Place Worse Than Death

"Leela: Who would've thought that Hell would exist - and that it would be in New Jersey? Fry: Well, actually..."

- Futurama

There are a few places in this world that nobody ever wants to go to. Not that it's immediately lethal, like an active volcano. But its reputation is so bad that being sent there is a Cool and Unusual Punishment. The threat of sending someone there can function as a Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon threat. And willingly going there is an act of extreme bravery, insanity, and/or desperation. In a fantasy setting there is a good chance your character will go there, for whatever reason.

Of course, sometimes this is merely a throwaway gag. I mean, who would want to actually go there?

See also Room 101, Maximum Fun Chamber and Forbidden Zone. See also You Would Not Want to Live In Dex. Compare Wretched Hive. Contrast Death World: A Place That IS Death.

Comic Books
"Spider-Man: Jersey? What are we doing in Jersey? Except, of course, for breaking my rule of never setting foot in Jersey."
 * Baron Zemo sends some of Captain America's allies there (and even says sending people there is a Fate Worse Than Death) during the Marvel Civil War Crisis Crossover.
 * Lampshaded in the lead-up to Secret Invasion:


 * When Spider-Man goes on live television to say that he's switching sides during Civil War, he says that the prison that unregistered heroes are being sent to is in the Negative Zone, which is like New Jersey... but worse.
 * He gets in on this in Ultimate Spider-Man, too. After ending up in Brazil during a fight with Doc Ock (which involved Ock hijacking a plane), he hitches a ride on another plane, smuggles himself onto a third plane, and is finally woken up by baggage handlers. "Ugh! What's that smell? Oh, good, I made it to Jersey!"
 * An issue of The Mighty Hercules involves him telling a group of kids a story about him fighting Thor. He's going on about how easily he was winning until he realises that one of them is a Thor fan and the others are just hoping to pick on him. He quickly changes the story to Thor simply feigning weakness, and it ends with Herc getting punched across the sky. "I landed in the place the Gods forgot - New Jersey!"

Film
"Bartleby: Where were we afraid he'd send us? Loki: New Jersey."
 * Pretty much the whole point of the Toxic Avenger movies - where else would someone get turned into a hideous radioactive mutant?
 * "We will now use the power of the Continuum Transfunctioner to vanish you to Hoboken, New Jersey!"
 * Ironically, nowadays Hoboken is the one place in New Jersey that New Yorkers don't look down on - it's actually seen as quite a good place to live.
 * An outtake from Dogma has Loki and Bartleby wonder why they never tried to leave Wisconsin (see below) before. Loki says it's because they were afraid God would send them someplace worse.

"I thought you were dead. Just in New Jersey"
 * From Desperately Seeking Susan:

Literature

 * Dave Barry Slept Here jokes that Richard Nixon left politics to live in a state of utter disgrace: New Jersey. (He was not making that up; Nixon actually lived out his last years in Park Ridge, New Jersey.)
 * In one of his columns, he says scientists believe "at one time the earth was nothing but a bunch of slime and ooze, sort of like Bayonne, New Jersey."

Live-Action TV
"Mike: I hate Jersey! Archie: Everybody hates Jersey! But someone has to live there!"
 * Almost any time a show is set in New York City, New Jersey's mention elicits a highly negative reaction.
 * Or even featuring New Yorkers. Madagascar gives us Alex berating Marty, saying that Marty was on the Jersey side of the island.
 * On How I Met Your Mother, Ted insists that he has no problem moving to his fiancee's home in New Jersey. Cut to flashbacks showing Ted relentlessly bashing New Jersey, showing off his "I Hate New Jersey" T-shirt, and referring to the act of defecation as "taking a New Jersey".
 * All in The Family: Mike and Gloria are house hunting and Archie, wanting to get rid of Mike, keeps suggesting that he "Try Jersey":


 * Actually, it's pronounced Joisey in the Bunker household, with a thick Brooklyn accent. Joisey. It tends to reappear in various negative contexts, such as the episode where Michael brings back horse meat for human consumption (presumably lawful in NJ but not NYS) and a disgusted Edith refuses to eat horse as if it were the same as eating beef, since "the Queen doesn't ride around on a cow".

""What's the devil doing here in New Jersey?" "What do you mean? I think he lives here!""
 * On The Drew Carey Show Drew is amused to learn that Kate's boyfriend (who claims to be the devil) was born in Jersey, although this could also be a reference to urban legends of a monster called The Jersey Devil.
 * The 80's revival of The Twilight Zone had jokes in least two episodes which explicitly compared the city of Newark to Hell.
 * In an episode where the Devil shows up for a card game:


 * In one episode of St. Elsewhere, Howie Mandel solemnly informs us, "Today, sleep is regarded as a complex and inconstant state, a state not unlike New Jersey."

