E=MC Hammer



As You Know, some writers didn't exactly do well in math class. So, it seems that, with the passing of time, all their knowledge of math was condensed into a pile of information that they know pasted on every chalkboard in school scenes or written in class notes, regardless of the knowledge necessary to understand those equations.

For example, a first-grade class will sometimes have "pi" (π) written on the board, which would probably only confuse the students who would only be learning arithmetic. Other popular examples are integrals, and their well-known "large S" ( ∫ ) symbol. Very often, however, there won't be any variable of integration. Elementary algebra will be represented as something like "x + y = z", which is entirely meaningless without a description of what the variables represent or how they relate to each other.

Let's not forget about E=mc2, the famous equation which has been degraded into nothing but a complex-looking decoration in everything from kids' cartoons to science shows. (E=mc2 is actually Albert Einstein's formula for mass-energy equivalence; far more people have heard of it than have any idea of what it actually means).

Also related to relativity, the Einstein field equations (Rab - (1/2)gabR = (8πG/c4)Tab) are rising in prominence as a decorative formula, as E=mc2 has started to become a cliché. Loosely, the terms of the left describe the curvature of space-time (which is perceived as gravity) while the terms on the right refer to the distribution of matter.

And then there's the big sigma (∑), the summation symbol. Nothing says smart like a big ol' sigma. There's also big pi (Π) notation (the symbol for a direct product).

Trigonometric relations and the Pythagorean theorem are also popular. But don't ask to see words like "sine", "cosine", and "tangent".

Furthermore, there're only two mathematical mistakes anyone ever makes, no matter how advanced their knowledge of the field; they either "misplaced the decimal point" or "forgot to carry the one". (Sign errors are conveniently absent.)

And math isn't the only subject that gets this treatment. Blackboards full of chemical formulae, sentence diagrams or plot/theme/character diagrams that stretch all over the whiteboard, or genealogies and timelines that look like a tangle of yarn are less common, but serve the same purpose.

This happens for three reasons: First, to ensure that there is some teaching going on, as the show itself thankfully never needs to show the actual classes. Second, to scare the young viewers into believing that they're going to see this stuff when they get older. Third, as a way of showing someone is really smart, often combining it with Room Full of Crazy.

Anime & Manga

 * A rather infamous example-turned-meme comes from a particular scene in Futari wa Pretty Cure. The original scene is actually intentional, intended to give Honoka an opportunity to show off how smart she is by pointing out the error, but it fails to do anything but make the teacher look stupid.
 * One scene in Neon Genesis Evangelion has some of this panned through before we see the characters in school. It makes effort to show more than just disjointed numbers, but, as an AMV Hell segment showed, it got several equations horribly wrong.
 * (Not really) justified in that the teacher seems to be their history teacher. At least he's never seen talking about anything else than Second Impact...
 * Makes sense, since in Japanese high schools the children stay in one room all day while different teachers come in and out, it's quite possible that their math teacher just left without erasing the board.
 * An episode of Air Gear shows the main character skating on a fence. The camera freezes when he jumps, and it overlays a Cartesian plane (height over time) with a parabola tracing his jump so far. y=x2 was written on the bottom. Never mind that the curve was concave down, so the formula should be negated. Never mind that he jumped from under the x-axis to cross the y-axis, which means he leapt from underground into negative time.
 * Surprisingly averted in an episode of Ouran High School Host Club, where a brief glimpse of Kyoya's homework shows real mathematical notation that actually makes some sense, even if the context in which it is found is unlikely.
 * In Kore wa Zombie Desu ka?, the protagonist makes the mistake of asking the resident "genius" to explain a math problem from the beginning. A few hours later: "...Spiral galaxies spin like this, kind of like a top. You need a string to spin it, and that's where string theory comes from. Oh, right. I want to touch on super string theory too..."
 * Later on, after asking how soup could be used to destroy monsters (it makes sense in context), they are given a lengthy off-screen explanation concluding with "I can't answer any of your questions though. I don't understand the super string theory stuff either."
 * Some of the math questions that appear on the board in Puella Magi Madoka Magica for an eighth grade math class are taken from, among other places, the entrance exam for Tokyo University. More information here.

