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Space Whale Aesops in Western Animation.

  • 3-2-1 Penguins!:
    • "Trouble on Planet Wait-Your-Turn": Wanting to go first all the time will only lead to trouble, like your planet slipping out of its orbit and heading towards the sun.
    • "The Amazing Carnival of Complaining": If you ever complain, you'll literally turn into a seed of discontent and be used to depopulate a planet.
    • "Moon Menace on Planet Tell-a-Lie": It's wrong to lie. Because if you do, the moon will flatten you and your planet.
    • "The Green-Eyed Monster": Don't ever feel envious, or else green-eyed monsters will appear and start eating all of your shit.
    • "More is More": You need to know when to say "enough", so that a giant space funnel won't threaten to consume your planet.
  • Adventure Time: In "It Came From The Nightosphere", Finn learns the hard way that you shouldn't meddle in other people's relationships with their parents, however strained they are, without asking... because it might turn out their father is literally a soul-sucking fiend from Hell.
  • The Amazing World of Gumball episode "The Copycats": Plagiarism is bad and will lead to you dying in a fiery crash at the bottom of a canyon.
  • American Dad!: "The Two Hundred" takes place After the End as a result of Roger entering a Large Hadron Collider. It culminates in most of Langley Falls (barring the Smith Family) turning into cannibals and going to war against every last persona Roger has ever made (given form from the aforementioned Collider incident) before their fight is interrupted by a mutant, monstrous Klaus, being rode by Jeff. We then Flash Forward years later, seeing a now elderly Stan having just told the events of the episode to a group of his grandchildren, including numerous implied to be adopted children and Jeff and Hayley's biological daughter as the rest of the family, and Greg, are now tending to a lakeside farm, Klaus is in the lake playing with other kids, and Roger is lazing around, all while Stan imparts a lesson on Hayley and Jeff's daughter: never let Roger go in a Hadron Collider.
  • Amphibia: Shoplifting is bad (and anyone telling you otherwise is not your friend), because the thing you're stealing will strand you in an alternate dimension full of frog people. It will then fall into the hands of a tyrannical amphibious Multiversal Conqueror. The majority of the series focuses mainly on the "toxic friend" aspect rather than the "shoplifting" aspect, but they're both there.
  • Played humorously in The Angry Beavers episode "The Loogie Hawk": if you remove a species from its natural habitat, the forest will fall apart. No, really, it will literally and immediately fall apart.
  • Arthur: The episode "To Eat or Not to Eat" advises kids to be careful of the artificial additives in what you eat... because it might have ingredients that are not only addictive but make you dizzy, lethargic, and "sad" when "the molecules [that are in them] die." For all the media panic over Scary Science Words on food ingredient lists, substances that are apparently as addictive as crack cocaine go WAY beyond any realistic health risk.
  • Batman: The Animated Series An overlooked lesson in "Pretty Poison" is that, if you go to confront somebody who uses Drugged Lipstick, cover your mouth to ensure they can't insistently lock lips with you. Batman learns this firsthand when Poison Ivy's pet Man-Eating Plant restrains his head so she can smash their lips together in a steamy goodnight kiss.
  • Big City Greens:
    • If you don't take your child on a traditional camping trip into the forest and just give them a makeshift campout at home instead on the day they get a wild urge, this will anger them to the point of becoming a Wild Child.
    • If you don't take your enemies seriously and treat them like a joke, mocking them over their constant failures and shrugging them off, they'll bite right back at you and destroy the most important thing in your family.
  • Many episodes of Captain Planet and the Planeteers, in a desperate attempt to hammer in the importance of the issues, provide ludicrously overblown and immediate consequences for small-scale ecological harm. The main problem is the constant portrayal of pollution being caused by supervillains For the Evulz.
  • Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue: Don't smoke pot or else you'll turn into a Big Brother Bully, trip, get told off by cartoon characters, and, if you keep smoking pot, end up looking like Freddy Kreuger.
  • Chowder: From "Grubble Gum", make sure to always share, or else the world will be destroyed by a Katamari made of gum.
    Truffles: This is what happens when you don't share!
