Imaginary Friend

"THAT's half the reason imaginary friends are illegal now! Kids always give them the creepiest possible names. Rubby Plop-Plop, Sir Zabblepants, Dingy Donger, Real Live Actual Mr. Blangcaster Next Door..."

- Strong Bad, "Strong Bad Email 202: Imaginary"

Children in their formative years have a lot of imagination. They also need guidance, support, love, and companionship. And stimulation for their imaginations. Happy, precocious children who are bored or just have more imagination than their parents can keep up with will dream up an Imaginary Friend - or even more than one.

In cases when the parent is physically present but emotionally and mentally a Missing Mom or Disappeared Dad; or when the child is abused or orphaned or otherwise put through upheaval -- they cope by creating a friend from their imagination to keep them company.

The Imaginary Friend can be a Parental Substitute, confidante, playmate, and sometimes protector (especially if the child has mental issues). If the child has Powers, then their Imaginary Friend, if a genuine product of the child, is bound to be slightly more... substantial than usual.

In darker stories, sometimes the Imaginary Friend is a ghost or extradimensional entity who may not have good and kind intentions toward the child. These can be a variation on Our Ghosts Are Different. Sometimes it's just a manipulative or Jerkass adult preying on the child's imagination and innocence and pretending to be imaginary, counting on adults not believing the child if the child does happen to speak on it.

There are also the odd adult occasions of an adult Imaginary Friend turning up or hanging around. Sometimes this becomes a Split Personality.

Occasionally, though, the person who conceived of the Imaginary Friend is an adult rather than a child. In these cases, it is usually a part of already-existing madness or else one of the warning signs of the character's Sanity Slippage.

Finally, it qualifies as Truth in Television, as many children (and adults) in Real Life have or have had imaginary friends. Some authors discuss their characters as if they're Imaginary Friends.

Related to I Just Want to Have Friends as the reason imaginary friends are made. Contrast with Imaginary Enemy and Not-So-Imaginary Friend.

The revelation that one of the characters is an Imaginary Friend is sometimes used as a major plot twist, so beware of spoilers.

Anime and Manga

 * The 1979-80 series Kujira No Josephina (Josephina The Whale) is about a boy in Spain who went on adventures with his imaginary whale. In the last episode, the boy eventually grew up and said goodbye to Josephina...yeah.
 * The series itself, by the way, was based on a Spanish children's book Adios, Josefina (Goodbye, Josephina).
 * The manga Noramimi features existing "imaginary friends" (similar to Foster's Home, below) labelled "mascots", who stay ("freeload") with a child until they grow up, and move on to another kid afterwards.
 * Higurashi no Naku Koro ni: Rika Furude, who is regarded by some as a prophet, had a childhood imaginary friend named "Oyashiro-sama", which is coincidentally the name of Hinamizawa's guardian god. (This is only briefly referenced in the anime, in Meakashi-hen, but is more explicitly spelled out in other material).
 * Umineko no Naku Koro ni has a few different cases of this, depending on which explanations you go with. Most evident is Maria's relationship with Sakutaro, a plushie of hers. Lord help you when he breaks. Later on, Ange has Maria, Sakutaro, and the Stakes of Purgatory as her imaginary friends. More spoileriffic is an example from the seventh arc - . This series really knocks around the line between Imaginary Friend and Not-So-Imaginary Friend.
 * A rather creepy example comes from Chaos;Head, where Takumi experiences regular delusions of Seira, the lead character from Blood Tune. Seira tries to encourage his Hikikomori habits every time she appears.
 * The cutesey mascot Maromi from Paranoia Agent who speaks to Tsukiko seems to be quite imaginary, but is a whole lot more dangerous. Somehow.
 * Short version:
 * Alternate Interpretation:
 * In Bleach,  was this to , before
 * Sorta used with
 * Ninja Ninja, Afro's foul mouthed, perverted, jive talking imaginary friend from Afro Samurai was thought up because Afro's entire adoptive family was murdered by a band of thieves and he created him so he wouldn't be completely alone. He is also the polar opposite of Afro, no one else can see or hear him but he can get hurt and once he accepted responsibility for their deaths he let go of Ninja Ninja allowing him to be killed in his place and letting vanish from his life, although he returns in the movie.
 * Yami Marik from Yu-Gi-Oh! started as this with Marik/Malik but eventually turned into a Split Personality.
 * England in Axis Powers Hetalia is assumed to have these- subverted in that they're actually fairies that only he can see. Its revealed that other nations (apart from America) go to his house they can see them too.
 * England in Axis Powers Hetalia is assumed to have these- subverted in that they're actually fairies that only he can see. Its revealed that other nations (apart from America) go to his house they can see them too.

