Bones



"Max: Are you sleeping with my daughter? Booth: No... Max: Why, are you gay?"

Bones is a television series which started in 2005 and is still ongoing. Temperance "Bones" Brennan, forensic anthropologist, is the pride of the Jeffersonian Institute's medico-legal lab. She's a brilliant scientist who's traveled all over the world in the course of her work and has even used her experience in the field to write a couple bestselling mystery novels. She's the person the FBI calls when a body turns up that can't be identified by normal procedures.

She's also aggressive, abrasive, and has all the social grace of a snapping turtle.

Fortunately for her (and the members of the public who have to deal with her), she has FBI agent Seeley Booth on her side. A former sniper with a young son and a laid-back loose-cannon personality, Booth is Brennan's partner in crime-solving, mutual irritation, and Unresolved Sexual Tension. With the help of a team of "squints" (Booth's terminology for The Lab Rat, cause they're always squinting at things), the two of them solve murders through a mix of forensics, detective work, and occasional violence.

Bones is easy to dismiss as yet another Forensic Drama, especially considering the laxity of some of the science and the better-than life crime recreation technology, but fans are quick to point out that the show's strength lies in its characters. The cases are little more than a backdrop for their interaction and growth. The writing is sometimes uneven and the episodes are more often either brilliant or horrible rather than mediocre, but the dialogue is clever and frequently peppered with moments of genuine emotion. Their behavior and interests help the audience relate to them as One of Us.

Rounding out the main cast of the lab are conspiracy theorist Jack Hodgins, the "bugs and slime guy"; hip and snarky Angela Montenegro, the facial reconstruction and crime scene recreation artist; and No Social Skills Zack Addy, a grad student even more socially awkward than the title character. Season two added Dr. Camille Saroyan, a pathologist who'd been assigned to take charge of the lab. Tension resulted, naturally, although it's mostly been smoothed over now. Season three added Dr. Lance Sweets, an FBI psychologist tasked with doing therapy sessions between Bones and Booth as well as profiling some of their suspects. The show also stars a rotation of "squinterns", Dr. Brennan's ambitious and quirky doctoral candidates.

An often recurring theme is the nature of intellect versus emotion and at what point you should use which. Most of Brennan's team rely on careful logic, and in some cases are bound entirely to it. Meanwhile Booth brings Brennan along on investigations and has to help put a soft touch to her chainmail glove when dealing with people.

A recurring element is wisecracking Hodgins and stoic Zack performing some absurd "test" to help solve cases. One particularly memorable one was putting a frozen pig through a wood chipper. It's a Long Story.

Loosely based on the novels and life of Kathy Reichs.

Has a character sheet. Not to be confused with the comic book series Bone, the animation studio BONES, The McCoy, the Snoop Dogg horror film, or actual bones.

A
"Bones: He can hold his breath for 3 minutes down there! (beat) Booth: ... underwater?"
 * Abusive Parents
 * Booth's father.
 * Sweets' biological parents.
 * Brennan's foster parents.
 * Abernathy's step-father.
 * Accent Relapse: Inverted by
 * Accidental Innuendo
 * Pointed out in-show in "The Man in the Outhouse" when Booth and Bones were discussing her sexual relationship with a Deep-Sea welder.


 * The conversation about how Bones' gun is bigger than Booth's.
 * Accidental Marriage / Oops, I Forgot I Was Married: Angela, so drunk she forgot it (and implied that she didn't think it counted; she had no idea the paperwork had been filed).
 * Action Girl: Brennan
 * Adorkable: Most of the regular male cast: Zack, Hodgins, Sweets, Vincent. Brennan is an uncommon female example. Despite geeky traits, Booth (comic book collector, although that is basically his only one) and Wendell are a little too macho to count, and Edison and seem a bit too smooth. Finn is a genius, but not at all nerdy.
 * Aerith and Bob: Seeley and Jared Booth. Seeley is a legitimate name, but it sounds a little odd when compared to his brother's.
 * Affably Evil: Max before his forced retirement.
 * Affectionate Parody
 * "The Body in the Bounty" has Bones guest star on a children's show called Bunsen Jude the Science Dude.
 * Also Hottie Student Body, a thinly-disguised Girls Gone Wild.
 * Agent Scully
 * No matter how often Sweets is useful or just plain right, Brennan always dismisses it as coincidence. This has been sort of wink-and-nudge acknowledged as Brennan not necessarily believing it's a coincidence, but making herself believe she believes it's a coincidence, which is not the same thing. Witness the time she tries to get Sweets to explain, and he blows her off with "You wouldn't believe me anyway." The curiosity clearly eats her alive.
 * Lampshaded (somewhat) by Booth in the first episode, when his way of turning over a new leaf with Brennan is by referring to them as Mulder and Scully.
 * The Booth/Brennan partnership and UST has often been compared to the Mulder/Scully partnership and UST. Quite a few Bones fans were The X-Files fans first. The core formula for both couples is still there; the Mother Nature, Father Science trope is inverted for both. However, since Booth and Brennan are not (thankfully) Expys of Mulder and Scully, the personalities are different and so is the interaction and dynamic between partners. Not to mention the Booth/Brennan romantic relationships was (presumably) planned from the start, giving a more logical progression to their UST (also adds realism). Unlike Mulder and Scully's romantic relationship, which was not planned from the start and entered into Romantic Plot Tumor territory after awhile.
 * All Psychology Is Freudian: Played straight by psychologist Sweets who often utilizes Freudian theories and language. However, psychiatrist Gordon Wyatt subverts this stating that "Freud is largely discredited, so to hell with him." Keep in mind Brennan actually feels that Wyatt's psychology makes more sense.
 * Almost Out of Oxygen: Brennan and Hodgins wind up in this situation when the Gravedigger buries them alive. Due to the relatively hard science nature of the program, Dr. Hodgins
 * Always Save the Girl: Whenever Bones is in danger, Booth won't hesitate to jump in to the rescue.
 * Almighty Janitor: In security guard form, Micah from "The Doctor in the Photo".
 * The Alcoholic
 * Booth's dad and until recently Booth's brother.
 * In season six, Vincent Nigel-Murray is a recovering alcoholic.
 * Ambiguous Disorder: Bones has a lot of trouble with metaphors and social skills.
 * And Now for Something Completely Different / Elseworld: The fourth season finale, a dream sequence in which a married Booth and Bones run a nightclub staffed by most of the cast.
 * Angst / What Angst:
 * Anti Intellectualism: Hodgins gets chewed out on a regular basis for his impromptu tests -- spam and artificial bone to determine exact circumstances of death by incineration make perfect sense to Hodgins and the viewer, but Cam says (paraphrased): "You say SPAM to a jury and they get a laugh and the perp gets an acquittal!" Bones herself gets harangued for being smart while jurors are slack-jawed morons -- she nearly loses an otherwise open-and-shut case because the opposing expert is chatty and handsome. "The jury likes Michael better than they like me, apparently that’s a problem. Are they stupid?" Goodman responds that, "Compared to you, yes they are stupid. However, compared to you most of the world is a little stupid." Bones and her "squints" are supposed to be smart enough to catch crooks with microscopic bone fragments, but not smart enough to intimidate Muggles.
 * Artistic License: Biology: In one episode Booth gets his sperm analyzed and everyone brags up that he had 28.8 million sperm in 3 mL. Although anything over 1 million sperm per mL is capable of fertilization, the average sperm count for a male in the United States is 120 million in ONE mL. (Or 360/28.8 = 12.5 times Booth's sperm count).
 * Artistic License Chemistry: In "The Twisted Bones in the Melted Truck", the bones in question were "melted" by exposure to a magnesium fire. Magnesium burns at 5000°F plus which would have been more than hot enough to melt the bullet which was found intact within the skeleton (lead melts at 622°F, steel at 2500°F).
 * Arc Number: 447
 * Ascended Fanon: "Squintern" was a fan term referring to Brennan's six ever-rotating interns. The cast and crew have recently adopted it.
 * Asian Gal with White Guy: Angela and Hodgins.
 * As Himself: Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top has appeared several times as himself -- Angela's dad!
 * Atonement Detective: Booth was an Army Sniper before joining the FBI. In the Pilot he tells Bones that he wants to catch at least as many murderers as people he killed in the line of duty.
 * Attending Your Own Funeral: at the end of the third season. For some reason, we weren't crying...