Comics

 * In one Carl Barks comic book, the blackboard in a kindergarten classroom has a slightly illegible, possibly nonsensical mathematical expression written on it, including an integral sign (which, incidentally, does appear to have a variable of integration).
 * An old Sidney Harris cartoon Lampshades this one: two scientists are standing in front of a blackboard full of equations. Toward the bottom right of the board, the chaos of integrals, summations, and other mathematical gobbledygook suddenly ends with "and then a miracle occurs" and an answer. The caption reads "You need to be more explicit here in step two."
 * Any Science Hero big brain is prone to this from time to time, but Reed Richards bears noting that he once came up with an equation so ludicrous, it became sentient and had reality warping powers.
 * Honestly.
 * It wasn't an equation. It was an expression. This was a plot point.
 * Leonard Le Genie does this often. Once he accidentally scribbled part of a long equation on the side of Raoul the cat.

Fan Works

 * One segment for AMV Hell focused on a slow crawl across a blackboard covered with math equations in Neon Genesis Evangelion. Halfway through the piece, we hear the Kevin Spacey in Superman Returns "WRONG!", and as the music is swapped out for King Missile's "Equivalencies", all the errors on the board are pointed out with red marker.
 * One of the problems is 9ab3x(-2/3* ab2)3 = 9abx(-8/27* a6* b³), when it should be 9ab3x(-8/27* a3* b6).

Films -- Live-Action

 * The Day the Earth Stood Still:
 * The 2008 remake of includes a scene where Klaatu et al. visit someone who won Nobel Prize for his work on biological altruism. He has a blackboard covered in maths, which may or may not be correct, including the words "Event Horizon". An event horizon is simply a boundary beyond which no events can be detected with the most commonly referenced one being that which marks the point of no return around a black hole. If there was ever a biological singularity, (evolving into god?), the word could come into play. Also, it sounds dark and foreboding.
 * In the 1951 original, Klaatu visits a leading scientist (an Albert Einstein expy), but the man is not home. Klaatu makes an addition to a blackboard-covering equation, then leaves his contact information with the scientist's housekeeper. The addition to the equation was apparently intended to convince the scientist not to write off his unknown caller as a joke.
 * In School of Rock, Jack Black's character writes E=mc2 on the board while pretending to teach the children something. Played with slightly in that he is totally clueless about teaching and this was presumably the only vaguely mathematical formula he could remember, and the school principal doesn't bat an eyelid when she walks into the room, even though the children are preteens.
 * When he's actually teaching the class the only subject he knows (rock, of course) he fills the board with a complicated diagram of rock bands.
 * In the 2000 remake of Bedazzled, according to a blackboard in the background, a schoolteacher (Elizabeth Hurley) has assigned her students to prove Fermat's Last Theorem as homework. Of course, the schoolteacher was actually the devil and all of these scenes in-between wishes were of her intentionally screwing up the lives of other people.
 * A minor example in Matilda, where the kindergarten students are learning the multiplication tables. Most kindergarten teachers are happy when their students can add one-digit numbers. This is possibly justified due to the Sadist Principal, Miss Trunchbull.
 * In Good Will Hunting, the protagonist does some Super Epic Hardcore Math that had previously stumped even the professors. Turns out it was one of the more basic proofs from linear algebra.
 * A Serious Man has a Dream Sequence featuring an implausibly large blackboard covered with enough of the stuff to fill a book.
 * Pornographic films dealing with teacher/student relationships will often invoke this trope in the background.
 * E=mc2 abuse is played for laughs in Young Einstein, a fictional biography that is deliberately wrong in just about every way. Whenever a character reads it aloud, they pronounce it "emk".
 * In one scene, Albert walks in on a class in progress, where the teacher is writing "E=" and an insanely complex mess of scribbles covering the rest of the board. Albert helpfully wipes out a clean space and writes a big "mc2". He's physically thrown out of the room in response.
 * In Kids in The Hall Brain Candy, Dr. Cooper is first seen inventing the anti-depression drug by finishing a gigantic equation on the chalkboard with "=HAPPY".
 * Subverted in Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows. While Moriarty's chalkboard was covered with mathematical symbols and formulas, the writers consulted with actual mathematicians in order to make sure they were scientifically accurate for the time period. According to one of the scholars involved, the original design for the chalkboard would have invoked this trope as explained here.

