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* Some "X Gets Y Expelled" videos start with a student, usually a rival of the troublemaker, getting an A on a test and celebrating while the troublemaker gets a poor grade. The troublemaker tells them to stop rubbing it in, and the other student states they weren't doing so. After the troublemaker flips out at the student, the teacher sarcastically congratulates the troublemaker and sends them to the principal's office. In the office, the principal asks the usual response to when someone comes in, and the troublemaker claims they don't know and that the teacher is an idiot with a non-working brain who sent them to the office for no reason. The principal knows this is a lie, and demands the troublemaker to tell the truth, which they do. The troublemaker then gets suspended or expelled for a week or few, and their parents promptly ground them. The troublemaker then hatches a plan that involves creating a robot that resembles the student to frame them for a wrongdoing and get them expelled. After a sequence of them building a robot, the troublemaker then goes to school and hides in a locker and uses a remote control (which looks like a UsefulNotes/PlayStation4 controller) to control the robot and destroy a location such as a bathroom. The principal sees the destruction and admits the student would never do such a thing, but decides to call them to the office anyways since they believe the surveillance footage couldn't have been tampered. The footage is replayed to the student, who is then expelled. The wrongly-framed student then goes back to class, explains what happened to the teacher, and then the teacher and the principal have a conversation. The teacher angrily leaves after almost getting fired before the parents of the student come in and ''scold'' them as if they had actually done such a thing. After another teacher/principal talk, the principal undergoes a {{Narm}} reaction to the full event after seeing what the troublemaker did. The principal then calls in the troublemaker to get on them for getting the student expelled, and then the troublemaker gets expelled from the school. The parents of the troublemaker are called, and then the troublemaker gets grounded. After this, the student is no longer expelled and their parents are proud of them for this.

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* Some "X Gets Y Expelled" videos start with a student, usually a rival of the troublemaker, getting an A on a test and celebrating while the troublemaker gets a poor grade. The troublemaker tells them to stop rubbing it in, and the other student states they weren't doing so. After the troublemaker flips out at the student, the teacher sarcastically congratulates the troublemaker and sends them to the principal's office. In the office, the principal asks the usual response to when someone comes in, and the troublemaker claims they don't know and that the teacher is an idiot with a non-working brain who sent them to the office for no reason. The principal knows this is a lie, and demands the troublemaker to tell the truth, which they do. The troublemaker then gets suspended or expelled for a week or few, and their parents promptly ground them. The troublemaker then hatches a plan that involves creating a robot that resembles the student to frame them for a wrongdoing and get them expelled. After a sequence of them building a robot, the troublemaker then goes to school and hides in a locker and uses a remote control (which looks like a UsefulNotes/PlayStation4 Platform/PlayStation4 controller) to control the robot and destroy a location such as a bathroom. The principal sees the destruction and admits the student would never do such a thing, but decides to call them to the office anyways since they believe the surveillance footage couldn't have been tampered. The footage is replayed to the student, who is then expelled. The wrongly-framed student then goes back to class, explains what happened to the teacher, and then the teacher and the principal have a conversation. The teacher angrily leaves after almost getting fired before the parents of the student come in and ''scold'' them as if they had actually done such a thing. After another teacher/principal talk, the principal undergoes a {{Narm}} reaction to the full event after seeing what the troublemaker did. The principal then calls in the troublemaker to get on them for getting the student expelled, and then the troublemaker gets expelled from the school. The parents of the troublemaker are called, and then the troublemaker gets grounded. After this, the student is no longer expelled and their parents are proud of them for this.
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When it comes to the infamous "grounded videos", it's common for Website/GoAnimate/Vyond users to make [[RecycledScript their own versions of another person's video]], though many of them aren't very different aside from the characters and (sometimes) the setting.

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When it comes to the infamous "grounded videos", it's common for Website/GoAnimate/Vyond Platform/GoAnimate[=/=]Vyond users to make [[RecycledScript their own versions of another person's video]], though many of them aren't very different aside from the characters and (sometimes) the setting.
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I reuploaded this privated video.


** His video "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJUfL2dJDF0 Ash and Pikachu Babysit Nicole]]" is a copy of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prK6km8oh_Q SpongeBob SquarePants and Mr. Krabs Babysit Pat]]" (which is mentioned on [[Narm/GoAnimate the Narm subpage]]), but with multiple "[[MemeticMutation Drops by Squidward's House]]" jokes added.