  • Danny Phantom: The Ultimate Enemy tells us not to cheat on a test, otherwise all of your friends and family will die and the future world will be completely destroyed by you. The series also has such gems as, "don't fight back against the bullies at school, or else the ghost of a dead kid from the '50s, who was bullied himself, will take over your body and trap your soul in a spirit world version of his high school," "don't let jealousy of a friend consume you, or you'll make a wish to have the thing that they have and become a raging ghost monster," "don't be a scrooge at Christmas, otherwise a ghost writer will shove you in a book and force you to accept Christmas for what it is," "don't refuse an offer to become an apprentice of someone you hate, or they'll plot to make a clone of you to become that apprentice," and "don't test your scientific experiments with your best friend standing right next to them without double checking everything's ready to go, otherwise they'll get hurt, become a half-ghost, and plot to make you look like a sociopath and drive your wife away from you so that she'll marry your friend instead."
  • Dexter's Laboratory had one episode, "Dos Boot", which aired in June 2002, with the aesop of "Don't open an email unless you know where it's from" but that quickly degenerated into "Don't mess with the internal workings of a PC or you'll end up stuck as cross-dresser photos on the wall by a possible Yaoi Fan" (that was one interpretation of the episode). Doubles as a Spoof Aesop too.
  • Dino Squad generally treats global warming as a bad thing, but in one episode tried to tell us part of the reason we should work to prevent it is because otherwise some prehistoric danger that was frozen in ice will be defrosted, mutated by a supervillain, and destroy us all.
  • Doc McStuffins often falls into this trope since usually if there's a moral, it's trying to link toy ailments with human ones:
    • "Engine Nine, Feelin' Fine": Drink plenty of water, or else your friend will think you're irreparable, and discard you.
    • "Lil' Egghead Feels the Heat": Don't spend too much time in the sun, or else you'll start saying random words instead of what you were trying to say.
    • "Gooooal!": Admit when you're injured, or else your arm may fall off.
    • "Hazel Has a Sleepover": Don't drink too much water before bedtime, or else water will leak out of your nose while you sleep.
  • Doctor Snuggles: Given this show's... unique style, a literal space whale would be far less crazy than most of its plots.
    • "The Remarkable Fidgety River": Don't pollute the water, or aliens will assume that it is of no importance to us and steal it.
    • "The Great Disappearing Mystery": Don't mistreat your pet bird, or a giant alien bird will capture you and keep you as his pet.
  • In The Drug Avengers, the reason that the Earth won't be able to join the Galactic Federation in the future is that you smoked a joint at that Radiohead concert.
  • DuckTales (2017) has the moral "don't rely on a Get-Rich-Quick Scheme to get ahead in life, or else you may end up accidentally erasing your family and friends from existence while traveling through time in a time machine in an effort to get rich."
  • Family Guy has a lampshaded version of this in which the ancient Irish race had vastly advanced technology. Then somebody invents whiskey, a few people take a sip, and crapsack island ensues.
  • Frosty Returns: We need to save the environment, because in a world where winter and snow don't exist, Frosty couldn't exist either!
  • On one episode of Gargoyles, the distinction between magic and science is discussed, with a focus on keeping your heritage alive—including the "magical" aspects of it. The Aesop works out as "Believe in your grandmother's teachings, or else a giant magic humanoid raven will destroy your land For the Evulz."
  • Futurama:
    • "Decision 3012" gives us "voting Republican will cause robots to rise up and destroy humanity."
    • "I Dated a Robot:" Virtual romance is bad because the programs are really kidnapped celebrity heads forced to be illegally cloned in to robots. The episode has an in-universe one where humans dating robots will lead to the end of civilization, because all civilization is based on the desire to impress the opposite sex on the slim chance of gettin' some.
  • One of Garfield and Friends' U.S. Acres cartoons featured Roy leaving the farm to go into showbiz, and joining the annoyingly edutaining Buddy Bears show to teach kids proper manners and hygiene habits. He played the Goofus to the female Buddy Bear's Gallant, and not only were the consequences ridiculous, but one of the Bears literally warned them as cause-and-effect relationships along the lines of "If you don't [do polite/clean/encouraged-by-parents'-groups behavior], a [random large heavy object] will fall on your head."
    • In one of the Garfield segments, Jon tried out a new recipe, which proved to be unpopular with the three of them, but Jon hates to waste food, so he put it (in the pot) in the fridge where over time it gained sentience and grew limbs, slowly becoming a monster that took over the fridge, and the whole house. The Aesop being "don't leave your leftovers in the fridge too long or they'll turn into a monster".
  • Gravity Falls:
    • The show gives us the decent moral of Cheaters Never Prosper...because if you cheat, then the supernatural means you have been using to cheat will inevitably turn out to have a rather hazy moral compass and will attempt to murder your opponent, forcing you to save them. Even funnier? The show gives us this moral not once, but TWICE.
