Relax-O-Vision



"What followed was… ugh. Horrible. It shall not be described here, this is a teen-rated story. How about this? Have you ever been to a slaughterhouse, like for a school field-trip or something? It was a bit like that. Only to a person. Honestly, just don't think about it, go look at a picture of a bunny or a kitten or something. You'll be happier."

- Uninvited Guests

A gag in which the camera cuts away or is interrupted by a bumper explaining the following scene is too disturbing to see, or, more importantly, would not be allowed by the broadcasting network.

Trope name comes from an episode of Freakazoid! where a cartoon supposedly filmed in "Relax-O-Vision" cut away from scenes that were purportedly too much for the kids to watch to relaxing images like ocean waves or a fish-tank, usually accompanied by the Theme from "A Summer Place" (more commonly known as the ubiquitous "peaceful music"). Bonus points if sounds from the disturbing event still can heard over the image, usually with lots of Noodle Implements thrown in. Polar opposite: Screamer Prank.

See also Battle Discretion Shot, and Discretion Shots in general.

Anime and Manga

 * Excel Saga substituted scenes of sunsets and seashores for footage of bloody violence in "The Koshi Rikdo Assassination Plot"—but didn't change the soundtrack, so you got to hear everything that happened. A similar gag occurs in "Take Back Love!", where random pictures of Puchuus are used to cover up the visuals (but not the sounds) of a non-consensual lesbian sex scene. Conversely, in "Butt Out, Youth", peaceful music is used to cover the horrible sound of Excel dragging metal claws across a blackboard.
 * One version of the Puni Puni Poemi trailer (available here) opened with a short message that they removed anything offensive to anyone so that it could reach "the widest possible audience". The result? A black screen. Remove anything offensive to "most people"? Another black screen. Remove "anything that might get us sued"? We finally get the trailer, with black screens with funny text replacing some scenes. This entire affair is made very funny when you remember that this version appeared on a Milk-chan DVD! The uncensored version, by the way, is available here.
 * In episode 16 of Gakuen Alice, a bumper screen comes up with the giant Piyo and the stuffed bear. The bear holds a sign which simply says, "Please wait for a moment." ("Shibaraku omachi kudasai.") in place of the violence Mikan undoubtedly intends to visit upon Natsume.
 * In episode 30 of Keroro Gunsou, it cuts away from Giroro being stretched in a body-sculpting aid/medieval torture device to cute, fanservicey shots of Natsumi. The equivalent chapter of the manga has the same gag, but instead censors it with a single panel full of nothing but speech bubbles and painful-sounding onomatopoeia.
 * In chapter 50 of the manga, during a black-out in the base, Giroro beats the crap out of Keroro for squandering their invasion budget and, at one point, hits him with "an attack no manga can express!"
 * In addition to having a small cartoon man with a sign censor minor infractions, Hayate the Combat Butler also uses Relax-O-Vision during particularly Egregious acts of senseless violence, mostly involving replacing the visuals with a landscape or façade shot of the area/building, or by mild Fan Service. The audio isn't affected, however, making it abundantly clear what's going on.
 * Almost always, it is a picture of Hinagiku that is used as Relax-O-Vision.
 * Subverted in the manga, when one of Hayate's vicious smackdowns of Gilbert is covered by... er, scenes of senseless violence.
 * Azumanga Daioh: Nyamo's drunken sex ed lesson is overlaid with relaxing music and uplifting visuals, such as windchimes, a paper lamp, and the earth with the sun rising in the north, occasionally cutting to the students' embarrassed enthralled faces. An Eyecatch featuring Chiyo and Tadakichi is used as a Vomit Discretion Shot earlier in the series when a drunken Yukari pukes in the street.
 * Almost a double subversion, since a couple of the pictures (an open gate?) are almost certainly intended to remind the audience of something.
 * And the same music plays when Chiyo asks Nyamo for... clarification. Bonus points for the toothbrush-and-cup metaphor.
 * A somewhat literal usage of this trope occurs in Gundam Wing, when Treize broadcasts images of a peaceful, sunlit field to Lady Une's Leo while encouraging her to calm down.
 * "Nice Boat." A real-life example: The violent anime School Days is infamous for being taken off air due to a recent violent murder, and being replaced by a half-hour long clip of a boat peacefully floating on water.
 * This is not an uncommon way for Japanese television censorship (voluntary or no) to take place, which is why there are so many manga/anime examples. When used inside a story for some truly nefarious/Egregious censorship, though, it can be pretty creepy (e.g. in Neon Genesis Evangelion, there are several layers of secrets regarding the Evas and Angels; since it isn't really permitted for the general public to know much about them at all, TV broadcast kicks on the Relax-O-Vision in one episode, which makes military nerd and borderline conspiracy theorist Keisuke suspicious).
 * Done in the Persona 3 manga in an omake. Minato is playing a rail simulator, and sets the speed to "Excessively powered mach speed" to the point where the rails started to melt from the friction. It shows Junpei's horrified face with the caption "Please enjoy Junpei's expression in place of the graphic scene on-screen" with horrible bold sound effects.