B
"Hacker: Ten seconds earlier and I would have been the hero, right?"
 * Babies Make Everything Better:
 * Background Music: Billy Gibbons gets his very own background riffs in "The Killer in the Crosshairs". Then again, it is Billy Gibbons.
 * Badass Boast: As badass as one can get in a realistic series: "I shave, sir. I have a driver's license. I've won a couple fistfights. I've saved a life. I've lain with woman. I've been hustled at pool. I've defied my father's wishes. I have broken hearts and I have been heartbroken. So by all the markers of this society, I am a grown man."
 * Badass Bookworm
 * In addition to her scientific prowess, Bones is a skilled and aggressive martial artist.
 * Her father is no slouch either, since he was a science teacher before and after he was a dangerous fugitive.
 * Badass Grandpa
 * Hank Booth. Has a bit of a secret:
 * As of season 6, Billy Gibbons.
 * As of season 7,.
 * Badass Longcoat: Booth dons one from time to time. Bones herself occasionally slips into her own trench coat as well.
 * Beastly Bloodsports: A Victim of the Week is a veteranarian who is trying to shut down a dogfighting ring.
 * Beta Couple
 * Angela and Hodgins.
 * Sweets and Daisy later on.
 * Berserk Button
 * Bones flips out whenever Booth is hurt or threatened. In one episode, she grits her teeth, screams, and for exactly the first ten minutes of the following episode. When he came back, she was so upset, she hit him.
 * Likewise, Booth for Bones (see the end of "The Woman in the Garden," where Booth threatens a gang leader).
 * Ask Booth any questions about his abusive father and he goes from happy guy to Death Glare in a heartbeat.
 * It's just one time, but Dr./Chef Gordon Wyatt gets a good one in "The Dwarf in the Dirt." "FRY COOK?!"
 * Best Friend Manual: Angela for Bones.
 * Big Brother Instinct: Booth towards Sweets and, to a lesser extent, all the Squinterns.
 * Big Damn Heroes: Attempted and failed by Hacker in "The Proof in the Pudding":
 * Big Damn Heroes: Attempted and failed by Hacker in "The Proof in the Pudding":

Booth is usually presented as more intuitive with a high emotional intelligence which makes sense for someone who has suffered abuse. Several episodes generally present him (and others) acknowledging that within context of the team, his "specialty" is the emotional aspect of such cases. It comes up a lot less though because within context of having to present a legal case and identifying bodies, gut instincts generally don't cut it.
 * Bi the Way: Angela
 * Birth-Death Juxtaposition: The death of and  an episode afterwards.
 * Bittersweet Ending: "The Hole in the Heart". The Squints pay tribute to by singing his favorite song as they place his casket in the hearse.
 * Black, White, Asian: Cam, Brennan, and Angela. It fiddles around with the stereotypes, too: Angela is the cool one, Cam is the reserved one, and Brennan is the nerdy one (granted, they're all nerds, but she takes the cake).
 * Book Dumb: Booth, contrasting with Brennan's TV Genius; there is evidence that this is more an act of Obfuscating Stupidity on his part, so that the various insufferable geniuses he works with are less threatened by him. We know he's Book Dumb, and we know he uses Obfuscating Stupidity to make Bones feel better, but we don't know the degrees in which these tropes are present. Probably he's just picked up a lot more from working with them than he lets on.
 * Boom! Headshot!:.
 * Brainy Brunette: Bones, and how.
 * Break Out the Museum Piece: Hodgins and Wendell do this (with a healthy dose of MacGyvering) when they are trapped by a blizzard without power, and they have to solve the case quickly because the murderer might be contagious. The clearest example is when Hodgins actually manages to vaporize some of the metal shrapnel and analyze it. Justified because they work IN a museum.
 * Angela had to borrow an Amiga computer "from the third floor" to process a 20 year old floppy disk found with a victim.
 * Brick Joke
 * The Gravedigger is introduced in season 2. Then they waited until season 4 to bring him back in. And then until season 5  And finally, in season 6,
 * The Angela Forever tattoo that Hodgins involuntarily receives in season 4. Finally revealed to Angela in season 5. She does not approve. Followed in season 6 by a Dad tattoo on the other bicep.
 * In "The Princess and the Pear", Fisher winds up sleeping with a suspect. In "The Gamer in the Grease", he mentions he's had nearly 100 conquests and gets another one while waiting in line to see Avatar.
 * After learning of Booth and Bones' in "The Santa in the Slush", Sweet's first reaction is  . Two seasons later, in "The Parts in the Sum of the Whole", Sweets learns of  and is pretty dang shocked. Bones immediately replies  before he can even ask the question.
 * British Royal Guards: When Brennan and Booth go to London, they suspect a Buckingham Palace guardsman of killing the Victim of the Week, but it turns out he only beat the guy up for sleeping with his sister. While waiting for the guard to finish his tour Booth taunts him, knowing that he can't react. When Booth discovers the truth about the two, he apologizes to the guard who very subtly acknowledges Booth with his eyes.
 * Broken Aesop: In "The Goop on the Girl", a suicide bomber at a bank appears to detonate his bomb using the signal from an angry left-wing radio show. Booth accuses the host of spreading "poison" throughout the airwaves and causing the attack, even if he was not legally responsible. The episode ends with the radio host giving a long apology on air, lecturing on the dangers of media-stoked rage, and ending his radio show. Nobody told him, however, that the radio show didn't inspire the bombing. The only reason the show's signal set off the bomb was because it was very close to the frequency used by the actual robbers.
 * Bunny Ears Lawyer
 * Brennan, Hodgins, Zack and all the interns. To the point where, in stark contrast to the rest, Clark actually seems like this simply for being so very normal.
 * Jude the Science Dude, a children's TV show host, who veers between competent anatomist and goofy Barney the Dinosaur-type.
 * Booth is a milder example. His trademark loud socks and "Cocky" belt buckle would not be acceptable attire for a less competent federal agent.
 * The interns have been working on their various quirks between seasons, but the quirk-180 is just as jarring -- for instance, Edison (Mr. Separation-of-work-and-play) suddenly asking if Cam is still dating the gynecologist (she is) and pestering the others for relationship advice on a Valentine's Day episode.
 * The Butler Did It: Deconstructed. The butler says he did it to protect his employers' reputation,
 * But Not Too Black / But Not Too Foreign
 * Angela and Camille, the two main characters of color, are both half-white and look very light.
 * Definitely averted for Clark Edison, although he's not a main cast member.
 * Double Subverted with Arastoo. He shows up as a thickly-accented, fresh off the boat, Arabic stereotypical Muslim who observes all of the customs of his faith. It turns out that the accent is fake and he is a born-and-bred American who puts on the FOB act to keep people from questioning his devotion to the Muslim faith.

C
": You're carrying the 50-caliber 500. Well, that's five shots. (cocks his shotgun) And by my count... (snaps the shotgun) ...you only got one shot left. That's one dumbass gun to bring to a shootout!'' Booth: One shot. (BLAM!) One hell of a shot."
 * California Doubling: The Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach is "The Aquarium of the Atlantic".
 * Averted in "The Suit on the Set" -- literally shot on location at Fox Studios, although as far as I saw they never explicitly say where they are (they just let the coffee cups do the talking).
 * Cannot Spit It Out: Booth and Brennan at different times. And when one of them can, the other one doesn't want to hear it.
 * Casanova Wannabe: When Dr. Nigel-Murray starts going to Alcoholics Anonymous and has to make apologies to anyone he's harmed, he brings up that he bragged about sleeping with Angela... and Bones... and Saroyan...
 * The Cast Showoff
 * Eric Milligan is trained in musical theater, so the show had Zack sing an amazing rendition of "Love is a Many-Splendored Thing".
 * John Francis Daley's band Dayplayer made an appearance in the season 4 finale.
 * In the season 3 ep. "The Wannabe in the Weeds" Dr. Brennan tells the cast that her mother insisted that Temperance sang "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" better then Cindi Lauper. Lucky for us, Emily Deschanel gets the chance to prove that later in the episode.
 * Catapult Nightmare: The beginning of "The Boy with the Answer".
 * Catch Phrase
 * Brennan's "I don't know what that is/means."
 * Also, whenever she feels it necessary to explain something, she often begins with, "Well, anthropologically speaking..."
 * In one episode, Hodgins and Brennan are kidnapped. When the team realizes, Booth tells Zack he's going to have to be Brennan. Guess what his response was?
 * Hodgins and Zack have "King of the Lab!"
 * Angela is a fan of saying, "Awkward, awkward, very awkward."
 * Brennan always has the same reaction to anyone (mostly Booth) who points out that she shot a man: "He was trying to set me on fire!"
 * Caroline calls everyone "chérie".
 * Jude's "A-mazing!"
 * Celebrity Paradox
 * The actor who plays Fisher is also in Avatar. This would not be a problem, except Fisher appeared in "The Gamer in the Grease", which has an Avatar-centric B-plot about him getting free tickets to the movie, and hatching a scheme with two coworkers to keep a place at the front of the line. Ironically enough,.
 * The same character also comments on being a fan of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Amusing, given who he works with.
 * On a much more subtle note, Hodgins mocks Zack for "watching reruns of ''Firefly" in Season 1. Six episodes later, Jayne
 * Character Blog: The Bones iPad app has this in the form of Sweets' journal entires.
 * Character Shilling: For Hannah Burley in the sixth season.
 * Chaste Hero
 * Averted. Bones hooks up with more men than any other female lead not portrayed in a misogynist manner on American television, ever. She once dated two men at the same time, one for sex and the other purely for conversation. They're not amused. She even discusses society's gender roles and sexual hangups from an anthropological perspective that flummoxes her partner Booth.
 * More recent episodes do the same thing such as Bones reasonably justifying the choice of several teenaged girls to have children without the father, skip college, and live together. Booth, being a practicing Catholic, is flummoxed.
 * Chekhov's Gun: Requisite for a detective story.
 * Somewhat inverted once, in that the only time we see Booth securing his gun in his home's hidden safe, it's the only time he might have use for it: there's a wanted killer waiting for him in the living room.
 * Also, it seems, Chekhov's Bank Account. Practically anytime that it's mentioned that Bones is really really rich, by the end of the episode she donates large amounts of money to a good cause. Except in the season 6 premiere, when she pays Wendel a large sum of money so he doesn't have to work for tuition, without the audience being reminded beforehand about her wealth. Also, at the end of the seventh season premiere, Bones is looking for houses for her and Booth to move into and she casually mentions that one, which is obviously a mansion, costs only $3 million, at which point Booth almost chokes on his beer because he wants to pay for half of the house.
 * A literal example is Bones' hand-cannon. The subject of much Freudian dialogue throughout the episode, it comes in handy when Booth has to shoot a serial killer through a metal door.

