Glee/YMMV

""They say it takes certainty more than talent to make a star. I mean, look at John Stamos.""
 * Actor Shipping: To Rule 34 levels. If you can think of an actor shipping pair, it exists.
 * Interestingly, the two openly gay cast-members (Chris Colfer and Jonathan Groff) are never being shipped with each other, everyone being busy pairing up Chris with a straight guy and Jonathan with a woman. Fandom is a funny place.
 * The most common pairings seem to be the Les Yay HeYa (Heather Morris and Naya Rivera), which makes enough sense as their characters are together, and Achele (Dianna Agron and Lea Michele), which also makes some sense. Well, to fans of it. Dianna and Naya together also seems to be happening now.
 * The Crisscolfer (Darren Criss and Chris Colfer) shipping is... shall we say, intense.
 * Actual couples, like Cory Monteith and Lea Michele, were supported.
 * A lot of people started Crack Pairing Lea Michele with Matthew Morrison (Rachel and Will) after it was revealed that the two had previously dated back when they were both on Broadway.
 * Alternate Character Interpretation:
 * All the Cliché Storm and Unfortunate Implications examples are completely intentional gags in a subversive parody. It takes a few episodes to realize this. Listening to all of the stuff Sue says lets you know, though.
 * One critic firmly believes that the show is fundamentally the most tragic show on TV, but is presented as the happiest show on TV.
 * Thanks to the well rounded personalities of every character in the show, everyone can be seen as the villain or the hero of the franchise. It all really depends on who you identify with the best... or who you hate the most.
 * Karofsky: A tortured soul that is in love with the one thing he hates? Or a Jerkass who forced a kiss on Kurt and gained many fans?
 * Blaine: a Knight in Shining Armor, handsome, knowledgeable and all or a complete Marty Stu without any personality?
 * Rachel: Self-centered Jerkass who occasionally displays kindness to other people or a well-intentioned girl who only wants the Glee club to be successful, but tends to go too far in pursuit of that goal and fails to think before she speaks/acts?
 * Anvilicious: Since the list was getting ridiculous, we now have a whole separate page dedicated to listing every episode's hard-to-miss theme.
 * Arc Fatigue:
 * Some people feel that the Dalton arc—when Kurt transferred to Dalton Academy to get away from bullying—was drawn out too long, and that Kurt was being overshadowed by Blaine and the Warblers in his own storyline. It was supposed to make a point about gay bullying, but for the most part amounted to little more than a few Non Sequitur Scenes and Yaoi scenes. According to Word of God, the Warblers were only supposed to appear for two episodes of the second season, but their immense popularity led to them staying on the show much longer, possibly into the third season. Until "Born This Way", when Kurt finally returned to McKinley, it felt entirely possible that he would be staying there indefinitely.
 * Rachel and Finn's relationship was frequently this, as they were a Foregone Conclusion from the start and yet the show kept finding new ways to break them up and get them back together, even after they promised to "keep them together to focus on other couples" in Season 2. Interestingly, when they did decide to keep them together in Season 3, they made it even worse with the wedding arc which was extremely unpopular with the fanbase (outside of hardcore Finchel shippers), most of whom saw it as out-of-character.
 * Author's Saving Throw:
 * Kurt was seen as a Creator's Pet by many during the first two seasons, since the show would often validate him when he did some very questionable things - sexually harassing Finn, stating that bisexuality doesn't exist when Blaine starts questioning his sexuality. However, later seasons eventually had him mature out of most of these traits, making Kurt a much more likeable character. "Asian F" shows him letting up on his ego enough to give Blaine encouragement as well as a floral arrangement to congratulate him on getting the part in West Side Story that Kurt had so desperately wanted. He also talks about the "faggy lamp" with a sentimental tone when sorting through Finn's belongings in "The Quarterback", implying that Kurt doesn't hold Finn dropping the other F-bomb against him anymore (The fact that he doesn't exactly object when Burt expresses remorse for his actions that day, and is seen crying along with him and Carole during his speech, also implies that Kurt came around to see Finn's side of the story as well).
 * In "The Quarterback", Burt brings up his controversial rant to Finn about his use of a homophobic slur, echoing fan sentiments that, while Finn was in the wrong for saying it, he was under a degree of stress at the time and things were not entirely black and white, and admitting that, yes, he may have overreacted just a little bit.
 * Ryan Murphy got a lot of hate for his supposed mistreatment of certain members of the cast — Dianna Agron in particular — especially when he was heavily favoring others. After the show ended, he issued a statement saying that he regrets how his relationship with a certain cast member or two turned out, and thinks the environment he created because of it may have been what made the show go downhill. A pseudo-apology after the fact may have been a successful saving throw, or may have made things worse.
 * Award Snub:
 * Nominated for 19 Emmys in the 2010 Emmys and only won 4. The Best Comedy Emmy and Best Casting Emmys (Comedy) went to Modern Family instead. Of course, if Modern Family hadn't won those, this entry would be on its page.
 * The fans of Community see Glee as being the cause of its own Award Snub, as it got zero nominations. Even though the shows don't even have the same timeslot.
 * To some fans, Naya Rivera in particular has been a target of this, especially after Santana's coming-out storyline.
 * And Dianna Agron - the writers really hated Quinn, but she got to show off how talented she is.
 * Glee was the reverse of this in Season 2, as it continued to receive loads of nominations even though the critics had soured on it. This changed with Season 3, when Glee only got three Emmy nominations, for Dot Marie Jones' guest performance as Coach Bieste, for make-up and for cinematography - none of which it won.
 * Base Breaker: Most characters.
 * Rachel. Any online discussion of Glee tends to be hijacked by someone talking about how she's the best singer/actor/oh-so-oppressed, followed promptly by people expressing their disagreement by demonizing Rachel in every conceivable way. The Rachel worshipers then proceed to bash all of the characters who aren't Rachel to show how she isn't so bad, making the haters even more defensive, and things go back and forth until the original topic is completely forgotten.
 * In mid-to-late Season 2, there's been some debate (or rather, all-out-warfare) over whether Rachel has redeemed herself and made up for her past actions, or whether she's being let off the hook too easily. The people who believe that she has redeemed herself point out that she has now apologized sincerely to the people she's wronged (Sunshine and Finn being the two prominent examples from this season) and that she's been generally nice in the second half of the season. The people who believe that she hasn't redeemed herself seem to think that her niceness is just a facade and that she's still self-centered.
 * Finn. It's generally agreed upon that they give him too many solos for being the weakest singer in the cast (and he's supposed to be the best of the male singers).
 * There's also the divide on whether he's a hypocritical jerk who does not learn from his mistakes or just a naive representation of regular teenage boys.
 * And the debate re: heartthrob vs. average-looking almost-30-year-old shoehorned into the role of a cute high school boy.
 * It's really kicked into high gear with the events of "Mash-Off", where he outs Santana in a crowded hallway as a reaction to her bullying. See Broken Base below for details.
 * Kurt. A Woobie who just wants to be loved, or a selfish, Manipulative Bastard and Karma Houdini? You decide!
 * Blaine. You either want him to get his own spin off show so you could see him more frequently, or you want him to get one so he stops showing up in Glee.
 * Artie. Is he the chronically misunderstood Only Sane Man who just wants to be loved, or is he a raging misogynist Karma Houdini who doesn't deserve anything less than being shoved off a cliff? THE GLEE WORLD MAY NEVER KNOW (this started with his sexist comments to Tina in "The Power of Madonna", but really rose to prominence due to getting in the way of Fan-Preferred Couple Brittany/Santana).
 * Speaking of the Brittana romance, that leads us to Santana: A Jerkass who is too immature to properly deal with her emotional issues and instead lashes out at bystanders, or an outstanding example of Character Development who has become one of the most sympathetic characters on the show? Or both?
 * Quinn: A heinous bitch who brought all her pain upon herself or an intelligent but insecure girl who lost everything she had?
 * The fandom seems pretty split on whether Karofsky is a Jerkass Woobie who is trying to redeem himself and does deserve redemption or not.
 * Jesse: an irredeemable jerkass who should go die in a fire, or someone who did genuinely regret his actions and was sincere in his apology to Rachel?
 * Will has been a Base Breaker for quite some time. Some see him as a Nice Guy who genuinely cares about his students and Emma and wants to help them; others see him as a whiny manchild who needs to keep his hands out of others' business.
 * Even Sue, once one of the most popular characters on the show, is starting to fall here as some are beginning to find her shtick to be overly repetitive.
 * Mercedes has never been a universally-popular character, but the events of the beginning of Season 3 (particularly surrounding her audition for West Side Story) have really inflamed her Hatedom, which has, in turn, made her fans more defensive.
 * Even before his first appearance on the show, Sebastian Warbler already had people who knew about him divided, especially the Klaine fandom.
 * Looking to get even worse since Michael, with the fandom now debating as to whether his character can be redeemed or not.
 * Broken Base:
 * Over the question of whether Rachel or Mercedes is the better singer, an argument which tends to divide along issues of musical taste (those who prefer Broadway or pop tend to prefer Rachel; R&B and hip-hop fans tend to prefer Mercedes).
 * In the first half of Season 1, there was a sort of "Team Rachel"/"Team Quinn" rivalry between fans of the two characters (not in terms of which one belonged more with Finn - with Quinn lying to him about her pregnancy, most fans were on Rachel's side with that one - but with the issue of which one was generally more sympathetic or had more right to feel "wronged" by the other).
 * It was rekindled in the second season after Rachel and Finn broke up and Finn and Quinn got back together. By then, Quinn had been made a lot more sympathetic, and one could have reasonably sided with either character in their battle for Finn (though this changed when it became clearer that Quinn was just dating Finn for his popularity so she could win Prom Queen). Then, of course, there are those fans who think both of them are too good for Finn...or not good enough...
 * The Finn/Kurt subplot in "Theatricality" has sparked quite a hot debate over which character was more in the wrong (Finn for calling Kurt's decor "faggy" or Kurt for the obsessiveness which led to Finn's outburst?). Eventually bled over into the show itself.
