stalls) the fact that they've been lying about smuggling liquor on a high school ski trip, and are using Christy as their dupe.
* In TheClique, Dylan feels the need to gossip about the two stars of a movie at a TV talk show set. The only problem? The co-host's mic was on in the bathroom and '''everybody heard it'''.
* In one of the BabySittersClub books, Claudia is accused of cheating on a math test that she did well on. Later, while sitting in the bathroom, the girl she supposedly cheated off of comes in with her friends. Claudia over hears her bragging about cheating since she knew Claudia's genius sister had been helping her study.
* In the book ''katie.com,'' Katie hears two girls gossiping about her in the bathroom, one girl claiming that she saw a positive pregnancy test belonging to her, and another claiming Katie aborted the child with a coat-hanger. (Neither of which are true, of course.)
* ''What Happened to Lani Garver'' features the protagonist in a bathroom overhearing others non-malevolently referring to her as "that cancer girl".
* In Lois Duncan's ''Don't Look Behind You,'' April/Valerie ducks out of the movie the kids are seeing and visits the bathroom. While she's in there, two girls from the group come in gossiping about her, take the stalls on either side of the one she's in, and continue to talk. Despite the theater only showing one movie and having one set of restrooms, and despite a stall being occupied when they come in right after they saw April/Valerie ''leave the single theater,'' it never occurs to them that they might want to be discreet.

[[AC: LiveActionTV]]
* ''{{Ally McBeal}}.'' Just... ''Ally [=McBeal=].''
** And, even better, that was a unisex bathroom, so characters could overhear characters of the opposite sex as well (in nearly every freaking episode). With a unisex bathroom and a cluelessly misogynistic boss in an office full of mostly female lawyers, one expects they'd be drowning in sexual harassment suits.
** It gets to a point where characters automatically check the stalls when they go in there to have a private conversation. Once Ally did this to find the secretary had pulled her legs up.
** And co-owner of the firm had even built himself a secret room behind one of the stalls! Sure, he used it just to have a place to think about stuff by himself, but that still doesn't change the fact that the compartment would have been some serious lawsuit-material if a client or coworker ever sat in that stall while the guy got out...
* Twisted in the 2000s ''BattlestarGalactica''; Laura Roslin asks Baltar to become her vice president upon a chance encounter in one of Cloud Nine's bathroom. After their conversation, it's revealed that one of Baltar's groupies was waiting for him in a stall. Did we mention that the Galactica has co-ed bathrooms?
** She wasn't "waiting". They were having sex when Roslin entered. Did we mention she is a reporter? Talk about a scoop.
** Later, in the final season [[spoiler: Boomer, while escaping ''Galactica'', knocks Athena out and dresses up as her, then leaves her bound and gagged in a bathroom stall. Helo shows up, wanting to give Athena a [[IfYouKnowWhatIMean "gift"]] before she goes on a six-day recon. Athena wakes up just in time to watch the show.]]
* ''MySoCalledLife'': In the bathroom, two girls debate (well, one talks and the other tries to respond, but gets word stampeded) on whether to tell the main character something really shocking, when who should walk in on the debate but...the main character.
* ''{{Seinfeld}}'' does an odd variation with Jerry's deaf girlfriend.
* In the pilot of ''SlingsAndArrows'', Oliver overhears a gay couple in the next stall giggling about how old he is.
* Okay, it wasn't in a TV episode, but in the online comic of ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' this happens to Candice during her backstory, back when she was in high school and less than pretty.
* ''VeronicaMars'' has the girls' bathroom at Neptune High being Veronica's "office" - unfortunately, this doesn't stop other girls from coming in and trash-talking her occasionally (as befits her status as the local outcast).
* ''InPlainSight'': a bit of an inversion. Marshall is guarding a witness who's using the bathroom. From inside the stall, the witness starts complaining about Mary. Unbeknownst to him, while he's ranting, Mary has quietly come up to the open bathroom door and heard everything.
* In ''CrossingJordan'', Nigel and Bug are caught gossiping about their coworkers on countless occasions, usually by the object of said gossip.
* {{Scrubs}} has an interesting variation. Elliot winds up in the men's room because the women's room is out of order. While in the stall she overhears Dr. Kelso talking on his cellphone and complaining about how her public revealing of his age has caused the hospital board to force him to retire. Elliot resolves to help him keep his job, but he claims he doesn't want her help. Later on she learns that cellphones can't get reception in that particular bathroom, and that the conversation was a ruse, Kelso's way of indirectly pleading for her help.
* In an episode of ''FullHouse'', the entire family has a secret meeting in DJ's room to complain about Danny's neat freak sensibilities. Little did they know that Danny was in DJ's closet the whole time installing shelf paper.
* In the second season premiere of ''Terminator: TheSarahConnorChronicles'' [[spoiler:a T-1001 disguises herself as a urinal to eavesdrop on men's room gossip. The person who insults her doesn't live very long.]]
* ''ImportantThingsWithDemetriMartin'' takes this to the extreme, with two guys using urinals discussing their co-workers. As they bring up their names, the camera cuts to said co-worker (or boss!) in one of the stalls. The last stall has a ''pimp'' with two prostitutes, flashing lights and techno music.
** Not to mention the entirety of ''CirqueDuSoleil'' in another stall.
* More than once on ''{{Cheers}}''.
* In an episode of ''NewsRadio'', Dave ducks under his desk for a moment to fix the phone line. One of his underlings sees the empty desk and assumes Dave to be out of the office. Before Dave has a chance to make his presence known, the entire staff has gathered in his office to let out some steam by mocking and criticizing him.
* In ''HannahMontana'', Miley Stewart defies this trope by checking for feet under the doors before talking about stuff pertaining to her life as Hannah.
* An amusing variant in the pilot of ''City Homicide'': Detective Jen Mapplethorpe is reassigned to Homicide under a different superior, DSS Sparkes, who quickly reveals how much he respects her by assigning her to filing and [[YouGetMeCoffee getting him coffee]]. She walks into the bathroom complaining aloud about Sparkes, only to be overheard by his superior, Superintendant Waverley, in the bathroom stall. Waverley privately agrees with her, resulting in Jen returning to Stanley's squad.
* Happens on a semi-regular basis in ''WaterlooRoad'', as [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] in the page quote.
* Variation: In ''{{Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip}}'', Simon and Tom leave the room to discuss how Simon is ''so good'' at handling reporters and mention everything they don't want Martha, the reporter in the room, to know. When they walk back in, she reveals Simon was still wearing his microphone, and asks for more information.
* ''Cra$h & Burn'' had a very deliberate aversion. Jimmy is GenreSavvy enough to know that in his office coworkers would gladly eavesdrop on bathroom conversations and backstab you with the information. When he has to talk to Papo in the bathroom he opens every bathroom stall to make sure that it does not happen. [[spoiler: The topic of their conversation could not only get them fired and thrown in jail but also likely killed]]