Comic Books

 * Depending on which story one believes, Bat-Mite is either an Imaginary Friend, an entity from the same dimension as Mr. Mxyzptlk, or a drug-induced hallucination.
 * One story written by certified madman Grant Morrison implied he might be both.
 * In Doom Patrol, the Reality Warper Dorothy Spinner had a group of disturbingly surreal imaginary friends and, because she had psychic powers, they could actually affect the world around them as though they were real people who just happened to be unpercievable by any sense. She had some who were good, who she used to help her be a superhero, and some who turned out to be evil, who she killed with an imaginary gun.
 * Mr. Immortal had Deathurge in Great Lakes Avengers. Who isn't Imaginary at all.
 * The Savage Dragon features She-Dragon, who, in a parody of She-Hulk's No Fourth Wall tendencies, had five or so imaginary friends, who many issues later turned out to be real people trapped in another dimension with a psychic link to her.
 * John Wayne in Preacher. He first started appearing when Jesse Custer was a child in need of a means of coping with his Evil Matriarch grandmother's abuse, and would occasionally show up during Jesse's adulthood as well.
 * Jesse belives that at one point, Wayne conveyed information that Jesse himself could not have known. Jesse never figures out the full reality of Wayne, but considering the cosmic powers thrown around...

Film

 * Jack Flack in Cloak and Dagger was the father figure to the kid whose Disappeared Dad was one of those "present but not here" types. Interestingly, it was implied that a version of him had been the father's imaginary friend as well; also, when the kid rejects Jack Flack out of horror for the real violence to which he's just been exposed, Flack starts to die, and says "I hate this part ... leaving when they stop believing." All this suggests that "Flack" does have some sort of independent existence.
 * It's also interesting that Jack Flack is played by the same actor as the dad, suggesting the hero that his son had always believed him to be, despite everything. The final line just tops it off: "I don't need him, anymore. Dad. I've got you."
 * Hide and Seek had an Imaginary Friend that turned out to be the Tomato in the Mirror in more ways than one.
 * Drop Dead Fred is about a girl who had her imaginary friend locked in a jack-in-the-box by her mother, and lets him back out by accident after she grows up. Apparently he still exists because she still needs him.
 * How Imaginary or Not-So-Imaginary he really is is pretty open to debate. The film tries to have it both ways.
 * In Fight Club, turns out to be an imaginary friend.
 * In A Beautiful Mind, are just a part of John Nash's imagination.
 * In Everything You Want, protagonist Abby creates an imaginary friend named Sy as a way to cope with the emotional abandonment by her perpetually traveling parents and her incapability to relate with other human beings derived from the above. Sy grows with her until adulthood and becomes her model and her perfect boyfriend. Abby is content with the situation, until she meets a classmate and begins to fall in love with a real person for the very first time...
 * In the Disney Channel Original Movie Don't Look Under the Bed, imaginary friends become boogeymen if the child stops believing in them too soon.
 * The in The Machinist turns out to be.
 * In the Kevin Costner film Mr. Brooks, the eponymous character is urged to commit his killings by "Marshall" (William Hurt), who acts as his id, as well as an extremely close companion who both friendlily taunts him and comforts him in times of despair. Interestingly, many of Brooks' secret talents and mental skills, such as his Living Lie Detector ability and cunning attention to detail, seem to manifest especially through Marshall.
 * Brazilian movie A Mulher Invísivel features an imaginary lover, the "invisible woman" of the title.
 * Reyeb for Malik in Un Prophète by Jacques Audiard. Remarkably friendly (if mysterious) considering Malik murdered him.
 * The TV Movie 'Invisible Child'.
 * Donnie Darko's "friend" Frank is considered imaginary by his doctor, even though Donnie's convinced that he's real.
 * In Paper Man, Ryan Reynolds plays the superhero imaginary friend of the main character, a middle-aged failed writer.
 * In the 1961 British film Hand in Hand, Rachel has always had a "pretend sister" and asks her opinion about everyday things.
 * The movie Sunday at Tiffany's, based on a book by James Patterson. Jane's imaginary friend Michael left her life on her tenth birthday. Twenty years later, on the eve of her birthday and her wedding, he shows up again—this time as a corporeal adult. Neither of them have any idea why he suddenly showed up out of nowhere or what his mission is. Michael falls in love with Jane, who is initially very resistant to his naïve, innocent view of her and the world. Eventually, she realizes she isn't satisfied with how her life has gone since Michael left, and that she loves him... just as he has to leave again. Or does he?

