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1%%
2%% Be careful when writing examples. If someone plans to fail and their plan works, that's a plain old FailureGambit.
3%% It only belongs here if it backfires.
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6RealLife Examples of SpringtimeForHitler:
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8[[foldercontrol]]
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10[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
11* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'': Creator/TiteKubo once admitted that Gin Ichimaru was designed to be off-putting and sinister, so he was surprised at the number of fangirls the character picked up.
12* When Creator/AlfonsoObregonInclan did a casting test to be cast as Kakashi Hatake in the Latin America dub of the ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' anime, he REALLY didnt want to do anime, and knew just how long the series was and didn't want to work for years on a series with so many episodes. Thus he deliberately tried to bomb the audition, making his best to come across as bored, uninterested and dry. Unfortunately for him, the licensors felt his performance fit Kakashi's dry wit and humor so he got the part.
13* ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'': [[EmotionlessGirl Rei Ayanami]] was intended to be a creepy TakeThat at the ideal of a shy love interest character, with a backstory and plot that doesn't help matters (basically, she's a clone of the [[IncestSubtext teenage protagonist's mother]]). Most viewers find her [[{{Moe}} adorable]] and [[TheWoobie just want to give her a hug]], ironically in part ''because'' of her backstory and role in the plot; she's arguably the most well-liked character in the series as well as one of the most popular characters in Japanese pop-culture ''ever'', inspiring a [[ReiAyanamiExpy horde of imitators]].
14* Similar to the above examples, L from ''Manga/DeathNote'' was intended to be ugly and off-putting, with his messy hair, huge, unblinking eyes, odd habits and (in the anime) unnaturally pale skin. Public opinion has declared him the hottest character in the series.
15* As he revealed on ''WebVideo/TrashTaste'', Creator/AleksLe considers the ''Manga/RentAGirlfriend'' manga to be a GuiltyPleasure and only auditioned for the role of [[LoserProtagonist Kazuya Kinoshita]] in the English dub to make his name visible to the studio and keep a foot in the door on potentially auditioning for their ''Manga/JujutsuKaisen'' dub (which didn’t happen). But since he didn’t actually want to be in ''Rent-A-Girlfriend'', he recorded a single deliberately bad audition and submitted it, only to be cast the next day as Kazuya.
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18[[folder:Academia]]
19* The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sokal_affair Sokal affair]] was a watershed moment in academia when physics professor Alan Sokal got a whole bunch of gibberish published in a real academic journal. Sokal, alarmed at the academic world's increasing and unquestioning acceptance of {{postmodernism}}, wrote a paper littered with fashionable postmodernist buzzwords -- and nothing else of substance -- hoping to prove his point by getting it rejected in peer review. But the journal, ''Social Text'', didn't reject it. Not only was it published, it was praised and circulated through several other academic journals. This in spite of the fact that, among other things, it argued that ''gravity'' was [[IRejectYourReality a social construct]]. Sokal eventually had to admit it was a hoax.
20* Taking a page from Sokal, James A. Lindsay, Peter Boghossian, and Helen Pluckrose decided to try their own experiment by making up ''twenty'' completely [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grievance_Studies_affair bogus academic papers]] in what became known as the "Sokal Squared" hoax. Like Sokal, they set out to make them as ridiculous as possible, loaded with buzzwords, politically fashionable language, and radical ideological bent. By the time they admitted the hoax, only six were rejected. Four had been published, three had been accepted for publication (including an alarming one [[note]] "Our Struggle Is My Struggle: Solidarity Feminism as an Intersectional Reply to Neoliberal and Choice Feminism"[[/note]] that was merely [[UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler Adolf Hitler's]] ''Mein Kampf'' re-written to swap out the groups the original author ranted about with AcceptableTargets), and seven were still under review. One of the published papers claiming that pet dogs participated in "rape culture" had won special recognition in its field, which is what eventually exposed the hoax.
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23[[folder:Arts]]
24* In 1924, as a way of mocking an art exhibition jury for rejecting his wife's paintings, Paul Jordan-Smith submitted an intentionally bad painting under the false name "Pavel Jerdanowitch", claiming that it represented a new art school called "disumbrationism". The painting ended up being very well received by critics, and he went on to paint several more before revealing that the entire thing was a hoax.
25* The MediaNotes/{{Dada}} movement of the 1920s was a potshot at man's unquestioning admiration of anything labeled "art". Dadaists such as Marcel Duchamp used things like urinals, postcards of the Mona Lisa with a mustache painted on it, and objects intended to be destroyed, offensive and otherwise without any major artistic qualities. Most surviving Dada works are considered genuine art, if only as a commentary on the definition of art.
26* Back in 1937, while Nazi Germany was promoting art glorifying Nazi ideology, they also decided to stage a show of "proper" German art alongside another of "degenerate art", to allow people to be properly disgusted by the supposedly perverse, anti-religious, "Jewish-Bolshevist" modern art. The exhibition of "degenerate" art attracted ''over two million visitors'', almost four times as many as the Nazi-approved art, making it one of the largest modern art shows of the 20[[superscript:th]] century.
27* When Creator/MichelangeloBuonarroti was assigned to paint the Art/SistineChapel ceiling, he believed (and several historians concur) that it was at the instigation of rival artist Creator/RaphaelSanzio; supposedly, Raphael was jealous of Michelangelo's fame, and, knowing that he was a sculptor and not a painter, was setting him up to fail. Instead, Michelangelo went on to create the most famous frisco of all time, ensuring that Raphael would be obscured by his rival's fame for centuries.
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30[[folder:Board Games]]
31* This sort of thing happened to a player at the World TabletopGame/{{Scrabble}} Championship Tournament. The first letters he drew only needed one extra letter added to make an 8-letter word. In Scrabble, using all seven tiles in a player's rack at once awards the player an additional fifty points. There was no seven-letter word that could be played using the letters on his rack, so if he wanted the 50-point bonus, he needed to play his 8-letter word. Unfortunately, he had the first move. So, he decided to give up his turn by playing a word which he believed was not real, getting his opponent to challenge it off the board so that he could use all his letters on his next turn. Unfortunately, his "non-word" was actually a real word, so it stayed on the board and he lost his chance at getting fifty extra points.[[note]]Why didn't he just pass? Probably because a championship-level opponent would figure out the ruse and simply pass right back, eventually ending the game in a draw.[[/note]]
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34[[folder:Card Games]]
35* In one of his TabletopGame/{{Poker}} books, Dan Harrington briefly talks about the practice of tournament poker players selling "pieces" of themselves (essentially, letting people buy or trade for a percentage of their winnings). He recounts the story of someone who accidentally sold more than 100% of himself in a tournament, meaning that any winnings would cost him money out of pocket, and the most profitable course of action would be to let himself be eliminated without winning anything. He won first place.
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38[[folder:Comedy]]
39* The 2018 Creator/{{Netflix}} comedy special ''Nanette'' was the product of Tasmanian stand-up comedian Hannah Gadsby, who got briefly famous thanks to a comedy routine which was basically a full, hour-long set about ''quitting'' comedy, crammed full of deconstructions of comedy itself, details of her own history with trauma and internalized prejudice, and an explanation of why she's quitting -- she can't stand to [[DefiedTrope make]] [[SelfDeprecation herself]] and other minorities the butt of jokes anymore. In her words, it was meant to divide audiences and get her removed from the Australian festival circuit.
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42[[folder:Comic Books]]
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44
45* At the dawn of MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks, Creator/DCComics was having a blast with its successes, which led to competitors trying to catch up with imitations. One particular writer was forced by his publisher to follow in ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica''[='=]s footsteps and create a team book to compete. However, the writer was fed up with being forced to write along with what was popular at the time and decided he had enough of the business. At the encouragement of his wife, he plotted to create a team book like his publisher wanted, but instead of what was conventional at the time, he'd fill the book with all kinds of AuthorAppeal such as money problems, squabbling teammates, and a monstrous "hero". Believing that nobody would want to read what ''he'd'' like to read, the writer expected for the book to be a major flop so he can bail out of the comics industry and pursue screenwriting for Hollywood. That writer was Creator/StanLee, and the book was the ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'' -- and that's how we got the Franchise/MarvelUniverse.
46* ''ComicBook/AnimalMan'': When Creator/GrantMorrison started writing the series, it was under the impression that it would be a four-issue limited series, and so Morrison basically just tried to modernize the character with some environmentalist themes and a general tone that could be described as "knockoff Creator/AlanMoore", before leaving the character for future writers to pick up on. Then the editors turned it into an ongoing and demanded Morrison stay. Morrison found the style of the early run to be overdone even then, and didn't have any good idea for where to take the character, and so wrote "The Coyote Gospel", a completely offbeat issue focusing on an {{Expy}} of [[WesternAnimation/WileECoyoteAndTheRoadRunner Wile E. Coyote]] being charged by a godlike being to travel to Animal Man's world from a different fictional universe and deliver a message, ultimately suffering a tragic final death. Though far more passionate while working on it, Morrison was convinced the issue would be seen as "absolute unreadable gibberish... that would hammer the final nail into the coffin of my fledgling career." Against all odds, it ended up being the most popular issue of the run up to that point, and encouraged Morrison to continue developing the themes and ideas that "Coyote Gospel" set up, which would go on to define both the rest of the run and Morrison's career in general.
47* ''ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'': According to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUhZAL-hLRk this podcast]], the Iron Dominion arc was a joke pitch from Creator/IanFlynn, one that was inserted among his actual pitches for the comic's two-hundredth issue to make the rest look better. The Iron Dominion arc was the one that got approved, leaving Flynn having to scramble to write it in a way that made it work.
48* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'': ComicBook/{{Venom}}'s iconic MoreTeethThanTheOsmondFamily and OverlyLongTongue design was because of Erik Larson. As the artist of ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963'' at the time, he was [[CreatorsPest not fond of Venom at all]] and, to pass the time, he drew him with more teeth than he had and a long, slobbering tongue. Somehow, it caught on with the fandom and it has been an iconic look for him, though future artists cleaned him up just a little.
49* ''Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles'': The origianl ''ComicBook/{{Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles|Mirage}}'' was originally created by Peter Laird and Kevin Eastman as a joke -- specifically, a parody of Creator/FrankMiller's ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}''. They self-published it, not knowing that it would end up becoming one of America's biggest {{Cash Cow Franchise}}s.
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52[[folder:Comic Strips]]
53* ''ComicStrip/BloomCounty'' creator Berke Breathed attempted to troll his audience by introducing an anti-ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}, the most unappealing cat character he could devise. This character was Bill the Cat, a mangy, unkempt, zoned-out alley cat completely oblivious to everything. Bill unexpectedly proved very popular with the comic's fanbase and soon within the fictional world as well, and became the second-most recognizable mascot of the strip next to Opus the Penguin.
54* This is how ''ComicStrip/ZippyThePinhead'' was syndicated. Alan Priaulx, the comics editor for King Features at the time, called Bill Griffith, who has been drawing the strip for the ''San Francisco Chronicle'', and offered him a syndication contract. Being an underground cartoonist, Griffith was wary of having his strip distributed by a mainstream company, so he made a list of 20 demands, figuring they wouldn't go for it. To his shock, Priaulx said yes to all. Griffith later found out why Priaulx was so accommodating when he quit his job at King Features a few months later: he was unhappy with his job at King and wanted to leave, but [[TakeThisJobAndShoveIt he wanted to leave with a bang]]. ''Zippy'' was picked up as a "ticking time bomb" for the syndicate. This trope also applies to Priaulx, as the strip is still running in newspapers to this day, the "bomb" not exploding.
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56
57[[folder:Eastern Animation]]
58* ''Animation/SquirrelAndHedgehog'' is a UsefulNotes/{{North Korea}}n propaganda cartoon, pitting "plucky" North Korean {{funny animal}}s against "evil" American wolves. When it was leaked to the Internet, it instantly provided a morale boost... to Americans, who found the depiction of them as a PatrioticFervor land of super-science amusing, and the PerkyFemaleMinion fox became a huge hit with the UsefulNotes/FurryFandom.
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61[[folder:Fan Works]]
62* ''FanFic/ThoseLackingSpines'' started as a simple TrollFic that Gexegee wanted to get off her chest to mess with her readers. It wound up becoming one of the most popular ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'' fanfiction of all time. When Gexegee realized the gem she had, the story started beeing less troll-y and more meta.
63* ''WebVideo/YuGiOhTheAbridgedSeries'' parodied [[SelfDeprecation its own tendency]] to rely on {{Character Catchphrase}}s in one episode in which Joey Wheeler began repeatedly proclaiming his "{{BROOKLYN RAGE}}!". The catchphrase fails utterly in-universe, but went on to become [[MemeticMutation one of the most popular lines in the fandom]] (right beside the one about [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney rule-screwing]]), with [[TheMerch a shirt]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HM9tyNkUAg a music video]], and the line being [[AscendedMeme quoted by the character's original voice actor]].
64* The author of the ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' FanFiction ''[[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/2595197/1/Darkness-within Darkness Within]]'' just wanted to make a one-shot story about Naruto brutally beating up Sakura and Sasuke and was expecting a lot of hate reviews. So he was obviously quite surprised to find how many people loved his story and made more chapters because it it.
65* ''WebVideo/NarutoTheAbridgedComedyFandubSpoofSeriesShow'', an April Fool's Day joke Creator/LittleKuriboh created to be a TakeThat of ''WebVideo/NarutoTheAbridgedSeries'', became unexpectedly popular with his viewers. He ended up creating a full-on series with it.
66* ''WebVideo/HellsingUltimateAbridged'' was originally supposed to be a one-off bait-and-switch troll video. Leading up to release, Creator/TeamFourStar teased that their newest abridged series would be an abridged series of ''Anime/OnePiece'', including with a few blurry images of the Straw Hat crew's sail, and Lanipator's post about how he was recording ''One Piece'''s main theme "We Are". After a few seconds that appeared to be exactly what was promised, the scene suddenly shifts to the CrapsackWorld that is ''Hellsing Ultimate'', with a giant {{Troll}} of an interpretation of Alucard that goes on [[DeadlyEuphemism very enthusiastic walks in the woods]] and kills homicidal vampire priests for the hell of it. It quickly got a ton of approval and good reception, leading TFS to turn ''Hellsing Ultimate Abridged'' into an annual Halloween special (outside of the brief ScheduleSlip in 2016 prior to the release of Episode 6) that lasted until its completion in Fall 2018.
