The Booth at the End



"Sister Carmel: Do you believe in God? The Man: I believe in the details."

The Booth at the End is a TV series that aired on City in Canada and FX in the USA. [[The Other Wik] says "As of summer 2015, the series has had two seasons, each consisting of 5 twenty-three-minute episodes."

A mysterious Man sits at a booth at the end of a diner. People approach him because they've heard The Man has a gift. He can solve their problems: A parent with a sick child, a woman who wants to be prettier, a nun who has lost her faith. The Man can give these people what they want. For a price. The Man makes a proposition. In exchange for realizing their desires, these individuals must complete a task, return to The Man, and describe every step in detail. The trick is that these tasks are things that would normally be inconceivable to them. But The Man never forces anyone to do anything. It's always up to the individual to start - or stop. The Booth at the End asks the question: How far would you go to get what you want?

""It can happen.""
 * [[Abusive Parent]: Allen, the detective, was one to his son and deeply regrets it.
 * [[Alternate Character Interpretatio]: Oh boy, the Man. Who is he? Villain, victim, hero? [[Well-Intentioned Extremis] or Satan himself? A [[Trickster Mento] or just a [[Trickste]?
 * [[Babies Ever Afte]:.
 * [[Be Careful What You Wish Fo]: The Man doesn't grant wishes, he just lets you know how to get what you desire. How the fickle finger of fate chooses to provide, however.....
 * [[Blue and Orange Moralit]: Possibly the Man, who reacts as a human would in some situations-- for instance, getting irritated when people accuse him of manipulating them, or being surprised and horrified at Willem's... interesting strategy to accomplish his task -- and strangely dispassionate and uncaring at other junctures
 * But Thou Must!: [[Playing with a Trope|Not exactl]. You could get what you want without him, but the only guarantee is to do what The Man says, and he only gives you one path.
 * Played with in that [[The Ma] knows exactly what the game board looks like, but his level of control is questionable at best, possibly even nonexistent.
 * He is accused of this trope several times, but is quite insistent that he is not a Chessmaster/Puppeteer, but merely a "messenger of opportunities"
 * [[Cliff Hange]: The ending of season one.

"The Man: Why did you : So I could be the hero. The Man: What."
 * Deal with the Devil
 * [[Decoy Protagonis]: At first, Willem's job of playing guardian angel to a little girl is pretty cut and dry. But when, he veers wildly into this territory.
 * Dirty Cop: Allen has to protect one.
 * [[Flat Wha]: When The Man hears.


 * [[Idiosyncratic Episode Namin]: every episode is named after something the Man says in that episode
 * [[Literal Geni]: You must be precise about what you want, or you will not be happy with the result. Other times, what you say you want and what you really mean/need/want are two separate things. The Man occasionally gives people what they really want under the guise of giving them what they say they want.
 * [[Morality Pe]: Doris serves as a semi-version to "The Man", as she is the only person who comes to him without greed, only curiosity. Similarly, those people with more selfish or greedy desires tend to end up with what they want... but rarely are very happy in the end while those with desire more based around personal growth tend to be both be happy and get what they want. One 'client' starts off greedy but ultimately grows as a person and so ends up both happy and getting what they want (or rather, what they realized they wanted).
 * [[Men Act, Women Ar]:
 * No Good Deed Goes Unpunished:
 * [[No Name Give]: The Man
 * [[The Omniscien]: The Man is either a Type I associate, or a Type II who has achieved beyond the mortal pale.
 * [[One Degree of Separatio]:
 * Red Herrin]: Told to protect a [[Dirty Cop in his department, Allan starts covering for a homicide detective who steals valuable items from murder scenes.
 * [[Self-Fulfilling Prophec]: Inverted. It's only a prophecy if you choose to do it.
 * Show, Don't Tell: Inverted. The audience is never shown anything outside of the diner setting, and instead relies on character dialogue to convey it. [[Your Mileage May Vary|Depending on who you ar], this serves as either an egregious violation of the rule, or helps the audience relate to the otherwise inscrutable Man.
 * [[Sliding Scale of Free Will vs. Fat]: As of season 1, this series looks to run somewhere in the Type III zone.
 * [[Sweet and Sour Grape]:
 * [[Trickster Mento]: The Man. Good sweet googly-moogly, The Man. He'll help you figure out what you have to do to get what you want, no problem...
 * [[Turned Against Their Master]:
 * [[Wham! Lin]: In response to what Gerald wants:
 * What You Are in the Dark: A part of The Man's modus operandi. Even if people get what they want, doing what The Man asks (or going through a large part of it) tends to make people confront themselves. Most aren't exactly very happy at what they see... but blame The Man.
 * [[Sweet and Sour Grape]:
 * [[Trickster Mento]: The Man. Good sweet googly-moogly, The Man. He'll help you figure out what you have to do to get what you want, no problem...
 * [[Turned Against Their Master]:
 * [[Wham! Lin]: In response to what Gerald wants:
 * What You Are in the Dark: A part of The Man's modus operandi. Even if people get what they want, doing what The Man asks (or going through a large part of it) tends to make people confront themselves. Most aren't exactly very happy at what they see... but blame The Man.

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