    • "Soos and the Real Girl" takes the already questionable moral "Virtual romance is bad, you should 'mature' and find real love" and adds "Because your AI girlfriend might be a sentient, murderous yandere".
    • "Roadside Attraction" combines a reasonable moral ("flirting when you don't really mean it will only hurt people") with a somewhat less reasonable one ("also, it may get your juices sucked out by a spider-person who preys mainly on sleazeball pick-up artists").
  • A British series that also aired in Australia and Canada, called Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids, was MADE of this trope. Watch too much TV? You'll end up as a potato chip at the back of someone's fridge. Get arrogant and fail to do your schoolwork properly? A gremlin will destroy your brain's memory centers. This was fused with a jarring blend of Nightmare Fuel and a claymation old man mistreating his pet spider, played for laughs.
    • The last part is rather hypocritical, given the tale of the boy who tortured a string of pet spiders to death, only to end up with his innards invaded and occupied by the ghosts of the unborn children of one of his victims and taking up knitting.
  • Some of the "Growing Up with Hello Kitty" segments in Hello Kitty:
    • "Replying Properly": Don't say, "Yeah, what?" instead of "yes" when someone calls your name, or a monster will come who gets bigger when you say, "Yeah, what?".
    • "Eating Nicely": Eat your food and don't play with your utensils, or else the utensils will get sad.
    • "Cleaning Up My Mess": Put your stuff away or it will complain to you telepathically about wanting to go "home".
  • Hey Arnold! has "don't skip school or you'll miss surprise carnival day." Bizarrely, there was an actual aesop (Arnold and Gerald had a horrible time skipping school that made it more trouble than just going to school), but that was what they ended with.
  • Infinity Train attempts this:
    • Don't try to run away from the past or you will be abducted by a magical infinitely long train full of pocket universes that will constantly try to kill you
    • Also don't try to live in the past or you will be unable to escape from the train that is trying to kill you
    • Also don't blame yourself for things that are not your fault or else the conductor of the train will turn your traveling companions into giant cockroaches. It was a really weird show.
  • Kaeloo: Make sure to clean your room, otherwise the socks you left under your bed will try to murder you for forgetting them.
  • On King of the Hill, in one of the Halloween episodes, the resident Moral Guardian gets a group of children to go on a tour in her "Hallelujah House," showing various scenes of how she views atheists and "the Druids." One of them has a pair of actors talking about wanting to have pre-marital sex. The lady suddenly rotates the scene, now showing morgue cabinets with two pairs of legs marked HIM and HER. These are real, believe it or not.
    "I guess the old saying is true: Sex kills."
  • The cartoon short Ladies First: Don't be vain and don't expect to always be first just because you're female, or else you'll be Stewed Alive and eaten by talking tigers.
  • The Loud House:
    • The episode "No Such Luck" has the Aesop don't lie to your parents and sisters about being bad luck, or they'll believe you and disallow you to partake in any family events and make you sleep outside
    • "Making the Grade": Don't downplay your intelligence, or your classmates will all get strep throat, your dad will forget the recipe for dinner and make something gross, your sister will lose a competition, your grandfather will be lost for an hour, and everyone will blame your brother because he was the one who suggested you do it.
    • An in-universe example in "The Price of Admission": Characters sing a song that claims that "every time you lie, a leprechaun will cry".
  • Martha Speaks: The episode "Helen's All Thumbs": If you play video games, you will become obsessed with them and start hallucinating sprites from the game...but not necessarily.
  • Milly, Molly: In "Magic Muffins", the Aesop is "Don't skip breakfast, or else you'll fall Asleep in Class and get writer's block. On the other hand, breakfast is guaranteed to get rid of writer's block."
  • Muppet Babies (2018): The moral of "Ralph Gets the Blues" is to realise that It's Okay to Cry and tell your friends if you're sad... or you'll literally turn blue.
  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic is set in a fantasy world and has An Aesop Once per Episode, so it is inevitable.
    • Dear Princess Celestia, no matter how strong and smart you may be, there are some things you just can't do alone. Friends have a special bond that has more meaning than you can find in any book. So cherish your friends, nurture your relationships with them, and always hold them near and dear to your heart, because together you can smite evil with a badass rainbow Wave-Motion Gun. Because friendship... is magic.