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69[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
70* In 1955 somebody got the idea to adapt a popular episode of a TV anthology series to film. Creator/BurtLancaster and his business partner decided to fund it, figuring the low-budget picture wouldn't make any money (who would pay to see a film they could watch for free on TV?) and they could use the expenses as a tax write-off. Compounding this plan was their casting of [[Creator/ErnestBorgnine some fat, ugly guy best known for playing villains]] as the romantic lead. The film? ''Film/{{Marty}}'', which became a huge box office smash and ended up winning four Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Actor, along with the MediaNotes/PalmeDOr at Cannes. ''Website/{{Cracked}}'''s [[http://www.cracked.com/article_20660_5-classic-movies-made-by-people-who-wanted-them-to-fail_p2.html 5 Classic Movies Made by People Who Wanted Them to Fail]] describes its production as having "literally started out as the plot of ''The Producers''."
71* ''Film/BattlefieldEarth'' was the subject of a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlefield_Earth_(film)#Fraud_by_Franchise_Pictures $121.7 million lawsuit]], possibly in an attempt to pull one of these.
72* As relayed by Ahmed Ahmed, an Arab-American actor and stand-up comedian in one of his routines in the mid '90s, he went in to read for a stereotypical Arab terrorist role in ''Film/ExecutiveDecision''. Since his stand-up comedy career was starting to flourish, and because he considered the role an offensive stereotype, he decided he'd go in and treat the audition as a complete joke, completely mocking the role and the producers. Ahmed proceeded to read the part as the most crazed, screaming ethnically offensive LargeHam stereotype he could manage. The casting director loved it and promptly offered him the part. He was going to turn it down but then [[MoneyDearBoy saw just how much he was going to be paid for a few weeks' work]].
73* Creator/RobertPattinson has been very vocal about his outright hatred for ''Literature/TheTwilightSaga'' and its characters, particularly his own character Edward Cullen. In interviews he's said that he portrays Edward as a pathetic, socially maladjusted loser, just the way he imagines a 100-plus-year-old virgin would be. Unfortunately for him, this only seems to have encouraged the crazy fangirls.
74* Creator/ElizabethTaylor, who was uninterested in playing the main character in ''Film/{{Cleopatra}}'', said she would do it only if she were paid a million dollars, an obscene sum for the early 1960s. But they said yes, and the rest is history. Only problem was that the film's TroubledProduction led to it being one of the biggest {{Box Office Bomb}}s of all time.
75* Creator/DennisMiller didn't want to do ''Film/BordelloOfBlood'' despite producer Joel Silver's insistence that he do so so he demanded a salary of a million dollars. Silver did exactly that, taking the bulk of the money from the movie's special effects budget, which also contributed to its TroubledProduction and poor reception.
76* Jaye Davidson similarly decided to retire from acting after his starring role in ''Film/TheCryingGame'', apparently not liking all the fame he'd been attracting, but the producers of ''Film/{{Stargate}}'' just kept pestering him to take the role of Ra. So to get them to go away, he demanded the most outlandish salary he could think of for the role ($1 million)... and they said yes.
77* ''Film/AnimalHouse'' featured a scene where a college student has sex with an underage girl. Originally, the director wanted the girl to be 16 (in-story -- [[DawsonCasting the actress playing her was 19 at the time]]), but was concerned that the censors would object due to the depiction of statutory rape. [[CensorDecoy They decided to change her age to 13, figuring the censors would reject it and they could come back with 16 as a "compromise".]] To their shock, the censors allowed the scene with no objections.
78* Director Creator/RobertAltman couldn't come up with lyrics "stupid enough" for ''[[Film/{{Mash}} M*A*S*H]]'''s theme song "Suicide Is Painless", so he gave the job to his 14-year-old son Michael, who wrote the song in five minutes. Instead of "stupid" lyrics, the song turned out to be tremendously moving. The royalties from an instrumental version of the song being used as the theme music for [[Series/{{MASH}} the later TV show]] meant that Michael made a ''lot'' more money off the movie than his father did.
79* ''Film/GorillaInterrupted'': After the film's one-week deadline for principle photography expired, there were still many alien scenes that needed to be filmed. Director Mike Stoklasa was so dispirited and embarrassed by the way the film was shaping up that he put zero effort into the remaining scenes, deliberately making them as stupid and fake as he could. But the film is a comedy, and the scenes' StylisticSuck is widely seen as the funniest part of the film.
80* As described by Music/HenryRollins, this was how he auditioned for the minor role of Spinner from ''Film/DeathToSmoochy''. Knowing he wasn't going to get the part anyway, Rollins decided to go completely ''apeshit'' during his read as the mentally handicapped boxer, ending the whole situation with director Creator/DannyDevito hiding behind the couch. Instead of tanking his chances, Rollins later found out he was ''in the top 2'' for actors they were considering for the role. Though he ultimately didn't land the role in the end.
81* When designing creatures for the ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'' trilogy, the film's conceptual artists created an incredibly malformed design for Gothmog, in an attempt to create something so disgusting that even Creator/PeterJackson would refuse to use it. This ended up backfiring when Jackson liked the design in its own right, and pointed out that it made sense to use it from a film-making perspective, as it would ensure that Gothmog would stand out from the other Orcs in the large-scale battle sequences.
82* When ''Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet'' series producer Robert Shaye decided he wanted to play the part of the main character's father in ''Film/ANightmareOnElmStreetPart2FreddysRevenge'', director Jack Sholder -- understandably not wanting to give such a critical part to someone with no acting experience -- falsely claimed that he had already given the role to Creator/CluGulager (who Sholder actually did want and eventually hired, but hadn't yet approached) and suggested that Shaye play the role of the bartender in a leather bar, hoping to make him give up on wanting to appear in the film altogether. Much to Sholder's shock, Shaye not only agreed to take on the role, but even made Sholder accompany him to a trip to a store to buy the appropriate outfit.
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85[[folder:Food]]
86* According to [[http://www.snopes.com/business/origins/chips.asp legend]], this is how we got potato chips. Some guy at a restaurant kept sending his potatoes back, complaining they were too thick, too soft, and not salty enough. So the cook, George Crum, got frustrated and sliced them super thin, fried them to a crisp, and ''poured'' on the salt. The customer ''loved'' it, and a new snack food was born.
87* This is reportedly the origin of hot fried chicken or more popularly known as Nashville hot chicken. It is generally accepted that the originator of hot chicken is the family of Andre Prince Jeffries, owner of Prince's Hot Chicken Shack. Although impossible to verify, Jeffries says the development of hot chicken was an accident. Her great-uncle Thornton was purportedly a womanizer, and after a particularly late night out, his girlfriend at the time cooked him a fried chicken breakfast with extra pepper as revenge. Instead, Thornton decided he liked it so much that by the mid-1930s, he and his brothers had created their own recipe and opened the BBQ Chicken Shack café. What began as breakfast revenge is now considered to be a staple food for late-night diners.
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90[[folder:Literature]]
91* Creator/ErnestHemingway wanted to break out of his contract with Horace Liverwright for a better deal with a new publisher, so he wrote ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Torrents_of_Spring The Torrents of Spring]]'' as a mocking parody of the style used by Liverwright's favorite author.
92* ''Literature/NakedCameTheStranger'', a book that was written back in 1969 by an astounding 24 journalists under the pseudonym Penelope Ashe, was meant as a TakeThat to what was considered vulgar and popular at the time in literary culture. The book sold well and did even better once the head writer revealed that it was merely meant as a hoax.
93* Creator/ChuckPalahniuk wrote ''Literature/FightClub'' when his novel ''Literature/InvisibleMonsters'' was rejected by his publishers for being too disturbing. He intended to make ''Fight Club'' even more disturbing to give them something they would at least remember. The publishers liked it, and it was published.
94* Once upon a time, an unsuccessful author of HighFantasy novels was told by the teacher of his writing class that, seeing as he liked ''Literature/AnitaBlake'' and ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' so much, he should write a novel like those using the teacher's method of novel creation.
95-->'''Creator/JimButcher:''' When I finally got tired of arguing with her and decided to write a novel as if I was some kind of formulaic, genre-writing drone, just to prove to her how awful it would be, I wrote the first book of ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''.
96* In the ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'', ever since the first book, both fans and anti-fans latched onto the villain Murtagh, seeing him as cooler, more sympathetic, and more moral than the main character. Time and again, the author tried to write him as an unlikable prick. Unfortunately, his turn to evil due to terrible circumstances beyond his control (he is literally ''forced'' to be evil) makes him TheWoobie and gives him more of a character arc than the main character. After the fourth book where [[spoiler:Murtagh makes a HeelFaceTurn]], Paolini appears to have capitulated somewhat.
97* According to crime novelist Val [=McDermid=], the author of ''Series/WireInTheBlood'', this is basically what happened when she wrote her [[CreatorsOddball children's picture book]] ''My Granny is a Pirate''. For a while there was a trend of celebrities writing children's books, and [=McDermid's=] publisher wanted her to write one too, and refused to listen when she said that this was a particular skill she didn't possess, so she sent her a poem she had made up for her son when he was younger.
98-->'''[=McDermid=]:''' But eventually, she just kept going on and on ''and on'', and the only way I thought to shut her up, was to send her something. ''[...]'' So I had written this, well, I had made up really, I hadn't even written it down to begin with, this poem about my granny being a pirate. You know: ''"My granny is a pirate! She sailed the seven seas. She's captured many pirate ships, but was always home for tea."'' And I sent this off to my publisher thinking; at least she'll shut up and leave me alone now, but no. No no no. She called me and said, "Darling, we love it! We want to publish it, darling!" And I'm like, ''Oh, for Christ's sake...''
99* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ern_Malley Ern Malley]] is a fictional poet created by conservative Australian writers James [=McAuley=] and Harold Stewart as a reaction to what they felt was the poor state of modernist poetry in the 1940s. They wrote sixteen deliberately bad poems under the pseudonym, which they then submitted to the popular modernist magazine ''Angry Penguins'' in an attempt to embarrass its founder Max Harris. Naturally, Harris fell for the hoax and devoted the next issue to Malley. When the con was revealed, he was humiliated and subsequently fined for publishing the poems on the grounds that they were obscene, and his magazine ceased publishing in 1946. While the hoax proved to be a major setback for the cause of Australian modernist literature, it was not long before the Ern Malley poems became celebrated as a successful example of surrealist poetry in their own right in spite of their well-known status as a forgery.
100* The book ''Real Men Don't Eat Quiche'' was written by Bruce Feirstein to satirize views on [[MasculinityTropes masculinity]] in America, however it became popular with men using it as an unironic guide on [[TestosteronePoisoning "how to be a man"]] [[PoesLaw completely missing the satire altogether]]. "Quiche-eater" has even entered the lexicon for an unmasculine man and in ''Film/AViewToAKill'', Franchise/JamesBond is shown cooking quiche as a subtle TakeThat to this view, bringing it full circle.
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103[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
104* ''Series/{{SCTV}}'''s Bob and Doug [=McKenzie=] were created as a TakeThat to Creator/{{CBC}}; after the program moved to the network, CBC requested that they add two minutes of "distinctively Canadian content" as {{Padding}} since it was running shorter due to having fewer commercials. The show's staff felt that the request was ridiculous; in particular, performers Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas jokingly suggested that they should just put up a map of Canada and act as [[MooseAndMapleSyrup stereotypically Canadian as possible]]. Moranis and Thomas ended up doing exactly that, and wound up creating the most popular characters in the show's history, as Canadians [[MexicansLoveSpeedyGonzales loved the mocking stereotype of themselves]].
105* During the first season of ''Series/WKRPInCincinnati'', Creator/{{CBS}} wanted more broad, kid-friendly comedy in the show. Producer Hugh Wilson wrote "Fish Story" as a TakeThat to the executives, a broad farce with silly costumes (Herb in the WKRP "carp" costume fighting the WPIG pig), pratfalls, and contrived explanations. Wilson hated the episode, and wrote it under a pseudonym as the last episode in CBS's initial 13-episode order. It got great ratings, and has always been one of the fans' favorite episodes.
106* This was what happened behind the scenes of the original ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|1978}}''. [[Creator/AmericanBroadcastingCompany ABC]] only greenlit it because they were hoping it would flop -- they figured so many people were playing FollowTheLeader after the success of ''[[Film/ANewHope Star Wars]]'' that people were going to sour on sci-fi sometime soon. They had the numbers to back it up -- no sci-fi series since ''Series/{{Star Trek|The Original Series}}'' had lasted longer than one season. They figured they could air ''Galactica'' as a loss-leader for their cheap sitcoms, which the audience would demand after they got bored with the sci-fi. But ''Galactica'' proved to be a huge hit, leaving ABC with a show that was too popular to cancel -- but too expensive to continue producing. They resorted to [[ScrewedByTheNetwork screwing the show over]], hoping to drive down viewership without losing face with an up-front cancellation. And the stunt didn't help ABC's sitcoms at all; none of that season's new series were hits, and last season's big hit ''Series/MorkAndMindy'' bled ratings thanks to a bad ReTool.
107* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
108** William Windom, who played Commodore Matt Decker in the ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' episode "The Doomsday Machine", thought the entire episode was just silly and decided to [[LargeHam ham it up]], treating it as if he was in some cartoon. This ended up making his character very memorable due to the captain's unhinged state, and today it's said that this was one of his most memorable roles.
109** Avery Brooks, who played Captain Sisko in ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'', supposedly didn't want the part originally, but was talked into it by his wife, who was a ''Star Trek'' fan. Consequently, he came across in his audition as grumpy and not entirely wanting to be there -- which was ''exactly'' how the producers envisaged his character. The show managed to find its place as a DarkerAndEdgier look at the universe at the time and drew viewers for that alternate perspective. It ran for seven seasons, and despite wanting to leave the show, Brooks stuck it out because he wanted to teach his son a lesson about honoring one's commitments.
