Courage the Cowardly Dog/YMMV


 * Big Lipped Alligator Moment:
 * A dragon coming out of absolutely nowhere(pun not intended) and eating Eustace in the last five seconds of the episode.
 * Eustace getting mauled by a Siberian Tiger while deer hunting.
 * Seems as though animals are always coming out of nowhere to attack Eustace, as he got attacked by a giant squirrel in "Family Business".
 * Most of Courage's nightmares from the last episode could count, especially that blue thing. It really had no importance to the rest of the episode except to scare you straight and it really wasn't seen or mentioned again in those other nightmares.
 * The way Katz gets defeated in "Katz Under the Sea".
 * "Snowman's Revenge" has Snowman breaking out into a So Bad It's Good musical number about... a chilly love story? Huh?
 * "Courage Meets The Mummy" opens with an archeologist dusting off a gem inside the Mayan temple, which then shoots out a beam of light which gets reflected off some things and causes a disco ball to come out of the ceiling while some music plays for a brief moment. Afterwards, the archeologist just shrugs it off and continues dusting off the gem stone.
 * Cargo Ship: In "The Gods Must Be Goosey",
 * Complete Monster:
 * Katz. A startlingly straight example for a kid's show: most of the villains are sort of cartoonishly ineffectual, even if they are loaded with Nightmare Fuel, but Katz is a genuine psychopath. "Care for a bit of sport before dying, dear boy?"
 * Mad Dog from "The Mask" also counts. He's a violently abusive and possessive gangleader who is hellbent on murdering someone just for being his girlfriend's best friend. When Bunny tries to escape him, he buries her alive as punishment and later attempts to run her down with his car for trying to escape with Courage. Yeah, at one point he "acts" like he cares, but given his other behavior, its easy to see this is just manipulating her emotions in order to keep her under his paw, a common tactic by real life abusers. Like Katz, he's also played startlingly straight with little comedy in his character at all.
 * Crowning Music of Awesome:
 * The soundtrack to the episode "The Tower of Dr. Zalost".
 * Also the end of the Doc Gerbil episode during the boat chase scene.
 * the person who composed that disturbing yet awesome theme in "Windmill Vandals" deserves a medal.
 * The subtle organ music that plays during certain events. It plays quite a bit clearer in the quilt club episode, one place where it's really noticeable.
 * Katz's Leitmotif, also a good case of Hell Is That Noise.
 * The Snowman's song from "Snowman's Revenge".
 * The Great Fusilli's theme, in its entirely appropriate Creepy Circus Music style.
 * Ear Worm: The themes for Doc Gerbil and King Ramses, as well as Flan King's hypnotic command to "buy Flantasy Flan".
 * There's no time to rest our laurels, when we must repair the corals!
 * What, no special mention to KING RAAAAAMMMSEEEEEEES (The man in gauze, the man in gauze)?
 * Ensemble Darkhorse:
 * Freaky Fred.
 * Di Lung. The recurring Asian guy.
 * King Ramses' also qualifies for some reason.
 * The computer.
 * Evil Is Sexy: the Queen of the Black Puddle.
 * Fan Nickname: The "Perfect Trumpet Thingy" for the blue thing in the first of Courage's nightmares in "Perfect" and "Violin Girl" for the Demon Head in "Courage in the Big Stinkin' City".
 * Courage, Muriel, and Eustace together as a group is usually called "the Bagges" or "the Bagge family" by fans.
 * Hell Is That Noise: Frequently.
 * Jerkass Woobie: Eustace, in his more humane moments.
 * Les Yay: Kitty and Bunny from the episode "The Mask".
 * Magnificent Bastard: Katz.
 * Memetic Mutation: "Watch where you're goin', ya foo!"
 * STUPID DOG! YA MADE ME LOOK BAD! OOGA BOOGA BOOGA!
 * Moral Event Horizon: Eustace crosses this in "Ball for Revenge" when he gathers up many villains to kill Courage.
 * As for Katz, good luck guessing which of his many evil deeds helps him cross it.
 * Nightmare Fuel: A lot of the more surreal stuff. It even has it's own page.
 * Paranoia Fuel: Kitty could see Eustace and Muriel doing things in secret (sneaking cake, not fixing things) when they couldn't tell.
 * Periphery Demographic
 * Seasonal Rot: a lot of season three and four episodes aren't nearly as memorable as pretty much every episode in season one and two. They're still considered pretty good, though.
 * Squick:
 * The idea of on of the Valkyries falling in love with the incredibly disgusting Troll king, and soon the other Valkyries and the trolls falling in love is just, gross. Don't think about their Honeymoon to much...
 * That scene doubles as a Crowning Moment of Funny because the as the Valkyrie and Troll King were singing about how much they love each other, they would not. Stop. Singing , Despite the fact that the rest of the Valkyries and Trolls were on their way to the cave. Added bonuses include going to the scene of the Valkyries and Trolls running their way over there, and cutting back to the Valkyrie and Troll King, STILL SINGING, and cutting back over and over, but also Courage Lampshading it.
 * The entire "The Clutching Foot" episode. Namely the scene where Courage licks the foot as a cure.
 * Tear Jerker: "The Last Of The Star Makers". *sniffle*
 * Ugly Cute: The Hunchback Of Nowhere.
 * Most characters, due to the art style.
 * Uncanny Valley: Several.
 * The first nightmare in the episode "Perfect".
 * And the Harvest Moon in "The House Of Discontent".
 * The Magic Tree of Nowhere.
 * The Demon Head in "Courage In the Big Stinkin' City".
 * King Ramses' in "King Ramses' Curse".
 * What Do You Mean It's for Kids?: A lot of people probably think Courage is for an adult audience with all the strange horror.
 * The Woobie: Courage takes a lot of crap.
 * The Hunchback of Nowhere.
 * In direct contrast to most "villains", Freaky Fred is a perfectly kind individual whose shaving... thing lost him his pet, his girlfriend, his job, and landed him in a mental institution.
 * Iron Woobie: Courage again.
 * And Freaky Fred, again. He may be sympathetic, but he's still, well, freaky and he seems to take the bad things in his past in stride.
 * Jerkass Woobie: Eustace - his family has been just as bad to him as he's been to everybody else, and his life is largely a study in failure.
 * Kitty from "The Mask". Her hatred of dogs is perfectly justified when you find out what happened to her best friend...
 * Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: Dr. Zalost.
 * The Snowman. The poor guy lost all of his friends and family because of global warming, is it really any wonder that he wanted to freeze everything in the entire world?