I'm Going to Hell For This

""Sammy, if you can hear me, our mom was a babe. And I'm going to hell. Again.""

- Dean Winchester, Supernatural, In The Beginning

""All right, then, I'll GO to hell.""

- Huckleberry Finn, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

A Stock Phrase used to lampshade the inherent immorality or tastelessness of an action, a statement, or a joke. The action itself does not even need to be something that will certainly send you straight to Hell. Draw on the Pope's face in sharpie? "I'm going to hell for this". Pull extensive and hysterical pranks on a cripple (such as pushing them down the stairs, wheelchair and all)? "I'm going to hell for this." Ignore the "Keep off the grass" sign? You guessed it.

(Note that, canonically, almost no sin "locks in" your destination; depending on the denomination, true repentance (i.e. you not only apologize, but actually make an effort to stop doing the behavior(s) so defined ), or simply believing that Christ saved your sins is said to be sufficient to change it.)

Anime and Manga
"Nami: Come on, can't you keep one little promise? [Zoro freezes] Now do as I say and I'll consider calling us even. Zoro: [angrily, through his teeth] Someday, you're gonna die a horrible death. Nami: [smirk] Oh, yes. And I'm sure I'll go straight to hell."
 * In the English dub of One Piece, Nami manipulates Zoro into catching bounties to pay her back the money she gave him (even though he didn't spend it and gave it right back).

Comic Books

 * In an issue of the erotic comic Skin Tight, the protagonist says this just before having sex with his 18 year sisters (who are identical twins).

Fan Works

 * In Kyon: Big Damn Hero, Kyon keeps telling himself he's going to go to a very special hell when he does things he realize go beyond friendship with Haruhi, Yuki, Mikuru and Tsuruya. Later events makes him wonder if he's already in it.

Film
"Once bad, what's the good of turning? In Hell, I'll be there a-burning Meanwhile, think of what I'm earning all on account of my name."
 * The opening scene of Pathology (consisting of some doctors making corpses 'talk' to each other) ends on this line.
 * In the movie Hamlet 2, the plot surrounds a semi-desperate high school drama director creating a Grease-esque musical surrounding a "Sexy Jesus" (who is to be played by him). At one point, one Hispanic cast member says to his friend in Spanish, "We're going to hell for this play."
 * In the film December Boys, a small group of orphan friends (sans one) are sneaking peaks at a Playboy type magazine in the middle of the night. The odd devout boy of the group says to them seriously, "You realize you're going to hell", to which one cheekily replies, "Really?", then holds up the centerfold to him. "At least I'll have company."
 * True Lies has Gib saying "I'm gonna go to hell" as he's sending Helen on her "mission"
 * The movie Good Morning Vietnam has Robin Williams impersonating a number of celebrity voices that only my dad would understand (natch). Immediately after impersonating Lyndon B. Johnson (and making less than polite comments about the first daughters), he switches to another character (Gomer Pyle, I think) and shouts, "Oh, you're going straight to hell for that one!"
 * Bill Sykes has this to say in Oliver!:

Literature

 * A non comedic example takes place in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, when Huck decides to  resulting in what some call the greatest phrase in American literature:
 * "All right, then, I'll GO to hell."

Live-Action TV
"Shepherd Book: If you take sexual advantage of her, you're going to burn in a very special level of hell. A level they reserve for child molesters and people who talk at the theater."
 * In Firefly, Mal is warned to not take advantage of his Accidental Marriage to Saffron, who at the time is believed to be just an innocent farmgirl.

"Mal: Oh, I'm going to the special hell."
 * And when Saffron seduces Mal:

"Shepherd Book: How very... special."
 * Later, when Shepherd Book finds out....

"It's official. I'm going to hell."
 * In an episode of Veronica Mars, where she installs a hidden camera inside a confessional, she mutters, "Yep, definitely going to hell."
 * In Fourth Season finale of Doctor Who, Martha Jones is told "You are going straight to hell" (in German), as she gets ready to prime the Osterhagen Key.
 * Friends: In response to a prank on Monica, Rachel told Ross, "I hope it's still funny when you're in Hell!"
 * Specifically, Monica accidentally banged Ross's son Ben's head and he pretended that the injury gave Ben brain damage (forgetting letters and numbers, messed up limb movements, etc.).
 * A Running Gag on Conan O'Brien is after he tells a joke of supposed bad taste, he breaks into a gospel like song that goes, "I'm gonna go to hell when I die..."
 * When the audience starts clapping along, he usually calls them out on it; "What a horrible thing to do!"
 * Shortly after Dean of Supernatural has returned from Hell, he spends some time in the past and comments on how attractive his mother was as a teenager. Then he adds, "I'm going to Hell. Again."
 * In Desperate Housewives, Gabrielle was caught illegally using handicap sign by two men in wheelchairs. While one of them goes to get security, the other one attempts to keep her out of her car. Her response is to get behind him and shove him into the middle of the parking lot. She then says:

"Abby: Care to guess what their fetish was, Kate? Kate: Oh. No, I'm going to hell just listening to all of this!"
 * She then drives off as quickly as she can.
 * In Pushing Daisies Ned brought a dead nun back to life to ask her who killed her. She tried to flee, and so ended up forcibly grabbing her to kill her again before the time limit was up. Afterwards, he commented "we are so going to Hell".
 * A large part of comedian Josh Blue's routine when he was on Last Comic Standing consisted of jokes about his difficulties with cerebral palsy. After a few of those went over well, he yelled at the audience, "You're all going to hell for laughing at me!"
 * A variation in The West Wing: at the Republican National Convention, the vice-presidential candidate Ray Sullivan is making a speech filled with "comedic" dog-whistles about President Bartlet's multiple sclerosis ("the body politic is ailing", "business is paralysed", the US is "just a shadow of its former strength"...) -- Josh and Donna watch on TV, outraged but calm. Then Ray Sullivan refers to something as "so clogged with complications, it's positively sclerotic", at which point Josh loses it and shouts "You're going to hell!" at the TV—very loudly, in front of a lot of people.
 * From NCIS, when the victim and suspect had apparently met on the same "dating" website:


 * In the Leverage episode The Miracle Job, after Nate suggests that they steal the church, Hardison replies "oh, we all going to hell!"
 * Family Feud host Steve Harvey says this a lot whenever a contestant gives a particularly off-the-wall answer.

Music
"I'm probably going to burn for this Ain't no lesson to learn from this Ain't nothing I'm-a earn But it sure is fun (to catch a predator)"
 * Stephen Lynch's completely tasteless (yet oh-so-hilarious) song "Special Olympics" actually includes a statement to this effect in the lyrics, and he usually mentions a few extra times whenever performing it live.
 * This Hed PE song features the line.
 * The Insane Clown Posse song "To Catch a Predator" has this as part of the chorus (though "burn" might also refer to the electric chair):


 * NoFX has a song actually titled "I Am Going To Hell For This One." It's about Jesus coming back, claiming royalties for his use in popular media, then living a drug-fueled orgy of Earthly pleasure while condemning Christians for their self-denial and use of fear and moral arrogance rather than love. Hence the title.
 * "I may be going to hell in a bucket, baby, but at least I'm enjoying the ride".

New Media

 * At the end of Doug Walker's "Aristocrats" video, there is an outtake of him saying these exact words.
 * In episode 43, Ask That Guy explains possible Christmas themed forms of suicide, culminating in him suggesting that one could be sodomized by a reindeer. At the very end of his response, he utters the magic phrase.
 * These exact words are used in a dramatic sense in this page of a collaborative improvisational comic. (Context: The character uttering these words has just doomed an orbital prison to burn up in the atmosphere.)
 * A running joke in the Fark community is to utter this after making or laughing at a particularly tasteless joke. It has become ubiquitous enough that most people don't even bother to say it, just "One ticket, please" or request a window seat. At least one commenter has requested the "bitch seat" (sitting between two other passengers), reasoning that on any plane or bus to hell, every seat is a bitch seat.

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy
"I'm goin' to hell for that bit...and yer all comin' with me! And don't try and get out of it, either -- 'But we didn't laugh at that bit, Jesus! Pleeeease?' 'Shut up, get on the bus with Leary and Scorsese; you're going right ta fuckin' hell!' "
 * After an extended impression of Jesus-As-Twilight-Years-Elvis (with him asking for cheeseburgers and oral sex from Mary Magdalene, while noting that he has a colostomy bag that needs emptying and he just voided his bowels), Denis Leary muses:


 * Comedian/Ventriloquist Jeff Dunham once did a routine about the oddity of having a Sign Language Interpreter present at a Ventriloquist show (and deaf people attending such a show). He likened it to blind people attending a David Copperfield show. At the end of his routine, he says (through his dummy), "We're going to hell for that."
 * That's not the worst of it. He explained how he cheerfully proceeded to mess with them by saying a string of random words, followed by saying nothing at all while miming energetic speech and laughter. The poor interpreter had to follow along while the deaf people were left wondering what the heck was going on. Then again, they were already in Hell, a.k.a. Santa Ana...
 * Comedian Dane Cook has used a variation on this. "I'm going to hell for that one. And you laughed, so you're coming with me... I'm doing two shows there Friday and Saturday."
 * Variation by Jimmy Carr — After one cheap shot at Christianity, he remarked "That seems to have split the room into two groups - one group thought that was hilarious, and the other is going to heaven."
 * Eddie Izzard's historical material often includes Biblical events. After the audience laughs at the end of one bit, he bursts into a song of "Blas~fehmeeee, blasfehyouuuuuu, blasfeheverybody~in~the~roooooom..!"

Tabletop Games

 * In In Nomine, an mortal who accomplishes his or her Fate (which, in some cases, can be done by a single action) is going to Hell after death. The only escape is for the mortal to also accomplish his or her Destiny, which would normally send the mortal to Heaven after death - accomplishing both (or neither) means the mortal is reincarnated to have another go.

Video Games
"We've already packed our bags."
 * In a meta example, many players of Assassin's Creed II said this when they realized that the Final Boss was, and that the Final Battle takes place . However, it's historical fact that was a horrible person, so hopefully God will give all us gamers a mulligan on this one.
 * There is one Flash game where Simon Belmont faces off against Jesus Christ, with the latter eventually being killed by God. The makers noted in the credits that a lot of people said they're going to hell for this.