110** Robert Beltran, who played Chakotay in ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'', got so fed up with how his character was depicted and the quality of the show as a whole that he demanded an extraordinarily large pay raise in order to stay on the cast, hoping that his bosses would ditch him rather than pay such a huge amount. They simply forked over the money. ''Voyager'' managed to find its legs and [[RuleOfThree ran for seven seasons as well]]. Even though Chakotay [[TheScrappy never became a fan favorite]] and Beltran never really enjoyed playing him, he would reprise the role years later in ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekProdigy''.
111* ''Franchise/PowerRangers'':
112** When Jason Narvy tried out for the role of Skull in ''Series/MightyMorphinPowerRangers'', he was tired of the entertainment industry, and proceeded to act as obnoxious as possible during the audition so he'd be sure to bomb it. Seeing as how Skull was one of ThoseTwoGuys and a total bully in-universe, this ended up getting Narvy the part, where he proceeded to have a longer tenure than any of the original cast of Power Rangers.
113** Creator/BarbaraGoodson was stunned when she was told she had to reaudition for the part of Rita Repulsa despite her performance having been well received in the pilot. Feeling humiliated and frustrated at the producers' comments that she didn't sound "angry enough", she decided to screech at them as loudly and angrily as she could, fully knowing she would fail the audition. And thus Rita's iconic voice was born.
114** After the disappointment of ''Series/PowerRangersTurbo'' (which suffered for trying to adapt the footage from parody Sentai ''Series/GekisouSentaiCarranger'' into a serious storyline), the budget was severely cut and the show was entering its intended final season. The footage from ''Series/DenjiSentaiMegaranger'' turned out to be technology-based. Judd Lynn decided to move forward with a ''Power Rangers'' series based on a space story. Not only did the resulting series, ''Series/PowerRangersInSpace'' save the franchise, it turned out to be the GrowingTheBeard moment for the series and the standard for future ''Power Rangers'' seasons.
115** The bulk of Creator/{{Disney}}'s ownership of the show is this. Disney acquired the rights in their purchase of Fox Family and related assets. They weren't interested all that much in ''Power Rangers'', so they intended to end the series with the expiration of Saban's original deal with Toei after ''Series/PowerRangersWildForce'' (even titling the finale "The End of Power Rangers", meant as just that). Then, two former ''Power Rangers'' writers and producers then elsewhere at Disney talked them into moving production to New Zealand for tax benefits, and the show continued to be a success... until Disney's apathy towards the show became more apparent. After ''Series/PowerRangersJungleFury'', Disney tried to end the series again, but Bandai convinced them to do another season [[MerchandiseDriven because of toy sales]] often outperforming the show itself in that time. The Sentai footage was from another parody Sentai, ''Series/EngineSentaiGoOnger''. Executive producer Eddie Guzelian (replaced midstream by Lynn due to ExecutiveMeddling) adapted it into a serious storyline, which is what they tried to do with ''Turbo'', only this time it worked. The resulting series, ''Series/PowerRangersRPM'', is incredibly well-regarded for its story, and could have been the most successful series since ''In Space''. Most ABC affiliates, including Disney-owned stations and stations in nearly all major markets, ended up [[ScrewedByTheNetwork screwing the show over]] to a graveyard early-morning slot or not airing it at all, which finally ended the series, save for the 2010 re-version of ''MMPR''. Then, Saban bought the rights to the franchise again, moved airing to Creator/{{Nickelodeon}}, and ''Power Rangers'' returned to being a top-rated TV show and best-selling toyline.
116* The cast of ''Series/TheState'' was pressured to write more catchphrase-driven comedy like ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'', so they wrote a TakeThat sketch starring "Louie, the Guy Who Says His Catchphrase Over and Over Again." In it, Louie repeats his catchphrase, "I wanna dip my balls in it!" over and over again to a crowd who find it hilarious every single time, while the OnlySaneMan criticizes the concept. The skit was pretty popular and the character made at least one reappearance.
117* The success of ''Series/TheWaltons'' was a complete accident; it was a show that would've fallen victim to the "rural purge" had it been broadcast any earlier. CBS put it in the FridayNightDeathSlot in a deliberate attempt to sabotage it. Needless to say, [[AndYouThoughtItWouldFail it backfired spectacularly, and it became one of the network's biggest hits of the '70s instead]].
118* For ''Series/TheGongShow'', producer Chuck Barris regularly brought in acts that were overly sexually suggestive on purpose to act as {{Censor Decoy}}s. On at least one occasion, one of these acts actually made it to air.
119* In 1993, when Cologne-based station Viva TV prepared for launch, local musician Creator/StefanRaab paid them a visit intending to produce jingles for them, but somehow found himself at a casting for presenters. He didn't want the job, so he completely misbehaved, only to end up with his own comedy show. This did give his music some nice exposure, but his shows eventually became so successful that he presumably became too tired to record more than just the occasional, infrequent single. Even after retiring from TV in 2015, he hasn't recorded any new music since 1997 (though he did mastermind Germany's Eurovision 2010 victory).
120* Music/DeanMartin had no intention of doing a weekly variety show, so he asked Creator/{{NBC}} for an enormous salary and insisted that his contract include clauses that allowed him to skip rehearsals and refuse to do retakes, among other outrageous demands. NBC agreed to every single demand, and Dean felt honor-bound to do it. The show ended up running for 9 years, followed by the ''Dean Martin Celebrity Roast'' specials that ran for an additional 10 years. True to his word, however, Dean refused to rehearse or shoot retakes and was usually in his car and well on his way home before shooting even wrapped for the day.
121* When Creator/DwayneMcDuffie created the [[https://thetommywestphall.wordpress.com/ Tommy Westphall Universe Hypothesis]] in 2002, he did so [[http://www.slushfactory.com/content/EpupypyZAZTDOLwdfz.php as a joke]], meant as a DeconstructiveParody of how seriously fans of comic books take continuity by applying that same SeriousBusiness attitude towards {{crossover}}s and {{Shout Out}}s to the world of television. The idea that "thanks to ''Series/StElsewhere''[='=]s GainaxEnding, vast swathes of modern television exist purely in the mind of an autistic boy" was meant to be a wholly unsupportable and ridiculous conclusion... one that was, indeed, taken seriously by some people, who have expanded on [=McDuffie=]'s hypothesis to link (as of this writing) [[https://thetommywestphall.wordpress.com/the-master-list/ 419 shows]] back to little Tommy Westphall.
122* Creator/JossWhedon has joked that he fully expected ''Series/{{Dollhouse}}'' to get cancelled after one season, and that Fox only renewed the series for a second season to spite him.
123* The ''Series/FatherTed'' episode about Ireland trying to get out of hosting the Series/EurovisionSongContest was based on a real life example. RTÉ allegedly selected an inferior song for the 1994 contest so they wouldn't have to face the daunting (and financially crippling) task of hosting a third consecutive contest. Not only did "Rock 'n' Roll Kids" win, it became the highest-scoring song in Eurovision history up to that point.
124* After the sixth series of ''Series/RedDwarf'' in 1993, co-writer Rob Grant departed the show, leaving his writing partner Doug Naylor to continue the series by himself. Despite pressure from the BBC, Naylor was reluctant to carry on solo, and he asked his agent to put in a deliberately ridiculous budget request for the seventh series which the BBC would reject. His agent ended up putting in a request for a "sensibly ridiculous" budget -- ''i.e.'' one so large he thought the BBC would definitely still reject it, but not so obviously unrealistic that the BBC would realise they were deliberately trying to get it turned down. The BBC agreed to fund it.
125* In 1993, ''Series/NoelsHouseParty'' introduced the character Music/MrBlobby, a deliberately ridiculous parody of children's TV characters who [[PokemonSpeak only speaks in the repeated phrase "blobby blobby blobby!"]], for their "[[CandidCameraPrank Gotcha]]" segments. He was intended to particularly embarrass the celebrities and arguably mock them for not realising that such a moronic character would never get his own show. He then became massively popular with children and he became a serious children's show character, and even got his own merchandise.
126* [[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/27/russian-man-trapped-chinese-reality-tv-show-voted-out-lelush-vladislav-ivanov-produce-camp Vladislav Ivanov]] aka Lelush is a Russian model who served as a translator for the Chinese singing talent show Produce Camp 2021. After the producers of the show noticed his good looks he was signed up as a contestant. Lelush quickly regretted the decision, finding the weekly training sessions and isolation to be grueling, but couldn't leave the show without breaking his contract. So he deliberately performed badly in hopes of being voted off the show. But instead, fans found his grumpy, defeatist attitude to be endearing and managed to vote him to stay until the final episode.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Music]]
130* Music/NeilYoung was in the midst of a creative dispute with his label Geffen Records, due to his 1982 experimental techno-rock album ''Trans'', which had flopped. Young recorded and had intended to release the straight country album ''Old Ways'' next, but it was rejected by Geffen, who requested Young to release a rock album instead. Not one to take such executive meddling in stride, Young recorded ''Everybody's Rockin''', an intentionally silly rockabilly album in hopes to anger Geffen enough to get out of his contract. The result was a lawsuit and counter lawsuit from both parties.
131* Music/MarvinGaye was coerced by his record label to record a {{Disco}} song. Gaye, not a fan of the Disco Genre by any stretch, went to do an intentionally bad song (singing in falsetto lampooning Music/TheBeeGees), hoping it would fail and his label would leave him alone. "Got To Give It Up" ended up being one of his biggest hits.
132* The quintessential example is Music/LouReed's ''Music/MetalMachineMusic'', a double album consisting exclusively of [[SensoryAbuse layered feedback from multiple instruments]]. It became a minor success, selling over 100,000 copies, singlehandedly invented the Noise genre of music (which is [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff particularly popular in Germany and Japan]]) and strongly influenced Industrial music. Most people assumed that Reed made it as [[WriterRevolt a big middle finger to the record company]], but Reed has denied this, saying that he was completely serious at the time, but was [[ArtisticStimulation also on a lot of drugs]].
133* Music/TheBeachBoys' ''[[Music/BeachBoysParty Party]]'', an album of covers thrown together quickly, was born from Creator/CapitolRecords' demand to have a new album [[ChristmasRushed in time for Christmas]] -- and their planned album ''Music/PetSounds'' wasn't going to make it thanks to Brian Wilson's perfectionism. The last song on the album, a cover of Fred Fasset's "Barbara Ann", became a surprise hit, charting at #2, although not initially released as a single, while the album itself hit the top 10 at #6.
134* Music/TheBeatles wrote the song "Helter Skelter" in the hopes of making a really manic, distorted, unpleasantly noisy song. The song however received substantial praise, and is considered an example of an early template for heavy metal, punk rock and grunge.
135* Music/HalfAlive explicitly wrote "still feel." in a way that was unplayable for radio by choosing to end with a FadeOut, but this ended up backfiring ''spectacularly'' due to its [[BreakoutHit popularity]].
136* Lampshaded with ''AudioPlay/MontyPythonsContractualObligationAlbum'', which was originally released with the tagline "Now a Major Lawsuit". The album actually ''was'' produced to finish out a contract, and listening to it, it's clear that the Pythons didn't put much effort into it. Over half the album is songs and brief spoken word pieces by Creator/EricIdle, and the rest is new recordings of old material that the Pythons had written for other projects.
137* Music/MikeOldfield's ''Amarok'' album includes "fuck you rb" in Morse code, targeted at Virgin's boss Richard Branson. Since Virgin had been pressing him to produce more tracks that could be released as singles, ''Amarok'' was deliberately constructed as a solid 60 minutes that is impossible to cut into a single. Many consider it his best album. Oldfield's page has an entire section of TakeThat examples dedicated to showing all the different ways ''Amarok'' is a big middle finger to Branson.
138* Love and Rockets (post-punk/synth-rock band consisting of former [[{{Goth}} Bauhaus]] members) did one of these with their side project "The Bubblemen" -- a single release consisting of "The Bubblemen Are Coming", "Bubblemen Rap", and "Bees", and featuring the band dressed in bee costumes -- as a "blowing off steam" variation of this trope. The project quickly became a cult hit, and they often performed as the Bubblemen as part of their regular concerts.
139* In the late '60s, Music/VanMorrison recorded an entire album of deliberately unreleaseably awful songs ("The Big Royalty Check", "Ringworm", "Here Comes Dumb George") in order to fulfill the ExactWords of his contract with Bang Records [[note]] He was required to record 36 original songs and submit them to the owner's publishing company... but nowhere did it say that the songs had to be ''good'' [[/note]]. This ended up backfiring on him in the early '90s, when the cash-strapped rights-holders began licensing them out... on "Greatest Hits" compilations, no less.
140* Music/SaraBareilles was forced by her record company to write a love song for her album ''Little Voice''. So, WriterRevolt kicked in with "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qi7Yh16dA0w&ob=av2e Love Song]]", which specifically goes "I'm not gonna write you a love song". Ironically, it was her first hit. Same story with her second hit "King of Anything"... so which party gets to say "I told you so"?
141* British extreme metallers Music/CradleOfFilth were sick of their then-current label Cacophonous Records, yet were pigeonholed into making a new release before they could leave the label. The result was the EP ''Vempire (or Dark Faarytales in Phallustein)'', which many fans of the band consider to be their best release.
142* The power chords to Music/REOSpeedwagon's "Keep On Loving You" were a reaction by guitarist Gary Richrath to singer Kevin Cronin's song, which Gary thought was [[SillyLoveSongs sappy and uncharacteristic]] of the hard-rock group. The combination became an early example of the '80s PowerBallad, and their first number one single. Today, they are almost ''only'' remembered for this and two other Power Ballads, "Can't Fight This Feeling" and "Take It on the Run".
143* Music/ToddRundgren's ''The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect'' is one of these. He intentionally wrote "Bang The Drum All Day" to be as stupid as possible, and it's quite possibly his most recognizable hit.
144* Music/TheResidents originally intended their album ''Duck Stab!'' to prove that even if they released an album of songs that actually followed traditional song structure, still no one would buy it. [[{{Irony}} It became one of their most popular.]]
145* Music/TheTurtles, a surf band turned folk-rock band from TheSixties [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot who had cheery bubblegum hits]] like "Happy Together" and "She'd Rather Be With Me", was having [[CreativeDifferences problems with their label]], White Whale, who wanted them to keep churning out [[StatusQuoIsGod more commercial product]] while the band wanted to move into more progressive music. So they wrote the most [[StealthParody deliberately banal]] pop song they could, "Elenore". It obviously [[MisaimedFandom was not taken as such]], and became a Top Ten hit.
