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"When we pulled into Argo Port in need of R&R, —Leslie Fish & the Dehorn Crew, "Banned from Argo"
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You, possibly along with your merry band of travelers, have found a nice place to hang out. Maybe it's a nice bar, a seaside town, or a resort planet. But then...things happened. You may not have meant for bad stuff to go down, but sometimes events are beyond your control. There might have been nudity, violence, stuff blowing up, certain substances may have been imbibed/smoked, and whoops, you just started a revolution. Possibly, your name is Mike Nelson, in which case, you're probably screwed.
Whatever happened, when it's all over, you're not allowed back. EVER. Nor is anyone else on your crew.
The trope name itself is Latin, meaning "an unwelcome person." The plural is personae non gratae. It is the commonly used Real Life legal term for this trope, especially regarding diplomats (who, because of diplomatic immunity, often cannot be charged with crimes, but can be kicked out of the country).
May or may not be considered a Noodle Incident. The redheaded stepchild of You Can't Go Home Again. See also Hollywood Restraining Order. May or may not be related to Banned in China. Video games with a Karma Meter or Alliance Meters may impose this on a player at certain locations as part of Video Game Cruelty Punishment or for plot-related reasons.
Anime and Manga[]
- Has happened to the Dirty Pair on at least two occasions. They go off on leave to some distant resort with plans to lounge on the beach, but while they're there they inevitably get drawn into some sort of illicit intrigue and wind up causing massive destruction in their attempts to stop it.
- Other times, this can't happen as the place that would've banned them no longer exists.
- Something like this happened to the original Macross. A freak accident causes them to be banned from
Utahthe USAthe Earth. This is after they spend several episodes getting back to Earth through the defense of the Zentraedi.
Comic Books[]
- Recently in Knights of the Dinner Table, Nitro Ferguson got banned from GaryCon after his D-Day game ran amok even more spectacularly than games in KoDT usually do.
- Happens far too often to LARP goth Walden Woods in Dork Tower; something inevitably gets them banned from their latest gathering spot.
Walden: "Great Clans of Mud Bay, I have called this gathering in the Poochy's Last Stand pet cemetery for one reason!" |
- Implied in the Halloween party arc in FoxTrot when Paige stands up to two party crashers who were prepared to kill Peter for not having beer at the party:
Paige Fox: My friend over there is on the phone with the cops right now, so I suggest you and your party-crashing pals go back to wherever you came from. |
Fan Fic[]
- In A Trail a Mile Wide, the crew of the SSV Normandy SR2 find themselves banned from a colony after a truly epic shore leave. The story itself heavily homages the Trope Naming song.
- In the Chuck story What Fates Impose, Sarah and Bryce mention that they've been banned from Paraguay for an incident involving a donkey.
- In the Harveste series, the Addamses are banned from Haiti and Indonesia. Gomez has been banned from Africa for an undetermined amount of time, but as of 1995, has at least ten years left on the ban. Grandmama is accepted as a witch doctor in five countries and banned from the rest of the world.
Film[]
- In Casino Nicky gets his name in a Black Book and is banned from the casinos because of notorious and unsavory reputation. Sam warns him beforehand but Nicky mocks the issue as the book only has two names and one of them still is Al Capone and continues to generate waves. Then he laments, as the ban hurts his operations.
- After the massive battle that spanned half of Paris in G.I. Joe the Rise of Cobra, the Joes are banned from France. Forever.
- O Brother, Where Art Thou?: Ulysses should have stayed out of the Woolsworth [sic].
- Is that all Woolworths, or just that particular one?
- In The Party, the protagonist is supposed to be blacklisted from Hollywood after accidentally blowing up an entire movie set. Instead, his name is unknowingly put on the invitation list for an A-list Hollywood party.
- Rain Man: Charlie and Raymond get kicked out of the casino for 'counting cards', and are warned not to try this at other casinos either because the word is out about them.
- Obliquely used in Return of the Living Dead: "No, we can't: the cops said they'd shoot us if we go back to the park."