"Hodgins: You call it conspiracy theories, I call it the family business."
 * In "The Change in the Game",
 * Chekhov MIA: Bones's parents.
 * Comic Role Play: When the Squints are re-enacting a crime, you can bet it's going to end up as this.
 * Conspiracy Theorist: Hodgins
 * At least one was oddly plausible; he believes that old, rich families secretly rule the world. He is actually a member of one of these families. Another was actually confirmed by a government official when he suggested it as a viable tool, although it turned out to be nowhere as cloak and dagger as he imagined (it basically came down to looking up information that was available in public records, but the way he described it made it sound like there was a dossier already prepared for every human being the US government knew existed).

"David Barron: Objection. Assuming facts not in evidence. Caroline Julian: What do you mean? The defendant has every needle disease in the book, except HIV. David Barron: Same objection. Plus Miss Julian seems to deeply desire to testify herself. Caroline Julian: Yes, I would like to testify, because then I'd know what answers I was getting. Judge: Alright, settle down. This is a murder trial, not a night at the Improv."
 * One episode features a team of secret service agents 'comandeering' the lab and the team, requiring them to examine a set of bones. They're firmly told not to speculate about the deceased's identity, but as the evidence mounts it looks more and more like they're examining the remains of President JFK. .)
 * Contamination Situation: The first season's Christmas episode, "The Man in the Fallout Shelter".
 * Conveniently an Orphan: Dr. Brennan, whose loss is used to explain and excuse her (seemingly?) detached approach to humanity.
 * Cool Old Guy: Max Brennan; Billy Gibbons; Hank Booth; Gordon Gordon Wyatt
 * Cop and Scientist
 * Corrupted Data: Given lip service: where even though it's stated to be corrupted, Angela will regularly reconstruct data and it will be good as new.
 * Courtroom Antics: Caroline has been known to engage in them every now and then.


 * Cryptid Episode: There's an episode focused on the chupacabra.
 * Cultural Translation: The original novels were partially -- sometimes mostly -- set in Montreal or North Carolina. This gets a nods in the pilot, where Brennan tells Booth the nearest forensic anthropologist other than herself is in Montreal.

D
"Mr. Fisher: Can I please keep my job if I promise never ever to have sex again with anyone, which, by the way, suits me temperamentally? I happen to be very self-sufficient."
 * Damn You, Muscle Memory!: For the final sniper cat-and-mouse show down with Booth, Broadsky, as trained snipers are taught to do, camped out on the high ground. Unfortunately, he forgot that
 * A Date with Rosie Palms: Alluded to when Mr. Fisher the depressed intern gets in trouble for sleeping with a suspect:

"(head falls off a body hung from a tree, and Bones catches it) Bones: I need an evidence bag. (rest of the body falls) Bones: I'm gonna need a bigger bag."
 * Dawson Casting: Zach is supposed to be the youngest member of the team by a significant margin; in fact Eric Millegan is the third oldest member of the cast after David Boreanaz and Tamara Taylor.
 * Dead Guy, Junior
 * One of the names Angela and Hodgins' baby gets is.
 * Booth names Parker after Corporal Edward Parker, a friend of Booth's from the Army Rangers.
 * Booth and Brennan name their daughter
 * Deadpan Snarker: Everyone, to a certain extent.
 * Bones especially, though. Subverted in that much of the time, Temperance isn't aware she's snarking.


 * Cam, being the Only Sane Employee at the Jeffersonian, does this. A lot.
 * Also Caroline Julian is made of this trope -- everything she says is both deadpan and snarky.
 * Death in the Clouds: In one episode they're taking a plane to China when a dead body is found, and they have to discover and arrest the murderer before they touch down or else the case becomes "property" of China.
 * Denser and Wackier: A common comment from season four onwards is that the show begins to dip more towards the comedy part of "dramedy".
 * Did Not Do the Research: Aristoo's journal article subplot. One, even if under NDA, his labmates would already know about his work, having collaborated with him on it in some fashion, and thus would almost certainly be aware that he is planning to publish it. In fact, one or more of them are likely to qualify as co-authors. Two, a reputable scientific journal does not publish puff pieces on Selena Gomez, and most certainly would not bump legitimate scientific content to do so, and double extra certainly will not kill it outright, even if it is bumped for some form of breaking news: science is science, even if it's published a week or month later, and more to the point, journals do not and cannot operate that quickly, due to the peer-review process and the nature of publication. Three, speaking of peer review, your current supervisor will never, ever, ever review your paper for the journal. Not only is that a direct conflict of interest in and of itself, and against any reputable journal's editorial policies, but she would very likely be the last author on said paper anyway, and thus have vetted it thoroughly before it came within a mile of the peer-review process. And that's to say nothing of his efforts to get another paper, which amount to throwing shit at the wall and seeing if something sticks. While even the best scientists have gone on the odd fishing expedition from time to time, there's a reason why the scientific process is what it is.
 * Distracted by the Sexy
 * In "The Babe in the Bar," when Vincent Nigel-Murray comes up with an idea to preserve the bubbles of the victim's last breath, Cam in her enthusiasm says "If I didn't have self-control, I could kiss you!" The normally Motor Mouth Nigel-Murray is struck silent for several seconds until Hodgins brings him out of it.
 * Hodgins himself falls victim, when he sees the newsreel Angela dug up to check out Booth's new girlfriend.
 * In "The Male in the Mail", Edison can't stop staring at Bones fidgeting with her pregnancy-sized breasts.
 * Don't Explain the Joke: Brennan does, both with her own jokes and the jokes of others.
 * Double Meaning Title: The sixth season opener, "The Mastodon in the Room", deals with the team getting back together and examining the motivations that had split them up and the problems this had caused. Unlike most episodes however, the case has nothing to do with mastodons. It instead involves the body of a young boy, and as the episode is entering its last few minutes with not even a mention of mastodons you find yourself thinking "Aren't they ignoring the Mastodon in the Room?". Then in one of the final shots, the team returns to their old lab -- which in their absence has been turned into an exhibit room for the Jeffersonian -- which features an actual mastodon.
 * Downer Ending: "The Graft in the Girl". Sure, they caught the murderer, but Amy's still terminal.
 * Howard Epps's introductory episode probably counts as this; sure, the guy on death row got exonerated, just not for the right reasons.
 * Drinking Game: In-show, not for the show (although there's probably one of those, too) -- Hodgins reveals that he and his college buddies had one of these for Bunsen Jude the Science Dude when he starts fanboying over the eponymous Science Dude and the latter calls him out on being "older than my usual audience".
 * Dysfunction Junction: After finding out that.

E
"Fisher: I got the idea at my summer job. Cam: I’m afraid to ask. Fisher: Suicide hotline. Cam: Were you for or against? Fisher: This is weird. Something good is happening."
 * The Eeyore: Fisher. Naturally, his mom is an overly-sunny optimist.

"Camille: Why can't you just lighten up the guy's face and, you know, zoom in? Angela: Because it was a cell phone camera that was aimed by a child. Bones: The plexiglass at this point is a foot thick! Angela: And thirty feet of water. Bones: At night. Camille: I was just asking!"
 * Emotionless Girl: Brennan
 * Enfant Terrible: A particularly brittle, obsessive, bratty little girl on Max's bowling league.
 * Enhance Button: The show RUNS on it. So much so that when they seemed about to avert it in season 5 in "The Predator in the Pool" they felt the need to justify themselves at length...

"Brennan: Particles from the cut grass are causing his mast cells to release inflammatory mediators. Booth: It's just allergies, Bones. Brennan: Yeah, that's what I said."
 * Ensemble Darkhorse: An In-Universe example. It had been a Story Arc looking for a new lab intern and the crew were really starting to like Wendell Bray. When the scholarship that qualified him for the position in the first place went bankrupt, they spent an entire episode trying to find a way to keep him.
 * Eskimos Aren't Real: Zack expresses surprise that Hodgins believes in pirates, and Hodgins snarks back that they're not Santa.
 * Establishing Shot: The stock footage of a lovely summer garden outside 'The Jeffersonian'.
 * Ethical Slut: Angela really likes sex, and has no reservations about letting it known.
 * Eureka Moment: Also requisite for a detective story.
 * Even the Guys Want Him: Angela's ex-husband Grayson gets some of this from both Sweets and Clark.
 * Everyone Can See It: Bones and Booth. Sweets writes a book about it!
 * Expospeak Gag


 * Expository Hairstyle Change: Zack's second-season makeover.
 * Expy: Mr. Bunsen Jude, The Science Dude
 * Eye Scream: Although it's done to a dead body, the scene where they remove fluid from an eye in one episode is still not for the squeamish.

F

 * Fan Nickname
 * The official forum is "The Boneyard".
 * The rotating squints are "The Squinterns"
 * Fan Service: Bones' Wonder Woman costume. Ms. Deschanel's assets are... unusually prominent. Noticeably prominent. Gloriously prominent. Quite a bit of Gainaxing too.
 * Faking the Dead: . Probably also a case of Like You Would Really Do It.
 * Fauxreigner: Arastoo (see farther down about his accent), because pretending to be fresh off the boat would make his coworkers less likely to bug him about his religion.
 * Famous Last Words: "Please just don't make me go. I don't wanna go. I love... it's been lovely being here with..."
 * Fictional Counterpart: Bones and her team work at a thinly veiled version of the Smithsonian Institution.
 * Finger in the Mail:
 * One actual use of this trope occurs in "The Woman in the Car", where the son of a grand jury witness gets kidnapped. Booth gets the kid's pinky finger in the mail.
 * Foot-Dragging Divorcee: Angela's husband that she didn't even remember marrying appears and says he has built a house for her. He won't grant her an annulment/divorce so she can marry Hodgins, but by the end of the episode he relents.
 * Forensic Drama
 * Foreshadowing
 * Angela's bisexuality was hinted at as far back as the first few episodes. "You have no idea how open-minded I can be."
 * A person doing interviews to see how suitable the lab guys were to be allowed access to top secret files (or something) asked Zack what he would do if . Zack replies he would ask Dr. Brennan first.
 * Just before he gets shot, says, "I feel like I'm going to be dead soon."
 * Zack is seen to hang on every word that his best friend, Jack Hodgins, says. This makes it all the more heartbreaking when you learn that
 * Frickin' Laser Beams
 * In the episode "The Knight on the Grid", the show warrants a surprising Artistic License Physics when Zack turns on a laser and we can see the laser tracing out its path.
 * Occurs even earlier (first season) when Hodgins uses two lasers to examine the chemical composition of a bone.
 * The Foster Kid: Brennan; Sweets
 * Full-Name Basis: Gordon Gordon Wyatt. That's not a typo, at one point he posits that his first and middle are the same, and he never says whether he's joking or not.
 * The Fun in Funeral: "The Double Death of the Dearly Departed"
 * Functional Addict: Nigel-Murray, apparently, who would get drunk and brag about sleeping with the lab's ladies to his pals (Cam and Angela are shocked, Bones just finds the idea of them being compatible hilarious). He joined AA and got better.
 * Funny Aneurysm Moment: In the alternate universe episode at the end of season 4, Nigel-Murray jokes that Zack is the kind of person who . Sort of a retroactive Funny Aneurysm Moment from a watcher's view, but a straight example in-universe.

