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* ''Series/FatherBrown'': From "[[Recap/FatherBrownS2E6 The Daughters of Jerusalem]]":
--> '''Father Brown:''' I think we need to find out what was in Miss Thimble's letter.
--> '''Lady Felicia:''' How on earth do we do that?
--> '''Father Brown:''' I think... we should ''ask'' her.
--> '''Mrs. [=McCarthy=]:''' ''[[[SimpleYetAwesome awed smile]]]''
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--> '''Josh:''' It's broken! It fell in the lake, a bear ate it, the point is ''you're lost''! And all you have is a compass and a topographical map of the region.
--> '''Megan:'' So, I have a compass and a topographical map, but I don't have my cell phone?
--> '''Josh:''' That tears it; we're seeing a movie!

to:

--> '''Josh:''' It's broken! It fell in the lake, a bear ate it, the point is ''you're lost''! And all you have is a compass and a topographical map of the region.
--> '''Megan:''
region.\\
'''Megan:'''
So, I have a compass and a topographical map, but I don't have my cell phone?
-->
phone?\\
'''Josh:''' That tears it; we're seeing a movie!
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*** Invoked in the episode "[[Recap/StargateSG1S4E1SmallVictories Small Victories]]". Thor borrows Major Carter specifically because humans would think of the low tech solutions that the Asgard would overlook. In this case, it was the idea to fly the Asgard's newest ship remotely so the Replicators would chase it, then [[TakingYouWithMe blowing up the ship, destroying the Replicators with it]].

to:

*** Invoked in the episode "[[Recap/StargateSG1S4E1SmallVictories Small Victories]]". Thor borrows Major Carter specifically because humans would think of the low tech simple solutions that the Asgard would overlook. In this case, it was the idea to fly the Asgard's newest ship remotely so the Replicators would chase it, then [[TakingYouWithMe blowing up the ship, destroying the Replicators with it]].
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*** Invoked in the episode "[[Recap/StargateSG1S4E1SmallVictories Small Victories]]". Thor borrows Major Carter specifically because humans would think of the low tech solutions that the Asgard would overlook. In this case, it was the idea to fly the Asgard's newest ship remotely so the Replicators would chase it, then [[TakingYouWithMe blowing up the ship, destroying the Replicators with it]].
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* ''Series/Numb3rs'': In the episode "Hot Shot", Colby watches Megan analyze a victim's whole room, deduce her personality, and finger a potential suspect in her ex-boyfriend. Then he holds up his phone and tells her that David figured out the same thing by talking to the neighbor, but it was fun watching her work anyway.

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** In "War Zone," Gunn locks Angel in a meat locker, and Angel takes pains to try to break himself out. Wesley and Cordelia show up and just open the door from the outside, asking why he didn't just call for help on his cell phone.
** Wolfram & Hart usually send demons and assassins after Angel and go through grandiose {{Evil Plan}}s. In "Carpe Noctem," [[ObstructiveBureaucrat Gavin Park]] points out that they can easily put Angel and his crew out of business by simply informing the government of [[UndeadTaxExemption Angel's ID issues]]; of course, soon after he points this out, [[TheRival Lilah Morgan]] gives Angel all the documents he needs just to spite him.

to:

** In "War Zone," "[[Recap/AngelS01E20WarZone War Zone]]", Gunn locks Angel in a meat locker, and Angel takes pains to try to break himself out. Wesley and Cordelia show up and just open the door from the outside, asking why he didn't just call for help on his cell phone.
** Wolfram & Hart usually send demons and assassins after Angel and go through grandiose {{Evil Plan}}s. In "Carpe Noctem," "[[Recap/AngelS03E04CarpeNoctem Carpe Noctem]]", [[ObstructiveBureaucrat Gavin Park]] points out that they can easily put Angel and his crew out of business by simply informing the government of [[UndeadTaxExemption Angel's ID issues]]; of course, soon after he points this out, [[TheRival Lilah Morgan]] gives Angel all the documents he needs just to spite him.



* ''Series/{{Arrowverse}}'':

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* ''Series/{{Arrowverse}}'':''Franchise/{{Arrowverse}}'':



** On ''Series/{{The Flash|2014}}'', the team are trying to find a country music star who is being hunted by an enemy. They try to figure out ways to track her using their various powers and such but come up short. New teammate Ralph then asks if any of them have ''checked her website.''

to:

** On ''Series/{{The Flash|2014}}'', In ''Series/TheFlash2014'', the team are trying to find a country music star who is being hunted by an enemy. They try to figure out ways to track her using their various powers and such but come up short. New teammate Ralph then asks if any of them have ''checked her website.''



* In ''Series/TheBlacklist'' an eco-terrorist is flying a helicopter to cause a nuclear accident. Aram uses his hacking skills to get into the helicopter's computer and talks of how he can use a special program to undo the air balance of the copter and drive it off course. Director Ressler angrily asks "can't you just shut down the rotor? Shut the damn thing down?" Adar pauses and realizes he can do that to ground the copter.

to:

* In ''Series/TheBlacklist'' ''Series/TheBlacklist'', an eco-terrorist is flying a helicopter to cause a nuclear accident. Aram uses his hacking skills to get into the helicopter's computer and talks of how he can use a special program to undo the air balance of the copter and drive it off course. Director Ressler angrily asks "can't you just shut down the rotor? Shut the damn thing down?" Adar pauses and realizes he can do that to ground the copter.



** Warren Mears, after once again having his plans thwarted, finally tries this by bringing a gun and shooting Buffy. It backfires when Buffy survives, and his parting shots cause arguably the show's most shocking case of AnyoneCanDie and lead directly and promptly to his very painful death by [[CruelAndUnusualDeath flaying]] courtesy of Willow.
--->'''Vampire:''' (at Willy's bar, watching a news report about Buffy surviving being shot, to Warren) Yeah. I was gonna eat you myself during the commercial, but now I think it'll be more fun to let the Slayer de-gut you. Might wanna get a head start, my friend. 'Cause this girl is gonna be coming for you, big time.
** The Judge is said to be a demon so strong that "no weapon forged" can harm him. Buffy points out that [[TechnologyMarchesOn what constitutes a "weapon forged" has changed a lot in six hundred years]]. To prove her point, Buffy shoots the Judge once. ''With a rocket launcher.'' [[ChunkySalsaRule No more Judge.]]
** Buffy tries to use her temporary mind-reading powers to get an answer out of Angel without him noticing, only to realize that it doesn't work on vampires:

to:

** Warren Mears, after once again having his plans thwarted, finally tries this by bringing a gun and shooting Buffy. It backfires when Buffy survives, and his parting shots cause arguably the show's most shocking case of AnyoneCanDie and lead directly and promptly to his very painful death by [[CruelAndUnusualDeath flaying]] courtesy of Willow.
--->'''Vampire:''' (at Willy's bar, watching a news report about Buffy surviving being shot, to Warren) Yeah. I was gonna eat you myself during the commercial, but now I think it'll be more fun to let the Slayer de-gut you. Might wanna get a head start, my friend. 'Cause this girl is gonna be coming for you, big time.
** The Judge is said to be a demon so strong that "no weapon forged" can harm him. In "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS2E14Innocence Innocence]]", Buffy points out that [[TechnologyMarchesOn what constitutes a "weapon forged" has changed a lot in six hundred years]]. To prove her point, Buffy shoots the Judge once. ''With once -- ''with a rocket launcher.'' [[ChunkySalsaRule No more Judge.]]
Judge]].
** Angelus insists on using his mind games on Buffy, while Spike insists that he finish her off before she gets really mad and kills them all. Guess what? He's right -- after what Angelus does to upset Giles, not only do they have to contend with a very pissed-off Slayer, but she's [[{{Pun}} hot]] on the heels of her Watcher, [[Awesome/BuffyTheVampireSlayer who is whaling on Angelus with a flaming baseball bat]] after [[KillItWithFire throwing a molotov cocktail into the factory]].
--->'''Spike:''' Why don't you rip her lungs out? It might make an impression.\\
'''Angelus:''' Lacks... poetry.\\
'''Spike:''' Doesn't have to. What rhymes with lungs?
** In "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS3E18Earshot Earshot]]",
Buffy tries to use her temporary mind-reading powers to get an answer out of Angel without him noticing, only to realize that it doesn't work on vampires:



** Angelus insists on using his mind games on Buffy, while Spike insists that he finish her off before she gets really mad and kills them all. Guess what? He's right... after what Angelus did to upset Giles, not only did they have to contend with a very pissed-off Slayer, but she was [[{{Pun}} hot]] on the heels of her Watcher, [[Awesome/BuffyTheVampireSlayer who was whaling on Angelus with a flaming baseball bat]] [[KillItWithFire after throwing a molotov cocktail into the factory]].
--->'''Spike:''' Why don't you rip her lungs out? It might make an impression.\\
'''Angelus:''' Lacks... poetry.\\
'''Spike:''' Doesn't have to. What rhymes with lungs?

to:

** Angelus insists on using his mind games on Buffy, while Spike insists that he finish her off before she gets really mad and kills them all. Guess what? He's right... Warren Mears, after what Angelus did once again having his plans thwarted, finally tries this in "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS6E19SeeingRed Seeing Red]]" by bringing a gun and shooting Buffy. It backfires when Buffy survives, and his parting shots cause arguably the show's most shocking case of AnyoneCanDie and lead directly and promptly to upset Giles, not only did they have to contend with a his very pissed-off Slayer, painful death by [[CruelAndUnusualDeath flaying]] courtesy of Willow.
--->'''Vampire:''' ''[at Willy's bar, watching a news report about Buffy surviving being shot, to Warren]'' Yeah. I was gonna eat you myself during the commercial,
but she was [[{{Pun}} hot]] on now I think it'll be more fun to let the heels of her Watcher, [[Awesome/BuffyTheVampireSlayer who was whaling on Angelus with Slayer de-gut you. Might wanna get a flaming baseball bat]] [[KillItWithFire after throwing a molotov cocktail into the factory]].
--->'''Spike:''' Why don't you rip her lungs out? It might make an impression.\\
'''Angelus:''' Lacks... poetry.\\
'''Spike:''' Doesn't have to. What rhymes with lungs?
head start, my friend. 'Cause this girl is gonna be coming for you, big time.



* On ''Series/PushingDaisies'', the murderers will never use mundane methods to either kill their victims or in their attempts to kill the heroes when they have the heroes captured (which they almost always do). This trope is eventually lampshaded in the episode "Smell of Success":

to:

* On In ''Series/PushingDaisies'', the murderers will never use mundane methods to either kill their victims or in their attempts to kill the heroes when they have the heroes captured (which they almost always do). This trope is eventually lampshaded in the episode "Smell of Success":



* ''Series/RedDwarf'': In addition to the page quote, a similar moment happens in the Back to Earth special. Taking a cue from ''Film/BladeRunner,'' Rimmer obtains the phone number of somebody they're looking for using an extremely [[OverlyLongGag long-winded]] and complicated form of [[EnhanceButton Zoom and Enhance]] on a photograph, by bouncing off the reflections of various objects in the picture (and some that aren't) until they get the man's number on the back of his business card by seeing a reverse angle of the original photo. After the whole charade, Kryten bluntly asks:
-->'''Kryten''': Sir, wouldn't it have been easier to look him up in the phone book?

to:

* ''Series/RedDwarf'': ''Series/RedDwarf'':
**
In addition to "[[Recap/RedDwarfSeasonVIRimmerworld Rimmerworld]]" (which provides the page quote, quote), Lister details an elaborate escape plan involving a brick from the wall, disguises, etc. Kryten says that they ''could'' do that, or they could use the teleporter.
** A
similar moment happens in the ''[[Recap/RedDwarfBackToEarth Back to Earth Earth]]'' special. Taking a cue from ''Film/BladeRunner,'' ''Film/BladeRunner'', Rimmer obtains the phone number of somebody they're looking for using an extremely [[OverlyLongGag long-winded]] and complicated form of [[EnhanceButton Zoom and Enhance]] on a photograph, by bouncing off the reflections of various objects in the picture (and some that aren't) until they get the man's number on the back of his business card by seeing a reverse angle of the original photo. After the whole charade, Kryten bluntly asks:
-->'''Kryten''': --->'''Kryten:''' Sir, wouldn't it have been easier to look him up in the phone book?



-->'''Oliver''': I can tell you how to conquer the beast. Kick his ass, Clark.

to:

-->'''Oliver''': -->'''Oliver:''' I can tell you how to conquer the beast. Kick his ass, Clark.