- In Little Miss Sunshine, after the fiasco at the titular beauty pageant, the family is told that the pageant will not press charges, under the condition that Olive never enter another 'little miss' pageant in the state of California, ever again. The family's reaction to the news amounted to "That's fine with us!"
Live-Action TV[]
- In an episode of Entourage, Johnny Drama is banned forever from the Playboy Mansion, then he gets readmitted and gets someone else banned from the Playboy Mansion.
- In the Doctor Who episode "Tooth and Claw", the Doctor and Rose are banned from Great Britain by Queen Victoria. Not that he cares.
- On Friends, Ross recounts how he and his first wife Carol got banned from Disneyland for having sex behind the animatronic children on "It's a Small World".
- A popular bit of Fanon is that after the events of "Upgrades," SG-1 are banned from O'Malley's for the bar fight they started under the influence of Applied Phlebotinum armbands.
- Lie to Me: As "Fold Equity" tells us, Cal Lightman has been banned from the entire city of Las Vegas after hustling one too many people at poker and something involving casino owner Ellis's wife.
- Newark, NJ mayor Cory Booker put Conan O'Brien on the "No Fly List" after Conan made a disparaging joke about his city. Conan soon after banned Cory from Burbank Airport, to which Cory retaliated by banning Conan from the entire state of New Jersey, as well as Newark's sister cities around the world. Conan subsequently banned Cory from California. Of course, as later revealed, this was all staged.
- The humorous introductions given for The Stig often mention him being banned from some location or event.
- There are a handful of hosts and musical guests on Saturday Night Live who have caused so much trouble backstage (or on the show) that they can never appear on the show again:
- Louise Lasser: Hosted the penultimate episode of Season 1 (1975-76). Michaels has gone on record in saying that Lasser was incoherent during her performance and wouldn't appear in any sketches unless she was by herself or with Chevy Chase.
- Chevy Chase: Speaking of which, he's banned from hosting (after doing so nine times, the record for a former cast member) due to his Jerkass attitude toward the writers and cast members. He has made cameos in a few episodes, but hasn't hosted since Season 22 (1996-97).
- Milton Berle: Hosted the April 14, 1979 episode, and after consistently upstaging other performers, non-stop mugging to the camera, and unscripted performance of "September Rain", Michaels banned him from the show. Berle's episode (along with Lasser's) would not be seen in syndication for twenty years after (and are included in the season DVD sets).
- Steven Seagal: Hosted the April 20, 1991 episode, and was banned soon afterwards because he had difficulty working with the cast and crew, often pitching lousy sketch ideas and getting angry that none of them were picked. This was referenced in a later episode (September 26, 1992) featuring Nicholas Cage, where Lorne Michaels responds to Cage's insistence that his monologue made him look like "the biggest jerk on the show" with the response "No, no. That would be Steven Seagal."
- Martin Lawrence: Hosted the episode that came right after the infamous Alec Baldwin-hosted show with the "Canteen Boy Goes Camping" sketch (where Canteen Boy (Adam Sandler) is molested by his scoutmaster) in 1994 (Season 19), and got himself banned when he launched into a monologue about the decline in women's hygiene. All reruns have cut off Martin's monologue and replaced it with cards that explain why this can never air on TV again.
- Adrien Brody: Hosted in Season 28 (2002-03) and got himself banned after introducing musical guest Sean Paul in a rude boy Jamaican get-up and ad-libbing. There wasn't any profanity uttered; it was just that Lorne utterly hates unscripted performances. Considering the rest of Season 28 [1], this was actually considered a highlight.
- Musical guest Sinead O'Connor was banned after ripping up a picture of Pope John Paul II and calling him 'the true enemy' after her second song (the segment was banned as well, save for an appearance on an SNL DVD special about the show's popular music performances in 25 years. The segment does appear, albeit with Lorne Michaels introducing the piece and telling viewers about the controversy behind it).
- Musical Guest Cypress Hill (on the season 19 episode hosted by Shannen Doherty) was banned after DJ Muggs lit a join on-camera (and trashed their dressing room).