146* Music/GunsNRoses guitarist Slash was "joking around" with a riff. He hated it. Axl Rose loved it. Over objections within the band, the track was recorded for their album-in-progress. The result was "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweet_Child_o%27_Mine Sweet Child O'Mine]]", a song Slash reportedly "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oobDQ0vdm8M really fucking hated to play]]" during their gigs. Slash had to spend ''a month'' recording that riff in the studio to get it just right for the album.
147* Steam's "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye", intended as a throwaway B side, instead a #1 hit. In fact, the overly-long chorus repetition at the end was specifically intended to be annoying. The plan was to encourage disc jockeys to only play the A side. The plan didn't work.
148* "Barely Breathing" by Duncan Sheik was similar, intended to be a filler song to bring the album up to proper length; it became his only hit (unless you count the music he did for "Spring Awakening").
149* This was what happened to Carl Douglas' "Kung Fu Fighting". After spending over two hours on A-side song "I Want to Give You My Everything", he recorded "Kung Fu Fighting" with the last ten minutes of studio time for the B-side track, in only two takes. It ended up becoming a #1 hit, and [[OneHitWonder nothing else he ever released even came close to replicating its success]].
150* German {{Krautrock}} band Music/{{Neu}}'s budget ran out during the recording of their second album after completing one side of an album. Short of material, they included the previously released single sides "Super" and "Neuschnee", and decided to fill the rest of the second side with sped-up and slowed-down versions of those two songs. In the process, they pretty much invented the remix.
151* Music/{{Mudhoney}} were asked to contribute a fast, driving song for a scene of the film ''With Honors'' wherein one of the characters runs through the snow. They offered up an instrumental they'd already written and recorded, but the studio insisted on a song with words. So the band added minimal throwaway lyrics to their instrumental, called the result "Run Shithead Run", and sent back both this version and the original, figuring the studio would either reject them outright or just use the instrumental after all. The version of the song with lyrics still ended up in the movie and its soundtrack album. The band did note that they were never asked to contribute music to a major motion picture again.
152* In 1976, amateur musician John Trubee, then a teenager, found an ad in a tabloid for a song poem company[[note]]That is, a company that takes lyrics from the clients and has studio musicians perform them[[/note]]. He submitted a deliberately offensive, nonsensical poem titled "Peace and Love", hoping he'd get a humorous (and rather offended) rejection letter.[[note]]Verses included "Warts love my nipples because they are pink / Vomit on me baby, yeah yeah yeah" and "Stevie Wonder's penis is erect because he's blind."[[/note]] He did not. 80 dollars and a quick change to the lyrics later, a [[SoBadItsGood comically godawful]], [[LyricalDissonance upbeat]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7vFFewvHwEY country march]] was set loose upon the world, where it would later gain [[http://www.songpoemmusic.com/trubee.htm a marked cult infamy]].
153* Music/KurtCobain wanted to make Music/{{Nirvana}}'s third album, ''Music/InUtero'', a noisy punk album in an attempt to get rid of the mainstream audience and massive fanbase they'd picked up with ''Music/{{Nevermind|Album}}''. It still shot to number one on the ''Billboard'' charts.
154* The metal band Music/{{GWAR}} got its start this way. Originally, the members were in a different band called Death Piggy, but in a few concerts, they tried a publicity stunt in which they posed as a FakeBand dressing up in ''Literature/{{Conan|TheBarbarian}}''-esque barbarian costumes (borrowed from a film they were making at the time) and running around screaming obscenities in the idea that after the audience was subjected to this, Death Piggy's arrival would come as a relief. To their surprise, many fans would stay for GWAR and leave when Death Piggy made their entrance, so they decided to play as GWAR full-time.
155* During the height of Psychedelia, Music/TheHollies (particularly Graham Nash) tried hard to develop a more elaborate, "serious" sound. The results, namely the single "King Midas in Reverse", were met with commercial indifference, prompting the label to demand something more marketable. In response, the band recorded the deliberately cheesy bubblegum song "Jennifer Eccles". It was a Top Ten hit, much to Nash's dismay.
156* As a joke, [[Music/FrankieValliAndTheFourSeasons The Four Seasons]] recorded a version of Music/BobDylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" with intentionally silly, self-parodic falsetto vocals, which they never intended to actually release. Their record company liked it enough to release it as a single anyway: Even though it was released under the name The Wonder Who? for contractual reasons, it reached #12 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 chart and sold a million copies.
157* Dylan, he has often claimed that his much-reviled ''Music/SelfPortrait'' album from 1970 was intended as one of these.
158* Music/AnalCunt attempted to make the worst music ever with music so abrasive it's difficult to tell what notes are even being played. They coupled this with lyrics that were frequently misogynistic, racist, homophobic, anti-Semitic, or otherwise offensive. Their singer, the late Seth Putnam, even admitted sending copies of their albums to reviewers who they knew would dislike it solely so they could get negative reviews. They wound up being admired by people who saw through the StealthParody and are one of the most influential bands of the grindcore genre. They even attempted making an album that even their fans wouldn't like, ''Picnic of Love''. The album is [[LighterAndSofter the opposite of their usual output]], featuring acoustic songs with Seth Putnam wailing in an obnoxiously high-pitched falsetto about respecting women. Many fans consider it their funniest and even critics gave it much more favorable reviews than their usual output.
159* Music/QuietRiot were asked to do a cover of the Music/{{Slade}} song "Cum on Feel the Noize" as a demo for their record company. Kevin Dubrow ''hated'' the song, refused to do more than one take, and put zero effort into it (there's an audible sound error at one point -- he demanded the band keep playing because he didn't want to have to start over). The song made their entire careers.
160* Sammy Davis Jr.'s version of "The Candy Man" was his biggest hit, spending three weeks at #1. This is in spite of his recording it in one syrupy, sanctimonious, and condescending take, and then grumbling about how the song would "take his career down the toilet". Seeing as he was probably still bitter over being passed up for the role of Bill the candy store owner in ''Film/WillyWonkaAndTheChocolateFactory'', it really could have.
161* [[http://www.black-sabbath.com/2004/06/depeche_mode/ According to designer Steve Joule]], this is how Music/BlackSabbath's ''Born Again'' cover art came to be: Joule was known for designing Ozzy Osbourne's album covers, and was asked by Sabbath's management to submit some rough designs for the band's next album. Fearing he might lose his main gig if he worked with Ozzy's former band, he decided to throw together some intentionally silly, hideous artwork in the hopes of getting rejected (but still collecting a fee for submitting his ideas). One of these designs was a stock photo of a crying baby crudely altered to look like a demon, which of course actually ended up being on the cover -- Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and Black Sabbath manager Don Arden reportedly approved of the design. On the other hand, then-vocalist Ian Gillan didn't see the artwork until it was already in stores, and was famously quoted (in a 1984 ''Kerrang!'' interview) as saying “I looked at the cover and puked!”
162* Music/JohnnyCash was one of a number of established artists who found the transition to the 80s difficult. Cash blamed it on poor promotion by his record company and recorded the intentionally awful "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_uM87NTFW4 Chicken in Black]]" in attempt to get out of his contract. It actually worked, but it also became his biggest hit in some time.
163* Australian pop singer Marty Rhone thought he was going to die in Vietnam and recorded "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KrgJMDONqXw So You Want to Be a Pop Singer]]" as a TakeThat to the music industry. The song, which references then ''Series/{{Countdown}}'' host Molly Meldrum, Russell Morris's hit "The Real Thing" and Elvis Presley, is pretty tame by today's standards and didn't come across as particularly scathing in 1970 either. It failed to chart, but it didn't sink Rhone's career either.
164* As an experiment, "Music/TheMostUnwantedSong" [[http://www.wired.com/listening_post/2008/04/a-scientific-at/ was created by polling 500 different people and determining which musical elements they disliked the most]]. These elements (which included children's choirs, advertising jingles, cowboy music, opera singers, rap, accordions, and bagpipes) were all combined into a 22-minute song.
165* Norwegian comedy duo Music/{{Ylvis}}, comprising brothers Vegard and Bård Ylvisåker, made "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jofNR_WkoCE The Fox]]", an intentionally nonsensical little ditty destined to go viral. They had done a favor for production team Stargate, and in return asked that Stargate produce "The Fox" to promote the new season of Ylvis' TV talk show ''I kveld med YLVIS'', the joke being that they had a chance at finally becoming pop stars but they did a nonsensical song that was destined to flop instead. Contrary to what they predicted, the song very quickly caught on and ended up being immensely successful on the charts instead of staying the joke Ylvis had originally created. The fact that another foreign novelty, "[[Music/{{PSY}} Gangnam Style]]", was still fresh in many peoples' minds probably helped too.
166-->"The whole humor is that we didn't succeed and had lots of obstacles. The obstacles generated the comedy. Then suddenly we're on this trip to America, the place people want to go, and there's no obstacles. Every doorway is open... and there's no comedy."
167* Australian PostPunk band Music/TheBirthdayParty wrote their single, "Release the Bats", as an over-the-top joke. It became their best known song.
168* With the Music/NewYorkDolls, vocalist David Johansen didn't achieve any commercial success, as his band was mostly a cult favorite as a forerunner of both American punk and glam rock. It was only when he launched his lounge singer alter-ego Buster Poindexter in 1987 that he became a commercial success, with "Hot Hot Hot" nearly cracking Billboard's Top 40. Johansen is now back with the Dolls, having long grown his hair back and ditched the suits he used to wear as his Poindexter alter-ego. In an interview, Johansen referred to "Hot Hot Hot" as "the bane of my existence", suggesting that he never intended for the song to become so popular.
169* Famously, the "crunch" sounds in Music/{{Radiohead}}'s "Creep" were an attempt to sabotage the song. The band left it in, and in part because of the crunches (which made an otherwise mellow song sound much harder, creating a dissonance that synergized well with the subject matter (intense personal self-loathing)), it became their first hit.
170* Music/SirMixALot recorded "Baby Got Back" as an intended parody of the then-popular MiamiBass genre, not expecting it to chart. Twelve weeks after debuting on the Hot 100, it went to #1, going on to become the second-biggest hit of 1992 and one of the 90s' most iconic songs.
171* The early rock and roll song "Little Darlin'" by the Diamonds was originally meant to be a parody of rock and roll. It's regarded as a classic.
172* Music/WeirdAlYankovic's "Albuquerque", [[EpicRocking which clocks in at 11 minutes]], was written to frustrate listeners by being a long, meandering story that [[ShaggyDogStory didn't go anywhere]], ending with a BrickJoke about how the narrator hates sauerkraut. It became a fan favorite.
173* Music/NickLowe wrote "[[BoyBand Bay City Rollers]], We Love You" to be as bad as possible in the hopes that his label would drop him. Instead, it turned out to be so catchy that it was released worldwide. It flopped everywhere [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff except Japan]].
174* Michael Sembello was asked to provide a song for ''Film/{{Flashdance}}''. Not liking any of the results, and frustrated by the lack of progress, he recorded the musical equivalent of a tasteless joke by making up a song celebrating the antics of a SlasherFilm maniac carving up victims. His wife accidentally sent it to the film producers. Sembello got a call, saying the producers ''loved'' the song. Understandably, a lyric change was needed. It ended up a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maniac_(Michael_Sembello_song) Number One hit.]]
175* Feeling pressure to deliver a hit, Music/ThrowingMuses wrote "Dizzy" in an effort to show how stupid it is to consciously try to write one. "We hated it even while we were recording it", Kristin Hersh said. "We expected them to get the point and they didn't at all, [[MisaimedFandom they loved it]]."
176* When The Church were recording "Under the Milky Way", they had left room in the arrangement for an instrumental solo of some kind, but were having some trouble coming up with one - as a joke, vocalist/bassist Steve Kilbey waited until everyone else left the studio and added a somewhat jarring [=EBow=] guitar solo that sounded a lot like a bagpipe played backwards. The producer and the band loved it and it was left in the final mix of the song, which became a SignatureSong for the group.
177* Gus Lobban, one-third of indie pop trio Music/KeroKeroBonito, [[https://web.archive.org/web/20190811142141/https://www.m-magazine.co.uk/features/interviews/interview-kane-west/ participated in a remix contest in 2014]] for Tiga and Audion's {{house|Music}} track "Let's Go Dancing", but submitted a messy joke entry filled with clunky, offbeat MIDI instrumentals, and under the name "kane west" (no relation to Music/KanyeWest). Surprisingly, he was among its selected winners (the contest holders interpreting his track as "free-jazz"), and after receiving additional positive [[PoesLaw (and somewhat ironic)]] reception from fans, Lobban decided to keep up Kane West as a side project, releasing similarly jokey MIDI material through Music/PCMusic.
178* "Fuck You" was designed to get Music/CeeLoGreen out of his contract with Atlantic Records. He was feeling completely ignored by his label and figured it would never pass muster. Instead, they loved it and he was front listed to the amazing success it became.
179[[/folder]]
180
181[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
182* Pastafarianism (a.k.a. the church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster), originally an in-joke among agnostics regarding the "man in the sky" interpretation of religion, wound up going [[MemeticMutation memetic]] enough that it has a following equal to a practiced religion and has legally recognized priests.
183* Several decades before Pastafarianism, [[Literature/PrincipiaDiscordia Discordianism]], an intentionally [[MediaNotes/{{Dada}} absurdist]] faux-religious tract achieved such a large cult following that it persists to this day.
184[[/folder]]
185
186[[folder:Politics]]
187* "Springtime for Hitler" cannot be mentioned without [[UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler the man himself]], who ascended to power in Germany in 1933 in much this way. He was appointed [[EvilChancellor Chancellor of Germany]] by President Paul von Hindenburg, who had the real power and was trying to promote Hitler to a position [[KickedUpstairs where he couldn't do any harm]]. However, Hitler knew the loopholes and was able to attain "emergency powers" following an arson attack on the German parliament building, which eventually led him to become the monstrous dictator we know him as today. After Hindenburg's death in 1934, he combined the powers of President and Chancellor and declared himself Führer of Germany.
