24-Hour Trope Clock



The rotation of the Earth on its axis creates a 24-hour cycle known as a "day." Each day consists of a number of markers based on the position of the sun; these include morning, evening, and night. All are vital to the development of human life, so it's no wonder they're also important in human drama.

Below is a quick guide to the way the times of day are portrayed in media, with a brief description of their general attributes and any specifically associated tropes.

Compare Plot Time, Flashbacks and Chronology. See also Right on the Tick.

Sunrise
Sunrise, the three minute period when the sun climbs over the horizon and signals the start of day. Sunrise is a time of new beginnings, and as such it's an incredibly common place to open stories. Dawn/sunrise are also frequently used to end stories. Generally if a story ends on a sunrise, it’s because the heroes have gone through hell all night and daylight signals that the fighting is over. After all the stuff the heroes have been through, sunrise is the sign of renewal and continuing life. It’s all very symbolic.

Waking or staying up to watch the sunrise is considered romantic by some. Stock music cues are Grieg’s Morning Music and Rossini’s Ranz des Vaches from the William Tell Overture.

Associated tropes:


 * Cock-a-Doodle Dawn
 * Cue the Sun
 * Shot At Dawn

Morning
Vaguely 7:00 until 9:00, “morning” is the waking-up period. This is another frequent starting point for stories, because unlike sunrise, normal people actually do wake up around then. Expect aspects of the average morning routine—hitting the alarm clock, brushing teeth, eating breakfast, trimming nose hairs, putting on clothes.

Heroes always wake up late in the morning.

Associated tropes:
 * Good Morning, Crono
 * Late for School
 * Morning Routine
 * Not a Morning Person
 * Ring Ring CRUNCH
 * Second Episode Morning
 * Synchronized Morning Routine
 * Wakeup Makeup

Mid-Morning
9:00 to 11:59. Nothing Exciting Ever Happens Here, except the main character being late for whatever they were late for in the morning.

Associated tropes:

Noon
It’s the middle of the day, the transition between “morning” and “afternoon.” The sun is at its highest point, which means there’s the most light. It’s also the hottest time of the day, and tempers flare with the temperature. Old West shootouts happen at high noon. It’s a tense time.

Also, lunch.

Associated tropes:
 * Eating Lunch Alone
 * Showdown At High Noon

Afternoon/Evening
Roughly 1:00 to 5:00 PM. Kids get home from school, people drive home from work. Most stuff that happens in stories happens in the afternoon, although there’s nothing particularly special about it.

Associated tropes:

Sunset
Sun down. End of the day. Activities wind down. Common ending cue. Also very romantic.

Associated tropes:


 * Against the Setting Sun
 * Endless Daytime
 * Lip-Lock Sun-Block
 * Riding Into the Sunset
 * Watching the Sunset

Dusk
Also called twilight (no comments, please), it’s the period when the sun is down but the moon isn’t up. Dusk is a transition time—kids gets called in for supper, shops close up, humans start changing into werewolves, and the gentle song of the crickets begins.

Associated tropes:

Night
Night is a dangerous time. The sun is out completely and everything is dark. It’s cold, lonely, and hard to see—probably why humans have a natural fear of the night. All decent people are at home in bed, which means indecent people are out and about, prowling the streets and doing unscrupulous things. Night is a spooky time, good for illegal activities, spying, wild parties, and trips to the local Haunted House. Basically, all the things that make a story interesting.

Due to the high danger factor, night’s a perennial—er, diurnal favourite for writers.

Stock Room cues: Sound effects of crickets chirping, owls hooting, and wolves howling. Clips of glowing eyes in otherwise shadowy areas. Shots of the moon, always full and frequently partially covered by a cloud.

Associated tropes:
 * Always Night
 * (Most) Dream Tropes
 * Index On the Moon
 * It Was a Dark and Stormy Night
 * Midnight Snack

Midnight
The spookiest time of day, bar none. Midnight is “the witching hour”—magical things happen at midnight, and not the good magic. The Hidden Hour is often before or after midnight. Part of it is that midnight happens at twelve o'clock—although for some reason, lunch doesn't have the same spook factor.

Associated tropes:
 * Doomsday Clock - inevitably set at X minutes to Midnight.
 * Midnight Snack
 * When the Clock Strikes Twelve

Early Morning
The wee hours of the night, between about 1:00 and 5:00. People should not be awake at this time, so if you are, it’s a sign that something’s up. Maybe you’re the undead and it’s the only time you can go out. Maybe you’re a criminal hoping to escape the cops’ notice. Maybe you’re an insomniac… or you’ve been up all night reading TV Tropes. Sometimes known as the Hour of the Wolf - the hour when you hear the wolves howl outside and shiver in fear.

Lots of nightmare sufferers wake up around this time, just to rub salt in their wounds.

Associated tropes:


 * Darkest Hour - in a literal sense, although many metaphorical darkest hours will occur at this time.
 * Otaku O'Clock

Early morning ends at dawn, which leads to…

Sunrise
Sunrise, the three minute period when the sun climbs—we’ve been here before, haven’t we? Oh well, days are cycles. It happens. Daily.