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1[[quoteright:191:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cgp-grey_copy_6613.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:191:Complex Things Explained]]
3
4Colin Gregory Palmer Grey is an American-born, UK-based educational [[Website/YouTube YouTuber]] who produces explanatory videos on a wide variety of topics, including history, politics, geography, economics, and pop culture. He's noted for his deep and rigorous research, with later videos occasionally having follow ups where he details how topics were investigated and produced.
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6He first came to wide attention when his video, "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNu8XDBSn10 The Difference between the United Kingdom, Great Britain, and England]]" went viral in 2011. As of 2021, he has surpassed five million subscribers.
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8His videos can be found on his [[https://www.youtube.com/user/CGPGrey YouTube channel]].
9
10Aside from his explainer videos, he's also produced narrations the works of others -- such as an animated retelling of ''Literature/TheFableOfTheDragonTyrant'' -- and has livestreamed gaming videos.
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12He also takes part in a few podcasts, most notably in ''Podcast/HelloInternet'', which is hosted alongside Brady Haran of WebVideo/{{Numberphile}} fame, as well as appearing on [[https://www.relay.fm/cortex Cortex]], hosted by Relay.FM owner Myke Hurley.
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14----
15!!Tropes:
16* AddedAlliterativeAppeal: Happens multiple times.
17** In "The better boarding method airlines won't use", this happens twice.
18--->'''Grey:''' Let's put our monkey brains to work to tackle this queue, which is what boarding groups do: prioritizing plainly packing primates precisely... primarily. ''[later]'' This [Steffen Perfect method] maximizes pull-aways and parallels, pristinely packing people in a pinch.
19** In "The sneaky plan to subvert the Electoral College", Grey says that one outcome of the way the Electoral College works is "the states less populous produce preponderate Presidential picking power per person"
20* AdvertisingDisguisedAsNews: Thankfully [[SubvertedTrope subverted]] in an episode of "Podcast/HelloInternet" where he mentions being offered payment from an on-line currency company to do an episode on the history of virtual money, with the ending portraying them as the future of virtual currency.
21* AffablyEvil: In "How to be a Pirate", the Pirate Captain is cheery and smiling throughout his description of his crew's operations ... including when he describes how he tortures captured enemy sailors to death just for fighting back.
22-->'''Pirate Captain:''' But lose, and you might beg for mercy in the last and longest moments of your life! Boop!
23* AlienKudzu: Tumbleweed, as described in "The Trouble With Tumbleweed". They can grow enormously big and block homes, are covered in thorns to inconvenience removal, [[IncendiaryExponent are ridiculously flammable]], can plant themselves into farms and suck out all the nutrients for the crops, are an invasive species, and a single tumble can fu-[[LastSecondWordSwap pollinate]] itself to propagate without any immediate mates.
24* AlwaysChaoticEvil: Discussed in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0fAznO1wA8 "How to be a Pirate: Quartermaster Edition"]]. When the personality index for the typical pirate is shown, the Cruelty vector is at a high level while the Aggression vector is at its maximum level.
25* AndIMustScream: The right brain in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfYbgdo8e-8 You Are Two]].
26* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Political entities such as countries and states are often represented as dress-wearing stick figures, with the entity's flag patterning the dress.
27* AppleForTeacher: A variant in "Grey Grades the State Flags" with Grey as the teacher grading the flag of each state, [[NationsAsPeople represented as schoolchildren]] handing in homework assignments. Connecticut's flag has three bunches of grapes on it, and Connecticut is munching on some as she offers them to Grey, who declines.
28* ArtShift: "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nQHBAdShgYI The Trouble with Transporters]]" ditches StickFigureAnimation in favor of a more standard cartoon style.
29* AssholeVictim: The video "Death & Dynasties" has a moment of this. When Grey is talking about why key supporters plan for the replacement of a dead ruler is that a "... a Dead Ruler surprise will lead to a scramble for power at best and a bloodbath at worst", with the latter outcome represented by a triumphant revolutionary surrounded by the corpses of dead key supporters from the old dictatorial regime. Since the episode "Rules for Rulers" establishes key supporters in dictatorships as [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder Chronic Backstabbers]] who overthrow benevolent dictators and screw over the people for the sake of their own enrichment, seeing them subjected to LaserGuidedKarma brings some satisfaction.
30* AuthorTract: Grey will sometimes outright express frustration at things he's come across.
31** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-FBwZtuJtMw A Crime Against Childhood]]", in which he rails against school administrators who are considering switching to remote learning instead of cancelling school on snow days, thus making childhoods slightly less magical.
32** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qEV9qoup2mQ&t=1094s Someone Dead Ruined My Life...Again]]", in which he spends 18 minutes describing the frustration poor scholarship and citation can have on researchers trying to track down information.
33* BaitAndSwitch:
34** In [[https://youtu.be/SCzXZfNIu3A "Ten Misconceptions Rundown"]], the tenth misconception that people swallow eight spiders a year while sleeping is described as ridiculous, [[spoiler:because people's mouths are so warm and moist, so eight spiders is an ''underestimate'']].
35** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swx6VyiJ7TI "Going to the Weed Research Lab in Colorado"]] was released on 4/20/2020, takes place in a state where marijuana is legalized, has a greened CGP Grey logo in the thumbnail... [[spoiler:and is actually a follow up to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hsWr_JWTZss "The Trouble With Tumbleweed"]] as it details the research he made for that video.]]
36* BlackBox: In "How Machines Learn", the bots that learn to separate images of bees from threes end up with a complex algorithm that cannot be explained by a human or the teacher and builder bots.
37* BlobMonster: In the "CGP Grey was WRONG" video, when discussing the different types of mistakes content creators make in their videos, he uses these to personify them. Glitches (for example, small animation errors like giving one of the stick characters 3 arms) and blunders (mispronunciations, wrong flags, and other minor research mistakes) were depicted as [[CuteSlimeMook small, cute blobs]] that annoy Grey, but are [[MinionWithAnFInEvil ultimately harmless]]. Errors depicting video-breaking mistakes are hideous with gross slimy tentacles and have MoreTeethThanTheOsmondFamily.