    • Remember kids, it's better to give than receive—or else you'll turn into a giant greedy monster and practically destroy your hometown.
    • "Hearth's Warming Eve": You'd better get along with people different from you or evil ice elementals will freeze your land in an ice age.
    • "A Canterlot Wedding": You should trust your instincts, because if somebody seems to be acting unlike themselves, they're perhaps being impersonated by a shapeshifting monster.
    • "Bats": Be understanding of those whose needs conflict with yours, or else someone is going to turn into a half vampire fruit bat and you're going to have to sacrifice your human-sized apple to turn them back. Also, don't let your friends force you into something you feel uncomfortable about, or else you'll be the one to turn into a half vampire fruit bat.
  • Numberjacks:
    • Know your math, or people/things will be forced to act erratically forever.
    • Downplayed in "Say What You Mean", which has a bit of a moral about being specific, and involves people making wishes and the Problem Blob granting them in a Literal Genie or Jackass Genie way. However, there is no implication that the people deserved this.
    • "What, How, Check": Always check back on your work, or you'll cause cornflakes to appear ad infinitum, and some clothes to keep shrinking and growing.
  • Oh Yeah! Cartoons: The "Curse of the Werebaby" short gives us "Act your age, or else you will turn into a literal big baby."
  • In Ozzy & Drix, the average boy that the characters live inside of puts on a few pounds in one episode. Apparently, this is enough to have his otherwise healthy body nearly go into cardiac arrest.
  • Peg + Cat: From "The Giant Problem", don't judge people based on size or jump to conclusions, or else you'll assume they want to eat you.
  • Phineas and Ferb:
    • The episode "Phineas and Ferb Get Busted" gives us "If you tattle on your brothers, they'll get sent to a military school where they'll have all their spirit crushed." Though perhaps justified as Candace dreamed the whole thing. While in a dream by Perry.
    • The episode "The Chronicles of Meap" has the Aesop "Don't judge a book by its cover... or else you might mistake a cute-looking doll for an intergalactic cop who can beat up alien poachers."
  • PJ Masks has generally realistic Aesops (as realistic as one can get in a show about grade-school kids fighting nocturnal villains in their superpowered pajamas, anyway) when the kids' negative behaviors tend to get in the way of them functioning as a team and completing their mission. But in one episode the lesson is "Be nice to your pet, or it will betray you to the villain who will take over your HQ."
  • The "moral" of the Rainbow Parade cartoon "Grandfather's Clock"; don't play around with or smash clocks, because they have hearts and feelings just like you and me!
  • The Real Ghostbusters:
    • "Janine, You've Changed": Don't try to change yourself to impress your crush, or else a demon will possess you.
    • "The Boogeyman is Back": Admit when you're scared, or the Boogeyman will emerge, wreak havoc on your city, kidnap you, and try to kill three children.
  • Really Rosie: If you don't care, your parents will leave you at home and you'll be eaten whole then vomited out by a lion that will end up staying for the weekend.
  • Mundane pranks turning into supernatural problems is a pillar of Regular Show's plotlines.
    Benson: I hope you've learned something from all this!
    Rigby: Yeah. Make sure we do our chores so you don't narc on us to a giant eyeball.
  • Rick and Morty:
    • "Total Rickall" teaches us to appreciate the negative sides of our loved ones as well as the positive sides... because if you have only positive memories of someone, then that means they're shape-shifting alien parasites who have implanted false memories into your head.
    • "Rattlestar Ricklactica" teaches that, if someone tells you to stay in the car, you probably should do so... unless you want an alien snake biting you in which case you'll kill it in self-defense, feel bad enough that you'll send an Earth snake to the alien snake's home planet, and end up causing said planet to freak out about possible life outside their world that they're willing to kill you via Time Travel.
    • "Rickdependence Spray" teaches the moral of how you should always tell the truth or else you'll unleash giant sperm monsters onto the world and create a giant incest baby.
  • Rolie Polie Olie: Subverted in "The Lie", which seems to have the moral of not to lie or else the Brussels sprout you pretended to eat will grow really huge. However, the episode turned out to all be a Guilt-Induced Nightmare.
  • Robot Chicken:
  • Referenced in The Simpsons: In one episode Rod and Todd Flanders are watching a religious-themed educational show, but since the star characters are sheep, they don't see how their problems and solutions apply to humans.
  • South Park:
    • "Free Willzyx" has a literal Space Whale Aesop: "If you mess with kids' minds, they will shoot a whale into space."