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** His video "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJUfL2dJDF0 "[[https://archive.org/details/ash-and-pikachu-babysit-nicole Ash and Pikachu Babysit Nicole]]" is a copy of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prK6km8oh_Q SpongeBob SquarePants and Mr. Krabs Babysit Pat]]" (which is mentioned on [[Narm/GoAnimate the Narm subpage]]), but with multiple "[[MemeticMutation Drops by Squidward's House]]" jokes added.
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Not sure if the piece in question is actually Kevin Mac Leod


* If a video has a character being punished or attacked by being [[FunWithFlushing flushed down the toilet]], usually the flushing sequence is identical across many videos: The character goes down the drain yelling "[[RapidFireNo nonononononono]]" all the way, goes through a series of small pipes before ending up in an AbsurdlySpaciousSewer, then sees a [[InevitableWaterfall drop off ahead]] ("No, not the drop. Waaa-aaaaaaaaaa-yo-ah."); they either get rescued just in time, or go over it and fall to their death (as there's only solid ground below for whatever reason). This is almost always set to the same stock music cue as well. [[Music/KevinMacleod (A rock tune.)]]

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* If a video has a character being punished or attacked by being [[FunWithFlushing flushed down the toilet]], usually the flushing sequence is identical across many videos: The character goes down the drain yelling "[[RapidFireNo nonononononono]]" all the way, goes through a series of small pipes before ending up in an AbsurdlySpaciousSewer, then sees a [[InevitableWaterfall drop off ahead]] ("No, not the drop. Waaa-aaaaaaaaaa-yo-ah."); they either get rescued just in time, or go over it and fall to their death (as there's only solid ground below for whatever reason). This is almost always set to the same stock music cue as well. [[Music/KevinMacleod (A rock tune.)]])
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** He made several PBS logo videos that are copied from videos by Willy Freebody and [=TheSuperdog19=], among others.

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** He made several PBS logo videos that are were copied from videos by Willy Freebody and [=TheSuperdog19=], among others.
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* Blatantly seen in almost every "X Misbehaves at (restaurant)" videos, which are in of themselves always reenactments of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaFtsW1Ceg8 this scene]] from ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark''. The troublemaker will ask their parent if they can go to their favorite restaurant, only for their parent to dismiss them, leading to the troublemaker repeating "I want to go to (restaurant)" several times before crying. The second parent will then announce that they're out of food, and the first parent will take the troublemaker to the restaurant. Once they get there, the two will order their meals, only for the waiter to inform them that one item on the troublemaker's order is out of stock, but offers a replacement instead. The troublemaker will often reject the replacement and throw a tantrum before going berserk and destroying the entire restaurant[[note]]In some videos, the troublemaker will ask their parent to get a diamond ring so they can "engage" them before going on their rampage.[[/note]], sometimes even killing all but two people who escape the restaurant the moment the troublemaker gets mad. During the drive home, the troublemaker will ask the parent to return to the restaurant, [[OffTheTable only for the parent to dismiss this for destroying the restaurant]]. In some videos, the event will be broadcasted on GNN news.

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* Blatantly seen in almost every "X Misbehaves at (restaurant)" videos, which are in of themselves always reenactments of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaFtsW1Ceg8 com/watch?v=LU7JklH-ycE this scene]] from ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark''. The troublemaker will ask their parent if they can go to their favorite restaurant, only for their parent to dismiss them, leading to the troublemaker repeating "I want to go to (restaurant)" several times before crying. The second parent will then announce that they're out of food, and the first parent will take the troublemaker to the restaurant. Once they get there, the two will order their meals, only for the waiter to inform them that one item on the troublemaker's order is out of stock, but offers a replacement instead. The troublemaker will often reject the replacement and throw a tantrum before going berserk and destroying the entire restaurant[[note]]In some videos, the troublemaker will ask their parent to get a diamond ring so they can "engage" them before going on their rampage.[[/note]], sometimes even killing all but two people who escape the restaurant the moment the troublemaker gets mad. During the drive home, the troublemaker will ask the parent to return to the restaurant, [[OffTheTable only for the parent to dismiss this for destroying the restaurant]]. In some videos, the event will be broadcasted on GNN news.
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* "Cusses/Swears in Class" videos often copy the scene where Cartman, Kyle, Stan and Kenny get in trouble for using profanity in school in ''WesternAnimation/SouthParkBiggerLongerAndUncut''. As with that scene, these videos typically open with the teacher asking the class a math problem that a student incorrectly answers and is chastised for. After the teacher asks for someone who actually knows the answer, another student says they know the answer before another student mocks them, which ends up setting off a very similar sequence of insults and profanity drops as the movie's scene, including the teacher calling out each of the four students for using such language and things eventually culminating with the mocking student directly insulting the teacher and repeating said insult loudly, causing them or all four students who swore to be sent to the principal's office, where they are promptly punished.
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* "X Gets Fat at (restaurant)" videos involve the troublemaker going to a restaurant and ordering an impossibly large amount of food. When the worker taking the order tries to decline the order, the troublemaker forces them to make it anyways and the worker tells them to find an empty seat. After the food is delivered (and sometimes the worker paid), the troublemaker then proceeds to eat all of the food in one sitting. After they remark on the deliciousness of their meal, they suddenly turn fat (whether it be in the form of their model getting horizontally stretched out, using the fat character model or both) and, in shock, remark that their parents will be extremely angry upon seeing their new state. Cut back to the troublemaker's house, and their parents indeed go volcanic and ground them.