Literature

 * In the Sword Of The Galaxy book series, a simple algebraic expression can be used by the Trakkorians to enter hyperspace. When the author received complaints about this piece of Fridge Logic, he recited the MST3K Mantra.
 * Played in The Maelstrom by Roger E. Moore (from Cloakmaster Cycle).
 * In Men At Arms, Sergeant Detritus gets Locked in a Freezer and his intelligence is boosted to the limit by being frozen nearly to death. His rescuers discover that he has written in the frost an enormous, complicated formula ending in an ominous equal sign, and nothing on the other side.
 * His eyes were flashing on and off when they pulled him out, so presumably the cold overcame him just before he could write the answer.
 * The Maelstrom by Roger E. Moore (Cloakmaster Cycle) has a good parody of the "E=mc2 says it all" version.

Live-Action TV
"Tory: You forgot to carry gravity. (Beat) Grant: What?!"
 * The trope's name comes from a pastiche of E=mc2 that appeared in a scene of Farscape: The Peacekeeper Wars where Harvey (who was named after Not-So-Imaginary Friend of the movie Harvey) writes "E = MC Hammer" on a blackboard of other nonsense. Especially funny in that Crichton, as a physicist and an astronaut, would know exactly what E=mc2 actually means, and Harvey is likely just dicking around.
 * The same exact equation was said aloud by Dina on the Nickelodeon sitcom Salute Your Shorts, during a scene intended to make fun of the "growing and learning" activities going on during her camp experience.
 * In the NCIS episode "Red Cell", Abby and McGee get into an argument about whether or not a set of equations is homology or cohomology. But the operator symbols are different in these two concepts, and what are subscripts in homology are superscripts in cohomology. No one with sufficient education (as Abby and McGee have) can mistake one for the other.
 * In the Covert Affairs episode "Walter's Walk", Auggie refers to a sequence of numbers as being a "complex cylic permutation". But a permutation is a rearrangement of things, not a sequence. Moreover cyclic permutations are the simplest of all permutations, and talking about them being complex makes no sense.
 * In an episode of Torchwood, a integral equation was used to open the rift that led Jack and Tosh into the past. It didn't seem very realistic, though at least it had integration variables.
 * The Doctor Who episode "The Impossible Planet" has Maxwell's equations of electric and magnetic fields as graffiti on a table in the cafeteria.
 * In "The Three Doctors," after coming through the black hole, the physicist Dr. Tyler writes the famous equation in the sand. Justified, too—he's trying to come to grips with the fact that he's just traveled at the speed of light.
 * In the pilot episode of Sliders, the main character leaves his blackboard covered in equations, not knowing what to write after the equals sign. When he comes back, his double has solved it, and the expression he has written as an infinity symbol on the denominator. That's right. He just needed to divide by infinity.
 * One of the clips in the Star Trek: Enterprise opener shows a black and white image of a scientist writing complex equations across a blackboard. It looks very fancy until the glaring mathematical error.
 * In his original pitch for Star Trek, Gene Roddenberry wanted to use the Drake equation to demonstrate how likely it was we'd encounter aliens. Unfortunately, he couldn't remember the Drake equation, so he just made something up (including two variables being raised to the first power). In the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Future's End" Rain Robinson's work station has both equations on the wall.
 * The original series episode "Court-Martial" refers to amplifying the sound of a heartbeat by a factor of "one to the fourth power"... which is one, meaning no amplification (or attenuation) at all.
 * In Lost Seasons 4 & 5 you get both Daniel Faraday (4) & his mother (5) just constantly writing jibberish on the chalkboard while conducting experiments.
 * Terrifyingly, the DVD shows that a real professor of physics wrote that gibberish up for them.
 * A sketch in series 1 episode 3 of A Bit of Fry and Laurie involves a "hilarious blooper" from a 1970s Open University programme, in which Hugh Laurie's presenter talks us through a blackboard full of nonsensical integral-like equations. What's more, the flub involves the equation giving a "resultant modular quantity" of 0.567395, rather than 0.567359 as Laurie's character states, when the integral in question has no limits and wouldn't have a numerical solution, not to mention that the programme appears to be a physics lecture about wave theory, which wouldn't involve numbers that precise as solutions anyway. ... Hmm, come to think of it, that's a hilarious blooper in itself! I don't believe it! Ha ha ha ha!
 * In an Imagine Spot, Everybody Hates Chris has a Sadist Teacher demand to know, giving no context whatsoever, "What is a2 plus b2?!?". The correct answer is apparently "c2". In other words, the protagonist has internalized the most common expression of the Pythagorean theorem, but with no clue of what it actually means.
 * Numb3rs gets a lot of credit for having both correct (syntactically) and relevant (in the context of the episode) math equations. Generally, it does—when the equations are displayed in the foreground. Whenever we see one of the fancy animations while Charlie explains something, though, expect at least half of the math in the background to be random and irrelevant. It gets to the point where even people who know nothing about math should be able to figure out that the equations are meaningless, because they appear even when the explanation Charlie is giving is not mathematical in nature (like the infamous IRC explanation, which doubles as being wholly inaccurate itself).
 * Spoofed in an episode of MythBusters. Grant sketched out a complex but valid mathematical formula on the side of a test vehicle. After Grant finished the calculations and announced the result, this exchange occurred:

"Rimmer: Right, they're bound to ask the right thigh, which is 10 per cent. They must ask the left thigh, which is 20 per cent. They've got to ask one of the forearms. Which means I've passed already; anything on the left shin's a bonus! Right. *Looks at one arm* `CUTIE'. Current under tension is ... what's this? Current under tension is equal? Current under tension is expendable? Current under tension is expensive? What does this mean? *Begins to panic* What does any of it mean? I've covered my body in complete and utter and total absolute nonsense gibberish!"
 * Rimmer does this to himself in Red Dwarf when he covers his arms and legs in astrophysics equations that are beyond his capacity to understand to cheat on a test he is clearly not qualifies to pass.


 * In Tattooed Teenage Alien Fighters From Beverly Hills episode "The Spy", Black and Nerdy Swinton ends a joke with a E = MC Hammer.
 * In That '70s Show, Eric's parents see fit to check that he's not neglecting school, so Red asks him sternly, "What is X?". Eric just stares at him, then very politely explains that it's a variable that can represent a given number. The parents think it sounds right, but neither of them actually know what answer they were expecting.

Music

 * Mariah Carey went so far as to name her most recent album E=MC2. She claims it stands for "(E) Emancipation (=) equals (MC) Mariah Carey to the second power." Yeah right.
 * See the Quantum Mariah Carey Problem for further discussion.
 * Subverted and literal: Doctor Steel raps about the Fibonacci Sequence.
 * E=MC2 appears on the Schoolmaster's blackboard in the gatefold art of The Wall.

Music Videos

 * "Weird Al" Yankovic's video "White and Nerdy". Just to show how smart Alfred is. Ironically, it contains an error.
 * Alas, in the song "Pancreas" he gets Newton's equation for the gravitational force between two masses wrong.

Video Games

 * The first few levels of Super Paper Mario feature "joke" equations in the background, made up of random numbers and mathematical symbols combined with famous Mario icons such as the Fire Flower and mushrooms.
 * In EarthBound, Doctor Andonuts has a big chalkboard in his lab with nothing written on it but a big "E=mc2".
 * Half-Life has a number of blackboards adorned with Newton's equation for gravity. That's like Ernest Hemingway trying to come to grips with "Hop On Pop".
 * This is lampshaded and blasted to bits in Freeman's Mind.
 * In Portal 2, there are posters around that list paradoxes in the event of a rogue AI. One of the listed paradoxes is "Does a set of all sets contain itself?"
 * Knowing the dev team's sense of humor, it might be deliberate.
 * While chalkboards in Team Fortress 2 do sport real equations (including the ridiculously complicated equation they use for rendering rim lights), it also boasts "equations" like "FIRE = QQ".
 * The World Ends With You's Mad Mathematician Sho Minamimoto not only SPEAKS in Math, he uses it as his Formulaic Magic and the Incantation of a Level i Flare.

Web Comics

 * This xkcd strip includes an integral without a variable of integration, as part of a clearly erroneous equation—but in this case the error is integral (sorry) to the punchline.
 * The variable of integration is obvious, since there's only one variable; the bigger issue is somehow getting a constant out of an indefinite integral (this would only happen if you nonsensically integrated zero, and even then you wouldn't get a specific constant because the derivative of any constant is zero). But this is also part of the joke, and the Alt Text takes it further: "It's pi plus C, of course."
 * A more elaborate variant appears in this cartoon by Tom Tomorrow. Instead of meaningless numerical symbols, it's an invalid proof that involves dividing by zero, perhaps to complement the scientist's fallacious reasoning.
 * The invalidity of the proof is probably intentional, but it still appears to be copied from an online source by someone who doesn't understand mathematical notation. It writes "a^2" instead of "a2" (the former notation is a substitute that is only ever used when technical constrains make it impossible to write the latter, which is not the case for blackboards).
 * In Two Lumps, Eben is occasionally shown contemplating equations right before Snooch interrupts with his latest insanity. In at least one instance readers have submitted corrections for the math displayed.
 * Although Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal is usually quite good about this sort of thing, this strip features a justified example - the designers are snowing their audience.

