agreed. That redefinition could work, but if there's no examples to support this, this should be cut, and a YKTTW made for the redefinition
Could someone else chime in on the Agents Dating
YKTTW please? It has four hats and I'm worried it's going to be launched even though it's a duplicate of a non-Trope.
That YKTTW makes a much better claim to tropeworthiness than this trope. When in a couple both characters are spies or on similar undertakings, the relationship dynamic is affected (for example, if one partner goes amiss) and the spywork is also affected. That's the reason why (at least in several crime shows I've seen; didn't check Real Life) two police officers dating is frowned upon.
Also, Undercover as Lovers is a trope about when a cover involves pretending to be a couple.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard FeynmanI still have my issue with Agents Dating (seriously, why does it cover cops?!?), but it's undeniably covers what little Spy Couple does, and better. Definitely turn into a redirect.
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I already made one topic
, so I'm going to go into more detail here.
I pointed out it wasn't clear in the last topic, which Eddie closed and said the definition was just "a couple are spies." Okay, so the definition's established, but I don't think that's tropeworthy in of itself. The description certainly doesn't help, and none of the examples have enough context that I can glean any significance to Spy Couple any more than "Doctor Couple", "Movie Star Couple", or hell even just Official Couple.
I did a quick wick check to try and find context, and didn't have any luck:
So of 10 examples, 8 have context past naming those involved. One's context seems The Same But More Specific to Official Couple, only one even begins to offer any significance making this distinctive.
Got bored, did more:
Part of the issue I have is that many of these show up in Spy Fiction where, well, most of the characters happen to be spies anyway. And since Love Interest is pretty much a given in any work, when a show is predominantly filled with spies, it's incidental that the spies will hook up.
I think that there could be a genuine trope here. As bulmabriefs points out in this YKTTW
(that is essentially a duplicate of Spy Couple with the same issues), there's a definite chance of spies dating having trust issues because they spend so much time lying and having their loyalties tested, can't talk about their past or actions, etc. That could be a genuine trope. However, it's not this trope as defined, and most of the examples (at least the ones that I am familiar with) don't fit that.
But two people who happen to be spies dating (especially when most of the cast is a spy)? Not a trope.
edited 8th Jul '14 7:08:14 PM by Larkmarn
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