 * Relax-O-Vision is used in Yu-Gi-Oh whenever one character punches another, having the characters out of frame, both in the original footage and the dub. However, it only occurs once or twice in the original, and numerous other times punches are shown on-screen with no cutaways (these on-screen punches are, of course, cut out of the dub), so the couple of occasions where they do use Relax-O-Vision are rather out of place.
 * Yu-Gi-Oh the Abridged Series lampshades this by having characters say "It is heavily implied that I am punching you!"
 * In an odd case of Values Dissonance, 4Kids DIDN'T decide to censor the scene during the Battle City Finale when Obelisk The Tormentor punches Yami Marik during a Shadow Game, despite the fact that Obelisk's fist was the size of Marik's ENTIRE BODY and (since the Shadow Game makes the creatures physical, rather than holograms) sends him flying several feet backwards, ending up with him sprawling on the ground. Probably because Yami Marik qualifies as a Complete Monster.
 * In Bludgeoning Angel Dokurochan, the non-DVD versions have a rather...calming photo of a beach in place of Dokuro-chan and her sister respectively molesting (read: washing the back) the protagonist.
 * In an episode of Ranma ½, particularly severe beatings are replaced by (animated) footage of heavy construction machinery in operation. Subtle.
 * Suffice to say, that scene was used in the abridged series with the sounds of a vicious beating playing while showing the "not-very-subtle symbolism," a-la the first Excel Saga example.
 * The pile-driver was a beautiful touch.
 * Does this really count? It only happened once, and the silent shot of some pile-driving equipment was used to cover the fact that Akane had just given Ranma-chan and Ryoga each a single powerful slap on the face for shearing off her hair.
 * Used in Mahou Sensei Negima when Negi, possessed by the magic of The World Tree in the Mahora Festival arc, gives Asuna a very passionate kiss. Just as it's implied that Negi starts to slip a little tongue in, we cut to a peaceful sea-side view with a cute turtle (Tama from Love Hina) in the foreground. "Everybody please wait for a while. Talk for a while".
 * Later in the Magic World arc, when Jack Rakan starts to sniff and taste the panties of Fate's minions (He was doing it for a very good cause! Really!), we see a panicked Konoka carrying a picture of that same sea-side view in an attempt to censor the scene, screaming that there are children reading the manga.
 * PARDONNEZ MOI, but which children, exactly, are reading Negima!? Naughty little buggers...
 * What Do You Mean It's for Kids?
 * Used during episode 6 of the K-On anime, when Mio . This is shown in the 4-koma, but in the anime, the scene cuts away to a blue-and-white striped bowl of rice.
 * Also, almost everytime Mio hits Ritsu, it cuts to a closeup of something else in the room, and then back to Ritsu, now with a Cranial Eruption.
 * In the fourth episode of Princess Lover, there is a brief picture of a mountain as Seika beats Haruhiko into the wall.
 * Ep.7 of To LOVE-Ru has a fight between Ren and a mountain ape interrupted by Haruna showering. Yes, showering.
 * He gets into another fight later in the episode, which is again interrupted by shower scenes.
 * In the Yu Yu Hakusho manga, at the conclusion of the Sacred Beasts arc, Kuwabara tricks Yusuke into thinking that Keiko and Botan were killed by the zombies that attacked them. Upon learning that they're really safe (though not before freaking out), Yusuke is implied to give Kuwabara a savage beating (even for him) for his twisted little joke, while the panel cuts to a picture of a kitten and the caption "We'll hold for a while as Kuwabara gets his head handed to him".
 * In an episode of Axis Powers Hetalia, America asks France for diet tips. Then, a white screen pops up explaining that France's response is "educationally inappropriate" or something like that, so they'll be cutting out that section. France is pissed.
 * There is also a sequence set during the WWII storyline where Japan attacks China. Readers are treated to a panel featuring a panda while China's cries of anguish are heard in the background.
 * Happens in an episode of Galaxy Angel in which Vanilla discovers she has a secret admirer. During the course of said episode, the rest of the Angels ask her different questions, such as if she knows what a love letter or a romantic relationship are (justified since Vanilla is also an Emotionless Girl), and every time she replies the camera does a close up on her moving lips (without sound) before changing into a picture of a different landscape each time. Then, we're cut back to the other Angels (minus Milfeulle) blushing in embarrassment.
 * Appears early on in The Wallflower anime, where, e-hem, certain scenes are replaced with a picture of a pretty flower on a meadow. As the sounds in the background get more and more gruesome, the flower starts spinning.
 * Used twice in Dazzle!. The first time is when Rahzel and Baroqueheat team up to cut off Rayborn's Peek-a-Bangs, and the second is when Sera beat up Baroqueheat. With a bat full of nails. In the first instance, you can hear Rayborn screaming over the pastoral scenery.
 * In Great Teacher Onizuka, shortly after fantasizing about Onizuka and herself on a beach, Fuyutsuki runs to the bathroom in her coworker's house and jumps in the tub. The viewers are treated to a black screen with flashing, scrolling text that says something like "For certain reasons, we cannot show the image".
 * SHUFFLE! has Sia beating up her father with a chair on occasion. One time when she was particularly pissed off, it switched to a message of apology for not showing the scene.
 * Used in episode 50 of Gintama to censor the worse of Okita's rather... interesting demonstration of how he thinks the show could be improved.