G
"Angela: Okay, what I did was modify my mass recognition program -- patent pending -- to scan the photographic reconstruction of the crime scene, to find areas of comparatively less chaos. Hodgins: Awesome. Cam: (surprised) You understand what she's saying? Hodgins: Not in the least, but I am so turned on by her brain. I'd like to see her brain totally naked."
 * Geeky Turn On: Hodgins and Angela, frequently. Notable incidents include him naming a rose smelling fungus after her (long story), proposing to her with glowing sea food (longer story), and, of course, the following:

"Booth: Good, old, American classic."
 * Genre Busting: It's a drama-comedy all about decaying bodies, murder investigations and romance.
 * Genre Savvy: In "The Hole in the Heart" (6x22),
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar
 * In "The Maggots in the Meathead", Sweets is translating text messages in text-speak. He gets to one that reads "4Q" and decides it doesn't need to be translated out loud.
 * In "The Secret in the Soil" Sweets gives Booth and Brennan a psychological questionnaire. We don't get to hear the actual question, but one of Booth's answers is "About 15-20 times a day. But I'm starting to think that I really misunderstood the question..."
 * Going Commando: Booth admits to sometimes doing this when he doesn't have clean underwear, while at a Radical Honesty meeting. Try to look at him the same way again, I dare you.
 * GPS Evidence: And Jack Hodgins has the GPS.
 * Groin Attack
 * How Max evens the playing field after he challenges Booth to a fight.
 * Booth himself in "The Proof in the Pudding".


 * Gross Up Close-Up
 * The bodies are often found badly decomposed and covered with maggots.
 * The fifth season episode "The Gamer in the Grease" takes it a step further with an extended shot of half-liquidated flesh sliding off of a corpse's bones. Complete with sound effects.

H
"Brennan: (aside) She's a therapist, isn't she? She talks like a therapist! Therapist: (later interview, out loud) Oh my god. She's an anthropologist, isn't she? She talks like an anthropologist!"
 * Had to Come to Prison to Be a Crook: Serial Killer Howard Epps, possibly. He could be a Manipulative Bastard all along, or maybe he learned it while on death row. When we first meet Epps, he's claiming to be innocent and trying to get exonerated, but it ends up he just reveals he's killed even more people than previously thought, so they have to keep him alive while they process the new bodies. When he returns in season 2, Epps is even more manipulative and playing serial killer games, leading the team on a merry chase with body parts as clues.
 * Hand Cannon: One episode has Brennan getting the most powerful production handgun in the world. In a later episode, she trades guns with Booth, confessing, "my gun is too big for me," and putting an interesting spin on the very Freudian conversation she'd had with him earlier.
 * Happily Adopted: Sweets in his backstory.
 * Hard on Soft Science
 * Brennan rather hypocritically mocks psychology. Very ironic, considering that Brennan is an anthropologist, and psychology is a considerably "harder", more lab/experiment-based social science than anthropology.

"Dr. Adam Copeland: (to Bones) I've listened to you take shots at my profession. And that's okay. I'm a big boy, and tolerant man. I want you to think about something. I spend every working hour of everyday trying to help people who are living in hell. That's an honorable way to spend a life. Perhaps more honorable than figuring out what happened to dead people who are already beyond pain and suffering."
 * Also ironically, one of Brennan's childhood idols is Wonder Woman, a superheroine designed by a psychologist.
 * Hates Small Talk: One of the regularly-repeating crew of interns is constantly frustrated by the amount of time the main characters spend discussing their personal lives and dramas, so much so that "can we talk about the job, please" is basically his Catch Phrase.
 * The Heart: Angela, at least according to Hodgins. Except rather than personal vendettas, it's the minutiae of the body they're studying that she raises their eyes from. Further driven home by the fact that in "The Man in the Cell", Angela receives a human heart in the mail after the publication of a newspaper article in which Hodgins calls her "the heart of the operation".
 * Hello, Nurse!: Booth says to Brennan, "There isn't a guy in this country who wouldn't want to have sex with you, including half the gay men."
 * Heroic BSOD
 * Booth nearly has one in "Proof in the Pudding",
 * Brennan gets one in "The Doctor in the Photo."
 * Hollywood Amnesia: Averted in "The Man in the Morgue". As far as Bones can tell, one minute she was accepting a dinner date with a nice guy, the next, she's beaten purple and covered in blood -- when she blacked out, she lost several hours of time before the event in question, as per Real Life retrograde amnesia. It actually makes everything more confusing and frightening. And while we manage to piece together the main gist of what happened, she never quite get all the memories back.
 * Hollywood Atheist: Averted. Bones is an atheist and the closest that gets to being plot-centric is another on the long list of personality conflicts between Bones and Booth (who is Catholic).
 * Hollywood Nerd: Brennan; Hodgins; Zack; Sweets
 * Hollywood Hacking: And how!
 * Hollywood Psych
 * This seems to be Bones view on psychology, completely not trusting it and calling it a "soft science". This would not be to bad if not for the fact that she prefers hard sciences like her own anthropology, a science not considered particularly "hard".
 * She dismisses any implied relation from what "is" to what "could be", so her use of anthropology is limited to what has been proven as fact.
 * Pointedly subverted in "The Devil in the Details", which takes place mostly in a mental ward.


 * When Stephen Fry is on the show, his character seems to have a bit of disdain for psychology himself, calling it on its ability to oversimplify and objectify a person's state of mind while arbitrarily projecting solutions that rely on the person's ability to understand and implement them. Then again, he was probably just using fast word play and large vocabulary to turn Brennan to his way of thought.
 * Honor Before Reason: In one episode the team find evidence a South American official with Diplomatic Immunity was involved with a murder. Getting through the red tape would be nearly impossible, and Cam suggested manipulating evidence to implicate the son, trying to get the official to confess and waive immunity. Booth listened but quickly rejected the proposal on the grounds that trying to cheat around DI would cause international problems, even though such manipulation is used all the time in local law enforcement.
 * Hot Scientist: Not so much in the first season.
 * Cam qualifies.
 * Played with in one episode where Booth sees Bones using a pair of grandma glasses during an investigation (they were on a plane with few tools so she needed something to magnify things). He promptly suggests she take off her glasses, shake out her hair, and say something subtly suggestive ("Do you know what the penalty is for an overdue book, Mr. Booth?"). Bones is promptly confused and only does so after Booth is gone. She still remains confused.
 * Hot Scoop: Hannah, the journalist Booth begins dating in season six.
 * How We Got Here: The episode "Aliens in a Spaceship" and "The Parts in the Sum of the Whole".
 * Hunk: Booth

I

 * Identification From Dental Records: used frequently, since they deal with corpses in advanced states of decay and/or dismemberment.
 * Idiosyncratic Episode Naming: Usually described as "The X in the Y", with X being a one-word description of the victim, and Y being the place in which they're found. X and Y are usually alliterative too. Exceptions to this pattern are often highly meaningful.
 * If You Ever Do Anything to Hurt Her...: Inverted. Booth says this to Brennan's brother Russ.
 * I Just Want to Be Normal: Hodgins's family is actually one of the most powerful families in the world and pretty much owns the Jeffersonian. He deliberately downplays it because he wants to be treated on his own terms.
 * I'm a Humanitarian: The Gormogon.
 * Improbably Predictable: Booth reveals that he knows Brennan's computer password, because he knows how she thinks. He also knows what she changes the password to -- twice.
 * In Name Only: The TV series borrows nothing from the novel series aside from the main protagonist's name, profession, and tendency for not suffering fools gladly. Most of the inspiration for the series comes from the life and work of Kathy Reichs, the novelist. Not that's a bad thing
 * The novel character is a worldly and rather jaded divorced (not to Booth, who does not exist in the novels) single-mother, former alcoholic professor in her late-forties. A bit taciturn but very much capable of normal social interaction. And she goes by Tempe, not Bones. Reichs and Deschanel theorizes that Novel!Brennan is a older version of TV!Brennan, but it's not canonical.
 * In-Series Nickname: Bones, Bren, and Tempe for Brennan, and King of the Lab for Hodgins (and occasionally, Zack).
 * Insistent Terminology: Ska-luh!
 * Insufferable Genius: MANY.
 * Insult of Endearment
 * Hodgins dismissivly calls new intern Finn Abernathy "Opie", after the character in The Andy Griffith Show. Abernathy counters by calling Hodgins "Thurston." By the end of the episode they've gained respect for each other, but still use the same nicknames.
 * Played With by Booth and Bones herself. Booth originally used the name as a term of endearment and respect for Brennan but  he continued to call her it out of a desire to annoy her and always got a "Don't call me Bones!" in response. Later on she came to like the nickname again and he became the only person allowed to call her that.
 * Intentional Engrish for Funny (Blind Idiot Translation in-universe): The instructions to the "baby walker" that Angela buys for her baby in season seven's "The Prince in the Plastic".
 * Interdisciplinary Sleuth: Brennan, Hodgins, and Angela all qualify in their own way.
 * Internal Homage: Compare these scenes from “The Parts in the Sum of the Whole” and “The Boy With the Answer” -- same taxi even!
 * Intro-Only Point of View
 * Irony: The replacement bowler on Max's team (paraphrased): "I'm not superstitious like Victim-of-the-Week, I believe in God!" Amazingly, Bones doesn't say a word (she's undercover, barely, but it must have been a strain).
 * It Has Been an Honor: Hodgins to Brennan.
 * I Was Young and Needed the Money: Cam's role in "The Invasion of the Mother Suckers".