*** In the first-season episode "The Serpent's Lair", the team is standing at the top of a long shaft, looking down at their target, the ship's shield generator. [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Bra'tac]] details a plan for them to fight their way through a series of corridors to reach the bottom of the shaft, at which point, they'll disable the generator. O'Neill doesn't actually ''say'' anything, he just removes a couple of grenades from his equipment, pulls the pins, and drops them down the shaft. It should be noted this is the moment where Bra'tac starts seeing the [[HumansByAnyOtherName Tau'ri]] as warriors worthy of respect.
*** In the episode "Wormhole X-Treme!", O'Neill is acting as the military advisor to Martin's TV show, and when the question is brought up of "How can they defeat the giant alien without being weightless?", O'Neill says "WhyDontYouJustShootHim", and is commended for his innovative thinking. Martin was not impressed.

to:

*** In the first-season episode "The "[[Recap/StargateSG1S2E1TheSerpentsLair The Serpent's Lair", Lair]]", the team is standing at the top of a long shaft, looking down at their target, the ship's shield generator. [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Bra'tac]] details a plan for them to fight their way through a series of corridors to reach the bottom of the shaft, at which point, they'll disable the generator. O'Neill doesn't actually ''say'' anything, he just removes a couple of grenades from his equipment, pulls the pins, and drops them down the shaft. It should be noted this is the moment where Bra'tac starts seeing the [[HumansByAnyOtherName Tau'ri]] as warriors worthy of respect.
*** In the episode "Wormhole X-Treme!", "[[Recap/StargateSG1S5E12WormholeXTreme Wormhole X-Treme!]]", O'Neill is acting as the military advisor to Martin's TV show, and when the question is brought up of "How can they defeat the giant alien without being weightless?", O'Neill says "WhyDontYouJustShootHim", and is commended for his innovative thinking. Martin was not impressed.



*** Suspecting that Gowron, supreme leader of the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Klingon Empire]], is a [[TheMole Changeling infiltrator]], General Martok allowed Sisko & co. to expose him -- by killing Gowron. Worf attacked Gowron and the two fought; at this point, Martok invoked this trope. [[spoiler:Martok's suggestion was quite uncharacteristic (and dishonorable) for a Klingon warrior, tipping Odo to the fact that he, not Gowron, was the real changeling.]]
*** In another episode, the Defiant is captured in battle by the Dominion. Sisko and crew are kept alive, though, because the Dominion ship has a different mission to perform elsewhere. The Jem'Hadar contingent left in control of the ship is led by the arrogant first of a new batch of clones with a seasoned veteran of an older generation as his second-in-command. The veteran brings this trope up repeatedly to his superior, saying that the value of the crew helping with repairs is surely outweighed by the fact that they're no doubt scheming of a way to take back control of the ship (because he's smart enough to know that's exactly what he would do in their place), but he's ignored. At the end of the episode, Sisko lampshades this, telling the dying veteran "Your leader should have listened to you." The Jem'Hadar is resigned -- his purpose, after all, was to [[HonorBeforeReason serve the Founders' will and they put the new young leader in charge]].
** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': "Timeless" involves a BadFuture where Chakotay and Harry are the sole survivors of ''Voyager'' after a newly-installed slipstream drive malfunctioned mid-warp and the ship crash-landed on an ice planet outside the Alpha Quadrant, killing everyone aboard (Harry and Chakotay were aboard the ''Delta Flyer'' mapping ''Voyager'''s course). With the help of the Doctor, whose program was still in working order, [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong they try to send new course corrections which would get everybody back to Earth alive]]. When it doesn't work, the Doctor suggests sending course corrections which would abort the jump while still saving everybody's lives. Sure enough, this plan works and the ship is saved, with the jump still significantly shortening their trip home.
* In ''Series/TheTerror'', after the Hickey we’ve been following for the entire show reveals that he is actually an imposter, who killed the real Hickey to join the expedition.
--->'''Crozier:''' You could’ve just joined up!

to:

*** Suspecting In "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS05E01ApocalypseRising Apocalypse Rising]]", suspecting that Gowron, supreme leader of the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Klingon Empire]], is a [[TheMole Changeling infiltrator]], General Martok allowed allows Sisko & and co. to expose him -- by killing Gowron. Worf attacked attacks Gowron and the two fought; fight; at this point, Martok invoked invokes this trope. [[spoiler:Martok's suggestion was is quite uncharacteristic (and dishonorable) for a Klingon warrior, tipping Odo to the fact that he, not Gowron, was is the real changeling.]]
*** In another episode, the Defiant ''Defiant'' is captured in battle by the Dominion. Sisko and crew are kept alive, though, because the Dominion ship has a different mission to perform elsewhere. The Jem'Hadar contingent left in control of the ship is led by the arrogant first of a new batch of clones with a seasoned veteran of an older generation as his second-in-command. The veteran brings this trope up repeatedly to his superior, saying that the value of the crew helping with repairs is surely outweighed by the fact that they're no doubt scheming of a way to take back control of the ship (because he's smart enough to know that's exactly what he would do in their place), but he's ignored. At the end of the episode, Sisko lampshades this, telling the dying veteran "Your leader should have listened to you." The Jem'Hadar is resigned -- his purpose, after all, was to [[HonorBeforeReason serve the Founders' will will, and they put the new young leader in charge]].
** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': "Timeless" "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS5E6Timeless Timeless]]" involves a BadFuture where Chakotay and Harry are the sole survivors of ''Voyager'' after a newly-installed newly installed slipstream drive malfunctioned mid-warp and the ship crash-landed on an ice planet outside the Alpha Quadrant, killing everyone aboard (Harry and Chakotay were aboard the ''Delta Flyer'' mapping ''Voyager'''s course). With the help of the Doctor, whose program was still in working order, [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong they try to send new course corrections which would get everybody back to Earth alive]]. When it doesn't work, the Doctor suggests sending course corrections which would abort the jump while still saving everybody's lives. Sure enough, this plan works and the ship is saved, with the jump still significantly shortening their trip home.
* In ''Series/TheTerror'', after the Hickey we’ve we've been following for the entire show reveals that he is actually an imposter, who killed the real Hickey to join the expedition.
--->'''Crozier:'''
expedition:
-->'''Crozier:'''
You could’ve could've just joined up!



