Where Do You Think You Are?

Someone makes a comment about X. Someone else replies, "This is Y," indicating that X wouldn't happen in/at/during Y (or would happen there, but they are somewhere else).

For example, Alice says "I hope the bulls don't run us over." Bob rolls his eyes and says "This is Italy. The running of the bulls is in Spain."

Compare with This Is Reality. Might also become a Captain Obvious.

Not to be confused with Who Do You Think You Are?, Who The Hell Do You Think We Are?, or a certain Wham! Line from Scrubs.

Advertising
"Narrator: Now we're from America, but this isn't New York City, or the Windy City, or Sin City. And we're certainly no one's Emerald City.
 * An ad campaign from a few years ago: "What do you think this is? GM Goodwrench Service Plus?"
 * The 2012 Chrysler ads featuring Eminem:

Eminem: This is the Motor City, and this is what we do."

Comics
"This isn't Metropolis, Captain, and not just because our guy works at night. This isn't the city of tomorrow, it's not San Francisco, it's not New York."
 * In Gotham City the police are corrupt, the streets are ruled by thugs with guns and the government is ineffective. Gotham Central was a series set amongst the people who actually live in Gotham, instead of the superheroes who just fight crime there, and they full-well realize that their city is a hole. And not a particularly tolerant one, at that.

- Renee Montoya to Maggie Sawyer


 * Batman also uses this on thugs who think it's okay to use guns or hurt children.
 * Ain't no Jesus in Snowtown.

Film
"Messenger: "This is blasphemy! This is madness!" Leonides: "Madness? (long pause) This! Is! SPARTA!""
 * The one for the ages:
 * "Toto...I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore..."
 * 300:

"[Simon Garden attempts to swing through the window of a bank, only to bounce off of it and falls to the floor, while a police officer looks on]
 * "Smokey, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules."
 * "Could you please keep your voices down? This is a family restaurant."
 * "This is a mortuary. Not a rental house."
 * "DIA. This is Africa".
 * Chef!: "We are in my kitchen!"
 * Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown.
 * And in an early scene in the Chinatown-like Mulholland Falls (which is set in Los Angeles sometime in the early 1950s), a suspected criminal warns a gang of renegade cops that they can't just throw him off a cliff, because "This is America." The gang leader retorts with "This isn't America. This is L.A." Cue screaming guy being thrown over the cliff.
 * Dr. Strangelove's famous line: "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the war room!"
 * "And now I have some advice for you: This is still my land. Get off my land."
 * At the end of the film Maid to Order, the main character asks the fairy godmother whether she was going to fly off in a bubble. The fairy godmother replied that this was the 20th century (the film was made in The Eighties), so her car flies off in a bubble.
 * In The Parole Officer

Gardner:[sheepishly] Toughened glass.

Police Officer: It's a bank!"

"This is the West, not the East. And the sun may rise there, but here is where it sets."
 * Used a few times in Shanghai Noon to point out contrasts between the east (i.e. China) and the west (i.e. The Wild West).

"Buzz: I just want you to know that even though you tried to terminate me, revenge is not an idea we promote on my planet. Woody: Oh. Well, that's good. Buzz: But we're not on my planet, are we?"
 * In Disney's Sleeping Beauty, Prince Philip tells his father, "You're living in the past. This is the 14th Century."
 * "This is where I live. This is me. I cannot allow violence against this house."
 * Used in this scene from Toy Story:

"Mounty: Mr. Ness! I do not approve of your methods! Eliot Ness: Yeah? Well you're not from Chicago."
 * "This is MYYYY housssssssse!"
 * The Untouchables: Upon getting chastised by the Canadian Mounty on his interrogation techniques.


 * "We're a deeply religious people. We don't commit murder here."'
 * "No apples? On Summerisle?"

