First-Name Basis/Live-Action TV

Examples of in  include:

"Daphne: Fasten yours, Niles."
 * Western Inversion: On Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide, most of the kids go by nicknames, and the kids who call them by their real name usually really like them. Lisa calls Cookie "Simon," Evelyn calls him by his last name "Cook," and Moze's boyfriend and fanboys call her "Jennifer." Once when she tried to get Ned to call her "Jennifer," he was physically unable to say it.
 * In Jekyll, Dr. Jackman's best friend turns out to be a spy planted into his life as part of an elaborate scheme. He attempts to appeal to Jackman's wife, Claire, by calling her name - who turns around and orders him very, very confidently to address her as Mrs. Jackman.
 * On Frasier, the Cranes would always refer to Daphne by her first name, and Daphne would address them as "Dr. Crane" or "Mr. Crane" without fail. This was a plot point in the episode where she accidentally found out about Niles' feelings for her. When the long-running Niles and Daphne romantic subplot finally came to a head, Daphne ran away from her wedding to be with Niles. He was waiting outside the chapel in a Winnebago. As Daphne climbs in, Niles tells her "Fasten your seatbelt, Daphne."

"Carla: CHRISTOPHER! Turk: Christopher? You only use my full name when you're angry, or when we're having sex. ...are you angry when we're having sex? Carla: ...sometimes..."
 * She finally calls Frasier and Martin by their first names after she marries Niles.
 * Roz referred to Martin as "Mr. Crane" for the first one and a half seasons before switching to "Martin", but she always called Frasier and Niles by their first names.
 * Similarly in Cheers: Woody called Sam and Carla by their first names, but Diane and Rebecce were always "Miss Chambers/Howe", and the customers (Norm, Cliff, Frasier, Lilith) were always referred to as "Mr/Dr.....".
 * Which meant Frasier and Lilith were "Mr Dr Crane" and "Mrs Dr Crane".
 * Scrubs. Oh, how it's used in Scrubs.
 * But subverted with Turk?

"Turk: You think my name is Turk Turkleton?"
 * Played with when it turns out that Kelso thinks he is on a first-name basis with Turk.

