Trope Maker

A Trope Maker is the first unambiguous example of a particular trope. Though there may have been similar things in the past, these are the works that defined their respective tropes.

See also Trope Codifier, which is the example of a trope that defines all other uses. If a Trope Codifier is very different in outlook than the Trope Maker, then the Trope Maker worked on an Unbuilt Trope.

And, of course, don't confuse with Ur Example—the earliest example that has the essence of the trope, but may not have the actual connotations and may be missing details. However, it's the Trope Maker which starts the consistent enough pattern to be called a trope.

To provide a concrete example of all three, the Detective Story's Trope Maker is Edgar Allan Poe's Dupin stories, and Sherlock Holmes is the Trope Codifier; but the Ur Example may well be "The Tale Of the Three Apples" in 1001 Nights (The Arabian Nights).

Related: Trope Namer.

If you make an entry here, expect some heavy challenges.

Anime and Manga

 * Astro Boy—The first modern anime to make its way to the United States, it also included the first Anime Theme Song. It was a creation of Osamu Tezuka, who also defined the style of manga and anime for decades with it and other works.
 * Cutey Honey -- Pre-battle speeches, naked Transformation Sequences, female monsters of the week, and several other Magical Girl Warrior tropes owe their existence to her.
 * Dragon Ball: -- Made Shonen anime big in the Western world and probably made most of the tropes it named.
 * Fist of the North Star—Made and codified several shonen tropes as well as Manly Tears.
 * Mazinger Z—The first Humongous Mecha to be piloted by a human, which is why they made a point to show Koji coming out of the robot in the intro. the first Super Robot to launch its fists at enemies.
 * Mobile Suit Gundam—Often considered the first Real Robot show, as it was the first to portray the robots as common military equipment. Later series took this idea further, however (see below). It was also an early anime adopter of Anyone Can Die.
 * Princess Knight - One of the first Shoujo series.
 * Codename: Sailor V and Sailor Moon - Was the first to combine the classic Magical Girl genre with sentai and superhero themes (both by the same author and in-continuity with each other, Sailor V came first, but was developed in parallel with Sailor Moon, the later becoming better known).
 * Science Ninja Team Gatchaman - The origin of the formal Five-Man Band concept, which predates even Super Sentai.
 * Mazinger Z, Gatchaman, and Getter Robo are the three candidates for first Combining Mecha. Mazinger is the weakest of these because while it is two entities coming together to form a whole, there's only one pilot and robot.
 * Raideen—First Transforming Mecha.
 * Space Battleship Yamato - The first epic Space Opera.
 * Super Dimension Fortress Macross—It popularized the Transforming Mecha genre; also sometimes considered to be the first "true" Real Robot show, as every mecha was mass-produced, and not a hint of "prototypes" being the focus. Also, Macross Missile Massacre.

Comic Books

 * Superman - There's a reason they're called Super Heroes.
 * Watchmen—Despite being one of the most beloved comics around, you can blame this for heralding the Dark Age of Comics.
 * Franklin - Black Best Friend.