Literature

 * There's a sequence in Brooks' World War Z involving a pilot talking over the radio to another person who got her safely out of a zombie-infested area. Or was she talking to anyone at all...?
 * In the Bagthorpe series of children's books by Helen Cresswell, the youngest cousin, Daisy, has an imaginary friend called Arry Awk (the name comes from a folksong). Daisy is a strange child who has fads, such as setting things on fire and burying sausages in the garden, and she blames Arry Awk for all her misdeeds.
 * The short story "Thus I Refute Beelzy" by John Collier, in which it's strongly implied the child has summoned up a demon.
 * One of the only Kevin Henkes books populated by humans is Jessica, a picture book about a girl whose best friend is imaginary. The girl is initially reluctant to start kindergarten due to fears of leaving Jessica, but eventually befriends a classmate who happens to share the name.
 * Arguably used by childrens' books author Astrid Lindgren in Most Beloved Sister, created out of loneliness on the child's part.
 * In Anne Tyler's Earthly Possessions, the narrator's daughter has an imaginary friend "Selinda" for whom a place must be set at the table; after a while, the daughter sits in Selinda's place and insists that she is Selinda, and that the daughter is the imaginary friend. She is always referred to as Selinda from then on.
 * Lola in the Charlie and Lola children's book/TV series has an imaginary friend by the name of Soren Laurenson. This would be one of the cases where the kid with the imaginary friend is perfectly happy and well-adjusted, she just has a somewhat overactive imagination.
 * Sort of the point of the end of The Lace Reader:
 * The novel The Other. The narrator and his twin brother deal with a host of calamities.
 * In the novel Chocolat, the protagonist's daughter has an imaginary friend who is a Kangaroo.
 * In The Graveyard Book, Scarlett thinks that Bod is her imaginary friend until she meets him again when she becomes older.
 * In Patricia McKillip's contemporary novel Stepping from the Shadows the narrator's "ugly sister" turns out to be.
 * The "Dumarest of Terra" books Haven of Darkness and Prison of Night by E.C. Tubb involved a world where daily flares of stellar radiation induced detailed hallucinations of dead acquaintances, friends and enemies alike. Extensive conversations often occurred with these "ghosts."
 * The Gone-Away World is weird about this. Just to hammer in the weirdness a little more,  who really likes tupperware.
 * On top of this,
 * In John Varley's The Golden Globe protagonist Kenneth "Sparky" Valentine's imaginary friend turns out to be a symptom of a disassociative personality disorder caused by years of suffering at the hands of his abusive father, Kenneth Sr.
 * J.D. Salinger's story "Uncle Wiggly in Connecticut" is about habitually drunk wannabe socialite Eloise's lost afternoon spent with a close friend half-remembered acquaintance, to whom she happily relives moans about their Glory Days in college. Her daughter Ramona seems to have little purpose in the story other than to demonstrate how Eloise neglects her. Ramona — insisting her friend Jimmy Jimmereeno is corporeal — makes room in bed for him (which annoys her mother). No need to use, as this short story — like most of Salinger's — is anti-climactic. (Perhaps — after "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", and "Teddy" — Salinger felt he'd written enough jarring endings for a lifetime.)
 * In the Discworld novels, when Agnes Nitt was young, she used to blame things that went wrong on "the other little girl". "The other little girl" is now Perdita; somewhere between a Split Personality and the part of your mind where all the thoughts you don't dare think go. And she and Agnes don't get on.
 * Earlier, in Small Gods, desert-dwelling religious hermit S.T. ("Saint") Ungulant has an imaginary friend called Angus.
 * The titular Anne of the Anne of Green Gables series starts out having two imaginary friends: her reflection, whom she imagined was another little girl who lived in an enchanted world, and another little girl named Violetta, based on an echo she heard in a meadow near a home she grew up in. Marilla does not approve, and tells her it will be good to have a real friend to replace her imaginary ones.
 * In the sequel Anne of Avonlea, one of Anne's students, Paul Irving, has some imaginary friends that he collectively refers to as the "Rock People".
 * In the book Magic for Marigold, also by L. M. Montgomery, Marigold has an imaginary friend named Sylvia.
 * A teenage example: near the end of The Basic Eight, Flannery discovers that her best friend, Natasha, is a figment of her imagination.
 * In the short story "Faithless Margaret", an old woman has an imaginary companion by that name who takes bus rides with her. Then the pair meet an old man who has an imaginary companion named Arthur. In the final scene the old man and woman ride the bus sullenly apart, angry and bereft — Margaret and Arthur apparently hit it off and now ride the bus together, abandoning their respective people.
 * In Zilpha Keatley Snyder's The Changeling, both Martha and Ivy have imaginary friends when they meet; Martha's is a protective lion, and Ivy's is Nicky, a Native American boy. Ivy's baby sister Josie sees and chats with all sorts of people, at least one of whom may actually be a ghost.
 * Adam Gopnik's Bumping Into Mr. Ravioli is an essay about his three-year-old daughter and the elusive Charlie Ravioli, who was apparently so busy that they rarely had time to do more than "grab lunch" or chat for a minute on the phone. Mr. Ravioli even had a receptionist who said "He's in a meeting right now, may I take a message?"
 * Life Among the Savages, Shirley Jackson's essays based on her family, describes a shopping trip with her son, daughter, and her daughter's seven daughters, all named Martha, whom Joanne has adopted after their real parents killed each other.
 * The Wind Woman in Emily of New Moon, an Anthropomorphic Personification whose shape changes with the direction of the wind.