Music
"I sued Delta Airlines -- They sold me a ticket to New Jersey, ''I went there, and it sucked!"
 * The singer Voltaire did a song about his home state... called "Bomb New Jersey." It's about Exactly What It Says on the Tin.
 * Anthony's Song (Movin' Out) from Billy Joel's The Stranger: "Who needs a house out in Hackensack, is that all you get for your money?" (Billy is from Long Island so Shout-Outs with NYC or NJ place names appear quite a few times.)
 * In the song "I'll Sue Ya" by "Weird Al" Yankovic, a List Song about the activities of a serial litigator, there are these lines:

Video Games
"Crow: Let's have one last fight. Winner take all. D-Mob: And the loser? Crow: Hell, I dunno. Loser goes to Jersey."
 * Def Jam: Fight For New York:


 * One Game Over sequence in Zork: Grand Inquisitor portrays the player as spending the rest of their existence as a sentient and immobile hubcap discarded on the shoulder of the Jersey Turnpike.

Web Comics

 * A recent issue of Ctrl-Alt-Del has Zeke heading some where 'devoid of humanity but where I can observe it'. Ethan questions: 'Jersey?'

Web Original

 * On the photoshop website Worth1000, the word "Hell" is censored to...you guessed it!
 * On Atop the Fourth Wall, in the review of Action Comics #593 Linkara has to explain about the New Gods. When he describes Apokalips, this is what he says "... Apokalips,which is, basically, New Jersey." A text blurb appears on the screen apologizing for the joke.

Western Animation
"Jamie: "You know, Coop. We could always just go get a Mega-Slush at the store in Hoboken." Coop: "Yeah, but that's Hoboken!""
 * In addition to the page quote, an early episode of Futurama had Fry responding to an advert for a "Suspiciously Fantastic Apartment". After Fry admitted that he gave up and couldn't see the catch, the estate agent revealed that technically, they were in New Jersey. Cut to Fry back at the office complaining that not one place he checked was even remotely livable.
 * When Zapp Brannigan destroys the DOOP space station headquarters they relocate to their old condemned HQ in Weehawken, New Jersey. Why they located it there in the first place is anyone's guess, but returning added insult to injury.
 * Landfills were full! New Jersey was full!
 * In the movie version of James and the Giant Peach, the peach gets caught in a storm just as they are approaching New York, and the centipede yells out, "We'll wind up in Jersey!"
 * Megas XLR doesn't misses the chance of poking some jokes about the Megas being sent to New Jersey.
 * Also, Coop's absolute last choice to get a slushie is in Hoboken

"Egon: First it will be all of Brooklyn, then all of New York, then all of New Jersey... Venkman: Oh, what will we ever do without New Jersey?"
 * In Galaxy Rangers one of the Rangers' semi-regular Rogues Gallery has bought all of New Jersey. Gooseman's tone of voice when Doc relates this fact to him is one of disbelief that anyone with that amount of cash would choose to live there, much less own it. Something of an in-joke, as the series was produced in New York.
 * In the U.S. Acres segments of Garfield and Friends, Orson the pig's overactive imagination is so powerful that when he reads a book, reality warps to look like whatever he's reading about. In one episode, he accidentally transports everyone to the surface of the Moon; one character, when asked where they are, responds, "Looks like New Jersey, except with more trees."
 * In episode 7 of Ugly Americans, Randall gets hit by a bus, tearing him in half, with his top half stuck to the bus. Because Randall's a zombie, this kind of traumatic injury isn't all that serious, and he seems moderately annoyed at the inconvenience of the situation... until he realizes the bus is heading to New Jersey, at which point he lets out a Big No.
 * Proving that this trope has been around for a while, in Felix the Cat: The Movie, there is a part where Felix comes over a hill and sees a barren shell of a town surrounded by a deadly swamp, to which Felix says "Where are we, New Jersey?"
 * A running gag in The Penguins of Madagascar is the horror of the Hoboken Zoo in North Jersey.
 * In the episode "All Tied Up With A Boa" there is a news report of a snake escaping from the Hoboken Zoo. When the anchor points out the panicked people running in the background, the reporter says, "This has nothing to do with the snake, It's just Hoboken."
 * One episode has the penguins actually arrive at the Hoboken Zoo, only to find that it's actually a pleasant place where everyone is nicer.
 * In the animated film The Addams Family, the Addams' house is explicitly placed in New Jersy (outside the fictitious town of Confromity), the state described as a place "no one would be caught dead in."
 * Jokes about New Jersey are common in The Real Ghostbusters, which takes place in New York City. For example, in one episode, the heroes are dealing with an Eldritch Abomination that could consume the city:

Film

 * The Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker trio likes this joke.
 * During the extended "A Fistful of Yen" sequence in The Kentucky Fried Movie, one prisoner only starts screaming for mercy when he is sent to Detroit.
 * Airplane!: "It was a rough place - the seediest dive on the wharf. Populated with every reject and cutthroat from Bombay to Calcutta. It's worse than Detroit."
 * In Scary Movie 4 (made by one of the Zuckers), the major difference between Detroit pre- and post-alien invasion is the alien tripods in the skyline, the place is a chaos to begin with.
 * Except, of course, that the skyline they show in both shots is actually San Diego.
 * RoboCop.
 * Then comes the people who want to put a RoboCop statue in the city...

Live-Action TV

 * When Sam and Dean Winchester need to meet with Lucifer in person in order to implement their ill-advised plan, they find the Devil and his entourage in Detroit.
 * Mad TV did a skit about words being removed from the dictionary and Detroit is one of those words.
 * Wayne and Shuster had a skit about a hockey fan who sells his soul to become the ultimate goalie. But at first he doesn't grasp that it's Satan he's talking to, and when the Devil announces that he comes from a place the mere mention of which strikes terror into men's hearts, the fan gasps, "Detroit?"