"Aaron Pierce:"
 * Moments where Cox actually calls JD by his name are often Crowning Moments of Heartwarming.
 * Another CMOH was the scene where the Janitor refers to Elliot as Elliot, rather than Blonde Doctor.
 * In the first season of 3rd Rock From The Sun, Dick and Mary mostly referred to each other as "Dr. Solomon" and "Dr. Albright" respectively. They shifted permanently to first-name terms after they hooked up at the end of the season.
 * The rest of the Solomons consistently refer to Mary as "Albright". In the Body Swap episode, Sally-in-Dick's-body had trouble remembering to say "Mary" instead of "Albright".
 * In Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Jadzia Dax's long-standing friendship with her commanding officer, Benjamin Sisko, earned her the privilege of addressing him by his given name while on duty.
 * As the initially-antagonistic relationship between Chief O'Brien and Dr. Bashir develops into firm friendship, the two start addressing each other as Miles and Julian.
 * Meanwhile, Major Kira's first name - Nerys - was used only rarely, and usually signified a very close relationship, such as her friendship with Dax and her relationship with Odo.
 * In Star Trek: The Original Series, many of the members of the Enterprise's bridge crew would eventually earn the right to refer to their captain as "Jim".
 * Dr. McCoy almost always referred to his Captain, and close friend, as "Jim". It was only in times of great distress that he would call him "Captain". Likewise, Kirk usually addressed McCoy as "Bones", a nickname that only he used during the run of the series. He very rarely called him "Leonard".
 * Spock, naturally, is the exact opposite of McCoy (and neither of them would have it any differently): Kirk is usually addressed as "Captain", but when Spock is subject to emotional instability, he's "Jim". He mellows considerably by the time of the movies, and almost always refers to Kirk as "Jim".
 * Scotty is almost always on a Last-Name Basis with everyone, even though he himself insists on being called "Scotty". He is never addressed by his own first name, "Montgomery". Scotty addresses Kirk as "Jim" exactly once in three seasons.
 * Getting on a First-Name Basis with the Romulan Commander is a pretty important moment for Spock in "The Enterprise Incident."
 * Meanwhile, in Star Trek: The Next Generation, Jean-Luc Picard's more aristocratic style of command meant that only longtime friend Beverly Crusher ever referred to him by his first name (aside from recurring antagonist Q, but there were... other reasons for that one. And Riker, in the episode where he was briefly turned into a Q; Picard promptly called him on it.) Data, Worf, and Geordi, however, were referred to by first name even while on duty (albeit in part because the first two only had a first name.)
 * Worf does have a surname, if only because he spent much of his life with human parents. He just doesn't use it. (His son may be referred to as Alexander Rozhenko, but he's always Worf, Son of Mogh.)
 * However he does use their name in his full title (Worf – son of Mogh, of the Klingon House of Martok, of the Human family Rozhenko; mate to K'Ehleyr, father to Alexander Rozhenko, and husband to Jadzia Dax; Starfleet officer and soldier of the Empire; bane of the House of Duras and slayer of Gowron; Federation ambassador to Qo'noS.)
 * That's not a title -- just a set of descriptions that somebody wrote up for Memory Alpha, but which never appear in any episode. Besides, it's not strictly true that Worf's surname is Rozhenko -- it's not hard to imagine that Alexander has chosen to adopt his grandparents' surname as his own where Worf (having stronger memories of his original parents, and a stronger sense of identity as a Klingon) did not.
 * To finish it off, the Even More Mildly Military crew of Star Trek: Voyager were referred to by first name almost all the time, with only two exceptions: Janeway, who was The Captain, and who only gave this privilege to Chakotay; and the Doctor, who had no name besides "The Doctor."
 * Of course, even after Chakotay gets upgraded to First-Name Basis, it's hard to tell because "Captain" and "Kathryn" sound so much alike.
 * Star Trek: Enterprise. When Daniels, Captain Archer's steward, reveals that he's a time-travelling agent from the 31st Century he starts calling the captain "Jonathan" without being invited. Silik, his opponent in the Temporal Cold War, also calls Archer 'Jon', likely for the same reasons -- as a patronising way of indicating that he's completely familiar with him (due to his knowledge of the future).
 * McGee and Gibbs on NCIS go by their last name (or by the nicknames "Probie" and "Boss," respectively). Abby is about the only person to call McGee by his first name with any regularity, and Ducky is one of the few who can get away with calling Gibbs by his.
 * Jethro is actually Gibbs' middle name. His first name is Leroy.
 * 24 featured a rare negative usage of this trope: in Day 5, when Special Agent Aaron Pierce discovers  What follows is probably Pierce's Crowning Moment of Awesome:

"Cameron: Are you mocking me? Foreman: No... Allison."
 * This could be considered a Crowning Moment of Awesome for both Aaron Pierce and his actor, Glen Morshower: the scene was done in a single take. The director thought Morshower's delivery to be so perfect that no further shooting was necessary.
 * There's also an instance of first name basis being revoked, when
 * Ethan Kanin, implied to be an old friend of President Taylor, is the only one to call her "Allison" on the show. To everyone else, she's "ma'am" or "Madame President."
 * Stargate Atlantis is somehow typical example. Everybody and their mother address to John Sheppard by his first name. However, Rodney Mс Kay never until 1 episode of season 4 called Sheppard by his given name. And after that fact he calls Sheppard by the first name only in very dare situations.
 * The characters start out calling each other by title and last name, gradually shifting as the characters grow familiar with each other, so by the second and third season, most characters refer to each other by first name.
 * Farscape examples: At first, Aeryn and D'Argo call John "Crichton". When he becomes closer to them, they switch to "John". Also, at first Pilot calls Aeryn "Officer Sun". Only later does he start to call her "Aeryn".
 * Name usage on Lost is quite complicated (see also Last-Name Basis.) Switching from someone's last name or nickname to a first name is a sign of camaraderie. As Sawyer's character has developed, more characters have begun calling him James. By season 5, nobody calls him Sawyer anymore. Similarly, most of the cast moved from "Hurley" to "Hugo" over the course of the seasons (particularly interestingly with Ben, who originally called Sawyer and Hurley by their real names as part of his manipulative personality, .) When Juliet Heel Face Turns from Others to Losties, she switches from last names to first names.
 * Despite the professional setting, every single character on The West Wing is called by their first name, with the exception of President Bartlet (who is called "Mr. President" or "the President", referring to him as "Bartlet" is usually a sign of contempt) and Mrs. Landingham, who is called thusly only because she used to be a secretary at the President's school when he was a kid. CJ is usually always called by everyone by her nickname, instead of her rarely-heard first name "Claudia Jean", though the President is, as usual, the exception.
 * The only two people to call President Bartlet by his name (Jed) are his wife, Abbey, and his Chief of Staff, Leo. It's especially poignant in "He Shall, From Time to Time" when Leo finds out about the MS. He yells at Bartlet "Of all the things you could have kept from me, Jed!", and all Bartlet can say in return is "you haven't called me Jed since before the election".
 * That's the only time Leo ever calls him Jed. There are two other precision Jed strikes in the series. The first is in "Take This Sabbath Day," when Bartlet's childhood priest comes to see him at the end of a day in which he's decided not to commute the death sentence of a criminal. He asks if he should call him Jed or Mr. President; Bartlet asks for Mr. President because it helps him think of himself "not as the man, but as the office." The priest complies, and the scene proceeds with him lecturing Bartlet for acting like whether to execute someone was a tough call for a Catholic. Bartlet gets the note telling him that the man has been executed, and the priest says, "Jed, would you like me to hear your confession?" The other time is "Ellie," with the surgeon general, who is an old family friend and godmother to one of his daughters (Ellie of the title), talking to him about his relationship with her.
 * Charlie initially addresses Zoey as "ma'am", despite Josh telling him it sounds awkward. He asks if he can address her by her first name, and she says he can if she can call him by his.
 * The members of the BAU in Criminal Minds mostly use last names with each other, with some exceptions:
 * Rossi is the only other person besides Hotch's ex-wife to refer to him as "Aaron". This begins with Rossi's very first episode, "About Face", and is a means of showing right from the get-go that the two of them have a previously established working relationship.
 * Similarly, while other characters have occasionally referred to or addressed Rossi with "Dave" or "David", Hotch is the only one who calls Rossi by his first name with any regularity.
 * JJ is always called by her nickname, almost never "Jareau" or "Jennifer".
 * JJ and Gideon are the only ones to call Reid "Spencer" (other than his parents).
 * Morgan and Garcia keep it professional most of the time - well, as professional as Morgan and Garcia get - but during times of extreme stress ("Penelope", "Mayhem") or when they're being extremely honest ("Hopeless"), they will call each other "Penelope" and "Derek".
 * A reversal happens when Morgan takes Hotch's place as leader of the BAU. He stops in the middle of calling her "baby girl" and switches to "Agent Garcia".
 * Elle was always called by her first name, rather than "Greenaway," with almost no exceptions.
 * Most members of the team, other than Hotch, switch between calling Emily Prentiss by her first and last name at random. Occasionally, they call her "Em."
 * Though "Emily" has been used with increased frequency from season four on, particularly by Rossi.
 * Rossi is the only person in the world who can get away with calling Section Chief Strauss "Erin."
 * On That '70s Show, Jackie started calling Steven Hyde on his first name after she became interested in him.
 * Fran is thrilled when Maxwell finally starts using her first name because it shows he's acknowledging their growing romance.
 * It isn't clear whether or not this applies to Leverage's Parker.
 * On Mash, Hawkeye expressed his disdain for military protocol by, among other things, routinely addressing Colonel Blake as "Henry", Major Burns as "Frank", Major Houlihan as "Margaret" (or, in earlier episodes, "Hot Lips"), and Major Winchester as "Charles". Only once, however, did he address Colonel Potter as "Sherman" - in an episode where he and the others are trying to convince Potter to stay at the 4077th after he starts to believe he's not needed and announces he's considering an early retirement - and this occasion is unsurprisingly one of the show's Crowning Moments of Heartwarming.
 * In an episode of Psych where Shawn spends most of the episode captive, Lassiter starts referring to the detective by his first name (having previously stuck to using his last name only) when he learns that Shaun has not only been taken captive, but shot. Once the episode is over, Lassiter goes back to using the derisive "Spencer" title, but the first name usage demonstrated how concerned he was for Shawn's safety. Lassiter later provides another example of the trope in the same episode, when he gives Shawn a congratulatory "Good work, detective", although he denies having done so to Shawn an instant later.
 * In a variation, on The Sarah Jane Adventures, Sarah Jane Smith insists that her friends call her "Sarah Jane" -- except for the Doctor, who alone reserves the right to call her "Sarah".
 * However, considering the age difference, the fact that they call her "Sarah Jane" instead of "Miss Smith" is significant.
 * In Law and Order Special Victims Unit, the rules are realistically intricate:
 * Detective Olivia Benson is called "Olivia" by most of her co-workers, but always "Liv" by her partner, and, in the later episodes, Alex Cabot. If anyone else calls her "Liv", the shit is about to hit the fan.
 * Detective Elliot Stabler is usually "Elliot", though the other detectives will call him "Stabler" occasionally. Both his partner and his wife, and no one else, call him "El".
 * Detective Odafin Tutuola is always called "Fin" by everyone, because his real name is a bloody mouthful. No one ever calls him simply "Odafin". Fin usually uses last names, except with Benson and Stabler. Even his partner of many years is almost always just "Munch".
 * Detective (later Sergeant) John Munch is always called "Munch" by everyone (because why wouldn't you?), with the sole exception of Cragen, who usually calls him "John".
 * Captain Donald Cragen is always addressed as "Captain" or, more affectionately, "Cap"; they call him "Cragen" when he isn't around. The only regular who ever calls him "Donald" or "Don" is Alex Cabot. Cragen usually refers to everyone by their first name; these customs are befitting of his status as Team Dad.
 * Dr. George Huang is always "Doc" or "Huang"; no one calls him "George" except for, once again, Alex Cabot. He refers to most people by their first names.
 * Dr. Melinda Warner is "Melinda" to Benson and Stabler; likewise, she calls them "Olivia" and "Elliot". To everyone else, she's "Warner", "Doc Warner", or simply "The M.E."; she, in turn, tends to stick to titles.
 * The ADA is always her first name, apart from the despised ones, who are "Greylek" and "Paxton". Alex Cabot, in particular, would refer to everyone by their first name, even when they weren't around.
 * On The Mentalist, the fact that Bosco and Lisbon call each other "Teresa" and "Sam" ought to tell you something.
 * Used in Bones frequently. When Cam first arrives, she calls Zach Addy and Jack Hodgins by nicknames (Zacharoni and Hodge-podge, respectively) to indicate that she's already close to the team. She calls Booth by his first name to show that she has a romantic history with him, which continues throughout the series. Brennan refers to Cam as "Dr. Saroyan" for a while, but eventually falls into calling her Cam when they become friends.
 * One episode demonstrates Brennan's conflict between being Temperance (her first name, which only her father and brother call her by) or Dr. Brennan when  Booth, who always refers to her as Bones, seems to have neatly solved that problem. Booth himself is always called by his last name except by his brother, his ex, and Cam.
 * Everyone calls Angela by her first name, although it's eventually revealed that  She occasionally calls Hodgins "Jack," but he's almost always called by his last name.
 * It's pointed out that Brennan calls the interns Mr/Ms LastName to highlight that they're not doctors yet. Other people tend towards calling them by their first names.
 * Everyone calls Sweets by his last name except Daisy, who calls him Lancelot. (His first name is Lance.)
 * On The Sarah Connor Chronicles, the only person to call Agent Ellison by his first name is his ex-wife.
 * Done rather comically on House in the first season when Cameron reads an "empowerment at work" book and begins to call Foreman and Chase by their first names. They respond by saying her first name whenever they say anything at all to her.


