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Captain Picard: "Shut up, Wesley!"
[...]
Dr. Crusher: "'Shut up, Wesley'?"
Picard: "Doctor..."
Wesley Crusher: "And since I am finished here, sir, may I point out that—"
Dr. Crusher: "Shut up, Wesley!"


The Scrappy and their ilk are characters who are despised by most (if not all) of the fandom. However, occasionally there may be one moment where the despised character is the butt of a humiliating joke, or another character says what the audience is thinking to/about the despised character.

If this results in the character's death, this can result in mass rejoicing. If the Scrappy in question has been around long enough and especially if they happen to be the Creator's Pet character, this is probably an Author's Saving Throw. Can be the character's (on the firing end) Moment of Awesome, or a Funny Moment.

See also Discontinuity Nod. Contrast Creator's Pet.

Note: This is NOT a page to cheer for and praise moments where your hated character gets told off, beaten up, or humiliated. Even if the character is a Scrappy in some way, not every instance of them getting egg on their face or pushed in the mud equals this trope. Doubly so if your favorite character is the one doling out the supposed punishment.

Examples of Take That, Scrappy! include:


Anime & Manga[]

Jail: I've been keeping myself healthy. This transparent prison is unexpectedly comfortable.
Cinque: Uno and Tre are healthy as well.
Jail: They haven't changed at all. Quattro has even gotten a bit fat.

  • Mega Man NT Warrior had the episode titled "The Purloined Princess" which brought back Yai in the show, only for the main cast to show that they are just as sick of her as the fandom.
  • Possible example: Chizuru Kawanami and her dream demon, Leon, of the Yumekui Merry anime adaptation. When a dream demon who's possessing a person gets killed, the person loses their dreams, which seems to equate to them basically becoming depressed, unmotivated, and almost doll-like, with very little personality. Leon gets killed in the final battle after being completely ineffectual. Kawanami spends the rest of the fight sitting there with soulless eyes, and then is shown wandering aimlessly after the battle, having not recovered at all. It's mentioned that she MIGHT recover on her own someday. Of course, given the quality of writing of the final episodes, there's a very real possibility that it might just be bad writing at work.
  • Zeta Gundam: The death of Katz. The kid suffers a humiliating death trying to take on Yazan Gable, fails miserably and crashes into an asteroid. Fans consider it the high part of Zeta's gut-wrenching Bittersweet Ending.
  • Mobile Suit Gundam: IRON-BLOODED ORPHANS: Many of the show's detractors may find the deaths of some Tekkadan members as cathartic, given their defiance and their wrong choices led by Orga.
  • Mobile Suit Gundam: Hathaway's FlashDepending on who you ask, Some fans are rather happy to Hathaway's Karmic Death in his execution in spite of the context.
  • The Nijiyon 4komas from the Love Live! series: In the 47th chapter of the comic strips' 4th season, Lanzhu Zhong is shown enduring Setsuna Yuki's cooked meal. While hilarious considering that the latter is a terrible cook, a fair number of the former's detractors, primarily owning to her reputation in the video game (School Idol Festival ALL STARS), sees her suffering as a generally satisfying sight.

Comic Books[]

  • In World War Hulk — Frontline, Sally Floyd (y'know, the one who made that speech[1] to Captain America) gets roaring drunk and wanders into the middle of a mugging. She's rescued by Moon Knight, who then tells her that if he'd realised who she was beforehand, he wouldn't have bothered saving her.[2]
    • Similarly, one of the tie-ins to Secret Empire had Captain HYDRA incarcerate Sally after a botched interview. To really rub it in, he mocked her while she was being dragged off by sarcastically saying that he was sure people on Twitter would be outraged to hear about her arrest, a clear nod to her controversial speech from the previous Civil War tie-in.
  • Used for a joke in Dork Tower when Igor plays Star Wars Battlefront:

Igor: "I'm killing Ewoks and Gungans! I'm killing Ewoks and Gungans!"
Carson: "Kewl! So, what do you think of it?"
Igor: "Explain to me what part of 'I'm killing Ewoks and Gungans' was, exactly, hard to understand..."