Film

 *  Sallie Gardner at a Gallop—Depending on how exactly we choose to define "film", this might be the very first, produced in 1878. Roundhay Garden Scene from 1888 would then be the oldest surviving film.
 * The Sneeze—The first thing ever to be caught on actual film (as opposed to paper, like earlier experiments were).
 * The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari -- Circus of Fear, Looks Like Cesare, Cuckoos Nest, Twist Ending.
 * Equilibrium -- Gun Kata.
 * The Maltese Falcon—Generally considered the first Film Noir.
 * It's a Wonderful Life—First example of It's a Wonderful Plot, for which it also is the Trope Namer.
 * Jaws was the first wide-release film, opening in hundreds of theaters at once instead of a gradual release with the movie travelling from town to town. As a result, it was the first Summer Blockbuster.
 * Seven Samurai—Contained a lot of film firsts, such as recruiting a group of quirky heroes to achieve a goal and introducing the main protagonist in a way unrelated to the plot. Sometimes is considered to be the first modern action movie or first modern epic movie.
 * Since You Went Away—First use of the Train Station Goodbye.
 * Toy Story (and by extension, Pixar themselves) -- Bringing the All CGI Cartoon to the big screen.
 * Scanners—Created the Psychic Nosebleed and Your Head Asplode as part of its Body Horror take on Psychic Powers.
 * Cat People -- Cat Scare. But despite the name, they used a bus.
 * Intolerance—Generally considered to be the first epic movie.
 * Birth of a Nation created the modern Hollywood movie as it stands today.
 * Godzilla -- The Tokyo Fireball was created by, and is a staple of, everybody's favorite giant radioactive lizard. He also invented kaiju and tokusatsu!
 * Bullitt -- Cowboy Cop. Unbuilt as his behavior royally screws up the case.
 * Superman—Not the first Superhero Movie by any means, but it was the first true Summer Blockbuster to feature a comic-book hero as its lead.
 * Blade Runner—Invented cyberpunk in film, along with Gibson.
 * The Great Train Robbery—The first Western.
 * Although it is difficult to determine for sure, the first entertainment on moving film appears to have been the 1895 short L'Arroseur arrose, viewable here. This is the first time in film a 'script' was used rather than simply filming everyday life like boxing matches, cock fights, or people leaving a factory after a long day of work. It's an old gag of standing on a hose to stop the water, waiting for the guy to look into the hose to find the problem, and releasing the pressure on the line to squirt the man in the face. It's film being used for the first time to tell a story.
 * Akira Kurosawa made everything we know about Chanbara.
 * Star Wars—One of first movies to utilize the Used Future in film and popularized the Space Western. Along with Jaws, it also effectively created the concept of the Summer Blockbuster.
 * 12AngryMen - Rogue Juror
 * The Kid - First film Dramedy.
 * Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs was the first full-length animated film.
 * Bringing Up Baby - Dinosaur Doggie Bone.

Folklore

 * Various legends and folktales from the Eighteenth and Nineteenth centuries about Countess Elizabeth Bathory provide the origins the Blood Bath myth for rejuvenating beauty and youth.

Literature

 * The Epic of Gilgamesh -- One of the earliest known written stories. If there's a written story that was written before it, we don't know about it.
 * JRR Tolkien --
 * The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit—Created the High Fantasy genre. He's the reason Our Dwarves Are All the Same, and kicked off (well, codified) the whole Elves vs. Dwarves thing.
 * Conan the Barbarian—Created the Heroic Fantasy genre, especially its Darker and Edgier variants. Arguably has a basis in Samson from The Bible.
 * Edgar Allan Poe—Normally known as a horror writer, he also invented the modern detective story and modern science fiction.
 * Pulp Magazines—Created Weird Science
 * H. G. Wells—One of the earliest science fiction writers, many science fiction tropes originated in his novels and short stories. First large-scale alien invasion in literature.
 * Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth is considered the first sci-fi story.
 * Dune took Used Future to the logical extreme and has been copied countless times.
 * HP Lovecraft—Created Lovecraftian horror, although there are a few Ur Examples.
 * A Clockwork Orange—The familiar strapped-into-a-chair-with-your-eyelids-taped-open method of Brainwashing.
 * Childhood's End made the Ominous Floating Spaceship trope.
 * Sherlock Holmes—Arguably created the first Supervillain Big Bad, Professor Moriarty, and the Sherlock Scan.
 * Nick Carter created the a boy sidekick, and the Rogues Gallery.
 * The Leatherstocking Tales—James Fenimore Cooper's Hawkeye was the trope maker for The Gunslinger and the romantic concept of the American Frontier. Trope codifier, not the trope maker, for the concept of the Noble Savage / Magical Native American.
 * Don Quixote—Made many Spanish tropes. The first Deconstruction, many critics consider it the first modern novel too, because it wasn't about ponies and princesses and was written by a commoner, not a nobleman.
 * Lensman—Created the Space Opera genre.
 * Vernor Vinge—Invented computer-networking-as-virtual-reality (later codified by Gibson.)
 * Varney the Vampire. It introduced most of the modern vampire concepts like hypnotic ability, super strength, puncture wounds from fang bites, and going crazy if a long time pass without feeding. Also a reluctant one. Stoker was inspired quite a bit by it.
 * Isaac Asimov—Most science fiction in the past 50 years, particularly the robot subgenre, owes a lot to Asimov. Even Star Wars is based on Foundation.
 * Mark Twain—Can be argued that he was the first true American novelist in style, though not the first American-born writer (i.e. Henry James, Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe), but his style was much less dependent on the European style of writing. He can be counted as both a Trope Maker and Trope Codifier of American literature
 * The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn—Made multi-ethnic protagonist teams okay, particularly the source of Black Best Friend. Remember, this was written not too long after the Civil War, with racism still heavy in the United States.
 * Edgar Rice Burroughs's John Carter of Mars, along with his Venus books, defined Planetary Romance.
 * The Devil and Daniel Webster—Created the Jury of the Damned.
 * L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz - Kicked off the whole Worldbuilding thing.
 * The works of William Gibson: Acknowledged as the father of Cyberpunk and many related tropes.
 * Friedrich Nietzsche's Also Sprach Zarathustra arguably created the Monster Clown with the evil-and-murderous-yet-holier-than-thou jester-man, No-Name-the-Clown.
 * The Canterbury Tales by Chaucer is recognized as one of the first uses of satire and sarcasm.
 * Beowulf—Defined the hero's journey for every protagonist from Middle-English on.
 * Nineteen Eighty-Four is this for the Dystopia.
 * Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's In a Glass Darkly (1872) had the first Occult Detective with Dr. Martin Hesselius, and also created the Lesbian Vampire with Carmilla, one of the segments of In a Glass Darkly.