 * There have been some fairly intense arguments over whether the pilot or season finale version of "Don't Stop Believing" is better.
 * The second season itself has become a base-breaker. While its themed episodes like "Brittany/Britney", "The Rocky Horror Glee Show", and "A Very Glee Christmas", and various guest stars have received a lot of hype and been fairly popular with the show's younger and/or more casual fans, a lot of viewers think the show has Jumped the Shark and long for the first season, when it was less interested in creating big moments and more in telling a consistent story and building interesting characters.
 * More generally, people who view Glee as a guilty pleasure, or as a legitimately good show. And in the middle, there are those who used to view it as the latter who now see it as the former, or who think it can oscillate between the two from episode to episode.
 * Mercedes' performance of "Sweet Transvestite". Some fans think she brought the house down. Others wish a house would be brought down on her for ruining it. There is very little middle ground.
 * Over Artie's relationship with Brittany, and whether the show has done enough to develop it beyond a Crack Pairing. Some think they are quite sweet together, while others think that it's still just a lazy attempt at Pair the Spares. And that's not even getting into what the Brittana shippers have to say about it...
 * There is something of a battle over Kurt's portrayal. His Camp Gay persona is quite controversial: as the show is so popular, many believe that it gives a bad representation of gays to the mainstream as Will and Grace did years ago. Others believe that having an openly gay character who is neither Invisible to Gaydar nor the least bit ashamed is a good thing.
 * The Gay Aesops of Season 2 also came under fire. There was either too many making them Anvilicious or it was perfectly justified since Some Anvils Need to Be Dropped.
 * There's been a huge debate already on the scene in "Mash-Off" where in response to her incessant teasing. Some say that Santana backed Finn into a corner and so it was only human that he would lash out with the only thing that would make Santana stop. Others say that as awful as Santana was,  for that is Disproportionate Retribution and never, ever justifiable. Then there's the middle-ground, where they admit that what Finn did was completely wrong but he can't have anticipated where it would lead (to the ). It gets ugly no matter which position you take.
 * That's not to mention the following episode. Many people believe that Finn was very Easily Forgiven and that an episode that should have been focused on was instead focused on Finn for no real reason. The one given by Finn was that Santana was the one who took his virginity, so he allegedly selflessly cares about the fact that her not being out is hurting her emotionally. Never mind the fact that in the prior episode, he just seemed to have been pushed to the edge by Santana's verbal attacks on his weight so he wanted to get back at her.
 * "Dance With Somebody" broke the base with and Blaine's reaction to it through song; part of the base sided fully with Blaine and despised Kurt for ; some didn't side with either; and some sided with Kurt as they saw Blaine's behavior as hypocritical given his pre-"Michael" relationship with Sebastian.
 * Canon Sue:
 * Holly Holiday. Any flaws she has only add a sense of nobility to her, and she's loved by everyone.
 * Blaine also fits this trope to a T. Even when he makes a mistake, it's not his fault. There's always something else to blame.
 * Cargo Shipping: Wes/Gavel and Kurt/Kilt are fairly popular, but the most widely known one is Santana/Shrub-shaped-like-a-person (Shrubtana).
 * Don't forget Briano (Brad, the piano player for New Directions and his piano. Though he cheats on it with the keyboard from time to time.)
 * Cliché Storm / Troperrific: Critics charge that the show relies too much on hackneyed plot devices; the show really tends to revel in the charge. The fans love it though, and the writers certainly know what they're getting into.
 * Completely Missing the Point: The "Umbrella/Singin' in the Rain" mash-up was supposed to make "Singin'" a bit more modern and enjoyable for the kids. Instead it's basically "Umbrella" with half of the chorus switched out. And most of the "Singin'" parts are only sung by Will anyways, so the kids don't have to do any of the old music anyways. At least it was mostly enjoyable to listen to.
 * Kurt in "Blame It On The Alcohol" says that Karofsky "didn't like who I am." Kurt must be really dense not to understand that the person Karofsky actually hates is himself and that Kurt is an object of admiration/stand-in for the parts of himself he hates the most. Then again, Kurt has also completely missed the point in Season 1, with all his Depraved Homosexual behavior towards Finn which was barely touched upon in "Duets" and tends to be excused by his fans.
 * The meaning of the "Don't Stand So Close To Me"/"Young Girl" mash-up (which deliberately ignores the point of both) is botched by the inclusion of the line "Temptation, frustration, so bad it makes him cry".
 * Complete Monster: !
 * Crack Pairing: Artie's relationship with Brittany, at least initially.
 * Crack pairings seem to be a part of the show. Others include: Puck/Rachel, Puck/Mercedes, Kurt/Brittany, Artie/Becky, Will/Sue, and Puck/Shelby
 * Creator's Pet:
 * Kurt. It's no secret that he's a Creator's Pet; his character didn't exist at first and was created specifically to play up Chris Colfer's strengths when he auditioned for Artie. Furthermore, Jerkass things he says often go unchecked, and there are many cases where logic takes a back seat so that he is never wrong (it took until the next season for him to get called out for harassing Finn, probably after viewers criticized his supposed innocence in the matter).
 * Holly Holiday. It definitely feels this way for people who don't like Holly, since Ryan Murphy called the actress who plays her "Glee's muse" and seems fond of the character by association.
 * Finn suffered a lot of backlash from people who saw him as this, to the point of there being a "Hypocritical Finn" meme. His most infamous moment was when he, and suffered no consequences other than her slapping him. Even his gay stepbrother, and raised-by-gay-dads girlfriend, don't say anything, and in the following episode it seems that everyone is convinced that Finn did the right thing. This is made even worse when Season 4 came around, where after calling Sue's baby a retard, Will decides to put him in charge of New Directions while Will is in Washington DC.
 * Blaine Anderson. It didn't help that even right after being introduced, he was already getting more and more air time and way more solos than most of the original cast members, which ended up being shoehorned in once or twice (TSSBS, Prom Queen). And his characterization made him out to be a Canon Sue for a lot of people. It has reached the point where even Darren Criss thought Blaine had a little too much focus on him.
 * Fan reaction got even more split as of Season 3, where he became less of a Canon Sue and more as a Spotlight Stealing Shallow Love Interest.
 * Crosses the Line Twice: Almost anything Sue does or says.
 * Die for Our Ship:
 * Artie. At PaleyFest 2011, Kevin McHale revealed that he often gets "hate Tweets" from Brittana shippers, protesting "I'm not Artie!"
 * Quinn, Blaine and Mercedes all got this from the Kurt/Sam shippers. Blaine got it the most, but Mercedes is likely to get more of it with Sam's return in "Hold on to Sixteen," which includes trying to win her back.
 * The Finchel ship gets this from Klaine and Brittana shippers: whether it's because the latter group is confused about who the show's actual protagonists are, or because of legitimate complaints about the discrepancy in treatment of opposite-sex couple vs. same-sex couples on the show.
 * Let's not forget the massive amount of hate the Finchel Fandom itself lets loose against anyone other than Finn that even shows the slightest interest in Rachel. Puck, Jesse, Brody, all of their respective actors and their fandoms catch no end of hell from them. Mark Salling actually got legitimate, police-investigated death threats after Rachel cheated on Finn with Puck in Season 2. In fact, it goes so far as to spill over into the Faberry fandom, a non-canon ship.
 * Sam, due to dating Brittany, and the series' complicated history regarding its depiction of LGBT issues. While Santana was the one to dump Brittany because she wanted to date other people, a lot of people resent the show's aforementioned imbalance in the portrayal of opposite-sex relationships vs. same-sex relationships. Whereas Brittana fans had to wait for over a year to see the two painfully in love characters kiss, Brittany and Sam kissed multiple times in the episode they got together. Once Brittany and Santana's relationship was made official, it took place almost entirely in the background, whereas Brittany and Sam had major plots revolve around their relationship in two consecutive episodes, leading to some resentment towards the character himself. Prefer Brittany with which ever character you like, but you'd be hard pressed to argue that they are treated equally.
 * Some less scrupulous fans were hoping Marley would have died from her fainting spell at Sectionals, so that Jake and Ryder could take comfort in each other.
 * The Klaine fandom sends quite a bit of hate as well. Max Adler, Grant Gustin, and Oliver Kieran-Jones have gotten hate sent to them for being a love interest of either Blaine or Kurt. Even Chris Colfer has gotten hate from Klaine shippers due to Kurt's actions in episodes or comments Chris has said that can be taken as anti-Klaine or pro another pairing like Kadam. Strangely, Darren Criss never really receives hate from Klainers even if he says similar anti-Klaine comments or Blaine shows interest in someone else, like Sam in Sadie Hawkins.
 * Notably subverted with Dani, Santana's new girlfriend. She doesn't receive much hate from Brittana shippers or frankly any other Santana-related shipper. In fact, people wish that she had been featured more and has a sizable fanbase of her own.
 * Draco in Leather Pants:
 * Puck. The fangirls were all over him long before he showed any signs of depth.
 * Karofsky has this among some fans despite injuring, threatening, and trying to force himself upon Kurt.
 * With the help of Grant Gustin and the show's 'interesting' way of character development, Sebastian is slowly but surely becoming this. Because there has to be a traumatized woobie beneath that 'facade'.
 * Blaine is still insanely popular even after.
 * Santana, as many of her fans tend to downplay her role in bullying other characters to turn her into The Woobie due to her torment over her sexuality. While rewatching early season 3 episodes would suggest that her bullying was in response to people attacking her and making fun of or taking advantage of Brittany, which she then gets punished for — and punished for being punished - it's still not an excuse. On top of that, she still struggled with her sexuality, thus providing an Alternative Character Interpretation that put her in a better light, especially among the young gay kids who can ignore the rest of her character to get some comfort in a shared experience.