  • Vibe and Steel from the reviled Justice League Detroit were killed off several years after they were created due to negative fan reaction. Decades after their deaths, the characters are almost never mentioned in-universe unless in a negative manner.
    • This itself got lampshaded when Black Lantern versions confronted the surviving Detroit Leaguers and basically asked why they were remembered as a joke while Gypsy and Vixen got to join the "proper" League.
  • Almost all the titles introduced in the Bloodlines crossover flopped after less than a year, with the lead characters being regulated to Comic Book Limbo. This was brought up in-universe in JLA/Hitman, where Green Lantern and The Flash mockingly claimed that the Bloodline heroes were a bunch of incompetent losers that everyone else in the superhero community looked down upon.
  • Jason Todd's No-Holds-Barred Beatdown on Damian Wayne in Batman and Robin #6, which ended with Damian getting his spine broken in half for his trouble.
  • Spider Island was one big Take That against infamous Spider-Man Replacement Scrappy, Creator's Pet (she's named after Joe Quesada's daughter), Shallow Love Interest and all-around Relationship Sue Carlie Cooper. While at first it seems like more of the same — Carlie gets to sleep with Peter Parker, she gets Spider-Powers while Mary Jane doesn't and gets to be a "super awesome" fighter to complete the Character Shilling — she then gets her butt handed to her in a fight, turns into a giant spider with the rest of the hapless citizens of New York, and the day ends up saved largely by MJ who gets Spider-Powers without turning into a giant spider. The comic ends with a Peter and MJ Ship Tease of the highest order. On top of that, Peter forgets about Carlie's predicament, leaving her naked and embarrassed in the middle of New York. And the fans rejoiced louder when they broke up right after this.
  • Absolute Carnage kicks off with the death of Lee "Maniac" Price, a former host of the Venom symbiote notorious for his irredeemable personality and actions towards others, traits that made his killing-off by Cletus Kassady very satisfying.
  • Marcus Immortus, the guy from Avengers #200 who raped Ms. Marvel and then brainwashed her into loving him, ends up aging to dust after returning to his home dimension due to being out of sync with its timestream. Carol returns to Earth and reams out the Avengers for letting him take her.
  • In DC Rebirth #1, Pandora, the character who was thought to be responsible for the divisive New 52 Continuity Reboot (and who is thus heavily associated with the reboot by fans), is casually offed by Doctor Manhattan.
    • One of the (many) controversial decisions made during the New 52 was Lobo being reintroduced as a slender, clean-shaven Bishonen instead of the grungy, musclebound slob fans had come to know and love. DC Rebirth later brought back the classic Lobo, with Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps revealing that Brainiac had shrunk down the New 52 Lobo and trapped him inside a containment jar, which the Green Lantern Corps then refused to open.

Hal Jordan: "Not that one. Trust me, it's better that we leave him on the shelf."

  • The Ultimate Marvel version of Deadpool was a major Scrappy amongst fans due to being a clichéd mutant-hater rather than the unique, fun-loving Jerk with a Heart of Gold that Earth-616 Deadpool is. Years later in Deadpool Kills Deadpool, Ultimate Deadpool is amongst the evil versions of Wade that attack him. So, of course, we get to see Deadpool curb-stomp him and then kill the bastard by stabbing him repeatedly with a knife.
  • Transformers: Deviations is pretty much this in a nutshell, shitting on all the Replacement Scrappies of Season 3 of The Transformers. Galvatron and his minions are never created, the main Autobot cast (Ultra Magnus, Springer, Arcee) are killed in a crash landing, Wheelie is left on Quintessa and the Quintessons are casually dismissed by Optimus Prime's heroism as Big Bad Wannabes while Starscream is the Big Bad. But the standout has to be the treatment of Hot Rod who is hated by anyone who is not Kup or Optimus Prime for no clear reason with most panels he's featured in being nothing but Ultra Magnus saying what an unqualified moron he is who will only make everything worse if he looks at a control panel funnily.
  • Rose Tyler in Titan's Doctor Who comic from 2014 to 2018. It's clear several times that the writers had very little love for her, flanderizing her as a Dumb Blonde Clingy Jealous Girl who can't do anything without the Doctor's constant supervision along with being excluded from the Crisis Crossovers. It was averted starting in 2020 but only so it could go in the opposite direction.