 * "Isaac...we're all gonna burn for what we did to you."

Web Comics
"Leo: Do you think Sims feel pain? Aeris: You're a monster and you're going straight to hell."
 * VG Cats, re: Video Game Cruelty Potential:

"Zexion: We're so going to hell for this. Axel: I don't even care any more."
 * Ansem Retort has the new show Throwing darts at fat people.

"Schweitzer: Scratch that, first I'm getting a drink. And then? Hell."
 * In Flintlockes Guide to Azeroth, the party's priest utters the phrase after attempting to resurrect the title character's mount and instead turning it into a hideous undead ram.


 * The author's note for Issue 5, Page 5 of Asperchu is simply "I'm going to hell for this." Said page uses pictures of Ground Zero to represent a collapsed building, while the next page ("Straight to the depths of Tartarus") explains that the comic's villain deliberately crashed his plane to destroy the structure.
 * Jon says this in Errant Story, when taking on a mission from the Wraiths to assassinate a priest.
 * In Horndog, Tommy tells Bob this.
 * In a rare, non-comedic example, Shelly of Wapsi Square says that there is a special place in hell reserved for her as she Shown here, but beware, for here there be spoilers.
 * In Concession, Kelly is asked by a theatre-goer if she's seen World Trade Centre. She says no, and she doesn't plan to, and the customer gets angry, saying "I bet you'd watch it if there were snakes on that plane!" Cue two panels of internal shots of the planes crashing into the Towers, while filled with snakes, and then a cut to the artist with his sidekick/muse yelling "You're going to Hell!"
 * In Exterminatus Now, Virus states this, as he's part of the party responsible for slashing an angel with a Laser Blade. Seen here.

Web Original
"Ferr: We are going to hell."
 * Crops up (kinda) in a Let's Play of New Super Mario Bros. Wii by the Freelance Astronauts. pipes!, as Luigi, gained control of a moving platform towards the end of a stage in level 8. When he loses control of said platform and can't change course in time, he decided to play it up, and send the platform at full speed into a lava trap, screaming, "TO HELL!!!" at the top of his lungs, causing a Total Party Kill.
 * A more definite example appears in their Let's Play of The Legend of Zelda Majoras Mask when Maxwell equips the Stone Mask to circumvent the stealth in the Gerudo Fortress. Said mask had already been called "downsy", so they started talking like Link as a person with Down's syndrome. Once inside the fortress (after the cutscene to show it off ended):

"Seiferguy(?): Aaaand we're all going to hell."
 * Also, for the same game, they play "I Would Do Anything For Love (But I Won't Do That)" over the last minute before the moon crashes, as well as the cinematic where it happens. As the moon is crushing the clock tower:


 * The Angry Video Game Nerd regularly reviews video games based on The Bible for his Christmas specials. One of said games is the complete text of the King James Bible on a Game Boy, including a search function. The Nerd proceeds to look up the word "ass", only to find a bunch of passages referring to donkeys and laughs at how they sound today, such as "seated upon an ass" or "dumb ass". His response is "Heh heh...I'm going to hell."
 * When Linkara reviewed a Mr. T comic book and came across the line "It's a crack baby, foo'!" he expressed a fear of going to hell for laughing at it.

Western Animation
"Brittany: Daria, Jane, would you like to contribute to the Tommy Sherman Memorial Tree Fund? We're hoping to get his spirit out of the girl's room. Daria: You know, if you could just get one of those crutches away from Kevin, you could plant one of them instead. That's sure to appease Tommy's restless bathroom spirit. Brittany: You're right! *walks away* Jane: You know you're going to hell. Daria: Anything that gets me out of Lawndale."
 * In Daria, from "A Tree Grows in Lawndale", Kevin accidentally sprains his knee and kills the Tommy Sherman Memorial Tree in a motorcycle accident. Brittany and the cheerleaders become inexplicably convinced that Tommy Sherman's ghost is haunting the girl's bathroom because of this. Hence, this moment:


 * Another episode has Quinn trying to convince people to donate money for her plastic surgery. When she tries to convince a goth girl that her beauty will be something everyone can share, the girl replies "and you're not even the least bit afraid that there may be a Hell?"
 * In a sketch on Robot Chicken, Daredevil teams up with Stevie Wonder against Marly Matlin and Helen Keller in a game show. The first round involves "what sound is this?" and the second involves "name this item". Unfortunately, Helen fails and has to do the physical challenge. The directing staff of that episode all say they're going to hell in the commentary.
 * Played straight in one episode of Family Guy where Tom Tucker and Diane Simmons make jabs at the people taking part in the Special Peoples' Games (i.e., the Special Olympics with the serial numbers filed off) and note that they are going to go to hell by the end of the day.

Real Life

 * Hold down F11
 * This Demotivational.
 * Tarol Hunt,creator of Goblins did an experiment where he listens to nothing but Justin Bieber. This trope was his response to drowning out Pink Floyd.