- Musical Guest Fear (on the season seven episode hosted by Donald Pleasence, which is also banned for its dark, disgusting humor [2]), after a profanity-laden and set-destroying performance.
- Subverted with Elvis Costello, who was initially banned for playing "Radio Radio" (a song critical of the music publishing establishment, of which NBC certainly was), instead of the planned "Less than Zero" on the season three episode hosted by Miskell Spillman (an elderly woman who won SNL's "Anyone Can Host" contest). He eventually returned to the show in 1987 (appearing on the episode hosted by Mary Tyler Moore), and eventually took part in the show's 25th anniversary celebration by recreating his song switch.
- In the first season of Heroes, Ando and Hiro are banned from all of Mr. Linderman's casinos after they abuse Hiro's powers to cheat at poker. This becomes a problem later in the series, when they need to get back into one of the casinos in order to steal an ancient Samurai sword in Mr. Linderman's collection.
- In an episode of ICarly, Carly joins an art class after dropping her lessons with Spencer. When Spencer observes the class and freaks out like a jealous ex, ending up in a paint fight with the teacher, the Shay siblings get banned from that building forever. And it's not like they'll forget, because security took their pictures and thumb-prints.
- Sam was banned from participating in beauty pageants for a number of years.
- As recounted in a retrospective episode, the Myth Busters are banned from Esparto, California after the finale of the "Knock Your Socks Off" myth, which involved (of course) setting off a huge explosion. The problem was that they underestimated just how big the shockwave would be, so it knocked people off sofas, broke windows, set off car alarms, and knocked down ceiling tiles in the town, and a news report erroneously made it sound like the Mythbusters had leveled the town. As they put it:
"And that's why we can never go to Esparto again." |
- And after a freak accident in December 2011 where a cannonball got loose and proceeded to bounce around a nearby suburb (which caused a fair bit of property damage but luckily no injuries), the Mythbusters are no longer allowed to use the Alameda County Bomb Range.
- The Middle: Mike is banned from Brick's school after his attempt to help at the Valentine's Day craft project ends up ruining Valentine's Day.
- Happens to Buffy, believe it or not. She heads to Los Angeles for the sole purpose of assassinating Faith, who had sought out Angel to kill her after realizing if she wasn't a Complete Monster then she was very close to being one. Instead he's intent on helping her reform. Buffy attacks Angel, defies him and goes after Faith. Afterwards Angel of all people tells Buffy she is not welcome, she reacts by being upset that Faith wins and escapes justice, despite the fact Faith had turned herself in to face the consequences of her actions.
- Monk almost ends up this to the San Fransisco Police Department in the two-parter pilot episode of Monk due to Monk being forced to let Ian Sykes escape from the police due to a crippling fear of heights (ironically when attempting to stop him himself). Only reason he didn't is because Sharona got Burger to get the SFPD to listen to him again as part of a favor in exchange for getting her to resume working with Monk after he inadvertently ruined her date.
- On Two Broke Girls Caroline Channing is not welcomed at any society functions due to her father cheating thousands of people out of their money. When she gets an invitation to a gala and decides to go, she is stopped at the entrance and it is made clear that even though she has a valid invitation she is not going to be let in. It does not help that while she is trying to clear this up, people who lost money in the Ponzi Scheme recognize her and start punching her.
Literature[]
- Robert Rankin's Brentford Trilogy books frequently involve intrepid protagonists Jim Pooley and John Omally being banned from their favorite pub The Flying Swan by the mercurial part-time barman, Neville. The ban never lasts long, though.
- Skeeve is banned from Perv at the end of Myth-Nomers and Im-Pervections.
- Long before that, in the very first book of the series, Another Fine Myth, it's revealed that Frumple is banned from Deva.
- In the Gor series, Tarl Cabot was banned from returning to the city-state of Ar, but that didn't stop him from doing so.
- In RA Salvatore's novel Road of the Patriarch Jarlaxle and Artemis end up banned for life from the Bloodstone Lands. Jarlaxle points out that Elves live a long time and he'll probably outlive the ban. Artemis is not comforted by this, being a human, with the attendant shorter life span.