Live Action TV

 * The Adventures of Pete and Pete—among the first of many American sitcoms to feature all of the following things: on location production, lack of a laugh track and the single camera setup. The fact that it was a children's show on a cable network meant that most were unaware of this new style of sitcom until Malcolm in the Middle (the Trope Codifier) helped popularize it in the late 1990's.
 * Pete & Pete is more or less tied as the Trope Maker with The Larry Sanders Show, which started around the same time. However, since Larry was not only broadcast on a cable channel but one you had to pay extra for, that meant that fewer people outside of its small cult audience were likely aware of the shared innovations of Sanders.
 * You're probably asking yourself "but what about Mash?", well, that's a different trope altogether (and it also drastically predates all other shows with this style by decades, it being very ahead of its time in that respect).
 * An American Family—The first contemporary Reality TV program.
 * Bewitched was said to have inspired the first Magical Girl anime.
 * Dark Shadows laid the groundwork for similar fantasy, Monster of the Week shows such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charmed and Supernatural.
 * Degrassi Junior High. Before it there were afterschool specials populated with one-shot characters, there were ensemble dramas with teenage characters and there were teen sitcoms, but it was the first Teen Drama.
 * The French Chef with Julia Child was the first nationwide Cooking Show and Child was the world's first actual "celebrity chef", predating Britain's Graham Kerr by a decade.
 * Good Times—Wilona Woods was the Sassy Black Woman and the Drop-In Character.
 * Guiding Light—The world's first Soap Opera, originating in 1937 on CBS Radio and making the move to TV in 1952. It finally ceased production in 2009.
 * I Love Lucy—The first syndicated Sitcom. Almost every single "wacky" sitcom situation that you can think of was either born on this show or at least popularized by it.
 * Lizzie McGuire—paved the roads of every Disney Channel sitcom post-2000s with its format.
 * Monty Python's Flying Circus—Changed the word "Kafkaesque" to "Pythonesque"; made "surrealism", "sex jokes" and "British comedy" go hand in hand from then on. The quintessential British comedy around the world.
 * My So-Called Life—One of the first modern dramas on TV.
 * Star Trek: The Original Series—Believe it or not, technically it was the first Space Western, as that's how Gene Roddenberry pitched it. Popularized Space Opera and created quite a few tropes of its own.
 * Tales Of Tomorrow—This nearly forgotten series was TV's first Genre Anthology.
 * Talk Soup—Started the snarky pop culture daily (at the time)/weekly clip show. First aired in 1991, ended in 2002. Revived in 2004 as The Soup, spun off The Dish, Sports Soup and Web Soup. It has imitators in Infomania and Tosh.0
 * Wide World of Sports—Invented the Sports Anthology genre. The sports nets like ESPN wouldn't exist without it.
 * Password — First game show to have a definitive Bonus Round