Tabletop Games

 * Every game line in the New World of Darkness has a signature city. Vampires have New Orleans, mages have Boston, changelings have Miami, and so on. Prometheans, standard-bearers of Blessed with Suck? Detroit.

Video Games

 * In the horror movie-themed levels of Gex, Gex will compare his surrounding to Detroit.

Web Original

 * The Hastily Made Cleveland Tourism videos (see Cleveland below) admit that, for all Cleveland's (many) downsides that make it a shithole, at least they're not Detroit.

Western Animation
"Narrator: Our story begins one morning in Detroit. Police sirens fill the cool morning air. This has nothing to do with our story, but it's Detroit."
 * Inverted in Transformers Animated, where it's the modern and shiny heart of the robot revolution. That is, the technological shift towards the greater use of robots, not a violent overthrow by robots.
 * Although Soundwave does try that at one point.
 * The Botcon script reading "Bee in the City" still had to get a dig in, however.


 * On South Park, when people already in Hell are killed, they simply revive unharmed somewhere else in Hell. After all, where are they going to go? Detroit?
 * Mexico City?
 * Earthworm Jim found it on a list of the worst places in the universe when searching for an Artifact of Doom.

Real Life

 * Truth in Television. Sports venues and theaters create a radius of "nice Detroit" that goes as far as the middle of the street. Beyond that, it's exactly the way you imagine it.

Film
"Jay: So the flying saucers were real and the World's Fair was just a coverup. K: Why else would they hold it in Queens?"
 * Ghostbusters 2 has Venkman calling Vigo the Carpathian an idiot for choosing New York as the site of his rebirth.
 * Any film set or created before Rudy Giuliani and the Disneyfication of Times Square casts New York City as a Wretched Hive the protagonists must endure and/or escape from (eg The Out-of-Towners, The Wiz, American Gangster...).
 * Men in Black:


 * Special credit must be given to future Manhattan in Escape from New York, which has been literally walled off as a prison and turned over entirely to the dregs of society.

Music

 * A Black47 song: "You got two choices mate: castration, or a one-way ticket to New York!"

Western Animation

 * Homer Simpson On New York City: "But Marge, New York is a hellhole! And you know how I feel about hellholes!"
 * Of course New York looks bad if all you remember are the pimps and the C.H.U.D.s.

Film

 * Eraserhead was partly inspired by David Lynch's stay in this city, which he claims that it left him with a sense of dread.

Literature
"Jubal: What on earth is there to do at night in Philadelphia? Duke: Plenty, if you know where to look."
 * Philly also comes in for a snarking in Robert A. Heinlein's Stranger in A Strange Land. Jubal is sending his handyman, Duke, out on an errand that includes dropping off a car in Philadelphia, and Duke wants to spend the night there rather than come straight home once he's done. Jubal is shocked that anyone would willingly spend the night in Philly:

Live-Action TV
"Angela: In the Martin family, we like to say, "Looks like someone took the slow train from Philly." That's code for "check out the slut.""
 * Angela Martin from The Office hates Philadelphia.

"Dee: We're in a dark, scary alley in Philly, we might as well call it Rape Bar."
 * It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia is this, period. Most of the jokes are directed at the characters, but it certainly doesn't let the town off easily either.


 * After John McCain announced that he would "chase Osama bin Laden to the gates of hell," The Daily Show decided to have a correspondent file a report from the gates of hell... which are in Philadelphia / South Jersey.
 * One suspect in Barney Miller is a Church of Happyology leader who tells his congregation they will eventually be going to Saturn, which he claims is Heaven. Fish asks him that if Saturn is Heaven, where is Hell? "Philadelphia", he claims.

Music
"I'd go to hell for ya Or Philadelphia, Any old place with you."
 * The early Rodgers and Hart song "Any Old Place With You" (possibly):

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

 * W.C. Fields frequently referred to Philadelphia in seriously disparaging terms. The final punchline was his proposed epitaph: "On the whole, I'd rather be in Philadelphia."
 * Might or might not be related to WC Fields, but some game show had a set of prizes based on this joke. First Place got a week in Philadelphia. Second place got two weeks.

Tabletop Games

 * Steve Jackson Games once asked its readers to write in their submissions for "useless random tables." The results were published in Murphy's Rules. One winning entry was for "dead character soul destination" (roll d4):
 * 1) Heaven
 * 2) Hell
 * 3) Purgatory
 * 4) Philadelphia

Theatre
""At a time in their lives when most men prosper, I am reduced to living in Philadelphia!""
 * In the short play The Philadelphia, a character is said to be caught in "a Philadelphia" when literally everything goes the complete opposite of what you actually want, likened to actually being in Philadelphia.
 * The play does this to other cities too... another character is caught in a Baltimore, which is "like death, without the advantages".
 * On the other hand, the character in a Los Angeles is living large, taking the loss of his girlfriend and his job in stride - until the main character sucks him into his Philadelphia and he instantly becomes a nervous wreck.
 * In the musical 1776, John Adams laments:

Western Animation

 * Megas XLR takes a shot at Philly, too, it being Coop's go-to place to dispose of the giant monsters he had accidentally unleashed.