    • "It Hits the Fan": "Don't abuse swear words or an Eldritch Abomination will awaken!" (That said, the real aesop is more like "Swearing isn't wrong, but having certain words be taboo makes them more fun.")
    • "Fun with Veal": "Eating veal is wrong because it is made from mistreated baby cows, but if you don't eat meat at all, you become a pussy." (yes, quite literally).
    • "Funnybot" had perhaps the weirdest one of all. "Don't have comedy awards or a robot will destroy the world".
    • "The Biggest Douche of the Universe" has, "Don't try to communicate with the dead, or else you'll get abducted by aliens and win the award for 'Biggest Douche of the Universe.'"
  • Spliced loved this trope:
    • Lampshaded in "Roots": "I promise I'll never be lazy enough to turn into a tree again!"
    • "Cleaning Up": "Have good hygiene or your dirt will take on a life of its own and try to replace you"
    • "Stompabout" has two in-universe examples from Wingus about getting angry. Firstly that if Joe doesn't learn to control his anger, he'll become a cyborg and sink the island with his robot legs. The second that if he is too determined not to get angry, Fuzzy will become a Super-Soldier and take over the island (the latter became a Chekhov's Gun in "Sgt. Snuggums", which itself was an example: "Don't play pranks on your friends or they'll turn into insane Super Soldiers who see everyone as evil robots that need to be destroyed")
    • "Amazon": "Take proper care of your pets or they'll form their own civilization where you're a wanted criminal"
    • "Juice": "Don't be too determined to be popular or all your friends will turn into juice-obsessed zombies"
    • "Promises, Promises": "Fulfill your promises or your best friend will have his brain stolen by a Mad Scientist in order to power a toaster"
    • "Taste of Friendship": "Don't be jealous of your friends or your mind will be taken over by an evil squid"
    • "Sugar Low": "Don't eat too much sugar or time will stop"
    • "The Mutants Who Cried Monster": "Admit to your mistakes or a giant robot will destroy your hometown"
    • "Livin' La Vida Lava": "Don't use too much power or you'll trigger an ice age in which yetis become the dominant species"
    • "Mo' Mayo, Mo' Problems": "Don't eat too much junk food or the junk food will eat you"
    • "Walkie-Talkie-Spinesuckie": "Think for yourself or a mad scientist will make you suck out all your friends' spines to feed a baby robot and then throw them in the volcano"
    • "Whirrel Call": "Don't be cruel to animals or you'll swap brains with them"
    • "Stomach on Strike": "Live a healthy lifestyle or your organs will become sentient and jump out of your body"
    • "Bite, Shuffle and Moan": "Stay in bed when you're sick or you'll cause a Zombie Apocalypse"
  • SpongeBob SquarePants: "Jellyfish Jam" taught us not to bring wild animals home because if you do, those animals will apparently invite their buddies over to party.
    "Wild animals throw very wild parties."
  • In the Stargate Infinity episode "The Illustrated Stacey", the team goads Stacey into getting an alien tattoo by insisting that she's too boring to do such a spontaneous thing. (It should be noted here that Stacey has multiple piercings, blue lipstick, and a pink mohawk.) The Aesop is something like "don't do things just to prove yourself" or "think before you act"; but the reason for this moral is that the tattoo ink is made up of microbes that start multiplying, threatening to cover Stacey's body and kill her within the day. Fortunately, most real life tattoos do not contain deadly diseases. (And the ones that do take much longer to kill.)
  • Star vs. the Forces of Evil:
    • The moral of "Mathmagic" seems to be "Even if you're not good at something, don't be afraid to try... otherwise you might get caught in a time loop or cause a Reality-Breaking Paradox."
    • The moral of "Stump Day" could be "Respect others' holiday traditions, and don't ruin things over petty arguments... otherwise you might get attacked by a giant vindictive tree stump and threatened with bloody murder."
    • The moral of "Mewberty" seems to be "Sometime, you have to let nature run its course...even if it's temporarily turned your friend into a humanoid butterfly that's abducting all the boys in school and trapping them in web prisons."
  • Steven Universe:
    • "Steven and the Stevens": You shouldn't tell yourself to be something you're not, because then your time clones will make a band without you because you told them they aren't handsome. Then you'll get angry and try to erase them with your time thingy and then you end up fighting across all of time and space, until the original you realizes that the original original you is scared of all of it and breaks the time thingy, killing off everybody but the original original you who's holding a pile of sand that used to be the original you wondering what the fuck just happened.