Web Original

 * The title card for The Angry Video Game Nerd video Chronologically Confused features the Nerd in front of a board filled with nonsensical equations and formulae, including at points a Triforce and a drawing of Mario.
 * E equals MC Hawking.
 * This FailBlog entry tries to show Einstein's equation but, well, fails.
 * Fan Art for the Whateley Universe: Hot Scientist Bugs, who is a genius deviser with a fascination with egg shapes: here.
 * Episode 1 of Echo Chamber has Tom and Dana (and possibly Zack) trying to figure out how to "show a Show Within a Show" and covering an entire blackboard with ideas, including nonsensical chemical and mathematical formulae that have little to do with...anything they are trying to discuss.
 * The blog Blackboards in Porn is devoted to pointing out examples of this trope in pornography.

Western Animation
"Homer: The sum of the square roots of any two sides of an isoceles triangle is equal to the square root of the remaining side! Co-worker in a stall: That's a right triangle, y'idiot! Homer: D'oh!"
 * SpongeBob SquarePants usually has Sandy show SpongeBob some equations.
 * The Fairly OddParents has done this as well.
 * Abused by Dexters Laboratory.
 * Professor Utonium's lab in The Powerpuff Girls.
 * And Pokey Oaks Kindergarten. In one episode, Ms Keane starts out with "1 + 1 = 2", then proceeds to give a theoretical description of time travel.
 * Fillmore! has an episode set around a maths test. When the teacher gives her class an assignment, it reads: 2+ x=5, x-y= 16, -2x-y=-14, 2x+ 4y=12, -2x+ 5y=5. She asks them to solve both x and y, and tells them to spend the rest of the lesson doing so. This amount of time would make sense, as it's actually impossible—the value of x and y changes in those equations from one example to the next.
 * And what is worse, the moral of the story is that "the value of x remains constant". Arghh!
 * The intro to Pinky and The Brain has a scene where Brain is writing his "theory of everything" on a chalkboard, which is basically a bunch of pseudo-mathematical mumbo-jumbo, including "THX=1138".
 * Spoofed in another episode which has Brain reveal that his latest plan to take over the world was hinged on an equation he had just uncovered. Pinky askes him if it is something complicated like E=mc2, and Brain replies that it is in fact even simpler, just E.
 * Monkey Dust has a chalkboard full of geometry in a class teaching cottaging! (For non-UK readers, that's anonymous gay sex in public bathrooms). True to the title of this trope, the board also contains "run=dmc".
 * The Simpsons is fond of this one. When Homer has a bright idea, the camera would occasionally do a close-up of his head, revealing two chimpanzees in graduation gowns and mortarboards writing E=mc2 on a chalkboard. Otherwise, the chimps would be grooming each other and eating the lice.
 * Parodied when Homer is an inventor. During a montage, he's shown writing equations on a blackboard. After he's done, the camera moves to shot of the house—where there's a massive explosion. Cut back to Homer: who examines his equation and crosses out the offending section, a drawing of a stick of dynamite, which he then replaces with something else. This results in another, bigger explosion.
 * Also done in Phineas and Ferb. The boys finally solved it by replacing the bomb with a smiley face.
 * And subverted in another episode: Homer puts on some Nerd Glasses he finds in the power plant's toilets and immediately recites what he seems to think is the Pythagorean Theorem (he's actually quoting The Wizard of Oz movie):

"Nelson: Lisa's a genius! She can do the kind of math that has letters! Watch: what does X equal, Lisa? Lisa: Well, that depends... Nelson: She could do it yesterday, I swear!"
 * Note that the co-worker's correction is nowhere near complete, becase the formula refers to the squares, nor the square roots, and "the remaining side" has to be the hypotenuse. But that wouldn't be as funny.
 * Variation, in the episode in which the Simpsons discover the third dimension, "P=NP" can be read in the 3d-CGI world.
 * Also parodied in "Moneybart":