* On ''Series/TheXFiles'', when the [[GovernmentConspiracy Syndicate]] discusses killing Mulder to keep him from thwarting their plans. Several of the members argue against this, pointing out that such an action would just make Mulder a martyr and draw unnecessary attention to Mulder's investigations into the X-Files. By leaving him alive and not doing anything, they just make Mulder look like a paranoid {{Cloudcuckoolander}} who no one outside of UFO circles will take seriously.

to:

* On In ''Series/TheXFiles'', when the [[GovernmentConspiracy the Syndicate]] discusses killing Mulder to keep him from thwarting their plans. Several plans, several of the members argue against this, pointing out that such an action would just [[DontCreateAMartyr make Mulder a martyr martyr]] and draw unnecessary attention to Mulder's investigations into the X-Files. By leaving him alive and not doing anything, they just make Mulder look like a paranoid {{Cloudcuckoolander}} who no one outside of UFO circles will take seriously.
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* ''Series/SirArthurConanDoylesTheLostWorld'': In "Camelot", Roxton gets challenged to a joust by the villain Vordred, who accepts even though he has never done this before. As they prepare, Malone asks, "Wouldn't it be easier just to shoot him?" Roxton thanks him for the idea, but decides to play by their rules for now. He wins anyway.
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* In the ''Series/{{Dinosaurs}}'' episode "Monster Under The Bed", the titular Monster has captured the Sinclair children and plans to eat them in retribution over their family's house being built over his home. At the end of the episode, Baby suggests that they just ''move'' their house so it's no longer an issue. Despite newscaster [[KentBrockmanNews Howard Handupme]] itching for ratings-worthy fight between it and the police, the Monster agrees.

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** This is frequently Ronon's job. For example, in one episode [=McKay's=] complex plan to stop the Asuran Replicators falls through and he starts panicking, Ronon's response is that they have guns that can kill Replicators... why not just shoot them all?

to:

** *** This is frequently Ronon's job. For example, in one episode [=McKay's=] complex plan to stop the Asuran Replicators falls through and he starts panicking, Ronon's response is that they have guns that can kill Replicators... why not just shoot them all?



** Used to highlight the incompatibility of Ronon and Keller. When the two are hiding from the Wraith who have taken over their ship, they agree that they need to disable the ship so the Wraith can't get to their destination. Keller muses about how to hack into the security system and disable the various systems one-by-one. Ronon just starts shooting out control panels.
* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
** Suspecting that Gowron, supreme leader of the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Klingon Empire]], is a [[TheMole Changeling infiltrator]], General Martok allowed Sisko & co. to expose him -- by killing Gowron. Worf attacked Gowron and the two fought; at this point, Martok invoked this trope. [[spoiler:Martok's suggestion was quite uncharacteristic (and dishonorable) for a Klingon warrior, tipping Odo to the fact that he, not Gowron, was the real changeling.]]
** In another episode, the Defiant is captured in battle by the Dominion. Sisko and crew are kept alive, though, because the Dominion ship has a different mission to perform elsewhere. The Jem'Hadar contingent left in control of the ship is led by the arrogant first of a new batch of clones with a seasoned veteran of an older generation as his second-in-command. The veteran brings this trope up repeatedly to his superior, saying that the value of the crew helping with repairs is surely outweighed by the fact that they're no doubt scheming of a way to take back control of the ship (because he's smart enough to know that's exactly what he would do in their place), but he's ignored. At the end of the episode, Sisko lampshades this, telling the dying veteran "Your leader should have listened to you." The Jem'Hadar is resigned -- his purpose, after all, was to [[HonorBeforeReason serve the Founders' will and they put the new young leader in charge]].
* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': "Timeless" involves a distant future where Chakotay and Harry are the sole survivors of ''Voyager'' after a newly-installed slipstream drive malfunctioned mid-warp and the ship crash-landed on an ice planet outside the Alpha Quadrant, killing everyone aboard (Harry and Chakotay were aboard the ''Delta Flyer'' mapping ''Voyager'''s course). With the help of the Doctor, whose program was still in working order, [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong they try to send new course corrections which would get everybody back to Earth alive]]. But when it doesn't work, the Doctor suggests sending course corrections which would abort the jump while still saving everybody's lives. Sure enough, this plans work and the ship is saved, with the jump still significantly shortening their trip home.

to:

** *** Used to highlight the incompatibility of Ronon and Keller. When the two are hiding from the Wraith who have taken over their ship, they agree that they need to disable the ship so the Wraith can't get to their destination. Keller muses about how to hack into the security system and disable the various systems one-by-one. Ronon just starts shooting out control panels.
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
**
''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
** *** Suspecting that Gowron, supreme leader of the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Klingon Empire]], is a [[TheMole Changeling infiltrator]], General Martok allowed Sisko & co. to expose him -- by killing Gowron. Worf attacked Gowron and the two fought; at this point, Martok invoked this trope. [[spoiler:Martok's suggestion was quite uncharacteristic (and dishonorable) for a Klingon warrior, tipping Odo to the fact that he, not Gowron, was the real changeling.]]
** *** In another episode, the Defiant is captured in battle by the Dominion. Sisko and crew are kept alive, though, because the Dominion ship has a different mission to perform elsewhere. The Jem'Hadar contingent left in control of the ship is led by the arrogant first of a new batch of clones with a seasoned veteran of an older generation as his second-in-command. The veteran brings this trope up repeatedly to his superior, saying that the value of the crew helping with repairs is surely outweighed by the fact that they're no doubt scheming of a way to take back control of the ship (because he's smart enough to know that's exactly what he would do in their place), but he's ignored. At the end of the episode, Sisko lampshades this, telling the dying veteran "Your leader should have listened to you." The Jem'Hadar is resigned -- his purpose, after all, was to [[HonorBeforeReason serve the Founders' will and they put the new young leader in charge]].
* ** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': "Timeless" involves a distant future BadFuture where Chakotay and Harry are the sole survivors of ''Voyager'' after a newly-installed slipstream drive malfunctioned mid-warp and the ship crash-landed on an ice planet outside the Alpha Quadrant, killing everyone aboard (Harry and Chakotay were aboard the ''Delta Flyer'' mapping ''Voyager'''s course). With the help of the Doctor, whose program was still in working order, [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong they try to send new course corrections which would get everybody back to Earth alive]]. But when When it doesn't work, the Doctor suggests sending course corrections which would abort the jump while still saving everybody's lives. Sure enough, this plans work plan works and the ship is saved, with the jump still significantly shortening their trip home.
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* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': "Timeless" involves a distant future where Chakotay and Harry are the sole survivors of ''Voyager'' after a newly-installed slipstream drive malfunctioned mid-warp and the ship crash-landed on an ice planet outside the Alpha Quadrant, killing everyone aboard (Harry and Chakotay were aboard the ''Delta Flyer'' mapping ''Voyager'''s course). With the help of the Doctor, whose program was still in working order, [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong they try to send new course corrections which would get everybody back to Earth alive]]. But when it doesn't work, the Doctor suggests sending course corrections which would abort the jump while still saving everybody's lives. Sure enough, this plans work and the ship is saved, with the jump still significantly shorting their trip home.

to:

* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': "Timeless" involves a distant future where Chakotay and Harry are the sole survivors of ''Voyager'' after a newly-installed slipstream drive malfunctioned mid-warp and the ship crash-landed on an ice planet outside the Alpha Quadrant, killing everyone aboard (Harry and Chakotay were aboard the ''Delta Flyer'' mapping ''Voyager'''s course). With the help of the Doctor, whose program was still in working order, [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong they try to send new course corrections which would get everybody back to Earth alive]]. But when it doesn't work, the Doctor suggests sending course corrections which would abort the jump while still saving everybody's lives. Sure enough, this plans work and the ship is saved, with the jump still significantly shorting shortening their trip home.