Literature

 * Mario Puzo's books have mobsters talk of being "sent to Siberia", meaning upstate New York prisons in general and Dannemora State Prison near Malone by the Canadian border in particular.

Live-Action TV

 * In Hogan's Heroes the Russian Front and Siberia is frequently used as a running gag, often by Hogan.
 * Justified as it was the German Soldiers running the prison camp were often threatened with being sent to the Russian Front, and the Germans were not doing very well on that front.

Real Life

 * Truth in Television - Soviet Russia did send political prisoners there for a reason.
 * Yogi Bear was afraid of this place for a reason.
 * By and large Siberia isn't all that bad, and large part of is is actually very pleasant place, if you are Russian and thus don't mind the winters—Southern Siberia is, in fact, one of the main Russian grain-producing regions, just like Canada's Prairie Provinces. It's main problem comes from being so unbelievably huge, and sparsely populated, which leads to the large tracts of land where there's nothing. If you end there with just the clothes on your back in the dead of the winter, then, yep, it might end not all that well. Otherwise—not so much.

Film
"Robert Wagner: I have to go to... Cleveland. Jesus, I hate Cleveland! And then later: John Candy: What are you doing here? I sent you to Cleveland! Robert Wagner: I should kill you for that alone."
 * In the plot of the John Candy movie Delirious he plays a soap opera writer transported into his own show and can literally write out other people's words and actions. When one character (played by Robert Wagner, who Candy's character calls Robert Wagner in a No Fourth Wall moment) becomes a nuisance he writes for them a hasty exit.

Live-Action TV

 * The pilot of Hot in Cleveland refers to the city very negatively for the most part. The only reason the characters change their mind is because they're seen as attractive there, unlike in Los Angeles.
 * It's mentioned a few times in Buffy the Vampire Slayer that there's a Hellmouth in Cleveland.
 * The Disney Channel movie The Luck Of The Irish ends with the bad guy being banished to the shores of Lake Erie, right by Cleveland.

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

 * Yakov Smirnoff: "In every country, there is a city everyone makes fun of. In United States, it is Cleveland. In Soviet Union, it is Cleveland."

Video Games

 * In the Infocom interactive fiction game Leather Goddesses of Phobos, there is a scene in Cleveland. They make fun of it even in the InvisiClues. ('How do I get out of Cleveland?' 'Millions of people ask this question every day!')

Web Original

 * The Hastily Made Cleveland Tourism videos admit that Cleveland is a shithole; at the end of the second, they admit that "at least we're not Detroit!"

Real Life

 * Forbes magazine rates it as the most miserable city in the USA
 * Ask a Steelers fan what the biggest shithole on Earth is. Most will say Cleveland.
 * In the 1980s, Cleveland's image suffered due to their declining economy and a river so polluted that it actually caught fire. In an effort to promote tourism, West Palm Beach took out national advertisements that showed the two cities' skylines side by side, and asked businesses where they'd rather hold a convention. This outraged Cleveland leaders, and West Palm had to name Cleveland a sister city as apology.
 * Isn't Cleveland one of those Inherently Funny Words?
 * Cleveland has the semi-official nickname of The Mistake by the Lake.

Film
""The networks said we made putting a man on the moon seem about as exciting as a trip to Pittsburgh""
 * Apollo 13, when asked why the networks aren't the showing the astronauts' broadcast:

Live-Action TV
""I know God hates the Steelers because he turned their hometown into Pittsburgh.""
 * Stephen Colbert on Pittsburgh:

"KAOS Agent: We don't want Pittsburgh. Max: That's funny, neither does Pennsylvania."
 * It's a running joke on Get Smart.


 * Another one involves a retired bank robber who was deported... to Pittsburgh. "They really threw the book at him."
 * And then, when you thought Western PA didn't have anything more to throw you in the face, it gets worse... Pittsburgh, bad? Picture Punxsutawney. In winter. In a very, very silly festival. And then, every time you awake is February 2nd.

Newspaper Comics
"Calvin: I wonder where we go when we die. Hobbes: Pittsburgh? Calvin: You mean if we're good or if we're bad?"
 * From Calvin and Hobbes:


 * Minor example: when the topic of "vacationing by smell" came up in Get Fuzzy (the October 30, 2003 strip), one character suggested going to Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh residents, to put it mildly, did not take it well. They weren't exactly shy about taking shots at other places for their odor, though. (Two that were named specifically were Philly and Jersey; see above.)

Western Animation
"Cosmo: "I call it Pittsburg!""
 * In Fairly Oddparents, Jorgen Von Strangle lamented how Cosmo ended up stripping him from being a 4-star Fairy General down to 1 star because of his miraculous blunders. First, with the reasoning that he was making it cleaner, he sunk Atlantis.... NINE TIMES, erupted Mt. Vesuvius and destroyed the prosperous civilization of Pompeii (To make it warmer), and improved upon the "gleaming utopia known as Xanadu".


 * All on the same day.

Video Games

 * In the Fallout 3 DLC 'The Pitt', the city has become radioactive and highly toxic center for slavery.