 * The board in Arthur's class would often be filled with formulas like the Pythagorean theorem or simple derivatives, even though the characters are respectively three and six years too young for them. Apparently, this is part of Mr. Ratburn's Sadist Teacher reputation.
 * In Rocko's Modern Life in an episode where Rocko keeps being late for work. While he gets berated for it by his boss, there's a flipchart in the background that contains, amongst other things, a clipart of a clock followed by a plus-minus sign and a square root containing "MC" and a clipart of a hammer.
 * In Code Lyoko, the same board (y=ax+b) is used for every science course. Including one about parthenogenesis.
 * In Robot Chicken, they parody this trope in a sketch. Where two scientists are laughing their heads off to a bizarre problem on the board, only for one of them to stop, erase a symbol, add another, and then both burst out laughing again.
 * One episode of The New Adventures of Winnie-the-Pooh centered on Gopher's "equation for the ultimate tunnel." How and why the layout for a tunnel took the form of a chalkboard full of mathematical-looking scrawlings was never explained.

Real Life

 * Even children's math workbooks have this problem. Some of them that go from K-12 will have the same picture with pi, percents, and algebra symbols on every book regardless of if it is a 11th grade (age 16-17) or 3rd grade (age 8-9) book.
 * This extends even to the university level. The cover of late-undergraduate/early-graduate level "Introduction to Lie Algebras" from the Springer series is adorned with many generic calculus and linear algebra equations not particularly related to the topic at hand. Subverted in that the equations, while complicated and arguably "pretty", should not be mysterious to anyone capable of understanding the contents of the book.
 * Speaking about Truth in Television - imagine what goes on when TV people come and ask for "some formulas" as a background for an interview with someone related to maths/physics education (and their request is granted just to please them).

General

 * Clausius-Clapeyron and the derivation via the Maxwell relations is extremely common, usually as Mad Science. It's easy to copy verbatim, and looks scary because it's an important equation in Thermodynamics and requires high level chemistry, physics and mathematics to understand.

Anime & Manga

 * The opening credits of The Melancholy Of Haruhi Suzumiya feature a number of diagrams and equations, including the obligatory E=mc2, the Drake Equation and Shannon's source entropy formula, appropriately enough (as well as plenty most people have never heard of). In "Snow Mountain Syndrome" of the later novels, though, solving an instance of formula becomes a matter of great importance, so this is to be expected. That and the guy that writes the Light Novel likes math.
 * The second season opening is, if anything, worse.
 * In a chapter of Pluto by Naoki Urasawa, we see to write on a wall a huge quantity of equations. While they are probabily correct (the notation is correct, for instance and any single expression makes sense), it is not probable that they are "the formula of the ": some are mathematical definitions, or Fourier tranforms, other appears to be basic equations of quantum physics, but surely not a project of bomb.
 * Subverted in a Crowning Moment of Awesome in Tobaku Datenroku Zero. Near the end of a psychotic quiz game in which a super-sharp pendulum is lowered when the answer is wrong, the titular character Ukai Zero is answering a trivia question about the period of a pendulum. He's shown to be under pressure, thinking up a bunch of random equations which have nothing to do with the relevant speeds of rotation. And he gets the question wrong. However,
 * Not actually an equation, but the blackboard in computer science class in Serial Experiments Lain shows an entirely plausible and workable (partial) code for a Conway's Game of Life implementation. It's a bit too straightforward and not very efficient, but then, it is a teaching example. What's interesting here is that the code is written in Common Lisp—a somewhat obscure programming language, but one with a long history of an intellectual superiority. Which is entirely in tune with the show's Viewers Are Geniuses approach.

Comics
"Peter: From such smarts, such stupidity."
 * One strip of the newspaper comic FoxTrot has Insufferable Genius Jason Fox, a ten-year-old, solving a simple division problem on his class chalkboard. He rewrites the equation in about a dozen different ways, many of which would require knowledge of trigonometry or calculus to understand. Given that the cartoonist Bill Amend majored in physics in college, all of them are correct.
 * Another strip has Jason serving as Paige's math tutor and the latter asking him what is the cosine of 60 degrees. Jason then starts rattling off a really long sum and only stops when Paige reminds him she's not paying him by the hour. Said sum is the actual Taylor series expansion of the cosine meaning of course he could continue going forever. The answer she was looking for is 0.5.
 * Yet another strip has Jason presenting Paige with an alphanumeric cipher with a twist: the key is comprised of 26 math problems, one for each letter of the alphabet. One of the clues involves integral calculus (but of course it's for Q, which doesn't get used much).
 * And another strip shows Jason doing a problem in class where he has to calculate the area of a farm enclosed by a fence of some length and width. Naturally, he draws out a coordinate plane for the farm and does an integration to find the area under the curve. That's definitely the method you all would choose, right?
 * Then there's the strip showing Peter holding several sheets of paper covered in equations, and a diagram of a catapult. The purpose? Allow Jason and Marcus to fly into Paige's room with squirt guns.