188* When UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy became the Democratic Party's nominee for President of the United States in 1960, there was growing concern that his more progressive values and agenda would lead to a low turnout from Democrats in southern states during the election. To pacify said southern Democrats, he took on UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson as his running mate and eventual Vice President, as he was a Democrat from [[GoodOldBoy Texas]], and would help retain that demographic of voters, while being in a position that wouldn't affect JFK's progressive agenda. However, when Johnson became President after JFK was assassinated in 1963, he ended up pursuing an even more progressive agenda than JFK had, which eventually resulted in many of said southern Democrats to jump ship to the Republican Party.
189* In 1970, Earl Brydges, majority leader of the New York State Senate (and thus one of the three most powerful politicians in the state), wanted to head off attempts to legalize abortion in the state. Some were before the legislature, but he decided to supersede them all by writing his own bill, even more liberal than any introduced by more liberal legislators, with the idea that it would be too liberal to pass and thus he could put off the reformers by pointing to the failed bill. However, it passed, and after a tense moment when an upstate assemblyman changed his vote after they had been counted, allowing the governor's veto to be overriden, New York became the first U.S. state to legalize abortion, three years before ''Roe v. Wade''.
190* Many joke political parties and candidates end up doing this as they become more popular:
191** The [[UsefulNotes/BritishPoliticalSystem Monster Raving Loony Party]] of the UK, having for decades contested elections in which they stood no chance, stood for the Bootle by-election in 1990, and placed higher than the SDP candidate. Screaming Lord Sutch was so disturbed by this result that he effectively killed the SDP off. History repeated at the Brecon and Radnorshire by-election in 2019, when the Monster Raving Loonies managed to win more votes than UKIP.
192** The Polish Beer-Lovers' Party managed to win ''sixteen seats in the Polish Parliament''. The result forced them to drop their joke image and become a serious group, the Polish Economic Program -- a failure at failing if ever there was one.
193** Possibly the most successful political example of this trope is Jón Gnarr, who ran for mayor of Iceland's capital city Reykjavík in 2010 as head of the satirical "Best Party"[[note]]a stab at Icelandic advertising laws, which prevent companies from claiming their products as "the best" because it's too subjective, a prohibition which does not extend to politicans[[/note]]. Iceland had just gone through a major financial crisis, and Jón mostly created the party to satirize establishment politics. To everyone's surprise (including his own), he and his party won the election, and he suddenly found himself mayor of a coalition government -- even after he famously vowed not to enter into a coalition with any politician who had not seen his favourite TV show, ''Series/TheWire''. (Well, they could learn something about politics if Iceland was anything like Baltimore.)
194** In 2002, in the first mayoral election in the town of Hartlepool in [[OopNorth north-east England]], Stuart Drummond, better known locally as H'Angus the Monkey, the mascot of the local football team, stood as a joke. In character, as the monkey. He did no real campaigning, he didn't turn up to any hustings or debates, and his only policy was to provide free bananas for schoolchildren. To his astonishment, he won. Once he'd actually become mayor, however, he started taking it seriously, abandoned the monkey persona, and did good enough job to serve three full terms before the town voted to abolish directly-elected mayors. And he did succeed in giving local schoolchildren fresh fruit, albeit not specifically bananas as they were too expensive. He even became a finalist for the World Mayor prize while he was in office.
195** A city in Ecuador was holing a mayoral election with two equally unlikeable candidates. [[http://www.snopes.com/politics/ballot/footpowder.asp Seeing a marketing opportunity]], a foot deodorant company decided to put up signs telling people to vote for a can of their foot powder instead of the candidates. The voters elected the can of foot powder.
196** In 1983, restaurant owner, PungeonMaster, and notorious {{troll}} Ivar Haglund, already nicknamed the "mayor" of the UsefulNotes/{{Seattle}} waterfront, put his name in the hat for Port Commissioner, a job he actually didn't want; it was merely an extended practical joke on his part. Unfortunately, he got elected. [[DownerEnding Even more unfortunately, he died of a heart attack the first day he was supposed to clock in for the new job.]]
197* The 2001 UK Conservative Party leadership election was the first in which the candidates would be narrowed to two, who would participate in a separate runoff among all the party's members. Kenneth Clarke figured he could win the first stage of the vote but was worried about facing Michael Portillo, who was much better known and had just returned to Parliament. He did some calculations and got some of his supporters to vote for Iain Duncan Smith as a spoiler candidate, and it worked -- he faced off against Duncan Smith in the runoff. Only problem being that the ex-Prime Minister UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher didn't like ''either'' Clarke or Portillo (they weren't conservative ''enough'' for her) and was delighted that Duncan Smith was an option, so she publicly endorsed him. That caused his popularity to skyrocket and led him to the party leadership.[[note]](Ironically, Duncan Smith is considered one of the worst leaders the Conservatives have ever had, to the point he was deposed a little over two years later. To avoid a repeat of his rise to the leadership, the party grandees manoeuvred to ensure that former cabinet minister Michael Howard was nominated unopposed, therefore bypassing the members' vote)[[/note]]
198* Everything about the Brexit referendum of 2016 -- by which the UK formally voted to leave UsefulNotes/TheEuropeanUnion -- seems to have been a plot of this kind GoneHorriblyRight:
199** Prime Minister David Cameron called for the referendum despite not supporting Brexit himself. He was on the outs with the more conservative elements of his party, particularly after he legalised same-sex marriage, and he worried that the rival UK Independence Party -- with more or less [[SingleIssueWonk an all-Brexit platform]] -- would siphon votes from the Conservatives and cost them their majority. He promised a Brexit referendum before the 2015 general election thinking he ''wouldn't'' win a majority and have to form a coalition with the pro-Europe Liberal Democrats (as had happened in 2010). But the Conservatives did win their majority, and he couldn't back down from his word. Cameron was still so confident that Brexit wouldn't pass that he basically staked his position on it, and when it did pass, he resigned almost immediately.
200** One of the big early Brexit supporters was Boris Johnson, who was cynically believed to be feigning his support to try and win the harder right wing of the party and wrest the leadership from Cameron. Much like Cameron, he ''also'' suspected the referendum would fail -- however, his popularity among the electorate was [[HoistByHisOwnPetard credited with swinging the referendum in favour of Brexit]]. It's telling that after Cameron resigned, Johnson [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone didn't even contest the subsequent leadership battle]]. (It is speculated however that the real reason Johnson didn't stand was due to another prominent Brexiter Michael Gove backstabbing him and trying to become Leader himself.) And ''that'' didn't work either, as Cameron's successor Theresa May made such a hash of the negotiations with the EU that ''she'' was forced to resign, and Johnson was tapped to be PM -- and was thus in charge of negotiating a course of action he didn't even really want.
201** Brexit was also part of how outsider candidate Jeremy Corbyn gained the Labour leadership in 2015 -- Conservatives who were afraid of losing their majority lobbied hard for Corbyn, even encouraging readers to join the Labour Party (it cost just £3) to vote in the leadership election for Corbyn. The idea was that Corbyn was hard-left and so unpalatable to the electorate that people would vote in the Tories just to avoid him. Once the referendum came down, Theresa May called a snap election in 2017 hoping to take advantage of the distaste for Corbyn and pick up an electoral mandate to make Brexit happen. It (partly) backfired on her, as the Conservatives ''did'' lose their majority[[note]]and to boot, had to form a coalition with the Democratic Unionist Party, based in Northern Ireland and ''not'' happy with May's plans to make Brexit happen while avoiding a hard border with the Republic of Ireland by effectively cutting Northern Ireland off from the rest of the UK[[/note]]. The Tories lucked out in 2019, once the popular (or at least more popular than Jeremy Corbyn) Boris Johnson was the PM and they battered Labour in [[LandslideElection their worst defeat since Margaret Thatcher]], due to the Tories running a very successful campaign against Corbyn and many people in the country just wanting Brexit to be completed at any cost.
202* The Affordable Care Act, popularly known as "Obamacare" after [[UsefulNotes/BarackObama the President who introduced it]], has seen a lot of attempts to curb or sabotage it go this way. While Republicans have an incredible distaste for the government spending money on things, it turns out that American health care is so expensive, tedious, and scam-riddled that even Republicans who need medical care (of whom there are many) came around on Obamacare. At one point, U.S. House Speaker John Boehner tried to demonstrate what a shitshow Obamacare was by making a show of trying to enroll through the website -- only to be fully approved in 45 minutes. Every attempt by the Republicans to scuttle Obamacare -- which ramped up significantly once UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump became president -- was thwarted by the program's growing popularity.
203* In November 2011, the Australian Labor Party managed to get Liberal Party member Peter Slipper appointed as the Speaker of the House of Representatives because doing so would effectively neutralise Slipper and increase Labor's "wafer-thin" majority in the House. The Party's motives turned out to be the least of their problems with Slipper, who was forced to take a leave of absence in April 2012 when he was investigated from misuse of cabcharge vouchers, before eventually resigning as Speaker in October over sexual harassment allegations by James Ashby, a member of his staff. His Deputy Speaker who eventually succeeded him was Anna Burke, a Labor member.
204* In 2012, Republican lawmaker Mitch [=McConnell=] introduced a bill that would allow the president to raise the debt ceiling. It was intended as a bluff to prove that Democrats were so split on the issue that they would vote against it. Instead, the Democrats agreed enough to it for a straight up or down vote, [[https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2012/12/06/dem-unity-forces-mcconnell-to-filibuster-his-own-proposal/?utm_term=.a47e2f7a6310 which forced McConnell to filibuster his own bill]].
205* Part of the reason why the 2016 United States Presidential election was so attention-grabbing and memorable was because it contained two examples of this trope:
206** According to author [[http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2018/01/michael-wolff-fire-and-fury-book-donald-trump.html Michael Wolf's insider view]], UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump's 2016 presidential victory is this trope writ large. Trump only ran for president to bolster his brand and springboard new business opportunities; he and his campaign team were expecting to narrowly lose to UsefulNotes/HillaryClinton. Instead, his surprise upset derailed their hopes, with Trump himself [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor "looking like he'd seen a ghost"]] when the results were announced. This left the country with a highly unprepared presidential transition team.
207** It's known in hindsight that this trope applies to UsefulNotes/BernieSanders' 2016 Presidential run. Since UsefulNotes/HillaryClinton spent years working the backrooms to ensure she wouldn't run into [[UsefulNotes/BarackObama another poison pill that would again foil her White House ambitions]], Sanders feared that she would utilize her [[HilariousInHindsight easy victory in the election]] to pursue neoliberal policies that would completely sell out the party's progressive wing. Thus, Sanders sought to organize a primary challenger on Hillary's left to protect their interests. However, he couldn't find a candidate as everyone he approached feared that running against her would be career suicide. Left with no other choice, Sanders made himself the candidate.[[note]]For what it's worth, he also had nothing to lose given that he was a fringe figure little known outside of his home state of Vermont, was of elderly age and knew the Senate was likely his ceiling in American politics.[[/note]] However, Sanders would up amassing a massive following among economically disillusioned young people and inadvertently tapped into a ''seething'' backlash against the party's base, against the idea of Hillary Clinton being shoved down their throats as an "inevitable" candidate they have no chance of stopping. Hillary's cakewalk to the nomination wound up being a bruising battle that lasted into the summer, with both campaigns going to the convention, though it was more-or-less mathematically impossible for Sanders to win by then.[[note]]Clinton had more delegates and the only path Sanders had to victory was to peel off a majority of "Superdelegates" (who's role he had earlier criticized during the campaign) on the convention floor - most of whom had been in the tank for Hillary since day one.[[/note]] Sanders would up emerging from the campaign as one of the most famous politicians in the country, the undisputed leader of American progressives and having a left a unquestionable footprint in the Democratic Party's politics.
208** After the 2016 election, it was revealed that the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee had discussed a possible [[https://www.salon.com/2016/11/09/the-hillary-clinton-campaign-intentionally-created-donald-trump-with-its-pied-piper-strategy/ "Pied Piper" strategy]], where they intentionally promoted the Republican Party's most conservative candidates, Trump, Sen. Ted Cruz, and Dr. Ben Carson, to force the entire Republican Party further to the right, so that Hillary could have an opponent who was so toxic and abhorrent that her victory would be more likely. Initially, Carson took the lead in the 2016 Republican primaries till Trump started overshadowing all his opponents, with Carson bowing out in February 2016 and Cruz desperately struggling to overtake Trump before finally conceding in May 2016. Unfortunately, both Trump and Hillary were the least popular major party presidential nominees in U.S. history, according to an August 2016 poll, and Hillary's alleged neglect to campaign in more vulnerable states, such as Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, and focusing more on "traditional" swing states such as Florida (among other factors), tipped the scales in Trump's favor.
209* This may have been how women were included as a protected class in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the legislation famous for protecting the civil rights of American blacks. Democrat Howard W. Smith, who opposed the already controversial bill, added the provisions protecting women, thinking the whole package would be so overwhelming that it wouldn't pass -- but it did. While historians are divided on whether Smith was actually ambivalent toward women's rights, they agree that he opposed the bill and wanted it to fail.
210* In 1887, a group of men against women in politics put Susanna Salter's name in the ballot list for Argonia in Kansas, for humiliation purposes. However, despite not even knowing she was a candidate until the ballot day, several defections and supports in her favor ended up securing her a large majority, hence making her the very first woman to be elected as mayor in the United States.
211* In some elections it is possible to not only vote for a party list, but also for individual candidates on that list, in effect re-arranging the order of candidates on the list. This system is known as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panachage panachage]], because EverythingSoundsSexierInFrench. In some elections, the ''last'' place on the list (having no realistic chance of winning a seat, but still prominent on the ballot as most humans pay attention to the first and last elements of a list more than those in the middle) is deliberately filled with someone known and beloved by the (local) public but not necessarily a "career politician". In the Netherlands this practice is known as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lijstduwer "Lijstduwer"]] ("list pusher" in analogy to the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead_Candidate Lead Candidate]] beig the "Lijsttrekker" or "list-puller" - in essence Dutch party lists operate in a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Push%E2%80%93pull_train push-pull configuration]]). While in the Netherlands the "job" of the Lijstduwer is to attract votes to their party (votes for individual candidates on a party list still count toward the vote total of that party in many systems with Panachage), it is generally understood that they are ''not'' supposed to actually take office if elected. However, there AintNoRule saying they can't. And in many local elections in Germany where people have been brow-beat by fellow party members to run on the last spot of their party list, they suddenly find themselves elected due to being well-known and beloved locally (and thus receiving votes from friends or acquaintances who otherwise vote straight-ticket of an opposing party) and feel duty-bound to actually serve. A ''six year'' term in many cases. Oops.
