Aída/YMMV

"Barajas: Hey, Javi (Chema)! Can we make love?"
 * Alas, Poor Scrappy: Paz when she comes back and sees Luisma happy with another girl. At first it was seen as karmic, but then became this.
 * Ainhoa . Well-liked or not, she didn't deserve that.
 * Anvilicious: So very much.
 * Base Breaker: Basically all the characters, due to being object of massive Depending on the Writer.
 * Broken Base: Season 6, everyone! Many people think that, with Aída leaving the show and Flanderization of the other characters, it hit Rock Bottom. Others thought it was a good opportunity to make fan favourite Luisma the main protagonist.
 * Cargo Ship: Barajas/Doraemon. Is as funny as it sounds.
 * Darkness-Induced Audience Apathy: Although the hilarious comedy downplays this quite a bit, it creates this due to Flanderization and the characters being really unsympathetic sometimes, especially in later seasons.
 * Draco in Leather Pants: Mauricio. People tend to downplay his bastardry due to his hilarious antics.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse: This trope should be called "The Luisma". His funny and over-the-top antics has made him the soul of the series. His actor, Paco León, has received many awards for this character and is famous for it.
 * Fandom Rivalry: With La que se Avecina, to the point that mentioning it is the fandom's Berserk Button.
 * This is not without justification. La que se Avecina is the main responsible of the series's derailment; similar at what Family Guy did to The Simpsons.
 * Fanon Discontinuity: The series ended in Season 5 for many fans, due to Aída leaving and the extreme Flanderization the series suffered.
 * Foe Yay Shipping: Too many to count.
 * Funny Aneurysm Moment: The constant over-the-top spanish patriotism. If you do that in Real Life, prepare for a severe smackdown.
 * Also, the representation of spanish people as lazy and vulgar. Many people has started to become like this, which earned a lot of criticism.
 * Hilarious in Hindsight: Luisma says that Jose and him are Like Brother and Sister. The actors (Paco and María León, respectively) are siblings in Real Life.
 * Also, in one episode, Jonathan says "This woman looks like momma" after watching a yoghurt TV ad. The woman is Carmen Machi, who portrays Aída herself.
 * Ho Yay: Very much. In-Universe with Fidel pinning on Jonathan.
 * This moment takes the cake:


 * Jerkass Woobie: Every character can act like a real dick and be pitiful at the same time.
 * Magnificent Bastard: Mauricio when pulling a Karma Houdini. Fidel can also be considered this.
 * Replacement Scrappy: Ainhoa was set up to be this. However, she's more of a Base Breaker, due to freeing Luisma out of his previous Flanderization.
 * Subverted with Barajas. At first, it looked like he was going to be a crappy carbon-copy of Luisma. However, his Non Sequitur Cloudcuckoolander tendencies made him one of the show's fan favourites.
 * Rescued from the Scrappy Heap: Mauricio became The Scrappy because of his feud with Chema in Season 7. When, he got this treatment. The same goes for Paz after.
 * Ainhoa gets this because of her kind nature and the fact she rescued Luisma from his previous Flanderization and Jerkassitude..
 * Romantic Plot Tumor: Luisma and Paz's complicated relationship, especially in later seasons.
 * The triangle Mauricio/Soraya/Chema in the infamous Season 7. It gets resolved early. (Thank, God!)
 * Ron the Death Eater: Chema and Fidel can become this. It doesn't help that they can be portrayed as Soapbox Sadies Hypocrites in-series.
 * Seasonal Rot: While Season 6 was more of a Broken Base, Season 7 is considered the worst, making failure attempts at drama and taking the characters' unpleasantness Up to Eleven. The following seasons and the Grand Finale solved this, in a way.
 * The Scrappy: Discounting Base Breakers, we have:
 * After their introduction, people gave Tagalong Kids Germán and Aidita a pass, being cuties despite not having funny traits. Once they grow older and take massive levels in jerkass, they very much earned the fandom's hatred.
 * Mecos and Néstor are not well-liked either, since they're more unpleasant versions of Jonathan and Machupichu respectively.
 * Unfortunate Implications: Plenty, but especially Mauricio's treatment on inmigrants. Then again, the Aída Universe is an exaggerated and surrealist version of Spanish stereotypes, so that was expected.
 * The Woobie: Barajas and Machupichu. They're Butt Monkeys who almost never hold the Jerkass Ball and are victimized frequently by the other characters.