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1'''Basic Trope''': A work tries to have AnAesop (that is, some sort of moral) but the Aesop doesn't come through due to the fact that it doesn't fit with the work's tone or is handled very sloppily.
2* '''Straight''':
3** One episode of a children's show tries to teach that DrugsAreBad but fails to mention why they're bad other than "they can mess you up", doesn't even explain what drugs are, and all the people who push drugs within the episode act like punks, giving the impression that all punks do drugs or that [[DoNotDoThisCoolThing drugs are cool]].
4** An episode of a children's show tries to teach kids how to be TooSmartForStrangers, but due to topics like child molestation and other shady things adults do to children being too heavy for the show, they don't tell kids ''why'' they should be careful around strangers and at one point in the episode, Alice mentions that even people you know can be bad and to run away if you get a "bad feeling."
5* '''Exaggerated''':
6** The show just drones on about how you shouldn't do drugs or talk to strangers without even explaining what drugs are and why you shouldn't do the things it's telling you not to.
7** The characters in the show outright [[OutOfCharacterMoment break character]] to deliver the moral.
8* '''Downplayed''':
9** The episode explains what drugs are and that not all punks do drugs, but still doesn't explain the bad things they can do.
10** The episode explains some of the inappropriate things some people do to kids (hurting them, touching their privates, etc.) but doesn't explain times when it's okay to talk to strangers, and what sort of "bad feeling" you should run away upon experiencing.
11* '''Justified''': The characters themselves don't know what drugs are or why kids should be careful around strangers.
12* '''Inverted''':
13** A show normally full of morals tries to do an episode ''without'' one, but due to the show's normal dependence on morals, it ends up seeming like a LostAesop.
14** The show manages to provide a good aesop about child abuse at the cost of it being an UnexpectedlyDarkEpisode that clashes majorly with the tone of the rest of the series. The [[WhatDoYouMeanItsForKids appropriateness for kids is debatable although actual abuse survivors in the demographic rate it well.]]
15* '''Subverted''':
16** The next episode features Bob, a punk who doesn't do drugs, who explains what drugs are and why they can be bad.
17** The next episode features Charlie, who is still not satisfied with the information about strangers and bad people, so Alice explains it better to both him and the audience.
18** The next episode features Charlie trying to know more from all the wrong places leading to the two-parter's real Aesop about what beating too much around the bush can do.
19* '''Double Subverted''': But when they try to do an episode about death, the NeverSayDie trope gets in the way and makes it look like the "dead" character just disappeared.
20* '''Parodied''':
21** Diane shows a TV episode that uses this trope for her little son Eric, then firmly asks him, "What did you learn?" Eric replies, "That TV can be confusing."
22** The characters make up a moral at the literal last second before the credits, with [[NonSequitur no connection to the preceding plot]]:
23--->'''Alice''': So, Bob, what did we learn from all this?\
24'''Bob''': Uh... crime doesn't pay?\
25''Alice''': ...[[SureLetsGoWithThat Sure, that'll do!]]
26** Apparently, the aesop of the story is literally "Uhhh... Don't... Uhm... Do drugs?". It's as if the story is so comically {{Mind Screw}}y that it can't even come up with a suitable aesop.
27* '''Zig-Zagged''': Some episodes can get their morals through, others cannot.
28* '''Averted''':
29** There are no Aesops.
30** There are Aesops, but they're all clear.
31** A character has been made DisabledInTheAdaptation to raise awareness of this disability, in a way that couldn't have been done as effectively by the source material.
32* '''Enforced''': The writers tried to make it more informative, but MoralGuardians wouldn't let them.
33* '''Lampshaded''': "I know you're probably confused, but still, don't do it!"
34* '''Invoked''': The characters teaching the lesson are deliberately cryptic.
35* '''Exploited''': The VillainOfTheWeek presents their good façace very well to persuade the protagonists that the characters teaching the lesson don't know whereof they speak.
36* '''Defied''': The characters decide not to beat around the bush and just explain things.
37* '''Discussed''':
38* '''Conversed''': "I just watched that VerySpecialEpisode and I won't do drugs, whatever they are."
39* '''Implied''':
40* '''Deconstructed''':
41** The [[TooSmartForStrangers Stranger Danger]] episode just ends up being ParanoiaFuel and unintentionally implies that you can't trust anyone.
42** The [[DrugsAreBad episode about drugs]] causes kids to reject all forms of medicine, because of the term 'drugs.'
43* '''Reconstructed''': The messages are so out of place that the kids ignore them, and thus there are no positive or negative effects.
44* '''Played for Laughs''': The protagonists attempt to explain their moral without diving into the nitty gritty of why it's important. Another character mercilessly mocks them for how clueless they're coming off as.
45* '''Played for Drama''': The episode, though confusing, feels like an UnexpectedlyDarkEpisode.
46----
47I can't tell what we do now ... do we go back to CluelessAesop?

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