 * The creators intended for everyone to hate Quinn, but her very early season 1 snark and bitchiness steadily made her a fan favorite. Her pregnancy and parental abandonment further reinforced this status, with her actress choosing to play her up as more sympathetic just adding to the reasons that people found it hard to hate her. This reportedly got the writers to dislike her, with Quinn's entire arc in Season 3 centering around overcoming all her flaws and getting her life back on track - as Will reminds her of how the glee club and its members have always supported her in the past and calls her out on blaming him for her transformation into a bad girl in "I Am Unicorn", as Sam tells her that she should enjoy her senior year while it lasts instead of constantly stressing about Beth in "Hold On to Sixteen", as Kurt tells her off for calling Dave "selfish" just because she's also been put through the wringer but could never consider committing suicide herself in "On My Way". She's supposed to be in the wrong, but this still doesn't stop the fans from putting her in leather pants and giving those characters the Ron the Death Eater treatment.
 * Drinking Game: Take a shot every time the word "Funk" is used in Episode 21. And every time the word "distraction" or "distract" is used in episode "Hairography".
 * Or how many times Michael Jackson's famous high pitched "hee hee" is used in the "Michael" episode
 * Ensemble Darkhorse:
 * Kurt is frequently cited as the show's "breakout star", as is Sue Sylvester.
 * Brittany, who wasn't in the pilot, didn't speak until Episode 4, gets a handful of lines in every episode and still manages to be one of the most popular characters on the show with her charming minimalistic humor. The TIME TV critic James Poniewozik posts his favorite "Brittany-ism" after every show on his blog. Brittany. She's one of the two best dancers, and a pretty good singer to boot.
 * An actor version: Mike O'Malley, who plays Kurt's father, was basically a stalwart of mediocre sitcoms (Yes, Dear), Nickelodeon game shows and commercials. In Glee, he routinely turns out subtle and heartfelt performances. His character, Burt, as well.
 * Blaine, who's won a lot of fans over with his good looks and excellent voice.
 * Mike Chang is also extremely popular, even before he started getting lines. Having nice abs doesn't hurt one's popularity.
 * Santana Lopez. She started off as a bitch. Then, they let her sing "The Boy is Mine". People embraced her bitchiness as comedy and fell in love with her voice. And then, she was revealed to be a lesbian, and was paired with Brittany...
 * Dave Karofsky, thanks in no small part to Max Adler's talent.
 * Brad the pianist.
 * Bryan Ryan. No surprise there. Everyone loves Neil Patrick Harris.
 * Holly Holiday, played by Gwyneth Paltrow, going from a celebrity guest spot to a recurring character and Love Interest for Will. She's the most frequently-recurring celebrity guest on the show, due to the character's popularity with viewers and the fact that her nature (a substitute teacher who can't stay in one place for long) is easy to work around Paltrow's schedule.
 * Jeff and Nick, two background Warblers who have only had one line between them, have been swooped upon by the shippers, pairing them with Kurt, Blaine, or each other.
 * Becky, even more so due to her inner monologuing.
 * Evil Is Cool: Why Sue started out as one of the most popular characters on the show, before turning into an Overly Long Gag.
 * Family-Unfriendly Aesop: "Rocky Horror Glee Show" attempted to tack on an aesop at the end by say "Freaks and outcasts are better off separating themselves from society because they aren't appreciated." Huh?
 * "Props" had the aesop of "If someone hogs all attention and praise all the time from you, it's Ok, because it's meant to be like that!"
 * Fandom Heresy: Let's just say that there aren't many places in the Glee fandom where it's safe to admit that you don't much like Lea Michele's singing voice, and leave it at that. Chris Colfer and Darren Criss (if not their characters) also tend to be sacred cows. Especially Darren's.
 * Fan Dumb: While it may seem like a theater/band geek/misfit paradise, the forum shows us that a vast majority of fans take the show more seriously than most school work, or in some cases, actual work. Flame wars get started over comments about a character's clothing, a throwaway comment that was played for laughs, song choice, and even seating positions. Numerous thread topics revolve around arguing about Darren Criss being a good actor or not, more topics have become pissing contests on who knows more about Broadway, and there is even a thread claiming The Beatles "aren't that good" and Glee made their songs better. It's not a wonder that the fans are often more hated than the show itself.
 * Kurt's fan base may or may not be the biggest, but it's certainly the most...let's just say "dedicated" and leave it at that.
 * There's also the Kurt fandom's Distaff Counterpart, the Brittana fangirls. During the second season, they became known on fan sites as Windmill Crusaders for constantly complaining about being oppressed by some hidden mass of Bartie fans - when, in fact, Brittana has always been the Fan-Preferred Couple and it was fan pressure that encouraged the creators to bring them together. There are also the Faberry shippers who, while mostly a not-so-serious bunch, can produce some really scary types who try to argue that Quinn/Rachel should count as a canon couple...
 * Some of the Blaine fangirls seem to be of the opinion that Blaine can do absolutely no wrong and that Kurt is unworthy of Blaine.
 * Conversely, Kurtsies think that Blaine doesn't deserve Kurt because the former is a contradictory jackass who's ruining Kurt's life.
 * Dalton fangirls are a very scary bunch. Some of them want Kurt to stay at Dalton forever, claiming that the Warblers are "way more interesting" than New Directions and want to get rid of ND altogether. This in spite of the fact that most of the Warblers have been given no personalities whatsoever and the few who've spoken have gotten one or two token lines.
 * To be fair, a good number of the Dalton fangirls have recognized that last bit and created their own fanworks about the school with their own canons (often crossing into Alternate Universe territory), rather than litter regular Glee fansites with complaints about how Dalton isn't getting enough focus.
 * If their complaints after Rachel-light episodes are anything to go by, some of the Rachel-fans seem to be of the opinion that Glee should be the Rachel Berry show.
 * The insistence that Sam cannot be straight in any way, shape, or form; while certain moments from various episodes do indeed contain some subtext between him and the male characters - the tenderness of the scene in "Naked" where Blaine tells him that his body is not his only worth, his immediate crushing on the new school nurse Penny in the wake of Tina dumping him in "Tina in the Sky With Diamonds" seems a little suspect… really, most of his interactions with Blaine - this doesn't in any way negate his previous relationships with female characters. This most likely comes from the fact that Sam was originally cast as Kurt's love interest for Season 2, but then the writers changed their mind at the last minute and brought in Blaine instead. Unfortunately, some fans chose to start shipping it before the season had even started, leading to some pretty sour grapes when things went in another direction.
 * Many people online decried his relationship with Mercedes as "unrealistic" because "Sam would never be interested in a girl like Mercedes." There are plenty of valid reasons to agree or disagree with the pairing, but when people fall on that, either they're saying that Sam is shallow and racist, or they're somewhat shallow and racist. It's worth noting that none of these people seem to think that the relationship is unrealistic due to Mercedes not being interested in a boy like Sam.
 * Then there are the Theocrats among the Fan Dumb, who cling to EVERYTHING Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk say or imply in interviews, rather than just watching the show.
 * Following the incident where a fan actually pulled Darren Criss from the stage a Kurtsie said: "I used to think Chris/Kurt fans are the craziest in the fandom, then came the Brittana shippers, and then the Faberry shippers, and now Darren stans."
 * Kurt/Karofsky shippers are constantly insulted and bullied by shippers of other pairings who believe Karofsky doesn't deserve redemption for his bullying. Ummmm...
 * Basically, the Glee Fandom is a great big pool of Fan Dumb.
 * Fan-Preferred Couple: There were several over the course of the series, but the most popular one was Quinn/Rachel (Faberry). The pairing won the 2012 E!Online poll for favorite couple, with there being so many votes that the site crashed. It's worth noting that they defeated Brittana and Klaine, two of the most popular ships on the show, in the final rounds. The pairing also won the 2012 Zimbio Couples March Madness poll, notably beating out Mercedes/Sam, Emma/Will, Finn/Rachel, Santana/Brittany, and Kurt/Blaine, all of which have been canon at one point or another. In fact, this ship is popular enough to the point that a different phrase containing the word "Faberry" trended each day worldwide for an entire week on Twitter.
 * The pairing of Sam/Blaine (Blam) could easily give Quinn/Rachel a run for its money. Just when Blaine's relationship with Kurt was starting to lose steam in the fourth season after their break up, Sam came in and quickly became close friends with Blaine. This led to a bromance that many fans felt was putting too much emphasis on the "romance" part for the supposedly-heterosexual Sam due to all the Ho Yay involved, and they thought Blaine had better chemistry with him than he did with his actual love interest. Add that to the fact that Sam getting into a relationship with Brittany around this point in the show invoked reactions of No Yay in much of the fandom, and you have Klaine vs Blam actually becoming a viable shipping war.
 * The writers were surprised with the acceptance Rachel/Puck (Puckleberry) got from the fans, which was canon for one episode as a joke before the fans just ran with it.
 * Previous ones included Kurt/Blaine (Klaine) and Santana/Brittany (Brittana) before they became Official Couples; with the latter, fan demand played a large part in the decision to make them official. It was definitely way more popular than Brittany/Artie, and for a while, there was a joke in the fandom about how Brittana fans were getting so fuming-at-the-ears mad over some plotting mass of Bartie fans who didn't actually exist.
 * Foe Yay:
 * Bryan Ryan (Neil Patrick Harris) and Sue, who have angry sex even after Bryan cuts the Cheerios budget in half. Hilarious in Hindsight when you realize that Neil Patrick Harris is gay and that Jane Lynch is a lesbian.
 * Rachel and Quinn anyone?
 * Will and Bryan, to combine your Foe Yay with Ho Yay.
 * Kurt and Puck in one of the Fox commercials.
 * Kurt wants to lock Rachel in his basement. Okay. Until one remembers that his basement is also his bedroom. That doesn't have sexual undertones due to his sexuality, but one does have to wonder why he'd want to lock someone he has so many issues with in the place where he sleeps. Then, there's the fact Kurt is just as determined as the other boys to go after Jesse when Jesse eggs Rachel. Rachel gets one by sending the football-playing Glee boys after the guy who has been terrifying Kurt.
