Furry Denial



""Cheese makes Mickey Mouse seem like a mouse. He's really not a mouse, you know, he's really more a human.""

- Disney on why Mickey Mouse is never allowed to be shown with cheese.

An anthropomorphic animal may say, "I'm only human."

This is, of course, false. They're not humans; they're clearly of a different species. This may indicate that a Funny Animal is unaware that he is an animal. This may also apply to actions, such as a dog eating ice cream or chocolate without getting sick, or a weasel having a romantic relationship with a human with no comment whatsoever. It may also imply that the creator views the character's appearance as simply cosmetic: as far as the setting is concerned they're "human" no matter what they look like as Disney said of Mickey Mouse.

Animals who are treated completely As human characters are especially prone to falling Into this trope.

Sometimes simply happens because Most Writers Are Human. Can be combined with Furry Reminder for comedic effect. Related to Furry Confusion and Anthropomorphic Shift. Not to be confused with denying you are part of the Furry Fandom. If a non-human is knowingly and ironically referring to himself as human, it's In the Original Klingon.

Contrast Furry Reminder.

Anime and Manga

 * This often happens to Meowth in Pokémon.
 * A particularly funny example was in the episode where Meowth, Team Rocket, Ash and Misty have a Pokémon tournament to decide who gets to keep Togepi. When it's Meowth's turn to duel, he realizes he has no Pokémon. After failing to get Team Rocket to lend him one of theirs, it suddenly dawns on him that he's a Pokémon and can thus act as his own trainer. Hilarity Ensues.

Film

 * Played with in the Special Edition of Star Wars: "Jabba, you're a wonderful human being."
 * Because when the scene was originally shot, Jabba was a human being. Lucas decided not to use the scene until the Special Edition where he could replace the human actor with a CGI Jabba.

Literature

 * A sort of third-person variant. In the Discworld series, the other wizards, and most of Ankh-Morpork, have gotten so used to the Librarian's form (he was turned into an Orangutan early in the series), that it's mentioned if an outsider had told the Wizards they saw an orangutan in the library, they'd probably go and ask the Librarian if he'd seen it.
 * In-universe example in the X Wing Series. Apparently "We're only human" is a phrase there, too, and a non human character pointedly states that while the speaker is human, he is not.

Newspaper Comics
"Howland: Do you know what el legarto means? Albert: (indifferently) A cigar? Howland: 'An alligator'! Albert: WHERE?!"
 * Garfield once forgot he was a cat and shaved off his facial hair.
 * In a Peanuts comic strip from 1991, Snoopy was about to drink from a water fountain at Charlie Brown's school when a girl saw him and said, "Hey! There's a dog in the hall!" Snoopy looked around and replied, "Where?"
 * In an earlier story, Sally is doing a report on animals. Snoopy is initially reluctant to help her because he claims that "I don't know any animals" (this means that he doesn't consider birds to be animals, either).
 * The Dog from Footrot Flats has also once said this. As his name implies - he is a dog.
 * In Calvin and Hobbes, while hiking, Calvin scares Hobbes by shouting, "LOOK! A TIGER!"
 * Given that Bill Watterson cites Pogo as a major influence, perhaps it was based on a similar joke in a Pogo strip, between Howland Owl and Albert Alligator:

Video Games
"Sam: Who knows what effect it had on civilisation? Max: Maybe it's a planet of talking animals ambling about on their hind legs like humans! Sam: Oh, that's just silly."
 * In the "Black Velvetopia" level of Psychonauts, one of the artist dogs mentioned that he's forced to hide in the alley "Like a lowdown dog". One of the lines you have the option of replying with is "Okay, promise you won't take this the wrong way, but you ARE a dog".
 * The Sam and Max Freelance Police episode "The Penal Zone" has Max, an anthropomorphic rabbit, telling Sam, an anthropomorphic dog, that his psychic powers make him the next stage in "our" evolution. Whose evolution, exactly?
 * The comics give us this intentional example:


 * Played with in Sam and Max Hit The Road, where they buy a coloring book. Sam can ask Max if he wants to do any coloring, and Max points out that he's colorblind. Sam then realises, "Me, too." The coloring book can still be used with what are explicitly Max's crayons, and there's several puzzles in the game which rely on colour codes.

Web Comics
"Speedy: I didn't fall out of the eucalyptus tree yesterday, kitten. If I want to be jerked around, I'll find myself a zoo. So shut your yap and mind your manners and we can pretend that we're both real human beings."
 * A Girl and Her Fed includes in its cast Speedy, an intelligence-enhanced koala.


 * In Femmegasm, Sonic the Hedgehog does this.
 * The furry enthusiasts in Untitled were told by a Furry to get a life.
 * Very prevalent in Nature of Nature's Art, as seen above.