[[AC: VideoGames]]
* Happened in the first of the ''PurpleMoon'' games, and again [[AllThereInTheManual in the books]].

[[AC: WesternAnimation]]
* A variation occurred in one episode of ''AsToldByGinger'': Macie overheard two high school girls plotting to deface Courtney at a party.
** Played straight in another episode, wherein the titular Ginger overhears Courtney and Miranda gossiping about how Miranda wants to hook up with Ginger's friend Darren, and that "[Ginger] will be the first to go".
* ''The Simpsons'' seems to have at least one of these in each of its 20+ seasons.

[[AC: RealLife]]
* The scene in ''GalaxyQuest'' was supposedly based on something that actually happened to Shatner at a ''StarTrek'' convention.
* [=McGill=] University has a [[MemeticMutation tradition]] of ''writing'' insults or other facts concerning the elusive and mysterious Sean Turner on bathroom walls.
* In general, this can become TruthInTelevision for you if you're not very, very careful...
----
brain.:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/werewolf_9693_8856.jpg]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None



to:

* ''Cra$h & Burn'' had a very deliberate aversion. Jimmy is GenreSavvy enough to know that in his office coworkers would gladly eavesdrop on bathroom conversations and backstab you with the information. When he has to talk to Papo in the bathroom he opens every bathroom stall to make sure that it does not happen. [[spoiler: The topic of their conversation could not only get them fired and thrown in jail but also likely killed]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[AC: {{Advertising}}]]
* In the UK, there was an ad for a financial planning service that showed two men in an office bathroom talking about a colleague's forthcoming redundancy (which he hadn't been informed about yet.) He comes out of an occupied bathroom stall, but because of his financial plan he remains unfazed, leading the other men to wonder if he has heard something about ''their'' jobs.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
She\'s actually a T-1001, a slightly modified and more social version of T-1000.


