Noodle Incident/Web Original

Examples of s in works include:

Other Examples
"Jay's camera flashed away as it [Classified! PPC protected information.]"
 * Maxter Bexter: "Max had a bad encounter with a mojito".
 * Destin told us Adam was banished from the site over the noodle incident, probably as a shout out.
 * The Onion gives us "Unspeakable happens in Area Town"
 * The Onion also provides the commentary "No Secrets Between Us, Except What Happened March 2, 2004"
 * Due to the strangeness of their work, many Protectors of the Plot Continuum agents end up with at least one; for example, in the Original Series, Jay and Acacia fed a Sue to the Balrog. They weren't quite sure how a creature apparently made entirely of fire eats, and wanted to see. "Osmotic incineration? Perhaps it devours them alive and they flake away inside it?"


 * The SCP Foundation has quite a few, most notably when [DATA EXPUNGED].
 * SCP-447 is perfectly safe... just as long as you never let it near any dead bodies.
 * SCP-231 is essentially a Noodle Incident.
 * Used for good dramatic effect in 085, A Romance in 2.5 Dimensions
 * Doctor Bright has apparently caused a lot of these.
 * SCP-3790 (the Department of Abnormalities) is Noodle Incidents within a Noodle Incident. The SCP itself is an abandoned - or possibly evacuated - Foundation facility that the O5 Council didn’t seem to know about until the numerical designation was assigned in recent ( continuity wise) years. The seven-floor subterranean facility has cells where the doors have been welded shut and had their handles removed; clearly, somebody did not want the contained occupants getting out for some reason. All that can be construed from the interred SCPs is their names and whatever can be seen through the panels on the doors. Some of the more interesting occupants are  “The Crying Boy” (a painting with a sheet over it; there is a sound of a child sobbing from somewhere in the room), “Channel 55” (an old television, turned on, again with a sheet over the screen),  “Adam’s Hatred” (a cloud of darkness; looking at it makes the viewer enraged), and “Dead Man’s Chair” (seemingly an ordinary rocking chair, but its shadow depicts a man sitting in it - sometimes. One disturbing example is “The Infinite Cold”; the room seemingly being an icy floor above a dark void of nothingness. This coldness seems to be felt in the adjoining room (“Sorrow”) which has an empty pedestal and fingerprints in the dust that indicated whatever was on it was recently removed - but by who?  Strangest of all is a door with no label and the panel also welded shut, with the word “Hello!” written on it in red graffiti - clearly whatever is in there is very dangerous. And then there’s what’s on the 7th floor… The narrator of the piece does not say what’s on it, only claiming that upon returning to the 1st floor, he ripped out the wiring for the elevator  so nobody else would ever have to see it.

"Dave: Oh man. Like that time we went to the Arbuckle Residence and in the basement found those three dead--- Mike: Shut up Dave! OK next topic..."
 * During Civil Protection: Halloween safety.