Fan Fiction[]

Rhymey: "There's no need to make a fuss! There's nothing he can do to us!"
Ace Ray: "WILL YOU STOP WITH THAT INFERNAL RHYMING?!"

Film[]

Tom Servo: "The Aztec speaks for all of us!"

Literature[]

Live Action TV[]

  • One mistaken example, pictured above, is in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Datalore". In the climax, Picard yells a big, loud "Shut up, Wesley!", but only so that it makes Wesley look more heroic when he insists on being heard, and when he's still ignored, he goes against Picard's orders and, as a result, saves the ship and everyone on it from being killed. Nonetheless, it was just about one of the funniest scenes that season, and satisfying to hear.
  • Happened a couple of times on Star Trek: Voyager
    • In "The Thaw", the crew are having a debate about the nature of fear. Neelix suggests telling a joke might help, because laughter overcomes fear. The rest of the crew just stare at him with a collective look of irritated disgust and he just sputters out in mid-sentence when he realises how badly his idea is going down.
    • In "Meld", Tuvok fears he is losing his self-control after a mind-meld with a psychopath. He decides to test the limits of his self-control by exposing himself to the circumstances that he thinks are most likely to make him snap by simulating them on the holodeck. His choice? Having to share a room with Neelix at his most obnoxious. Needless to say, he discovers what his limit is.
  • In Coronation Street, after surviving a car crash, Janice Battersby acts like even more of a Spoiled Brat than ever, and goes about ruining Sally Webster's work. Sally finally snaps and punches her in the nose. Not only that, but it went further by Danny Baldwin firing Janice (again), and not one person sprang to her defense.
  • Law & Order: Special Victims Unit had almost nothing but these for Dale Stuckey during his run.
    • Perhaps the ultimate example of this towards him was in "Zebras", where he (having already screwed up an open-and-shut case) made a comment that provoked Stabler into angrily shoving him. When he complained about it, Cragen simply blew him off.
  • The original Scrappy of House, Dr. Allison Cameron, got up on her high horse once again in an early Season 3 episode, prompting Cuddy to channel the viewers and comment: "She's not nearly as delightful as she thinks she is."
    • There's also the Season 1 episode where Cameron forces House to go on a date with her. During the date, House goes on a rant about how she has a complex requiring her to fall in love with "broken" guys (her ex-husband, who was dying when they got married, and House himself) and try to fix them. It's heavily implied she cried herself to sleep that night.
  • Robin Hood:
    • Robin decides to work with Isabella, resulting in a snide "She always gets what she wants" remark from Clingy Jealous Girl Kate. Robin irritably snaps "Just leave it, Kate!". Unfortunately, like the Wesley example above, Kate is eventually proved irrefutably right in her insistence that Isabella can't be trusted, and gets to say "Maybe next time you'll listen to me" and "I told you so!" before she gets to make out with John.
      • Several episodes later though, when Isabella's brother Guy joins the team, he calmly informs Kate "You don't have to like me. I don't like you."
    • In the Grand Finale of the show, Robin discovers that he's been fatally poisoned. Kate attempts to give him a Last Kiss, but he deliberately turns his face away, and a few moments later is reunited with Marian. Kate has to settle for a one-armed hug, and when Robin leaves to die alone, he doesn't even look back.
  • Lost: Widmore's henchman, Zoe, in Season 6, is widely hated for being a pointless, annoying character, eating up valuable screen time... and also for the actress claiming that she's the key to all the show's themes and is on "every page" of the series finale [4]. In the penultimate episode, The Man in Black violently slits her throat, killing her and pleasing everyone who hated her.
    • Earlier, in season 3:

Hurley: "Dude, Nikki's dead."
Sawyer: Who the hell is Nikki?"

