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[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/brain_center_at_whipples_2117.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:Whipple displays his plan to save money by replacing the workers.]]

-->'''Creator/RodSerling''': These are the players, with or without a scorecard: in one corner, a machine; in the other, one Wallace V. Whipple, man. And the game? It happens to be the historical battle between flesh and steel, between the brain of man and the product of man's brain. We don't make book on this one and predict no winner, but we can tell you that, for this particular contest, there is standing room only in the Twilight Zone.

In 1967, Wallace V. Whipple, owner of a vast manufacturing corporation, decides to upgrade his plant to increase output by installing a machine named the "[=X109B14=] modified transistorized totally automated machine", which leads to layoffs as more and more employees are replaced by robots or computers. Some former employees try to convince him that the value of a man outweighs the value of a machine, but their protests fall on deaf ears.

Eventually, the board of directors find him neurotically obsessed with machines and retire him. Whipple joins his former plant manager, replaced by another computer earlier, at the bar opposite his factory and expresses deep sorrow at his misfortune ("It isn't fair, Hanley! It isn't fair the way they...diminish us"), now that a robot runs his office.

-->'''Rod Serling''': There are many bromides applicable here -- too much of a good thing; tiger by the tail; as ye sow, so shall ye reap. The point is that too often, man becomes clever instead of becoming wise, he becomes inventive but not thoughtful -- and sometimes, as in the case of Mr. Whipple, he can create himself right out of existence. Tonight's tale of oddness and obsolescence from the Twilight Zone.

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[[quoteright:300:https://static.[[quoteright:345:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/brain_center_at_whipples_2117.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:Whipple
org/pmwiki/pub/images/tz_the_brain_center_at_whipples.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:345:Whipple
displays his plan to save money by replacing replacing\\
the workers.]]

-->'''Creator/RodSerling''': ->'''Creator/RodSerling''': These are the players, with or without a scorecard: in one corner, a machine; in the other, one Wallace V. Whipple, man. And the game? It happens to be the historical battle between flesh and steel, between the brain of man and the product of man's brain. We don't make book on this one and predict no winner, but we can tell you that, for this particular contest, there is standing room only in the Twilight Zone.

Air date: May 15, 1964

In 1967, Wallace V. Whipple, Whipple (Richard Deacon), the owner of a vast manufacturing corporation, decides to upgrade his plant to increase output by installing a machine named the "[=X109B14=] modified transistorized totally automated automatic assembly machine", which leads to layoffs as more and more of the plant's employees are replaced by robots or computers. Some of his former employees try to convince him that the value of a man outweighs the value of a machine, but their protests fall on deaf ears.

Eventually, the company's board of directors find him directors, finding Whipple neurotically obsessed with machines and machines, decide to retire him. Whipple joins his former plant manager, replaced by another computer earlier, at the bar opposite his factory and expresses deep sorrow at his misfortune ("It isn't fair, Hanley! It isn't fair the way they... diminish us"), now that a robot runs his office.

-->'''Rod Serling''': There are many bromides applicable here -- too much of a good thing; tiger by the tail; as ye sow, so shall ye reap. The point is that too often, man becomes clever instead of becoming wise, he becomes inventive but not thoughtful -- and sometimes, as in the case of Mr. Whipple, he can create himself right out of existence. Tonight's tale of oddness and obsolescence from the Twilight Zone.
office.




!!The Trope Center at Whipples:

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\n!!The Trope Center at Whipples:Whipple;s:


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-->'''Rod Serling''': There are many bromides applicable here – too much of a good thing; tiger by the tail; as ye sow, so shall ye reap. The point is that too often, man becomes clever instead of becoming wise, he becomes inventive but not thoughtful – and sometimes, as in the case of Mr. Whipple, he can create himself right out of existence. Tonight's tale of oddness and obsolescence from the Twilight Zone.
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* {{Irony}}: Lampshaded. Whipple's remaining human employee points out there's something self-defeating in making an efficient company that sells many fine products, but puts so many people out of work that there will be fewer customers who can afford to buy it themselves.
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[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/brain_center_at_whipples_2117.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:Whipple displays his plan to save money by replacing the workers.]]

