Rhetorical Question Blunder



"Captain America: Big man in a suit of armor. Take that away, what are you?

Iron Man: A genius billionaire playboy philanthropist?"

- The Avengers

Ah, rhetorical questions. Is there anything they can't do? ...Wait, don't answer that.

A Rhetorical Question Blunder is what happens when a character asks a question that they didn't need an answer to... and then gets an answer anyway. That answer will almost always be contrary to the point they were trying to make. Occasionally this can lead down a slippery slope as the asker tries to salvage the original intention.

Could easily lead to a Rhetorical Request Blunder. Particularly common when dealing with someone who Does Not Understand Sarcasm. Related to Analogy Backfire.

Despite the common use of the phrase when the asker sees this coming, this has nothing to do with Don't Answer That, which is a trope about Perp Sweating.

See About Rhetorical Questions for why rhetorical questions don't work well on a wiki.

Anime
"Yamamoto: You fools, what do you think of the Captain's cloak?
 * In Bleach:
 * 3 Captains of the Gotei 13 "lost" their cloak during a fight, and have been called up by the Captain Commander Yamamoto to explain.

Kuchiki Byakuya: Cheap.

Zaraki Kenpachi: Nuisance.

Kyoraku Shunsui: Fashionable?

Yamamoto: Shut up, you morons."

Comics
"Namor: When were you going to tell me about this?
 * Don Rosa played with the trope in "A Little Something Special". After Magica De Spell, Flintheart Glomgold, the Beagle Boys and Blackheart Beagle teamed up in a plan to steal Scrooge McDuck's fortune and failed, Magica and the Beagles went to South Africa and robbed Flintheart, who asked what he did to deserve that but quickly added a "Don't Answer That" command.
 * From New Avengers:

Iron Man: It just happened yesterday.

Namor: I thought we agreed to keep each other informed of major superhuman developments.

Iron Man: Does anyone know how to say "It just happened yesterday" in Atlantean?

Reed Richards: Fortanu Vasyama.

Everyone in the room stares at Richards.

Reed Richards: Sorry. I thought he was actually asking."

Film -- Animated
"Governor Ratcliffe: Wiggins, why do you think those insolent heathens attacked us?
 * Pocahontas has one between Governor Ratcliffe and Wiggins. For bonus points, Ratcliffe ends his monologue with another rhetorical question.

Wiggins: Because we invaded their land and cut down their trees and dug up their earth?

Governor Ratcliffe: It's the gold! They have it and they don't want us to take it from them. Well, I'll just have to take it by force then, won't I?"

"Scuttle: Have I ever been wrong? (Pause) I mean when it's important!"
 * In Alice in Wonderland, when Alice shrinks back to normal size after calling the Queen out, the Queen rhetorically asks what she was saying and the Cheshire Cat answers. But unlike many other examples, it's likely he knew it was a rhetorical question and he did it for a laugh.
 * In Disney's The Little Mermaid:

"Hopper: Are you saying that I'm stupid?
 * From the Hilarious Outtakes at the end of A Bugs Life:

Princess Atta: (bursts out laughing) Yes!"

Film -- Live Action
""All right, but apart from the sanitation, medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh water system and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?"
 * Life of Brian has an extended example: when Reg asks "What have the Romans ever done for us?" the other revolutionaries begin offering examples, eventually leading to:

"Brought peace?"

"Oh, peace! SHUT UP!""

"Evil: That's a good question. Why have I let the Supreme Being keep me here in the Fortress of Ultimate Darkness?
 * Time Bandits has the embodiment of Evil thinking aloud:

Robert: Because you - (he explodes)

Evil: Shut up, I'm speaking rhetorically."

"Mal: Do you want to run this ship!?
 * Serenity has one such example, where in the midst of an argument between the crew, Mal barks a question at Jayne, who promptly answers, much to throw Mal off of his speechifying track.

Jayne: Yes.

Mal: ...Well you can't."

"Holly: I have a request.
 * Die Hard:

Hans Gruber: What idiot put you in charge?

Holly: You did. When you murdered my boss. Now everybody's looking to me."

"Bubba: Forrest...why'd this happen?
 * Hans, being who he is, proceeds to act like a perfect gentleman.
 * Errol from Snatch has this problem, with his boss Brick Top just wanting him to be Dumb Muscle. "It was a rhetorical question, Errol. What have I told you about thinking?"
 * A rather tragic example from Forrest Gump, when Bubba is dying in Gump's arms.

Forrest: You got shot."

"Steve: Big man in a suit of armor. Take that away, what are you?
 * In The Avengers.