J-L
"Angela:"Wait. The evidence actually adds up to an old, fat man with a white beard, in a custom-made Santa suit who smoked a clay pipe and got kicked in the ass by a reindeer?""
 * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: The sheriff who puts Hodgins and Angela in jail after they mess around with their Prius' auto-driving feature
 * : Brennen's team suspects, but can't ever be sure, that.
 * The Kindnapper: One episode involves a kidnapped child, who it turns out has been kidnapped by his father, who thinks his ex-wife is an unfit mother. The father changes the child's name and hair color to hide him at his cousin's house.
 * Knife-Throwing Act: Booth and Bones went undercover as a knife-throwing act.
 * Laser-Guided Karma: In "The Graft in the Girl", a woman who dropped out of medical school is stealing corpses from a funeral home and selling them through a fake medical supply house for bone grafts. One of these corpses, who died of mesothelioma, infected at least five people with a deadly disease. The suspect isn't going to trial, though. She didn't last long enough in med school to know that bone dust is toxic, so she gave herself a fatal disease.
 * Last-Name Basis
 * Even away from the job Booth is just Booth, almost nobody calls him Seeley. Inverted with his brother who is always called "Jared" and is actually at one point called "a fake Booth".
 * Colin Fisher is never called by his first name. In a scene where Wendell is speaking to Cam about the other interns, he refers to them as Daisy, Vincent (who almost everyone else calls Mister Nigel-Murray), Arastoo and Fisher.
 * Hodgins; even his own wife rarely calls him Jack.
 * Max and Russ are the only people who call Bones "Temperance". Booth calls her "Bones" (the only one she allows to) and everyone else calls her Brennan with or without the "Doctor".
 * Leaning on the Fourth Wall: In the episode the Family in the Fued the conflict of the Hatfield and McCoys is referred to as "a story", whereas "there's nothing made up about the Mobley's and Babcocks.", when in fact it's the exact opposite.
 * Left the Background Music On: In "The X in the File," Bones and Booth are talking about the possibility of alien visitation, when the X Files theme starts up in the background. Turns out it's the ringtone of an abandoned cellphone.
 * Let Me Get This Straight...: From the episode The Santa In The Slush.

"Dr. Gordon Wyatt: ... Bilious socks and your ostentatious ties, and your provocative belt buckles. [...] Oh, it's a modern-day codpiece. It forces the eye to the groin."
 * Limited Wardrobe: Booth's trademark black suit and belt buckle, with occasional variations in the shirt, socks, and tie. When he's off the job, he usually wears a brown leather jacket, which he sometimes wears to crime scenes. Brennan tends to wear big, dangly earrings and necklaces.

"Perotta: Booth was right, you're like a portable polygraph. Sweets: He didn't mean that in a good way, did he?"
 * Literal-Minded: Brennan, more so than anyone who isn't an android should be.
 * Living Lie Detector: Sweets


 * Locking MacGyver in the Store Cupboard: When Brennan and Hodgins are.
 * Lonely Funeral: Brennan and Booth decide to avert this by showing up with the whole team at the funeral of their latest corpse of the week, a loner who had nobody in the world but his mother.
 * Lovable Sex Maniac: Angela
 * Lower Class Lout: One episode explores the "Guido" culture, and Brennan herself said she followed the TV "documentary" on them.

M
"Bones: Phalanges! Dancing phalanges!"
 * MacGyvering: Practically Dr. Hodgins's main role. He usually ropes whichever squintern there is into helping him. Cam frequently disapproves. Special mention goes to Wendell Bray, who managed to take X-rays with scotch tape supplying the needed (static) electricity during a blizzard, and used a potato battery to power a cellphone.
 * Magical Computer: Lampshaded in the pilot. But still played straight most of the time. Angela's computer (and Angela herself) can do almost anything with her combination computer-hologram projector. Such as recreating detailed hieroglyphics... from the stains of an object inside a several thousand year old mummy or being able to reconstruct an accurate corpse from a body that had been crushed with a car crusher... enough to be able to identify markings on the bones.
 * Parodied in episode 100 "The Parts in the Sum of the Whole", a flashback to the first collaboration between Booth and Bones, where Angela, new to the Jeffersonian, reenacts the murder with a flip book animation of stick figures. Caroline Julian says it won't convince a jury unless it's a computer simulation.
 * Angela has a minor in computer science to explain her tech-savvy.
 * Malaproper: Bones, after getting out of her "I don't know what that means" phase, and moving onto guessing.
 * The Man Behind the Man:
 * Maternally Challenged: Brennan, naturally. "Just because I have breasts does not mean I have magical powers over infants." She does grow attached to the kid by the end of the episode, though.


 * She eventually decides it would be "selfish" of her not to procreate and chooses Booth to be her sperm donor; this is put on hold due to
 * Back on, now that
 * Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: Was Brennan drugged or bespelled in New Orleans? And did Booth really see a ghost, or was it just a hallucination?
 * McLeaned: is killed in "The Hole in the Heart" a few weeks before 's new show was set to premier. The dialogue during the death scene even sounds like someone who's more about to be fired than died.
 * Misplaced Accent: In-universe; Vaziri fakes a Jordanian accent despite being Iranian.
 * Moment Killer:
 * Mommy Issues: They put pressure on escaped serial killer Epps by locking up his (abusive) mother.
 * Monster Clown: "The Mummy in the Maze"
 * Mood Dissonance: Or it would be if we didn't know her so well -- Bones behaves at a body farm the way other people would at Disneyland.
 * Mood Whiplash: Constantly. This is a lighthearted sweet comedic show about serial killers, mutilated corpses, cannibals, murder, and death. There's an episode where the team finds a body in a river. The bones have been removed, meaning they can't get a facial likeness from the skin of the head. So two of the characters rig a way to inflate the eyeless, boneless, water-rotted face like a balloon -- literally -- to give it the rounded shape of a human head. This scene is played for laughs.
 * Monster Fangirl: Howard Epps gets married to one while he's in prison. Then he escapes and kills her.
 * Mr. Fanservice:, finally seen in the season 4 opener. If he was one of the main cast, he'd be a Marty Stu. There may even be slashy implications in there, what with two separate male cast members volunteering to take him to the airport.

N
"Angela: What? Brennan: That just... makes me feel sick. Angela: You pick dead bodies out of mass graves, and yanking out a belly-button ring makes you sick? Booth: Hey, I've shot a lot of people in my time; I gotta admit, that whole belly-button thing makes me nauseous too. Brennan: Thank you."
 * A Naked Shoulder to Cry On: Bones and Booth finally break six seasons of Unresolved Sexual Tension by having sex while coming to terms with the brutal assassination of one of theirsquints, just hours after it happened. A couple episodes later we discover that Booth knocked Bones up. This scenario was devised to accommodate star Emily Deschanel's real life pregnancy during the filming of the following season.
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast
 * Subverted with Bones herself.
 * The Gormogon, Arthur Graves and the Master.
 * The Gravedigger.
 * Nausea Dissonance: This comes up all the time. The Jeffersonian crew are all unfazed by decaying corpses and the like, while other characters get squicked to varying degrees, including having to vomit.
 * Surprisingly, even Bones is not immune to this. When Angela plays a scenario of a girl with a belly-button ring shimmying in a narrow space, in the part where the girl's belly-button ring gets ripped off, Bones immediately looks away from the computer screen and takes a few deep breaths. Angela calls her out on this.

"Bones: (makes call) Yes, you said to call if anyone asked about him. Agent: (stunned after taking the phone) ... They're checking my credentials... I am to wait here until somebody comes to destroy my notes."
 * Nightmare Fetishist: Sweets pops into the Jeffersonian to discuss the Gormogon in "The Knight on the Grid." The team is somewhat disturbed by how enthusiastic he is. We later find out that in his youth he was a fan of both Black and Death Metal and still has the clothes -- or lack thereof -- to go incognito at a concert.
 * No Celebrities Were Harmed: Bunsen Jude, the Science Dude.
 * No Man of Woman Born: When Bones and Booth discuss whether they could catch each other if one of them committed a murder, Booth boasts "I always get my man," and Bones replies smugly, "I am a woman."
 * Non-Idle Rich: Hodgins, as well as Bones, who makes enough from her books to discuss the merits of having a Cayman Islands account.
 * Nonuniform Uniform
 * Booth wears a standard FBI suit-and-tie get-up, but varies it with strange socks and a ludicrous belt-buckle.
 * Angela decorated the collars of her lab coat, though it's the same lab coat all the time.
 * Noodle Incident
 * In the episode "The Man in the Fallout Shelter," Brennan mentions a Fourth of July fiasco when Hodgins and Zack try to spike the eggnog.
 * An agent from the State Department asks Bones about an incident involving a South American drug lord:


 * In "The Bones on the Blue Line": a sexual position described on page 187 in one of Brennan's books.
 * The newly-personable Edison refusing to talk about what he did . Naturally this drives conspiracy-buff Hodges nuts.
 * The case we never see solved: a skeleton curved all the way around into a backwards circle. This is before Brennan is pulled off the case for her father's trial.
 * Dr. Nigel-Murray's hedonistic trip during the one-year break using the money he won on Jeopardy!.
 * We never really find out Angela's birth name, only that it was so bad she had to change it.
 * No Social Skills: Zack, and Brennan to a lesser extent. As Angela puts it when they attempt to fist-bump (and immediately start deconstructing the entire concept) "It's so cute when you try to behave like earthlings." What's strange about this is that from what we see of Zack's family, it's normal. Like, mind-numbingly normal. His descriptions of them fit the stereotype of the average American family to a T. If anything, this seems to have exacerbated his strangeness.
 * Not So Different: Broadsky invokes this when comparing himself and Booth, as does Bones when comparing the two. Booth vigorously rejects the notion but has trouble with the fact that Bones sees them as similar.
 * Nude Nature Dance: In one episode, when a self-proclaimed witch is found dead, Brennan and Booth decide to check out a local group of Wiccans. They show up at a ceremony in the woods just as the (all-female) group begins to disrobe and start dancing.

O
"Sweets: Ok, now I'm hearing a caveat. Gordon Gordon: It's a small one. It's just... that Brennan and Booth aren't in any way opposites. Sweets: Wow! Small? What is that, British understatement?"
 * Obfuscating Stupidity
 * Booth does this continuously; notice he is more prone to having great ideas and Eureka Moments in times of greater urgency.
 * In "The Bones That Foam," Angela had apparently figured out the ruse -- that Booth was smarter than he let on, citing it almost by name.
 * Max Brennan is a natural at this.
 * Odd Couple: Booth and Bones' outlooks on very nearly everything are polar opposites. Certain other characters have noted that they really shouldn't work as well together as they do because of it. Dr. Sweets drafts a book centering on exactly that during season 4 (Opposites Attract: Yin and Yang in the Workplace), but seems to eventually change his viewpoint after discussing it with retiring psychologist Gordon Gordon Wyatt.


 * Odd Friendship: Angela and Brennan have opposite views on most things, yet are great friends.
 * Offscreen Moment of Awesome: Six seasons of Unresolved Sexual Tension.
 * Older Than They Look: Daisy's actress, Carla Gallo, is actually a year older than Emily Deschanel and ten years older than John Francis Daley (Sweets). Sweets himself falls victim to this. In his first appearance, he's 22, but looks like Sam Weir if he grew a foot taller.
 * Omnidisciplinary Scientist: Mostly averted. The squint squad is a team of highly-focused specialists, and many episodes will have someone rattle off some fairly dense bio-babble that needs to be translated, even for the other scientists.
 * Zack, on the other hand, seems to be a whiz at math, chemistry and physics, besides his doctorate in forensic anthropology. Early on, Zack is revealed to be working on an engineering degree as well as anthropology.
 * Hodgins is also revealed to have three doctorates -- explaining why he can do bugs, plants and material science (don't say 'dirt' around him) It's best not to look too closely at how long it would take to get the background/experience the team has, and their relative youth.
 * Also Vincent, who can spout random useless facts on a wealth of topics. And yes, there are people who can actually do this. He won a large sum on Jeopardy! doing this, and promptly spent all of it.
 * One of Our Own: When Bones and Hodgins, and later Booth, are kidnapped. Saroyan, Hodgins and intern-of-the-episode Wendell take offense when a substitute agent calls the team (minus Booth) "her people," with Hodgins and Wendell quickly correcting her that they're "Booth's people."
 * One-Scene Wonder: Caroline Julian manages to steal pretty much any scene she's in. It's okay, because she's awesome.
 * Only Sane Woman / Only Sane Employee
 * Camille Saroyan.
 * Angela often served this function before Cam signed up. After, she apparently felt more free to be nuts.
 * Recurring intern-of-the week Clark Edison tends to act like this whenever he shows up. Ironically, his straight-laced nature compare to the other interns makes him come across as equally quirky.
 * Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Done in-character. Arastoo (the Muslim squintern-of-the-episode) slips his around Cam, then decides to not even bother with the accent any more when it's revealed that he was faking it all along -- he thought his religion would not be accepted if he did not have a heavy accent like he was a recent immigrant.
 * Opposites Attract: Lampshaded when Sweets writes a book with this title about Bones and Booth.
 * Origins Episode: Episode 100 gives us the story of how Booth and Bones first met, their real first case and why they were at odds in the premiere episode.
 * Our Ghosts Are Different
 * When Booth is trapped on a ship set to explode, he's reunited with Corporal Teddy Parker, the dead guy he named his son after. Teddy is 100% tangible and picks up stuff, helps Booth open doors, Booth physically picks him up... but disappears just as Booth gets rescued. Later, Brennan (who sees him later, but doesn't know the guy's identity) points out that some of the stuff Booth did to get out really did require two people. An odd episode to be sure. In-universe, Booth was drugged (though this is not confirmed by anyone other than himself) but still, you can read it as you like.
 * An earlier episode involves college students filming a Blair Witch knock-off in the woods when one character was apparently "possessed" by the ghost they were looking for and goes on a killing spree. Although the real course of events is solved, it turns out the camera actually caught the ghost on tape. Angela and Hodgins decide that it's an optical illusion, and try to convince themselves of it very hard.

P
"Brennan: I don't want you to kill people for me, just buy me a sweater like a regular dad!"
 * Papa Wolf
 * Max Keenan does NOT take it well if you threaten Brennan or her brother Russ, as seen in the episode "Judas on a Pole". The rest of the time, however, he comes across as more bumbling than menacing. This is very much intentional.

"Brennan: Where the hell are my bones?!"
 * Also Angela's dad.
 * Booth is on record as saying that if "God Himself" told him to sacrifice his son, "That's not gonna happen." Considering that he's a devout Catholic...
 * Parental Abandonment: Brennan's parents disappeared when she was fifteen.
 * Parental Substitute: Mostly in backstory, and related to Abusive Parents. Booth and Sweets are both abused by their parents... but rescued and raised with great love and care by substitute parents, Booth's grandfather in his case, an older couple who adopted him for Sweets.
 * The Password Is Always Swordfish: Brennan's authorization password was "daffodil". When Booth lampshaded this trope by telling her her own password, she changed it. He immediately guessed the new password. Twice.
 * Playful Hacker / The Cracker: The "hacktivist" who claims he's only trying to expose government corruption. His methods are a little unorthodox: . And he does all this while under house arrest with no computer access.
 * Polymath: Brennan, Zach and Hodgins hold about eight doctorates between them.
 * Poorly-Disguised Pilot: "The Finder" for The Finder.
 * Pragmatic Adaptation: Very enjoyable, if admittedly quite divergent from the novels.
 * The Pratfall: A disturbing-but-still-funny version. Booth is in a hurry to find a missing head. He slips on a muddy riverbank, and slides on his rear into the water, then triumphantly holds up the head.
 * Precision F-Strike
 * In "The Man with the Bone," upon discovering that an entire skeleton has disappeared:

"Brennan: There was a baby in that car! You son of a bitch!"
 * And in "The Baby in the Bough:


 * Pregnant Badass: Brennan
 * Product Placement
 * The B-plot of "The Gamer in the Grease" is basically a big ad for Avatar. Apparently Bones takes place in an alternate universe where said film is as hotly anticipated as a new Star Wars flick, with people camping out to see it and painting their faces blue. And where Joel Moore has a doppleganger. Or just isn't in Avatar.
 * Toyota has a lot of scripted references, some quite obvious.
 * The Sienna, which Angela describes as having plenty of room and says how much she loves the backup camera.
 * The Prius, when Hodgins swerves and the Prius beeps at him, prompting Angela to say "Look! The Prius helps you stay in your lane!"
 * Two season six episodes in a row ("The Shallow in the Deep" and "The Babe in the Bar") feature some almost comically blatant product placement for Windows Phone 7, which fills up the entire screen for several seconds as Brennan is using it.
 * Season Six has another incredibly jarring Prius advert, this time without any plot significance at all. The same scene devolves into Big Lipped Alligator Moment territory as it ends with Booth and Bones giggling like six-year-olds while calling a dead man names like "bonehead" and "asshat."
 * Booth always drives a black Toyota SUV on FBI business, which is improbable given that in the real world US Government vehicles are invariably domestic.
 * Bones using a Windows phone to send pictures to Hodgins' giant screen with the Windows logo and namedropping Skydrive three times in the episode with the severed feet.
 * "The Pinnochio in the Planter" has an extremely off-putting scene: Bones, Booth and Sweets are in a car, talking about the case of the week, they stop abruptly to marvel at the fact that the car can park itself; Booth makes a lame joke and then end scene.
 * Put on a Bus
 * Dr. Goodman between seasons one and two.
 * Sully (a boat, in fact)
 * Hacker
 * Putting the Band Back Together: The whole purpose of the sixth season opener: Brennan and Daisy went to the Molucca Islands, Booth's in Afghanistan, Hodgins and Angela are in Paris, Cam's still in DC, Sweets is on sabbatical, and the interns have either taken new positions at other places, lost the funding for their scholarship, won the lottery, or in a clinic. But the core team returns (with Caroline's urging) to help save Cam's job.