Live-Action TV
""Hello, everyone! I'm Amy's imaginary friend... but I came anyway.""
 * Harry Morgan on Dexter is a pretty good reminder of how disturbed Dexter actually is.
 * Played very darkly on Lost. Hurley's best friend while he was in a mental institution was Dave, a bad influence who encouraged Hurley to overeat, try to escape the hospital, and other bad ideas. Hurley only started improving after he accepted that Dave wasn't real, rather a manifestation of his darker impulses. We learn all this in flashback during an episode where Dave shows up on the Island.
 * However it gets more complicated when it turns out that
 * A Saturday Night Live sketch featured an "imaginary friend-off" competition, which had guest star Fred Savage talk about his imaginary friend Mike Podium.
 * Tales from the Crypt—in "Operation Friendship", it's an adult nerdy video game designer with an imaginary friend. Their relationship sours when the man starts dating a psychologist and the imaginary friend, in fear for his existence, tries to turn the man against her. In the end,
 * Monty Python's Flying Circus: Dinsdale Pirahna was perfectly normal . . . except that he was convinced that he was being watched by a gigantic hedgehog named Spiny Norman. Normally, Norman was wont to be about eight to ten feet from snout to tail, but when Dinsdale was really depressed, Norman could anywhere up to eight hundred yards long.
 * A variation on The Invisible Man: the little girl already has an imaginary friend, and Darien uses his power of invisibility to impersonate "Ralph" and get a witness statement from her.
 * On The 4400, a Muggle who took Promicin to get powers ended up with an Imaginary Friend who gave him seemingly prescient instructions.
 * On Huff the title character imagined and developed a good friendship with a Hungarian composer.
 * On 7th Heaven, Ruthie had an imaginary friend named Hoowie for a good part of the first season; he even had part of an episode's plot focused on him when she claimed Simon "sat on him and squished him".
 * House went a somewhat dark route with this trope near the end of Season 5, as House starts hallucinating that  is following him around at all times. House knows it's got to be a hallucination and ends up taking advantage of the relationship, seeing as   represents "an all-access pass to [his] own subconscious." That is, until  's arrangements for Chase's bachelor party result in him going into anaphylactic shock due to an allergy House would've known about... which leads to him wondering why he would possibly want Chase dead..
 * In Ghost Whisperer the title character is aware some children can see ghosts. The child of a storekeeper on the same square as her antique store, Dylan, appears to have the full-fledged medium gift, and his mother reacts poorly to her son talking to people who aren't there.
 * Played with in Doctor Who. Young Amy Pond's first meeting with the Doctor has such a profound effect on her, that as she grows up, he becomes a part of her play, almost as if an imaginary friend. To the point of four psychiatrists trying to tell her he's not real. However, as it turns out, he's real—very real. And recognized by everyone Amy knows, from the days of childhood play.