Western Animation
"Sylvester Jr.: Oh, father. You're just not human. Sylvester Sr.: Of course I'm not human - I'm a cat!"
 * The Cartoon Network series I Am Weasel uses this trope frequently. A rather hilarious example may be when Weasel said something along the lines of, "They may only be baboons, but they're still human!"
 * In one Looney Tunes cartoon, Sylvester (a Talking Animal) is trying to catch and eat a bluebird, much to the dismay of his son (a Funny Animal). The following exchange occurs:

"Bender: C'mon, Fry, I really wanna see [Past-O-Rama]. You know how I yearn for a simpler time. A time of barn dances and buggy rides, before life was cheapened by heartless hi-tech machines. Leela: But, Bender, you are-- (Bender holds his hands to his ear units and shakes his head.) Bender: LALALALALALALALALALALALALALALALALA!"
 * Futurama had a rather funny example of this:

"Bender: You're my best friend, Fry, I'm sorry I treated you so badly. Fry: Apology accepted. After all, you're only human. (They pat each other on the backs) Leela: Wait a minute! You did it all backwards. (Fry and Bender stop and look towards Leela) Leela: Fry's the one who should be-- Oh, never mind!"
 * Also, we have this:

"Peter: Holy crap! You can talk!"
 * In the first Scooby Doo movie, Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island, Scooby was chasing cats when their owner told Shaggy to stop his dog. Scooby's response? "Rog, Rhere?"
 * Mutant League: When primary hero Bones Justice (a living skeleton-like mutant) suffers a loss of confidence in his abilities and becomes a dick about it, his scaley friend Razor Kid works to bring him out of it. After recovering by the episode's end, a now confident Bones quotes Razor's own words back at him. "Hey, I'm only human. Sort of."
 * To be fair, he was born human, according to the intro.
 * When's the last time anyone on Family Guy acknowledged that Brian is a dog?

"Huey: You can't lock Unca' Donald in your old zoo! Dewey and Louie: And, besides, he isn't an animal!"
 * There was a recent episode where Brian campaigned for equal rights for dogs, only for all the humans around to treat him like an idiot. This was presumably because, other than Brian and rare, one-off characters like his gay cousin Jasper, every other dog in the show's universe is an ordinary animal.
 * Far too many times to list on Arthur
 * In the Donald Duck short "Early to Bed", he quips "Maybe I'm just a duck, but I'm human."
 * Mickey Mouse, besides the ears and tail, is barely a mouse himself. Walt Disney wouldn't let him be shown eating cheese, as a page quote attests. (However, House of Mouse, created long after Walt's death, actually does show him having an affinity to cheese.)
 * In the Carl Barks comic "The Trail of the Unicorn", Scrooge McDuck sends for Donald to help capture the one animal he is missing from his zoo, but the nephews take this the wrong way and interrupt his exposition with the following protest:

"Willie The Giant (as The Ghost of Christmas Present): Fe! Fi! Fo! Fum! I smell. I mean, I smell. A stingy little Englishman! I think I do."
 * Both Don Rosa and Carl Barks famously claimed that Donald is rather a man that happens to look like duck.
 * In Mickey's Christmas Carol, Scrooge McDuck, who's playing Ebenezer Scrooge from A Christmas Carol is referred to as an "Englishman," despite being a drake (a male duck).


 * Ralph Bakshi's reasoning for why the anthropomorphic characters in Fritz the Cat and Coonskin never act like animals is that it would ruin what he was trying to create, which was a more realistic and mature form of animation. This is specifically the reason why a scene in Fritz the Cat where Duke the Crow saves Fritz was changed from R. Crumb's comic; Crumb had Duke flying Fritz away from a car crash, whereas he grabs a railing in the film. Bakshi admits that he wasn't entirely satisfied with the solution, but it kept him from using any "animal" behavior to further the plot.
 * In South Park, Cartman's attempt to prank Butters by disgusing himself as a robot goes out of hand, and he ends up captured by government officials who believe he's a robot with memories and consciousness and has this trope in effect, a belief which lasts up until his Unrobotic Reveal.
 * In The Looney Tunes Show episode "That's My Baby" Tina Russo's sister's baby, Zachary, is never referred to as a duckling even though he is one. He is instead always referred to as a baby as if he were a human baby. Also, he's drinking milk, which human and other mammal babies drink, not ducklings or any other baby bird for that matter.
 * In "Daffy - The Commando," Daffy Duck wears a shirt labeled "Human Cannon Ball" when he flies into Berlin, Germany.
 * In one Top Cat episode, TC leaves one of his gang as collateral for a loan. The lender is perplexed: "A human collateral?" Then again, the only time in the entire series when the gang actually behave like cats is when they spend the winter at Dibble's, and they all jump into the only bed, crowding Dibble out and pushing him onto the floor: anyone with a cat knows what THAT's like.