Films -- Live-Action

 * A very common mockery thrown at the movie A Beautiful Mind is that in promo posters for the movie, Russell Crowe as John Nash is sitting making a thinking face behind a glass wall covered in equations. Right on his forehead is the statement "0 < pi < 1". Geeks had a lot of fun mocking the apparent total lack of understanding of math in Hollywood and coming up for ways this statement might be justified (often speculating on the shape of Russell Crowe's penis). In reality, there was a perfectly good explanation, in fact: The math consultant for the movie had been asked to help prepare the shoot for this poster by covering the glass wall with impressive-looking equations, and for "authenticity's" sake had done so using real equations from the real John Nash's papers. John Nash was a game theorist, and he had written a paper involving an imaginary game with 24 players. Since there are 24 letters in the Greek alphabet, he playfully decided to name the imaginary players after Greek letters. The "0 < pi < 1" statement comes from a portion of the paper describing an imaginary situation involving placement of turn order within the game. Notice that Nash was specifically doing this in order to undermine mathematicians insistence on using symbols to mean just one thing.
 * Averted in the romantic comedy It's My Turn, which begins with a proof of the Snake Lemma. In fact Weibel's An Introduction to Homological Algebra refuses to print a proof, referring the readers instead to the first scene of this move.
 * Averted in the 2016 Ghostbusters reboot: the production team brought in real particle physicists to create all the equations seen in the movie, and to redesign the proton packs with 21st century science and technology.

Literature

 * Robert A. Heinlein was meticulous about everything he ever wrote about. While much of his work has been victim to Science Marches On, he would often spend whole chapters explaining why something does or doesn't work in his future technologies. One of his most mindboggling and in depth explanations (for a layman) was the short story "—And He Built a Crooked House—", where he actively explains how to create a tesseract house in four dimensions.
 * Heinlein mentions in his non-fiction writing that when he was doing his earliest juvenile novels (mostly wham-bang space opera involving teenage boys fighting Nazis on the Moon and such) he and his wife Virginia still made complete orbital calculations for the spacecraft, working longhand on rolls of butcher's paper.

Live-Action TV

 * Considering that the show Numb3rs has, well, numbers as its unique gimmick, it would be pretty insulting if this were the case. They keep a mathematician on staff who writes all of the equations seen.
 * Which, unfortunately, is not to say they don't make mistakes. While the math is often correct, much of the equations and anaylizi Charlie Epps uses often are not correctly called for in the situation, or, while coming to the correct conclusion, make the work a bit more difficult then it could have been.
 * For the physics class scenes in 3rd Rock from the Sun, much of Dick's dialogue was written by Elegant Universe author Dr. Brian Greene.
 * Seriously averted with The Big Bang Theory, who have a theoretical physics professor on-staff at all times. Not only are all of the equations shown in the programme entirely correct (and used in the correct contexts to boot), but some of the ones that are shown (especially displayed in the background on Sheldon and Leonard's whiteboards in their apartment) are actual assignments that the university professor sets to his physics students the week before. They can actually watch the show and learn at the same time!
 * An episode of Stargate SG-1 had Major Carter guest-lecturing Air Force cadets on a multiple-universe theory, in front of the "chalk board full of formulae" version of this trope. According to the episode's commentary, the mathematics on the board were real. Carter made an original mistake as well—she accidentally inverted one of the ratios.
 * Only time in the entire series she screws up math.
 * A cadet actually walks up and stares at the board before pointing out the mistake, only to be chastised by the professor for correcting a superior. Carter then re-examines the problem and also sees the mistake, noting that it completely changes the problem. She is then very interested in the cadet for being smart enough to spot it.
 * Averted in Kyle XY. There's a real math problem there, which is typically supposed to take months to solve (looked it up, but can't remember).
 * Not so certain about his solution, though.
 * University of Oklahoma chemistry professor Donna Nelson serves as the science consultant for Breaking Bad, so the chemistry Walter teaches his high school class is accurate. They intentionally change some of the steps for making methamphetamine so that viewers don't learn how to make meth from the show.