"Holly Walsh: I don't think many people give their imaginary friends surnames. Lee Mack: He's one of the few..."
 * There was an episode of the 1980's The Twilight Zone where a dad scoffs at his son's imaginary friend, then is shocked to realize that he can see and hear the friend as well.
 * The non-supernatural interpretation of the Bones episode where Booth is trapped on a soon-to-be-sunken navy ship is that "Parker" is his Hallucinatory Friend rather than a ghost. This presumes that the obstacles Parker helps Booth get past were also hallucinations, and he was really just stumbling around at random below deck.
 * A Sketch Show sketch took this to an over-the-top degree. The sketch concerned a psychiatrist running a group therapy session to persuade people that their imaginary friends weren't real; her patients were a guy who used his imaginary friend as a cover for alcoholism, a lonely and lovesick woman, and a guy who thought he himself was the imaginary one. At the very end of the sketch, it turns out the psychiatrist was actually addressing an empty room.
 * The A-Team has Murdock's invisible dog, Billy. At the end of one episode, it appears that Billy actually knocks Murdock over and drags him along the ground.
 * In one episode of Boy Meets World, Adult Child Eric makes an imaginary friend version of his former mentor Mr. Feeny to help him with his college work. At the end of the episode the imaginary Feeny convinces him that he has the skills to do well without him so Eric lets him go.
 * In an episode of The Nanny, Gracie is traumatized when Fran unwittingly "kills" her imaginary friend, going so far as to hold a funeral for her (burying her in a shoebox containing Fran's favorite boots). After talking with a family counselor though, Gracie admits that she'd been looking for an excuse to get rid of her imaginary friend anyway, since she created her shortly after her mother died, and Fran's presence was filling that void in her life. Fran is touched, but she still isn't happy about having to sacrifice her boots.
 * In an episode of Would I Lie to You?, David Mitchell claimed to have had a painted bucket he played board games with called "Stephen Tatlock":


 * Robert Webb claimed in series 5 that he had so many imaginary friends he formed an imaginary gang.
 * During a Daily Show report on "Imaginary Black on White Crime," Wyatt Cenac says at one point that all of the imaginary friends he grew up with are now "either dead or in jail" thanks to a terrible "imaginary public school system that has failed a whole generation of imaginary youth."
 * Invoked in an early episode of M*A*S*H, when Hawkeye describes to Trapper the imaginary friend he had as a kid, on whom he blamed all manner of misbehavior, and who became an Invented Individual after Hawkeye used his name to divert attention from himself when helping a financially-strapped orphanage.

Music
"Shiloh, when I was young, I used to call your name; When no one else would come, Shiloh, you always came... ''Come today."
 * Neil Diamond's "Shiloh", wherein a boy develops an imaginary friend to help him cope with a dad who just doesn't have time for him - and then, years later, when a woman enters his life but proves just as distant, he cries out for his old friend, who no longer shows up.


 * Trout Fishing in America's "Nobody", about a boy with an invisible imaginary friend with that name.
 * Telekinesis's aptly titled song "Imaginary Friends".
 * Freezepop did an album called Imaginary Friends, including a title track about a girl who meets a mysterious man, who happens to be imaginary.