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** Suspecting that Gowron, supreme leader of the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Klingon Empire]], is a [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Changeling infiltrator]], General Martok allowed Sisko & co. to expose him -- by killing Gowron. Worf attacked Gowron and the two fought; at this point, Martok invoked this trope. [[spoiler:Martok's suggestion was quite uncharacteristic (and dishonorable) for a Klingon warrior, tipping Odo to the fact that he, not Gowron, was the real changeling.]]

to:

** Suspecting that Gowron, supreme leader of the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Klingon Empire]], is a [[VoluntaryShapeshifting [[TheMole Changeling infiltrator]], General Martok allowed Sisko & co. to expose him -- by killing Gowron. Worf attacked Gowron and the two fought; at this point, Martok invoked this trope. [[spoiler:Martok's suggestion was quite uncharacteristic (and dishonorable) for a Klingon warrior, tipping Odo to the fact that he, not Gowron, was the real changeling.]]


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* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': "Timeless" involves a distant future where Chakotay and Harry are the sole survivors of ''Voyager'' after a newly-installed slipstream drive malfunctioned mid-warp and the ship crash-landed on an ice planet outside the Alpha Quadrant, killing everyone aboard (Harry and Chakotay were aboard the ''Delta Flyer'' mapping ''Voyager'''s course). With the help of the Doctor, whose program was still in working order, [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong they try to send new course corrections which would get everybody back to Earth alive]]. But when it doesn't work, the Doctor suggests sending course corrections which would abort the jump while still saving everybody's lives. Sure enough, this plans work and the ship is saved, with the jump still significantly shorting their trip home.
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** "Angel Summoner and BMX Bandit", a mismatched pair of superheroes [[TheyFightCrime who fight crime]]. In each sketch, BMX Bandit would draw up a complicated strategy involving his BMX tricks, only for Angel Summoner to point out it's easier to just summon some angels to do everything for them. Subverted in the final installment, when it's BMX Bandit suggesting some angel-summoning, rather than risk his life trying to perform an impossible jump and fight a group of terrorists, but Angel Summoner refuses to because of a previous agreement. [[spoiler:Then it turns out he summoned some angels anyway.]]

to:

** "Angel Summoner and BMX Bandit", a mismatched pair of superheroes [[TheyFightCrime who fight crime]].crime. In each sketch, BMX Bandit would draw up a complicated strategy involving his BMX tricks, only for Angel Summoner to point out it's easier to just summon some angels to do everything for them. Subverted in the final installment, when it's BMX Bandit suggesting some angel-summoning, rather than risk his life trying to perform an impossible jump and fight a group of terrorists, but Angel Summoner refuses to because of a previous agreement. [[spoiler:Then it turns out he summoned some angels anyway.]]
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--> '''Josh:''' It's broken! It fell in the lake, a bear ate it, the point is ''you're lost''! And all you have is a compass and a topographical map of the region.
--> '''Megan:'' So, I have a compass and a topographical map, but I don't have my cell phone?
--> '''Josh:''' That tears it; we're seeing a movie!
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%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!
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StatingTheSimpleSolution in LiveActionTV series.
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* ''Series/{{Angel}}'':
** In "War Zone," Gunn locks Angel in a meat locker, and Angel takes pains to try to break himself out. Wesley and Cordelia show up and just open the door from the outside, asking why he didn't just call for help on his cell phone.
** Wolfram & Hart usually send demons and assassins after Angel and go through grandiose {{Evil Plan}}s. In "Carpe Noctem," [[ObstructiveBureaucrat Gavin Park]] points out that they can easily put Angel and his crew out of business by simply informing the government of [[UndeadTaxExemption Angel's ID issues]]; of course, soon after he points this out, [[TheRival Lilah Morgan]] gives Angel all the documents he needs just to spite him.
--->'''Gavin''': The guy has no social security number, no taxpayer ID, no last name as far as I know. How can he go down to the building department, or anywhere else in officialdom for that matter? He's the rat and we're the maze.
* ''Series/{{Arrowverse}}'':
** ''Series/LegendsOfTomorrow'':
*** In Season 1, Vandal Savage prevents Kendra from killing him by revealing that he has her boyfriend, Carter, brainwashed. Savage is the only one who can free him, so Kendra has to let him live and try to force him to free Carter. Rory points out (and Sara and Snart agree) that Carter ''reincarnates''; even if there is no way to save this particular incarnation, they have a timeship and can just find a sane one somewhere else. To make it worse, Carter eventually breaks free of the brainwashing on his own, meaning Savage's threat that Carter would be brainwashed forever without him wasn't even true.
*** In Season 2, the BigBad Eobard Thawne never really tries to actually kill the Legends, despite being able to do it in the space of a second, frequently coming up with other means to deal with them. His partners Damien Darhk and Malcolm Merlyn keep invoking this trope, but he ignores them. [[spoiler:He finally takes the gloves off in the season finale, [[AndShowItToYou ripping Ray's heart out]] (luckily, there's another version of Ray.)]] Off that, Thawne is constantly running from [[spoiler:the Black Flash]] who can detect him by his speed. When he finally tells this to Darhk and Merlyn, they suggest a very easy answer: ''Stop running.''
*** Likewise with Thawne, when he and the Legion [[spoiler:rewrite the world [[VillainWorld to their own liking]]]], they leave the Legends alive to suffer in various ways. Thawne is greatly annoyed when the Legends end up being a problem after all.
---->'''Thawne:''' I should have wiped you from existence when I had the chance. Do you have any idea how ''infuriating'' it is to know that ''Merlyn was right?''
** On ''Series/{{The Flash|2014}}'', the team are trying to find a country music star who is being hunted by an enemy. They try to figure out ways to track her using their various powers and such but come up short. New teammate Ralph then asks if any of them have ''checked her website.''
* ''Series/TheBigBangTheory'':
** This is how Amy sets up one of the main plotlines of "The Raiders Minimization". When Sheldon shows her ''Film/RaidersOfTheLostArk'', she says it's an okay movie though she says that Indiana Jones was not necessary to the plot and the film would have ended the same without him. When Sheldon, a huge fan of ''Raiders'', asks her to clarify her position, she says that if Indiana Jones had not interfered, the Nazis would've still taken the ark to the uninhabited island, opened it, and died. As Sheldon looks for something to ruin that Amy likes out of spite, he explains to the guys Amy's realization, but when Raj and Howard point out that the Nazis were digging in the wrong place because Indiana Jones sabotaged their search, Leonard points out that if he wasn't involved, the Nazis would've found the ark the first time, opened it, and killed themselves.
** In another episode, when Sheldon is sick, he camps out in Penny's section at the Cheesecake Factory in order to have soup. When Penny asks why he didn't just have soup delivered to his apartment (thereby allowing him to stay in bed and rest), he hesitates and admits that he didn't think of it.
* In ''Series/TheBlacklist'' an eco-terrorist is flying a helicopter to cause a nuclear accident. Aram uses his hacking skills to get into the helicopter's computer and talks of how he can use a special program to undo the air balance of the copter and drive it off course. Director Ressler angrily asks "can't you just shut down the rotor? Shut the damn thing down?" Adar pauses and realizes he can do that to ground the copter.
* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'':
** Warren Mears, after once again having his plans thwarted, finally tries this by bringing a gun and shooting Buffy. It backfires when Buffy survives, and his parting shots cause arguably the show's most shocking case of AnyoneCanDie and lead directly and promptly to his very painful death by [[CruelAndUnusualDeath flaying]] courtesy of Willow.
--->'''Vampire:''' (at Willy's bar, watching a news report about Buffy surviving being shot, to Warren) Yeah. I was gonna eat you myself during the commercial, but now I think it'll be more fun to let the Slayer de-gut you. Might wanna get a head start, my friend. 'Cause this girl is gonna be coming for you, big time.
** The Judge is said to be a demon so strong that "no weapon forged" can harm him. Buffy points out that [[TechnologyMarchesOn what constitutes a "weapon forged" has changed a lot in six hundred years]]. To prove her point, Buffy shoots the Judge once. ''With a rocket launcher.'' [[ChunkySalsaRule No more Judge.]]
** Buffy tries to use her temporary mind-reading powers to get an answer out of Angel without him noticing, only to realize that it doesn't work on vampires:
--->'''Angel:''' You don't have to play games with me, Buffy. Ever.\\
'''Buffy:''' Well, you're not exactly Joe-here's-what-I'm-thinking.\\
'''Angel:''' So ask me.\\
'''Buffy:''' Oh, but that would have made sense...
** Angelus insists on using his mind games on Buffy, while Spike insists that he finish her off before she gets really mad and kills them all. Guess what? He's right... after what Angelus did to upset Giles, not only did they have to contend with a very pissed-off Slayer, but she was [[{{Pun}} hot]] on the heels of her Watcher, [[Awesome/BuffyTheVampireSlayer who was whaling on Angelus with a flaming baseball bat]] [[KillItWithFire after throwing a molotov cocktail into the factory]].
--->'''Spike:''' Why don't you rip her lungs out? It might make an impression.\\
'''Angelus:''' Lacks... poetry.\\
'''Spike:''' Doesn't have to. What rhymes with lungs?
%%** Roden begs Genevieve to kill Faith, believing she is a threat, but she ignores him.
* ''Series/BurnNotice'':
** Michael could have dealt with any number of cases by shooting the villain of the week, a fact that [[TriggerHappy Fiona]] never hesitates to point out. Justified, here: depending on the circumstances, Michael will make the point that either they don't want a trail of bodies leading back to them or that if they do things his way they can take a whole gang down. In Michael's words (from the first episode):
--->'''Michael''': I'll take a hardware store over a gun any day. Guns make you stupid; better to fight your wars with duct tape. Duct tape makes you smart.