[5]

  • Vanessa of Gossip Girl gets a lot of this from Blair, who hates her.
    • Dan used to get his share of this too, mainly from Chuck and Blair. By season five he's become too much of a Mary Sue for this to happen more than rarely.
  • The Doctor certainly has some choice words for Adric and his dubious behavior in "Four to Doomsday":

Fifth Doctor: "Now listen to me, you young idiot, you're not so much gullible as idealistic. I suppose it comes from your deprived delinquent background."

    • And earlier in the same story, Nyssa tells him to shut up.
    • In an extra on the DVD version of "Earthshock", Adric survives the spaceship crash, lands on prehistoric Earth... and is promptly eaten by a Tyrannosaurus. A detached Cyberman head remarks "Excellent".
  • A 1975 Happy Days episode has Fonzie in police gear just long enough to stem a possible gang war. When a gang member takes notice of Ralph, Potsie and Richie:

Gang member: "Who are these nerds?"
Fonzie: These are not nerds, these are my friends."
Potsie: (defiantly) "Yeah!"
Fonzie: (to Potsie) "Shut up, nerd!"

Professional Wrestling[]

  • Mick Foley pulled one on his last night at TNA on Bubba the Love Sponge. As he was finishing saying his goodbyes to the roster, Bubba gets in Mick's face and tries to interview him. Mick brushes him off and Bubba then mocks him for getting fired. Foley then proceeds to do what every TNA fan had been wanting to do since Bubba's arrival... knock his lights out.
  • Pretty much any time someone takes a shot at Michael Cole.
  • Michelle McCool superkicking Hornswoggle on the October 1st 2010 episode of WWE Smackdown. This one may have been unintentional and actually an attempt for cheap heat by having Michelle attack the diminutive one. YMMV on whether it worked, given that Hornswoggle is one of the few Scrappies bigger than Michelle.
  • Michelle McCool losing her Divas Championship to Natalya.
  • The Sandman beating Eugene with a kendo stick when he went to give him a hug at ECW One Night Stand 2006.
  • Heels are often deliberately written to be pathetic and obnoxious. After all, you're supposed to hate them, right? It's pretty much standard procedure for faces to call them out on it and generally mock them when it comes time for promos.
  • Melina being the first eliminated from a #1 contender's battle royale after weeks of being a God Mode Sue.
  • The Miz to Maryse at Night of Champions:

Miz: "You're not a champion, you're a tease. You had your chance with me and you butchered it, just like you butcher the English language every time you open your mouth."

  • At the 2011 Extreme Rules PPV, not only does Michelle McCool end up losing a "loser leaves WWE" match, but after the match, she gets attacked by the debuting Kharma (who is better known by her TNA name, Awesome Kong).
  • From one Scrappy to another:

Maryse: "Oh my God, Michael Cole, you vintage nerd."

Software[]

  • Microsoft Office 97 and 2000 were plagued with Clippy, an assistant paperclip who tries to help you, whether you want it or not. As advertisement for Microsoft Office XP, these three videos (in which the paperclip was voiced by Gilbert Gottfried) were released by Microsoft.
    • It also features the line "Next to Microsoft Bob, you are the most annoying thing in computer history!".

Theater[]

Tabletop Games[]

  • In Magic: The Gathering, the Onslaught set's version of Shock depicts a Psychatog being shocked by lightning, both in reference to the creature's time as a Tier-Induced Scrappy. Also, Deep Analysis has art depicting a decapitated Masticore, with some great flavor text:

"The specimen seems to be broken."