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* "X Gets Fat at (restaurant)" videos involve the a troublemaker going to a restaurant and ordering an impossibly large amount of food. When the worker taking the order tries to decline the order, the troublemaker forces them to make it anyways and the worker tells them to find an empty seat. After the food is delivered (and sometimes the worker paid), the troublemaker then proceeds to eat all of the food in one sitting. After they remark on the deliciousness of their meal, they suddenly turn fat (whether it be in the form of their model getting horizontally stretched out, using the fat character model or both) and, in shock, remark that their parents will be extremely angry upon seeing their new state. Cut back to the troublemaker's house, and their parents indeed go volcanic and ground them.



** His video "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJUfL2dJDF0 Ash and Pikachu Babysit Nicole]]" is a copy of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prK6km8oh_Q SpongeBob SquarePants and Mr. Krabs Babysit Pat]]" (which is mentioned on the Narm subpage), but with multiple "[[MemeticMutation Drops by Squidward's House]]" jokes added.

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** His video "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJUfL2dJDF0 Ash and Pikachu Babysit Nicole]]" is a copy of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prK6km8oh_Q SpongeBob SquarePants and Mr. Krabs Babysit Pat]]" (which is mentioned on [[Narm/GoAnimate the Narm subpage), subpage]]), but with multiple "[[MemeticMutation Drops by Squidward's House]]" jokes added.
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None


* "Character Elimination" video series are the [=GoAnimate=] community's take on the ever-popular "Object Show" genre of web animation (as well as similar shows like ''WesternAnimation/TotalDrama''), featuring fictional characters and sometimes even real people, who are battling it out for a cash prize, with the viewers usually deciding who wins or who goes home.
** There are usually troublemakers who sabotage their respective teams, causing said teams to lose and being forced to hold a "Vote Me Out!" sign (a reference to Firey holding a similar sign in Episode 23 of ''WebAnimation/BattleForDreamIsland''). Predictably, the viewers send said troublemakers home, and this repeats for the first couple of eliminations until all troublemakers are eliminated.

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* "Character Elimination" video series are the [=GoAnimate=] community's take on the ever-popular "Object Show" genre of web animation (as well as similar shows like ''WesternAnimation/TotalDrama''), featuring fictional characters and sometimes even real people, who are battling it out for a cash prize, prize through a series of challenges, with the viewers usually deciding who wins or who goes home.
** There are usually troublemakers who sabotage their respective teams, causing said teams to lose their challenges and being forced to hold a "Vote Me Out!" sign (a reference to Firey holding a similar sign in Episode 23 of ''WebAnimation/BattleForDreamIsland''). Predictably, the viewers send said troublemakers home, and this repeats for the first couple of eliminations until all troublemakers are eliminated.



** Most of the challenges are repeated as well, such as eating a giant cake (with a troublemaker putting something disgusting on said cake, causing their team to lose the challenge).

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** Most of the challenges are repeated as well, such as eating a giant cake (with a troublemaker putting something disgusting on said cake, causing their team to lose the challenge).cake).
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* "X and Y Suck at Hungry Pumkin" videos involve two troublemakers applying for a job at a restaurant and, upon immediately landing the job, being given a tutorial by the restaurant's manager, who expects both of them to do well on their first shift. The Hungry Pumkin from ''VideoGame/PumkinLand'' then comes to the restaurant, and the troublemakers bungle his orders, whether it be by giving him a pepper vegetable instead of a condiment, eating a food item (usually a hot dog) he asked for (and, in return, [[LaserGuidedKarma getting a food item of the same kind that they saved for their promotion day eaten by the Pumkin]]), swiping the Pumkin's order off the table, or refusing to give them a specific food item by giving him another one (with the Pumkin rejecting it) and eventually one of the troublemakers trying to encourage him to eat them instead (which leads to the Pumkin throwing them across the restaurant). After many of these (and sometimes also more) screw-ups, the thoroughly dissatisfied Pumkin storms out after declaring how awful the experience was and that he'll never come back, and the troublemakers are fired after asking about how they did and for a promotion. These videos typically end with the troublemakers [[{{Angrish}} angrily spewing gibberish]] and ranting on how they were fired and thus cannot make the money needed to buy something (such as a video game console or tickets to a theme park), but there are some that end with the troublemakers getting grounded.