* In the second season premiere of ''Terminator: TheSarahConnorChronicles'' [[spoiler:a T-1000 disguises herself as a urinal to eavesdrop on men's room gossip. The person who insults her doesn't live very long.]]

to:

* In the second season premiere of ''Terminator: TheSarahConnorChronicles'' [[spoiler:a T-1000 T-1001 disguises herself as a urinal to eavesdrop on men's room gossip. The person who insults her doesn't live very long.]]
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** Interestingly, it is being treated in the third film as kissing another man be worse than murder, which is what she was really planning. ValluesDissonance, anyone?
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* In Lois Duncan's ''Don't Look Behind You,'' April/Valerie ducks out of the movie the kids are seeing and visits the bathroom. While she's in there, two girls from the group come in gossiping about her, take the stalls on either side of the one she's in, and continue to talk. Despite the theater only showing one movie and having one set of restrooms, and despite a stall being occupied when they come in right after they saw April/Valerie ''leave the single theater,'' it never occurs to them that they might want to be discreet.
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* ''What Happened to Lani Garver'' features the protagonist in a bathroom overhearing others non-malevolently referring to her as "that cancer girl".
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* In ''WithTheLight'', Sachiko is in a bathroom stall when she overhears two parents complaining about a disruption caused by one of Hikaru's panics.
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* Played with in ''SlamDunk''. Hisashi Mitsui is just done taking a dump right before the Shoyo match and overhears one of the Shoyo players saying out loud that Mitsui will only score ''five'' points in the game. An upset Mitsui gets outta the stall to find out who unknowingly insulted his skills, but only sees the player's back. He still takes it in the ItsPersonal way, and when he finds out who said crap about him ([[spoiler: his old rival Hasegawa, who unlike others ''knows'' Mitsui is an ex delinquent]]), he engages in a sports duel with him.

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* Played with in ''SlamDunk''. Hisashi Mitsui is just done taking a dump right before the Shoyo match and overhears one of the Shoyo players saying out loud that Mitsui will only score ''five'' points in the game. An upset Mitsui gets outta the stall to find out who unknowingly insulted his skills, but only sees the player's back. back (just enough to know he wears the #5 jersey). He still takes it in the ItsPersonal way, and when he finds out finally remembers who is the guy who said crap about him ([[spoiler: his ([[spoiler:his old rival Kazushi Hasegawa, who unlike others ''knows'' Mitsui is an ex delinquent]]), ex-delinquent]]), he engages in a sports duel with him.
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* In KimiNiTodoke, this is how rumours are found out about. Sawako's first appearance is in the girl's bathroom, even.
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* Variation: In ''{{Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip}}'', Simon and Tom leave the room to discuss how Simon is ''so good'' at handling reporters and mention everything they don't want Martha, the reporter in the room, to know. When they walk back in, she reveals Simon was still wearing his microphone, and asks for more information.

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->''You can hear everything if you're in there long enough.''
-->--'''Janeece Bryant''', ''WaterlooRoad''




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* Happens on a semi-regular basis in ''WaterlooRoad'', as [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] in the page quote.
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Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom.) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:

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Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom.) [[GenderBlenderName Unless it's Charlotte and Roberta]]) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:
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* An amusing variant in the pilot of ''City Homicide'': Detective Jen Mapplethorpe is reassigned to Homicide under a different superior, DSS Sparkes, who quickly reveals how much he respects her by assigning her to filing and [[YouGetMeCoffee getting him coffee]]. She walks into the bathroom complaining aloud about Sparkes, only to be overheard by his superior, Superintendant Waverly, in the bathroom stall. Waverley privately agrees with her, resulting in Jen returning to Stanley's squad.

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* An amusing variant in the pilot of ''City Homicide'': Detective Jen Mapplethorpe is reassigned to Homicide under a different superior, DSS Sparkes, who quickly reveals how much he respects her by assigning her to filing and [[YouGetMeCoffee getting him coffee]]. She walks into the bathroom complaining aloud about Sparkes, only to be overheard by his superior, Superintendant Waverly, Waverley, in the bathroom stall. Waverley privately agrees with her, resulting in Jen returning to Stanley's squad.
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* An amusing variant in the pilot of ''City Homicide'': Detective Jen Mapplethorpe is reassigned to Homicide under a different superior, DSS Sparkes, who quickly reveals how much he respects her by assigning her to filing and [[YouGetMeCoffee getting him coffee]]. She walks into the bathroom complaining aloud about Sparkes, only to be overheard by his superior, Superintendant Waverly, in the bathroom stall. Waverley privately agrees with her, resulting in Jen returning to Stanley's squad.

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* The third kind happens in [[{{ShesTheMan}} She's the Man]].

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* The third kind happens in [[{{ShesTheMan}} She's ''[=~She's the Man]].Man~=]''.