 * Say what you want about the "Smooth Criminal" cover, but it's painfully obvious that Sebastian and Santana are both oozing this, despite the Incompatible Orientation.
 * Also, Kurt and Sebastian. Sometimes their sniping at each other seems to take this turn.
 * Fountain of Memes: Brittany.
 * Funny Aneurysm Moment: Fandom-wise, a lot of people thought that Kurt and Blaine nominated/elected for Prom King(s) would be awesome, and many affectionate jokes about Kurt being the Prom Queen ensued. At least part of it was because some people just didn't want the other candidates to be prom queen, particularly Quinn for being creepily obsessed about it, but also Santana for blackmailing Karofsky into being her beard and rejecting Brittany, and Lauren for cruelly leaking Quinn's "former identity" to the school. Then the episode "Prom Queen" rolls around . Yeah, Ryan Murphy? You're a bastard.
 * "Rumours" revealed that . Care to remember what song he sang for his New Directions audition? That's right,.
 * In "Pilot", Finn was blackmailed into joining ND when Will claimed he had found marijuana in his locker. That's so funny!... until we find out that Finn's actor, Cory Monteith, dropped out of high school due to serious drug addiction problems.
 * For most of the first season, Finn's mediocre singing and dancing was a running gag with the fandom. Cut to "The First Time" in in the third season, where . Ironically, it's possibly Cory Monteith's best acting so far.
 * In a more heartbreaking example, the Friday before "Heart" the 2012 Valentine's day episode, The music was released for the episode featuring.
 * Genius Bonus: Though it's more like Movie Trivia Awareness Bonus, Will dreams he is performing the "Make 'Em Laugh" number from Singin' In The Rain while sick and feverish; Gene Kelly performed the film's title number with an incredibly high fever.
 * Germans Love David Hasselhoff: Sunshine for Filipinos, natch.
 * Harsher in Hindsight:
 * Kurt says that being called "lady" is bullying. That makes this screengrab from Entertainment Tonight especially cringe-worthy.
 * Sam's performance of "Billionaire" in his debut seemed to be a random song to show off his voice with, but it becomes a lot more painful after seeing the events of "Rumors".
 * In his 'fake' apology to the Glee club in "Born This Way" Dave Karofsky says he 'read stories about kids who were bullied so much they hung themselves'. That speech takes on a whole new light after the events of "On My Way".
 * Hilarious in Hindsight:
 * One episode used the song "Gold Digger" mere days before Kanye West made an ass of himself at the VMAs.
 * Jayma Mays (Emma) once played a woman who used her pregnancy to cause discord between her ex-boyfriend and his girlfriend on Ugly Betty. Terri used her (fake) pregnancy to try to keep Will from getting too attached to Emma. Granted, there is a difference in that Henry had broken up with her before dating Betty and Will was actually married...
 * Emma in Episode 3:


 * Kurt's dad says he hates Duke like he hates the Nazis in "Home". This episode came before the final 4 game where Duke beat Butler (a team from Ryan Murphy's hometown of Indianapolis).
 * Karofsky, in "Britney/Brittany":

"Kurt: "Can we discuss the elephant in the room?" Santana: "Your sexuality?""
 * Even more hilarious after.
 * When Glee first came out, Chris Colfer (Kurt) mentioned in an interview that "Kurt's [biggest fear] would be that there would be ". Guess what happens come Season Two?
 * In Todd in the Shadows review of "Bad Romance", he compared Lady Gaga's evolution to Britney Spears and Madonna. These three are all the women so far with episodes centered around them, with recurrer Justin Bieber to be the only man to hold the title. Well except for Bruno Mars but the episode was not advertised at such.
 * For added fun, in that same video he psyches himself up by saying "courage".
 * The study group in Community encounters the Glee club, an Expy for the cast of Glee. After the study group defeats them, Jeff tells them "Write some original songs!" In February 2011, it was announced that Glee would be doing an episode with original songs.
 * Not to mention that the Glee club in Community is introduced by singing "Hit Me With Your Best Shot" to attract people during a paintball game and take them out, and Glee will use the very same song, mashed up with "One Way Or Another", in a similar situation during a game of dodgeball.
 * Actress Amber Riley was turned down for American Idol (as in, didn't even make it on TV) before being picked up for Glee, which will probably net her more fame than AI ever would.
 * Santana's snarking on Kurt in Episode 5:

"I don't dig fat chicks."
 * Also, her comment about "gay jokes" after the Glee club.
 * How about in "Silly Love Songs"? She says that kissing Finn isn't worth paying a dollar for, but she would pay to jiggle one of his "man-boobs". Of course we'd all find out later her affinity for boobs.
 * Puck's line to Quinn in Season 1.

"Marley: I'm so hungry. But at least I fit into my dress."
 * In the Season Two premier "Audition", Brittany states instead of being on vacation during the summer as previously believed, she had actually spent the summer lost in the sewers. Later, in the episode "Sexy", Santana tells Brittany that their hook-ups don't constitute cheating because the plumbing is different.
 * It should be acknowledged that many of these occur because the writers make things up as they go along—several plot points (i.e. ) were not even dreamed of at the time of those lines being spoken.
 * Which is why they're considered an example of this trope rather than Foreshadowing.
 * In "Mattress", Dave Karofsky is defacing a yearbook picture of the Glee club. If the picture's turned upside down, it looks like he's drawn a heart over Kurt's picture (it seems he was going for breasts). Yeah, it's most likely a teenage boy who has no drawing talent, but considering what we eventually find out...
 * In the middle of Season 3, Puck mentions that global warming means his pool-cleaning business is in demand well into winter. This was meant to be a throwaway joke, but the winter of 2011-12 turned out to be unusually mild for much of the US, with summer-like weather in March.
 * Hollywood Homely: Suzie Pepper (played by the definitely-not-ugly Sarah Drew) saying that she and Rachel are "Mildly Attractive".
 * Ho Yay: So much it has its own page here.
 * Hype Backlash: It's been experiencing this, since the show's win at the Golden Globes / Emmy nomination.
 * Idiosyncratic Ship Naming: Fans of the pairing Quinn and Artie often refer to them as "Wheels + Preggers" due to episodes based around their conditions being named that, though to be fair they are also referred to as Quartie and Quarter.
 * Idiot Plot: The entire fight between Kurt, Finn, and Burt in "Theatricality". Kurt for being too caught up in his ridiculous fantasy to accept that Finn is straight and going to insane lengths to be close to him, Finn for completely failing to articulate the very real squickiness of Kurt's harassment without using a slur and attacking Kurt's homosexuality specifically, and Burt for jumping into the fight without listening to anything other than a single word Finn used.
 * Most of the episodes in Season 3 have at least one of these.
 * Informed Wrongness:
 * Mike Chang Sr. is treated as unreasonable for not wanting his son to enter a field where very few people succeed.
 * Brittany dumps Artie after he calls her stupid. Keep in mind that he calls her stupid because he was naturally hurt and upset that she was cheating on him with another girl, Santana, who convinced Brittany that it's not cheating "if the plumbing is different." The breakup wouldn't be so bad but the episode in question goes out of its way to paint Artie as the wrong party, and neither Brittany nor Santana are ever called out on it.
 * Mercedes telling Puck that Quinn chose Finn to be her baby's father and Puck has to respect that. Except Finn doesn't know that he isn't the father. And no matter who a mother chooses to be her partner, the guy whose sperm actually made her pregnant most definitely has rights to the child.
 * In "Jagged Little Tapestry", Santana finds Kurt and unleashes one of her most scathing rants ever after he objects to her proposing marriage to Brittany and says the two are too young while clearly completely enveloped in his bitterness over losing Blaine. Normally, this would be an unfortunate example of Kurt's ego from the earlier seasons reasserting itself since it was his choice to end things with Blaine, but he does have a point in that they are too young to be getting married - Finn and Rachel tried getting engaged once before and that clearly didn't end so well. Hell, when Blaine asks for Burt's permission to propose to Kurt during "Wonder-ful", Burt even points out how Blaine should know that it's a wrong idea seeing how things turned out for Finn and Rachel. Kurt even calls it off with Blaine specifically because they're kids, and the fact that the man's proposal involves overwhelming Kurt by his Grand Romantic Gesture so much that he can't exactly be in the right frame to say anything else but yes and thereby pressuring him into marriage lends some credence to the fact it was a bad idea much like it was for Finn and Rachel. But because Positive Discrimination seems to be in play here, it's Kurt who has to apologize to Brittany for lashing out and she later marries Santana without a hitch in "A Wedding".
 * Jerkass Woobie: Every single character depending on your viewpoint is either this or just a Jerkass.
 * Jumping the Shark: Most fans seem to think that this has occurred, with the most common view being that it happened in either the back nine of Season 1, or with the beginning of Season 2, and the show jumped an addition shark with the beginning of Season 3. However, there are plenty of fans who still genuinely enjoy it and see its critics as "Stop Having Fun!" Guys, while another group attests that the show was always bad and it was only when the novelty of its format wore off that people could see it for what it was.
 * Launcher of a Thousand Ships: Puck, Rachel, Kurt. Finn and Santana as well.
 * Jesse too, to the point where there are decent-sized fanbases shipping him with characters he has never actually met (i.e. Blaine and Harmony).
 * Also Dave.
 * Like You Would Really Do It: Played straight and subverted in the first season finale..
 * Memetic Badass: Pavarotti, the Warblers mascot, seems to be headed in this direction.
 * Sue Sylvester as well.
 * Lord Tubbington.
 * Memetic Mutation:
 * The "Say A Little Prayer" dance from Quinn, Brittany, and Santana's audition.
 * It's become common for commentary on the show to invoke "Grilled Cheesus".
 * "Did you know dolphins are just gay sharks?"
 * "Do briefs stink??" (taken from a deleted scene circulated on YouTube).