** Also, when Michael goes undercover [[LampshadeHanging one or more of the crook's other associates will often wonder why they don't just shoot Michael when he's pretty clearly lying to them or making unhelpful suggestions that are likely to get them caught and/or killed]]. Semi-justified here, in that Michael is very good at engineering situations to prevent the decision-making crooks from actually pulling the trigger (most often by making his lies ''just'' plausible enough to make him seem useful--and hey, he's a trained spy: the government spent thousands if not millions teaching him how to do just this).
** Later, when Michael ''does'' start to use bullets instead of more complicated solutions, things start to go hairy for him ''fast'', such as when he [[spoiler:straight-up murders his former mentor, who is unarmed at this point and is ''in his own CIA office'']].
* ''Series/CobraKai:'' In the third season, both [[Film/TheKarateKid Daniel LaRusso and Johnny Lawrence,]] along with their students, are being harassed by rival sensei and former SociopathicSoldier John Kreese. Daniel's solution is to re-open his dojo in order to teach the kids of the Valley awesome self-defence karate skills: his wife Amanda's solution is to call the police and get a restraining order. Unfortunately, when they try this, they find that Kreese beat them to it: he already ''has'' a restraining order against ''Amanda'' from when she went to his dojo and punched him in a fit of anger, and the cop on the desk [[VillainWithGoodPublicity is unimpressed by how she harassed an innocent veteran.]] With that option off the table, Amanda gives her full support to Daniel and his dojo.
** Throughout the series, certain characters [[NonActionGuy (particularly Demitri)]] say that the solution to bullying (first from generic bullies, then from rival dojos) would be to get a teacher or another adult involved. [[AdultsAreUseless When the characters try it, it never works,]] [[CantGetAwayWithNuthin or it makes things worse.]]
* Subverted as a rule in ''Series/CriminalMinds''. Many of the [[VillainOfTheWeek unknown subjects]], or "Unsubs," in the show don't kill indiscriminately--they have [[FreudianExcuse deep psychological issues]] that prompt them to murder their victims in highly specific ways. Heck, some of them don't even ''want'' to murder people--they're just trying to soothe some other psychosis, and their methods of doing so prove lethal (case in point: the woman who kidnapped women to turn into life-sized dolls because her ''real'' dolls were stolen by her stepfather, who sexually and physically abused her).
* In the ''Series/{{CSI}}'' episode "Unshockable", when discussing [[spoiler:how a victim was poisoned with Sarin when already knocked out]], Sara asks:
-->[[WhyDontYouJustShootHim "Why didn't he just shoot him?"]]
* Played straight in ''Series/DarkAngel'' when Lydecker is pointing a gun at a sleeping Max and decides to talk instead of shoot, giving her the opportunity to ''jump up and roundhouse kick him in the face''. However, this is {{justified|Trope}} by a) Max being an expensive asset; and b) Lydecker regarding the X-5s as his children, [[PapaWolf and not being fond of the idea of them getting hurt]].
* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
** Justified in the episode [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E3PlanetOfTheOod "Planet of the Ood"]] when business owner Mr. Halpen declined to shoot the Doctor and Donna, saying that there will likely be a full investigation and their bodies will likely be found. If he did shoot them, it would create many problems for him legally in the future; but by leaving them to the Ood, they'll die just like all the other people around and there's no trouble beyond what's already happened.
** In [[Recap/DoctorWho50thASTheDayOfTheDoctor "The Day of the Doctor"]] the 10th, 11th, and War Doctors programmed their sonic screwdrivers to dissolve the wooden door of their cell in the Tower of London. As they are about to so, Clara opens the unlocked door.
--->'''Clara:''' Three of you in one cell, and none of you thought to try the door?
** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS37E2TheGhostMonument "The Ghost Monument",]] Ryan's solution to being pinned down behind cover with alien robots firing lasers at him is to pick up one of their guns and start firing back, as opposed to the Doctor's [[TechnicalPacifist pacifism.]] The robots crumple to the ground...[[GunsAreWorthless and then get back up again, since they were built to be immune to their own weaponry.]] Ryan promptly hides.
* In the ''Series/DrakeAndJosh'' episode "Number One Fan", Josh takes the Campfire Kids to the movie theater to learn about wilderness navigation. He asks the kids a hypothetical question about them getting dropped off in the middle of nowhere with only a compass and a topographic map as guides, but Megan insists that she could simply call her mother on her cellphone.
* Played for laughs in ''Series/ElChavoDelOcho''. The kids were playing orchestra but they simply sounded horrible. La Chilindra, who was the "coductor", complained that they couldn't play alright, and el Chavo suggested an idea, that instead of playing whatever they were, all of them play the same song.
* Pretty much happens in every episode of ''Series/{{Eureka}}''. The super-scientists will cause a problem and go through various complex methods to try and solve it. It's Carter (the one-non genius in the town) who comes up with the solution that's so simple that it never occurs to the geniuses and saves the day.
* In ''Series/{{Fargo}}'', Bear Gerhardt makes good arguments about why Floyd should be the one who directs the company.
* ''Series/{{Frasier}}:'' Often, Frasier or Niles (or Frasier and Niles) will come up with some overly elaborate psychoanalysis of a situation, and someone, either Martin, Daphne or Roz, will offer a much more sensible and practical alternative, which is brushed off because Frasier and [=/=] or Niles think they know better. And it all ends in flames. At least one time, a slight justification is given, when Frasier insists on elaborate evasion games with Lilith. Daphne asks why he doesn't just talk to her, and Frasier says they tried that while they were married.
-->'''Frasier:''' We were better at games.
* Once combined with DumbassHasAPoint in ''Series/GilligansIsland''. It's been discovered that the Howells' marriage was not legally binding (the officiant being a fraud), which causes friction between them that is driving the other castaways batty. Gilligan says he has a solution, and the Skipper, fed up with Gilligan's [[ZanyScheme Zany Schemes]] doesn't want to hear it... when Gilligan's solution is to merely have the Skipper, who is considered to have the authority to officiate a wedding when on a craft in water, perform a simple ceremony while standing on a raft in the lagoon. Skipper seems flabbergasted and agrees.
* In the CS Centrl GagSub of ''Series/HikariSentaiMaskman'', Okelampa, the guy who shows up solely to [[MakeMyMonsterGrow resurrect the monsters as giants when they get shot by the Maskman]] asks "Why don't the Maskman shoot me first?"
* Subverted in the ''Series/HorribleHistories'' about UsefulNotes/WorldWarII German prisoner-of-war camps, and Allied prisoners continually escaping from them (forcing German troops to be tied up guarding prisoners instead of fighting the war):
-->'''Commandant Klinsman:''' You give me one good reason why I shouldn't just shoot you right here on the spot.\\
'''Squadron Leader Higgins:''' Because it's against the Geneva Convention to shoot officers.\\
'''Klinsman:''' Yes, forgot about that.
* ''Series/InTheDark'': In Season 4, after each is kicked out by Leslie and their car stolen, Felix moans "we are at rock bottom" and have nowhere to go. Max just stares at him before pointing out Felix can simply call his ''millionaire'' grandmother to let them stay at her mansion for a while.
* In ''Series/{{Inhumans}}'', Karnak needs to suture Jen's wound to prevent her bleeding out. He starts striping a palm frond to use as a makeshift solution. Jen suggests just using her travel sewing kit she keeps on her. Clothes tend to catch and rip on the trees.
* In ''Series/KamenRiderBuild'', protagonist Sento's [[TransformationTrinket Transformation Belt]] runs off of "Full Bottles" which contain the essence of animals, machines, etc. He tries to identify Best Matches (pairs with high compatibility) because they're more powerful and does so with a testing device built into the wall of his ElaborateUndergroundBase. After being told all this, DumbMuscle Ryuga tries it out and the very first pair of Bottles he tests turns out to be a Best Match, to Sento's amazement. Ryuga explains that his logic was "living creature plus inanimate object", something that Sento had dismissed as too obvious in spite of the fact that the Best Matches he had already discovered followed this pattern[[note]]like Rabbit [[TankGoodness Tank]] and [[KillerGorilla Gorilla]] (Dia)Mond[[/note]].