Tony: Genius billionaire playboy philanthropist."

Literature
"Cut-Me-Own-Throat Dibbler: Trust me. Have I ever lied to you?
 * In The Talisman by Stephen King, the Big Bad considers the Bible verse "For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?" He concludes, "It profits him the world."
 * Several Discworld examples:
 * Moving Pictures has:

Bezam Planter: Well, one night last month you sold me a sausage in a bun and you said--

Throat: I was speaking rhetorically.

Bezam: Oh. Well. I dunno about rhetorically."


 * Moving Pictures also has the same The Merchant of Venice gag as Neverwhere (below), with the troll who asked the question still insisting "Ah, but I would if I had blood. I'd bleed all over the place."
 * In Going Postal, Mr. Groat informs Moist von Lipwig that he has to take "The Postman's Walk" if he wants to be accepted as the new Postmaster by the Order of the Post. Moist decides to go through with what he thinks is just a harmless initiation ritual, asking "What's the worst that could happen?" After a bit of thought, Mr. Groat responds "The worst that could happen is you lose all your fingers on one hand, are crippled for life, and break half the bones in your body. Oh, and then they don't let you join."
 * In Thud, Fred Colon comments on the trouble in Koom Valley with the immortal question "War, Nobby, huh. What is it good for?" This being Discworld, where rhetorical questions never caught on, Nobby answers the question with things like "Freeing slaves?" and "Protecting yourself from a totalitarian aggressor?"
 * The undefined-but-clearly-supernatural nature of Messrs Croup and Vandemar in Neverwhere is shown when Vandemar sticks a knife through the back of his own hand, doesn't bleed, and shows no pain. Shortly afterward, Mr Croup makes a comment about "Oh, Mr Vandemar, if you cut us, do we not bleed?" Vandemar's response is a carefully considered "No."
 * In A Civil Campaign by Lois McMaster Bujold, Richars Vorrutyer gives a speech with a lengthy list of insulting rhetorical questions. Then someone answers him.

Live Action TV
"Blackadder: I mean, look at this. What is it?
 * On 3rd Rock From the Sun, Dick Solomon responds to the question "You think you're the smartest person in the world, don't you?" with "For the thousandth time, yes!"
 * In Black Adder II, Blackadder shows Baldrick a potato and One Dialogue, Two Conversations ensues:

Baldrick: I'm surprised you've forgotten, my lord.

Blackadder: I haven't forgotten. It's a rhetorical question.

Baldrick: No, it's a potato."

"Professor Crawley: Let me ask you a question. What does an accomplished entomologist with a doctorate and twenty years of experience do when the university cuts all his funding?
 * This happens in The Big Bang Theory when Raj, Howard, and Sheldon go look up an entomologist to settle a bet:

Raj: Ask uncomfortable rhetorical questions to people?"

"Penny: And what kind of doctor removes feet from asses?
 * Sheldon often answers rhetorical questions.

Sheldon: Depending on the depth, that would be either a proctologist or a general surgeon....Oh."

"Artie: For crying out loud. Who designed this thing?
 * In Warehouse 13, Artie is looking at the Warehouse's electrical schematic and muttering to himself.

Leena: Thomas Edison. Nicola Tesla. And M. C. Escher."

"James: Isn't that adorable? When was the last time you saw a diaper poking out from a Dolce and Gabbana suit?
 * One Mark Wary sketch on The Wedge features his manager asking "How could Mark possibly have impregnated three women at the same time?" Mark, sitting next to him, unhelpfully answers "Daylight Savings."
 * In How I Met Your Mother, Barney's brother shows the gang pictures of his son.

Marshall: Tuesday, At work... some of the senior partners are really getting up there."

"Barney (to the girl he's about to climb in bed with) Who's your daddy?
 * Also Barney once, when he was angsting about finding his father.

Girl: (flirtatiously) I don't know... who's your daddy?

Barney: (bursts into tears) I don't know!"

"Mr. Whitmore: How many of us have lost countless productive hours plagued by unwanted sexual thoughts and feelings?
 * Buffy the Vampire Slayer has:

Xander raises his hand.

Mr. Whitmore: That was a rhetorical question, Mr. Harris, not a poll."

"Xander: (to Willow) Excuse me? Who made you the boss of the group?
 * And in "Bargaining, Part I":

Anya: You did.

Tara: You said Willow should be boss.

Anya: And then you said "let's vote," and it was unanimous...

Tara: ...and then you made her this little plaque, that said "Boss of Us," you put little sparkles on it...