Literature
""It is forbidden to fight on the Killing Ground." and: "Let's have no fighting, please. This is, after all, a council of war.""
 * "My temple should be a house of prayer! But you have made it a den of thieves!"
 * Discworld has: "We don't need to be patriotic. This is Ankh-Morpork. We don't need to tell everyone we're the best. We just know."
 * It also parodies the famous Dr. Strangelove line with:


 * In Holes, Mr. Sir often reminds the "campers" that they are not, in fact, at Girl Scout camp. There is a sweet bit of irony when, after the novel ends and the villainous Warden is forced to sell the property, it is turned into a Girl Scout camp.
 * A short story by Kim Newman, deconstructing William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, ends with Viola confronting The Chessmaster responsible for all the events, and demanding to know why such things were done. The response is an Ironic Echo of the first thing the ship's captain said when they arrived. "This is Illyria, lady".
 * Quoth Harry Dresden when pursuing "Grey Cloak" using Little Chicago: "You might have gotten away with this in other cities, asshole, but Chicago is my city."

Live Action Television
"Buffy: There are better schools. Willow: Sunnydale's not bad. A-And I can design my own curriculum. Buffy: Okay, well, there are safer schools. THERE ARE SAFER PRISONS! I can't let you stay because of me."
 * On 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer', Willow shares the news that she'll be enrolling UC Sunnydale

"King John : Sir Giles Estram is the best swordsman in France. The Doctor: It's just as well we're in England, then."
 * Doctor Who: 'The King's Demons' (not sure of exact quote, but near enough)

"That May be, but right now my friend... you are in the Dominion Of Canada."
 * The Doctor saying that "You think you can just shoot me?", causing River to reply "THEY'RE AMERICANS!". This is a Running Gag in the episode. One of the upcoming episodes has the gem "everyone who's not American put down your guns." Amy them proceeds to accidentally shoot all over the place.
 * Due South: On a stolen ship drifting north across one of the Great Lakes, Fraser and Ray are trying to stop a bad guy from blowing up the ship. The bad guy boasts that they will soon be at the bottom of the lake, and he in the South Pacific. Fraser's response:

"Cox: You know, crying babies covered in chocolate, people singing Happy Birthday to my son who have never even met him before, the whole routine! JD: ..Where do you think we are? Cox: *looks around and realizes he's at the cemetery for Ben's funeral*"
 * An awesome Curb Stomp Battle between Fraser and the bad guy ensues.
 * "WHHHAAAT!? Am I holding a crock of shit? Tell me something: is this hospital called St. Crock of Shit?"
 * Get Smart: Siegfried's Mad Libs Catchphrase "This is KAOS! We don't ____ here!"
 * The League of Gentlemen: "This is a local shop for local people. There's nothing for you here!"
 * "In this house..."
 * When the Losties find the Black Rock at the end of the first season of Lost, Hurley wonders aloud how it got to the middle of the jungle. Rousseau replies, "Are you living on the same island as I am?"
 * Adam on Myth Busters: "Basically, now I'm about to pour the dog wee on the pile of baking soda, which, if the myth is correct, should cause a small explosion, or, if we're actually on Earth, will do absolutely bupkis."
 * Used dramatically in Scrubs, as Cox comes to terms with his denial/grief over Ben's death and forgives himself and JD.


 * The TV series This is Wonderland had it right there in the title.
 * Seriously Weird does this, Hugo wanted ice-cream and was in Heaven at the time.
 * Twilight Zone, typical Twist. Small-time crook dies, and everything is wonderful, he always wins when he gambles, has women around, then admits he should never have been allowed into heaven, he wants to go to "the other place." "Heaven? What makes you think this is heaven? This IS the other place!"
 * The Wire: "This is West Baltimore, bitch."