212[[/folder]]
213
214[[folder:Print Media]]
215* In his book ''Antifragility'', Nassim Taleb recalls a colleague from his Wall Street days, a trader who disliked his firm and decided to get himself fired from it by making big, high-risk bets. Some of them, however, paid off... and since the risk had been high they paid off ''big''. He wound up getting a huge bonus out of it.
216[[/folder]]
217
218[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
219* [[Wrestling/HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hulk Hogan]] was supposed to be the ultimate {{Heel}} when he joined the [[Wrestling/NewWorldOrder nWo]]. Unfortunately, Wrestling/ScottHall and Wrestling/KevinNash, the originators of what became the nWo, were obsessed with seeming "cool", so WCW cranked out a ton of nWo merchandise that fans seemingly snapped up without a second thought. Thanks to ExecutiveMeddling, they became enmeshed in the company's inner workings, to the point that Nash got to be made head booker and use his newfound powers to kill Wrestling/{{Goldberg}}'s huge undefeated streak and beat him for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW World Heavyweight Title]]. This led to the FingerPokeOfDoom and the demise of the company two years later. So they failed at what they set out to do, found success, but ultimately planted the seeds of their ultimate demise.
220* The WWF decided to pull a practical joke on Fit Finlay by making him the women's trainer, without doing their homework and realizing he had been running a wrestling school for years and that he had taken a few women through it, nationally renowned [[Wrestling/JillianHall Macaela Mercedes]] among them. The end result was the most success the women's division had had since [[Wrestling/{{Madusa}} Alundra Blayze]]. WWE still found a way to nearly kill the division and stuck Finlay on TV, grooming him to become a {{jobber}}, but fans invested too much in him for their tastes. So they stuck him with a [[Wrestling/{{Hornswoggle}} little bastard]] to make him less popular. ''This made the little bastard popular''[[note]]Note the sheer absurdity of it -- Hornswoggle would randomly appear from under the ring to present the commentary team with cans of Guinness, and Finley often used him as [[FastballSpecial a projectile weapon]] to win matches. Once he missed, leading Hornswoggle to land on and bite [[TheScrappy perpetual scrappy]] Wrestling/MichaelCole and then leave a letter on WWE.com criticizing Cole signed with [[FlippingTheBird two middle fingers]].[[/note]]. Eventually WWE just made Finlay a jobber in spite of his popularity and then removed him from the active roster, claiming he was too old. Finlay would then leave WWE to wrestle on the independent circuit and returned about a year later as a full-time road agent.
221* IWA Puerto Rico introduced Sensational Carlitos in 2005 as a parody of Carlos Colon, founder of rival promotion CSP[=/=]WWC and of his son Wrestling/{{Carlito C|olon}}aribbean Cool, was an illiterate, barefoot RummageSaleReject of a cabana boy who thought of himself as a patriotic Boricua. Fans didn't laugh at him; they ''loved'' him, putting IWA PR in the awkward position of having to push a knockoff presented to make their competition look bad. But at least they made money. WWC itself was only too happy to sign and push Carlitos after IWA PR folded.
222* There is a belief that Wrestling/{{WWE}}'s writers and Wrestling/JohnCena are attempting to have him pull a FaceHeelTurn by making his opponents (except Wrestling/TheNexus) look good, but the female and younger male members of the WWE Universe just kept eating this up and cheering for Cena even more, preventing this from happening.[[note]]Given that Cena's massive amount of charity work (he's the "record holder" for most appearances on behalf of the Make-a-Wish Foundation and is basically a full-time philanthropist at this point) is basically the ''only good PR that WWE '''ever''' gets'' a heel turn has never been seriously considered. Cena himself has even lamented this a bit (if you think Cena's character is stale just imagine how ''he'' feels...), noting that turning heel would either require him to drop all the charity stuff so he actually looks "bad" (which he's unwilling to do), or having him be an obvious fake even by wrestling standards.[[/note]]
223* Nothing Wrestling/CMPunk could do, be it his holier-than-thou attitude or attempt to flee the company with the WWE Championship, would keep half the WWE crowd from cheering for him. The feud between Wrestling/RandyOrton and Wrestling/{{Christian}} was between two guys who will always get huge pop no matter how heelish they act (Christian being the nominal heel), but for CM Punk -- he ''was'' in his hometown of Chicago on the night he won the world title. And he was also feuding with Wrestling/TripleH, who was actually loathed by WWE fans outside of {{Kayfabe}}. If you can't recognize DracoInLeatherPants (fans in the post-territorial era tend to cheer for wrestlers they think are good before booing wrestlers for being assholes) and don't consider how to counteract it if you're dead set on fighting it, it will always lead to this.
224* Wrestling/BethPhoenix and Wrestling/{{Natalya|Neidhart}} turned heel and supposedly formed an alliance to stop WWE from being taken over by "the Barbie doll Divas". They still got more pops than Divas Champion Wrestling/KellyKelly. What makes the last scenario all the more absurd is that Beth was friends with Kelly literally ''one day'' before Kelly won the championship. Her abrupt heel turn only came about because Kelly's scheduled feuding partner, [[Wrestling/KiaStevens Kharma]], had to take a year off from wrestling after becoming pregnant.
225* Wrestling/DamienSandow was given a stupid gimmick where he would impersonate other people, including Wrestling/VinceMcMahon, culminating in him becoming Wrestling/TheMiz's stunt double. You can imagine how perplexed the suits at WWE were when "Damien Mizdow" ended up more over than the man he was impersonating.
226* Wrestling/MickFoley repeatedly came up with ideas with the purpose of them being stupid but which turned out brilliant and succeeded ''despite'' Mick's best efforts. These include the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXnbuHTHcfc Dude Love entrance video]], the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VOznZP2XdnY debut of "Mr. Socko"]] and the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDmzRGAksc0 "Rock, This Is Your Life"]] segment from the September 27, 1999 ''Raw'', which drew a whopping 8.4 quarter hour rating.
227[[/folder]]
228
229[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
230* ''Series/SpittingImage'' made "The Chicken Song" as a TakeThat to catchy summer pop tunes, only to have the song reach #1.
231-->''From the shores of Spain\
232To the coast of southern France\
233No matter where you hide\
234You just can't escape this dance''
235[[/folder]]
236
237[[folder:Radio]]
238* When Humphrey Lyttelton originally auditioned for the Radio 4 panel game ''Radio/ImSorryIHaventAClue'', he was apparently in a bad mood and really didn't want the part, so he spent the entire show being irritable and sarcastic. Everyone else loved this, and so he ended up hosting it from 1972 up until his death in 2008. Apparently he was the ''only'' thing people liked about the first show, and Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graeme Garden felt they'd done so badly that they turned to each other afterwards and said, "Never again." When it was picked up and became the BBC mainstay that it is, they made this a good-luck ritual.
239[[/folder]]
240
241[[folder:Roleplay]]
242* In ''Roleplay/EnterTheArenaAsYourAvatar'', [[spoiler:Micool completely intended for Kyubey to be a JokeCharacter, but somehow managed to get a girl to sign a Contract with him]].
243[[/folder]]
244
245[[folder:Sports]]
246* In draft systems for professional sports, teams choose players in reverse order of their record. The team with the worst record gets the first choice, then the second-worst team picks, then the third-worst, and so on up to the champions (who have to pick last). The idea is to allow struggling teams a way to restock with new talent and compete for the title again. The problem is that this encourages teams that are clearly not going to be contending for a title to lose on purpose in order to get better draft positions. (Note that "lose on purpose" means trying to put the worst team possible on the field/court/ice by cutting or trading good players,[[note]]Which has the added benefit of reducing payroll[[/note]] '''not''' actually [[ThrowingTheFight throwing games]], which would get everyone involved banned for life if they're found out.) The process is known as "tanking", named for a metaphor in which the sports league is a big tank full of water; a team that's losing on purpose is trying to sink to the bottom of the proverbial tank. Some leagues use a "draft lottery" system which determines the first few picks in random order so that tanking is discouraged, and that might lead to the Springtime for Hitler trope in full effect. A team deliberately tries to fail in order to get the first pick in the lottery, only to have that pick go to someone else, rendering their efforts at tanking AllForNothing.
247** UsefulNotes/{{Basketball}}:
248*** The NBA first implemented the draft lottery in 1985. The previous year, the Houston Rockets were accused of tanking hard to win the first overall pick in a ''very'' deep draft (they got Hakeem Olajuwon, who helped them win two titles in 1994 and 1995, but the third-overall was a guy you might have heard of named UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan). And then, in 1985, the NBA was accused of ''rigging'' the lottery in favor of the New York Knicks, allowing them to draft Patrick Ewing.
249*** 2013-14 was a ''very'' weird year for NBA tanking, as even a quarter of the way into the season, only two teams in the Eastern Conference (Miami and Indiana) had a winning record -- the rest were trying to tank. This led to the oddity of the Toronto Raptors, who had been trying to tank earlier in the season, giving up on losing, getting to the playoffs (with a winning record), and taking the much more experienced Brooklyn Nets down to the wire before losing Game 7 by a single point. ...Win?
250** UsefulNotes/AmericanFootball: The NFL season is only 17 games and has no draft lottery. As such, a bad team winning one game can have ''disastrous'' consequences at a franchise-changing pick. And even a team that expected to be good might have their season turn irreversibly sour after only a handful of games. Tanking is thus particularly rampant and obvious in football:
251*** In 1968, the Philadelphia Eagles started 0-11 and had their sights set on USC's Heisman-winning running back Creator/OJSimpson[[note]]This is what he was famous for before the whole murder investigation, kids[[/note]] -- except that they surprisingly won their next two games, with no hope of actually making the playoffs, giving the Buffalo Bills the opportunity to finish with a worse record and snap up Simpson. To add insult to injury, the pissed-off Philadelphia fans packed the stadium for the Eagles' final game (which they lost) and took their frustration out by pelting snowballs at Santa Claus[[note]]This wasn't even an actor -- it was a fan named Frank Olivo who was roped into playing Santa. The original guy playing Santa [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere never showed up]], probably because [[FootballHooligans he knew what he was in for]].[[/note]], an event which is brought up to this day when describing [[FootballHooligans Philadelphia sports fans]]. To add ''more'' insult to injury, the Eagles' 2-12 record tied them with the Atlanta Falcons, necessitating a coin flip for the second overall pick -- which the Falcons won. To add ''even more'' insult to injury, the Eagles' pick, Leroy Keyes, was a draft bust -- and right after them at #4, the Pittsburgh Steelers picked "Mean" Joe Greene, a cornerstone of their defense who would help them win ''four'' Super Bowls in the 1970s.
252*** Teams that have decided to tank have been known to trade away important players in a bid to lose games. The weirdest version of this came in 2019, when the Miami Dolphins traded away basically everyone of note (including safety Minkah Fitzpatrick, who promptly turned his new team the Pittsburgh Steelers into one of the league's best defenses) and ate up $66 million in dead cap space (''i.e.'' spent on players not on the roster), only to be ''out-sucked'' by the Cincinnati Bengals, who weren't even tanking -- they just sucked.[[note]]Interestingly, the Dolphins got the guy they wanted -- Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa -- because he had been eclipsed in the draft ranking by LSU quarterback Joe Burrow, who won the Heisman Trophy and went to the Bengals.[[/note]] A variant happened in 2011, when the Indianapolis Colts' star quarterback Creator/PeytonManning missed the entire season with a neck injury which observers suspected may have been exaggerated to give the Colts a chance to draft Manning's successor in Andrew Luck. In both cases, their draft chances were nearly jeopardized by their replacement-level quarterbacks actually playing pretty well, effectively auditioning for a job elsewhere the following season.
253*** Tanking teams can have such a dire reputation that highly touted draft picks may refuse to play for them. In 1983, John Elway was drafted by the Baltimore Colts but refused to play for them -- he was traded to the Denver Broncos, where he made it to five Super Bowls and won two of them. In 2004, Eli Manning refused to play for the San Diego Chargers and was traded to the New York Giants, where ''he'' won two Super Bowls. And in 1986, Bo Jackson (he of GameBreaker status in ''VideoGame/TecmoBowl'') attributed his refusal to play for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers partly because of this[[note]] However, the main reason he refused to play for the Buccaneers was because they essentially tricked him into visiting their facilities and breaking NCAA rules, costing him the ability to play baseball in his senior year. Jackson was one of the few two-sport superstars -- he was a top player in both baseball and football -- but he never forgave the Buccaneers for essentially robbing him of a season of baseball. Buccaneers owner Hugh Culverhouse was also known as a massive cheapskate, and this destroyed his reputation for good -- when he died, the Bucs became one of the few NFL teams not to be inherited by his family.[[/note]] -- he re-entered the NFL's supplemental draft in 1987 and was picked by the Los Angeles Raiders.
254** In UsefulNotes/{{Baseball}}, the biggest failed tank came from the 2008 Seattle Mariners, who had their eye on top pitching prospect Steven Strasburg. With two games left, the Mariners had the worst record in the league, one loss more than the Washington Nationals. But the Mariners won both of their last two games thanks to the usually uber-terrible Yuniesky Betancourt having the best two games of his career, and the Nationals finished last and picked Strasburg -- who helped them win the World Series (considered a nearly impossible prospect for ''[[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut that]]'' franchise) in 2019.
