Sibling Seniority Squabble

"Skeeter: Shoot me, Gonzo! Scooter: Me first, I'm older! Skeeter: Only by a minute!"

- Muppet Babies

Twins often argue, among themselves or with others, about the respect they are due because of age, even though the difference is minuscule. In the most common form, Twin A will attempt to give their side leverage by saying that he/she is oldest, which will cause Twin B to retort "Yeah, by five minutes" and therefore defuse such an argument.

Anime and Manga

 * In Naruto, Hiashi Hyuga was born seconds before Hizashi. The difference is especially crucial in the Hyuga clan, as Hiashi grew up to become head of the clan, while Hizashi was made into a branch house member and expected to obey Hiashi, under threat of his cursed seal activating and causing him pain or killing him.
 * Gundam Seed:.
 * Inverted in Lucky Star. Tsukasa tells Kagami it's good she's older, because it would be bad for an older sister to need so much help with schoolwork from the younger. Kagami tells her it's bad anyway.
 * Despite being twins, Unsui of Eyeshield 21 is referred to as the "elder brother" quite often. Of course, it's partially because he acts the part, often taking responsibility for his "younger brother's" actions, despite the fact that they're the same age. Agon could be seen as an extreme (and violent) version of the Annoying Younger Sibling trope.
 * In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha, the Numbers cyborgs type numbers do not represent their actual birth order; Sette (Type VII), is the youngest of them, while Dieci (Type X) is older than several others. As a result, Quattro (Type IV) is annoyed that Cinque (Type V) being technically older due to being born first, and refers to her as she would a younger sibling. In Sound Stage X and Vi Vid, is somewhat unwilling to accept that she's  younger sister after her adoption.
 * Vash and Knives' screwed-up relationship in Trigun contains shades of this. Since no one was actually watching when they were born and their mother couldn't talk even if she hadn't apparently suffered Death by Childbirth, they don't know who's older. They're also theoretically speaking English, even though they're actually speaking Japanese, and since the normal Japanese words for brother require knowledge of birth order they use the vague and slightly standoffish term 'kyoudai,' or 'sibling' most of the time. Knives appears to have appointed himself older in a lot of their interactions, but when they were kids this role (in the manga) very slightly defaulted to Vash, and he has the responsibility to 'take care of Knives.'
 * Their arguments about whether to kill off the human race etc. all boil down partly to a debate about which twin has more authority over the other. Being psychotic and incapable of self-doubt has given Knives the more forceful personality, but Vash is at bottom tougher. It never actually is settled;
 * Anime Knives is pretty definitely finagling the elder role from the start, though, although they do still use 'kyoudai.' Vash even seems to have accepted his authority for a couple of years after the Fall, before flipping out that Knives is still on his Kill All Humans kick, shooting him in the leg, and running like hell. This has led to a split understanding in the fanbase.
 * Liza and Tate from the Pokémon anime have this dynamic, with Tate suffering a bit of an inferiority complex considering how Liza holds her seniority (and the fact that she continuously pummels him in battles) over him.

Films
"Solange: Just because I was born fifteen minutes earlier doesn't mean you can call me "old girl!""
 * Used in the movie Hangman's Curse.
 * Variant: the French musical Les Demoiselles de Rochefort has the younger twin calling the other "old girl," leading the other to reply:

""By ninety seconds!""
 * The seniority of rank example also occurs in the 1964 film Zulu, between Lieutenant Chard and Lieutenant Bromhead. This might have been the origin for the Voyager example.
 * Variation: A deleted scene from The Boondock Saints includes the main characters trying to get their mother to tell them which of them is older, presumably so they will then be able to use this trope. Eventually she tells them, "The one with the bigger cock!"
 * Widget and Sludge in the 2009 Astro Boy film.

Literature
"Artemis: I'm fine, Apollo. And I am not your little sister. Apollo: Hey, I was born first. Artemis: We're twins! How many millennia do we have to argue—"
 * Sweet Valley High: "Elizabeth was 4 minutes older than Jessica, but sometimes it felt more like 4 years..."
 * When the Auditors of Reality obtain bodies in Thief of Time, they begin to argue about who incarnated first because "seniority is seniority".
 * And in Peter David's Star Trek TNG novel "Vendetta", Picard's old Academy classmate Morgan Korsmo tries to give him orders because he got his captain's pips a few weeks before Picard.
 * The "promoted two minutes earlier is still seniority" variant was used in Aaron Allston's Wraith Squadron novels.
 * Done with Apollo and Artemis in the Percy Jackson series.


 * The Chronicles of Narnia, The Horse and His Boy. King Loon explains that Prince Cor, rather than his twin brother Prince Corin is first in line to succession, because he's the elder by 20 minutes. Inverted because Corin is quite happy about this while Cor is not.
 * The Bible: Jacob and Esau squabbling over who is the rightful heir. Esau ends up giving it to Jacob for a "mess of pottage" (lentil soup).