    • To a lesser extent, Magic R&Ds primary strategy for weakening dominant strategies, rather than banning cards which people put effort into acquiring, is to print cards in the next set that are very niche in their practicality, but usually devastating against the top deck. For example:
      • When the best card in the format was Blightning, they printed Obstinate Baloth that could be pitched to Blightning to give you a big creature and offset the life loss.
      • When Ravager Affinity, a powerful artifact strategy, was the king of the hill, they printed Oxidize, one of the cheapest artifact destruction spells every printed. (It wasn't enough, but it's the thought that counts.)
      • When Faeries was the best deck, Conflux released a lot of cheaply-costed or hard to counter spells that wreaked havoc on hordes of small, flying creatures.
  • In the Yu-Gi-Oh Card Game, the "Legacy of Yata-Garasu" card features Yata-Garasu lying dead on the ground. The effect even counters his own special ability.
  • In the Old World of Darkness, the eventual fate of the much-hated ghoul-werewolf-mage God Mode Stu Samuel Haight was... to have his spirit crafted into an ashtray.
  • An odd case: the Squats were retconned out of existence in the third edition of Warhammer 40,000, and the creators got so fed up with fans asking about their return that they began to consider the Squats as the in-universe Scrappies. The official explanation now is that all of the Squat homeworlds were eaten by Tyranids. Occasionally one or two survivors turn up in the fiction, usually played for laughs.

Video Games[]