      • The literal Aesop for this according to Word of God is actually "Time travel is cool, and wouldn't it be funny if we killed our main character on screen like 60 times?"
    • In "Winter Forecast", Steven wants Connie to stay a little longer and show her a video. With a snowstorm about to arrive, Garnet kisses Steven on the forehead, showing him the possible consequences of unnecessary delay: 1. Greg spends a little extra time finding decent clothes to wear. After the van meets an icy patch in the road, it skids off into a snowbank. Greg walks Connie home to her parents, but she catches a cold and is grounded by her mother. 2. Greg, Steven and Connie decide to stay warm in the van. When Connie's dad arrives, his car skids off the road and collides with Greg's van. 3. Steven and Connie run back to the house, and her mother objects to Connie spending the night at Steven's house, sending Connie's dad to pick her up. Meanwhile, the gems are trying to send a Shooting Star to the Warp Galaxy, only for Steven and Connie to interrupt the process, destroying everything. After the future visions conclude, Steven decides that Greg has to set out for Connie's house immediately. Fortunately, the weather isn't as bad when they start out, and Connie is perfectly healthy when they arrive at her house. When Connie's parents see that the snowstorm is getting worse, they invite Greg and Steven to stay overnight until the storm passes.
    • "Space Race": Sometimes, you just gotta know when to bail... out of a collapsing space rocket made of spare parts from your great-uncle's barn.
    • "A Very Special Episode": Don't overbook your schedule, or the Creepy Child you were babysitting will hypnotize a bunch of people into falling off a cliff. That being said, the entire episode was a non-canon spoof of the A Very Special Episode format, so this example was likely intentional.
  • TaleSpin has the episode "Vowel Play", in which a crime ring is using skywriting to send coded messages, and Baloo keeps misspelling words and making things worse. They eventually find a code book one of the bad guys dropped, and, working with the police, use misspelled words on purpose to interfere with the crooks' plot, but almost screw that up as well. The whole point of the episode is to teach kids that spelling is important, but how likely is it kids will actually encounter a crime ring that does something like this?
  • Teen Titans (2003) had a few, usually attached to Bizarro Episodes.
    • For example, "Crash" had a Digital Piracy Is Evil Aesop delivered by way of Beast Boy downloading a new video game and trying to play it on Cyborg's system recharger, which in turn infects Cyborg, giving him food-based hallucinations and then nearly destroys the city. (Admittedly there is a risk of getting a virus from downloading software from a shady site, but presumably just having a computer blue-screen isn't as entertaining.)
    • "Employee of the Month" is either an anti-meat Aesop or an anti-Tofu Aesop, depending on how one interprets the text. Namely, Beast Boy takes a job at a disgusting restaurant that specializes in gelled meat—except the "meat" is sentient Space Tofu seeking to steal cows for fuel and destroy the earth because "It is our way."
  • Teen Titans Go!, being a Status Quo Is God "wacky" show where anything can happen because it'll all be reset next episode anyway, has "don't try to make your friend who was pretending to be a ghost think he actually is a ghost to teach him a lesson, or he'll decide that since he's dead he can't get hurt any more and run off to jump in a volcano for fun, and while you're trying to stop him random lasers from outer space will kill half your party (the others will also die, but from more reasonable causes)".
    • In "Smile Bones" we get the lesson to chew your food, or else your bellies will become sentient and eat everything in sight.
    • "Pyramid Scheme": Never use the pyramid scheme, or else mummies will capture you for slavery.
  • Total Drama: Don't homeschool your kids. If you try it, your kid will not only become a sexist and a socially awkward outcast, they'll turn into a green monster.
  • Trollz once had Ruby encounter a Space Whale Broken Aesop: It's always good to act nice and set a good example to your friends... unless a magical spell has turned them evil anyway.
  • Numerous Victor and Valentino episodes teach morals about cheating and honesty. Apparently, if you cheat at something and/or lie to others, you'll have supernatural entities out for your blood.
  • We Bare Bears: One of the segments in "Charlie's Halloween Thing 2" teaches that you shouldn't pirate movies off the Internet, because your computer might get messed up by viruses... that summon an obnoxious, reality-warping "Internet troll".
  • Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!: "Wubbzy Tells a Whopper" has the moral "Don't lie or you'll have to face up against the monster you thought you made up."

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