-->'''Creator/RodSerling''': These are the players, with or without a scorecard: in one corner, a machine; in the other, one Wallace V. Whipple, man. And the game? It happens to be the historical battle between flesh and steel, between the brain of man and the product of man's brain. We don't make book on this one and predict no winner, but we can tell you that, for this particular contest, there is standing room only in the Twilight Zone.

In 1967, Wallace V. Whipple, owner of a vast manufacturing corporation, decides to upgrade his plant to increase output by installing a machine named the "[=X109B14=] modified transistorized totally automated machine", which leads to layoffs as more and more employees are replaced by robots or computers. Some former employees try to convince him that the value of a man outweighs the value of a machine, but their protests fall on deaf ears.

Eventually, the board of directors find him neurotically obsessed with machines and retire him. Whipple joins his former plant manager, replaced by another computer earlier, at the bar opposite his factory and expresses deep sorrow at his misfortune ("It isn't fair, Hanley! It isn't fair the way they...diminish us"), now that a robot runs his office.

-->'''Rod Serling''': There are many bromides applicable here -- too much of a good thing; tiger by the tail; as ye sow, so shall ye reap. The point is that too often, man becomes clever instead of becoming wise, he becomes inventive but not thoughtful -- and sometimes, as in the case of Mr. Whipple, he can create himself right out of existence. Tonight's tale of oddness and obsolescence from the Twilight Zone.

!!The Trope Center at Whipples:
* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: The episode is set in 1967, three years after it was filmed.
* AnAesop: Aiming for superior efficiency is not in of itself a bad thing, but it should never be an excuse to sacrifice or devalue humanity. Whipple aimed for efficiency to the point where he devalued himself out of his own job.
* AlliterativeName: The protagonist's name is Wallace V. Whipple.
* BaldOfEvil: Although in Whipple's case, it's more like Bald of {{Jerkass}}.
* BecameTheirOwnAntithesis: Whipple starts out cold and without empathy. Later, after he's fired, he becomes just as humanly devastated as the very people he's fired, going into a poignant, raw spiel about the worth and value of a man.
* BreakTheHaughty: What happens to Whipple in the end.
* TheCameo: [[Film/ForbiddenPlanet Robby the Robot]] appears at the very end of the episode, during Serling's closing monologue, as the new CEO of the Whipple Manufacturing Plant.
* CharacterTic: Whipple likes to twirl his watch fob when he's thinking. The robot who takes over his job does the same thing (though what a robot needs with a pocket watch is anyone's guess).
* ChromosomeCasting: The only women featured in this episode are from crowd scenes in Whipple's film at the start of the episode, with none playing a major role in the story.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: Wallace V. Whipple.
* EverybodyHasStandards: Whipple's last human employee doesn't approve of a lot of what Whipple has done but is at least initially willing to put up with it. However, he shows genuine disgust when Whipple names maternity as one of the human "inconveniences" that makes robots more efficient replacements.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Whipple's dedication to efficiency and his machinery winds up getting him efficiency-ed out of his own job.
* JobStealingRobot: The general plot of the episode.
* LaserGuidedKarma: At the end of the episode, Wallace Whipple suffers karmic justice as he himself is replaced by a robot.
* MasterComputer: [=X109B14=] takes over the operation of Whipple's factory.
* OriginalPositionFallacy: Whipple had no problem firing his employees by the dozen in exchange for machines that outsourced them. But towards the end, when a machine has replaced ''him'', he goes into a devastated spiel about how it's wrong to toss a man away for not meeting up to the same standards as machines. It's not lost on his retired assistant that Whipple ironically created the very system that pushed him out of his own company.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Whipple is such an overwhelmingly unlikable person that he receives ''three'' of these before he finally gets a clue.
* SpeakIllOfTheDead: Downplayed. While Whipple doesn't outright insult his late father, he points out that his father's "good will" wasn't as "efficient" as his own approach at business.
* WorldOfHam: As Mark Scott Zicree says in ''The Twilight Zone Companion'', there are two kinds of characters in this episode: those who make speeches and those who make speeches while [[MilkingTheGiantCow gesticulating]]. In particular, Ted de Corsia (as Dickerson) gives a speech to Whipple that, to refer to it as "scenery chewing", would be an extreme understatement. "'''''I'M A MAAAAAAAANNNNN, MR. WHIPPLE!!!!!!'''''"
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