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Superman: Is everything okay? —Justice League Unlimited, "Dead Reckoning"
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In certain situations, characters (and writers, it seems) just have to make certain puns. And they're usually the same ones. But Tropes Are Not Bad, as in many cases the audience may feel disappointed or even slightly confused if the obligatory joke fails to come up.
Nonetheless, many writers try to inject some freshness into the obligatory, by lampshading or overt and deliberate subversion.
- Anything involving a primate is going to involve lines like "Monkeying Around" or Making a Monkey('s uncle) out of someone," and "Monkey Business".
- We're just going to make it easy and say that whenever a situation with an animal comes up, somebody will have to quote a saying or phrase having to do with it.
- Anything involving honey, molasses, maple syrup, etc. will be described as a "sticky situation."
- A person Bound and Gagged, or even just bound, will be described as "a little tied up right now."
- If an animal of some kind is biting someone, an onlooker will be prompted to ask, "What's eating you?"
- Any hand-related pun when dealing with hand monsters or armless people.
- Cat-related jokes are sometimes catastrophic or catholic. They may leave you catatonic.
- Any time electricity is involved, you know someone will quip about a "shocking" situation.
- Similarly, expect An Ice Person to be surrounded by an abundance of "Ice to meet you," "Take a chill pill," etc. jokes.
See also Incredibly Lame Pun, Bond One-Liner, Quip to Black, and others, which have considerable overlap. You Look Like You've Seen a Ghost is one subtrope. A Punny Name or Unfortunate Name resulting in this may make someone a Phrase Catcher.
Comic Books[]
- The Spectacular Spider-Man had Green Goblin do the "tied up" joke, chuckling to himself that you gotta love the classics.
Literature[]
- To hear Harry Dresden tell it, he's the original this. He claims that he's now so well known that if he isn't flip and punny to every supernatural being of a distinctly higher weight class than him, they'll be insulted, because they expect him to be. Note that this was a retrospective excuse to Sigrun for pissing off Odin's secretaries.
Live-Action TV[]
- On QI, giving the obvious-but-incorrect answer causes an alarm to ring and the panelist to forfeit points. Obvious riffs such as these sometimes trigger the klaxon as well.
- Castle uses the "tied up right now" variant when the eponymous character had bound himself to a chair to see whether he could free himself. Played with in another episode Lanie finds out that the recent victim, who had been burnt in a pizza oven, has the last name "Burns". She tells Castle, who had started to look excited, to make the Obligatory Joke...but it turns out that Castle had actually recognized the name.
Newspaper Comics[]
- Michael Caesar of The Boondocks often makes obligatory bad jokes about current events or whatever the topic of the day is about. His best friend Huey's response is usually to stop and glare at him, and then walk offscreen without saying a word. Caesar usually quips that he needs a better audience.
Web Original[]
- Yahtzee's review of No More Heroes opened with the song "No More Heroes" by The Stranglers, which he cut short stating it was too obvious.
- The Nostalgia Critic did a review of the Care Bears movie, and when the leader of the Care Bear Cousins said his name, Braveheart, Critic showed a clip from Braveheart, asking how could he not do that joke. Later, he opened a review of the film Alaska with "Sarah Palin is stupid. That's my obligatory Sarah Palin reference out of the way. Now, Alaska..."
Web Comics[]
- On this page of Dinosaur Comics, T-Rex complains about the overuse of the phrase "a whale of a good time" in conjunction with literal whales.
T-Rex: It should mean "a good time that is large or immense: METAPHORICALLY like a whale", but the metaphor's broken because it's always used on literal friggin' whales. "Dog-gone great" is getting there too. |
Western Animation[]
- In the Danny Phantom episode "Doctor's Disorders", Penelope Spectra tries to get a sample of Danny's DNA to make a perfect body for herself. When she's not looking, Danny swaps it out with something from his dad's uses hankerchief. The result is Spectra turning into a Jack Fenton-shaped snot monster. Danny comments, "There's a 'You blew it' pun here somewhere, but I'd rather not." When the fight begins, Spectra growls, "Let's boogie!" to which Danny replies, "That's exactly the kind of pun I was trying to avoid with the 'You blew it' comment!"
- In a particularly silly episode of The New Batman Adventures, Robin and Batgirl are fighting genetically altered giant cows. Batgirl lampshades the fact that Robin couldn't resist yelling "Holy Cow!"
- The page quote was used in Justice League after the heroes foiled Gorilla Grodd's plot to turn all of humanity into gorillas.
- In one episode of Kim Possible, Kim discovers that the villain keeps electric eels, to which she replies, "The puns just write themselves. Shocking, isn't it?" Of course, the villain says the very same line later when he reveals his electric eels.
Video Games[]
- It's lampshaded in Strong Bads Cool Game for Attractive People episode 5. Homestar is in a dungeon suspended by his "arms". Strong Bad asks him what's up:
Homestar: "Oh, you know, not much..." |