38* BoringButPractical: In "Hexagons are the Bestagons", Grey explains why hexagons are the best shape for tiling structures and why they are so common on the molecular and cellular levels.
39* BreadEggsBreadedEggs: Inverted in his video "This Video Will Hurt", listing what people believe cause allergies:
40-->'''Grey:''' People get sick from [=WiFi=] or windfarms or windfarms with [=WiFi=]...
41* BrownNote: He places a faintly-audible sound in "This Video Will Hurt" that will cause sickness in listeners.[[spoiler:..is what he claimed to make viewers think that, so he can provide viewers with a firsthand example of the nocebo effect.]]
42* TheCameo: Grey has had many in other [=YouTube=]r's videos, and some have cameoed in his own:
43** He appeared in "Favourite Numbers" and "Numbers confuse Americans" from Numberphile.
44** In an "Ask Emily" episode of ''WebVideo/TheBrainScoop'', Emily answered a question he submitted about how caterpillar metamorphosis works.
45** The "You Are Two" video featured WebAnimation/{{Kurzgesagt}} at the end, and he cameoed at the end of their sister video "What Is Something?"
46* TheChainsOfCommanding: "The Rules for Rulers" is a rather sobering video on the idea that being the leader of a country is not all that it's cracked up to be in terms of being able to enact solutions to problems. Whether as a dictatorship or a democracy, Grey argues that most of the ruler's job is allocating enough "treasure" (straight-up cash in dictatorships, more legal favors like subsidies and tax breaks in democracies) to placate the key entities to his rule, or else face being taken out of office by ballot or bullet. Anything leftover that a ruler spends on the country as a whole (or keeps for himself) is potential money that a rival could use to entice those key entities to switch sides.
47* CivilWar: In "The Sneaky Plan to Subvert the Electoral College for the Next Election", he states that should [=NaPoVoInterCo=] be enacted, states that did not join this plan (or refused to do so) would likely challenge the constitutionality of it by launching legal cases in the Supreme Court, leading to a judicial version of this as they clash with states that ''did'' enact the plan.
48* ComicallyMissingThePoint: In his description of how pirate crews are paid in shares, the Pirate Quartermaster states that surgeons rarely have a personality matrix that predisposes them to piracy and so often the carpenter is the surgeon much to the audience stand-in's horror. The quartermaster agrees: shocking... because the carpenter-surgeon's pay isn't that different to the crew's, and everyone is given fairly equal wage.
49-->'''Quartermaster:''' "Shocking, I know: such flat and equal compensation is not what you'll find on empire and merchant ships."
50* TheComicallySerious: The [[AnthropomorphicPersonification personification]] of the American Supreme Court almost always has a very deadpan facial expression with a neutral mouth. [[https://youtu.be/tUX-frlNBJY?t=318 Even when several states are physically fighting over whether or not the Electoral College should stay or go]]. But there are a few instances where the Supreme Court persona has a different expression. One was on the newspaper cover supposedly explaining that faithless electors were banned, showing them angrily slamming the judicial hammer as one elector is arrested. [[OutOfCharacterAlert However, Grey explains that this didn't happen.]] Another instance is when New York and New Jersey were arguing over who owns Staten Island, the Supreme Court persona has a more annoyed expression, but is mostly still deadpan. The video where Supreme court justices are depicted with the greatest variety of emotions is in Supreme Court Shenanigans! Here, the justices are shown happy to serve (whether out of genuine desire to serve or being influenced by the president), being annoyed that an empty justice seat is not being filled, or other similar expressions.
51** The Pirate Quartermaster is joyless and stern, only cracking a smile when contemplating the vast wealth a successful voyage will rake in.
52* ConditionedToAcceptHorror: Discussed in his "Why Die?" video. Grey views modern-day acceptance of the "necessity of death" as simply people resigning themselves to a horror they can't resist, the same way a hostage might development an attachment to their kidnapping, and this attitude has prevented humanity from properly finding ways to stop death and aging.
53* ContinuityNod: "The simple secret of runway digits" has the pirate captain and quartermaster show up from the pirate videos, as well as the infinite A4 paper golden spiral from the metric paper video. Also, in one shot, Grey stares annoyed at a social security number, as a reference to his video about the insecurity of that system.
54* CorruptPolitician: Deconstructed in "The Rules for Rulers." Politicians, whether as dictators or representatives, must placate a small cabal of supporters in order to keep power. It’s just InherentInTheSystem. These people don’t all necessarily go into politics planning to be corrupt and self-serving, but the idealistic ones either get defeated by less scrupulous rivals, or learn to play the game in order to stay in power.
55* CoughSnarkCough: A blunt, SayingSoundEffectsOutLoud variation happens in "The Better Boarding Method Airlines Won't Use":
56-->'''Grey:''' There's almost a law of the universe that solutions which are the first thing you think of and look sensible and are easy to implement are often terrible, ineffective solutions, that once implemented, will drag on civilization forever. Cough, [[https://youtu.be/s7tWHJfhiyo voting systems]], cough.
57* CrazyEnoughToWork: On a business trip that involved traveling from San Jose, California to Moab, Utah, Grey's initial plan was to fly. Instead, he was convinced to drive a Tesla. In this situation, the sensible thing to do would be to take the Interstate to his destination (I-80 to I-15 to I-70), stopping at some of the several Tesla Supercharger stations along the way. Instead, he opted to cross Nevada on US-50, otherwise known as [[IDontLikeTheSoundOfThatPlace The Loneliest Road in America]]. Nearly 500 miles of rural road, with only three towns along its entire length, and not a single Supercharger. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_naDg-guomA And it worked,]] although he did admit it was a stupid decision.
58* CripplingOverspecialization: In "How Machines Learn" the bots are only designed to separate static images of a bee from images of a three, being shown as confused by videos, upside-down images, as well as images that clearly show neither (dog in a bee costume, for example).