 * There's a new meme around, which consists of making Santana a proper English gentleman. It's hilarious. Gadzooks!
 * Two words: Dapper Blaine.
 * Pedo Will
 * That piano the camera cuts to when finally kiss has been dubbed "That cock-blocking piano."
 * Insanity Rachel.
 * Suddenly... Karofsky!
 * CanniBlaine.
 * Glee Secrets. The hilarious levels of narm and Fan Dumb spawned a troll tumblr that basically parodies everyone in the fandom.
 * "Brittana is on, Brittana was always on."
 * Since it was announced via Twitter that Blaine is a junior, not a senior as previously thought, it became an overnight meme to twist old scenes to reflect him as a child.
 * Blaine is a magnet for these. Another one involving him is his abusive relationship with furniture.
 * Cargoshipping. Everyone on this show seems to be an objectphile.
 * Blaine is a hobbit.
 * Fancy and Hamhock in the Kurtofsky fandom.
 * Sugar is Brittana's Kid From the Future. The cast themselves think this one is awesome.
 * It's expanded into Rory being Klaine's adopted son, and Harmony as the daughter as either Finchel or Faberry. There's a picture to back that up along with the addition of Cameron.
 * Shrubtana: the Crack Ship between Santana and a shrub shaped like a person, based off of a throwaway line in "Sexy".
 * Misaimed Fandom: An alarming number of fans think Sue is actually a good teacher.
 * Moral Event Horizon: Terri lying about her pregnancy, for starters.
 * Jesse after defecting back to Vocal Adrenaline, and later getting the entire group to egg Rachel after it appears he might still be a good guy, even though the way he guiltily looks away seems to suggest otherwise (in fact, there apparently was an apology scene in what was supposed to be the following episode "Theatricality", but was cut because FOX decided to air it first.
 * Sebastian throwing a slushee laced with rocksalt at which caused much damage to the eye. Even though he intended to hit  it was quite possibly worse than anything any character on the show has done.
 * For many Blaine's.
 * Narm Charm: The unabashedly cheery Christmas Episode should have by all means been a non-stop Glurge fest, and yet it was one of the sweetest episodes of the series, especially.
 * A lot of the things Finn says or does can be this as well. Him singing "I'll Stand By You" to a sonogram would have been hilarious if done by anyone else, but Finn manages to get away with it somehow.
 * Especially since his mother catches him doing it, forcing him to tell her about the baby.
 * Never Live It Down:
 * In-Universe, Santana's "Yeast-i-stat" commercial garnered her a lot of attention in New York, to the point that several patrons of the diner she works at lost their appetites for bread after seeing her.
 * Another In-Universe example is people are still making jabs about Tina putting vapo-rub on Blaine's chest while he was passed out
 * Fandom will probably never forgive Finn for inadvertently causing Santana to be outed not only to the entire school, but the entire town. It just goes to show how selective fandom's memory can be, since Finn only snapped back after being bullied by Santana all day and had no idea that he was being filmed by someone who was out to get Sue Sylvester.
 * Fandom will also probably never forget Will blackmailing a student into joining the club by planting drugs in his locker.
 * Nightmare Fuel:
 * The episode "Furt", where we already know that Karofsky is gay and has feelings for Kurt, but the way he stands really close and does a glary/smile thing, along with winking. It looks a little perverse and the audience are left a little violated, along with Kurt.
 * Brittany's throwaway lines that sound an awful lot like she was raped, including being visited by aliens. And what it feels like to be roofied.
 * Brittany lifting Artie onto the bed, camera fade without consent.
 * Blaine's drunken near-rape of Kurt in "The First Time".
 * Santana being outed after some girl overheard her argument with Finn in the hallway—where he tells her to come out the closet—and the girl told her uncle, who is running against Sue for the Congress seat and targeted Santana's lesbianism in a smear ad against Sue. For many a closeted teenager, being outed is bad enough, but for it to happen on TELEVISION in front of millions makes it nightmare fuel.
 * EVERYTHING about Karofsky's storyline in "On My Way". Hey, being outed not bad enough for you? How about your homophobic classmates spamming the Internet with hate-speech about you until you hang yourself? And just in case you could sleep, have Karofsky's dad finding his near-dead body and screaming in anguish. And even while in recovery, his mom thinks that he's mentally ill for being gay and his best friend Azimio cuts contact.
 * The car crash scene at the very end of the same episode. Of course, she turned out to be fine in the next episode. But still, a lot of fans thought Quinn was dead.
 * The effects of Bulimia on Marley. She spends her first five episodes looking warm and bright and cheerful, but once Kitty gets in her head and makes her start vomiting all her meals up she gets less energetic, more pale, and more frail. It all comes to a climax during the Gangnam Style performance: the music starts to cut out near the end, the camera is at weird angles, parts of the song speed up or slow down, and at the end Marley is so malnourished that she collapses onstage. The worst part is the insight to the skewed priorities she's developed, and how such a simple line can become really disturbing.
 * The effects of Bulimia on Marley. She spends her first five episodes looking warm and bright and cheerful, but once Kitty gets in her head and makes her start vomiting all her meals up she gets less energetic, more pale, and more frail. It all comes to a climax during the Gangnam Style performance: the music starts to cut out near the end, the camera is at weird angles, parts of the song speed up or slow down, and at the end Marley is so malnourished that she collapses onstage. The worst part is the insight to the skewed priorities she's developed, and how such a simple line can become really disturbing.

""You're so talented!" "No, you're so talented!" *cue Wicked song* *hug*"
 * For added points, when they lose Sectionals due to Marley fainting, Tina promptly blames her for them losing.
 * "Feud": It's supposed to be played for laughs, and is never mentioned again, but Sue putting 30 credit cards and a house loan in Blaine's name, singlehandedly ruining his parents' credit, simply because he wouldn't join the Cheerios is quite disturbing.
 * "Shooting Star". A gun goes off at the school. Most of the club is holed up in the choir room, but Brittany is stuck alone in a washroom and Tina is outside the school and can't contact anyone. Marley tries to text her mom, but Millie can't answer because her phone is too far away and she can't risk grabbing it - and Marley starts assuming the worst.
 * The eerie silence during that scene just makes the whole thing worse. If you weren't spending that entire scene on the edge of your seat, wondering when the shooter would burst through the choir room door, gun in hand, then congratulations, you have Nerves of Steel.
 * The metronome going the whole time gave the atmosphere a whole new level of scary.
 * Kurt getting gay bashed in "Bash". Oh my god.
 * Sue has a Room Full of Crazy dedicated to all the people she hates. A large portion of it is dedicated to the New Directions and Will personally. This would be funny, but we see the words "Missing" in a couple of places. We knew Sue hated the Glee Club, but she also might be more than a little unhinged.
 * This also includes a life size doll of Al Roker, which seems plain ol' crazy and weird until you remember that back in "I Do", not only do Quinn and Santana know about him, but Quinn starts the conversation by outright naming him as maybe the only nice guy in the world. It's disturbing to think what that doll may have been used for before or since.
 * Look at Kurt's actions towards Finn during the first season through the latter's eyes. Way back in "Preggers", Finn thought that Kurt was asking him out and politely declined. ("Thanks, but I already have a date to the prom. I'm flattered you asked, though, I know dances are important to gay teens.") To which Kurt said he wasn't gay, but he later sings a love song while looking intently at Finn the whole time, plots to break up his relationship with the girl they both think is pregnant with his child, and works to ruin his opinion of Rachel, who Finn genuinely does have a connection with. It rapidly becomes an open secret in the whole Glee club not only that Kurt's crushing on Finn, but that it's so one-sided since Clingy Jealous Girl Quinn doesn't even bother giving Kurt a single verbal warning. Finn finds out that his mom is dating Kurt's dad when she tells him they're all moving in together, but not until after Kurt asks his opinion on interior decorating for what Finn doesn't yet know will be their shared bedroom. Finn's "faggy" reaction to Kurt's full-on interior design mockup is a very bad word choice, but no one ever seems to consider that not only does Finn have a genuine right to be upset at the situation in general - everyone acts like Finn's honest concern for his personal space from the guy who's rampantly crushing on him is simply homophobia and loudly condemns him for it.
 * In "Child Star", Sue goes into one of her trademark rampages that ends with her slapping a random student for no reason.
 * Throughout the show, there are a disturbing number of implications that Santana is bulimic. Made worse by the show passing them off as jokes and the episode dealing with Sue making the Cheerios basically live off of super unhealthy shakes that seem to actively encourage eating disorders.
 * Non Sequitur Scene:
 * At one point the club is performing one of their songs onstage in front of a closed curtain. At the climax of the song, the curtain opens and an entire gospel choir is revealed and sings along with the cast. This is never brought up again.
 * "Make 'em Laugh" from "The Substitute" was just a dream sequence Will had from being sick and watching Singin in The Rain too much.
 * From the same episode, the Umbrella/Singing in the Rain mash-up featuring the cast performing elaborate choreography in front of a waterfall in their school auditorium. The writers don't even bother trying to explain this.
 * Several of the Dalton numbers feel rather shoehorned into the show. "Baby, It's Cold Outside" had little purpose aside from being Yaoi fanservice, and "Bills, Bills, Bills" came out of nowhere after the commercial break with Regionals practice as its only Hand Wave.
 * And while the shippers loved it, Kurt and Blaine's slow-mo run down a hallway seems a little out of place. It also seemed that way to Chris Colfer, who said that the scene "was too gay even for me."
 * Near the end of "Guilty Pleasures", an episode about... guilty pleasures, Tina reveals her love of Small Wonder. By dressing as Vicki. And chasing Kitty down the hallway.
 * Most of the songs in "Puppet Master" were this. Half of them were gas-induced hallucinations, while the performance of Ylvis' "The Fox" at the end was completely unrelated to anything else in the episode, and was probably included to cash in the song's success.
