The TVTropes Trope Finder is where you can come to ask questions like "Do we have this one?" and "What's the trope about...?" Trying to rediscover a long lost show or other medium but need a little help? Head to Media Finder and try your luck there. Want to propose a new trope? You should be over at You Know, That Thing Where.
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openNo Title Western Animation
Applies to anime too, and I think the trope may have originated there. I don't watch anime, and I've mostly been seeing it in Friendship Is Magic, though, so Western Animation it is.
It's the inverse of Dull Eyes of Unhappiness. People's eyes getting extra shiny, with a little shaky sparkle, when they're ecstatic. Don't see any mention of it on Dull Eyes of Unhappiness, though, and I can't find it by searching for "shiny happy eyes". Am I being stupid, or does it not exist?
openNo Title Western Animation
In "Smart and Smarter" from The Simpsons, Lisa thinks Maggie the smartest one in the family and starts looking for new things to identify her, like being a cowgirl or a cheerleader. I thought of Quest for Identity, but that is an amnesia trope. Is there an appropriate trope that perfectly describes this episode subplot?
openNo Title Western Animation
The gang of heroes has penetrated the Supervillain Lair to foil the enemy's scheme. They proceed to the Control Room, but what's this? It's The Dragon blocking their way. The heroes could probably take him out if they worked together, but time is of the essence. No problem, The Lancer will stay behind and and hold him off. The others continue on to the next floor, only to run into The Brute, also itching for a fight. So The Big Guy stays to fight him while the remaining members go on. Rinse and repeat until only one or two heroes remain to face The Big Bad.
The first time I saw this was in the "Pryde of the X-Men" special, and I saw it again in comic form in Excalibur #100. I can't think of where else it's been done, but it seems like a simple way of giving all your heroes and all your villains screen time.
openNo Title Western Animation
I THINK a scene in Futurama played out something like this:
The usual characters are sitting in the room with the table and Fry walks in and said "What's everyone been up to?" to which Dr. Zoidberg nervously shouted "Not drinking juice out of the dumpster, if that's what you're asking!"
Thus by denying something that was so abjectly repulsive that no one even would have ever SUSPECTED that was what he had just been doing unless they had seen him doing it, he in fact informed them that he was just doing that loathesome thing.
Is this an official trope?
openNo Title Western Animation
I've seen this alot in western animation, but I'm pretty sure it's common in other media.
It's basically like this: Bob is taking care of Alice, who has a cold. Later in the episode Alice is no longer sick, but Bob has caught the cold from her. Thrus,the role between caretaker and patient is reversed by the en of the episode.
I've could've sworn we had this already...
Edited by OreochanopenNo Title Western Animation
Is there a trope for when a character is inflated like a balloon, and then goes flying away when they "deflate"? I know I've seen this in cartoons, but I couldn't find that exact thing when I searched around.
openNo Title Western Animation
The trope where there is one normal/generic character in a large cast mainly consisting of other characters who are alot less normal/generic. A good example would be Arthur but the cover stars of old DC Thomson Comics would fit this trope as well.
Its a bit like the generic guy but then some.
Edited by HueJass84openNo Title Western Animation
Is there a trope that is basically "All Adult Animation Is South Park"?
openNo Title Western Animation
I've seen in a lot of comedy shows that the characters have no sense of priority: serious injuries are either laughed at or ignored completely (never taken to the hospital), and things like sports and watching new episodes of a drama are almost life-or-death situations for them. It's like a combination of Black Comedy and Serious Business used as a universal opinion. It's used on most of Seth MacFarlane's shows (Family Guy, American Dad, etc.) and on Butch Hartman's shows (Danny Phantom, Fairly Oddparents, etc.),Spongebob and even on the older cartoons like Looney Tunes. What is the trope for this?
Edited by TheHeightenedIllusionistopenNo Title Western Animation
What's the type of run/charge by cartoon characters where their legs/feet run around in a circular blury motion.
Sonic the Hedgehog from the Genesis games has this type run.
openNo Title Western Animation
Do we have a trope for when a character is of a different species from everyone else? For instance, in the cartoon Birdz, literally everyone is a bird except for Sleepy Bat, who is Exactly What It Says on the Tin.
openNo Title Western Animation
Is there a step-sister trope to No One Could Survive That! where a character falls into fire/quicksand, etc. but is merely 'captured' and shows up unhurt later? It's something of a Saturday morning cartoon thing, where characters and viewers alike can safely assume that no one ever actually dies.
Not the same thing as an anime dub or edit that spares a character who died in the original or retcons his death.
Edited by CharisetopenNo Title Western Animation
In the end of a cartoon, the babies look exactly like miniature versions of the adult couple, with exact gender correlation, like in the end of Lady And The Tramp. Does this exist?
Edit: Omg found it on this page. Gender Equals Breed, eh?
Edited by leurzopenNo Title Western Animation
Pretty sure this only happens in western animation. The character goes to say something, sometimes with his finger pointed up to denote knowledge, but then for one reason or another finds himself speechless. And sometimes his finger will curl downward as a physical response to that. I've seen it happen Ed, Edd n' Eddy, Dexter's Lab (the Computress episode especially), and Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.
openNo Title Western Animation
In MLP:Fi M, Diamond Tiara brags about how her outfit shows off her cutie mark. However, her outfit actually completely covers up the cutie mark. It sounds like Informed Attribute, but that is an exampleless supertrope.
I thought it might also be Stealth Insult, except that she says it herself so it can't be an insult. So where should I put it?
Edited by storyyelleropenNo Title Western Animation
I wonder if the following is Adored by the Network, or just something similar: rather than a show that is adored at the expense of other shows, it is some season of a show that is adored at the expense of other seasons of that show.
Some cases I've encountered in the last couple of years:
- In their late evening broadcast of Ben 10, Cartoon Network would only loop through season 3.
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer reruns seem to be focused on season 4.
- In Disney XD reruns of the 1994 Spider-Man series, there seems to be a special fondness for season 1, especially the Alien Symbiote episodes: at seemingly random intervals, they will restart the rerun sequence, preferably with these episodes both at the start and end of that adored season.
openNo Title Western Animation
This appears in perhaps maybe anime and live action even.
The male character becomes all maternal after caring for a helpless creature or infant or both.
openNo Title Western Animation
This happens alot in cartoons there is often one episode where they shrink down and go inside a character for one reason or another. I've seen this in loadsa cartoons eg Spongebob, Rugrats, Phineas and Ferb and Futurama.
This applies to any animated format, or even comics. Basically, it's the trope about how cartoon/anime characters don't age (or more specifically, look exactly the same) as the series goes on, even though they age in-universe. Sometimes a character will look the same as they age from 14 to 18.
Even weirder is that sometimes they'll introduce new characters who are younger than the cast now, but older than the characters were in the first episode. But in order to show an age difference, they draw those characters to be younger (usually by making them smaller or some other trick of the trade) than the cast.