59* DatedHistory: In one Q&A session he claims human development only improves over time. Whig history such as this is widely discredited by historians and hasn't been taken seriously in nearly a century.
60* DeadpanSnarker: His personal opinion towards things he disagrees with when stating the facts. Especially with scientific misconceptions, [[CaptainObvious obvious logical thinking]] and political actions that only look out for their interest while missing the big picture.
61* DemocracyIsFlawed: According to "The Rules for Rulers", modern-day representative democracy isn't without its flaws with [[LoopHoleAbuse specific tax codes for wealthier segments]], gerrymandering, and complicated election process to remain in power. On the other hand, democratic countries--specifically stable ones--tend to have a higher quality of life than dictatorships because [[EnlightenedSelfInterest improving the lives of voters also improve tax revenues and approval ratings]].
62* DestructiveTeleportation: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nQHBAdShgYI "The Trouble With Transporters"]] has Grey musing if the transporters from ''Franchise/StarTrek'' kill the user as part of the teleporting, and whether the person arriving at their destination counts as the original person, or an identical clone of a dead person with all of their memories.
63* {{Determinator}}: "The Race to Win Staten Island" recounts Grey's mission to find out the truth behind the dubious story of Christopher Billopp securing Staten Island for New York. In pursuit of this goal, Grey flies to New York to visit the New York Public Library to see if the crucial editions of Richmond County Gazette are there. After confirming that the copies really are missing, he takes a boat to Staten Island to visit the Billopp House and Dissoway's gravestone. The video ends with him laughing maniacally as he wanders through the Staten Island Cemetery in a rainstorm.
64-->'''Grey:''' Ignore my emails? I might just show up!
65* DontTryThisAtHome: When discussing the law you won't be told:
66-->'''Grey:''' [[MotorMouth CGP Grey is NOT a lawyer, this is NOT legal advice, it is meant for entertainment purposes only. Seriously, guy, don't do anything in a court of law based on what an internet video told you. No joke.]]
67* EnlightenedSelfInterest: In the "Rules For Rulers", nations that invest in their populations' welfare only do so because creative and productive citizens will create more wealth for the ruler and his cronies. This is why nations with lots of natural resources are often horrible places to live; a leader who can get wealth from the ground from a high-priced commodity doesn't have to concern himself with the welfare of the population since he can generate wealth regardless of the well-being of the population.
68* EtherealChoir: In "Grey Grades the State Flags", the first ten out of eleven state flags Grey grades are dominated by blue backgrounds (the exception is California's, which he fails for writing out the state's name on the flag and having a bear that looks scared on it) and all but two of them are consigned to F-tier for egregious violations of good flag design[[note]]And that's counting Oregon, which he initially failed before giving the lone beaver on the back a passing D grade[[/note]]. In despondency he calls out whether ''anyone'' made a flag that wasn't blue. Cue the choir as New Mexico's flag of the Zia people's sun colored red on gold background (a nod to the state's Spanish heritage) steps up, which Grey finds [[StealthPun enchanting]] and it becomes one of only four flags he rates as S-tier.
69* EvenTheGuysWantHim: In "Which Planet is the Closest?", Grey talks about what planet is closest to Earth; Mercury spends the most time closest to Earth, which he portrays with the Roman god Mercury gifting a rose to Earth, and to Venus (whose closest planet is also Mercury). Then, as it turns out, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and every other planet in the solar system has Mercury as the closest planet. The final image of the video is of Mercury successfully wooing all the gods and goddesses in the Roman pantheon with roses.
70* EverybodyHatesMathematics: While Grey is perfectly fine with physics, forces, algebra, and what have you, he [[DownplayedTrope draws the line]] at UsefulNotes/QuantumPhysics.
71-->'''Grey:''' Okay, look, 'whirl around' and 'spin' don't mean what you think down here, because in the land of quantum, words mean ''nothing'', there is only math, that we're ''not gonna do''.
72* FMinusMinus: When grading "his students' flags" in the episode where Grey ranks US state flags, the F tier is so full that he has to break it down into S-tier-F-tier to F-tier-F-tier.
73* TheFaceless: On the occasions Grey appears in person in his videos, he'll point the camera at his chest rather than his face.
74* FictionalFlag: Grey creates some redesigns for some of the worst state flags in "Grey Grades the State Flags". His redesign for Wisconsin, which looks like a slice of cheese on a blue background, previously appeared in his video about the flag of Antarctica.
75* FictionalPoliticalParty: Grey's videos about U.S. politics feature two unnamed parties represented by the colors of yellow and orange.[[note]]Yellow actually is the color of the Libertarian Party, but this is probably a coincidence considering the Libertarian Party never actually gets into power. Plus, there is no existing U.S. party that uses orange as its color.[[/note]]
76* FormulaBreakingEpisode:
77** Once discusses Website/{{Reddit}}.
78** His video "History of the Union Jack" has him not speak at all. This anomaly corresponds with EarlyInstallmentWeirdness, as this is his eighth video on the channel.
79** His video "Humans Need Not Apply" about automation has an outright serious and existential tone, as well as being significantly longer than his usual videos at 15 minutes and a tad depressing.
80** He takes a similar tone in "Americapox: The Missing Plague", at 12 minutes and on the rather depressing subject of plagues (specifically, how Old World diseases decimated the people of the New World but the reverse didn't happen). Also, he intentionally slowed down his MotorMouth habit for this video.
81** He takes this tone again in "Rules for Rulers", his longest video so far at almost 20 minutes, has a Machiavellian tone on how people are supposed to get in positions of power and how they keep it.
82** He takes this tone again in "Why Die?" where he thinks the idea of accepting aging and death to be similar to having a fondness for a criminal that tortures you, and that people should fight it.
83** "The Fable of the Dragon-Tyrant" is a departure from his usual art style and hard reality style in favor of Grey narrating a fable by Nick Bostrom about the wonders of human progress and the tragedy of accepting horror, with lush and detailed artwork to boot.