- Hrolf the Unruly, the captain of Elfmaid from Starlight And Shadows trilogy by Elaine Cunningham got "a taste for recreational mayhem", which earned him ban from many ports and even imprisonment and confiscation in Skullport, which is an achievement in itself. Where he was found under arrest, roaring a song:
Come ashore with the lads of the Elfmaid, my friend. |
- In Soul Music, The Band With Rocks In is banished from every city they visit on their Sto Plains tour, on pain of pain and/or being buried alive.
- The Nac Mac Feegle was banished for rebelling against the tyranny of the Fairy Queen, and NOT for being completely smashed at four in the afternoon. They'll fight any lying scunner who says otherwise.
- In Simon R. Green's For Heaven's Eyes Only, Roger the half-demon claims he's been banned from Limbo.
- This has happened to a variety of CIA officers with diplomatic immunity who got caught spying in Tom Clancy novels. The consequences for officers or agents who don't have diplomatic immunity and get caught spying tend to be far more severe.
Music[]
- In the late 80s and early 90s, various members of X Japan (and occasionally the entire band) were banned from various restaurants, hotels, bars, and drinking establishments around Tokyo and elsewhere in Japan, due to the band's tendencies to start fights. Some bars even had "No Yoshiki" or "No Blondes" (since both Yoshiki and other VK rockers that tended to cause trouble had blonde hair) signs, and the band still holds the record for most damage done to a Japanese hotel. Not just the room, either. The hotel.
- At one time, it was almost a point of pride for many punk rock, heavy metal, and hard rock bands to get themselves banned from venues and hotels; typically after trashing their rooms or starting riots at the venues, but also for violating local obscenity laws. Several have been banned from performing in entire states or countries; usually on obscenity grounds.
- GWAR was at one time banned from the state of North Carolina, for certain... elements of their costuming.
- Bad Brains was at one time banned at nearly every nightclub and performance venue in Washington D.C.
- The Who at one time held the record for this, thanks to the antics of the late Keith Moon.
- Taken to the extreme by Power Electronics group Whitehouse, who would routinely bill themselves as a "synth-pop" band in order to get gigs, often provoking the baffled audience to riot or simply leave.
- The World/Inferno Friendship Society won't have a chance to play at Cha-Cha's of Coney Island again, after what happened at that one show in 2007.[3] Prior to 2003 the band was also banned from a few venues that they'd actually set on fire.
- Guns N' Roses can never again perform in St. Louis after the Riverport Riot (in case you don't know, it all started when a bootlegger pressed W. Axl Rose's Berserk Button, and Axl flipped out and left the stage, which indirectly led the fans to riot).
- During a 1985 show in Switzerland, the Post Punk band Swans were actually arrested onstage and asked to leave the country for being too loud.
- Hanatarash, for reasons that only The Other Wiki could adequately explain with a straight face. And yes, there is video.
- Ozzy Osbourne was banned from the city of San Antonio, Texas for a decade, for urinating on a cenotaph outside The Alamo.
- In the Filk Song Banned From Argo, the former Trope Namer which provides the page quote, the crew of a Starfleet vessel heavily implied to be the Enterprise causes mayhem on the eponymous shore leave planet until they get kicked out.
- Ironically, the song itself became so over-used that it got banned from several SF conventions.
- There's a sequel in which Argo forgives them, and invites the Next Generation crew to visit. They wind up getting banned themselves, and this time Argo learns its lesson and makes the ban permanent.
Tabletop RPG[]
- Classic Traveller supplement The Traveller Adventure. During the adventure "Pysadian Escapade" the PCs are railroaded into inadvertently breaking a Pysadian law and end up being banned from the planet.
Theatre[]
- In Mister Roberts, it's understandable why the crew of the "Bucket" would not be allowed ashore on Elysium again, after hearing what they did while on liberty there.
- In Don't Drink the Water by Woody Allen, the main character, Axel, is banned from Africa. He laments that while many diplomats have been banned from various countries, he's the only one to have ever been banned from a continent.