"Dharok: If you don't come with us, we're gonna tell everyone your secret! Zamorak: Wait that was only one night! we had a bit to drink at the Blue moon Inn! Saradomin: Yeah, I don't even know where the banana came from! Zamorak: And I was only shoving a little! Dharok: Yeah! We're gonna tell everyone your first names! Dwayne Zamorak and Alfred Saradomin! Saradomin: Oh... that secret... wouldn't want that to get out in the open..."
 * Unanswered questions abound in The Saga of Tuck, but given the author's tendency to withhold information until the last second, these are probably the safest to mention:
 * Just what did Travis do as a favor for Lisa?
 * What happened during Mike and Tuck's last dual babysitting job?
 * Why were panties found under Brian's desk?
 * Where did the missing air compressor go?
 * In Void Dogs, Galatea was bounced from the casino station for doing something that took more than seventeen pages for the station security to describe, as that's how much of the report was redacted from it.
 * Whateley Universe
 * There's a particular incident that's been mentioned several times. At the end of spring and fall terms, the students in the Super-Hero School Whateley Academy have to participate in what is called the Combat Finals. In Chaka's first term at school, when everyone else was fighting one-on-one battles, the instructors pitted her against THREE opponents (a super-strong brick, a giant, and a badguy wizard/manifester), and threw in a series of massive disasters including (apparently) an earthquake and a tornado. All that the readers know is that she totally kicked ass. But people keep bringing it up; it's been officially verified by one of the Canon Cabal that it will NEVER be seen in detail. (Forum, Questions and Answers, Fey's combat final.)
 * They have a literal Noodle Incident as well. All they've told us about it is that those were not really noodles, and Generator was behind it.
 * Oh, and don't forget Belphegor's Disco Ball of Doom. And much of Belphoebe's shopping trip is not actually described, we only hear the dialogue.
 * A DRAMATIC example is used in Against Ill Chances, where suddenly the main character's personality changes subtly, and he can't remember what happened on the second day of testing, and one of his friends is missing... Later we found out. It's a lot worse than you'd guess.
 * Three new noodle incidents subsequently appeared: Team Kimba faced an Unwinnable Training Simulation and got their asses handed to them the first time that term (the Grunts, the supposedly the best team in the Sims, needed three or four tries). Generator proposes a strategy that includes a Radioactive Condor Girl and scares the crap out of battle-hardened combat teachers. After the weekend, they (apparently) try this scenario thrice more, ending with the Radioactive Condor Girl strategy. And win. We don't have any details, however.
 * The waffle incident in Chewbot's Let's Play of The Oregon Trail, Plague and Treachery On The Oregon Trail.
 * You're bound to get at least one of these if a webcomic gives one of it's characters a Twitter account, if only because of the limited space available to tell a story. For example, Max Facepuncher from The Fancy Adventures of Jack Cannon. His escapades so far as revealed in the comic, and his own Twitter, show that although his name is a clear indicator of his purpose, it's probably only scratching the surface of what he did to piss off Goofy enough that he got banned from Disneyland.
 * The play-by-post RP Insane Cafe 3: The Curse of the Haunted Hotel has Mr.Bigmouth mention "The Gravel Pass" incident. It is never fully explained but it is heavily implied to be a friendly fire incident in the Great Valley.
 * In the 3rd RP of Darwin's Soldiers, Alfred mentions that he can easily tip over a 3 ton pickup truck. How he knows that is never mentioned.
 * Sgt. Larry Masters is nicknamed Sgt. Pepper. It is not explained how he got that nickname aside from the fact it involved some Tabasco sauce, his uniform and some beer.
 * Doomsday Arcade: Maybe more of a lampshade character: Mario refers to 'The Man Upstairs' he is actually working for throughout the entire series, without giving anything else away.
 * In this original fictionpress story a Ouija Board incident is mentioned in chapter 23 of the story. Over 100 chapters later and still no explanation.
 * Memorably used with the aid of Noodle Implements in Tehnoobshow's Guthixscape video.