Video Games

 * A whiteboard in the opening scene of Half-Life has the formula for gravity written on it. This is in a lab that works in theoretical physics. Ross Scott makes fun of this in his Freeman's Mind machinima. "Having trouble remembering that one, guys?"
 * On a similar note, in the second Portal game's cooperative mode, some whiteboards have Fourier transforms written on them. This would be quite useful for a lab that screws with physics as much as Aperture does.
 * And early in the single-player game, a wall in one of Ratman's Rooms Full Of Crazy shows a cat jumping (or perhaps tunneling?) out of a box, along with various Quantum Physics equations, a reference to the Schrödinger's Cat thought experiment that was played with in the tie-in Lab Rat comic.

Web Comics

 * This strip of Irregular Webcomic.
 * Also, for the most part, any xkcd strip will be extremely accurate.
 * Schlock Mercenary, being hard sci-fi, routinely dissects and discusses the sorts of physics involved in space travel. The writer encourages readers to check his work, and occasionally posts problems for the readers to solve themselves, such as the space elevator between Earth and the Moon.

Western Animation

 * Futurama has quite the opposite. Several of the writers are math people, so there are math jokes in the background that laymen won't even notice, like the number 1729 (yes, that's a joke).
 * They also parody and subvert on occasion too. For example, in the first season episode "Mars University" Fry signs up for the Professor's course, entitled "The Mathematics of Quantum Neutrino Fields" which Fry mishears as "Wonton Burrito Meals". When Fry finally turns up to the class he finds the Professor teaching complete nonsense, using an illustration named Witten's Dog to explain why electrons taste like grapeade (a parody of Schrödinger's cat). This is especially amusing when you consider that earlier in the episode the Professor himself refers to genetic engineering as "preposterous science-fiction mumbo-jumbo".
 * The Professor also claimed that the name itself was an E=MC Hammer; he just made up some imposing-sounding nonsense so that no one would take his class, because he's a professor and doesn't know how to teach, and indeed Fry's motivation for taking the course is apparently because Professor Farnsworth is teaching it.
 * Electrons tasting like grapeade is itself probably a reference to the fact that the 6 symmetrically-paired "types" of quarks are known as flavors.
 * Bender has a box of P and a box of nP in his closet.
 * When Bender first meets Flexo, they find it greatly amusing that both of them have serial numbers expressible as a sum of two cubes (like 1729 above).
 * In one episode, Bender is terrified when the number 666 mysteriously appears on the wall... in binary.
 * Bender also freaks out over a dream where he thought he saw the number 2. Fortunately, Fry is right there to reassure Bender there's no such thing as 2.
 * Loew's Aleph-naught-Plex. That is all.
 * One of the most awesome(ly geeky) parts of the entire series is a half hour extra on the first movie's DVD, where the writing crew bring in a mathematician to explain some of the math jokes in the series to the viewer.
 * In the sixth season, in the body-swapping episode, when Bumblegum Tate has worked out a solution to their body-swapping problem, there is actually a correct and reasonably rigorous proof on their floating holographic blackboard.
 * The entire proof can be found on the wiki. The writer who wrote the Theorem has a Ph.D in mathematics.
 * The PJs actually used the trope title in-context. When Thurgood is attempting to prepare to go back to school, a neighbor helps him catch up on his science. The neighbor writes "E=MC___" on the board, and Thurgood subsequently writes in "Hammer". After a second attempt, he writes in "Nuggets" (geddit?)
 * In the Teen Titans episode "Stranded", when Cyborg is explaining to Beast Boy how to fix the crashed T-ship a string of mathematical symbols emerges from his mouth—the point being that Beast Boy does not understand science. But the symbols themselves are in fact a mathematically accurate series expansion.
 * My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic:
 * The blackboard in Cheerilee's classroom features what some viewers have identified as high-school level physics formulas. Everything else points to the students being more like elementary school kids.
 * In "It's About Time", Twilight writes the formulae for time dilation on her blackboard. (Well, mostly. She crashes and burns computing the integral, but at least they're valid mathematical expressions.)
 * In "It's About Time", Twilight writes the formulae for time dilation on her blackboard. (Well, mostly. She crashes and burns computing the integral, but at least they're valid mathematical expressions.)

Real Life

 * Nobel Prize winning physicist Leon Lederman speculated in The God Particle that physicists in trouble could write the number 137 on a sign and expect other physicists to come to their assistance. The reason: 137 is (very close to) the reciprocal of alpha, the fine structure constant, and one of the most arbitrary-seeming constants in physics.
 * It also might not even be constant, so that's fun.