84* FreezeFrameBonus: A few videos have blink-and-you'll-miss-it flashes of text that viewers would have little to no chance of reading without the pause button - a good example is "Quick and Easy Voting for Normal People" (which actually has two instances - one as a gag and one as a footnote).
85** A rather off-color one occurs in "Who Owns the Statue of Liberty?"
86--->'''America:''' [=BFFs=], France! [=BFFs=] forever!\
87'''France:''' [[ShapedLikeItself The F stands for "forever"]], you idiot.\
88'''America:''' ''(still smiling)'' [[PrecisionFStrike You pretentious bitch.]] I hate you. Forever.
89* FullCircleRevolution: In "The Rules for Rulers," he lists that these rules are precisely why revolutions so often see a ruler become even worse than his predecessor. The keys to power expect a greater cut from him, or else they would simply stamp him out, so he has little choice but to provide that larger cut at the expense of the people.
90* FunnyBackgroundEvent: In "How to Become Pope", the bishop takes the cardinals' electronics away before they can vote for the new pope. One of the cardinals can be seen pocketing his phone and is later playing with it when he should be praying.
91* GhostTown: On his road trip across the Loneliest Road in America, Grey stops off to use an outhouse in Cisco, Utah, which certainly looks like one of these, with no sign of human habitation except for several suspiciously new-looking "no trespassing" signs and what seems to be a fully functional security camera on one building. Grey never gets to find out what Cisco's deal is, and he leaves [[NothingIsScarier incredibly unnerved]].
92* GirlishPigtails: The "young" versions of U.S. states are portrayed with these. In the present day, their grown-up incarnations have the standard straight hair.
93* GossipEvolution: In "The Race to Win Staten Island," Grey recounts how this happened with the Christopher Billopp story. Later versions of the story have Billopp using empty barrels to increase his sailing speed, but this detail does not appear in earlier versions. Also, early versions have Billopp living in the manor before the race, but later versions made it a prize for winning.
94-->'''CGP Grey:''' It's Ye Olde Meme!
95* HardTruthAesop: "The Rules For Rulers" very bluntly states that power is mainly about controlling wealth and who gets it. If you want to hold power, you ''have'' to engage and even kowtow to powerful interests by giving them a share of the "treasure". If you don't, someone offering them a share will convince them to overthrow you.
96* HehHehYouSaidX: When the Quartermaster does his presentation on how pirate ships are run in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0fAznO1wA8 "How To Be A Pirate"]], he compares it to a business whose source of income is pirate booty. The recruit and captain immediately giggle like immature ten-year-olds, to which TheComicallySerious StraightMan Quartermaster sighs and changes it to "treasure" for the rest of the video.
97* HighTechHexagons: [[https://youtu.be/thOifuHs6eY Hexagons are the Bestagons]] discusses this as it applies to real life.
98* HoistByHisOwnPetard: "The Sneaky Plan to Subvert the Electoral College for the Next Election" details some of the states that comprise the United States doing this to the Electoral College, by using the freedom granted by the College to cast their electoral votes however they want. Namely, the eponymous plan involves states committed to it to vote in line with the country's popular vote as a whole, rather than the popular vote within the state itself. This would ensure that any future president is functionally elected through the popular vote of the entire country.
99* {{Homage}}: Music/HankGreen's WebVideo/VlogBrothers video, "Apples! (CGP Grey style)" is this to C.G.P Grey’s videos.
100** ''Conjecture'' makes a parody video of WebVideo/VSauce, Vlogbrothers, and WebVideo/CGPGrey, the latter using Grey's iconic stickman animation.
101** When discussing a hypothetical "Videocators Guild", CGP Grey in its coat of arms includes, besides his own logo, the logos of WebVideo/MinutePhysics, Creator/ViHart, and [=CrashCourse=].
102* ICallItVera: For [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_naDg-guomA a video]] recapping a journey from San Jose, California through the desert of Nevada to Moab, Utah, Grey borrows an acquaintance's, Tesla Model X. He dubs it "Bailey".
103* InherentInTheSystem:
104** Why are governments so corrupt? Why don't they ever cater to the people and instead devote their resources to the benefit of the rich and powerful? Because according to "The Rules for Rulers," it's easier to win and maintain the support of a few key entities than it is for the masses. And any ruler who doesn't keep these key entities satisfied will lose them to a rival who will.
105** Grey has highlighted across multiple videos, most notably "The Sneaky Plan to Subvert the Electoral College for the Next Election", that due to the way the Electoral College is structured, the United States may occasionally wind up with a president that most of its citizens did not vote for.
106* InterfaceScrew: He inserts a brief series of fake buffers into his "Net Neutrality Explained" video to demonstrate the experience for non-"fast lane" users in a Net Neutrality-less world.
107* JollyRoger: Discussed in "How to be a Pirate", where he says that real pirates normally don't fly the Jolly Roger, and only unveil it after sneaking up on a merchant ship that they plan to pillage.
108* JudicialWig: The AnthropomorphicPersonification of the American Supreme Court always wears a long white wig.
109* TheLastDJ: Deconstructed and defied in "The Rules for Rulers". Trying to be an "honest" leader, whether in a democracy or dictatorship, means you risk losing power at the hands of several powerful interests by not giving them a share of the wealth you control. But even after explaining the harsh realities of politics, the viewer is told that while the political game is hard and brutal, ''not'' engaging means you can't change a thing.
110* LastSecondWordSwap: In "Zebra vs. Horses" (about animal domestication, the follow-up to the Americapox video), the first three traits he lists for a good candidate for domestication are friendly, feedable, and [[CurseCutShort fu-]], er, fecund. (The fourth is [[AccidentalPun family-friendly]].)
111** In "The Trouble With Tumbleweed", he mentions that tumbles can [[CurseCutShort f]]pollinate themselves.
