Cleveland Rocks

"''All the little kids growing up on the skids

Go "Cleveland rocks!", "Cleveland rocks!"''"

- Ian Hunter (not The Presidents of the United States), Trope Namer

""Now, I make fun of Cleveland because everybody makes fun of Cleveland. I mean, every country has one city that people make fun of. In Russia, we used to make fun of Cleveland.""

- Yakov Smirnoff with the opposing viewpoint

Known in some circles as "The Mistake By The Lake" or "The/Tha Land", Cleveland has the largest urban area in Ohio. It's often considered a Wretched Hive and a Place Worse Than Death, a joke that's been ongoing for years. Many recent polls and news articles only reinforce this image, as it was once rated the most miserable city in America. It was also the original Trope Namer for Aliens in Cleveland, as the city is considered by many the image of mundane mediocrity (at best).

Possibly the biggest reason why this goes unchallenged is because all but the most anal-retentive Clevelanders have a sense of humor about it; they'll tell you themselves how Cleveland is America's Butt Monkey. With the brutal winters, massive urban decay, a river that was once so polluted that it caught on fire thirteen times, several political scandals leading to multiple FBI raids, and the fact that road construction is never finished (also a staple of Ohio in general), most residents have no illusions of being in paradise, and rely often on Gallows Humor. Some choose to stay, however, as the city has a low cost of living, a growing healthcare industry (the world-renown Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals), and decent nightlife. It can even be called a mini-Chicago, due to its patchwork of ethnic neighborhoods, midwestern atmosphere, public rail that's both elevated and underground, and division by a major river (east and west in this case, with people on either side almost never going further than downtown).

The term "Rock and Roll" was coined in Cleveland, and the city has a proud musical heritage and is home to both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Cleveland Orchestra, one of America's "Big Five" symphonies. Also, Playhouse Square in downtown is the second-largest theatre complex in the United States, behind New York City's Lincoln Center. The city is also sometimes used as a stand-in for NYC or Chicago in film, due to lower filming costs, since it has similar architecture. It possesses a surprising number of truly beautiful churches, more museums than a city thrice its size generally has, and two of the best library systems in the country. Cleveland's the home of Case Western Reserve University, one of the more bizarrely named colleges in the country, and Cleveland State University. An hour southeast is Kent State University, a Berzerkley known for an infamous shootout in 1970.

The American Greetings greeting card company has been based in the city for well over a century. During the 1960s, American Greetings employed a group of young artists, some of which became pioneers in the underground comic genre, most notably Robert Crumb (Fritz the Cat) and Harvey Pekar (American Splendor). In contrast, the company would develop greeting card characters Ziggy, Strawberry Shortcake and the Care Bears in the late 1970s and early 1980s, all three of which would become licensing powerhouses.

Its baseball and basketball teams--the Indians and Cavaliers respectively--are fairly solid, although the Indians have currently gone more than 60 years without winning the World Series, longer than any other team in the American League and longer than any Major League Baseball team that hasn't been cursed by a goat-owning bartender, and the Cavs lost its star player; ESPN had an hour-long special dedicated to his announcement. But said star player returned to the Cavs four years later, and the fans rejoiced. And supporting its football team, the Browns, tends to be a lesson in masochism. The city has had a sports rivalry with Pittsburgh for decades. Sort of. Also, never, ever say anything nice about the Baltimore Ravens.

The city was named for surveyor Moses Cleaveland (the first 'A' was reportedly dropped so the name would fit on a newspaper masthead) and has no connection to the English county of Cleveland, or the 22nd and 24th President of the United States (who was only distantly related to Moses Cleaveland).

Has been the subject of some rather infamous but hilarious videos.

Not to be confused with Cleveland, the name of the area around the mouth of the River Tees in the UK including the cities of Middlesbrough and Stockton-on-Tees.


 * Antwone Fisher
 * Howard the Duck
 * American Splendor
 * The Fortune Cookie
 * Major League
 * The Drew Carey Show (whose one-time theme song is the Trope Namer, used in full irony here)
 * Funky Winkerbean, originally a gag-a-day newspaper comic about high school students that has since evolved into an episodic strip replete with recurring story lines about illness, death and other tragic events, takes place in the fictitious suburb of "Westview." Spin-off comic Crankshaft is also based in a similar suburb of "Centerville."
 * Calvin and Hobbes never referred to when the strip took place by name, yet, the winter landscapes and occasional shout-outs would reflect Bill Watterson's youth and residence in Northeast Ohio.
 * Overton from Living Single
 * Marvel superheroine Dagger (of Cloak and Dagger fame) is from Shaker Heights, a wealthy suburb in the East Side.
 * On Buffy the Vampire Slayer, passing references are made to a Hellmouth in Cleveland. Robin is shown to have moved there with his own squad of slayers.
 * How I Met Your Mother: the main character of the show, Ted Mosby, is from Cleveland, namely Shaker Heights. Series creator Carter Bays (he based Ted’s character off of himself) also hails from Shaker.
 * Ted’s best friend from school, Punchy, still lives in Cleveland with his fiancée. In season 6, he asks Ted to be the best man at his wedding,.
 * The Thirty Rock episode of the same name portrayed Cleveland as an idyllic paradise, albeit through the eyes of harried New Yorkers. In actuality, Public Square should have a lot more homeless people and pigeons hanging out.
 * The Escapists
 * The opening scene of Air Force One was filmed from the roof of Severance Hall.
 * Fat Freddy of The Freak Brothers was briefly elected mayor (after trying to replicate Dick Whittington's adventures and become Lord Mayor of London, Cleveland was reckoned second best). People mooned him and threw bottles during his inaugural parade.
 * Portal takes place in Cleveland, according to information in Half-Life 2: Episode Two. Later retconned, Portal 2 takes place in a salt mine in the state of Michigan, though both settings could have been used.
 * Welcome To Collinwood
 * The Soloist
 * Stranger Than Paradise
 * Kappa Mikey main character Mikey Simon is said to be from Cleveland
 * Not fiction, but a number of Cleveland's restaurants have been featured on TLC.
 * Several books/movies based on the Torso Murder (a Cleveland serial killer) such as Butcher's Dozen or John Peyton Cooke's novel Torso.
 * Criminal Minds had an episode with a serial killer in Cleveland. Unfortunately, real life has been just as shocking.
 * Blood and Rust by S. A. Swiniarski a book that contains two vampire stories set in Cleveland.
 * A few Route 66 episodes take place in Cleveland.
 * The short story "On a Clear Day You can See All the Way to Conspiracy" by Desmond Warzel.
 * The Infocom game Leather Goddesses of Phobos includes a small area of Cleveland, where it is compared (unfavorably) to the slime pits of Venus and sandstorms of Mars.
 * A few Get Fuzzy strips mention Cleveland such as the one that rates it the smelliest city in America.
 * In View From The Top, Cleveland is the hub of Royalty Airlines' commuter-class sibling, Royalty Express, and serves as the setting for the middle third of the film.
 * Hot in Cleveland
 * The short story "Fields" by Desmond Warzel takes place in Cleveland during the final days of humanity, after most plant life on Earth has been choked out by genetically modified wheat.
 * In Little Shop of Horrors, Cleveland.
 * In Kids Next Door Numbuh 1's history report decribes the founding of an adult paradise, "they named it Cleveland."
 * In Deadpool's ending in Marvel vs. Capcom 3,
 * Carl Sandburg's poem "Honky Tonk in Cleveland, Ohio" seems to paint the Cleveland of the first half of the 20th century as a happening jazz and blues scene, albeit with a darker undertone of hedonism and disappointment for the common worker (in keeping with Sandburg's socialism).
 * Les Roberts's series of detective novels featuring Milan Jacovich (fifteen books as of 2011).
 * In Skin Horse, the transgenic convention takes place in Cleveland.
 * In a darkly humorous twist of fate, Cleveland is left as the largest city left standing in North America within the Alternate History Dot Com timeline, Protect and Survive.


 * LeBron James (basketball player once worshiped for making the Cavs a respected team, then was hated with a violent passion for moving to Miami and making a huge media event out of announcing The Decision, only to return to the Cavaliers four years later to much rejoicing)
 * Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
 * Mark Foster (lead singer of Foster the People, who spent his formative years in Cleveland)
 * Halle Berry (critically-acclaimed actress best known for X-Men, Monster's Ball and... yeah. Named after "Halle Brothers", a defunct downtown department store)
 * Mushroomhead
 * Trent Reznor (founder and lead singer of Nine Inch Nails)
 * Drew Carey (star of his eponymous sitcom and host of Whose Line Is It Anyway? and The Price Is Right)
 * Alan Freed (a Cleveland disc jockey who not only coined the phrase "rock and roll" but organized the first rock concert ever. )
 * Tracy Chapman
 * Patricia Heaton
 * Jim Backus
 * Anne Heche
 * Gerald Levert
 * Dan O'Shannon (executive producer for Modern Family; writer for Frasier, Cheers and Newhart, and co-writer of the latter's acclaimed series finale)
 * Joe Eszterhas (a former journalist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer who helped expose the My Lai Massacre; later found fame as a screenwriter, most notably for Basic Instinct)
 * Avant
 * Filter
 * Joe Schuster and Jerry Siegel (the creators of Superman)
 * Siegel and Schuster originally wanted Superman's adventures to be set in Cleveland before Executive Meddling vetoed that idea. We can only speculate how this would have affected Cleveland's image in the public consciousness.
 * Award-winning sportswriter Joe Posnanski
 * Jerry Lawler (Spent some of his childhood there, life-long Cleveland Browns fan. We're sorry, King.)
 * The Miz
 * Molly Shannon
 * Martin Mull (spent much of his early childhood in North Ridgeville)
 * Teri Garr
 * Monica Potter
 * Burgess Meredith
 * Hal Holbrook
 * Frank Yankovic (musician, known as "America's Polka King")
 * Pere Ubu
 * Harvey Pekar (who also wrote about it)
 * Steve Harvey (stand-up comic, sitcom star, radio host and current host of Family Feud)
 * Tim Conway
 * Mike Douglas
 * Bill Watterson
 * Bernie Kosar (Who famously played the NFL Draft system so he could end up with his hometown team.)
 * Langston Hughes
 * Paul Newman
 * Ernest Tidyman (writer of Shaft)
 * Bob Hope (acclaimed actor and entertainer, and was heavily involved with USO and annual TV specials on NBC )
 * Michael Symon (Food Network Chef)
 * Wes Craven
 * Mary Ann Winkowski - Television personality whose claims of paranormal experiences are the basis for Ghost Whisperer, on which she is also a paid producer.
 * Harlan Ellison (Grew up in the nearby town of Painesville)
 * George Steinbrenner (owner of the Lorain, Ohio-based American Shipbuilding Company who tried to buy the Cleveland Indians before settling for the New York Yankees instead.)
 * Lady Akashia (Drag Queen who appeared in the first season of Ru Paul's Drag Race)
 * Kid Cudi