Comic Books

 * The Great Lakes Avengers are based out of Milwaukee, and treated as something of a joke by other heroing teams (and Marvel's writers); the Crazy Awesome Squirrel Girl notwithstanding. The location is treated with the same reverence as the team.

Film
"Bethany: Were they sent to hell? Metatron: Worse. Wisconsin."
 * Dogma: Metatron tells Bethany that God punished Bartleby and Loki for their crimes until the Rapture occured.

Live-Action TV
"Beth: Hello Dave. Bill: Hello employee! You look miserable and oppressed! Beth: Oh I am! I can no longer take cab rides home from the office! Bill: Excellent! That's good news to me. You see I'm from Wiscoooooonsin, where taxi cabs are feared and hunted for the delicious meat under their hoods! Beth: Comedy? Bill: Or Tragedy? Both: You be the judge!"
 * News Radio


 * Naturally being made in Minnesota, Mystery Science Theater 3000 is chock-full of Wisconsin bashing. For example, during the host segment for The Deadly Bees, Brain Guy manages to trump two Observers who had come to take him home. After taking their brains, thus making them idiots, he decides that the absolute worst punishment he could give is to make them live in Wisconsin where they will work for a small dairy co-op, and be rabid Packers fans.
 * "This is probably the most interest ANYONE’S shown in Milwaukee."
 * An episode of Night Court had Bull asking Yakov Smirnoff why it was so bad living in the Soviet Union. Yakov tells him to close his eyes and imagine he is "standing in the middle of Milwaukee. No matter where you go, you will still be in the middle of Milwaukee. You could get in a car and drive a hundred miles, you will still be in the middle of Milwaukee. You could..." At which point Bull screams for Yakov to stop.

Music

 * The song/spoken word poetry Deteriorata by National Lampoon reflects that "And whatever misfortune may be your lot, it can only be worse in Milwaukee."

Western Animation

 * Homer Simpson, on learning that Springfield is the fattest city in America: "Take That, Milwaukee!"
 * "Lois, everyone has their sanctuary. Catholics have church, fat people have Wisconsin, and I have the Paw Tucket Brewery!"

Real Life

 * Near the end of his career, original Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach John "Dial-a-Quote" McKay incensed Packers fans by saying, among other things, "If a contest had 97 prizes, the 98th would be a trip to Green Bay".

Anime and Manga

 * Cowboy Bebop: "Nothing good comes from the Earth anymore."

Comic Books
"Hell...I'm in hell... Mad Hettie: Nah, 's London. 's like Hell, but less crowded."
 * The Sandman spin-off comic, The Dreaming had one very lost character lament:

Film
"English Bob: I thought that you were dead . Little Bill Dagget: I heard that one myself, Bob. Hell, I even thought I was dead. Till I found out I was just in Nebraska."
 * Unforgiven

"Polly Pry: You made it to Wyoming, right? Packer: Yeah, but I would've been better off just letting those people catch me and kill me. Polly Pry: Why? Packer: You ever been to Wyoming? [cut to Packer in a lonely, barren wasteland] Heh-hello??"
 * "Maybe that's what Hell is, the entire rest of eternity spent in fucking Bruges."
 * "Good morning Baltimore! There's the flasher that lives next door, there's the drunk on his barroom stool; they wish me luck on my way to school..." (Most John Waters films tends towards an affectionate mocking of his hometown, though.)
 * Cannibal! The Musical:

"Marty: It's like we're in Hell or something. Doc: No, this is Hill Valley, though I can't imagine Hell being much worse"
 * Marty and Doc invoke this in the second Back to The Future film, faced with an alternate 1985 ruled by Biff Tannen.

""Due to his 'condition,' Micah was sent on an extended visit to his grandparents in Palatka, Florida. And if there's one thing worse than chlamydia, it's Florida.""
 * In Wayne's World, Wayne and Garth use a backscreen that's flashing exotic locales to which the two make make fun of the stereotypes associated with those places. Then the backscreen flashes Delaware, and the two can't think of anything associated with Delaware.
 * In Easy A, Olive's narration commenting on a character's punishment for contracting a veneral disease:


 * In Labyrinth, Hoggle is terrified of being banished to the Bog of Eternal Stench. Unlike many of the other places on this list, the audience actually does get to see it. Perhaps fortunately, however, we don't get to smell it.

Literature
""GO, AND REFORM — OR, MARK MY WORDS — SOME DAY, FOR YOUR SINS YOU WILL DIE AND GO TO HELL OR HADLEYBURG — TRY AND MAKE IT THE FORMER.""
 * The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg by Mark Twain has a line from the man who "seldom gave advice to anyone, but that it always bore the hallmark of high value when he did give it":