Live Action TV

 * Zack is ten minutes older than Cody in The Suite Life of Zack and Cody, and he has no problems making sure his brother remembers that fact.
 * A rare non-sibling example found in Star Trek: Voyager: Paris tried to order Torres to do something. Torres refuses on the grounds that they're the same rank, so Paris plays the seniority card. Torres immediately points out that he only has about a week over her.
 * In real life, seniority is serious business. My department had to lay off two people, and one day of seniority was going to determine who stayed. (In the end, it was averted by the most senior employee taking early retirement instead.)
 * Data and Lore in Star Trek: The Next Generation, androids created with the same physical template, both argue that seniority gives them precedence. (Lore had lied and said Data was the older twin.)
 * And a rare non-twin example: On Soap, there is an exchange between Jessica and Mary where they're trying to decide which one is the older sister. They definitely remember that they're a year apart, but each one seems to think that they're the younger one. (Remember, they're at a point in their lives where younger is better -- both of them are grandmothers by the end of the show's run.)
 * On All Together Now, Anna comments on how she is fifteen minutes older than Thomas and wonders if she kicked him in the head on the way out.
 * An entire episode of Pair of Kings plays with this; Brady claims to be the older twin, prompting Boomer to go to an oracle to find proof.

Radio

 * Used at the beginning of the Peabody-winning drama "Bonhoeffer: The Cost of Freedom."

Video Games
": Big brother? How do you know I didn't pop out first?
 * Inverted in Final Fantasy VI, where Sabin affectionately calls his twin Edgar "big brother", the imprecision of which is Lampshaded by the other characters. Further toyed with in that Sabin, due to his years of training in the wilderness, is way bigger physically than his pampered royal brother.
 * Dante and Vergil in Devil May Cry. Vergil is the slightly older twin brother... and acts like it.
 * Yuri and Chelink in Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Ring of Fates have this argument constantly, with Chelinka insisting that Meeth told her she's a couple minutes older.
 * In Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin, Stella is older than Loretta and tends to take on a larger share of authority and responsibility. At the end of the game,.
 * In The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Koume and Kotake have a moment within an argument, compounded by the fact that one of them misrepresents her own age to her own twin.
 * In No More Heroes, we find out that ; however, it is not discussed until the sequel (in an overly long answering machine message) that is supposedly the older twin, something  is quick to make a snarky remark on:
 * You're prob'ly spoutin' off about which one of us popped out first."


 * Dragon Quest VIII: Twins Cash and Carrie try to use this on each other. The problem is, since they were both adopted, neither knows who the older sibling is.

Western Animation
"Jan: Jace, we're twins. You're only two minutes older than me. Jace: A guy can learn a lot in two minutes!"
 * 3-2-1 Penguins: Jason notes that Michelle is only 5 minutes older and holds out his hand to indicate "5" only to realize that as a cartoon he only has four digits per hand.
 * Hank Venture mentioned that he and Dean were about 4 minutes apart in Venture Brothers. Of course, how true this is is debatable, since they're clones and may well have been activated at exactly the same time.
 * Lampshaded in a Space Ghost episode:

"Gemini: Four minutes, four years, the point is I am the older brother and she never respected that!"
 * Inverted on The Simpsons, when Selma laments Patty's good fortune in being "two minutes younger" and thus presumably more desirable to men than Selma herself.
 * Rugrats: Lil is two minutes older than Phil, continued to come up in arguments in All Grown Up.
 * Dragon Tales took this to the extreme, with one head of a two-headed dragon popping out of the egg five minutes before the other.
 * In one episode of Kim Possible, Dr. Director's evil (fraternal) twin is four minutes older, and blames his megomaniacal ambitions on the fact she didn't defer to him as a kid.


 * Scooter and his sister Skeeter arguing above, over who gets filmed by a camera the kids are playing with in Muppet Babies.
 * Batman the Brave And The Bold "The Malicious Mr. Mind!" Mary Marvel argues that Billy Batson is only older than her in superhero form, otherwise she's older than him by three seconds.
 * In The Powerpuff Girls, Blossom always takes charges and generally acts older than her sisters, Buttercup has typically the behaviour of the somewhat overlooked middle-child, and Bubbles acts like the baby of the three. In spite of the fact that there is no age-gap between them at all.

Real Life
"Interviewer: Now I notice in the [CD] liner notes, I think Tom, you say "my younger brother"? Tom Kaulitz: Yeah, I'm 10 minutes older! Bill Kaulitz: Yeah, he's so proud of it! So, please. 10 minutes? Oh wow."
 * An interview with the band Tokio Hotel, which includes identical twins: