Mysterious Informant

A type of Messenger, the mysterious informant exists to feed information to the good guys, often just enough to keep them on track to expose The Conspiracy. The information is usually fragmentary and/or in cryptic Spy Speak. They tend to meet the main character in secluded areas like parking garages or shadowy alleys, be impossible to find unless they want to be found, always wear a Conspicuous Trenchcoat, and are usually masters of the Stealth Hi Bye, to prevent heroes from pursuing them.

In police shows, this role may be filled by a snitch. In shows involving conspiracies, the mysterious informant is usually an anonymous insider. In Speculative Fiction, this role is often filled by psychics and prophets.

The Trope Maker and a major inspiration for Stock Shout Outs is Deep Throat, the Washington Post's mysterious informant during the Watergate scandal that drove US President Richard Nixon out of office. The real-life Deep Throat, being Properly Paranoid, did in fact deliver vague, cryptic information in the dead of night in a parking garage and take other extreme precautions against being discovered.

Compare and contrast Mysterious Employer: he tells the characters what to do, but provides minimal information.

Anime and Manga

 * The Big O anime: Big Ear, Roger Smith's information source. He's always in the same bar (in the same seat, no less) and almost never looks directly at Roger, reading the newspaper as they talk.
 * Also, it's eventually revealed that
 * SSS ("Three Speed") from Madlax, the titular character's employer/ contact . She doesn't hold a grudge at him for this.
 * Sylia occasionally receives job offers and intelligence from one of these in Bubblegum Crisis. He spends at least half of each meeting hitting on her.
 * Kujaku from RG Veda is one of very few people who knows what's going on with the prophecy, and the only one who helps the heroes.
 * In Durarara!!, Izaya might not be nice or helping the good guys too often, but he is mostly definitely an informant.

Film

 * Chatter Telephone from Toy Story 3 helped Woody out when things turned sour. He also has a kick-ass film noir voice.
 * Donald Sutherland's character in JFK.
 * All the Presidents Men has the original Deep Throat, Bob Woodward's government source who tells him "Follow the money."

Literature

 * In the Discworld novel The Truth, there is a mysterious informant known only to William De Worde as Deep Bone, who provides him some key information about the alleged attempted murder at the palace.
 * Spoofed in the Beavis and Butthead book "The Butt-Files". In a section parodying the X-files, Beavis and Butt-head take the roles of Scully and Mulder, and get a tip from Deep Throat. Angered, Beavis yells "Dammit, you're always pulling this crap! If you know everything, why the hell don't you just tell us so we can go home! Now it's gonna take us another 45 minutes to figure this out!" Deep Throat initially refuses, but "Scully" persuades him with a kick to the crotch.
 * Joe Grey in the Joe Grey Mysteries by Shirley Rousseau-Murphy. Since Joe, Dulcie, and Kit are, well, talking cats, they can't exactly walk into the police department to spill the beans on all they know.
 * "Diana" in Boris Akunin's The State Counsellor leaks the terrorist organisation's secrets to the police - or is it the other way around? - and attains a considerable influence over the heads of several police departments. She really likes to keep up the mysterious appearance - it helps her maintain her Femme Fatale reputation as well.

Live Action TV
"Frasier: That would work better without the vanity plates, Dr. Dorfman."
 * Police Squad!! (the six-episode ABC series that later became the Naked Gun movies) also parodied this with Johnny the Shoeshine Boy, who knew everything if you had the price. After every visit by Frank Drebin, Johnny had to deal with a celebrity looking for advice or help on their special areas of expertise (Dick Clark asking about ska music, Dr. Joyce Brothers asking about psychology, and so on).
 * The X-Files turned it into a cottage industry. To elaborate, Mulder's very first informant was Deep Throat ; after him, there were the ex-MIB X, Marita "SRSG" Covarrubias , and the Well-Manicured Man (only in The Movie, ).
 * Malcolm in the Middle: When Hal is being indicted for his masterminding of a vast conspiracy to defraud the company he worked at, he's met by one of these at the public library who tells him that he's got six months to live and wants to die with a clean conscience. It's then neatly subverted when the informant turns up at court, testifies AGAINST Hal and says that the medical records were mixed up and he's going to be fine.
 * An episode of Lois and Clark featured a constantly coughing informant called "Sore Throat". When Perry asked him to give them more information he said "What, like 'follow the money'? I never understood that." One episode guide refers to him as "an obvious parody of Deep Throat in The X-Files".
 * Sporty James from Hunter TV series. Not very mysterious though.
 * The Mysterious Informant shows up, and is subverted, in the Frasier episode "Three Days of the Condo." A secretive figure approaches Frasier in the car garage of his apartment building and urges him to stand as a candidate against the current chair of the condo board in the upcoming election. When Frasier asks why his informant insists on remaining anonymous, the figure replies that he's redecorating his bathroom and doesn't want his bidet request to be denied. Then he gets in his car and zooms away.

"Daphne: Wouldn't this be more anonymous if it didn't say, 'From the desk of Doctor William M. Dorfman'?"
 * Later in the episode, Frasier's Mysterious Informant sends him an "anonymous" letter saying the building tenants are supporting Frasier.


 * This trope was parodied in Happy Days when Milwaukee is in the midst of a bitter garbage strike and Richie is investigating a story about it. Fonzie says he has a source, but since he wants to be anonymous, he will only appear as a silhouette on a window blind standing outside to give yes or no signs to questions. When he steps forward, Richie notes that it is obviously Al, but Fonz insists that Richie plays along. Reluctantly, he cooperates with his questions until Al forgets himself and answers a question by talking. Now with the silliness completely pointless, Richie opens the blind and the two finish their conversation normally.
 * Rebel in Heroes volume 4. But it was not that hard to guess his true identity.

Video Games
"Snake: Is this...?"
 * Used in both Metal Gear Solid and Metal Gear Solid 2. The mysterious informants both dub themselves "Deep Throat", although the second then says to call him Mr. X because Raiden, in Fan Girl mode, made comparisons to the Shadow Moses "Deep Throat".
 * Then subverted in the fourth game, where Snake guesses who the mysterious informant is about three sentences into the conversation:


 * The G-Man in the Half Life series.
 * The original Max Payne gave us Alfred Woden, who supplied Max with useful data throughout the game, before revealing himself as the head of the counter-conspiracy to and giving him the name of the Final Boss in the endgame.

Western Animation

 * The Simpsons parodied this in one episode with a trenchcoat-wearing, cigarette-smoking Mr. Smithers.
 * Family Guy has also had one, with the shadowed Mysterious Informant obviously being Kermit The Frog. In another episode where they had become a reality TV family and Meg was kicked out of the family for being boring, Peter and Lois met her in this fashion, complete with offering her a cigarette.
 * Hey Arnold!: In The Movie, there was a principal character who was impersonating "Deep Voice", a reference to "Deep Throat". This character also wore a trenchcoat and used a voice simulator.
 * Used in The Fairly Odd Parents when Tootie gives Timmy's parents information about her sister Vicky's evil deeds under the alias of "Deep Toot" (the name of which Timmy's dad finds hilarious).
 * The Mole in Ozzy and Drix. He's not entirely sane.

Real Life

 * Real-life example and Trope Maker: "Deep Throat", the Watergate informant whose identity (William Mark Felt Sr.) was only recently revealed. So ubiquitous, nearly every Mysterious Informant is either an outright reference/parody, or at least has some aspects gleaned from Deep Throat. However, some aspects of the trope draws heavily from the Popcultural Osmosis of All the Presidents Men; the real-life Deep Throat's identity was a mystery to the general public, but Bob Woodward knew exactly who he was talking to.