 * In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Arthur Dent says, "When I was little I used to have this nightmare about dying - all my school friends went to Heaven or Hell and I was sent to Southend!"
 * Much sport of the city of Milton Keynes is made in Good Omens.
 * Much sport is made of Milton Keynes by Britain in general. Also from Good Omens, Crowley is particularly proud of his work with Manchester.
 * The ultimate example may be Gehenna, an area near Jerusalem so unpleasant that it actually became the Hebrew word for Hell. Any time The Bible refers to "Hell", it's probably been translated from "Gehenna".
 * It's only referenced as such in the Bible because it used to be a place where refuse was burned, suggesting that sinners may as well wind up in the trash dump at death. It's not actually a bad place for any other reason, in modern Jerusalem it's actually a very pleasant little valley.
 * "Can anything good come out of Nazareth?" (John 1:46)
 * The mock-atlas "Our Dumb World" by The Onion (which was created in Madison, Wisconsin) has a part entitled "Minnesota: Land of 10,000 Retards"
 * There is a story by Isaac Asimov avout a man being exiled, with his attorney insisting that the punishment is way too harsh. In the end, it is revealed that he is sent

Live-Action TV
"Spike: Am I in Hell? Lorne: No, you're in Los Angeles, though a lot of people make that mistake."
 * Many World War II based series will have Those Wacky Nazis threatening to send a subordinate to "ze Eastern Front!"
 * The threat was a running joke in Hogan's Heroes.
 * This has actual basis in real life, of course. The Soviets treated captured prisoners much, much worse than the western powers, and the Eastern front was much more brutal in general. (This was in part because the Nazis were much worse to captured Russians, as well, since their doctrine of racial superiority put them on a lower tier.)
 * In Allo Allo, many of the Nazi characters had a particular horror of being sent on covert missions to Bognor. And on that note, Bugger Bognor!
 * One episode of the American Whose Line Is It Anyway? had as a Scene From A Hat "Versions of Hell without fire or brimstone". Greg presented it as driving eternally in Mississippi.
 * They've also made jokes about Fresno and Seattle.
 * "What's death like?" "Ever been to Swindon?"
 * John Betjeman wrote the poem "Slough" to trash its transformation into a dreary factory town, inviting bombs to obliterate it in the first stanza. This was one of the reasons the town was chosen as the setting for the original The Office. The DVD packaging includes the poem.
 * David Brent also gives his analysis of the poem in the series proper.
 * From Angel:

"Nina: Annie. You were in purgatory. Annie: Yeah, I know. But I've been to the Isle of Wight so it's not really that much of a culture shock."
 * In Being Human (UK), Nina asks Annie if she wants to talk about her experience of Purgatory:


 * Also, after rescuing her from Purgatory, Mitchell tells Annie that they've moved to a home in Wales. Annie jokingly replies that she'd rather go back to Purgatory.

Music

 * Electric Six's "Escape From Ohio" is all about the horror of finding yourself stranded in Ohio. They do also include shout outs to a couple of bands who happen to come from there though ("Except for GBV and Devo, nothing seems to redeem Ohio").
 * According to John Denver "Saturday night in Toledo, Ohio, is like being nowhere at all."
 * And speaking of Getting Crap Past the Radar, "be thankful next time you get weighed ... so wive and wet wive ..."

Newspaper Comics

 * A common Running Gag in the Garfield comics is the titular cat's constant attempts to send his nephew Nermal to Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.

Radio

 * All but said outright of Calgary, Alberta in The Frantics' signature sketch "Last Will and Temperament", in which the late (and very wealthy) Arthur Durham Muldoon turns out to have left his entire estate to its citizens "so they can afford to move someplace decent."

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

 * British comedians of a certain age often speak this way about the Glasgow Empire, a venue notorious for giving acts very short shrift. Des O'Connor fainted on stage and Morecambe and Wise were booed off.
 * Glasgow in general often gets this too.
 * The late comedian Robin Harris often made jokes that calling Hell from Compton, CA was a Local call (as opposed to Long-Distance).
 * Hoosier comedian Jim Gaffigan, after listing somewhat cliched boasts for residents of other states, said of his home state, "We're from Indiana and we're gonna move!"
 * During one of his shows, Jeff Dunham got into an argument with Peanut over whether or not they were currently in Santa Ana, California, or in Hell.

Theatre

 * Mel Brooks's original opening for the musical version of The Producers was Max Bialystock's horrible spoof of Oklahoma, titled "Hey Nebraska". The entire song was essentially this. Lyrics include "Oh, what a terrible morning/Oh what a terrible night,/Things in the state of Nebraska/Never will ever go right" and "Hey, Nebraska- You suck!"

Video Games

 * The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind: "Solstheim? A terrible place, I've heard. There's a boat from Khuul, if you have any reason to go."

Web Comics
""Wherever he doesn't want to be... that's always where he'll go.""
 * Nonspecific, but combines with Fate Worse Than Death in Zebra Girl as the ultimate fate of.


 * In Overside, Surya: a frozen wasteland where criminals and dissidents are exiled.
 * In Blue Yonder, Black Dog is told his pilot, if lucky, is in the rings of Saturn, and if not -- Edinburgh.

Web Original
"BOFH: "Well, coverage in the third world is always a bit dodgy..." PFY: "Really? Where did you go, Luton?" BOFH: "Luton, Hull and Glasgow. A package hole-iday" PFY: "You didn't drink the water, did you?" BOFH: "Hell no, my interpreter warned me about that!""
 * Visiting Gore Calls Pennsylvania 'A Hellhole'
 * The Bastard Operator From Hell does this with Luton.

"Corruption's as high as an elephant's eye... and the meters cost 74.25..."
 * The That Guy With The Glasses Anniversary Brawl begins with The Nostalgia Critic singing an ode to Chicago, (Oh what an adequate morning!) loaded with Take Thats to Chicago that make it sound like this.