 * When Chase and Cameron are together they call each other by their last names at work and their first names whenever else.
 * In the BBC show Sherlock, which puts Sherlock Holmes in a modern setting, the two main characters call each other Sherlock and John, rather than Holmes and Watson.
 * Moriarty introduces himself as . Both times.
 * In ''Monk', Adrian Monk only calls Captain Stottlemeyer "Leeland" when he's especially concerned for him.
 * Luther. Sociopathic murder suspect Alice Morgan and Cowboy Cop John Luther, as a sign of their Foe Yay.
 * In Babylon 5, when Sheridan and G'Kar are saying farewell to each other (as G'Kar is about to leave the station to go exploring), Sheridan reflects on their sometimes frustrating but ultimately respectful friendship. As he turns to leave, G'kar quietly says "Goodbye, John", which Sheridan points out is the first time G'Kar had ever called him by his first name. G'Kar denies it, leading to one last, brief argument between them before both smile and laugh and say goodbye again.
 * While they call each other "Captain" and "Ivanova" on duty, off it Sheridan and Ivanova call each other "John" and "Susan" due to their long-standing and incredibly close friendship.
 * In the same fashion, it's a significant moment when Sheridan and Delenn go from "Captain" and "Ambassador" to "John" and "Delenn".
 * The eponymous Inspector Lynley almost universally called his partner, Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers, either 'Sergeant' or 'Havers' while on duty. It's not until the last produced episode of the show that he switches to calling her 'Barbara' on a regular basis, only calling her 'Havers' when he is cross with her; this marks a significant shift in their relationship. (Havers, however, calls him nothing but 'Sir', relying on tone to get her point across, as he is both her social and professional superior.)
 * Kamen Rider Fourze protagonist Gentaro Kisaragi refers to almost all his classmates by just their first name, no honorific. In Japan, this is considered very intimate, the sort of thing only really close friends or lovers would do, but Gentaro does it because he wants to be friends with everybody. A few members of the Kamen Rider Club, such as Lovable Jock Shun Daimonji, do the same with him.