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* In ''HannahMontana'', Miley Stewart defies this trope by checking for feet under the doors before talking about stuff pertaining to her life as Hannah.
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* In the book ''katie.com,'' Katie hears two girls gossiping about her in the bathroom, one girl claiming that she saw a positive pregnancy test belonging to her, and another claiming Katie aborted the child with a coat-hanger. (Neither of which are true, of course.)
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Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom.) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:

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Alice is doing her business in a stall, when who should walk in but Charlie and Bob. (Don't ask what they're doing in the women's bathroom.) Both of them start trash-talking Alice. Their conversation might not even be mean spirited, but simply flaws they wouldn't bring up in person that [[SelectiveObliviousness burst Alice's bubble]]. Or they assume that she's not out there and [[{{GIFT}} feel they can talk without consequences]]. After an earful, Alice will likely do one of four things:

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[[AC: {{Film}}]]
* The third kind happened in {{She's the Man}}.

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[[AC: {{Film}}]]
{{Film}} -- Animated]]
* In ''MonstersInc.'' Randall almost catches Sulley and Mike with Boo hiding in the bathroom when his lackey Fungus shows him the newspaper story of the kid entering the monster world. From Randall and Fungus' dialogue, Sulley learns that Randall is working on some sort of machine. (Not an overheard insult really, but close enough to merit a mention.)

[[AC: {{Film}} -- Live Action]]
* The third kind happened happens in {{She's [[{{ShesTheMan}} She's the Man}}.Man]].



* In ''MonstersInc.'' Randall almost catches Sulley and Mike with Boo hiding in the bathroom when his lackey Fungus shows him the newspaper story of the kid entering the monster world. From Randall and Fungus' dialogue, Sulley learns that Randall is working on some sort of machine. (Not an overheard insult really, but close enough to merit a mention.)
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* The third kind happened in She's the Man.

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* The third kind happened in She's {{She's the Man.Man}}.



* It's how EddieMurphy finds out about the plot in ''Trading Places.'' Plus one of the guys refers to him as the N words, so insults are included in this scene.

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* It's how EddieMurphy finds out about the plot in ''Trading Places.''TradingPlaces.'' Plus one of the guys refers to him as the N words, so insults are included in this scene.



* A DoubleSubversion appears in ''NineToFive'': early in the movie, Violet advises Judy to check the bathroom stalls before gossipping in the ladies' room, lest Roz, the boss' prime stooge, be listening in. Later in the film, Violet, Judy, and Doralee discuss Violet's accidental near-poisoning of their boss, after Violet assures the others that she's already checked the stalls for Roz's shoes. Cut to Roz in one of the stalls with her feet pulled up out of view, taking notes on a roll of toilet paper.

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* A DoubleSubversion appears in ''NineToFive'': early in the movie, Violet advises Judy to check the bathroom stalls before gossipping gossiping in the ladies' room, lest Roz, the boss' prime stooge, be listening in. Later in the film, Violet, Judy, and Doralee discuss Violet's accidental near-poisoning of their boss, after Violet assures the others that she's already checked the stalls for Roz's shoes. Cut to Roz in one of the stalls with her feet pulled up out of view, taking notes on a roll of toilet paper.



* In a movie called ''Sorority Row'' two of the girls start talking about [[spoiler: the dead friend no one was supposed to know about]] in the middle of the bathroom. Surprisingly, they weren't alone. All this led to [[spoiler: the death of the unlucky eavesdropper]].

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* In a movie called ''Sorority Row'' ''SororityRow'' two of the girls start talking about [[spoiler: the dead friend no one was supposed to know about]] in the middle of the bathroom. Surprisingly, they weren't alone. All this led to [[spoiler: the death of the unlucky eavesdropper]].



* ''Lean On Me''. The mayor and the fire code director discuss how to get the principal out of his position in the bathroom. A teacher (a nerdy white guy no less) manages to avoid being caught by keeping his feet off the floor and make it appear no one is in the bathroom but them.

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* ''Lean On Me''.''LeanOnMe''. The mayor and the fire code director discuss how to get the principal out of his position in the bathroom. A teacher (a nerdy white guy no less) manages to avoid being caught by keeping his feet off the floor and make it appear no one is in the bathroom but them.



* A variation occured in one episode of ''AsToldByGinger'': Macie overheard two high school girls plotting to deface Courtney at a party.

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* A variation occured occurred in one episode of ''AsToldByGinger'': Macie overheard two high school girls plotting to deface Courtney at a party.

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