 * The appearances of Sugar and Joe in season 6. They vanished at the end of season 4 without an explanation, and appeared for single-scene cameos without any explanation for their return either.
 * "Suddenly Seymour" from the Season 6 premiere. It's supposed to get Rachel's spirit, but it's the most random, off-the-wall song choice. Literally any song could be used for the same purpose.
 * No Yay:
 * How some viewers reacted to the Will/Sue relationship in "Funk." Basically, if your reaction wasn't Foe Yay it was probably this.
 * And Karofsky kissing Kurt in "Never Been Kissed", for some people.
 * Kurt/Blaine for some people. Especially after "The First Time" and "Dance With Somebody".
 * Will kissing Coach Beiste in the same episode. Namely because Will's actions seemed predatory rather than endearing.
 * Also how many viewers reacted to Will and Terri hooking up in "The Substitute".
 * Finchel quickly became this due to Seasonal Rot.
 * Season 4 gave us Sam/Brittany. Brittana fans immediately called for Chord Overstreet's head.
 * In the final season, there was Blaine/Karofsky. The second it was announced they would be canon in the wake of Kurt and Blaine's second breakup, Klaine shippers were PISSED.
 * Portmanteau Couple Name:
 * Wemma or Wilma (Will/Emma).
 * Finchel (Finn/Rachel).
 * Quick (Quinn/Puck).
 * Puchel/Puckleberry (Puck/Rachel).
 * Faberry/Quinchel (Quinn/Rachel).
 * Winn (Will/Finn).
 * Take a wild guess what Finn/Puck is. Hint: it ain't "Pinn".
 * Puckurt/Purt/Pummel (Puck/Kurt).
 * Furt (Finn/Kurt).
 * Kinn is also becoming popular among Finn/Kurt fans for reasons that become quite obvious once one tries to say "Furt" out loud.
 * Bike (Brittany/Mike).
 * Mark Salling requested that fans make Puck/Artie videos because "Puck + Artie = Party!" My God... He's one of them!
 * Brittana (Brittany/Santana), or "Santittany", according to Naya Rivera.
 * Puckleberry Finn! OT3
 * Puckleberry Quinn!
 * Tartie or Artina (Tina/Artie).
 * Meanwhile, shippers for the actors who play them dub them "McHalowitz".
 * Quartie or Quarter (Quinn/Artie).
 * Changel (Mike Chang/Kurt Hummel).
 * St. Berry (Rachel/Jesse).
 * St. Fabray (Quinn/Jesse).
 * There already exists Skurt or Kum for Sam/Kurt fans.
 * Or the lesser used "Hevans".
 * Shell (Shelby/Will).
 * Chachang (Tina/Mike), also called Chang Squared, Changcest, or Tike. Chitty Chitty Chang Chang was used on the actual show in "Prom Queen".
 * Sack (Sam/Puck).
 * Sinn (Sam/Quinn) as of "Duets". Most fans use Fabrevans or Quam.
 * Sinn was also used for Finn/Sam for a while, but those fans have begun to use Hudevans due to the tumblr tag being filled with "Vampire Diaries, watches, and pornstars".
 * Arittany (Artie/Brittany).
 * More commonly, Bartie - and the less-flattering "Barfie" from the Brittana shippers.
 * Klaine is used for Kurt/Blaine. Though Blurt is also a used alternative.
 * Due to the events of "Never Been Kissed", "Karommel" has been offered for Karofsky/Kurt...although "Kurtofsky" is more popular.
 * Raine for the Crack Pairing of Rachel and Blaine, who kissed twice in "Blame it on the Alcohol".
 * Blainchel is another common name for those two.
 * Blam/Slaine (Blaine/Sam).
 * Kublam for Kurt/Sam/Blaine threesome.
 * Save for Sam/Karofsky and Blainofsky for Blaine/Karofsky have both taken off.
 * Mersamchel for the Mercedes/Sam/Rachel friendship in "Prom Queen", which was used in the Glee-Wind for that episode.
 * Lauren/Puck reference on the show is "Pizes". Fans call them "Luck".
 * Samcedes (Sam/Mercedes) which is now canon.
 * Rory and Karofsky had one long before Rory appeared on the show. So long before that they didn't know what Damian's character's name would be. The shippers went with Irishofsky.
 * After "Extraordinary Merry Christmas", Smory, Sory, and Flanavans have all been popular names for Sam/Rory.
 * Seblaine or Blastian for Sebastian/Blaine; yes, shippers of this do exist. Add Kurt to the mix and it becomes Seklaine.
 * Kurtbastian or Sebkurt for Sebastian/Kurt.
 * Sebofsky is Sebastian/Karofsky. Though they're also known as MeerCub, since Kurt called Sebastian a meerkat and Dave said he was a bear cub.
 * Rory/Sugar is Sugory or, occasionally, Sweet Potatoes.
 * After their performance of "Smooth Criminal", some fans have taken to calling the coupling of Sebastian and Santana 'Sebtana'. Its an interesting pairing, considering that both characters are gay, and as Sebastian's actor Grant Gustin noted, Santana's coming out story has been a pretty important one for her. This, combined with Sebastian's haughty air and confidence, make it seem terribly unlikely that the couple will ever come to fruition.
 * Faberritana as a combination of Quinn/Rachel/Santana/Brittany often crops out in the Les Yay part of the fandom
 * So does any combination out of those: Quinntana (Quinn/Santana), Quitt or Fierce (Quinn/Brittany), Pezberry (Santana/Rachel) and Pieberry (Brittany/Rachel)
 * Rorbastian is Rory/Sebastian.
 * Rormony is Rory/Harmony.
 * Rescued from the Scrappy Heap: Quinn and Rachel for some. Dave for others.
 * Retroactive Recognition: Go on, watch Criminal Minds or Julie and Julia and catch yourself going "Hey, it's Sue Sylvester!"
 * Or the episodes of Two and A Half Men where she played Alan, and then Charlie's therapist.
 * There's also Weeds.
 * Or the movies Paul or The 40-Year-Old Virgin.
 * In the first two Warbler performances, fans of Power Rangers: Samurai might spot the gold ranger singing next to Blaine.
 * Romantic Plot Tumor: Rachel and Finn's wedding storyline in Season 3 is very hated. Most fans are praying that it doesn't happen.
 * While the wedding didn't happen due to Quinn's accident, it's now clear that the storyline will drag on for the rest of the season.
 * Blaine's growing Base Breaker status in Season 3 turned Klaine into this as well.
 * Ron the Death Eater:
 * To put it as delicately as possible, some sections of fandom seem to be under the impression that certain characters are nothing BUT vices.
 * Special mention goes to Blaine's parents. We've never seen them, and no relatively little about them, other than Blaine doesn't have a very strong relationship with them. The "logical" interpretation of this is that they are vicious homophobes who abuse Blaine worse than the Dursley beat Harry.
 * The worst would have to be Adam, Kurt's temporary love interest from season 4. Despite being shown as rather sweet and caring, some Klainers seem to twist him at times into being a huge jerk simply because he interferes with their ship.
 * The same goes from Anti-Klainers in regards to Blaine as well, despite also being a Draco in Leather Pants as mentioned above. While he has made some mistakes, at the same time, you would think he murdered everyone in Kurt's life from the way they talk about him.
 * Scapegoat Creator: Ryan Murphy is often the first person to get any flack for anything disliked on the show. Never mind that he not only doesn't write every episode but there are two other creators who are involved. Although, to be fair, he tends to be the one most likely to play Lying Creator.
 * The Scrappy: Even inGlee's incredibly divided fanbase, where just about everybody is a Base Breaker, you'd still be hard-pressed to find viewers who like Jacob Ben-Israel.
 * A lot of fans who didn't watch The Glee Project find some of the characters created for those actors, and their insertion into longer-running storylines focusing on existing characters, rather irritating. Particularly of note is Rory Flanagan, largely due to the fact that he has yet to be developed beyond "the Irish character".
 * Shipping Bed Death: Rachel and Finn's relationship is seen this way by a lot of people. In the front thirteen of the first season, it was so obvious that they would get together, so the delay, the subsequent breakup when they did get together and the way the writing was stacked against Jesse and Quinn was especially frustrating, especially after Ryan Murphy promised they'd stay together in Season 2 to move the focus to other couples.
 * Ship Sinking:
 * Rachel and Puck in Episodes 8 and 17. Probably not going to stop the shippers. Murphy has also said in an interview that he couldn't see them together.
 * Finn and Quinn in "Sectionals", when . At least it seemed like it did until mid-Season 2, when they got back together only for the ship to be sunk again.
 * Episode 21 sinks Rachel/Jesse pretty definitively...or at least it did until he came back in Season 2, though it never got far off the ground even then.
 * Santana's coming-out essentially sunk Santana/Puck and any other ships that had her matched with boys.
 * Season 3 involuntarily sinks Finchel and Klaine every time it tries to show how great they are.
 * Ships That Pass in the Night: Rory has never interacted with Harmony or Sebastian, and the only time he was close to either would have been a brief moment during competitions. However both the Rormony and Rorbastian ships are strong. At least Rormany is justified, since it's basically a carry-over of Damsay from The Glee Project.
 * Ship Tease:
 * Finn's "Hello, I Love You" number made it seem like he still had feelings for Quinn.
 * Sue and Mr. Schue in Episode 21. That almost kiss? Hilarious.
 * In the promos to Season 2, we saw Finn telling Quinn "I would be lying if I said I didn't have feelings for you" with a sad-looking Rachel watching from the sidelines. In "Britney/Brittany", we found out what was really going on:.
 * Ship-to-Ship Combat: Up to Eleven due in part to the Love Dodecahedron nature of the show and a "passionate" and "devoted" fan base. In the Glee fandom, choosing an OTP is akin to enlisting in a nation’s armed forces and marching into battle. Forums can become warzones at the drop of a dime and the ensuing conflicts make some of history’s bloodiest battles seem tame. There are actually ship alliances, spies, and even strategic initiatives for things like winning polls for a specific ships (either through spamming or the use of bots) and character bashing.