"58. The following words and phrases may not be used in a cadence- Budding sexuality, necrophilia, I hate everyone in this formation and wish they were dead, sexual lubrication, black earth mother, all Marines are latent homosexuals, Tantric yoga, Gotterdammerung, Korean hooker, Eskimo Nell, we've all got jackboots now, slut puppy, or any references to squid."
 * Texts From Last Night is an entire website devoted to texts messages taken out of context (though some create their own context). This is a good one.
 * Here's another one. I'd really like to know the story as to why that person was in Tehachapi and what happened while they were there.
 * Todd in the Shadows mentioned one in his review of "Like a G6" : "I'm not having any bottle broken over anyone's head in this room, not after the DL incident. I'll tell you about it some time... So much blood !" (he explained it on his Twitter and his "Grenade" review)
 * The Lupa Fiasco from his Top 11 Songs of 2011 list, which apparently involved several geese, something painted on the ceiling, and a freshly-boiled haggis.
 * The Motley Two has the mysterious incident which ended up with one of the protagonists getting a robotic eye, and the other a robotic arm and leg. No word on what it was, but it happened on Homestuck's Alternia, and violent incidents like these are hardly a rare occurrence on that planet.
 * Vork in The Guild doesn't think of himself as a bad man... well, there was that night he spent at a Hitler Youth Camp by accident...
 * When The Nostalgia Critic is taken to the future to review The Room by his future self, he discovers that somehow, Sea Horses have taken over the world. The only explaination we're ever given is Future Nostalgia Critic telling him that they really should've seen it coming. The Sea Horses have also outlawed watching The Room and fly now. Neither of these facts is given any explaination.
 * In the review of The Thief and the Cobbler Vincent Price calls the Critic. He then starts a poem to explain why he rhymes in the movie, then forgets it. The Critic mocks him by pointing out the irony that it's been years after he's dead and he can't remember anything. The only explanation Price gives is that it had something to do with Rock Hudson and a banana cream pie.
 * This is also done in the Nick Coms episode. To quote: "Granted, I didn't grow up as a girl. At least, not for long. *beat* I have a history."
 * This episode of Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Series has: "Put down that stick! Remember what happened with the scissors?"
 * Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't this more of a callback to when Tristan's voice died?
 * As a Memetic Mutation that started on certain Image Boards, we have the infamous I accidentally..., where one posts a sentence beginning with the words "I accidentally...", with the verb removed, frequently followed by the question, "Is this bad?". In many cases one can easily guess which verb is meant (often "wrecked" or "destroyed"), e.g. "I accidentally my save file". In other cases it's pretty much a mystery, thus qualifying for this trope: "I accidentally 93MB of .rar files; what should I do… is this dangerous?"
 * Red vs. Blue
 * Has this in the form of 'Yellow Church' whose idea to stop a bomb going off was apparently so bad that he somehow managed to change his armor colour from blue to yellow, he even got a special bonus on the DVD where he starts to explain then says 'Ugh, just...never mind'. Inverted in the original series finale where after much begging by the fans, the origin of Yellow Church was finally explained and it turns out that he actually had nothing to do with the bomb and was refering to a different incident.
 * To quote Tucker: "And I said: Read it? I already ruined it!". Nothing more to that story is given except for Tex thinking that it was disgusting and Caboose not getting it.
 * There are 49 Freelancers, one named after each state. Poor Florida.
 * Although technically a mythology gag, Both Red and Blue allude to an event at the Lake Hylia Water Temple that made going through it more difficult in Episode 3 of 4 Swords Misadventures.
 * From Dirty the Pooh chapter 1: "For Owl, a testicle case, in case he lost his testicles, because... oh well, it would take too long to explain."
 * Shadow Unit: Sol Todd is a bottomless fount of them, some of which (due to his days as a gonzo journalist) may even refer to real events. (One day, the world will finally hear the Argentinean racehorse story...)
 * Considering the first season is primarily made up of footage from the Troubled Production of Marble Hornets, we never really get much of what Alex Kralie's student film was really about. Then again, maybe that's for the best.
 * When Pokecapn and Friends did their Let's Play of Sonic Unleashed, the prior LP they'd done was given this treatment, despite the fact that the entire affair is in the public record, and given its notoriety, likely to stay there.
 * Certain sites catering to *ahem* niche demographics will occasionally have an image up that can make viewers wonder just what's going on in the picture and what lead to the... eh... circumstances, as they are. Assuming they stop and think about what's happening, of course.
 * In Dragonball Z Abridged, Freeza and Vegeta have both mentioned (in their thoughts) a "jockstrap incident", and all that we've learned is that at some point Freeza ordered Ginyu to bury something.
 * Skippy's List has examples:


 * Apparently, the last time Mrs. Snob trusted a guy in a hockey mask, she ended up with a miniature Zamboni shoved up her ass.
 * Yahtzee has never tried to invade Europe, apart from that one time
 * The hosts of the Nerdist Podcast, over a number of episodes, referred to literal "noodle stories," always speaking in lisping voices when saying it, and for a long time never explaining what it meant. They apparently had no idea what a "noodle incident" was until angry, angry fans brought it up while demanding to know the backstory. It was apparently just something someone said in a funny voice once, so they kept using it, and continued to do so especially once listeners first made clear they found it annoying.
 * At least one shows up in the collaborative writing project Fenspace -- the "unfortunate Tennis Ball Incident", mentioned only in the Fenspace Wiki Glossary. It apparently has something to do with the Warsies calling the SV Grover's Corners "The Death Star", but nothing more is known.