112* LeftTheBackgroundMusicOn: In "The Better Boarding Method Airlines Won't Use", Grey's lament about why the "Steffen Perfect" method won't work in real life is accompanied by mournful violin music. The circle that represents Grey in the video then looks at the top-left corner and sees two violin-playing angels. He glares at them, and they stop playing and fly away.
113* LiesToChildren: There are occasional bonus videos that has Grey clarify that the method he described isn't really the best or most popular one, just the simplest. For example, the STV video and the video about bot programming. Both are complicated and unintuitive issues, so he instead opts to show the simplest way it ''can'' be done before explaining in a footnote the basics of how most people ''actually'' do it. For example, it's easier to explain how three representatives need about 33%+ of the vote each[[note]]100/3[[/note]] rather than 26%+ each[[note]]100/(3+1) +1[[/note]] and the difference isn't significant enough to waste time explaining.
114* LoopholeAbuse: "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDYFiq1l5Dg Supreme Court Shenanigans!]]" details how these are used in the appointment of justices to the U.S. Supreme Court.
115* MagicCountdown: Invoked as a metaphor in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIbkoop4AYE his description of the debt limit of the U.S. federal government,]] in which it is a ticking TimeBomb set by Congress that Congress also has the ability to disarm at any time. In cases where congress and the president are at odds, they can milk the debt limit for political points by delaying "disarming" it until the last possible moment.
116* MenAreGenericWomenAreSpecial: Grey uses male and female stick figure designs, where the female design consists of the male design with hair and a miniskirt. Human characters (without a specific gender) are male by default. Characters representing political and geographic entities are female by default, with the design on the miniskirt signifying the entity that the character represents.
117* MexicanStandoff: In "Who Owns Antarctica?" there's a two-second scene of [[NationsAsPeople the Axis and Allied powers]] pointing guns at each other to illustrate who was threatening who (if you're wondering what that has to do with Antarctica, Argentina and Chile made claims that overlap with the UK who they believed wouldn't be able to object because of the impending World War II). [[spoiler:America, who's looking off the right edge of the scene whistling, is apparently not paying attention to Japan.]]
118* MoneyFetish: The Quartermaster in the "How to be a Pirate" videos smiles exactly once between both installments: when he's looking at the heaps of gold he owns.
119* MoodWhiplash: In "Metric Paper" he goes from celebrating... [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Metric Paper]], to narrating the scale of the universe with plenty of existential dread.
120* MotorMouth: In his United Kingdom video, he lists off about a dozen or so countries in the Commonwealth Realm at a very rapid pace. He also blurts out a very fast [[DontTryThisAtHome disclaimer]] in The Law You Won't Be Told.
121* MundaneMadeAwesome: The "Steffen Perfect" boarding method. It's just a theoretically more efficient method of boarding a commercial airline plane, but it's treated as a downright utopia.
122* NationsAsPeople: From "How Many Countries are There?" on. In earlier videos, they are either depicted as flags or have speech bubbles on a map. Notably, nations use his female stick figure model (with Vatican City as the major exception as it is demographically at least 90% male), with the nation's (or other political units like a state) flag as her skirt.
123* NoJustNoReaction: In the "How Many Countries are There" video, after talking about China–Taiwan relations:
124-->'''Grey:''' Thus, the innocent question "how many countries?" has led us straight to a big 'World War III: Press Here To Start' button which is getting depressing so let's move on to...\
125''[shows a map of the West Bank and Gaza]''\
126'''Grey:''' Ohhh, right. ''[sigh]'' No more politics.
127* NonIndicativeName: Grey's pet peeve.
128-->'''Grey:''' This message has been brought to you by The Society of People Who Think That '''Names Should Mean Something'''. [from "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=utDHcbiOfKY History Lesson for the History Channel]]"]
129** Though [[HypocriticalHumor his own logo]] is a case of this: while it depicts science and technology, and the man ''wanted'' to make videos about the two fields since he thinks that they are the most important, most of his videos are about history, politics, and nomenclature.
130* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: In "The Battle of SHARKS!", Grey provides voices for various London-based organizations. While he uses some Britishisms, he maintains his natural accent rather than attempting to sound like a Londoner.
131* NotInMyBackyard: In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8xhdL8BPvU "The Battle of SHARKS!"]], the art collective Antepavillion has had a long-running feud with the Hackney Council over their art pieces standing out in the neighborhood, including a balcony disguised as an oversized HVAC system and a massive play backdrop on the roof. ''SHARKS!'', a collection of giant fibreglass sharks, won a contest themed around mocking Hackney's hackneyed planning rules, but a court injunction was issued at the last moment to stop the piece from being displayed in the canal next to Antepavillion's warehouse. Luckily, a nearby boat club was willing to host the piece, but has since run into trouble with their own council and the piece will soon have to move back to Antepavillion.
132* ANuclearError: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhgLasBFr6o "What is TEKOI?"]] reported that the Tekoi test range in Utah was a facility testing engines for the Minuteman ICBM, though in the exploration video, Grey found documents stating that the engines were for the Trident SLBM. He documented his making the mistake in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ua4QMFQATco another video]] and uploaded a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCeMCwxayp0 corrected version]] with some changed wording and an appropriate missile model.
133* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: If Grey's speech departs from the usual MotorMouth (i.e., he speaks more slowly and it's easier to follow what he's saying), it's a sign the video is going to be depressing and sobering:
134** "Humans Need Not Apply" is about how [[JobStealingRobot robots are set to displace humans]] in all aspects of the labor force beyond just manual labor.
135** The first "Americapox" video starts with the historical fact diseases from Europe killed that ~90% of the population of pre-Columbian America (and why the reverse didn't happen).
136** "The Rules For Rulers" explains why politics and all the seeming backstabbing and corruption among those in power is nigh-inevitable (short answer: if you don't you won't stay in power for long).
137** "Why Die?" dissects the ethics of mortality. "Spaceship You", released during the initial lockdowns of the UsefulNotes/Covid19Pandemic, discusses the importance of maintaining health while isolated from the rest of the world.
138* OrphanedEtymology: Throughout the "Who Owns The Statue of Liberty?" video, Grey refers to Liberty Island by that name, but of course, it wasn't given that name until ''after'' the Statue of Liberty was put there. In fact, the name "Liberty Island" didn't become official until the 1950s. For most of the time period discussed in the video, it was known as Bedloe's Island. And even the name "Bedloe's Island" is too new for the time period in which the English had just taken over the Dutch colony. The Dutch called it "Great Oyster Island," with Ellis Island being "Little Oyster Island." Okay, it's pretty clear by now why Grey decided to just stick with the modern names.
139* OurLawyersAdvisedThisTrope: In his narration for "Sharks!", Grey repeatedly says that he had to have legal consultations and that he's ''not'' taking any legal stance in order to avoid litigation from any of the parties currently suing and countersuing each other.
140* PassThePopcorn:
141** When he's listening to a New York vs New Jersey Supreme Court case in "The Race to Win Staten Island", he brings a bucket of popcorn, finishing it right as the recording ends.
142** In "The Sneaky Plan to Subvert the Electoral College for the Next Election", when it gets to the point with states outside the compact the video describes fighting states inside the compact within the supreme court, CGP's avatar is seen looking over the chaos with a bucket of popcorn while he talks about how the conflict will be amazing to watch no matter the outcome.
143* PlutoIsExpendable: In "Which Planet is the Closest?", Grey remarks that Pluto isn't counted as a planet anymore; cue the planetoid getting torn off the planet chart, with an upset D: face. Later in the video, Pluto (the Roman god) shows up, and he also seems distraught at the idea that Pluto is no longer considered a planet.
144* PrecisionFStrike: Describes zebra as "bastards" and "pain-in-the-ass" animals in "Zebra vs Horses: Animal Domestication". The fact that this is in the same video as the above-mentioned LastSecondWordSwap makes this even more jarring.
145* ProductDisplacement: In "Grey Grades Canada's Flags!", the AnthropomorphicPersonification of Ontario is quite clearly sipping at a cup of Tim Hortons. The shape language is there to indicate the American logo for Tim Hortons coffee cups prior to their {{Minimalis|m}}t redesign, but the actual name "Tim Hortons" isn't present.
146* PunchclockVillain: The Pirate Quartermaster comes across as this. Unlike the AffablyEvil and giddy Captain who thinks being a pirate is great, the Quartermaster states at the beginning that he's a pirate because of external forces. When he describes his duties he mentions "punishments executed for contract violations" and the accompanying image is a pirate being flogged with a cat-of-nine-tails by his shipmates.
147-->"The motions we choose but the sum of forces upon us. I became a pirate as the gold in this grail chose this form."
148* PunctuatedForEmphasis: Look at RunningGag, and also used multiple times in his video about the UK's worst election ever.
149* RayOfHopeEnding: Even after "The Rules for Rulers" makes it clear that structures of power and corruption go hand-in-hand, the viewer is encouraged ''not'' to turn away from politics, but to understand the rules if they ever want the power to bring the change they seek. It ends with the message that even if the viewer doesn't like the rules, better they be in power than someone else, and by knowing them, maybe they'll be different. [[note]]Of course, the very last, easy-to-miss shot is of the potential ruler becoming a dictator, showing that the viewer themselves could potentially [[HeWhoFightsMonsters become corrupt later in life]].[[/note]].
150* RedOniBlueOni: The pirate captain and the pirate quartermaster, respectively, in the twinned videos about how to be a pirate. The captain's piece about how piracy and branding in the Age of Exploration worked is full of enthusiasm to the potential recruit, while the quartermaster is far more calm while he talks plainly about the economic forces at the time and the financial reasons that led to piracy and its far more egalitarian pay output.
151* RhymesOnADime: The episode [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAHbLRjF0vo "The Better Boarding Method Airlines Won't Use"]] features a lot of rhyming.
152-->'''Grey:''' Let's put our monkey brains to work to tackle this queue, which is what boarding groups do: [[AddedAlliterativeAppeal prioritizing plainly packing primates precisely... primarily.]] ''[later]'' The first boarding group [in the Back to Front method] walks to the back of the plane. Everything is smooth right until the first to go reaches their row and starts to stow. So slow. And for passenger two, while their seat is in view, there's nothing to do, the isle's one queue where all can not but stew stuck like glue until this guy's through. Phew! ''[later still]'' This [Steffen Perfect method] maximizes [[AddedAlliterativeAppeal pull-aways and parallels, pristinely packing people in a pinch.]] ''[even later still]'' One, two, three, four: we can't ask people for more. ''[at the end of the video]'' How do we deplane? That's right; front to back, row by row, no slower could we go.
153* RidiculouslyCuteCritter: The Algorithm-Bots from [[https://youtu.be/R9OHn5ZF4Uo "How Machines Learn"]], to the point that many viewers wished for a plushie. Almost a year later, [[http://www.cgpgrey.com/blog/grey-plushie-bots they got their wish.]]
154* RunningGag: A handful appear in videos, but some have either receded in use or become discredited.
155** Creator/TheHistoryChannel
156** Because, Empire. [[hottip:*: Variants exist, such as "Because, Romans" and "Because, politics".]]
157** [[GunboatDiplomacy Bigger-army diplomacy.]]
158** [[SarcasmMode Good luck.]] [[PunctuatedForEmphasis with that]].
159** If there is a photo with many people or many elements, try to watch out for a [[VideoGame/{{Minecraft}} Creeper]]
160** [[DeathWorld Deadly, deadly nature.]]
161** Bitcoins as the international currency.
162** Whenever he says that someone/something is cool or popular, a [[CoolShades pair of sunglasses]] come from nowhere to demonstrate it.
163** "[=NetMeTube=]" for video-sharing platforms like Website/YouTube.
164** The Executive and Legislative branches of the US government just can't seem to get along in Grey's videos, always arguing over how laws should work and trying to out-do each-other with political shenanigans.
165** By contrast, the Judicial branch is given RealityWarper powers to sort matters out and the Supreme Court Justices are almost always depicted as TheComicallySerious.
166** Grey saying that there isn't time to cover something in a video, saying that it's "a story for another time."
167* SelfDeprecation: In "The Better Boarding Method Airlines Won't Use", CGP Grey describes one person who brings three carry-on bags because he doesn't think the rules should apply to him and who also fiddles around with getting his laptop out after stowing his bags. This figure is CGP Grey himself.
168* ShoutOut:
169** When explaining the many kinds of Daddy Longlegs, he casually mentions that the Australian version does indeed have venom and fangs and adds that "then again, so does everything else in that bloody country" as the screen changes to images of several animals and a [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking politician]], with the distinctive stick figure on the yellow background of CausticCritic [[WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw]] hiding in the corner of the video.
170** For "How To Become Pope", two of the questions the Apostolic Nuncio asks potential bishops are [[Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail "What is your quest?" and "What is your favorite color?"]]
171** In the "American Empire" video, the formation of the United States from the original 13 is depicted as [[CombiningMecha forming]] Anime/{{Voltron}}.
172** When discussing Svalbard in the "Where is Scandanavia?" video, he mentions that it is [[Literature/HisDarkMaterials guarded by armored bears]].
173** "Death & Dynasties" has one to Franchise/DoctorWho, featuring the [[Characters/DoctorWhoTenthDoctor Tenth Doctor]] whispering the infamous quote he used to depose Harriet Jones ([[Recap/DoctorWho2005CSTheChristmasInvasion "Don't you think she looks tired?"]]) to the monarch's aide.
174** For the "Who Owns The Statue of Liberty?" video about the surprisingly complicated question of where the border between New York and New Jersey runs (due to the original English charter being both wordy and vague), New York claimed the whole river (including Staten, Ellis, and the future Liberty Island) as theirs -- even the Hudson River piers New Jersey built. "All New York. [[VideoGame/ZeroWing All belong to us." Said while the New York avatar is wearing a blue cape mimicking CATS.]]
175** In "Which Planet is the Closest?", all the planet humanoids are represented by their standard [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Roman mythological]] god/goddess appearances. Saturn specifically has blood leaking from his mouth, as a reference to Creator/FranciscoDeGoya's ''Art/SaturnDevouringHisSon''.
176** "The Trouble with Tumbles" recalls for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' fans the episode [[Recap/StarTrekS2E15TheTroubleWithTribbles "The Trouble With Tribbles"]], as Grey implicitly compares tumbleweeds with tribbles in terms of how they seem harmless and kind of endearing at first but actually cause major problems due to their absurdly rapid reproduction rate. A graphic within the video about how prairie fires are a threat to agriculture also mimics the user interface of ''VideoGame/RimWorld''.
177** "There are three players in [[https://youtu.be/KW0eUrUiyxo this game]]: content creators who make videos, advertisers who make the ads, and {{Website/YouTube}} playing [[Theatre/FiddlerOnTheRoof matchmaker, matchmaker, making the match]]."
178** Grey is fond of making references to ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic''.
179*** In "You Are Two", Right Brain picks up an Twilight Sparkle figure, which Left Brain justifies as being "Because she's the best pony."
180*** In "Which Planet Is The Closest?", he exclaims [[OhMyGods "Oh my Celestia!"]] when holding up the paper with the maths results, and the paper emanates Princess Celestia's mane colors, which wave in a similar way to how it does in the show.
181*** In "Ask Grey: Lockdown Edition", while explaining how he believes post-virus life will go back to normal when everyone returns to normal life, he describes it as "everyone says [[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS2E15TheSuperSpeedyCiderSqueezy6000 'Dear Princess Celestia, I didn't learn a thing.']]"
182** In ''[[https://www.youtube.com/qC5h9zcHmPA Q&A with Grey: Ten Years Later]]'' on the eras question, a bespectacled KnowNothingKnowItAll offers a generalized statement on Grey's death-themed videos, only for the listener to [[Film/AnnieHall pull Grey himself from behind an easel, who tells the generalizer "You know nothing of my work"]].
183** In "Why Nevada Owns Less Than 20% of Nevada", about US Federal Land, different plots of land are represented by TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering land cards.
184* ShownTheirWork: He always does rigorous research into his video topics[[note]]which contributes to his sporadic release schedule due to the time that involves[[/note]]. Wherever possible, he'll show interviews with primary sources or cite secondary sources to back up his claims. Sometimes he'll release companion videos where he'll detail the research process and [[WikiWalk how far he'll go]] to either confirm or disprove information.
185* SiblingRivalry: In both "Who Owns the Statue of Liberty?" and "Grey Grades the State Flags", New Jersey and New York are depicted as constantly trying to one-up one another, a lot more so than other state pairings. In the former video, New York is generally depicted as a BigSisterBully with regards to New Jersey's piers on the Hudson River that New York once demanded tax on because she claimed all of the river, befitting of the ''Empire'' State. The latter video New Jersey teases New York constantly, to the latter's displeasure, for having a (ever so slightly) better state flag as ranked by Grey.
186* TheSmurfettePrinciple: Inverted. While countries and states are generally represented as female and referred to with she/her pronouns, Vatican City is the only one referred to as a "he," considering [[UsefulNotes/ThePope his]] demographics.
187* SoBadItsGood: {{Invoked}} in "Grey Grades the State Flags", where he concludes this regarding the infamous flag of Maryland: "So hideous, it falls right off the bottom to land back on the top. S-tier, Maryland."
188* SophisticatedAsHell: In explaining why the Perfect Steffen boarding method can't be used, one of the reasons Grey lists is that passengers would "flip the hell out" upon seeing that they were in boarding group 123.
189* SouthernGentlemen: With a name like "General Beauregard Lee" he concludes that Georgia's native groundhog seasonal predictor must be one of these, and lists off a few characteristics he assumes said groundhog must-have.
190* SoulCrushingDeskJob: In the Pirate videos, the Quartermaster describes the life of a law-abiding sailor as this.