Comic Books

 * In a few Asterix books, particularly violent brawls only happen off-panel. In Asterix in Belgium, our heroes get in a fight with Romans, which is hidden by a flowery curtain pulled over the panel, as seen above.
 * Suske en Wiske employs the same flowery curtain when Jethro becomes particularly violent (since Jethro using enemies as melee weapons does show up, one does wonder what's behind this curtain...)
 * In one such instance, it is mentioned how Jethro expertly makes use of a technique called "furniture swinging."
 * Used as an alternate cover for a volume of X-Force featuring X-23 and other mutants killing people, all the blood was replaced by rainbows and kittens.
 * Occasionally used in the British Anthology Comic, The Beano, especially in Calamity James strips, to obscure pain caused upon Calamity James due to his misfortunes.

Fan Works

 * Appears in at least two Abridged Series including Naruto and Avatar.

Film
""We'll get right back to that storm, and hopefully Sam will look a little more appealing.""
 * Non-animated variation: In the Tarantino/Rodriguez double feature Grindhouse, both movies ("Planet Terror" and "Death Proof") feature "missing reels" to give them an authentic, old-fashioned feel. However, both missing reels are inserted during apparent sex scenes; given the rest of the content of the movie, it's obviously not really done for censorship purposes so much as purely for the gag. In fact, Planet Terror's missing reel covers up a fairly major plot revelation, and comes just toward the end of the sex scene. As the film leads up to the sex scene, it gets more and more heavily scratched until the missing reel, the implication being that the sex scene was played so many times that it fell apart. Tarantino got the idea for "missing reels" after he watched a B-movie that skipped over a plot point due to a missing reel and realized that you could interpret the rest of the movie differently depending on what had happened in the missing footage.
 * This is also a not so subtle nod to the fact that missing reels containing sex scenes were common in "Grindhouse" theaters because the projectionists would steal them for personal use.
 * This happens more due to the lack of budget and no post-production than actual Relax-O-Vision in Dogma, in a part cut from a scene, where Azrael shows Bethany exactly what hell's like now that human imagination has made it even worse. A title card is then flashed on the screen: [ten seconds of the most fucked-up imagery to ever be shown in cinema] before cutting back to Azrael hissing, "I'd rather die than go back to that."
 * George of the Jungle does this several times. When an extra falls off a bridge suspended several hundred metres over a canyon or  the narrator quickly interjects with the line, "Whew! Let's all calm down, now. Don't worry, kids, nobody dies in this film, they just get really big boo-boos," before moving to the next scene showing the victim covered in dozens of bandages and casts.
 * Another live-action version in The Princess Bride...she does not get eaten by eels at this time.
 * Used mercifully during the Room 101 scene of the 1984 movie.
 * Used by WNN in Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. Head anchor Patrick cuts from Sam reporting on the spaghetti twister to a shot of a playful puppy over scrolling weather forcasts, not due to any technical difficulties, but due to her recently reembraced nerd style.