Video Games[]
- In the first Knights of the Old Republic game, if you end up killing an important fish on Mannan, the planetary authorities ban you from ever coming back.
- You can blackmail the authorities and force them to let you return, which is perfectly in line with the previous evil action.
- In Umineko no Naku Koro ni, Ange mentions briefly that Amakusa will get arrested if he's ever caught back in France.
- Max has something to brag about in the Sam and Max Freelance Police game Moai Better Blues:
Max: ... and I've been banned from 27 local arcades for playing Forbidden Dance Insurrection in ways that the designers never intended. |
- The conclusion of Tony Hawk Underground 2- subtitled "World Destruction Tour" - is a news report, which concludes with:
Hugh Jass: And finally, Tony Hawk and Bam Margera, the founders of the World Destruction Tour, have been officially banned from ever returning to Boston, Barcelona, Berlin, Australia, New Orleans, and even Thailand. Upon hearing the news, Tony and Bam replied, "Hey, good call." |
- A variation in Fallout: New Vegas: You can get yourself banned from gambling at every casino in the game if you win too much while gambling. You can still enter the casinos, but you can't gamble anymore.
- At the end of Assassin's Creed Revelations, Ezio is banned from Constantinople by the new Sultan Selim, who notes that it's only because his son Suleiman speaks highly of him that he doesn't just execute him on the spot.
- In Secret of Mana, the hero gets banned from his hometown after pulling out the Mana Sword because the village elder fears that it will bring monsters to their village.
- In Disgaea 4: A Promise Unforgotten, Fuka Kazamatsuri manages to get herself banned from Celestia forever for insulting Lady Archangel Flonne.
Webcomics[]
- Tedd of El Goonish Shive managed to get himself banned from certain areas of the mall. This overlaps with Noodle Incident because not even the author wants to know what happened (read the title of that strip).
- In Questionable Content, Jimbo managed to get himself banned from Canada. Not even he knows how it happened. Apparently he was very drunk at the time.
- Triangle and Robert are banned from more of the country (essentially the USA) than actually exists, as they've been banned from some areas twice and one county that banned them no longer exists as a consequence of the event that caused the ban. They're essentially living where they are because the non industrial part of their city is the only place they can legally be in the entire country.
- In Slightly Damned, Buwaro and Kieri can never go back to the town of Weyville. Not because they've been banned, technically, but because it's home to a Knight Templar angel who'll kill them if he ever sees them again (and already tried to the first time he saw them).
- In Homestuck, John and Dad are banned from the Cirque du Soleil. It's implied that it has something to do with John's Gamzee caused phobia of clowns.
Web Original[]
- The Nostalgia Critic can never go back to Nevada due to it being the location of his base of operations during his attempt at invading & conquering the micro-nation of Molossia.
- Similarly, The Cinema Snob was banned from returning to Kickassia by the Critic, after he plotted to overthrow him.
- The Strong Bad email "movies" ends with Strong Bad firing a bazooka in a theater out of frustration at the other patrons. Cut to him typing...
Strong Bad: So that's why I'm not allowed at the movies anymore. |
- The Outcasts of Tasakeru are stripped of their citizenship and given a lifetime ban on setting foot inside their country's only city. Most of them have found ways of avoiding or ignoring the ban.
Western Animation[]
- In every episode of the show, Timon and Pumbaa got thrown out of wherever they were. Timon even asks at one point "Why did you think it was a good idea to drag us around the world getting into trouble?"
- Skipper mentions in The Penguins of Madagascar that he can't go back to Denmark due to the Copenhagen Incident involving Hans the Puffin.
- Unsurprisingly, The Simpsons:
- After getting kicked out of Florida in one episode, we see the family with an enormous map of the United States. They cross Florida off in a close shot, and the camera zooms out to show that all but 2 states have permanently banned them. Neither of which they're currently in.
- Played with in the episode "Lisa the Iconoclast where Lisa, and her children, and her children's children are banned from the historical society... for three months!