Newspaper Comics

 * One Far Side cartoon features a father being held up in the air by an invisible grasping fist while his young son announces "Big Bob's tired of you saying he doesn't exist!"
 * Calvin and Hobbes is built largely on playing with this trope. Watterson has gone on record saying that the "true" nature of Hobbes - imaginary friend or doll that comes to life - really doesn't concern him. In any case, though, there's definitely a lot of weird blending of the two interpretations, like Hobbes taking periodic baths in the washing machine or the time Calvin somehow got tied to a chair.

Professional Wrestling

 * WWE's R-Truth has a person who he consults that he calls "Little Jimmy".

Theatre

 * Hilariously and disturbingly deconstructed in Mr. Marmalade. The title character is the imaginary friend of a five year old girl named Lucy, taking on the appearance of a short tempered workoholic who has a problem with pornography, cocaine and beating up his assistant. This contrasts with the plant imaginary friends of the character Larry, though Larry is somewhat suicidal.
 * The South Coast Repertory children's play Imagine is about a lonely boy with an imaginary friend. The boy meets an unimaginative girl, and lends her his imaginary friend. This goes well until the boy gets trapped in a sort of Imaginationland, causing the imaginary friend and the girl to journey there to rescue him. At the end of the play,
 * The play The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of is about an adult who never outgrew his imaginary friend.

Video Games

 * Dr. Cid in Final Fantasy XII subverts this. In his early appearances in the story he's often seen talking to someone who isn't there, even when he's in a room with other people. Others largely seem to ignore this because, well, he's a Mad Scientist, which pretty much makes him contractually obligated to be screwy. Later, however,.
 * Darkseed 2 pulls the full Fight Club, revealing that
 * Manhunt 2 does this with Daniel and  which isn't that surprising as
 * In Call of Duty: Black Ops, Mason has  as an imaginary friend, as a result of Dr. Steiner's experiments on him. It is heavily hinted so when no one else could see or interact with . The player could even shoot through him during the mission.
 * The Sims 3 adds in these as large, doll-looking things.
 * In Winter Voices the player can choose a feat that gives the main character one. The friend is a named character that she can talk to who will help battle the other manifestations of her troubled mind.
 * In Deadly Premonition, York often converses with his imaginary friend Zach about everything he does, from investigations to 80's B-movies. In the end, it's revealed that

Web Comics
"Go make a magic friend to play with."
 * Mr. Pingoo of Star Bored is strongly hinted to be Ham Luca's Imaginary Friend.
 * The Imaginaries is about new residents of the extradimensional limbo that imaginary friends go to when their creators don't need imaginary friends anymore.
 * When Minus could not play with the other children, she took their suggestion.


 * Lucy and Ruby from A Day of Lucy have an interesting case. You may know Japan (Dad) and Lithuania (Liet) from Axis Powers Hetalia. The twist? They have no idea that they are really countries.
 * Jodie from Loserz kind of, for a while... hard to explain. See this strip.
 * Garfield in Garfield Minus Garfield is portrayed as Jon's imaginary friend who we the viewers can't see, making Jon often appearing to be talking to and arguing with himself.
 * Drowtales creates the unusual case where the audience is an imaginary friend of one of the characters! This makes it some sort of subversion?
 * Kay and P Kay has an imaginary friend, a skeleton by the name of Peaches, or just P. Thing is, Kay is now in college.
 * Gunshow had one here... briefly.

Web Original

 * There exists a scary series of videos on YouTube about a ghost in a house's pantry that is a young girl's imaginary friend Mabel. It is generally under "Pantry Ghost", though a few of the videos that focus on "Mabel" are not actually in the pantry.
 * Gaia Online has an evolving item called "Imaginary Friend", featuring various types of strange creatures (and a robot) that correspond to the colors of the rainbow.
 * Mirrorfall has a fairy court that organises imaginary friends for troubled children (in particular victims of abuse or neglect).

Web Animation

 * Homestar Runner has Brett Bretterson, So-And-So's imaginary boyfriend from Teen Girl Squad.
 * Strong Sad also had an imaginary friend as a kid named Scotty Titi, to which Strong Bad responded by drinking a couple gallons of Blue Drink and making up Frishy Freshy Dragon Man. Strong Bad notes the creepyness of their names.