Music

 * "I'm on a boat, motherfucker! Don't you ever forget!"
 * "This ain't no disco!/And it ain't no country club, either! This is LA!"
 * "This ain't the Garden of Eden/There ain't no angels above/And things ain't like they used to be/And this ain't the Summer of Love!" - Blue Oyster Cult, 1976

Video Games
"Zelos: Hey, hey, hey! I thought the hero, Mithos was taboo in Heimdall! Storyteller: This is not Heimdall."
 * Funcoland's final ad campaign before they went bust: "Where do you think you are? Funcoland?!"
 * Left 4 Dead: "I hate Canada so much." "Francis! We're in Pennsylvania!"
 * In the beginning scene of Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening, Link wakes up and mistakes Marin for Princess Zelda, thinking he is in the kingdom of Hyrule. She corrects him and explains that he is now on Koholint Island, which is soon after reaffirmed by a mysterious owl.
 * In the second case of the first Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney game, the primary (or rather the only) evidence incriminating suspect Maya Fey in her sister's murder is a receipt with her name written in blood. Phoenix Wright asks Detective Gumshoe whether murder victims often identify their killer this way, and Gumshoe asserts that it happens all the time in detective novels. The detective's certainty wavers a little when Wright points out that this isn't a detective novel.
 * A minor example in Tales of Symphonia:

"Narville: We are prisoners of war! You just violated the Stockholm treaty! Stahl: [chuckles] Stockholm? What planet do you THINK YOU'RE ON!"
 * In World of Warcraft, if you ask an Ironforge guard if there's a mining trainer around, he asks "Where do ye think ye are?!" before giving you the directions.
 * Malygos also asks this of players when they invade his inner sanctum, claiming that he's omnipotent in it. The raid generally goes on to prove him wrong.
 * In Killzone 3, during Captain Varville's execution, Stahl proceeds to shoot one of the other POWs in the head, much to Narville's surprise.

Web Original
""No, I'm not gonna tell you what happened in part 1. It's the fucking internet! Go watch it yourself, you lazy dorks!""
 * In Yu-Gi-Oh the Abridged Series, Tea sees a museum of ancient history, and wonders whether "they will have DDR machines in there." Yami says, "Tea, this is Japan. Of course they will."
 * Also used was the following quote from Kung Pow: Enter the Fist: "I'm sure on some planet your skills are quite impressive. Your weak link is, this is Earth."
 * And let's not forget: "Can't we just call the police to get this guy locked up?" "This is Japan, card games are the only law."
 * In Bonds Beyond Time Abridged, Paradox comments that by his time, Duel Monsters has evolved far beyond Yami Yugi's understanding, Yami responds, "That may be the case in your timeline Paradox, but then, we're not in your time, are we?" as Paradox quickly realises this, Yami continues, "And where I come from, Duel Monsters is still a broken, exploitable mess of a game, and I'm about to exploit the hell outta it!"
 * Used in Yu Yu Hakusho Abridged. "Pokemon? Grrrr...this is Yu-Gi-Oh! town mother-!"
 * Mr. Coat and Friends had a line in part two of this video.

Western Animation

 * In the episode of Arthur where Muffy first arrives at Lakewood, she repeatedly comments about how much classier everything was at her old school (probably an expensive private school). Finally Buster interrupts, "We're not at your old school, fancy pants! We're at plain-old Lakewood Elementary!"
 * The Simpsons
 * Apu, seeing Homer looking through magazines at the Kwik-E-Mart, throws him out, scolding "This is not a library!" We then see him getting thrown out of a library, hot dog and soft drink in hand, with the librarian saying "This is not a convenience store!"
 * When Ned Flanders tries to use a flare gun to signal for help when he, Homer, and their boys become lost at sea during a river-rafting trip, Homer grabs the gun from him, explaining that they aren't on a church picnic. He then uses the gun himself - and accidentally shoots down the airplane they were trying to signal.
 * When Homer performed as "Dancin' Homer" for the Springfield Isotopes baseball team, his small-town brand of humor was not well received everywhere. ("That kind of act might play in the sticks, but this is Capital City!")

Real Life

 * Writer Chuck Palahniuk of Fight Club fame has a short story called Guts from the book Haunted 2005. The story is infamous for being a real life Brown Note, and according to Wikipedia has caused more than 60 people to faint while hearing readings of it. At one reading in New York City, Palanhiuk finished and noted with surprise that no one had fainted. Someone in the front row responded by snorting and saying "This is New York."