R

 * Raised Catholic: Booth. He's hardly an altar boy (Well, he was a literal altar boy, just not the figurative one...), but being Catholic is a central part of who he is.
 * Real Life Relative: Bones's second cousin Margaret is played by Emily Deschanel's sister Zooey in the Season 5 Christmas Episode. Lampshaded to death: "You two could be sisters!"
 * Real Life Writes the Plot: Emily Deschanel's pregnancy was written into the 7th season.
 * Relationship Upgrade:
 * Retired Badass: Max
 * Reverse Cerebus Syndrome: From season four onwards, the show noticeably takes a more comedic tone.
 * Ripped from the Headlines
 * More than one plot, but perhaps most obvious in an episode featuring a "pregnancy pact" written around the same time the Massachusetts girls were news.
 * Another episode featured all those feet that washed up in The Other Rainforest's area.
 * "The Goop on the Girl" has all the earmarks of
 * "Mayhem on a Cross" may have something to do with the murder of Euronymous, guitarist of black metal band Mayhem.
 * Rock-Paper-Scissors: Zack and Hodgins play to determine who has to deal with a bag of unsavory evidence.
 * Romantic False Lead
 * Sully for Bones before he was Put on a Bus.
 * Hannah for Booth.
 * Angela has had a few: her ex-husband, an ex-girlfriend who wound up back in her life because of a case, and Wendell.
 * Running Gag
 * Brennan, and occasionally Zack, asking Booth for a gun. Which means that any time they do get a gun, it's made by Chekhov Arms. Brennan eventually just got a permit and bought her own gun.
 * Also, Brennan hates psychology. And pie.
 * "I don't know what that means."
 * Vincent's constant churning out of random facts, which usually have little or no relevance to the case at hand.
 * Zack or the intern-of-the-week getting used as a medium to play out the way the murder went.
 * Bones rarely praising her interns for their hard work. When Edison, who's African-American, implies she's a literal slave driver ("What'cha like me to do next, massa?"), it goes over her head. Bones herself thinks she's just being "kind," in a way: since no one can measure up to the high standards she sets for herself, she doesn't bother.
 * "He shot a clown once."
 * Age jokes about Sweets.
 * Smurfs are frequently mentioned.

S
"Booth: Yeah, sure. Poke fun at the naked guy..."
 * The Scourge of God: Brodsky, season six's villainous sniper. Booth has to remind people the guy is pretty much just a crazy murderer with a severely skewed moral compass.
 * Screaming Birth
 * Angela in "The Change in the Game".
 * Secret Test of Character
 * What Sweets thinks is happening to the team in "Proof in the Pudding".
 * What Cam's daughter thinks is happening when
 * Serial Killer Killer: The sniper who goes after evildoers such as embezzlers and . Booth loathes being compared to him, which Bones does constantly.
 * Sesame Street Cred: In-universe example with Bones.
 * Sex Is Interesting: Angela, though it is consistent with the character's general portrayal.
 * Sex with the Ex: Bones and Booth have both indulged in this with past flames, Bones with her old boyfriend (and thesis supervisor!) when he came into town, Booth has had a couple of "one time only" sleepovers with his ex-girlfriend, the mother of his son.
 * Stepford Smiler: When Brennan turns out to be the most normal alumni from her high school, you can sure as hell bet there's some.
 * Share the Male Pain: When a severed testicle is recovered from a corpse high-powered washing machine, there's a Running Gag about the men in the lab feeling the deceased man's pain. Especially Booth.
 * Shipper on Deck: Brennan & Booth...
 * In the hundredth episode, Sweets is a very adamant Bones/Booth shipper.
 * Cam, and even Clark seemed to have joined in on the Booth/Brennan shipping in season six.
 * Angela has been on that ship from the Pilot.
 * Brennan's father Max is definitely a shipper by season six, asking Angela if Brennan and Booth were together, declaring his daughter much prettier and smarter than Hannah Burley, and then buying his daughter a conch shell toothbrush-holder with two holes.
 * Booth's grandfather, Hank.
 * Ship Tease: Every single episode, more or less, but especially the Christmas episode where Booth and Brennan kiss. And that only came about because Caroline was feeling "puckish".
 * Shirtless Scene
 * Booth gets one in the '09 Christmas episode ("The Goop on the Girl"). Booth gets caught in the blast of a suicide bomber and his clothes become covered in DNA evidence. So naturally, Brennan strips him to his undies. Merry Christmas, indeed. Also serves as a setup for Not What It Looks Like.
 * Booth gets one in the '09 Christmas episode ("The Goop on the Girl"). Booth gets caught in the blast of a suicide bomber and his clothes become covered in DNA evidence. So naturally, Brennan strips him to his undies. Merry Christmas, indeed. Also serves as a setup for Not What It Looks Like.

"Hodgins: Your robot reminds me of you. You tell it to turn, it stops. You tell it to stop, it turns. You ask it to take out the garbage, it watches reruns of Firefly."
 * They certainly do love to give Christmas presents: in the 2005 Christmas episode, Hodgins had to hit the showers after a biological accident and for about half the episode appeared in a towel and nothing else.
 * Another for Hodgins in the Season 1 gag reel, where he apparently did a scene in boxers and nothing else. With Angela.
 * Shout-Out
 * "The Girl with the Curl" has the Hyperion Hotel.
 * Also in "The Girl with the Curl" Brennan mentions Booth threatening to push someone out a window, possibly a subtle shout out to the pilot episode of Angel, in which Angel (Boreanaz) does exactly that.
 * "Boris and Natasha and their Russian Throwing Knives of Death."
 * One which is made all the funnier when you realize that Cam has a bit role as River's teacher in Serenity:

"Brennan: Nobody wants to hear that rambling psycho-speech!"
 * "The Bond in the Boot" is loaded with James Bond references. One of the few that goes unremarked is a CIA front company named "Universal Exports" -- 007's standard cover.
 * There are two inside thirty seconds in "The Dwarf in the Dirt" -- "There are no such things as leprechauns" and Homer Simpson's MRI on the X-ray board behind Nigel. Both were put in to coincide with The Simpson's 20th anniversary, a theme running throughout all Fox shows that week.
 * Possibly, possibly "Mr. White" in "The Proof in the Pudding." Possibly.
 * Booth spends the first half of "The Devil in the Details" dressed uncannily similarly to John Constantine.
 * The opening camera zoom during "The Woman in the Sand," set in Las Vegas, is identical to those commonly used on Las Vegas. Given that reruns of both shows air on TNT, once could be forgiven for thinking someone screwed up the scheduling until Brennan starts talking.
 * Possibly in the episode "The Death of the Queen Bee", during which Booth and Bones Booth is Bobby Kent, newspaper man.
 * The episode "The Beaver in the Otter" is one long sequence of references to Animal House, from the title to the Dean being named "Vernon Wormer" and a student having sex with the Dean's wife.
 * In the sixth season opener Caroline refers to the Squints as the Scooby Gang.
 * In "The Babe in the Bar", the victim of the week is named Harriet.
 * "The Maggots in the Meathead" is one big shoutout to Jersey Shore. The "documentary" on the Guidos that Brennan watches is implied to be Jersey Shore itself.
 * In the pilot episode, Booth refers to both himself and Bones as "Scully and Mulder".
 * Not to mention the episode "The X in the File", which is full of X-Files references and guest stars.
 * In the book series, Brennan's mother is named Daisy. On the show, we have the intern Daisy Wick. This is either a dual case of Shown Their Work or just an extreme coincidence.
 * The episode title for "The Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood".
 * One of the major character interactions in "The Gamer in the Grease" is lifted directly from The King of Kong, right down to the record holder and breaker being named Billy and Steve, respectively.
 * In "The Feet on the Beach", one of the employees at the body farm is named Larry Wolfram.
 * The Show Goes Hollywood: In "The Suit on the Set", Bones and Booth visit the set of the film of one of Bones' novels, where they discover an actual dead body.
 * Shut UP, Hannibal: Bones hits a guy with a bedpan rather than hear his psycho-rant about why it's OK to eat people.


 * Sleep Cute:, cuddling in bed, have made it to the opening credits as of the seventh season.
 * Sliding Scale of Silliness Versus Seriousness: The show has always balanced humor and drama, but the DVD box art has grown progressively sillier over time. Season 1 has Bones and Booth posing against a white background. By season 3, they're playing poker with a cigar-smoking skeleton.
 * Smart Ball: How can a show completely populated with geniuses hand one of them a Smart Ball?
 * When you have Raised by Wolves Bones be the one who can navigate Japanese manners with politeness and sensitivity. This is the person who often can't even figure out how to compliment someone in the looser and less formal American society without making it an offhand (or sometimes just outright) insult.
 * Also as noted in "The Maggots in the Meathead", she can quite readily pick up and understand cultures and social groups to the point of appreciating various similarities and differences. Mostly, it's just her tendency to be fairly literal in her own culture that makes her seem socially stunted.
 * Something Completely Different / Out-of-Genre Experience
 * Bones is usually a drama with some hints of comedy. But a 4th season episode "The Double Death of the Dearly Departed" is a pure comedy. It's filled with out-of-character actions that in any other episode would be considered utterly ridiculous. Such as . However due to Rule of Funny this episode actually works and currently has an average rating of 9.2 out of 10 at TV.com.
 * And "The Death of the Queen Bee" is mostly Shout Outs to horror movies, complete with Scare Chords every few minutes.
 * Sophisticated As Hell: The only way Sweets knows how to talk.
 * Special Guest
 * Stephen Fry is a recurring character.
 * A more regular example is Family Guy's Stewie Griffin. No, not Seth MacFarlane, Stewart Gilligan Griffin appeared in cartoon form on a television, as part of Booth's anxiety-induced fantasy while donating sperm.
 * Also, Cesar Millan showed up in one episode, in an obvious plug for his own show. Several scenes were devoted to showcasing his dog-taming skills as the main characters oohed and aahed.
 * The Spock: Brennan, who also sometimes is a Straw Vulcan as well. In addition, Zack.
 * Spock Speak / Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness: Brennan, almost to the point of Cringe Comedy.
 * Spontaneous Human Combustion: In the episode "The Foot in the Foreclosure", they find ashes of a pair of lovers; Booth suspects SHC, but Brennan says it's just an urban legend.
 * Stab the Salad: Played for laughs several times in "The Death of the Queen Bee" with Mr. Buxley, the creepy janitor at Bones' high school -- played by Freddy Krueger, no less.
 * Stalker with a Crush: Berimbau
 * Stalker Without a Crush: The season four episode "Man in the Outhouse" has Noel Liftin, a stalker who was previously on the show as a Stalker with a Crush; Boothe pays him $50 to "stalk" one of their suspects and get more information. He proves to be frighteningly good at it.
 * Invisible to Gaydar: To the max in "The Dentist in the Ditch." The victim played amateur full contact football, his entire team is gay and his ex is a bow hunter.
 * Stuff Blowing Up: Wait, why is the ship exploding that spectacularly? Oh, because it's cool. Also several of Zack and Hodgins experiments.
 * Seen in the movie within a show Bone of Contention, a loose adaptation of one of Bones' novels.