 * One of the video trailers for Braindead had, for the sake of viewers of a nervous disposition, scenes from the film only on the right side of the screen, on the other side were some pictures of lambs. However, right at the end, one particularly gory moment does fill the whole screen. This can be seen here
 * In Asterix: Mission Cleopatra, a voiceover announces that due to the violence of the few next scenes, a short documentary on crayfish will be shown instead. After that, the view cuts to Roman soldiers flying all over, with very audible punch sounds.
 * Another live action example with the sound intact; according to IMDb, the original Japanese cut of Dawn of the Dead had the film freezing on the frame prior to any gore scene, with the sound playing through, and having the film jump back into motion once the offending moment passed.
 * Played with in the British film Cuts, about a man trying to write a screenplay. Early in the film, a man in the film industry makes a very loud joke that in his day, to refer to sex, you would show a field of waving corn, while today, to refer to a field of waving corn, you show two people having sex. Suffice to say that both versions happen in the film.

Literature

 * In The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Tom has just successfully conned all his friends into giving him enough tickets to receive a special prize in Sunday School for Bible memorization. However, he didn't count on his surprised teachers proudly asking him to display his Scripture knowledge by answering a few questions. Needless to say, his cover is blown when when he answers the question, "Who were the first two disciples?", with, "David and Goliath!" At which point the narrator interjects: "Let us draw the curtain of charity over the rest of the scene." End of chapter.

Live-Action TV
"Clarkson: Now I'm going to talk about all the German technical stuff but for those not interested in all that, on the left-hand half of the screen we'll be showing kittens!"
 * On Monty Python's Flying Circus, a sketch involving a four-star restaurant in the middle of the jungle cuts out just as bushmen are about to attack the diners. A faux BBC apology plays over the scene, with the announcer describing in rather graphic detail the violence and nudity that will not be shown. In typical Python fashion, they play the 1958 Gardening Club instead...and a few seconds into footage of a formal garden, in run several nude women, the Pantomime Goose, Mister Gumby, and others having a frantic, clumsy orgy.
 * A variation occurs in another episode. Following the ridiculously violent "Sam Peckinpah's Salad Days" sketch, and the subsequent gunning down of critic Philip Jenkinson in slow motion, the show ends with several minutes of waves crashing against the shore.
 * Top Gear: Split-Screen Optional. Not censorship, rather an anti-boredom device:


 * Repeatedly on Have I Got News for You, of the "we're being censored" variety.
 * Happens a lot on Everybody Hates Chris. Usually it is just when Chris is about to do something bad. One example was when Chris was handed a bag of marijuana by a criminal trying to escape the police. His friend Greg suggest they smoke it. A screen then comes up and says that Chris Rock does not endorse the smoking of pot. He instead decides to put it in lasagna.
 * There is a segment on the German The Daily Show style "heute-show" that has correspondent Gernot Hassknecht ("Hateservant") peacefully commenting on a news story, then launching into a hateful tirade. After a few seconds he is cut off by a VHS recording of the network's 60s-era Technical Difficulties screen with elevator music in the background.
 * Parodied in the "Kim Jong-Il Show" sketch on Mad TV, where, when censoring J.C. Chavez's musical number, threatens to cut the song to kittens when it gets too sexy, which he does.
 * A slight variation was seen in a sketch on The Whitest Kids U' Know, when Trevor and Timmy Break the Fourth Wall by explaining that they couldn't think of the ending to the sketch and instead have a girl take off her top and bounce around "to help DVD sales" because her exposed breasts are censored on television but would be uncensored on the DVD.

Newspaper Comics
"Rather than taint our "art" with the smirch of undignified pictorialism we draw the curtain of propriety - we deal as ever in naught but "gentle humor"."
 * In a Liberty Meadows strip, the "graphic and nonpolitically correct" panels have been replaced by a picture of a bunny, who says: "Gosh, I'm so cute and nonthreatening."
 * Liberty Meadows has invoked this several times. One time, there was a mundane one-panel comic "Yard Apes" ("I'm e-mailing Grandma a hug.") drawn as being taped over an implicitly fanservicey image.
 * Also done in My Cage with the Censor Sheep standing in for regular strips pulled for controversial/offensive content. Also done with bunnies in The New Adventures Of Queen Victoria - all of which are homages to Walt Kelly, who had "cute bunny" strips on the ready for newspapers too nervous to run regular strips of his (often controversial and outspoken) Pogo.
 * In a Garfield strip, Jon says to Garfield: "If you beg, I'll let you lick my ice cream cone." In the next panel, there's a title card saying: "The cartoonist has elected not to show this panel due to its graphic nature."
 * After a character is angered to the point where it looks like he's about to blow, a Bloom County strip covers up the following panel with a title card reading, "A scene of unimaginable violence."
 * Happens in a couple of Yenny strips in spring 2006, whenever the title character's pet lizard does something bad.
 * At least one Krazy Kat strip censors the usual "Ignatz beans Krazy with brick" gag thus:

Radio

 * The original radio version of The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy included an interlude during the approach to Magrathea where, supposedly in order to help combat rising stress levels in the galaxy, it was carefully explained to the audience that no one was going to get killed in the ensuing confusion—although one unidentified person would be bruised on the arm. The novelization did this too, as did the television series, the latter of which used posterization and other special effects to obscure the action as the Book explained what was going on.
 * The same series, of course, includes the famous Peril Sensitive Sunglasses, which help you take a relaxed attitude to danger by going black at the first hint of trouble to prevent your seeing anything that might alarm you. A pair of these glasses were provided as feelies with the text adventure game.

Video Games

 * The special ability "Devour" in Final Fantasy VIII cut to a scene of a peaceful meadow with a disclaimer about sensibilities, rather than show the character consume the monster. When the move is successful, a sound bite of something gruesome happening out of sight played.
 * Selphie' Limit Break "The End" worked with similar visuals; Memetic Mutation by the fans then turned Selphie into a Reality Warper capable of "wishing people into the cornfield".
 * From the Dragon Quest games, the move known in the U.S. as "Puff-Puff" cuts away from the actual "Puff-puff" (which is a somewhat Unusual Euphemism for... ahem, well let's just say that only females normally have the Puff-puff ability...) Some male characters can use it too, but it isn't nearly as pleasant and in fact does damage.
 * There is a Double Subversion in Dragon Quest VIII. One of the secret places is a sort of brothel, where you can get a "Puff-puff" from one of the girls. There is a black screen, because the character is blindfolded, and we hears sounds of something squishy, but then the screen brightens up, and we just see the girl squishing a couple of slime dolls against the character's head.
 * As a general rule, you should never trust a strange woman offering "Puff-Puff", as this sort of thing happens in more than one Dragon Quest game, and the result is never pleasant. In Dragon Quest III, the Puff-Puff is administered not by the girl who drags you to her house, but by the girl's extremely manly father, and in Dragon Quest IX, the girl uses a pair of sheeps' butts.
 * The Super Move of Morrigan Aensland in the Darkstalkers series. If it connects, red curtains close over the screen for a few seconds, during which silhouettes provide a vague idea of what she's doing to her opponent. Never mind the fact that she's a succubus...
 * In Space Quest 3, if you don't get off the garbage conveyor in time, "NOT A PRETTY SIGHT" covers the disposal unit as Roger is shredded. Rather than relaxing the player, it actually serves to make this way of dying funny.
 * In AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!! - A Reckless Disregard for Gravity, a base jumping game about almost hitting buildings (kind of like a gravity-powered Burnout), has an unlockable level which is just a voice telling you relax.
 * The game has a lot of unlockable sections like this... and one that subverts it by trying to invoke unnerving mental imagery instead.
 * In House of the Dead Overkill, after G and Washington storm the secret facility in the final level, they confront the Big Bad only to discover they're too late. As the horror of the plan unfolds, the game puts up a "Missing reel" card, and suddenly G and Washington are on the surface, armed with personal gatling guns, and fighting an Eldritch Abomination.
 * In MetalGearChick's Let's Play of Yoshi's Island, she cuts the frog boss battle in case some viewers were to get grossed out, and puts a test pattern in place of it.
 * Playing Katawa Shoujo with sex scenes turned off brings in pictures of stuff to replace them. (For instance a sex scene in Shizune's route is replaced by a picture of cantaloupes.)