- On "Brother's Little Helper" (the episode where Bart is put on ADHD medication after his latest prank at school), Homer mentions a ten-year ban from the water park that recently ended. Whether this is connected to the incident in season two where Homer got stuck on a water slide due to his weight and the water slide had to be shut down so officials could release him isn't known as it wasn't mentioned outright, making the scene the punchline to a Brick Joke or yet another throwaway line that the writers don't want to flesh out that now stands as a Noodle Incident.
- In yet another episode, Bart and Milhouse were banned for life from Comic Book Guy's store (although the "for life" part eventually ended up revoked due to them saving Comic Book Guy's life when he underwent a severe heart attack in the middle of an angry rant). In an attempt to comfort him, Homer tearfully reminisces of his first life-long ban: after eating one of Gallagher's melons during one of his shows, the latter banned him for life from all his future performances and related media.
- In one episode, Bart enters the school library only to find his father Homer there doing research. "This library is for students, why aren't you at the regular public library?" "There was some... unpleasantness, I can never go back."
- Dr. Hibbert was also banned from the library for reasons never specified other than it relating to Moe Syszlak's actions while Hibbert hired him to act as a body double to distract Bart regarding a flu vaccination.
- And they'll never let Homer near Lake Havasu again.
- In the episode where Marge conquers her fear of flying, Homer Simpson ends up banned from Moe's Tavern for a prank he committed against Moe on Prank Day. Ironically, his prank (overloading the sugar container so it spills in a soggy manner) was actually safer than some of the pranks played that day, such as having a king cobra nearly bite Moe or causing a fire.
- The Simpsons were nearly banned from Springfield by the populace for some of the things they did.
- In the Rugrats In Paris movie, one of Charles Finster's potential dates is said to not be allowed in the state of Kentucky.
- On The Fairly Odd Parents, Crocker can never go back to Cincinnati. For reasons unknown.
- Also, Cosmo is banned from Atlantis since he sunk it nine times. Therefore, he becomes the number one criminal there. But in the end of the episode, Timmy is the new number one criminal.
- After establishing that it was he who made Crocker's life miserable, Timmy is banned by Jorgen von Strangle from going back in time to March 15th to fix that. Jorgen also threatened to ban Timmy from visiting other months of that year if he interferes with the election of "President Mc Govern".
- In the Phineas and Ferb "We Call It Maze", Dr. Doofenshmirtz reveals that he's no longer welcome in Albania after he somehow provoked the ambassador's wife.
- On Frisky Dingo, Killface and Simon CAN'T EVER GO BACK TO ARIZONA!
- Chowder episode "Banned From the Stand" featured Mung Daal being banned from Gazpacho's fruit stand. Mung can't simply buy fruits from another stand because the fruit stand owner code allows Gazpacho to extend the ban to the other fruit stands in Marzipan City. After Mung tried (and failed) to buy fruits under several disguises, Gazpacho became so paranoid he banned everyone... even himself. Because being banned from a stand last for as long as the stand remains, his only way out was destroying the stand and building a new one, from which Mung got himself banned after repeating what got him banned from the first one.
- Generator Rex: Lansky in "Moonlighting" has a Running Gag of "I can't go to (X). Long story."
- In My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic, after a trip to the bowling alley, as the Cutie Mark Crusaders leave, Scootaloo says that Mr. Kingpin will probably never let her back in the bowling alley again after making a gutter ball... on another lane. She seems oddly cheerful about it.
- In Family Guy, Peter alludes to being banned from Sea World for something when he prepares to explain to Chris what a whale's blowhole is for (or more specificially, what a whale's blowhole is not for), but we never hear it due to the scene shifting. The closest to an explanation given is from Seth MacFarland's in-character commentary for the episode, where he, in Peter's voice, claimed that he basically had sex with a whale's blowhole.
Real Life[]
For details, see Banned in China.
- This is essentially the idea behind most restraining orders, to keep someone away from someone or someplace after they do something bad to them.
- Michael Savage is banned from entering the UK for "inciting hatred" against Muslims.