 * So Bad It's Good: Trouty Mouth.
 * And while we're on the subject some consider the show this
 * Strangled by the Red String / Last-Minute Hookup: How more cynical viewers saw it when Kurt and Blaine got together in "Original Song", feeling the scene was sappy and inconsistent with Blaine's previous characterization. Others saw it as something the show had been building to for quite a while, although within them is a subgroup who feels that while their pairing up was to be expected from a Doylist perspective, it happened in a way that was premature for their characterization from a Watsonian perspective, resulting in an early Shipping Bed Death. And that's all that needs to be said about that.
 * Kurt and Blaine's storyline in the last season. After breaking up off-screen because they apparently couldn't stand each other when living together, they get dragged back together by what can be seen as in-universe fan-ex machina. First by Sue Sylvester, who turns out to be a psychotic Klaine fan and her shipper tactics include kidnapping and rape threats. Then they get convinced to get married alongside Santana and Brittany. And what is done about their so serious relationship problems that caused the break-up in the first place? That's right, nothing. To drive the point that Kurt and Blaine belong to each other home, Brittany includes - in her own wedding vows, no less - thanks to them for their inspiring path of pursuing his love and living with his sexuality that helped her, Brittany to come to terms with hers. (Never mind, that Brittany might be the only queer character in the series who never displayed any angst over her sexuality and her interest in Kurt's only appeared briefly in the first season when she was his beard.)
 * Straw Man Has a Point:
 * Even if Sue's techniques are not the most correct, she is almost always proven right.
 * There is a grain of truth in Bryan Ryan's notion that kids shouldn't plan their lives around succeeding in the arts. The problem is that he doesn't stop at "have a back-up plan," but suggests that they should just give up without having any idea of what their chances are.
 * At least one of the Tea Party members in "Homecoming" talks sense, when she says that Puck shouldn't call them losers if he wants them to listen to them.
 * Squick: Perhaps not for everyone, but Figgins getting sneezed on in slow motion was perhaps a little Squick-y for some.
 * Super Couple: Blaine and Kurt are listed on the trope page. Their first kiss alone caused pretty much the entire LGBT-friendly world to rejoice. The actual LGBTQ world, however, had more varied opinions.
 * Tastes Like Diabetes: The Rachel/Kurt friendship scenes come across this way to some. For roughly the first half of Season 1, they were frenemies, and their rivalry included struggles for solos and for Finn. Then, they made up and became friends, which would fine except that there were some who actually enjoyed their previous rivalry. And even the people who liked seeing Kurt and Rachel as friends eventually started to feel like their scenes together started getting overly-sappy and repetitive. To elaborate, the standard formula for a Kurt/Rachel scene basically started to become the following:


 * Many Aesops and character-to-character moments come across this way to some people. The Kurt/Rachel interaction may be the biggest, Tastes Like Diabetes instigator, but there are arguably a lot of others.
 * This Is Your Premise on Drugs: Fame on uppers. Or maybe hallucinogens. Alternately, High School Musical off its antidepressants.
 * And as of "Goodbye", it's turned into High School Musical: The Cover Edition.
 * They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot: "Audition" seems to set up an intense rivalry between Quinn and Santana over the position of Head Cheerleader, including the famous catfight in the hallway, which seems like it will be a big deal that season (confirmed by the creators' comments). Nothing comes of it. Quinn offhandedly mentions she needs to keep Santana off her back in "Duets", but nothing to this effect has ever been seen on screen, and, so far, nothing else has come of what initially appeared to be a pretty significant plot development.
 * The Dalton Arc could have been a legitimately interesting side-plot by showing how Blaine's conflict over "running away" drives him to overcompensate in misguided attempts to help Kurt. Instead, Blaine barely got any characterization because 1) the writers kept Pandering to the Base of rabid Yaoi Fangirls, and 2) at least half of the Dalton scenes were songs. And not even relevant ones.
 * Dave Karofsky's suicide attempt for sure, because of the Klaine Fan Dumb and the writers' They Just Didn't Care attitude. Hell, they didn't even mention it in the "Previously On..." in the episode after it.
 * "Big Brother" definitely has this problem. They had a plot perfectly set up in which ended up being almost completely sidelined in favor of bringing in drama with Blaine and his brother.
 * The Sue Sylvester Bowl Shuffle sets up Dave's redemption and his eventual joining New Directions. That got lost in RM's infatuation with his Marty Stu, Blaine...
 * Ugly Cute: When Karofsky isn't being a douche and all ugly with hate, he's actually not too bad looking and has a nice smile. (This is pretty much because Max Adler is, in fact, hot, at least to those who go for the muscly types. And really nice.)
 * Unfortunate Implications: Just about everything that comes out of Sue's mouth.
 * The majority of the girls in the Jane Addams halfway house are black.
 * As of Season 3, Santana is no longer just the promiscuous Spicy Latina, the other minority characters have been developed beyond racial stereotypes - Mercedes is still primarily the Sassy Black Woman and Mike and Tina seem to exist just to make Asian jokes. Even Mike's larger Season 3 plot is rooted in Asian stereotypes about overly strict parents who push their kids to become doctors.
 * Somewhat justified, as Mike’s father pushed him because his own mother wanted to escape poverty.
 * Many feel that Glee's supposed "progressiveness" in its treatment of gays is undermined by the fact that its two main gay male characters, Kurt and Blaine, are built on Camp Gay stereotypes that are really not that new in television (for example, as noted above, Will and Grace was criticized on the same grounds ten years ago). The show does have two Invisible to Gaydar characters in Santana and Karofsky, though.
 * One of which is transferred to another school between seasons and the other of which is usually painted as a complete bitch and gets reduced screen time since coming out as a lesbian.
 * The discovery that Shelby Corcoran is Rachel's biological mother takes up a multi-episode arc, but Rachel's two gay fathers haven't been seen on the show at all except as a picture in her locker.
 * No longer true as of "Hearts".
 * Kurt's behavior in "Grilled Cheesus" was treated as unreasonable, but was it, really? It would be one thing to tell friends they're not allowed to pray, but they went beyond praying - they made a big show of being religious in his dad's waiting room, despite the fact that no one except Carol, Finn and maybe Mercedes actually knew Burt. Also, Mercedes wouldn't accept Kurt's atheism until he went to church with her, but Kurt is supposed to be the intolerant one? No wonder some atheists got really pissed off.
 * This goes both ways. Some people think Kurt was being needlessly antagonistic to his friends, who were only trying to help in the only way they knew how. Arguably, they weren't making a big show of being religious either. They chose to visit and pray for Burt when he wasn't there (until he walked in unexpectedly). Also, "Furt" later establishes that Burt does believe in God and thus likely would have appreciated the prayers, which gets some people thinking that Kurt seemed to care more about what he wanted than what his dad, who was the patient/one being prayed.
 * Some people were angry that the episode "Home" had Mercedes develop what looked like an eating disorder, and only to be instantly "cured" by Quinn giving her a granola bar and telling her she's beautiful.
 * Speaking of Tina and Mike, the Asian jokes about them are moving toward Unfortunate Implications, if not there already. At first the "dim sum with your mom" jokes were a cute gag, but since then it's become the defining feature of Tina and Mike's relationship and their character development this season, and no scene featuring them can get by without an Asian joke. When Tina asked Mike why "everything has to be Asian", she may as well have been speaking for the fans who wonder why they can't be more than a Token Ship. Season 3, however, seems to be moving the couple in a better direction with the storyline about Mike wanting to be a dancer and his dad not accepting that, although even that storyline is based on an Asian stereotype (that Asian parents always want their kids to become doctors).
 * The "Sexy" episode seemed to give the message that abstinence is completely unrealistic for everyone. Rachel even gets called "frigid" when she says that she doesn't want to have sex in high school. It does appear that it's just Holly Holiday pushing that angle, but no one ever calls her out on it. Emma technically does, but her opposing argument is just as extremist as Holly's, so it really isn't effective. The anti-abstinence messages continue in "The First Time", where Artie encourages three people (including one TEACHER) to lose their virginity just because he thinks it'll make their performances in West Side Story more realistic. When Rachel later objects to this, he tells her that she must have a "strange aversion to fun." Even worse, at the end of the episode everyone thanks him for being such a good director, with no mention of how inappropriate his behavior was.
 * Kurt's speech to Blaine who is questioning his sexuality in "Blame It On The Alcohol", where he states that bisexuality doesn't exist and that men claiming to be bisexual are really just closeted gay people. While it could just be dismissed as Kurt holding the Jerkass Ball, and Blaine does call him out on his insensitivity, the fact that Kurt is validated at the end of the episode combined with his usual history of being seen as an Author Avatar regarding LGBT issues was seen by many viewers as a case of the show being biphobic. Not helping were comments from Ryan Murphy made soon after regarding the fact that Blaine is 100% gay that "it’s very important to young kids that they know this character [Blaine] is one of them", as if bisexual kids don't matter. Especially considering male bisexuality has even less representation in the media than male homosexuality does.
 * The controversy got reignited after "Tina In the Sky With Diamonds", where Santana spends half of her courtship with Dani panicking over having no "real" experience since she dated a bisexual woman, and the other half sighing in relieve that she didn't have to worry about her girlfriend "straying for penis". Between implying that bisexuals aren't "real" members of the LGBT community, claiming that they're unfaithful and promiscuous by nature, and wrongfully smearing Brittany's character (Brittany didn't even end the relationship between she and Santana--Santana did), viewers got angry.
 * In "Born This Way", even after Quinn learned to accept herself for who she really is (as implied by her "Lucy Caboosey" t-shirt during the performance) she still proved to be a massive bitch who bullies other people for exactly the same things that she hated about herself. She sort of learned half of the lesson and skipped the rest. And then there was that weird thing where those random girls (who all dress alike, for whatever reason) suddenly declared their approval and liking of her because she used to be "one of them" (i.e. fat and "ugly" by society's standards), even though she's still an incredibly mean person inside.