Western Animation

 * Teen Titans: One girl had an imaginary friend who was invisible to those she didn't trust. It was the expression of her telekinesis. Expression of telekinesis in this case being.
 * Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends is all about this. Mac had good reason for inventing Bloo: he has a bullying older brother, a Disappeared Dad and a Missing Mom due to her working so many jobs to keep her sons clothed and fed.
 * Goo, on the other hand, just has more imagination than is good for anybody, and is literally an Imaginary Friend factory.
 * Generally ignored (except as a lampshade) is the fact that Foster's residents actually exist, although the kids they were created from are not shown to have any special powers.
 * The Fairly OddParents Timmy had an Imaginary Friend he called Imaginary Gary, but when he got Cosmo and Wanda (and therapy) he abandoned the figment... to the figment's immense displeasure.
 * The Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy episode "Who Let The Ed In?" revolved around Ed's imaginary friend Jib... who was apparently real enough to pummel Eddy.
 * That same show has Plank, Johnny's Companion Cube, though again his status as "imaginary" is often left up in the air.
 * In one episode, The Powerpuff Girls had to fight an Imaginary Friend who was causing trouble at school. They defeat him by imagining a friend of their own to beat the snot out of him.
 * And since the Powerpuff Girls' creator went on to create Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, this can be seen as a first try how the concept would work out.
 * This raises the question of what exactly made Mike (the kid who dreamed up the villain) imagine an evil Monster Clown as a friend?
 * DeeDee of Dexter's Laboratory has an Imaginary Friend called the Koos-A-La-Goop-A-Goop. Dexter has also met him, but was so Not Now, Kiddo about Koosy's presence that Koosy was banished forever, and only then did Dexter realize how much he missed the figment.
 * DeeDee is also Koosy's imaginary friend, as revealed when she went to his world.
 * He shows up for Bubbles in Powerpuff Girls, though the butt-kicking Imaginary Friend the girls create later thinks he's kind of annoying.
 * In Arthur, his little sister D.W. has an imaginary friend named Nadine who at times seems to be smarter than her.
 * In the '80s special Puff the Magic Dragon and the Incredible Mr. Nobody, an excessively creative boy named Terry creates an imaginary friend named Nobody (since nobody was his friend). Since his creative talents got him teased by his peers and weren't understood by his teachers, he starts to tell everyone that Nobody was responsible, and eventually he comes to believe that his talent was actually all from his friend. After his father tries to explain that Nobody isn't real, Nobody vanishes, so Terry goes on a quest to find him, aided by Puff. With Puff's help, Terry realizes that he and Nobody are one and the same, and he embraces his talents.
 * Played for laughs in South Park, Chef has an imaginary friend called Foo Foo the dinosaur who turns out to be the Loch Ness monster trying to get $3.50 from Chef's father again.
 * In Kim Possible, Ron's pet mole rat Rufus is named from his imaginary friend as a child.
 * In The Mighty B! Bessie has Finger, her left index finger. When she sprains Finger in a competition, her right index finger, Finger's French Cousin Fingaire, shows up—but he is not a nice finger, and Finger has to defeat him in combat.
 * In King of the Hill Bill has alluded to creating imaginary friends for himself because his regular friends don't often listen to him and are unsupportive.
 * One episode of Family Guy introduces Lois' long-lost brother, who was put in an insane asylum. Lois thinks he's perfectly normal... until he starts talking about an imaginary wife. Of course, this being Family Guy, they play around with it a bit: at one point, Stewie jokingly suggests leaving a cucumber on the couch where "she" is sitting and seeing if it pickles. A couple of scenes later, Lois finds a pickle on the couch.
 * In an episode of Almost Naked Animals, a head injury reunites Howie with his childhood imaginary friend, Platymoose. Turns out Platymoose is a Jerkass who just wants to annoy all of Howie's friends.
 * In one episode of All Grown Up!, Dil makes an imaginary friend. Tommy and co. tease him for being too old for imaginary friends... until Dil's imaginary friend somehow manages to become one of the most popular kids in school. Until he gets run over by a lawnmower, when some of Dil's friends actually start mourning for his imaginary friend.