- Charlie Chaplin was banned from the USA during the Red Scare and the McCarthy era, a situation that he parodied in A King in New York. He was allowed back in with open arms in the early 1970's.
- Fred Phelps is banned from several places, most notably the UK.
- Semi-related, but comedian Andrew Dice Clay is the only person to be banned from MTV.
- He was, apparently, unbanned at some point before attending the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards.
- At least one musician is banned for life from England's Channel 4 for saying "Fuck" before the Watershed.
- For several years in the late 1980s, a Coast Guard cutter which shall remain nameless was banned from the port of Juneau, Alaska, until the crew (due to the usual billet changes and rotations) was almost entirely replaced. Upon its eventual return, Leslie Fish's filk song made the rounds of the enlisted decks.
- This is quite frequently the fate of anybody caught counting cards at a casino blackjack table. While card counting mentally is legal, so is banning players for virtually any reason besides discrimination, making Rain Man a case of Truth In Hollywood.
- World Memory Champion Dominic O'Brien was banned from every casino in the UK.
- Arielle Juliette, belly dancer from Madison, Wisconsin. Plans were supposedly afoot to get her banned from performing in Bury, Bolton and some other parts of Greater Manchester, all areas Oop North, but thankfully this never happened.
- It's still not known What Could Have Been, considering that she's more popular in Greater Manchester than Madison, Wisconsin...
- Rustycon 1995: A Seattle area science-fiction convention already notorious for its wild partying was put into a very fancy Hyatt hotel. The hotel staff was clueless about what to expect, resulting in business guests being put on the same floor as the party wing. Among the highlights were an intoxicated person crashing through a plate glass window, sabotage to the fire alarm, broken elevators, damage to several chandeliers, and damage to the lobby artwork that reached the five-figures mark. Needless to say, downtown Bellevue has not hosted a sci-fi convention since.
- Also banned from the UK is Terry Jones... Not the Monty Python one. The one that holds Koran burnings.
- The man who started the NBA Pacers-Pistons brawl (a.k.a. The Malace at the Palace) got a season ticket revocation and a lifetime ban from the arena.
- There was an attempt to ban the German film, The Tin Drum in Oklahoma due to the belief that it was child pornography. The director personally spoke to law makers to get the ruling overturned. He succeeded.
- Kurt Waldheim was Secretary-General of the UN and then President of Austria. He was also maybe a former Nazi intelligence officer. The controversy got so bad that by the time he was President of Austria he was not allowed to enter the United States, or many European countries. Nobody ever found conclusive proof (and at least one author claimed he was framed by Mossad), so Waldheim was never prosecuted.
- Ozzy Osbourne was banned from entering San Antonio after he was caught urinating on the Alamo.
- The Sheraton hotel chain will not host a Shriners' convention, owing to the extreme rowdiness and damages that tend to follow them. Ray Stevens' song about a Shriners' convention involved molestation, extreme intoxication, and a motorcycle going off a high diving board; the real ones aren't nearly that sedate.
- The Bullingdon Club, a near equivalent catering to young Upper Class Twits in Great Britain, are effectively banned from just about every bar and restaurant in the country for much the same reason, but get around it by the simple expedient of booking function rooms through some sort of shell corporation and writing cheques for the cost of repairing the venue as they stagger away from the wreckage.
- During World War II the Allies tried to quarter ANZAC troops in Cairo. The Egyptian government refused, saying that while New Zealanders were welcome, the city was still recovering from the victory celebration the Australian troops gave in the last world war.
- In ancient Athens, criminals convicted of the most heinous crimes weren't executed or imprisoned for life, they were instead exiled from Athens. At the time, most of the territory in the Greek islands was untamed wilderness, and exile often amounted to a death sentence.
- This was called an ostracism, and there were people who preferred death to being exiled from Athens, even if they had the chance to live elsewhere.
- Frequently happens on internet forums, for obvious reasons. Sometimes, the members who were banned make spin-off forums, as sort of a "refugee camp" for banned users so to speak.