T
"Brennan: How did you do it? Sweets: You're not gonna believe me anyway... You're just gonna say I guessed. So have it your way. I guessed."
 * Take a Third Option: One earlier episode had Zack and Hodgins fighting over who signed for a hot delivery girl's packages. Angela is there to see which one the girl chooses when both men are there. She chooses Angela. Who says that's "sweet", and fans herself.
 * Take Five: In an early episode, Booth tells the Jeffersonian technicians that he needs the room for a few minutes, to a room full of blank faces. Hodgins ends up explaining to them that Booth wants them to leave so he can talk with Bones in private.
 * Take That
 * Many, most of which seem to be pointed at Sweets and Psychology as a whole. In the (admittedly odd and written by an "Unreliable Narrator") season finale, Sweets' surrogate declares that psychologists are glorified bartenders. Unknown if this is used for comedic effect, because they do like riling up Sweets.
 * Sweets gets one on Brennan in a season 4 episode, when he is able to pick out a murderer from a crowd of college students. She is "amazed" he was able to do that, and questions him on what he saw. Sweets doesn't answer her, simply saying "You're not gonna believe me anyway," and walks out of the room.

"Sweets: "I'm jumping! I'M JUMPING!""
 * What actually happened was when Booth fired the weapon used to kill the Victim of the Week in front of the suspects, Sweets picked the one who involuntarily winced, which Brennan probably didn't notice.
 * From "The Salt in the Wounds": "Of course, you aren't a medical doctor, either." Bones had been asking for it. Nullified when, but still very sweet.
 * "The Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood": "What are you supposed to do, preach abstinence? It doesn't work in Alaska, why would it work in Verbena Court?"
 * Tar and Feathers
 * Tarot Troubles: With Special Guest Cyndi Lauper as the fortuneteller.
 * Teacher-Student Romance: Brennan carried on affairs with a professor and her thesis adviser in college.
 * Techno Babble: Most of the scientists.
 * Played rather darkly in "The Girl in the Fridge" where Bones is testifying in court, and her Spock Speak is hindering her testimony, making her appear unsympathetic to the jury. Until the prosecutor, with a little help from Booth, brings up her childhood, which disturbs her enough to start speaking in Layman's Terms.
 * Invoked by Booth in "The Proof in the Pudding" where part of his plan involves Bones burying the Secret Service agent holding the team in lockdown under technical jargon so he will let them perform a questionable experiment. Bones doesn't disappoint.
 * Therapy Is for the Weak: Definitely. They resist Sweets' much needed therapy sessions for over a season. Even now, they would cheerfully leap out a window before admitting they're actually coming to Sweets for therapy, rather than profiling and the like. Finally, Sweets gets so fed up with Booth's weak excuses that he threatens to jump out of the car if Booth doesn't admit that he actually wants advice from Sweets. Even then, Booths adds afterward that he didn't really need Sweets' help, he was just making him feel better about himself.

"Angela: So you think that we should feel like big giant losers that we're not spending Christmas with family? Hodgins: There's more than one kind of family."
 * They Do
 * Hodgins and Angela.
 * Later, . Angela's thrilled.
 * Thou Shalt Not Kill: Analyzed carefully in the show. Booth is a former sniper and while he acknowledges the acceptability in dealing with enemy soldiers and criminals, he doesn't take it lightly. When Brennan had to kill someone to protect Booth, she is also noticeably troubled by it, but only the first time. She kills the stalker who shot Booth (who took the bullet for her) with a throat shot and was shown having no problems at all with the killing and even declares how she's killed and it wasn't that hard in the 2-parter in England when trying to talk Scotland Yard into giving her a gun like they did Booth.
 * A Threesome Is Hot: A guy at the bar tries to get Brennan and Hannah into one at the end of "The Body in the Bag" -- they tell him to get lost.
 * Tiny Guy, Huge Girl: Angela is noticeably taller than Hodgins. Commented on in "The Man in the Cell." But it's O.K., because apparently "short guys have better leverage."
 * TV Genius: Brennan; Zack
 * Trailers Always Lie and/or Trailers Always Spoil
 * A trailer spoiled that It didn't let on that.
 * The trailer for "The Hole in the Heart" cuts to black at end but features a voice-over by Brennan. This gave away that not only was she safe but that whoever did get shot was going to be with her..
 * Translation Train Wreck: In-universe with the English instructions of toy Angela is trying to assemble in "The Prince in the Plastic".
 * True Companions


 * Turn in Your Badge: Season 2 episode "Judas on a Pole" offers the most classic example of this, but also toyed with a few times throughout the show, when Booth gets decommissioned or confined to desk duty for needlessly discharging his weapon.
 * Twerp Sweating: Booth intimidates Cam's daughter's boyfriend in "The Plain in the Prodigy".
 * Two-Timer Date: Brennan

U-Z
"Brennan:"
 * Unrequited Love Switcheroo: Arguably what happened between Seasons Five & Six between.
 * Unresolved Sexual Tension: Oh, so very much. Word of God says it's the whole point. It is Lampshaded by pretty much every guest character, ever. As of "The Doctor in the Photo", she's openly lamenting the fact they never got together. It's pretty sad.  As of, it's heavily implied that.
 * Unusual Euphemism: In "The Double Death of the Dearly Departed", Booth makes Brennan say "translated" instead of "murdered". Oddly, in Shakespeare's time this would have worked as a metaphor.
 * Vigilante Man: The sniper who shot . Booth loathes being compared to him, which Bones does constantly ("He kills bad people, just like you do!").
 * We All Live in America: In the episode "Mayhem on a Cross", Norwegian police are depicted as wearing what appears to be riot gear and guns, violently kicking in the door spurring a fight between policemen and musicians and concert goers. In reality, Norwegian police are typically unarmed and many policemen may only arm themselves in extreme situations, such as when approaching a suspect they know to be armed.
 * Wham! Episode
 * The season six finale, "The Change in the Game" ends with
 * The previous episode, "The Hole in the Heart," was no slouch either, as
 * The season three finale where we learn that
 * Wham! Line: From the Season 6 finale:

"Sweets: Like with any subculture, storm chasing attracts a variety of distinct personality types. Booth: Adrenaline junkies. Sweets: Yeah, they're the ones most likely to put their lives and the lives of others in danger. There's a name for them. They're called-- Booth: Insane. Sweets: You know, that’s a real word and people just throw it around."
 * What the Fu Are You Doing?: Hodgins in "The Devil in the Details". Arastoo shows him how it's done.
 * What the Hell, Hero?
 * Booth gets a minor one directed at him when he runs a background check on Jared's latest girlfriend. Sweets, Brennan, and Jared all call him out on it.
 * He pulls one again when he ducks out on  to have sex with his girlfriend.
 * Who Dunnit to Me?
 * In "The Graft in the Girl" the team tries to solve a murder where the victim is still alive.
 * Plus, there's when Bones and Hodgins are buried alive in "Aliens in a Spaceship" and have to figure out and tell the others where they are.
 * Who Shot JFK?: "The Proof In The Pudding" is built around (possibly) answering this question.
 * Will They or Won't They?: Bones and Booth.
 * William Telling: When Bones and Booth were undercover at the circus doing a Knife-Throwing Act, she made him throw a knife at an oversized prop apple on top of her head. She sprang it on him all of a sudden during the show.
 * Window Love: Zack and his family, when he's trapped in quarantine during a Christmas Episode.
 * Wouldn't Hurt a Child: Repeatedly invoked by Bones in the seventh episode of season seven. She's in a prison and knows the prisoners wouldn't hurt a pregnant woman. Up to Eleven when she walks calmly through the middle of a prison riot, with the prisoners don't just getting out of her way, but actively block some people who might get toward her.
 * Writer on Board: Season three finale, Angela and Hodgins in season four, even more in season four from Emily Deschanel's interview...The season three finale was the result of 12,000 Writers On Board.
 * You Keep Using That Word: In "The Twist in the Twister", Sweets takes issue with Booth's choice of words.


 * You Look Familiar: The same actor played at least three minor roles on the show, first as a patient of Sweets, whose session Booth interrupts, interested in having a sex change. Second, again as a patient of Sweets whose interrupted, this time as someone who may have multiple personalities. Thirdly in a speaking role at last as an arms dealer who custom made Broadsky's sniper rifle.