  • The various Star Wars licensed games love to do this to Jar-Jar:
    • Star Wars: The Force Unleashed presents the beautiful sight of Jar-Jar frozen in carbonite
    • Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga has an achievement called "Crowd Pleaser", earned by killing Jar-Jar 20 times.
    • Star Wars Battlefront has a level where you invade Naboo and fight lots of Gungans, all of whom act a lot like Jar-Jar and fight poorly. Needless to say, it's a very popular level.
    • He's crushed by a falling N64 logo in Star Wars: Battle for Naboo.
    • In the casual MMO Clone Wars Adventures, one of the minigames is punting him for distance (all in the name of practicing Force Push, of course).
    • In Bounty Hunter, he's a holographic target on the firing range in the first level.
  • Sonic the Hedgehog:
  • The entire character of Ivan Raidenovitch Raikov in Metal Gear Solid 3 Snake Eater is this. He looks exactly like Raiden, the last game's widely-hated protagonist, and appears in the game as the sadomasochistic colonel Volgin's homosexual love interest (even his name is a Japanese double entendre, 'Raidenovitch' can be read in Japanese as "Raiden no bitch", which itself translates to "Thunderbolt's bitch", hinting at his and Volgin's relationship).
    • Well, technically, he was only hated by American fans. Apparently in Japan, Raiden's fanbase potentially rivals that of even Solid Snake. Also, apparently, the player is also given the option to either kill or knock out Raikov, depending on what the player feels like, and the player doesn't even get a Time Paradox if he does the former.
    • The player also has a mask of Raikov's likeness that's used late in the game to impersonate him, and there's a lot of fun to be had with the mask. Calling your Mission Control while wearing the mask will lead Snake's superiors to comment on how just wearing the mask is already making Snake seem more annoying, while Snake himself insists that wearing the mask is bound to make him more popular.
    • The Secret Theatre FMVs also poke fun of Raiden. One FMV involves Raiden and Snake fighting over who gets to be the protagonist in Metal Gear Solid 4 Guns of the Patriots, with Snake winning in the end. In another FMV, Raiden goes back in time to eliminate Big Boss during Operation Snake Eater so he can be the main character, but can't bring himself to it when he finally meets the man face-to-face. However, as Rose consoles him, there's always going to be a fifth MGS game...
  • Eric Sparrow, the antagonist of Tony Hawk's Underground and something of a memetic Jerkass, spent the entirety of THUG 2 pissing himself, squealing like a girl and getting the crap beat out of him.
  • The Season 2 finale of The Adventures of Sam & Max: Freelance Police does this to the Soda Poppers, combined with a Brick Joke. They become the rulers of Hell and, long story short, Sam and Max drop them into a small island in a pit of lava. The Stinger of the episode/season shows them doing the "we'll be back" monologue... and then the purple Bermuda Triangle from the end of "Moai Better Blues" appears. Last we saw, a volcano had been erupting into it... the Poppers get vaporized.
    • This was completely intentional from the very beginning — The Soda Poppers are hated both in and out-of-universe. Only two characters like or care about them in any capacity aside from how they can be exploited to further Sam and Max's goals, and one of them is Max (who you may recognize as someone who regularly exploits the Soda Poppers to further Sam and Max's goals).
  • From the Mass Effect series:
    • In Mass Effect 1, we have Ambassador Udina, a brown-nosing politician who later in the game impounds the Normandy when your dire warnings aren't heeded and you become politically inconvenient. Your good friend Captain Anderson hatches a plan to rectify that and send you on your way to save the galaxy and take the heat for it himself. One option involves Anderson storming into Udina's office, KOing the ambassador in one punch and then freeing the Normandy from her dock. You can later do one to him yourself by endorsing Anderson for the Council seat instead of Udina. The third game takes this even further with a Renegade interrupt that lets you kill him.
    • There's also Khalisah al-Jilani, the reporter, who tries to make Shepard look bad in pursuit of ratings. In Mass Effect 1, you can crack her jaw. In Mass Effect 2 Shepard can crack her jaw again, or s/he can give her an an equally awesome verbal beatdown. Lair of the Shadow Broker also includes videos of her getting punched out by a krogan... and kicked in the shin by a volus[6]. If you try to punch her again in the third game, she's finally wised up enough to dodge... but then another interrupt appears that lets you headbutt her.
    • In a case of the scrappy being a vehicle/game mechanic rather than a person, James and Steve can be heard bickering over the flaws/merits of the Mako and Hammerhead. Steve thinks the Mako handles like a drunk rhino, James thinks the Hammerhead's made of tissue paper.
  • Fable II mentions a rumor that Weaver the Guildmaster was found dead with the words "Your health is low!" carved onto his forehead.
    • Not to mention that you can optionally kill him as part of a quest in The Lost Chapters edition of the first game. The rumor could be referring to that.
  • Wipeout Fusion was was heavily different from the rest of the series and divisive among the fanbase. Wipeout Pure returned to the style of the original series and the backstory indicated that Fusion‍'‍s F9000 league was corrupt and riddled with scandal, and almost killed anti-gravity racing as a legitimate sport.
  • Ultimate Spider-Man has one in the Venom tutorial, when it's telling you that you need to eat people to survive, your first target is... a child who loses his balloon, a jab at the extremely annoying lost balloon missions in the Spider-Man 2 movie game. The child even says "I lost my balloon!" using the exact same vocal clip from that game.
  • Duke Nukem 3D: Atomic Edition/Plutonia Pack features Scrappy "Due". In a cage. In the basement of a burger joint staffed by Beavis and Butthead. Surrounded by his own excrement. About to be made into hamburger. You can do the humane thing and blow him to bloody ribbons.
  • The PSP remake of Final Fantasy Tactics features a new battle which brings its resident Scrappy Argath Back From the Dead just so you get the pleasure of killing him again.
  • Carter Blake from Heavy Rain is a complete asshole from the moment he appears, and in one optional chapter he goads you to hit him. You can.
  • In the Fan Remake of King's Quest II: Romancing the Throne Romancing the Throne, during the Cloud Spirit test, if you pass the first two questions you can choose an optional answer where Graham asks Connor to free the kingdom from a dreaded beast... revealed to be Cedric the Owl, and then he draw his blade and chase the damned owl himself.
  • A recently introduced quest chain in World of Warcraft has the player delving into Thrall's inner emotional struggles in an effort to bring him back after he's killed by the Twilight Hammer. When the player gets to his inner rage, there are hints that he's... less than pleased with Garrosh's run as Warchief. For those who see Varian Wrynn as The Scrappy, Thrall ain't happy with him either.
  • Anders and Carver of Dragon Age 2 were both divisive characters among the fandom. Of party banter of the game's DLC made the two the butt of many jokes from other characters.
  • Nobody liked the minstrels in Assassin's Creed II. They got in your face and sang annoying songs until they either went away or you tossed coins, possibly blowing your cover. Assassin's Creed Revelations has a mission where Ezio dresses up as a minstrel and sings. One of the songs is this little gem:

I am a tactless minstrel,
I sing off-key for coins,
If you see me in the street,
Please kick me in the loins.

    • Not to mention that, to get the costumes in the first place you get to beat eight of them up. The fact that they go down in one punch each is just icing.