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* "X and Y Suck at Hungry Pumkin" videos involve two troublemakers applying for a job at a restaurant and, upon immediately landing the job, being given a tutorial by the restaurant's manager, who expects both of them to do well on their first shift. The Hungry Pumkin from ''VideoGame/PumkinLand'' then comes to the restaurant, and the troublemakers bungle his orders, whether it be by giving him a pepper vegetable instead of a condiment, eating a food item (usually a hot dog) he asked for (and, in return, [[LaserGuidedKarma getting a food item of the same kind that they saved for their promotion day eaten by the Pumkin]]), swiping the Pumkin's order off the table, or refusing to give them serve him a specific food item by giving him another one (with the Pumkin rejecting it) and eventually one of the troublemakers trying to encourage him to eat them instead (which leads to the Pumkin throwing them across the restaurant). After many of these (and sometimes also more) screw-ups, the thoroughly dissatisfied Pumkin storms out after declaring how awful the experience was and that he'll never come back, and the troublemakers are fired after asking about how they did and for a promotion. These videos typically end with the troublemakers [[{{Angrish}} angrily spewing gibberish]] and ranting on how they were fired and thus cannot make the money needed to buy something (such as a video game console or tickets to a theme park), but there are some that end with the troublemakers getting grounded.
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Privated video. The Wayback Machine doesn’t have the Ash and Pikachu video above, so I will reupload it soon.


** He made a video called "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4lIhSW-dccE Technicolor Bloopers]]", which is recycled from an episode of ''Technicolor Logo Bloopers'' (which itself is based on ''WebAnimation/LooneyTunesIntroBloopers'') but with logos as the characters. At one point, the line "Martha's a munter" from the original video was changed to "Martha's a mother", even though there's nobody named Martha in the remake. Jake presumably realized his mistake, since his captions for the video try to pass off the line as "Month is a month-er".

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** He made a video called "[[https://www."[[https://web.archive.org/web/20200513120000/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4lIhSW-dccE Technicolor Bloopers]]", which is recycled from an episode of ''Technicolor Logo Bloopers'' (which itself is based on ''WebAnimation/LooneyTunesIntroBloopers'') but with logos as the characters. At one point, the line "Martha's a munter" from the original video was changed to "Martha's a mother", even though there's nobody named Martha in the remake. Jake presumably realized his mistake, since his captions for the video try to pass off the line as "Month is a month-er".
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* Most “X misbehaves at (movie)” videos usually begin with the troublemaker's parents telling them they are going to see a movie because another character wants to do so, which the troublemaker protests because they want to watch a movie the creator hates instead. The parents then say that they are not going to see the movie the troublemaker wants to watch and insult it (usually saying it is a ripoff of another movie) before the gang goes to the cinema with the troublemaker proceeding to insult trailers that play before the movie. Then, before the movie starts, the troublemaker will usually escape to the film they wanted to watch (usually by saying they need to go to the bathroom). However, after both movies are completely, the parents will catch the troublemaker leaving the screening and ground them.

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* Most “X misbehaves at (movie)” videos usually begin with the troublemaker's parents telling them they are going to see a movie because another character wants to do so, which the troublemaker protests because they want to watch a movie the creator hates instead. The parents then say that they are not going to see the movie the troublemaker wants to watch and insult it (usually saying it is a ripoff of another movie) before the gang goes to the cinema with the troublemaker proceeding to insult trailers that play before the movie. Then, before the movie starts, the troublemaker will usually escape to the film they wanted to watch (usually by saying they need to go to the bathroom). However, after both movies are completely, completed, the parents will catch the troublemaker leaving the screening and ground them.
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** He made a video called "Technicolor Bloopers", which is recycled from an episode of ''Technicolor Logo Bloopers'' (which itself is based on ''WebAnimation/LooneyTunesIntroBloopers'') but with logos as the characters. At one point, the line "Martha's a munter" from the original video was changed to "Martha's a mother", even though there's nobody named Martha in the remake. Jake presumably realized his mistake, since his captions for the video try to pass off the line as "Month is a month-er".

to:

** He made a video called "Technicolor Bloopers", "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4lIhSW-dccE Technicolor Bloopers]]", which is recycled from an episode of ''Technicolor Logo Bloopers'' (which itself is based on ''WebAnimation/LooneyTunesIntroBloopers'') but with logos as the characters. At one point, the line "Martha's a munter" from the original video was changed to "Martha's a mother", even though there's nobody named Martha in the remake. Jake presumably realized his mistake, since his captions for the video try to pass off the line as "Month is a month-er".

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