* Invoked in the past tense on ''Franchise/LawAndOrder'', when a character asks an investigator why, if the convicted killer's pleas that he'd not intended to commit murder were untrue, he didn't shoot the woman he'd struck with a tire iron. "The noise" is the reply.
* In ''Series/PersonOfInterest'', Harold Finch realizes a USB drive he needs is on the person of one of Reese's targets. He begins contriving a rather complex plan to get it, or the data, when Reese simply walks past the man, shoulder-checks him, and grabs the USB drive out of his pocket when the man is distracted.
* ''Series/MacGyver1985'': In "Deadly Silents", Karl's partner Neil keeps urging to just shoot Mac and Pinky and dump their bodies somewhere. After multiple attempts to MakeItLookLikeAnAccident fail, Karl gives in and agrees to just shoot them. [[spoiler:It fails.]]
* Displayed in ''Series/MajorCrimes'': Captain Sharon Raydor is attempting to get psychiatrist Dr. Joe to break confidentiality on his sessions with her foster son, first as the police officer in charge of his safety [[note]]He's a material witness in a serial killer's murder trial.[[/note]], then as his legal guardian. Dr. Joe politely [[NoSell shoots her down]] on both counts, lays out the legal requirements for breaking confidentiality, and suggests an alternative: Just talk to her foster son.
* In his review of the first season of ''Series/MightyMorphinPowerRangers'', [[WebVideo/AtopTheFourthWall Linkara]] noted a plot-point that if Rita Repulsa knows the identities of the Rangers, why didn't she just blow up their houses?
* On ''Series/PushingDaisies'', the murderers will never use mundane methods to either kill their victims or in their attempts to kill the heroes when they have the heroes captured (which they almost always do). This trope is eventually lampshaded in the episode "Smell of Success":
-->'''Emerson Cod:''' Death by scratch and sniff. What the hell happened to people shooting each other with guns?
* ''Series/RedDwarf'': In addition to the page quote, a similar moment happens in the Back to Earth special. Taking a cue from ''Film/BladeRunner,'' Rimmer obtains the phone number of somebody they're looking for using an extremely [[OverlyLongGag long-winded]] and complicated form of [[EnhanceButton Zoom and Enhance]] on a photograph, by bouncing off the reflections of various objects in the picture (and some that aren't) until they get the man's number on the back of his business card by seeing a reverse angle of the original photo. After the whole charade, Kryten bluntly asks:
-->'''Kryten''': Sir, wouldn't it have been easier to look him up in the phone book?
* In ''Series/{{Smallville}}'', when Clark is talking to Oliver about dealing with Doomsday and saying he is going to the [[DeusExMachina Fortress]] to find a way of sending it away, Oliver does this.
-->'''Oliver''': I can tell you how to conquer the beast. Kick his ass, Clark.
* ''Franchise/StargateVerse'':
** ''Series/StargateSG1'':
*** In the first-season episode "The Serpent's Lair", the team is standing at the top of a long shaft, looking down at their target, the ship's shield generator. [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Bra'tac]] details a plan for them to fight their way through a series of corridors to reach the bottom of the shaft, at which point, they'll disable the generator. O'Neill doesn't actually ''say'' anything, he just removes a couple of grenades from his equipment, pulls the pins, and drops them down the shaft. It should be noted this is the moment where Bra'tac starts seeing the [[HumansByAnyOtherName Tau'ri]] as warriors worthy of respect.
*** In the episode "Wormhole X-Treme!", O'Neill is acting as the military advisor to Martin's TV show, and when the question is brought up of "How can they defeat the giant alien without being weightless?", O'Neill says "WhyDontYouJustShootHim", and is commended for his innovative thinking. Martin was not impressed.
*** When the team discover Khalek, a genetically engineered clone of BigBad Anubis, it is ''Daniel'' of all people who simply suggest killing him right then and there, because he is too powerful to risk his escape, and eventually his ascension.
** ''Series/StargateAtlantis'':
** This is frequently Ronon's job. For example, in one episode [=McKay's=] complex plan to stop the Asuran Replicators falls through and he starts panicking, Ronon's response is that they have guns that can kill Replicators... why not just shoot them all?
---->'''Todd:''' I was going to write a program that would trigger a slow overload in the primary capacitor, but I don't think we have time for that now.\\
'''Ronon:''' I was just gonna blow it up.\\
'''Todd:''' [[DeadpanSnarker Naturally.]]
** Used to highlight the incompatibility of Ronon and Keller. When the two are hiding from the Wraith who have taken over their ship, they agree that they need to disable the ship so the Wraith can't get to their destination. Keller muses about how to hack into the security system and disable the various systems one-by-one. Ronon just starts shooting out control panels.
* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
** Suspecting that Gowron, supreme leader of the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Klingon Empire]], is a [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Changeling infiltrator]], General Martok allowed Sisko & co. to expose him -- by killing Gowron. Worf attacked Gowron and the two fought; at this point, Martok invoked this trope. [[spoiler:Martok's suggestion was quite uncharacteristic (and dishonorable) for a Klingon warrior, tipping Odo to the fact that he, not Gowron, was the real changeling.]]
** In another episode, the Defiant is captured in battle by the Dominion. Sisko and crew are kept alive, though, because the Dominion ship has a different mission to perform elsewhere. The Jem'Hadar contingent left in control of the ship is led by the arrogant first of a new batch of clones with a seasoned veteran of an older generation as his second-in-command. The veteran brings this trope up repeatedly to his superior, saying that the value of the crew helping with repairs is surely outweighed by the fact that they're no doubt scheming of a way to take back control of the ship (because he's smart enough to know that's exactly what he would do in their place), but he's ignored. At the end of the episode, Sisko lampshades this, telling the dying veteran "Your leader should have listened to you." The Jem'Hadar is resigned -- his purpose, after all, was to [[HonorBeforeReason serve the Founders' will and they put the new young leader in charge]].
* In ''Series/TheTerror'', after the Hickey we’ve been following for the entire show reveals that he is actually an imposter, who killed the real Hickey to join the expedition.
--->'''Crozier:''' You could’ve just joined up!
* ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'':
** "Angel Summoner and BMX Bandit", a mismatched pair of superheroes [[TheyFightCrime who fight crime]]. In each sketch, BMX Bandit would draw up a complicated strategy involving his BMX tricks, only for Angel Summoner to point out it's easier to just summon some angels to do everything for them. Subverted in the final installment, when it's BMX Bandit suggesting some angel-summoning, rather than risk his life trying to perform an impossible jump and fight a group of terrorists, but Angel Summoner refuses to because of a previous agreement. [[spoiler:Then it turns out he summoned some angels anyway.]]
** One sketch revolves around a medieval king constantly giving jobs to his CampGay underling / crush Lucentio, much to the aggravation of his lords, since Lucentio is pretty useless. Eventually, one of the lords approaches the king and asks why he doesn't just have sex with Lucentio, rather than giving him important jobs and titles. So he does.
* On ''Series/TheXFiles'', when the [[GovernmentConspiracy Syndicate]] discusses killing Mulder to keep him from thwarting their plans. Several of the members argue against this, pointing out that such an action would just make Mulder a martyr and draw unnecessary attention to Mulder's investigations into the X-Files. By leaving him alive and not doing anything, they just make Mulder look like a paranoid {{Cloudcuckoolander}} who no one outside of UFO circles will take seriously.

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