Ezio: "Minstrels from Italia? I'm going to enjoy this."

  • In Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist, Freddy may stumble across a "lost and out-of-place" Cedric the Owl, who later gets eaten by vultures.
  • Animal Crossing: Wild World introduced Lyle, an insurance scammer who would appear outside of the player's house on Saturdays. If talked to, he would force the player to pay him to buy insurance from him. If the player ignored him, he would try to follow them around until they talked to him and bought insurance. This combined with his annoying personality, the fact that he would continue to harass the player even if they gave in and bought insurance from him, and that his insurance was generally worthless (he would occasionally "cover" players who were stung by bees or sold forged paintings, but only in pitiful amounts that generally did not come close to what the player paid for his insurance in the first place) made many players despise him. Possibly due to this, in Animal Crossing: City Folk, Lyle has lost his job as an insurance salesman and now works at the Happy Room Academy, a job he absolutely hates, and frequently talks about how his dreams have been crushed.
  • Love Live! School Idol Festival ALL-STARS: In the 24th chapter, both Karin and Ai (who has defected to Lanzhu's School Idol Association) finally getting their own karma after losing to both Kasumi and Setsuna in the School Idol battle between the School Idol Club and the Association.

Web Comics[]

Web Original[]

  • Team CRDL (especially leader Cardin Winchester) earned the ire of many RWBY fans not only for being flat, stereotypical Jerk Jocks, but for being the focus of the most hated arc in volume 1. Watching Pyrrha Nikos beat the stuffing out of all four of them during a training match in volume 2 was incredibly cathartic, especially for fans of Jaune Arc (Cardin's main victim).

Western Animation[]

