An Aesop/Playing With

Basic Trope: A TV show has a moral tacked on to the end.
 * Straight: At the end of an episode of Timmy's World O' Fun, Timmy learns not to judge people by the color of their skin.
 * Exaggerated:
 * Everyone on that episode Timmy's World O' Fun learns a different lesson.
 * Timmy learns a lesson every episode.
 * Up to Eleven: Everyone learns a lesson in every episode of Timmy's World O' Fun.
 * Justified: Hey, teaching people to not be prejudiced is a very important thing.
 * Inverted:
 * The lesson comes at the beginning of the episode, and the show is based on trying to prove that it's a good lesson.
 * Alternatively, Timmy learns that judging people by the color of their skin is a great way of measuring someone's character.
 * Subverted: It seems like the show is building towards the traditional "don't judge others" Aesop, but the last few minutes of the show trail off into a different direction.
 * Double Subverted:
 * Only to firmly veer back into Aesop territory.
 * Then a horde of Exclusively Evil orcs raids the school, and all humans, white, black and green team up, apply the Power of Love, and the trope is justified.
 * Parodied: Spoof Aesop
 * Deconstructed: ??
 * Reconstructed: ??
 * Zig Zagged: The show can't seem to decide whether it wants to teach a lesson or not.
 * Averted: There is no Aesop.
 * Enforced: The FCC mandates a certain amount of educational programming.
 * Lampshaded: "Gather round, kids, it's time for Timmy Troper's Lesson Of The Day!"
 * Invoked: ??
 * Defied: Timmy refuses to learn any lessons.
 * Discussed: "Timmy, why do you seem to learn some obvious lesson every week?"
 * Conversed: "Shows like that always have some kind of moral at the end."