191-->"[...] working 9 to 5 on a ship of the Empire for minimum wage, staying out of trouble and saving for retirement as banal days pass, eroding the dreams and aspirations of your younger self, leaving you at the end to wonder how it all slipped away."
192* SternOldJudge: The [[AnthropomorphicPersonification personification]] of the American Supreme Court always has a deadpan facial expression, a JudicialWig, and a gavel. He is also [[TheComicallySerious comically serious]]. Sometimes there are nine of them to represent the nine justices on the Supreme Court.
193* StickFigureAnimation: Humans (excluding portraits of [[HistoricalDomainCharacter Historical Domain Characters]]) are drawn as stick figures, including CGP Grey himself.
194* TheStinger: "Who Owns the Statue of Liberty?" contains one about Shooters Island, a tiny island north of Staten Island that is currently a bird sanctuary.
195* StopHittingYourself:
196** Discussed in the video about the debt limit, which compares the debt limit to Congress doing this to the President.
197** "Who Owns the Statue of Liberty?" depicts New York doing this to New Jersey.
198** "The Sneaky Plan to Subvert the Electoral College for the Next Election" depicts a figure representing [=NaPoVoInterCo=] doing this to the Electoral College. Because the video features several states inflicting HoistByHisOwnPetard on the Electoral College, this is fitting.
199* StraightManAndWiseGuy: In "How to be a Pirate", the Quartermaster and Captain respectively. The Quartermaster speaks in constant deadpan, manages the "boring business" side of the ship such as budgeting, and [[WhenHeSmiles smiles exactly once and very slightly, at the prospect of treasure]]. The Captain [[{{TalkLikeAPirate}} talks like a pirate]] (without the accent), constantly gets distracted by his surroundings in the Quartermaster video, and almost always smiling, even [[BlackComedy when he's describing how he tortures his enemies to death if they fight and lose]].
200* SuspiciouslySpecificDenial: Subverted in "Las Vegas isn't Las Vegas":
201-->'''Grey:''' The casinos were rich enough to provide their own [essential services], notably using their security forces as ''de facto'' police - which might not sound on the up-and-up, but this was [[TheMafia the mob]] running things, and, of course, ''they don't any more''...[[SincerityMode actually, really, they don't, it's all run by about two companies now]].[[note]]Cue "What's the difference?" jokes.[[/note]]
202* TalkLikeAPirate: When a personality matrix is shown in the "How to be a Pirate" videos, one of the vectors is "Yarr!". For Pirates, it's the only vector other than Aggression that's at maximum level, but for Surgeons and Empire Sailors, this vector is empty.
203* TheseAreThingsManWasNotMeantToKnow: The Planck Length is the smallest distance that can be meaningfully measured. In "[[https://youtu.be/pUF5esTscZI Metric Paper]]," Grey describes it as "a sort of reality pixel that it's best not to think about."
204* UranusIsShowing: Discussed in one video, where he mentions the problematic pronunciations of Uranus, i.e. "you-RAIN-us"[[note]]your anus[[/note]] and "YUR-in-us"[[note]]urine-us[[/note]]. In TheStinger he asks the viewers to avert this trope and pronounce it like the Greek Ouranos ("oo-RON-ohs") instead. [[note]] Someone in the comment then pointed out that the Ouranos version had connotations of Ron Weasley porn.... This is WhyWeCannotHaveNiceThings. [[/note]]
205* VisualPun: In "How To Become Pope", when it comes time for the College of Cardinals to begin the voting process to elect a new pope, their means of communication with the outside world are confiscated. This includes electronic tablets, though people only paying attention to Grey's narration might not notice one of the cardinals has a tablet made of stone.
206* TheVoice: Grey considers himself a pretty private person, so in most of his videos, he becomes this trope. When appearing as himself, however, various methods are employed to hide his identity. These include framing his face out (People Pronouncing Uranus video), or standing behind a tree in WebVideo/{{Numberphile}}’s "Favourite Numbers" videos.
207** In WebVideo/{{Vlogbrothers}} videos where he is in the frame, he is usually censored with a large black box, sometimes annotated with his name. (The same courtesy was extended to Creator/JohnGreen's wife, "The Yeti," before she started hosting The Art Assignment.)
208* WhoWantsToLiveForever: Deconstructed. Grey posits in "Why Die?" that death is a degenerative disease like any other, and that accepting death as natural was a dangerous deterrent to the life-extension that he believes will be feasible, comparing resigning yourself to aging to [[UsefulNotes/StockholmSyndrome a hostage falling in love with their kidnapper]].
209* WikiWalk: Non-internet version (sort of), he describes "The Forest of All Knowledge" like this, as a place where there are rabbit-trails galore, and walking off the path you intend to tread leads you to get lost in its depths, far away from the topic you wished to learn about.
210* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: In "Rules for Rulers", Grey notes that the leader of a successful coup will usually purge some of the supporters who helped him come to power, and will often continue to employ some of the key supporters who served the deposed ruler. This may sound like a bad idea, but it actually makes sense. Since a revolutionary leader must promise a greater share of the treasure to convince enough keys to power to switch sides, and the size of the treasury hasn’t increased in the meantime, the only way to free up enough money to pay off the most necessary keys is to identify and eliminate whichever key supporters are no longer needed. Good revolutionary supporters may not have the necessary qualities to help their master govern once in power, in which case they must be ruthlessly discarded.
211* YourPrincessIsInAnotherCastle: A few of Grey's videos seem like they're about to conclude when they're not anywhere close to the end of the bar. The most extreme example is "How Many Countries Are There?", where he notes counting the number of United Nations members gets you 193 ("Fastest video ever, right?") but it's only 25 seconds into a video that's over 5 minutes long.
212* ZebrasAreJustStripedHorses: Notably averted in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOmjnioNulo "Zebras vs Horses: Animal Domestication"]], in which Grey points out all the differences between horses and zebras, and how they would make zebras horrible candidates for domestication.

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