 * In "Pot o' Gold", the bullying of the Irish student seems too tastelessly reminiscent of the Phoebe Prince bullyings that lead to her suicide.
 * In "First Time", Brittany losing her virginity when somebody climbed into her tent at camp was interpreted by many viewers to mean she was raped, especially since she thought it was an alien invasion.
 * Even if Sugar Motta is shown to clearly not have Aspergers, the character is still problematic, given that people faking such diagnoses don't seem to be that common in real life yet there's still a good number of people who will accuse actual Aspies of "faking". For a show with such a big anti-bullying message, it's disappointing that they seem to be feeding into a form of bullying.
 * The storyline about Quinn trying to get Beth back was criticized by adoption advocates for giving a bad image of open adoptions, as well as just factual inaccuracy (i.e. once the birth parents sign away their parental rights they're gone for good, so if the adoptive parent is declared to be "unfit", the child is taken into foster care, not given to the birth parents). They petitioned the show to do a PSA dispelling myths about adoption; so far, nothing has come of it, but the controversial storyline also seems to have been wrapped up.
 * Rachel did point out that Shelby is now officially Beth's mother rather than simply an obstacle for Quinn, and that Beth would go into foster care if Shelby were deemed unfit.
 * Some argue that the two gay couples on the show are getting much less screen time/development than the straight couples.
 * And then in that, you have people who argue that the gay male couple (Kurt/Blaine) gets more screen time and development than the lesbian couple (Santana/Brittany)
 * The fact that most of the minority cast don't do that much compared to the white hetero/homo sexual couples.
 * There was a warning before "The First Time" and none before "On My Way". The former had two couples, one heterosexual, one homosexual, have consensual sex. The latter had.
 * The fact that the two main storylines in "On My Way" have either been relegated to a small B-Plot (Quinn's car accident) and completely ignored (Dave's attempted suicide) come "Big Brother" because of Blaine's (thoroughly botched) Character Development.
 * Rachel and Kurt.
 * Blaine's borderline abusive behavior is shown as Kurt's fault in both "The First Time" and "Dance With Myself", which makes the Domestic Abuse storyline in "Choke" sound definitely hypocritical.
 * Unintentionally Unsympathetic:
 * Will Schuester. His supposed virtue is that he is a compassionate teacher who genuinely cares for and puts all of his students first. But it's a bit hard to see him as the sweet teacher he's made out to be after he planted drugs in Finn's locker to blackmail him into joining Glee Club. And after he blatantly favors a select handful of students within his group. And after he abandons his students on their competition day to pursue a personal audition. And after he lets open acts of bullying of his own students go unreported, even when it lands one of them in the hospital. And after he suspends Marley, who always dresses modestly and had suffered from bulimia in the past, for refusing to wear a skimpy bikini in a musical performance.
 * Kurt Hummel fell into this a lot during the first two seasons. In "Duets", both his father and Finn call him out on seducing the latter and not caring that this behavior was seriously inappropriate, but both times, Kurt chalks up their genuine grievances to them just having "issues with [him] being gay" and does not apologize for it at all. Then there's "Blame it on the Alcohol", where Kurt outright denies the existence of bisexuality after Blaine sharing a long kiss with Rachel during a game of spin the bottle eventually leads him to accept when she asks him out. The context more seems to suggest that he's just not inclined to let somebody else that he's interested in define their own sexuality in a way that might lessen his chances of getting with them rather than Kurt being genuinely bigoted however - he mostly claims that it's something gay guys use to appear normal, and he's almost never seen harassing characters like Brittany for it. Not that this makes it any better though.
 * Santana Lopez is supposed to be seen as a hilarious, snarky Alpha Bitch that the audience is supposed to sympathize with after tearfully confessing to Brittany that she is love with her and wants to be with her, but that she is also afraid of being bullied and ostracized for coming out as a lesbian. However, the fact that most of her screen-time consisted of her actively ruining other people's relationships and just being the biggest raging bitch humanly possible means that things like Finn calling her a coward for constantly tearing others down while not accepting herself and her relationship with Brittany during "Mash Off", thereby revealing to their fellow students that she is a lesbian, seem more like Laser-Guided Karma rather than any kind of tragedy. The subsequent episode "I Kissed a Girl" later has what makes Santana act like such a bitch in the first place come out in the open, and she even forgives Finn after he shows her how their glee clubs all support her. You'd think that this would provide some decent Character Development for Santana... and yet she continues to belittle and mock people with a haughty and condescending attitude for no reason throughout the entire rest of the series.
 * The issue regarding how much sympathy viewers are supposed to feel forwards Santana after Finn forces her out of the flannel closet is further exacerbated by the fact that, earlier that very same episode, she and the rest of her dodgeball team went over and pummeled Rory while he was completely helpless, laughing while the kid was bleeding on the floor, and her response to Kurt calling her out on using this sport to bully and how this makes her no different than the people who make fun of and harass their glee clubs is a derisive "Calm down, grandma". Santana's horribleness is amped up to such a degree that there is no possible way that she isn't supposed to be unsympathetic. She even turns out to be placating the Troubletones after agreeing that she should play fair against the New Directions from now on, since her so-called apology to Finn consists of a series of insults, but our sympathy is suddenly supposed to be with her when running out of Sue's office in tears and saying that her parents do not yet know she's gay is played as a Tear Jerker? Sorry, Glee, but it's too little, too late.
 * Unnecessary Makeover: Rachel had one in Season One, which gets lampshaded by Finn. It happens again in Season Four with a lot of fans finding it that way. It's hard to argue against it, considering it does change her appearance from Rachel Berry to pretty much Lea Michele.
 * Even her own self agrees it's an unnecessary makeover when sings a duet with herself.
 * Unpopular Popular Character: Rachel.
 * Values Dissonance: Many international viewers have expressed surprise that this show portrays teachers hugging their students, something forbidden in the UK but mostly common in US schools.
 * Viewer Gender Confusion: Some viewers thought Coach Beiste was played by a male transvestite. In fact, she is played by a woman, Dot Jones. And on the other side of the gender spectrum, more than a few viewers thought Kurt was a girl at first due to his high-pitched voice and somewhat feminine facial features. Now that his actor is older and more well-established, it's less common, though it still happens on occasion for first-time watchers.
 * What an Idiot!: Hiring Terri as the school nurse.
 * It's a wonder Dave didn't just blurt out, 'I didn't kiss Kurt in the locker room!' There's actually a very plausible denial he could have given for checking out Sam's bottom. Namely, Sam was getting a drink out of a water fountain. Dave was thirsty and looked to see who was at the fountain. He saw, and then, continued walking until he found another one. If Santana thought that his eyes were specifically on the bottom, that's probably because that's where hers were. Of course, it probably doesn't help that scene was played so subtly that, even knowing Dave's gay, this troper didn't even realise that's what he was doing until Santana spelled it out.
 * Sure, Kurt, give the guy who assaulted your boyfriend the only evidence of his wrongdoing. Without showing it to anyone who could do something about it. "Now your teammates know what kind of a person you are"? No. They don't. Because they haven't heard the evidence.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not for Kids?: The way so many "family values" groups reacted to the "Push It" number and the negative portrayal of the celibacy club in Episode 2 is a bit more understandable when you realize that a lot of parents of younger children were under the mistaken impression that Glee was High School Musical: The TV Series. (which had nothing to do with the marketing of the show, but everything to do with the surface similarities - musical comedies set in high schools! - and general public ignorance about musical theatre not always being a "family friendly" medium).
 * If the Parents Television Council's uproar about the GQ cover and the more recent one lambasting Lea Michele's choice to appear in a low-cut photo on Cosmo are anything to go by, people are still not getting it. This was even unintentionally lampshaded by the people in the latter case, who said "Lea Michele may be an adult, but to pretend that she doesn't know her fans are 11 is just ignorance." Why should an actress on a show that has had subplots about teen pregnancy and when to lose your virginity, jokes about oral sex, a former teacher turning to drug dealing, and students taking uppers to do better in competitions be expected to cater to 11-year-olds?
 * It doesn't help that Claire's, a store famous for cheap jewlery aimed at pre-teens, now sells a small ammount of Glee merchandise. Including make up sets for Rachel and Quinn, Team Finn and Team Puck necklaces, bracelets, and even knee socks.
 * The fact that they play quite a few of the original and cover songs on Radio Disney REALLY doesn't help them change the idea.
 * What the Hell, Casting Agency?: Kevin McHale is one of the best dancers on the cast, but it's his character who's in a wheelchair.
 * It made a pretty interesting storyline/scene when he was daydreaming about being able to get up and dance, in the episode "Dream On". If the casting director had cast an actor who was actually handicapped, one can only imagine how that dance dream sequence would have gone.
 * The Woobie:
 * For core characters? Let's just cut to the chase: Everybody not named Sue or Terri. And Terri,.
 * Let's add Sue to the list after "Grilled Cheesus" and "Funeral".
 * Artie in Season 2.
 * Beiste in "Never Been Kissed".
 * Even more so in "Choke".
 * Also from "Never Been Kissed", Dave Karofsky who divides people between the polar aspects of a Jerkass Woobie. "Prom Queen" makes him a full-blown Woobie, where he tearfully apologizes to Kurt and is torn between his complicated feelings for him and his fear of coming out.
 * By "Heart", he.
 * And in "On My Way", where he . Wow.
 * Santana in "Silly Love Songs" and "Sexy", where her ice queen facade is chipped away.
 * The episode "Mash Off" makes Santana an even bigger woobie,.
 * Sam in "Rumours". . If you didn't even try to shed a tear during "Rumours", you probably don't have a soul.
 * Don't forget that in "Prom Queen", Sam says his birthday was last week. So on top of, his friends forgot his birthday.
 * Rory. Irish Exchange student far from home who gets beat up and bullied on a near-daily basis.