Music

 * Bill Monroe created bluegrass.
 * Ougenweide created Medieval Rock/Metal music by combining medieval texts and melodies with modern Rock and Hard Rock.
 * The Beatles, with almost every subgenre of rock music after them. Musicologically speaking, in this day and age, to say a certain rock band is "Beatles-like" is redundant.
 * With Richard Lester, they made the first music videos with the films A Hard Day's Night and Help! and with their promos for Rain and Paperback Writer. MTV credited Dick Lester as the father of music videos. His response was asking for a blood test.
 * The Who directly created Punk Rock, and also innovated in hard rock. Along with Led Zeppelin, made heavier rock and metal as we know it.
 * Despite there being one before it (by the same group, no less), Tommy by The Who is the first—is the rock opera. (Well, okay, The Who had done two other things before which you might call rock operas--"A Quick One, While He's Away", "Rael"—but the former was a track long and the latter two tracks so neither counts.)
 * Additionally, The Who+The Beatles=Power Pop.
 * The Yardbirds are practically a who's-who of blues-rock guitarists (at different times, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page numbered amongst their members). They popularized riff-driven songs and pioneered the use of fuzz, distortion, feedback and innovative recording techniques. And evolved into...
 * ...Led Zeppelin, who created heavy metal, along with Heavy Mithril, and Viking Metal.
 * Blue Cheer really need to get the credit for creating heavy metal the way the early bands played it. Their influence was heavily evident in the most popular of the early metal bands, Black Sabbath, Grand Funk Railroad, and Iron Butterfly. That influence extended through Motorhead and Venom.
 * Credit Prog Rock to King Crimson, Yes, Procol Harum and The Moody Blues.
 * The Moody Blues also invented symphonic rock.
 * Procol Harum may also have created Epic Rocking. Some might also name Frank Zappa or The Beatles for creating prog.
 * Kraftwerk, the first band to really experiment with electronic music.
 * Black Sabbath, the first band to use detuned guitar in a metal context, although they are more of the trope codifiers, because they took disparate elements (dark lyrical themes, riff and guitar-driven music, heavy distortion, drug abuse, and tough attitude) and put them together to create what's known today as "heavy metal".
 * Iron Maiden and Judas Priest first blended hard rock with heavy metal.
 * Pink Floyd established progressive rock as psychedelic.
 * X Japan is arguably the creator of Visual Kei (or at least, the first band to collect all of its elements into one band concept and name it "Visual Kei")
 * By extension, Yoshiki Hayashi, by being the first person to name it as such, is the Trope Maker and Trope Namer of Visual Kei.
 * "The Four Seasons", by Vivaldi, was the world's first symphony, defining classical music forever.
 * Beethoven was the world's first Romantic composer. And Debussy defines the Modern movement that followed the Romantic.
 * While the biggest influences on Stoner Metal had been around for a while before the genre itself formed, Kyuss and Sleep were the first bands to actually make music in that style.
 * Even though there were some innovative music videos before they came along, Russell Mulcahy and the directing team of Godley and Creme (former bandmates in 10cc) were the Trope Makers as far as creative, groundbreaking music videos go. Back when even Michael Jackson was just doing in-studio "performance" videos, Mulcahy was shooting filmic videos on location and Godley and Creme were using innovative visual effects and creating whole stories for their videos that put the focus away from straightforward performance videos.
 * Iggy Pop & The Stooges are the Trope Makers when it comes to punk rock. While there may have been other artists before who laid the groundwork for punk, they were among the first to put all the pieces together and perform what could reliably be considered punk rock.
 * REM essentially created the Alternative Rock genre with their debut single, the original "Radio Free Europe." As noted in one biography, the single "...marked the point in time where post-punk turned into alternative rock."
 * On a more limited level The Velvet Underground more or less invented the Obligatory Bondage Song with "Venus in Furs" (on their debut album The Velvet Underground & Nico).
 * Before anyone gets their knickers in a twist, Tom Lehrer's "The Masochism Tango" is an Unbuilt Trope version.
 * Yellow Magic Orchestra was the first Synth Pop band. While Kraftwerk was the first to do live performances of electronic music, YMO was the first to do it without playing up the instruments' novelty.
 * Lïkë Ümläüts? Thänk Blue Oyster Cult.
 * Dream Theater and Queensrÿche are generally considered the first two Progressive Metal bands.
 * My Bloody Valentine. Shoegazing. Nuff said.
 * Skream popularized dubstep with what is believed to be the first proper dubstep song called midnight request line
 * Metallica's "Kill 'em All" (specifically "Hit the Lights" the first recorded song from the album, released for the compilation album "Metal Massacre" in 1982) is usually cited as Thrash Metal's Trope Maker, but some give that honor to Venom's "Welcome to Hell," and dub Metallica the Trope Codifier.