Xander: Valid points all."

"Buffy: How hard you gonna hit when you're blowin' in the wind?
 * In "Seeing Red" Buffy is up against a vampire who's putting up a good fight.

(Vampire kicks Buffy into a tombstone just as she dusts him)

Buffy: (groaning in pain) That was rhetorical."

"Spike: What the bleeding hell is wrong with you bloody women? What the hell does it take? Why do you bitches torture me?
 * Played with in "Crush".

Buffy: Which question do you want me to answer first?"

"Angel: Do you know how hard it is to think with a rebar through your torso?
 * Angel gets in on it too, when Cordelia is chastising him for letting a demon get away:

Cordelia: Actually, I do. Benefits of a Sunnydale education. had the same thing happen as well. |undefined"

"Grace: I'm doing the right thing, right?
 * On Will and Grace, when Grace is getting ready for her rushed wedding to Leo, she and Will have this exchange:

Will: Well--

Grace: What?!

Will: Nothing. No, I just--I'm just saying--as a friend, I want you to know that if you were thinking of calling it off, don't worry about the people out there. Don't worry about all those gifts. You do what your heart tells you is right.

Grace: ...Are you freaking kidding me with this?!

Will: "If," I said "if!"

Grace: The question was rhetorical. That means you're supposed to say "yes."

Will: That's not what "rhetorical" means.

Grace: Are we talking about what "rhetorical" means or about how you're freaking me out right now?!

Will: Am I supposed to answer that or is that rhetorical too?"

"Kirk: Trying to get yourself killed. Do you know how much Starfleet has invested in you?
 * In Star Trek the Original Series, Spock sometimes answers rhetorical questions. For example, this exchange from "The Apple," after Spock has risked his life to save Kirk:

Spock: One hundred twenty two thousand two hundred --

Kirk cuts him off

Kirk: Never mind. But thanks."

"Dean: "Dude, could you be more gay? ...Don't answer that.""
 * Supernatural did one of these in the episode "Bedtime Stories".

"Geoffrey: Which would you prefer: an empty house with a great play, or a full house with a piece of garbage?
 * Community -- in "Competitive Wine-Tasting" Professor Sheffield, who teaches a class critically analysing Whos the Boss, opens his first class with the question: "Who was the Boss?" He intends it as a rhetorical question -- unfortunately, as Abed ends up conclusively and empirically demonstrating, this particular question has a quite clear and definite answer.
 * So the professor moves on to "What was happening?" (a course critically analyzing What's Happening)
 * Slings and Arrows has this dialogue exchange (from "Steeped In Blood"), which perfectly typifies the difference in philosophy between Geoffrey and Richard.

Richard: GARBAGE! GARBAGE! I want GARBAGE!"

"Charles: Will they stop at nothing?!
 * From Monty Python's Flying Circus, the Science Fiction Sketch:

Carol I don't know, do you think they will?

Charles: I meant that rhetorically.

Carol What does rhetorically mean?

Charles: It means I didn't expect an answer."

"Debra: I've sat through god knows how many briefings; why am I so fucking nervous?
 * From Dexter:

Dexter: Because everyone'll be looking to see if you know what you're doing?

Debra: Do me a favor: when you get back to your desk, look up the word "rhetorical"."

"Whitaker: (sarcastically) And how many people do you think you can pluck off the streets before people start noticing?
 * Done in Threshold. Awesomely

Molly: (completely serious) Approximately 300."


 * When Samantha Carter is introduced in the pilot of Stargate SG-1, the men in the briefing room are somewhat annoyed that "another scientist" (and a female one, no less) is being foisted on them for the recon mission to Abydos. Maj. Kawalsky condescendingly asks her if she has ever pulled out of a simulated bombing run in an F-16 at eight-plus g's. Carter's response is a Blunt Yes, and Kawalsky has to stop and process that before saying that traveling through the stargate feels worse.

Music
"Do you like my band?
 * Bowling for Soup's song "No Hablo Ingles", in a verse containing a series of questions:

...Don't answer that."

"Are you out of love with me?
 * The Magnetic Fields' "Yeah! Oh, Yeah!"

Are you longing to be free?

Do I drive you up a tree?

(Yeah! Oh, yeah!)

Do I drive you up the wall?

Do you dread every phone call?

Can you not stand me at all?

(Yeah! Oh, yeah!)"

Newspaper Comics

 * Garfield says this to a mirror in the January 15, 1985 strip when he asks it who the cutest cat of all is and Nermal walked up soon after.