255** [[UsefulNotes/IceHockey The NHL]] uses a draft lottery system, but it doesn't prevent tanking very well. 2015 was probably the weirdest year, in which the bottom two teams -- the Phoenix Coyotes and the Buffalo Sabres -- both tried to tank to pick up once-in-a-generation phenom Connor [=McDavid=], leading to a game between the two teams in Buffalo where the fans actively cheered ''against'' their team. The Coyotes won in overtime, and the Buffalo fans roared as if their own team had scored. [[ShaggyDogStory Neither team got McDavid]], as the Edmonton Oilers won that year's draft lottery.[[note]]This ended up being a complete fail for the Sabres, who selected center Jack Eichel with the #2 pick. Eichel played well enough to earn himself a fat contract extension, but the Sabres were then forced to trade him shortly thereafter when he all but refused to suit up for the team after a dispute over treatment of his neck injury (Eichel wanted an artificial disk replacement, a procedure never done on an NHL player to that point, the Sabres wanted him to rehab the injury without surgery). He'd be traded to the Vegas Golden Knights during the 2021-22 season for basically nothing.[[/note]]
256* This happens in Olympics in Sailing, owing to the scoring system used, as with Ben Ainslie taking Gold in the 2000 Sydney Games. Ainslie led going into the final race knowing that if Brazil's Robert Scheidt finished 22nd or lower, he would win gold. Ainslie thus tacked and tacked upon Scheidt's wind to stall his rival and subsequently push him down the fleet. Ainslie finished 37th, but Scheidt was 22nd, giving Ainslie the gold. Scheidt failed to realize that he needed to accumulate points on his own.
257* This happened in the last round-robin group match of the 1998 Tiger Cup soccer tournament was between Thailand and Indonesia. Regardless of the outcome of the game, both were already guaranteed to advance to the semi-finals, but whichever team won that game would face Vietnam while the loser would face Singapore. Both Thailand and Indonesia thought Singapore would be the easier opponent. This led to both teams playing to lose, culminating in Thailand deliberately kicking the ball into their own goal while Indonesia tried to stop them. Ironically, they'd both proceed to lose in the semi-finals, while Singapore would go on to win the whole tournament.
258* In the [[UsefulNotes/OlympicGames 2012 Summer Olympics]], the badminton rounds were changed from a knockout format to a round-robin one, meaning that the winner was more often decided based on who [[CurbStompBattle won bigger against the worst team in the group]]. This meant that it served the teams just fine to lose the first game. Cue an EpicFail match between the Chinese and South Korean teams trying to one-up each other in hilariously poor serves with the Chinese ultimately proving to be better at losing. And then ''both'' teams got disqualified for basically making every other badminton player hide their faces in shame, so everybody lost in the end.
259* Algerian sprinter Taoufik Makhloufi was ejected from the 2012 Olympics for not trying in his 800m event (Algeria failed to withdraw him on time, forcing him to compete), instead choosing to save his energy for the 1500m event. Makhloufi was reinstated in time to win gold. An outcry of a DoubleStandard followed, as a French sprinter did the same exact thing as Makhloufi but faced zero consequences.
260* In baseball leagues without designated hitters, it's accepted that a pitcher might just take a strikeout without even attempting to hit, out of fear that actually trying to swing at the ball might result in an injury. This was the case on August 14, 2011, when Giants reliever Santiago Casilla came to the plate for his first career at-bat in eight seasons. He stood as far from the plate as he could, with the bat down. This threw off Marlins pitcher Jose Ceda so badly that he failed to throw a single strike and walked Casilla on four pitches. In other words, a batter who deliberately tried to strike out was awarded first base [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cj6IasJZIk without doing anything]].
261* Donald Crowhurst entered the 1968 ''Sunday Times'' Golden Globe Race, which gave a a £5000 prize to whoever was the fastest to sail around the world solo without stopping, in order to drum up publicity for his failing business. Crowhurst had to mortgage his home and said business as collateral for sponsorship with the condition that if Crowhurst didn't finish, he would lose everything. When the race started, Crowhurst realized his boat was not ready for the rigors of sailing around the world, so he started dithering around the Atlantic while reporting fake positions on his journey. Crowhurst knew that he would be exposed if his logbook was scrutinized, so he planned to come in last place, knowing that the judges wouldn't pay any attention to a losing contestant. With nearly every other competitor dropping out, Crowhurst's last hope was to finish behind the only other remaining contestant, Nigel Tetley. Unfortunately for Crowhurst, his faked reports gave Tetley the impression that his competitor was right on his tail, driving him to push his ship too hard to outrun his "pursuer" and wound up capsizing his boat, meaning Crowhurst was going to get the speed record prize by default, wherein his logs would be examined, the fakery would be discovered, and he would lose everything he owned. Facing utter financial ruin, Crowhurst killed himself by jumping overboard.
262* This is how UsefulNotes/FormulaOne racer Kimi Räikkönen [[https://f1.co.uk/f/kimi-raikkonens-performances-almost-sent-lotus-into-bankruptcy nearly bankrupted]] Lotus' racing team. For the 2012 and 2013 seasons, they signed him with a bonus of €50,000 per point he scored, thinking that, having just come out of a two-year retirement from Formula One to compete in UsefulNotes/{{rallying}}, he would be rusty and would wind up near the middle of the pack. Instead, "the Iceman" proved that he was still one of the best race car drivers of his generation, winning €19.5 million off the points bonus alone over the course of his two years with Lotus to the point that the team was struggling to pay the bills, and reacted with dread when he showed up to race in the 2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix after initially seeming like he wouldn't. Lotus breathed a sigh of relief when Räikkönen left their team in 2014 to return to Ferrari. To this day, Lotus ''[[https://www.foxsports.com.au/motorsport/formula-one/lotus-admits-its-behind-in-its-payments-to-kimi-raikkonen-but-hes-going-to-be-paid/news-story/a38fcf8e0e376d3b639d8f6c3d2f3ff1 still]]'' owes him money.
263[[/folder]]
264
265[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
266* Gary Morley, former sculptor for Games Workshop, is responsible for the infamous original Nagash model from TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}. A suit had rejected his original (much better) head sculpt, so Gary created the "Bobo the Evil Skeleton" head in the belief that the cartoonish job would get rejected and he could go with the one closer to the artwork. It was approved.
267* ''TabletopGame/PrincessTheHopeful'' began as a parody, with the author reasoning that no-one could take a game about {{Magical Girl}}s in the CrapsackWorld that is the TabletopGame/ChroniclesOfDarkness seriously. The fans thought it had serious potential and after expansion and a few {{Cerebus Retcon}}s it became one of the most popular and acclaimed fan gamelines.
268[[/folder]]
269
270[[folder:Theatre]]
271* The Creator/MarxBrothers were originally struggling as a primarily musical act before an appearance in Texas, where the audience left the theatre during a performance to go watch a mule. This outraged the team, and they began breaking from their script to abuse the audience with pointed jokes. Instead of getting angry, the audience ate it up, and the family realized that their real talent lay in comedy.
272[[/folder]]
273
274[[folder:Toys]]
275* When designing He-Man's mount for the ''Franchise/MastersOfTheUniverse'' toyline, VP of marketing Paul Cleveland suggested using an animal figure from another line, which was in a much larger scale than the other toys, as a means of saving money. Sculptor Tony Guerrero thought this was a stupid idea and the figure would look terrible when it was out-of-scale, and so took the tiger figure he was given and painted it bright green with orange stripes. As it turned out, Cleveland loved the look (by his account, Tony audibly swore when hearing this), and after being given a saddle so a figure could ride it, the toy became Battle Cat.
276[[/folder]]
277
278[[folder:Video Games]]
279* Ian Bogost created ''Cow Clicker'' as a satire of social games like Farmville. The idea was to distill the games down to core mechanics to expose how ridiculous they are. However, not only did Cow Clicker actually became popular (with some people even paying real life money to click their cows more often), but it ended up [[FollowTheLeader spawning]] an entire ''genre'' of [[IdleGame similar games]].
280* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid2SonsOfLiberty'' could have been titled ''"You want me to make a sequel even though I don't want to? Here you go. It's about how much [[ThisLoserIsYou the player sucks]]. I hope that teaches you a lesson"'' if that weren't so cumbersome. Supposedly, Creator/HideoKojima has kept this up for the entire franchise, repeatedly trying to sabotage his own games so that he never has to make another one. The fact that he's up to the fifth numbered ''Metal Gear Solid'' game (plus a handful of side games), after vowing that the first, second, and third ''Metal Gear Solid'' game would be the last ''VideoGame/MetalGear'' game he would ever direct, should indicate roughly how successful this had been. Unfortunately, there had been alleged death threats involved each time he tries to quit. The aforementioned fourth ''Metal Gear Solid'' game, ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots'', was filled with "there, happy now?" moments, like DoingInTheWizard of Vamp's unexplained powers in a deliberately unsatisfying way. It got to the point where Kojima [[TorchTheFranchiseAndRun wanted to have Snake and Otacon brought in for terrorism charges and executed]] at the end of ''Metal Gear Solid 4''. [[WriterRevolt His staff refused to work with him until he changed the ending.]] The way he finally succeeded was not on happy terms -- right as [[VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain the fifth game]] was finishing up development, [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere he just up and left Konami, fed up with their unfair treatment of employees]].
281* ''VideoGame/{{Divekick}}'' was meant as a spoof to poke fun at the FightingGame genre and the EVO pro-gaming scene. Instead of being a complicated fighting game with many buttons and combos, the game simply has two commands: Dive and Kick. The game became a huge hit in the EVO scene, because of its simple yet hard-to-master concept -- creating many competitive matches. As a result, the creator of the game, in 2013, started heavily promoting it for release on the [=PlayStation Network=] and the PC, and it became a main tournament feature at the EVO Championships.
282* This is apparently [[http://www.shadowmagic.org.uk/spectrum/sqij.html the story]] behind the poorly-received game ''[[VideoGame/{{Sqij}} SQIJ!]]''. The author, Jason Creighton, signed a contract with the publisher to make the game, but later got into an argument and wanted to cancel the contract. He couldn't, so he decided to make use of one of the clauses, and deliberately create the worst game imaginable so that it would get rejected. It was accepted for publication, despite being literally impossible to play due to a GameBreakingBug and technically illegal to own and distribute due to containing an unencrypted copy of the Laser BASIC programming tool.
283* Because Creator/NaughtyDog was sick of ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot'' for a myriad of reasons, they tried to TorchTheFranchiseAndRun in ''VideoGame/CrashTeamRacing'' by making the antagonist an alien. They believed people wouldn't take the game seriously and would turn their backs on the game, but instead, it's fondly remembered as one of the best Platform/PlayStation games, and the alien in question, Nitros Oxide, became a pretty popular character.
284-->'''Jason Ruben:''' We actually tried to kill Crash. In ''CTR'', we said "What won't anybody believe?" Because this was our last game. "Let's put aliens in. We'll bring in an alien, no one will like Crash after that 'cause there's an alien. This'll be the end, we've jumped the shark, the alien came into ''CTR''." Everybody loved it!
285* Did you know that Microsoft's game console family was almost never called "Platform/{{Xbox}}"? That's because Microsoft's marketing team disliked the name (which is derived from the [=DirectX=] MediaNotes/ApplicationProgrammingInterface), and left it among the suggested names at focus testing to show its unpopularity. Instead, the focus groups loved the name, leading to it being selected.
286* By the account of one of the designers of the Nokia Platform/NGage, he was so sick of ExecutiveMeddling that he decided to submit a joke design based on the infamous ShockSite Goatse. It not only passed, but became the N-Gage's finalized design.
287* Creator/TakeshiKitano designed ''VideoGame/TakeshisChallenge'' with the intent of frustrating those who played it, as he hated video games and felt they had a negative impact on Japanese society. His plan included game mechanics such as waiting for up to an hour in real time to access a map to the in-game treasure, failure to beat up an old man leading to a KaizoTrap in which he gets to the treasure before you, having to sing a karaoke song three times in order to progress, and having to get to a remote island only by using a hangglider that can only go up or down by way of gusts of wind. The game ended up being a huge hit, selling a reported 800,000 copies.
288[[/folder]]
289
290[[folder:Web Animation]]
291* The cast of ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'' originally didn't want Becca Frasier to voice Sister, so they sabotaged her audition in an attempt to discourage her by giving her increasingly more and more vulgar lines to see how far she could go before she refused to say them. To their surprise, Becca had no limits at all, and she ended up getting the part.
292* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YW3HarwTiIY This video]] theorizes this is what happened with ''WebAnimation/CatFace'' and ''WebVideo/TheAnnoyingOrange''. Both started out as [[BlackComedy darkly comedic]] satires of saccharine kids shows and loud and obnoxious tween comedy, respectfully. Then the audience for both series ended up consisting of mostly children who unironically liked said content, and they ended up transforming into the very thing they were mocking.
293[[/folder]]
294
295[[folder:Webcomics]]
296* ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'': Referring to Creator/KevinSmith's assertion that the widely-panned ''Film/JerseyGirl'' was "[[ItsNotSupposedToWinOscars not for the critics]]", Tycho and Gabe created the [[DadaComics bizarre non-sequitur characters]] of [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2004/03/24/ Twisp (anthropomorphic cat in period suit who speaks only single words) and Catsby (articulate miniature devil)]] to mock him. The joke was ''supposed'' to be that Twisp and Catsby were terrible characters, but you couldn't complain about them, because they'd been declared "not for critics". The duo were a smash hit with fans and would go on to appear in more strips (and on plenty of merchandise).
297* ''Webcomic/SomethingPositive'': Randal Milholland has a pretty big BerserkButton, and he likes to take his feelings out by drawing new characters in an attempt to tell his audience [[TakeThatAudience how much he loves them]]. Of course, his fandom being what it is, two of his biggest {{Take That}}s -- Rippy the Razor and Fluffmodeus the Imaginary Homicidal Blue Things -- have become fan favorites.
298[[/folder]]
299
300[[folder:Web Original]]
301* Website/FourChan's /v/ board attempted to ensure that Website/{{Reddit}} wouldn't again blatantly copy their memes by intentionally modifying the Rustled Jimmies meme. It was changed into "[[StylisticSuck le monkey face]]", a TakeThat against Reddit as a terribly unfunny joke. Reddit, however, accepted "le monkey face" as a meme, mostly because it was ironic. This also led to [[StylisticSuck intentionally modifying memes to resemble vectors for rage comics]] becoming a meme of its own on 4chan, one of them being [[http://i3.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/000/429/017/7ce.png altered]] [[http://static.fjcdn.com/pictures/Bad+Troll+Face+Comp.+I+collected+all+of+these+and_7122bf_4216007.png versions]] of Trollface.
