Follow TV Tropes

Following

History WesternAnimation / FiredOnMars

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* {{Retraux}}: Smartphones and computers have an interface modeled after UsefulNotes/AppleMacintosh operating systems of the 1990s.

to:

* {{Retraux}}: Smartphones and computers have an interface modeled after UsefulNotes/AppleMacintosh Platform/AppleMacintosh operating systems of the 1990s.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Spelling/grammar fix(es)


* IJustWanttoHaveFriends: Jeff struggles with constant loneliness while trying to find a job on the colony, feeling disconnected from his co-workers.

to:

* IJustWanttoHaveFriends: IJustWantToHaveFriends: Jeff struggles with constant loneliness while trying to find a job on the colony, feeling disconnected from his co-workers.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* IJustWanttoHaveFriends: Jeff struggles with constant loneliness while trying to find a job on the colony, feeling disconnected from his co-workers.

Added: 100

Changed: 623

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: On many occasions, Jeff's good intentions have disatrous consequences.

to:

* UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist: Despite how put upon he is, and how relatable his plight might be, it's hard to root for Jeff throughout the series. He is whiny, selfish, self-righteous, impulsive, careless, pushy, indecisive and generally very obnoxious. He is a consummate corporate bootlicker and has serious social climbing tendencies. He is very prone to poor and brash decisions that cause serious trouble for him and many other people, and rarely owns up to his mistakes, even when other characters directly point them to him. He is probably a very realistic character, given the setting, but not a likeble one.
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: On many occasions, Jeff's good intentions have disatrous disastrous consequences.

Added: 231

Changed: 229

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* {{Fingore}}: While moving rocks on the surface of Mars, Jeff uncaps his index finger to answer a text message, only for the extreme cold to freeze the finger in seconds. It ultimately falls off, though he gets a cybernetic replacement later.

to:

* {{Fingore}}: {{Fingore}}:
**
While moving rocks on the surface of Mars, Jeff uncaps his index finger to answer a text message, only for the extreme cold to freeze the finger in seconds. It ultimately falls off, though he gets a cybernetic replacement later.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Created a page for this show, since it needs more attention.

Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/firedonmars.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:[[TagLine The New Corporate Landscape]]]]
->''"Every setback is an opportunity in disguise." John Adams said that, and I tend to believe it. Also, I wasn't fired, I was on hold. And when I think about everything I'd accomplished over the past few months, my value to this colony was undeniable. I was doing the best graphic design of my career. I was living my passion. And more importantly, I was part of something bigger. ... Everyone had a purpose. Mine was graphic design, and nobody could ever take that away from me.''
-->-- '''Jeff Cooper'''

-----------------

''Fired on Mars'' is a [[Creator/HBOMax Max original]] adult animated [[ScienceFiction sci-fi]] series created by Nate Sherman and Nick Vokey, based on their 2016 short film of the same name. It follows the life of Jeff Cooper (Creator/LukeWilson), a graphic designer at corporate start-up [=Mars.ly=] which has recently established a colony on [[UsefulNotes/{{Mars}} the Red Planet]]. But soon after his one-way trip to the new office, Jeff's position is unceremoniously put on hold. Unable to return to Earth or go anywhere outside of what [=Mars.ly=] has made habitable, Jeff struggles to find some place where he can fit in as a valued member of the team.

The series premiered on April 20, 2023, with 8 episodes released two at a time every Thursday.

----
!! ''Fired on Mars'' provides examples of:
* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: [=Mars.ly=] has the technology to colonize Mars, but the work environment is otherwise familiar to that on Earth.
* DesperatelyLookingForAPurposeInLife: Jeff's central conflict. Having left his Earth life behind and his future on Mars not going as expected, he must find other ways to make his time useful and meaningful.
* {{Fingore}}: While moving rocks on the surface of Mars, Jeff uncaps his index finger to answer a text message, only for the extreme cold to freeze the finger in seconds. It ultimately falls off, though he gets a cybernetic replacement later.
** When he explains this incident to Crystal, she shares her own experience with losing her thumb in an acid accident. Her replacement is relatively fancy, looking like an ordinary thumb while also housing a pen.
* {{Retraux}}: Smartphones and computers have an interface modeled after UsefulNotes/AppleMacintosh operating systems of the 1990s.
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: On many occasions, Jeff's good intentions have disatrous consequences.
** In the first episode, he finds new purpose in the advice from a book on label theory, but gets carried away and wastes most of [=Mars.ly's=] label supplies on items that didn't need them, such as individual pens and coffee pods. Most of the consequences are off-screen, but when Martin calls him out on it, he mentions how a biologist mistook a cup of fluoroantimonic acid for ginger ale and almost drank it due to the label shortage.
** In the second episode, Jax tasks him with setting up party favors for Reagan's birthday, but he ends up stuck with tacky substitutes like latex gloves for balloons and bales of hay instead of flowers. In a last ditch attempt to salvage the party, Jeff turns up the nitrous oxide like Jax taught him earlier so the partygoers are too euphoric to care how stupid it looks. [[spoiler: It goes well, until someone tries to light a candle and ignites the gas in a floor-wide explosion.]]
** One of his biggest screwups comes in Episode 6, [[spoiler: when he joins a group of rebels seeking to start their own colony, and they task him with feeding their replenishable food supply of grasshoppers twice a day. Under the stress of balancing his time with the rebels and increased responsibilities up at [=Mars.ly=] itself, Jeff gets the idea to steal Sluggo's cuckoo clock to use as a makeshift button presser for the feeder. It doesn't take long for Sluggo to find his missing clock, though, and when he takes it back, a chair that was propping it up falls on the switch, holding it down and overfeeding the grasshoppers, causing them to swarm the entire building.]]
----

Top