Theater

 * In the musical of Wicked, Glinda the Good Witch enters in the first song to cheers and halloos. She, smiling, replies "It's good to see me, isn't it?" They all respond, "Yes!" She (still smiling) answers, "You needn't respond; that was rhetorical."

Video Games
"Tan Soldier: Colonel Grimm and the Sarge have escaped our forces and captured a blue intelligence officer and...to make matters worse, Sarge found one of our portals.
 * In Ghost Trick, Bailey the prison guard blunders over his own rhetorical question when he replies to a co-worker implying he's stupid with "What's that supposed to mean?", then explains apropos of nothing that it was just an expression of indignation.
 * Done hilariously in Army Men: Sarge's Heroes

General Plastro: WHAT?

Tan Soldier: Colonel Grimm and Sarge have escaped -

General Plastro: I HEARD YOU! IT WAS A RHETORICAL 'WHAT'! (punches the soldier out of the building) Does anyone else have any good news they'd like to share?

Tan Soldiers: No sir! Nope! Not me! Nothin'!"

"Wrex: So tell me, who would win in a fight between you and Shepard?
 * In the first Mass Effect 1 game, Urdnot Wrex has a penchant for these, particularly in his elevator conversations with Tali.

Tali: Do krogan always size up one another for a fight? Even friends and allies?

Wrex: Yes."

"Wrex: Hey, Tali. Your people created the geth, ever talk about it?

Tali: Do the krogan talk about starting a stupid war that got your species sterilized?

Wrex: All the time."

Web Comics
"Beatriz Juruna: What does it profit a man to gain the world and lose his soul?
 * From A Miracle of Science:

Vergil Haas: ...Well, he profits by one entire world, for starters."

"Percy: Is there anything in the world more miserable than a wet cat?
 * El Goonish Shive: Do you have a distinctive impression that Abraham didn't care to hear the answer to this question?
 * Sinfest: Here:

Pooch: Ummmm... A frozen penguin? ... A shaved porcupine? Constipated skunk? ... A toothless beaver!"

"Nogg: Does failing so many times mean I should give up, or that it's more noble that I keep getting up to get knocked down again? ... That's rhetorical.
 * Implied here -- "You been living in a cave or something?" is not answered "Yes", but the readers know it's true.
 * Bob and George: Anyone want to know why I named him Mega Man X?
 * Girl Genius, with Agatha and Krosp, when she didn't know who and what he is yet.
 * The Last Days of Foxhound: "Do I look like a masochist? Don't answer that."
 * Spacetrawler, on this page.

Krep: Do you hear me replying?"

Western Animation
"Mr. Butlertron: What would the real Joan of Arc have done?
 * From Clone High:

Joan: She would have listened to her heart. And then she would've gotten burned at the stake. [nervous laugh] But what are the odds of that happening again?

Mr. Butlertron: 38%."

"Bart: This isn't bad!
 * The Simpsons did it several times.
 * In "Homer To The Max":

Homer: "Isn't bad"? Tell me one thing mankind has ever done that's any better?

Lisa: The Renaissance?

Homer: This is better!"

"Lisa: What is the sound of one hand clapping?
 * And again in "Dead Putting Society":

Bart: Piece of cake. [claps with one hand]

Lisa: No, Bart, it's a 3000-year-old riddle with no answer. It's supposed to clear your mind of conscious thought.

Bart: No answer? Lisa, listen up! [claps with one hand]"

"Mona Simpson [sings]: How many roads must a man walk down / Before you can call him a man?
 * And also heavily lampshaded it in "Mother Simpson":

Homer: Seven.

Lisa: No, dad, it's a rhetorical question.

Homer: OK, eight.

Lisa: Dad, do you even know what "rhetorical" means?

Homer: Do I know what "rhetorical" means?"

"Patrick: When did the fun go away, Spongebob?
 * In the Flowers for Algernon Syndrome episode of SpongeBob SquarePants, this leads to a Eureka Moment when Patrick figures out why he's suddenly become super-intelligent.

Spongebob: Right after you went over that cliff."

"Chris: And what's a baby carriage without a baby?
 * Used in Total Drama World Tour, when Chris was trying to tell the contestants that one of them would have to ride in the baby carriage as part of their challenge.

Owen: Oooh! A SHOPPING CART!

Chris: It was a rhetorical question!"

"Bender: If that stuff wasn't real, how can I be sure anything is real? Is it not possible, nay, probable, that my entire life is just a figment of my or someone else's imagination?
 * Futurama really likes doing this with "is it not" questions:
 * "Obsoletely Fabulous'' has:

Technician: No. Get out."