 * A picture someone put together shows a guy in full space suit holding a cardboard sign reading "Away." A caption over this says, "24 astronauts were born in Ohio. What is it about your state that makes people want to flee the Earth?"

Western Animation
"Fry: I'm impressed. In my time we had no idea Mars had a university. Professor Farnsworth: That's because then Mars was a uninhabitable wasteland, much like Utah. But unlike Utah, Mars was eventually made livable when the university was founded in 2636."
 * In the Invader Zim episode "A Room with a Moose," Zim threatens to send the entire class into the titular room with a moose, a dimension that simply consists of a white plane with a giant moose graphically munching on walnuts, which apparently is worse than both a dimension of pure doogie and one of pure itching.
 * In Futurama, Fry wakes up from a second cryo-stasis and finds himself in a blasted wasteland. It's really Los Angeles in his own time period.

"Sam: It's powerful hot here. Is this Dallas? Satan: No, but you're close."
 * Animaniacs: Are we dead, or is this Ohio?
 * A Looney Tunes short "Satan's Waitin'" from The Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie involved Yosemite Sam going to Hell.

"Mr. Garrison: And where are you from, Damien? Damien: The seventh layer of hell! Mr. Garrison: Ooooh, that's exciting, my mother was from Alabama."
 * South Park: When Cartman and the boys go to visit his grandmother they pass a sign that says "Now leaving Colorful Colorado," on a mountain background with rainbow. The scenery changes abruptly to a gray sky and fields of wheat and a new sign reads "You are now in NEBRASKA. ...Sorry."
 * There's also an episode where Kenny gets hit by a bus, but doesn't die, instead ending up carried under the bus all the way to Mexico. In the next episode, Kenny manages to call his friends, and when he describes the place he wound up (i.e. drinking the water gives you bloody diarrhea), they're convinced Kenny is in Hell.
 * And in the same episode, Jesus decides to punish Cartman by sending him to a place "worse" than Hell. Guess where?
 * And:

"The Brain:: This is the axis shift-a-Tron, a device that will alter the Earth's axis by one millionth of a percent. Causing a shift in weather patterns resulting in one less day of rain a year everywhere in the world! Except Los Angeles."
 * In one of the episodes of the short-lived Dilbert TV show, two teams of engineers are competing, and the losing team will be transferred to Albany, NY—which is shown as being incredibly cold on the first day of summer.
 * In an episode of The Simpsons, Homer travels to Winnipeg, Canada, and the road sign on approaching the city proclaims "We were born here. What's your excuse?"
 * At the end of An American Tail, the villains are all chased off a harbor and are last seen aboard a ship headed for Hong Kong, China.
 * At the end of The Aristocats, the evil butler Edgar actually attempts to send Duchess and her kittens to Timbuktu, Mali. Unfortunately, his plan backfires and as a result he actually ends up getting sent there instead!
 * According to the film Monsters, Inc., the main form of punishment for a monster is permanent banishment to the human world.
 * Rocky and Bullwinkle had Mooslevania, a place so bad that people would vacation there because afterwards any other place seemed like a vacation.
 * Mooslevania almost became a real place thanks to a nationwide campaign. However, it was cut short due to the visit to Washington D.C. coinciding with the Cuban Missile Crisis.
 * The Brain explains his latest plan for world domination in the Pinky and The Brain episode "You Said a Mouseful":


 * Helluva Boss; in a third season episode "Seeing Stars", Octavia runs away from home, steals her father's Grimoire (from Blitzo, who is using it) and travels to the human world; at first, Stolas and Blitzo have no idea where she is, until Loona sniffs the air and says, "Since it smells like urine and desperation, I'd say... Los Angeles." To drive this home, when they arrive there, Blitzo's first impression is that it's worse than Hell. Plus, while only Stolas and Loona are able to disguise themselves, none of the civilians bat an eye at them - it's a City of Weirdos where the I.M.P.s aren't weird enough to draw attention.