Newspaper Comics

 * Dick Tracy—Has been called the first Police Procedural, originator of the Death Trap and the Rogues Gallery.
 * Yellow Kid—The first modern newspaper comic, introducing modern speech balloons.

Tabletop Games

 * Kriegspiel was the first war game, created by a German nobleman to train his generals in military strategy. The name means "wargame."
 * Dungeons & Dragons—In fact, many video game ideas ultimately came from here, as Ultima and Rogue drew heavily from D&D and went on to influence every computer/video RPG that came later.
 * Call of Cthulhu (tabletop game) was the first major horror RPG, and is the acknowledged Trope Maker of the Sanity Meter, a variation of which can be found in almost all horror RPGs that followed it (e.g. Humanity in Vampire: The Masquerade, the Madness Meters of Unknown Armies, etc, etc). As with Dungeons & Dragons, this aspect is often copied in video games as well as tabletops.
 * It's a rare collectible card game that owes nothing at all to Magic: The Gathering. It could be argued that there's no such thing, since Richard Garfield essentially invented the idea of a game with collectible pieces.

Theatre

 * William Shakespeare—See The Zeroth Law of Trope Examples, Shout-Out/To Shakespeare.
 * Orfeo sought to revive Greek theater, in which music played an equally important role to the drama. Although it failed in this regard, it created the notion of a "drama set within music"; inventing opera and all other musical theater. Curiously, Orfeo is the name of both the Ur Example and the Trope Codifier: two separate works written by separate composers.

Video Games

 * Adventure—Created the console Action Adventure genre, and the first Wide Open Sandbox game.
 * Body Harvest—The first 3D GTA-like. The game was made by the company who became Rockstar and introduced many of the ideas which would be fine-tuned in their next game, Grand Theft Auto III.
 * Boiling Point: Road to Hell -- Open-world first-person shooters.
 * Cabal—A shooting game that spawned a lot of clones such as Blood Bros and Wild Guns.
 * Castle Wolfenstein—First Stealth Based Game
 * Colossal Cave—Created the Interactive Fiction/Adventure Game genre (it's even the Trope Namer on the latter).
 * Columns -- Match Three Game
 * Doom created many tropes of the Space Marine genre.
 * Dragon Quest—Created the Eastern RPG genre.
 * Elite—Credited as being the first truly open-ended videogame, as well as being the first truly 3D game for home computers.
 * Stonkers, Nether Earth and Ancient Art Of War —Co-makers of the Real Time Strategy genre, despite how little-known they were compared to the latter Dune II (which was mistakenly considered as a Trope Maker of the genre, rather than being Trope Codifier/Genre Popularizer).
 * Final Fantasy—Pioneered many RPG tropes.
 * Final Fantasy VII—Introduced the modern trend of heavy CGI in most JRPGs.
 * Fire Emblem—Defined the Strategy RPG genre.
 * Half Life—Established many of the tropes of later FPS games.
 * Golden Eye 1997—More or less defined the standard of the FPS genre on game consoles, establishes or popularizes many tropes seen in later FPS games.
 * Grand Theft Auto—Popularized and defined the standard of the Wide Open Sandbox game.
 * Halo—Popularized FPS on Consoles, Vehicles in games outside racers, Online Gaming on consoles, Machinimas and possibly even Teabagging, and proved the relevancy of the Xbox in the Console Wars.
 * Ironically, saying that Halo is a Trope Maker and/or a Trope Codifier in anything can cause massive Internet Backdraft in any Console Wars threads. Although these days saying that any popular title created or popularized a good trope can cause massive rage, this itself is an unfortunate Trope Maker for Halo.
 * I, Robot—First game to use polygon-based graphics, camera control and a sandbox option. All of this in 1983!
 * Kana: Little Sister—Defined the Utsuge-tropes in Japanese visual novels for the English audience.
 * The Legend of Zelda—One of the first Action Adventure games, and the first to allow you to save your progress without having to memorize passwords.
 * Also one of the first and most well known open-world games.
 * Trope maker for games having secrets and sidequests.
 * Marathon—The first true example of Mouselook.
 * Metroid—Invented the Metroidvania genre.
 * Modem Wars was the first networked multiplayer game.
 * Myst—Launched the Beautiful Void subgenre, and popularized Scenery Porn in PC games.
 * Pac-Man—The first Maze Game.
 * Pitfall—Did the Platformer thing years before Super Mario Bros..
 * Pokémon—Defined and is the Trope Namer for Gotta Catch Them All, while it's also responsible for the "mon" craze in general. See Trope Codifier.
 * Pong—The first successful Arcade Game, and the first home Video Game System, laying out many of the basics.
 * Rogue—Y'see, there's this type of game called a Roguelike... Also called "dungeon-crawlers".
 * Nekketsu Kouha Kunio Kun/Renegade - established the foundations of the Beat'Em Up genre as we know it, or the "belt-scrolling" beat-em-ups at the very least, which was built upon by Double Dragon and its own sequel.
 * R-Type—Introduced the idea of a formal system of powerups each of which did a specific thing (as opposed to the Gradius system of using powerups as currency). Introduced the idea of a controllable Attack Drone, and the Reflecting Laser, Charged Attack and Battleship Raid tropes.
 * Scorched Earth—Turn-based Artillery.
 * Shin Megami Tensei—Created the Mons RPG sub-genre. Its source material, Digital Devil Story, is a brutal Deconstruction of the genre, making it unbuilt.
 * Shin Megami Tensei I was also revolutionary in its handling of apocalyptic disasters, angels, gods, demons, balance of power and morality in the face of The End of the World as We Know It.
 * SimCity—Created the Simulation Game genre (or at least popularized it).
 * Sonic the Hedgehog—Pioneered the Mascot with Attitude.
 * Space Invaders—Created the Shoot'Em Up genre.
 * Space War—The first real Video Game!
 * Street Fighter II—Created the idea of a gallery of fighters from which you could pick and fight against. Also, stages.
 * Super Mario Bros..—More or less defined the Platformer genre.
 * Super Mario 64—Did what Super Mario Bros. did... In 3D, thereby creating the 3D platformer.
 * Tetris—Truly popularised the Puzzle Game. A good majority of puzzle games are Tetris-like.
 * Tokimeki Memorial—Created the modern Dating Sim genre, especially of the non-H type, and pionnered many Romance and Unwanted Harem tropes in Japanese sub-culture such as Anime.
 * Tomb Raider—Created many of the tropes of 3D Action Adventure games.
 * Ultima—Created the RPG, First-Person Shooter and MMORPG genres.
 * The series did, although the specific games mentioned here would be Ultima I: The First Age of Darkness, Ultima Underworld: The Stygian Abyss, and Ultima Online.
 * Virtua Fighter—The first successful 3D Fighting Game, and one of the first to use more realistic fighting styles as opposed to Ki Attacks and projectiles.
 * Wolfenstein 3D—The first popular FPS.