"Farnsworth: I know this anomaly is terrifying, but, as scientists, is it not our sworn duty to seek out knowledge, even at the cost of our very lives?
 * The Beast With A Billion Backs has a similar example:

Stephen Hawking's head: No."

"Zapp Brannigan: We have failed to uphold Brannigan's Law. However, I made it with a hot alien babe. And, in the end, is that not what man has dreamt of since first he looked up at the stars? [Beat] Kif, I'm asking you a question!"
 * "Love's Labours Lost In Space" has this inversion:

"Stormy: You and I may have to repopulate the human species, Debby!
 * Similar to the Futurama example, the episode Predator of Sealab 2021 has this inverted example:

Debby: That's disgusting!

Stormy: (flirtingly) Is it? ...[beat]… (seriously) Well is it?

Debby: YES!"

"Eddy: Do I look like twenty bucks or what?
 * The bit is echoed later in the same episode with Captain Murphy and Dr. Quinn.
 * Has happened to Eddy a couple times on Ed, Edd n Eddy.

Edd: "Or what?" is a good question...

Eddy: I was born to fleece, Double D! Do you know who I think I am?

Edd: Unfortunately, yes.

Eddy: What could be more important than Master Eddy?

Ed: COOKIE DOUGH!! Yum-yum-yum-yum-yum-yum-yum-yum!"

"Nightmare Moon: Am I not royal enough for you? Don't you know who I am?
 * Maybe he's learning his lesson; in Ed, Edd, 'n' Eddy's Big Picture Show, Eddy, having gotten stranded in the middle of the desert with his friends, says to Double D, "Have I ever steered you wrong? Don't answer that."
 * From the first episode of My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic:

Pinkie Pie: Ooh, ooh, more guessing games! Um, Hokey Smokes? How 'bout... Queen Meanie? No, Black Snooty! Black Snooty!

[cue Applejack trying to shut Pinkie up by stuffing a cupcake in her mouth]"

"Rainbow Dash: Hey! What are you waiting for, an invitation?
 * Pinkie does it again in "Dragonshy":

Pinkie Pie: Ooh, I think I have one in my bag!"

"Rarity: Sweetie Belle, what am I going to do with you?!
 * Sweetie Belle gets in on the act in "Sisterhooves Social":

Sweetie Belle: Oh, we could paint together! We could ride bikes, play chess, sing a song, catch frogs, pillow fight...

Rarity: That's not what I meant!"

"Boris: What did I ever do to deserve this?
 * In one episode of Rocky and Bullwinkle, Boris says something to the effect of "Do I look like the kind of guy who'd lie to you? Don't answer that."
 * Also

Natasha: Well...

Boris: Don't answer that."

"Fred: Have I ever given you a bum steer?
 * The Flintstones:

Barney: Well I...

Fred [covering Barney's mouth]: Don't answer that!"

"[during the Christmas Episode]
 * Daffy Duck while flattering a cop in the Looney Tunes short "Hollywood Daffy": "What's Errol Flynn got that you ain't got? [to audience] Don't answer that!"
 * Kim Possible:

Ron: What? I'm supposed to let you take over the world?

Drakken: In the spirit of the season, yes!"

"Old Lady: Would you care for a free lollipop?
 * From the Chowder episode "Schnitzel Makes a Deposit":

Chowder: Would I?!

Old Lady: Would you?

Chowder: Would I?!

Old Lady: Would you?"

"Jimmy: Would you have a good date with a sandwich?
 * Jimmy Two Shoes:

Beezy: *begins drooling*

Jimmy: Don't answer that."

"Lydia: What's the sound of one hand clapping? (Chicken is about to write but is stumped)
 * Phineas and Ferb: "You wanna live forever?" "Was that an option?"
 * In the Beetlejuice episode "Poultrygeist," Beetlejuice is tormented by a sentient roast chicken from his refrigerator that has an answer for every question which it writes on a note pad. Lydia has the solution--ask it questions that have no answer.

Beetlejuice: And if a log falls on a lumberjack in the forest and no one's around, does he make a sound? (Chicken now getting frustrated)

Lydia: (winks to B.J.) Now here's the clincher. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? (Chicken loses it and explodes)"

"Lila: Johnny, how many times have your father and I told you not to bring back the dead?!
 * An episode of Johnny Test where Johnny uses a device to reanimate the corpses of Porkbelly's founding fathers has this exchange:

Johnny: Um, never?

Hugh: Well, we shouldn't have to!"