Real Life

 * Truth in Television:
 * There is actually a Hell in Norway, though it just means "Cave." "Helvete" is Norwegian for "Hell".
 * ...Helvetica.
 * ...Helvetica comes from an old Latin name for Switzerland. Now, as per Switzerland being hell...
 * There is also a Hell, Michigan. According to the story, after the first few names were rejected, their postmaster declared, "You can name it Hell if you want to!" They took him up on it.
 * Both regularly freeze over.
 * Also, there's a Hell on the island of Grand Cayman. Considering that the island is in the Caribbean (and has the typical climate/terrain you'd expect) it's a fitting name for a large expanse of warped, pitted, ugly, sharp-edged black limestone formations.
 * The Netherlands also has both a Hellmouth (Helmond) and a Sunnydale.
 * Truth In Television: One of J. Edgar Hoover's ... idiosyncrasies ... was sending FBI agents who displeased him to New Orleans, a city he hated. Seeing as he was a well known racist, you can probably imagine why he'd think that.
 * Particular scorn was heaped upon it by H.L. Mencken: "All other mammals would succumb quickly to what man endures without damage. Consider, for example, the life of a soldier in the front line--or the life of anyone in Mississippi."
 * The phrase "sold down the river" refers to slaves in northern slave states being sold to Mississippi farms, a terrible fate due to the much harsher conditions down there. Today the phrase is still used to mean "betrayed."
 * Twain said about Cincinnati, "When the end of the world comes, I want to be in Cincinnati because it's always twenty years behind the times."
 * In Argentina, during the first half of the XX century, capital punishment was imprisonment in the infamous Ushuaia prison, in Tierra del Fuego, a frozen hell in the middle of nowhere in the most southern point of America. There were even not many guards, as it was understood that anyone so crazy as to escape would survive a couple of days, at best. A lot of them tried, anyway, with unsurprising results. Considering the kind of inmates you would share your cell with, I'd have ventured into the frozen woods without second thoughts too.
 * In California the cities of Salinas, Bakersfield and Fresno have this reputation, mostly spread by residents themselves.
 * In the northern half of the Golden State, Yuba City, though less well known, also has image problems - partly because of its place as the hometown of the 1970s serial ax murderer Juan Corona, and also because the "Rand McNally Places Rated" quality-of-life ranking in 1985 placed the city 330th and last among U.S. cities.
 * In Mesa County in Colorado, Clifton is this, and it is routinely mocked. And sometimes Fruita.
 * The dirty secret among Rhode Island expats: They know the state's population is made up of horrible, contemptuous people, especially as you get close to I-95. Problem is, most people don't even know Rhode Island exists, which makes Jersey comparisons difficult to swing.
 * Uryupinsk, Volgograd Oblast has a reputation of a memetically boring hicksville in Russia.
 * It is mostly in the name. It has a uniquely undignified sound to it. Now, Kolyma and Magadan, on the other hand, are geniunly notorious for being the central hubs of prison camps in USSR.
 * In Greater Vancouver, Surrey has this reputation; when people get more specific they usually paint it as being populated by hicks and/or trailer trash and petty criminals. (It is the car-theft capital of British Columbia, according to some fuzzy half-remembered statistics I can't recall the source of.) Being the largest suburb by a good margin, it's sort of like the local equivalent of New Jersey. There's also the Downtown Eastside, which has a reputation more along the lines of "if you go here you will die (or at least get mugged)" than mere lack of class.
 * Minnesotans think of the northernmost part of Minneapolis as a gang-ridden, violent hellhole. The light rail ends at Target Field, and to most natives, that's where the city ends. That this is more or less the truth doesn't make this any less the trope.
 * To a lesser extent (largely due to size), people unfamiliar with the city consider it dangerous to go on Lake Street after dark. This is mostly due to xenophobia (it's a very Mexican part of town).
 * Marylanders are weird about this in regards to Baltimore. It is, after all, a city that is nearly as corrupt as Gotham (fanfic) but with no Rich Idiot With No Day Job to help against that. There is only a few "safe" parts of town and even then gang violence is a regular occurrence. But Marylanders do generally love their city and it's charm (it's even nicknamed Charm City). Yes, Baltimore is a horrible city, but it's our horrible city.
 * Baltimorons, represent. Hoo-ah. (Although I usually call it 'Harm City')
 * It's gotten a bit better. At one point, we were both the murder capitol AND the STD capitol of the United States. Now, we have a football team.
 * Again ... thanks a lot, Colts!
 * Where else would John Waters and his movies come from?
 * Baltimore is a city that is very much block by bloc. If you want a real sense of it, read The Other Wes Moore.
 * Among Wisconsinites, Waukesha, if not the entirety of Waukesha County, is quickly gaining a reputation as 'Wisconsin's Alabama', which manages to actually slam two places at once.
 * The town of Corby in Northamptonshire has achieved memetic status as this locally, partly because it combines the worst aspects of Milton Keynes and just about any large town Oop North, but also because a lot of its residential property is built on land contaminated with toxic waste.
 * Michigan and Ohio have hated one-another literally for centuries, so it should come as little surprise that, if you ask a person from either state, each ones' citizens view the other state as a hellhole, a warzone, or a toxic waste dump. Of course, in some cases they're not always wrong.
 * In Ann Arbor, Michigan, one t-shirt seen for sale showed the outline of Ohio surrounding the words, "Worst State Ever."
 * Fort Polk, Louisiana, also known as "Fort Puke, Lousy-ana." The Military Clothing store sold t-shirts reading, "Happiness is Fort Polk in My Rear-View Mirror." One wit commented to me that if the Army as a whole were given an enema, the tube would be inserted at Fort Polk.
 * One of the curious ambiguities of military life is that it is not clear what constitutes a place worse than death. A professional officer often wants to be sent to such places -- if he is ambitious and there is nowhere else to tap promotion points. Of course for a ranker a miserable place is just miserable. Even then it is an even match whether someone prefers a pleasant climate with lots of combat or a miserable one with lots of boredom.
 * The Northwest Frontier (the border of Afghanistan) was once the most coveted post in the British Army despite its miserable climate, and its fanatical, quarrelsome, and often sadistic inhabitants. Because of course said fanatical, quarrelsome and sadistic inhabitants were always getting into fights with the imperialistic British and there were plenty of promotions to go round when there often wasn't anywhere else.