Stroker & Hoop

An animated parody of the Buddy Cop Show, especially Starsky and Hutch. Features two semi-competent yet ineffective Private Detectives, John "Stroker" Strockmeyer, his partner Hoop Schwartz, and their self-aware robotic car, C.A.R.R.

Stroker (Jon Glaser) falls short as a detective mostly due to his own short-sightedness, self-involvement and greed more than bad investigative skills. He has a young son (by his Latina ex-wife), whom he loves, even if he can't quite seem to show it properly.

Hoop (Speed Levitch) is a very touchy-feely, sensitive, pacifistic sort who prefers to talk problems out rather than skip straight to the gunplay. This never works.

C.A.R.R. (Paul Christie) is essentially the opposite of K.I.T.T. from Knight Rider. He's a junky old beater (not quite The Alleged Car, but past his prime), he's not too smart, and lacks any really useful gadgetry other than talking and the ability to drive himself. He listens to a lot of ultra-right-wing talk shows, since he doesn't have an FM radio. He was built by Stroker's mechanic friend "Double-Wide" (who is voiced by Curtis "Booger" Armstrong), whose odd private life is often helpful.

Finally, they are aided by the jovial, and perhaps most competent, Coroner Rick. He is often played as a Black Best Friend to quite nearly every main character.

The characters all had a good dose of Genre Savvy, though they often failed anyway, and many a Lampshade was hung on various tropes. As far as trope use in parodies goes, this show is a great example.

This show airs in the Cartoon Network's Adult Swim block on Sunday night.

Canceled only after a season of 13 episodes and with no ending. But the show (As of 12/19/08) reruns on Adult Swim and on its online service, Adult Swim Video.

This show provides examples of:
""Why they always gotta land face-down like that?""
 * Attending Your Own Funeral: Though Stroker later admits that bringing his son to his own funeral was a crappy idea
 * Anti Hero : Stroker. By contrast, however, Hoop is very kind and innocent (When not provoked into avenging his fallen comrades).
 * Autopsy Snack Time: Coroner Rick does this.
 * Beware the Nice Ones: Hoop, though this does get played with in a few ways.
 * Blofeld Ploy:
 * Further, too much of this causes a villain to run out of henchmen for when Stroker and Hoop appear.
 * Buddy Cop Show
 * Casanova Wannabe: Stroker. And how.
 * Ceiling Cling: Subverted, the guy they're hiding from sees them immediately.
 * Chekhov's Boomerang: one episode was set in motion by the duo buying a billboard for "Stroker and Hoop, Detectvies". In a later episode the pair lampshade that they'll have anonymity against a gang who has no idea who they are. The gang leader looks up and sees the billboard still there, still misspelled. Stroker even says he forgot they had it.
 * Cliff Hanger / Left Hanging / No Ending:
 * Conspiracy Theorist: Ron Howard is trying to control his mind.
 * Subverted, in that Ron Howard actually was trying to control his mind.
 * Dead Baby Comedy: Coroner Rick is an in-universe example...if only to himself.

""In these situations it's always either the corrupt mayor, a random hillbilly, or the corrupt sheriff.""
 * Either or Title
 * Faking the Dead: Stroker and Keith in "Ninja Worrier".
 * Genre Savvy: One explicit example is when the pair are solving a mystery in The Deep South.

"Cultists: Eat a human, be a human, eat a human, be a human...
 * It was in fact
 * And done again at the end of the episode
 * Idiosyncratic Episode Naming: Composed of Pun Based Titles
 * I'm Dying Please Take My MacGuffin: Lampshaded. A dying karate instructor entrusts the handle of a magic sword to Stroker's son Keith and warns that reuniting the handle with the pieces of the blade would be disastrous. Stroker asks why, if it's such a big deal, the sword wasn't destroyed completely, even suggesting flushing it down the toilet or something.
 * When the sword is reassembled, it's nothing more than an over sized flashlight. Hoop, who was fighting with the villain using the sword, noted that when the sword was broken and separated centuries ago, that people in ancient China would've seen that as amazing or terrifying.
 * Of course, when you shine the light on the dead...
 * Instant Sedation: Parodied. A camera guy gets hit in the head and falls down unconscious. After Stroker tries to explain to the other crew member that this trope is what's going on, he pretends he's knocked rather than risk brain damage/death.
 * Interrupted Cooldown Hug: In "Ninja Worrier", when
 * Logic Bomb: Stroker notices a particularly devastating flaw in the cannibal cult's logic.

Stroker: So wait, your philosophy is you are what you eat, right?

Cult Leader: Yes.

Stroker: So, if I eat a hamburger, then I'm a hamburger, right?

Cult Leader: Yes.

Stroker: And then...if you eat me, you're hamburgers too, right?

Cult Leader: ..."

"Stroker: (wakes up alone) Oh crap. (notices Hoop is actually in the bed with him) Oh crap! (notices he has stitches where his kidney should be) Crapcrapcrapcrapcrapcrapcrapcrap..."
 * Meaningful Name: Khan'Ja = Conned Ya
 * Nice Job Breaking It Hero: Pretty much the entire series.
 * Ninja
 * Oh Crap: After waking up from a night of drunken sex with a blonde bombshell, things go quickly downhill for Stroker.

"C.A.R.R.: "On Dashiell, on Danzig, on Randolph, on Blitzkrieg, on other non-copyrighted names!""
 * Parody Names


 * Post Mortem One Liner/Pre Mortem One Liner: Hoop in one episode. They're all pretty bad
 * Regret Eating Me: When it looks like he's going to be eaten by cannibals, Stroker tells them, "I hope you choke on my assbone bitches."
 * Shur Fine Guns: Combined with Accidental Aiming Skills at the start of one episode. Stroker and Hoop are held up by a Columbian drug dealer and are forced to drop their guns.. which go off, injuring both the drug dealer and his wife (who was inexplicably not present until just then). Stroker immediately lampshades it by stating he can't shoot that well when he actually aims.
 * Skyward Scream: "KHAAAAAAAAAAAN...ja"
 * Take That: The New Hampshire Fuzzy Bear company to the Vermont Teddy Bear Company.
 * Tap On the Head: Averted and Lampshaded
 * The Guards Must Be Crazy: Averted and lampshaded in "The Wrath of Khan'Ja" when Stroker knocks out a guard and steals his clothes to try to get into the FPI headquarters. It turns out the other guard was watching the camera.
 * Yet Another Christmas Carol: The episode "I Saw Stroker Killing Santa Claus"

See Also:
 * The Adult Swim Stroker and Hoop website
 * The Stroker and Hoop Fan website