  • Scooby Doo
    • In the first live-action Scooby Doo movie Scrappy-Doo is the villain and Scooby actually punches him. Earlier on, the gang have a fond flashback to how horrible having Scrappy around was, along with how glad they are he isn't around anymore.
    • In Cartoon Network's Big Game between Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, two jokes were made at Scrappy's expense. It's said by the pre-game show hosts that Scrappy barely lasted in the playoffs, and during the game itself, Pat Summerall listed adding Scrappy to Scooby Doo as one of the worst business decisions ever made.
    • In the "The Best Place for Cartoons" promo, Scrappy was ranting on how the Cartoon Cartoons characters are more popular than him, despite his being there longer than them (Ironically, YouTube posts of this clip have comments from people saying they agree with what Scrappy is saying).
    • There was also a game on Cartoon Network's site at one point where the point was to throw tomatoes at Scrappy. The very first game on the site, no less.
    • Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law has the "Shaggy Busted" episode end with Scrappy showing up for a brief cameo, only to be taken away to be eaten by Avenger (in later episodes, he is depicted as a corpse). And the cast laughs about it.
    • Even Warner Home Video is in on the act, starting with minimizing Scrappy's presence in clips in the trailer for The Richie Rich/Scooby-Doo Show and not mentioning him at all on the descriptions for the DVDs of the late-'80s Scooby movies. Seeing as only Scooby and Shaggy appear on the cover of the 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo set, one can imagine that this trend is going to continue. This is presumably due to the fact that Warner Bros is aware of the backlash Scrappy-Doo had received.
    • In Scooby Doo and the Goblin King, the living Mystery Machine runs down a stand with Scrappy dolls as prizes.
    • At one point in the Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated episode "The Siren's Song," Daphne and Fred find a statue of Scrappy Doo, with Fred quickly telling Daphne, " We all promised each other that we would never speak of him. Not ever!"
  • One sketch of Robot Chicken had the Scooby Doobies planning retribution for the Really Rottens' terrorist attack at the Laff-A-Lympics. The Blue Falcon wanted to partner with a "more subtle talking dog" and had the choice between Dynomutt Dog Wonder and Scrappy-Doo. Guess who he immediately kicks out (literally).
  • The Venture Brothers has the Murderous Moppets, two creepy and unpleasant dwarf henchmen that The Monarch inherited through marriage, to his (and the fans') displeasure. When Mrs. The Monarch orders the Moppets to distract him, they try to get in his face, only for the Monarch to coldly and plainly tell them that he doesn't like them and that if they ever try to give him an order he will kill them and feed them to the neighborhood dogs.
    • In the final episode of Season Four, Dr. Girlfriend finally tells them off and admits that they're starting to creep even her out. The Monarch's reaction is similar to that of the fanbase's.
  • Family Guy:
  • It's obvious that the characters — especially the Clone Troopers — in Star Wars: The Clone Wars find Jar Jar Binks just as annoying as the audience. Oddly, this seems to make his character much more bearable.
  • The Animaniacs episode "The Warners' 65th Anniversary Special" states that the Warners were created as Buddy's funnier co-stars, and he later tries to kill them for stealing his (nonexistent in real-life) fame.
  • Irving is treated with contempt by the rest of the Phineas and Ferb cast, except for the title characters. But then again, who doesn't Phineas tolerate? And even then, Ferb is the only one who doesn't seem to mind... mainly because he's fairly stoic and nonverbal. Phineas, however, has several times shown to be less than enthused at his presence.
  • The Cloverfield parody segment in MAD takes a jab at Sam Puckett from ICarly, by her getting shoved out of the camera by other co-star Freddie.
  • On The Simpsons, Marge's ex-boyfriend Artie Ziff was a smug jerk who got fresh with her more than once. His every present appearance has him trying to get her away from Homer, seemingly learning his lesson, only to try again, and at one point framing Homer for stock market fraud. When he does turn himself in, he winds up surrounded by big, angry prisoners about to beat the shit out of him. It's hard to imagine too many viewers were worried about him after all the scummy things he'd done.
    • Anyone who hates Lisa will take any moment she loses a fight, is hurt, is made out to be wrong, or inconvenienced in any way as this trope, if not a Crowning Moment of Awesome. This is slightly more justified in the later seasons, as she's been Flanderized from a young well-intentioned Granola Girl who simply has a lot to learn to a Soapbox Sadie who yells and rants about everything.
    • In one of the Treehouse of Horror episodes, Marge is forced to shoot and kill a zombified Helen Lovejoy. After all the damage her gossiping and fair-weather friend tendencies have caused in the man series, this was quite a cathartic moment.
  • Miko of Transformers Prime was quickly derided by the fanbase for being The Load, and often Too Dumb to Live. One has to wonder if this was meant to be an Intended Audience Reaction as she's called out for this attitude in the fourth episode. And Jack is largely repeating what he'd said two episodes earlier, less than half a day ago In-Universe.

Jack: "Miko, Raf was almost killed! This isn't a game; when are you going to get that through your thick skull!?"

  • Rodimus Prime in Transformers Animated. In his first appearance, he ends up getting afflicted with cosmic rust. This has satisfied some fans who don't like Rody for getting Optimus Prime killed in Transformers: The Movie.
  • Princess Bubblegum became so hated by fans during the middle of Adventure Time's run that these people considered anything bad or inconvenient that happened to her this trope, if not a Crowning Moment of Awesome for the petty reason of wanting to see their hated character suffer.
  • In the first season of Harley Quinn, most things people were said to Damian Wayne were riffing on his contentious reception in the DC fandom. Though this pops up every now and then, it died down following the first season, the show instead taking pity on the kid for having Bruce Wayne as a father.
  1. During Civil War: Frontline, she interviewed Captain America and gave him a lengthy "The Reason You Suck" Speech where she suggested he was out of touch with modern Americans because he didn't do things like use social media or watch NASCAR races. Needless to say, readers took it very badly.
  2. Moon Knight hadn't taken part in the Civil War and neither side wanted him. That said, his heart was clearly with Cap and the anti-registration heroes.
  3. The canon character Zecora also speaks in rhyme, but unlike Rhymey, she actually has a personality.
  4. Apparently the "every page" referred to the watermark on her script.
  5. Word of God is that Paolo and Nikki's manner of death was a direct response to their Scrappy status.
  6. an entire species of Chew Toys