Web Comics
"(picture of a rainbow and unicorn) "We've provided you a rainbow picture because nice people don't own the kind of crayons that would be needed to draw a picture of what people are seeing from that office building." (picture of crayons labeled "Auiiieeyellow" and "Why Am I On Fire White")"
 * Schlock Mercenary plays with the fourth wall by having a character argue with the narrator, wanting to see the grisly wound that's covered by a censored panel.
 * Also, when the capitol of Earth was under attack -


 * Whenever sex is meant to be portrayed on Girly, the panel instead shows a scene with the characters involved dancing with happy mammals in a world where everything has an incredibly cute face and sings "Lalalala". It was even done in thought bubbles! Example here.
 * In Captain SNES, panels are occasionally replaced with an image of the the Nintendo Censorship Angel.
 * Flintlocke's Guide to Azeroth has this one here when Flintlocke is using Beaverstick (don't ask) to fight against an Everblooming. Naturally, the character protest immediately that they want to see the fight.
 * Nodwick at one point features a panel explaining that Nodwick's brain turning into coleslaw followed by his head exploding couldn't be shown, so it cuts straight to the aftermath.
 * Suburban Jungle usually covers up fight/predation scenes with a text banner announcing "A scene of indescribable carnage" or words to that effect.
 * Similar to Girly, a Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures bonus strip replaces a sex scene from a Visual Novel with a little girl chasing butterflies.
 * Weaponized in-universe in El Goonish Shive by the immortal known only as Jerry. He has a spell that causes the target to suddenly perceive itself as being in a grassy field surrounded by adorable fluffy animals. Its only been used once so far, but when it was, it reduced a character from an angst-driven rampage to vaguely River Tam-like babbling in seconds.
 * Parodied in The KAMics complete with Nice Boat.
 * Germophobic protagonist Paul of Uh-oh, it's a Dinosaur who works a thankless retail job is one day given a special assignment . So it is represented by cute puppies! to keep things inoffensive....
 * GG-Guys had Dave wear Relax-O-Vision goggles to portray the censored version of Left 4 Dead 2. It did not end well.
 * Subverted in Errant Story, where Meji's early melee with the guards at the Heretic Knowledge Vault (using her familiar Ellis as a melee weapon) goes on behind a relax-o-vision curtain. However, that wasn't out of concern for the sensibilities of the reader; it was because Poe was too lazy to draw the melee scene. (He said so.)

Web Original
"Hitsugaya turned to stare at the immobilized Espada, his eyes not quite visibly glowing. But the glow was implied."
 * The Desu Des Brigade has used it a few times lately.
 * In Italian Spiderman, the start of a love scene cuts away to Toku.
 * In Jalyss Dislikes Headcrabs, Jalyss shows pictures of puppies while describing how a headcrab attaches itself to a victim because there is no way she's showing anything that disturbing.
 * This happens in 4 Swords Misadventures while Red Link is being pummeled by the Cuccos during Episode 4. The screen even displays the words "Relax-O-Vision" superimposed on a field of flowers with a blurb about the scene being unsuitable for those with weak stomachs, perhaps as a Shout-Out to the original Freakazoid "Relax-O-Vision".
 * In another possible example, Green Link and Red Link are fighting each other, and then the scene cuts to Blue and Purple in a theater, watching a parody of the infamous ant speech from Naruto. When Blue and Purple get back to where the fight was, it's already over.
 * [[media:tumblr l2dlvpofJb1qzpph3o1 500 9959.jpg|This]] image macro.
 * While it's not an outright replacement, in the Cracked.com article 5 Popular Brands the Nazis Gave Us, the editor puts pictures of cute kittens after particularly horrifying parts.
 * As mentioned earlier, this YouTube Poop parodying the The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy example. (NSFW)
 * Happens in Uninvited Guests when Hitsugaya...gets some business done with Zommari, as shown in the page quote. Note that this is perhaps one of the first textual example of this trope.


 * On Topless Robot, the "Fan Fiction Friday" reviews sometimes include pictures of baby animals when particularly graphic excerpts from the fan fictions are quoted.
 * During SF Debris' analysis of Blade Runner, he showed two kittens in a laundry basket when Roy Batty killed his creator.