Exceptions:

 * Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon uses this as a plot point in an early episode. Ami starts calling Usagi by her first name (making a direct leap from "Tsukino-san" to "Usagi") in an attempt at making friends. However, it soon becomes clear that Ami's putting undue stress on herself by moving too fast. However, Ami then learns An Aesop about true friendship and from that point on comfortably uses the "chan" honorific.
 * In the early episodes of The X-Files the protagonists always refer to each other as "Agent Mulder" and "Agent Scully". Although they remain on a Last-Name Basis for the rest of the series, the dropping of these titles show they're beginning to accept each other as partners. More on Scully's side than Mulder's; Mulder drops the "Agent" quickly into the pilot, whereas Scully calls him Agent Mulder until the second episode.
 * Scully only ever tried calling Mulder "Fox" once and was informed that he liked "Mulder" better, so she never tried again. Mulder called Scully "Dana" when he was especially concerned about her, or when they were having a particularly intimate moment (not necessarily like that, pervs) during the first few seasons. But by around season 4, even that had stopped, as if the last names had become more intimate by that point. In the second movie, set six years after the series, and they're still on a Last-Name Basis.
 * However, Mulder does tend to call her "Dana" around her family; Scully only meets with Mulder's mother once and does not refer to Mulder by any name.
 * In the Freaky Friday Flip episode, Mulder's calling her "Dana" casually was one of her first hints that he was Not Himself.
 * In contrast, Doggett and Reyes call each other by their first names, usually only addressing each other by "Agent Doggett" or "Agent Reyes" around other agents.
 * Scully winds up on a sporadic first name basis with them both in season nine, though more often with Reyes than Doggett.
 * Trip Tucker has been friends with Captain Archer for years before Enterprise was launched, but always refers to him as Captain, even when off-duty.
 * Archer often calls his crew by their first names - Hoshi, Travis, Trip, Malcolm - but Malcolm Reed, the extremely uptight, formal British armoury officer, never calls anyone by anything other than their rank or rank + last name, even when off duty.
 * In House, virtually none of the doctors on staff are referred to or addressed by their first names. Only the title character's parents and his ex-girlfriend (and on one occasion, Wilson) call him "Greg." None of the central cast ever calls Dr. Wilson "James" ? not even his best friend, Dr. House (although he will sometimes use "Jimmy" condescendingly) ? nor does anyone call Dr. Cuddy "Lisa." Only on rare occasions does anyone ever call Drs. Cameron, Chase, and Foreman "Allison," "Robert," or "Eric," respectively. On one occasions, Dr. Cameron starts addressing her colleagues by their first names (and House as "Dr. House" instead of merely his surname) as a strategy aimed at making them take her more seriously, which Dr. House immediately points out.
 * This tradition continued once House assembled his new team, as well; you'd be hard pressed to find anyone who called Drs. Taub and Kutner "Chris" or "Lawrence", respectively. This was taken to an extreme with Dr. Remy "Thirteen" Hadley, who was called simply "Thirteen" for an entire season after her introduction.
 * Despite all being good friends, the male teens from That '70s Show only ever refer to each other by their surnames. Donna also does this, except for her boyfriend Eric.
 * Eric's mother Kitty calls everyone by their first names (except Fez, but he has No Name Given) While Red uses their last names but will occasionally use their first names if he has something important to say.
 * The characters on Are You Being Served? nearly always refer to each other as "Mr." or "Mrs./Miss"; to the point that the rest of the staff has to do some detective work to figure out what Mrs. Slocombe's first initial stands for, and you have to watch several episodes to find out everyone's first name.