Welcome to the Big City

"You know where you are? You in the jungle, baby! YOU GONNA DIE!"

- Guns N' Roses, "Welcome to the Jungle"

Our Country Mouse character is young, idealistic, innocent, naive, you name it - and it's their first time in the big city. How to show that? Why, by him or her being confronted with any combination of pickpocketing, prostitution and generally upsetting behaviour, of course.

And the sooner the better, often right as he steps off the train/plane/coach/boat from whatever idyllic rural paradise they came from.

New York City is a popular venue for this.

Anime and Manga

 * Durarara!! Possibly subverted by Mikado Ryugamine.

Comic Books

 * Happens to Altar Boy when he first arrives in Astro City. It also leads to his first encounter with superheroes when the Crossbreed stop the pickpocket.
 * Many versions of Superman, both in the comics and in TV and movies, depict Clark Kent's arrival in Metropolis as being a little overwhelming (at least initially) for the small town Kansas-raised protagonist, who is often portrayed as being shocked by the city residents' apathy, which stands in stark contrast to the attitudes of his neighbors back in Smallville, Kansas. However, Clark inevitably gets over the shock pretty quickly.

Film
"Joe's Letter: "Dear mom, I made it to New York safe and sou- Mugger: HEADS UP PIN-HEAD! [whack!] Joe: Dear mom, I made it to New Yor- Mugger #2: HEADS UP PIN-HEAD! [whack!] Joe: Dear mom - Mugger #3: HEADS UP PIN-HEAD! Joe: ...send money.""
 * Flik in A Bug's Life. He doesn't get mugged or attacked (it's hardly as if he had anything on him), but he does get mocked by a couple of street performers.
 * In Robots, almost as soon as Rodney steps off the train, Robin Williams tries to con him and a shifty robot tries to sell him a watch
 * The Picture of Dorian Gray (the 2010 movie) has Dorian arrive at the London main station and confronted with children trying to steal from him and women offering their services to him right away.
 * In Across the Universe, "Come Together" is used as a song about this when Jojo first arrives in New York. Nothing bad actually happens to him, but he's obviously traumatized.
 * In Joe's Apartment, our hero is fresh off the bus from Iowa...


 * Gotham City is shown to be a Wretched Hive in the 1989 film version of Batman by showing a hapless tourist family getting accosted by beggars, prostitutes, and finally, a pair of armed robbers.
 * In Crocodile Dundee, our title character is mugged pretty soon after he gets to the big city, but the mugger's switchblade is no match for Dundee's bowie knife.

Literature

 * Franz Kafka's Amerika. This is the basic premise.
 * Vonda McIntyre's Thieves' World short story "Looking for Satan". 4 naive Northerners encounter the rough and crude denizens of the city of Sanctuary. One local tries to hire a female party member as a prostitute, and another woman is almost raped and murdered when she goes out alone.
 * Discworld:
 * In Soul Music, Imp Y Celyn moves from Llamedos to Ankh-Morpork, and tries some busking. As buskers do, he puts a few coins in his bowl as "seed money". The next time he looks down, they've gone.
 * Carrot's arrival in Ankh in Guards! Guards! has elements of this as well; he doesn't get robbed himself, but he doesn't cope well with the idea that theft is legal (and that the Watch are probably closer to criminals than the Thieves' Guild are). Although he's so naive he doesn't notice the prostitution, even when he's staying at Mrs. Palm's.
 * In Thief of Time, Lu Tze says the first thing that happened to him in Ankh-Morpork was he "learned an important lesson on the value of material goods" when some people took it upon themselves to "welcome" him to the city in this way.
 * In Aesop's Fables, after the City Mouse scorned his home as simple, Country Mouse visits him in the city. The cat makes him realize that home is Arcadia.
 * Beatrix Potter subverts it. The Country Mouse goes to the city first and is frightened off. But the City Mouse visits him after, and is terrified by the weather and the prospect of being stepped on by a cow.

Live-Action TV
"Cliff: Welcome to the big city. Woody: Gee, thanks, Mr. Clavin!"
 * Benton Fraser in the pilot movie of Due South, except that—as befits the general theme of the show—some of it ends up coming out right in the end (e.g., the panhandler he "loans" $100 to returns it at the end of the episode).
 * On Cheers, Woody mentions how earlier that day, something was stolen from him when he took his eyes off it for only a moment.


 * Inverted in The Big Bang Theory. After a break-in in their apartment, Sheldon decides that Pasadena is too dangerous, so he moves to Bozman, Montana, which he determines it's the safest city in America. (It's also where aliens first make contact, according to Star Trek: First Contact.) The moment he arrives, his bags are stolen. He immediately buys a ticket back to Pasadena.

Music

 * The spoken word portion of Stevie Wonder's "Living in the City" is about a man who, within minutes of arriving in New York, is approached by a drug dealer, arrested for possession, and sent to jail for ten years.
 * This is the whole theme of Guns N' Roses' song and video, "Welcome to the Jungle". Axl Rose literally gets off the bus with a hayseed piece of straw in his mouth, and walks right into the parking lot of corruption.

Theatre
"Sure, I went to New York to b an overnight sensation More than a face, I was a winning combination Of talent and grace, shoulda packed mace 'Cause I was tripped, raped, and robbed before I left Penn Station!"
 * Used in Ruthless! The Musical in the teacher's song, "Teaching Third Grade":

"They took your shoe?"
 * Used at the beginning of the stage version of Thoroughly Modern Millie:

Video Games

 * Squall's first impression of Esthar.
 * Merrill's initial disappointed reaction to the Kirkall Alienage in Dragon Age 2.
 * In one of the Mega Man Battle Network games, Lan travels from Electopia (read: Japan) to Netopia (which is pretty obviously a stand-in for America), and gets robbed the moment he steps off the plane. Then he gets robbed again. Then he has to go to the ghetto and fight a Scary Black Man (using only the crappy chips he has left) to track down his stuff.

Web Comics
"Chelsea: I've lived in New York City for three years and you wait 'til now to mug me?"
 * In Something*Positive, Helen (of Penny and Aggie moves to the city and is helped by a kindly old lady, only to later discover said sweet old lady had relieved her of her wallet.
 * Hilariously referred to in Clan of the Cats:

Western Animation
"Homer: And then the CHUDs came at me."
 * At the end of the pilot episode of The Itsy Bitsy Spider, a cheerful city girl, Leslie McGroarty is finally reunited with a country spider, Itsy, and two of them go home to the city.
 * The Legend of Korra's première episode is aptly named, "Welcome to Republic City". In it, Korra, who has spent her life sheltered in a compound at the South Pole, goes to the bustling Republic City, only to learn that it's not all it's cracked up to be. She is literally "fresh off the boat".
 * Tom and Jerry. Mouse In Manhattan. Jerry gets bored with country life, comes to New York, things are great at first. Then he takes a wrong turn. Jerry kisses Tom and encourages him to chase him after experiencing New York.
 * The Simpsons Did It when Homer first came to New York. He's robbed several times (once by a police officer), has a bird eat his hot dog, has garbage dumped on him by Woody Allen and is chased around by an angry pimp.


 * Wait Till Your Father Gets Home - Harry goes on a business trip to New York and gets robbed of everything but his underwear the moment he steps out of his hotel.
 * Alice's sister on The Critic gets a similar treatment when she arrives in New York from Knoxville. She doesn't even make it off the bus before someone shoves her down. It gets worse when she later steps out of Alice's apartment for all of five seconds and returns covered in graffiti, among other things.