Web Comics

 * Sluggy Freelance—One of the first and longest-running webcomics; the first and best example of Planet Eris and Cerebus Syndrome.
 * Penny Arcade—If not the first Two Gamers on a Couch gaming Web Comic, then one of the mainstays. Almost all other gaming webcomics can claim to have been inspired by Penny Arcade and its format in some way.

Web Original

 * Yu-Gi-Oh the Abridged Series—the Ur-Abridged Series.
 * Red vs. Blue, the first modern Machinima.
 * Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, and so influential that few wikis exist that aren't, functionally, specialized encyclopedias rather than, say, community projects or collections of cross-referenced essays. The most obvious counterexample, Everything2, predates Wikipedia.
 * THE WORK, WHICH BECOMES A NEW GENRE ITSELF, WILL BE CALLED......... AMV Hell

Western Animation

 * The Beatles—The first Band Toon.
 * The Flintstones—The first animated Sitcom.
 * Winky Dink and You—The first Merchandise-Driven cartoon.
 * Steamboat Willie—First true sound cartoon, first real use of Mickey Mousing.
 * Short theatrical animation such as Classic Disney Shorts, Looney Tunes and Fleischer Studios shorts created countless animation tropes, so many that this entire page could be filled with nothing but examples of this.
 * The Ren and Stimpy Show—The first Gross-Out Show. Also the first to make extensive use of Gross Up Close-Up.
 * Gertie the Dinosaur—First use of the Roger Rabbit Effect
 * Popeye -- Power-Up Food. He also may be an Ur Example of the modern Superhero, in a way.
 * Daffy Duck—The first real Screwy Squirrel cartoon character.
 * Donald Duck - First clear example of a morally ambiguous duck.