302* The ''Charlie Hebdo'' attacks in Paris (in which Islamist terrorists attacked a satirical magazine that had printed cartoons of UsefulNotes/TheProphetMuhammad) led to the proliferation of the Website/{{Twitter}} hashtag "#jesuischarlie" ("I am Charlie") in support of the magazine. It grew to be so mawkish and "slacktivistic" that a Twitter user, taking advantage of the death of a police dog in a raid on a terrorist safehouse in Paris, started the hashtag "#jesuischien" ("I am dog") to mock the phenomenon. [[PoesLaw It was then taken up by many Twitter users who thought that it was sincere]].
303* In 2014, a writer for ''Website/{{Cracked}}'' attempted to create the [[http://www.cracked.com/blog/4-things-i-learned-from-worst-online-dating-profile-ever/ "Worst Online Dating Profile Ever"]] on dating website [=OKCupid=]. It included such nuggets as claiming her occupation was "partying lol my parents think I'm in law school so they pay all my bills lmao!", "I convinced my ex I was pregnant and he still pays me child support, lolol", and a typical Friday night of hers was "knocking the cups out of homeless people's hands, it's so funny". But the profile picture was one of an attractive friend of the writer. The profile was still deluged with messages from hundreds of men, many of whom still begged for a date after she responded with complete nonsense or repeated insults.
304* Some Website/TVTropes forum games revolve around coming up with humorously bad ideas for additions to the site. Sometimes, these ideas aren't as bad as originally thought:
305** In the [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16525360080A45215600 Crappy Image Pickin']] thread, the goal is to jokingly suggest page images that [[Administrivia/JustAFaceAndACaption blatantly fail to illustrate the trope]], are actually just {{Visual Pun}}s, or are otherwise just silly. However, [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16525360080A45215600&page=9#comment-206 this suggestion]] of an image for MenAreGenericWomenAreSpecial ended up becoming the real page image, as [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1661641669005786900 users agreed]] that it did a ''better'' job of illustrating the trope than the original image.
306** On multiple occasions in the [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=15995180790A71421900 Bad Trope Ideas]] thread, users have accidentally reinvented tropes that already exist on the site, correctly guessing both their name and definition. Examples include [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=15995180790A71421900&page=19#comment-465 Bastard Bastard]], [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=15995180790A71421900&page=27#comment-662 Our Humans Are Different]], [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=15995180790A71421900&page=57#comment-1410 Villain Antagonist]], and [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=15995180790A71421900&page=74#comment-1832 Antidisestablishmentarianism]].
307[[/folder]]
308
309[[folder:Web Videos]]
310* WebVideo/TheCinemaSnob and WebVideo/{{Phelous}} teamed up to review ''Troll 4'', a movie that doesn't exist. During the review they put in a lot of cameos from other Website/ChannelAwesome contributors, something known to piss off the fandom, including Creator/JewWario's sole line being leaping out of an elevator and declaring "CAMEO!" The creators were surprised when people actually enjoyed the video. This ended up having long-reaching effects, since it broke the back of the VocalMinority in the fandom who hated crossovers by revealing how small it actually was.
311* The ''WebVideo/JoueurDuGrenier'' review of ''VideoGame/XPerts'' is a troll episode from 2016 made exactly like a video from 2010-2011 (both from writing and technical aspects) while heavily lampshading it was retro. It was made as a deliberately cheap video to refute the "it was better when it was cheap" recurring opinion from a vocal minority (a phenomenon which was at its peak at the time). Except Fred was unexpectedly happy with the result and the video had a very positive reception, which means he considers this episode as a real life example of the trope.
312* Youtuber ''Let's Game It Out'', fond of VideogameCrueltyPotential, decided to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVt5my65WL8 run his company into the ground]] when playing ''Smartphone Tycoon''. He created unergonomic, underpowered, overpriced, ugly phones that were produced in the greatest numbers the game would allow, while working with only the cheapest employees possible, and made every succeeding model identical to the last. Unfortunately, it turned out that the game was [[ObviousBeta so poorly programmed that the phones still sold out regardless]]; in only a few years, he owned a MegaCorp worth 993 quadrillion dollars. Variations on "won the game despite deliberately playing as wrong as possible" happen in his videos so often that a lot of his fans suspect the main reason creators keep sending him early access codes is for bug testing.
313* When ''WebVideo/LoadingReadyRun'' first moved to Website/YouTube, they did a disconnected bunch of fake viral-bait videos completely unlike their usual sketch comedy as a joke tied into their sitcom series. Then one of them, ''Nunchuck Jousting'', happened to go into rotation as one of those random Internet clips late-night shows run sometimes. The result is that more people have seen this deliberately lowbrow nut-shot gag than everything else they've done put together.
314* LetsPlay/TheRunawayGuys:
315** The LP of ''Mario Party 4'', in Episode 2 of Goomba's Greedy Gala: [[LetsPlay/{{Chuggaaconroy}} Chugga]]/Emile and LetsPlay/ProtonJon are in a tight race for first place, with both possessing one star each and Emile holding a narrow four coin lead over Jon. However, the AI player is right in front of the Boo House with enough coins to steal one of their stars, so, aware that the AI will only ever steal from whomever is in first place at that moment, they both try to lose as many coins as possible before the AI's next turn. Emile wastes five by playing the lottery and losing, then lands on a red space to lose three more, for a net loss of eight coins to put Jon ahead of him. Jon tries to counter by going to the roulette wheel and offering the Goomba operator a meaningless twenty coin bribe to fix the outcome... and then ''wins all those coins back'' when it lands on a winner space, cementing his "lead" and ensuring that the AI will steal his star.
316--->'''Emile:''' Even when you are incredibly lucky, you still have shit luck.
317** In ''Boo's Haunted Bash'' (Part 2): Chugga, Jon, and the AI are in front of a star. Chugga knows he can't get it, but Jon might be able to before the AI. So during the next mini-game (which is a coin-collecting game), Chugga, who is teamed up with Jon, tries to get Jon away from as many coins as possible. This fails miserably as they not only get enough coins for the star, they actually end up getting ''more'' coins than Tim and the AI!
318* WebVideo/PartyCrashers: When all four members purposely try losing the minigame Crazy Cutters in "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EP7YQnvWp8&t=367s Mario Party but it's Secret Santa]]", Nick somehow manages to win with ''4'' points to everyone else's ''0'', much to his dismay:
319-->'''Nick:''' I tried my hardest to throw that!
320* [[Creator/TheCynicalBrit TotalBiscuit]] made an {{Angrish}} and exaggerated rage filled ''WTF Is...'' video for ''Videogame/IWannaBeTheGuyGaiden'' both to make fun of similar videos and to see if his fanbase would recognize it as stupid and dislike it. It became one of his highest rated videos.
321* All over the place in ''WebVideo/TwitchPlaysPokemon'':
322** In the original ''WebVideo/TwitchPlaysPokemonRed'', the Voices went right up against the Elite Four without grinding (they tried doing it in the Burned Mansion, but it was time-consuming and too dangerous) -- they'd keep losing, but they'd gain a lot of XP in the process. In one such run, they got all the way to Lance's last Pokémon, but their {{Mon}}s were all so banged up that they figured they didn't have a chance -- so they sent out their underleveled Venomoth "ATV" against Lance's powerful Dragonite in an attempt to get wiped out quickly. But ''[[VideoGame/PokemonRedAndBlue Pokemon Red]]'''s programming meant that Dragonite would spam whichever move had a type advantage over Venomoth -- which, in this case, was Agility, a status-enhancing move that does no damage. This allowed Venomoth to ''beat'' Dragonite through DeathByAThousandCuts and win the fight. Then they got shit-stomped by Blue -- [[HeroicRematch but when they returned]], [[CurbStompBattle things were far different]].
323** ''WebVideo/TwitchPlaysPokemonRedAnniversary'' was a [[SelfImposedChallenge challenge run]] where they had to [[GottaCatchThemAll catch all 151 Pokémon]]. To get money for Poké Balls, they went up against the Elite Four to grind for money, then planned to lose to teleport them back to the entrance with some of the earnings. Instead, they beat the Elite Four and ended up back in Pallet Town.
324* The ''WebVideo/TwoBestFriendsPlay'' feature ''Shitty Games Done Slow'' is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin pretty much what it sounds like]] -- an AffectionateParody of [[WebVideo/GamesDoneQuick Awesome Games Done Quick]] that focuses on not-so-awesome games and plays them not-so-quickly. But the very first game in the feature was ''VideoGame/MindJack'', and they accidentally beat both their predicted time and the only existing record they could find. They concluded that this was because the game was so unpopular that there was just no competition to speedrun it.
325[[/folder]]
326
327[[folder:Western Animation]]
328* When Creator/MaxAndDaveFleischer were approached by Creator/{{Paramount}} to produce ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheatricalCartoons'', they tried scaring the company off by suggesting that they needed an enormous $100,000 budget for each film, four times what Creator/WaltDisney spent on his films. To their shock, Paramount compromised at $50,000 and the Fleischers were committed to the biggest-budget animated ShortFilm series in Hollywood history.
329* ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'': Creator/CraigMcCracken supposedly wrote the "City of Clipsville" episode, which featured one "skit" with the Girls as teenagers dating the Rowdyruff Boys, because he didn't like how overused the plot was becoming in fanfics and wanted to show how absurd it was. The episode actually became one of the most popular in the show's run.
330* Creator/ChuckJones created the ''WesternAnimation/WileECoyoteAndTheRoadRunner'' cartoons as a way of [[TakeThat mocking and satirizing]] overly-formulaic "chase" cartoons, such as ''WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry''. They wound up being some of his most popular cartoons.
331* Aaron [=McGruder=] created Uncle Ruckus, an original character, for ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks'' animated series. He was a BoomerangBigot meant to be a HateSink. Instead, he became one of the most popular, for all the [[MisaimedFandom wrong]] [[DracoInLeatherPants reasons]] (and occasionally for [[LoveToHate the right ones]] too).
332* Even fans of ''WesternAnimation/CloneHigh'' who know that the episode "Litter Kills: Literally" is meant to be a harsh satire on [[LongLostUncleAesop shows that introduce a new character]] just to [[TonightSomeoneDies kill them off for the sake of cheap drama]] have said that it plays JFK's [[BreakTheHaughty brokenness]] so straight that it goes from the show's typical parody of the VerySpecialEpisode to an ''actual'' VSE about grief.
333* When approached by the producers of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' to guest-animate a CouchGag, Creator/JohnKricfalusi wasn't entirely enthusiastic, having been a vocal detractor of the show since its earliest days, and his first instinct was to tell them to go jump off a cliff. However, he was intrigued enough by the creative possibilities of doing a couch gag to tell the producers that he'd make one for them, but only on condition that he would have total creative control, that he would produce it himself with a hand-picked selection of animators, and that the producers could not alter one frame of what he sent them. His past experiences with ExecutiveMeddling led him to believe that they'd probably turn him down right away, so he naturally ended up surprised when they actually agreed to his conditions.
334[[/folder]]
335
336[[folder:Other]]
337* "Lord" [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Dexter Timothy Dexter]] (1747-1806) was an eccentric American businessman who owed his success to the fact that people kept giving him deliberately bad advice for business ventures in order to embarrass and financially ruin him, only to be frustrated when he actually followed their advice and made huge profits through sheer dumb luck. For example, he ''actually'' [[LiteralMetaphor sold coal to Newcastle]] (a coal mining town) at a profit because there just happened to be a miner's strike when he arrived.
338* The City of Pasadena was founded in part by a bankroller who wanted to capitalize on medical tourism, which was popular at the time, and short-sell the land, believing it to be a fad vacation spot. Then the railroad came and it is now one of the biggest cities in California.
339* The Girl Scout detailed in [[https://web.archive.org/web/20170203012146/https://www.aol.com/article/news/2017/02/02/girl-scout-s-cookie-sales-explode-after-dirty-jobs-mike-rowe-r/21706043/ this article]] wrote a brutally honest and negative review of her organization's cookies. ("The toffee-tastic is a bleak, flavorless, gluten-free wasteland. I'm telling you, it's as flavorless as dirt.") [[OurProductSucks The result? Her sales have skyrocketed]], nearly hitting the group's record.
340* Shorting a stock can become an example of this, if the buyer is unlucky. Here's how it works: someone borrows shares of stock from someone else with interest, sells the stock at a high price, and then hopes the stock price goes down so they can buy the stocks back cheap, ultimately making a profit. However, if the price of the shorted stocks goes ''up'', it forces the person who shorted the stock to buy it back at a loss. In short, you lost money because the stock you wanted to fail ended up succeeding.
341** A notorious example occurred in January 2021, when [=GameStop=] was one of the most shorted stocks, particularly by hedge funds who were certain of the chain's collapse. This was noticed by a number of Website/{{Reddit}} users (specifically the subreddit r/wallstreetbets), who started buying up [=GameStop's=] stock en masse, forcing the value of the company's stock through the roof. Because the hedge funds had to buy back massive amounts of stocks all at a loss, this effectively cost the hedge funds billions of dollars, benefitted [=GameStop=] in the process (to the ire of those who betted on [=GameStop=] failing), and got some of those who bought the stock just to sell it later a massive amount of money, although the short squeeze [[GoneHorriblyRight turned into a bubble]] that left large numbers of the r/wallstreetbets investors [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GameStop_short_squeeze#Losses_by_retail_investors holding bags as well]].
342* Ride/SuperstarLimo at Disney California Adventure was originally planned as a high-speed dark ride involving the guests (as movie stars) boarding a limousine and fleeing through Hollywood from mobs of nosy paparazzi. Unfortunately, [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents Diana, Princess of Wales was killed in a similar incident]] during production, forcing them to revamp the ride. Pressed for time and money, Disney's Imagineers decided to hack the ride apart to remove anything even ''slightly'' resembling Di's death in favor of slowly trudging through a procession of cheap sight gags and glorified cardboard cutouts (as that was [[NoBudget the only thing the budget would allow]]) in the hopes that when they pitched it to then-CEO Michael Eisner, he would just end up scrapping the ride. Unfortunately for them, he ''loved'' the idea, and greenlit what ended up being one of the most universally hated attractions at any Disney park before closing only a year later. There's an infamous promotional video featuring the cast of ''Series/TheDrewCareyShow'' unethusiastically visiting the attraction and making sarcastic comments throughout the ride.
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