Western Animation

 * In The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy episode "Here There Be Dwarves", R. Lee Ermey, of all people, pops up to explain that a fierce battle between dwarves and elves is too gruesome to show to younger viewers, so they will be showing a clip of a cute koala instead. However, they accidentally cut back briefly to the battle before the carnage is over, and Ermey remarks "That was entirely my bad! I misread the signal. I knew a guy named Joe. He misread the signals in a combat situation - now he eats everything through a mechanical straw!"
 * Parodied in this YouTube Poop. (Begins at 2:20).
 * In the Courage the Cowardly Dog episode "The Magic Tree of Nowhere", this happens after Courage climbs into a hive. The camera pans across a beautiful field while only Courage's screams of pain can be heard in the background.
 * In the Drawn Together episode "Alzheimer's That Ends Well", Wooldoor covers Clara's genitalia with himself, explaining that they cannot show it because of the FCC. When he proceeds to explain what FCC stands for, his mouth is pixelated and his words are beeped out.
 * Aqua Teen Hunger Force episode "Gee Whiz". Pretty much the entire episode is a parody of this trope combined with religious censorship.
 * Variation from Dave the Barbarian: "And so our heroes defeat the muffin in an exciting battle, which we can't show you because it would be much too expensive for a cheap show like this."
 * Played straight in the episode where Chuckles takes over the show by enslaving the narrator. He writes a scene where he defeats Dave and his family, but the narrator can't read it because it's "far too violent for a family show". Chuckles makes some adjustments and hands the script back. The narrator okays it, and they cut to the exterior of the castle, as it bounces like crazy and a fierce battle is heard; the narrator's dialogue is somewhere along the lines of "And lo, the Dark Lord Chuckles the Silly Piggy does inflict many vague but presumably unpleasant things on the smelly barbarians."
 * South Park's portrayal of Mohammed ordering food at a stand was censored by Comedy Central. After much kerfuffle, Comedy Central replaced it with Relax-O-Vision, allowing Matt and Trey to describe the scene and express their feelings about the censorship. (Oddly enough, South Park had showed Mohammed previously without having censorship problems.
 * The theme song to the Earthworm Jim cartoon includes a cut away from Peter Puppy-monster induced ultraviolence to Jim in a hammock accidentally swallowing a butterfly to relaxing music, and then back to the aftermath of said violence.
 * Freakazoid!: The Trope Namer. This results in Freakazoid charging to fight three of his most notable villains, then Relax-O-Vision kicks in and when it goes back to the show, Freakazoid is standing over his defeated enemies and says "Wow! We must have blown the entire animation budget on that one fight!"
 * Variation: in a Tex Avery Screwy Squirrel cartoon the squirrel is chased by the dog into a pitch-black cave where loud violent noises rage. Squirrel steps out into the light, telling us "Sure was a great gag, folks - too bad you couldn't see it!"
 * The Bugs Bunny cartoon Rabbit Punch ends with Bugs Bunny about to be run over by a train. As the train barrels toward Bugs, the film breaks. Bugs walks onto a blank screen and announces, "Ladies and gentlemen, due to circumstances beyond our control, we are unable to finish this picture. And, uh, confidentially," he adds, holding up a pair of scissors, "the film didn't exactly break."
 * Similar ending to the Daffy Duck cartoon My Favorite Duck, where the film breaks while Porky Pig is chasing Daffy Duck with a gun. Daffy then describes the missing action where he fights back against Porky and gains the upper hand, until Porky hits him over the head with his rifle.
 * Another Daffy Duck cartoon from 1938 called Porky and Daffy has someone pull down a shade that says "censored" before a big fight.
 * Oggy and the Cockroaches does this frequently, even having the characters either move the camera, or put a picture in front of the camera to stop us from seeing the ensuing violence. They do show the result of the violence, though.
 * Spoofed in the Merrie Melodies short "Cross Country Detours". At one point, the screen splits to show a snarling Gila monster on one side and a cute little girl reciting a nursery rhyme on the other, for those who might find the Gila monster too scary. Eventually, the girl shouts at the Gila monster to shut up, scaring it away.
 * Spliced: To avoid damage to young minds, we've been ordered to replace this fight scene with happy puppies
 * In the conclusion to the Rocky and Bullwinkle adventure "Big Moose on Campus," Rocky is making a dramatic, game-saving, climactic move, when suddenly the action stops as we cut to a blank screen with the only word "RELAX!!!" After a few seconds, the action resumes where it left off.
 * "Treehouse of Horror" episodes of The Simpsons sometimes cut from a scene of implied violence on a Show Within a Show to a card explaining "technical difficulties, please stand by."

Troping

 * In the Bloodier and Gorier article, instead of a horrific, gory scene of guts and carnage, there used to be an adorable picture of Cute Kittens.
 * Same used to go for Nightmare Face, though it was later replaced with a back shot.