You Never Did That for Me

A Stock Phrase used to compare the difference between the way the speaker and a third character are treated. This is often used to imply that the speaker is not valued as much by the subject in question, and can become a source of Angst in the relationship.

This can be shown in a number of different situations, including:


 * Someone complaining their (ex) significant other is willing to go farther for a current or former lover than they would for the speaker.
 * A child lamenting that their parent treats a sibling more favorably.
 * A friend feels that they are the odd-man-out amongst their group.

When this phrase is used in the context of an ongoing romantic relationship, this could indicate the moment in which the speaker realizes that their feelings are not fully reciprocated, and lead to a Make Up or Break Up dilemma. If it is instead used by an ex-lover, it can serve to show the audience that the current pairing is True Love after all.

This is very common in Netorare Genre (or Cuckold) stories, where it is used to further the humiliation of the cuckolded party by showing how much dominant the lover is.

Note that while this is often shown in a dramatic sense, it's also commonly Played for Laughs as one friend uses this phrase on another in a joking way (usually with an "I'm joking" added in.)

This Stock Phrase commonly leads to the stock response "You never asked."

Film
"Lucy: "You never picked up my brother from the airport!" Logan: "But, you never asked me to!" Lucy: "... that's because I knew you'd say no.""
 * |Dead Air 2009: Used by Lucy when she overhears her ex, Logan, promise to pick up his current wife's brother from the airport.

"Cypher: "I don't remember you ever bringing me dinner.""
 * The Matrix: Trinity has just brought Neo his dinner and Cypher decides to tease her about her obvious attraction to him.


 * Played for Laughs in Airplane!: When her husband has a second cup of coffee, the wife (listed in the credits as "Mrs. Hammen") says, "That's funny, Jim never has a second cup of coffee at home." (Later, when he's sick and hurling into the barf bag, she says, "Jim never vomits at home...")
 * This was a parody of a Yuban commercial from the late 1970s that played this trope straight. The wife is pained to discover that her coffee doesn't measure up to the party-thrower's coffee, because her husband thinks it's worth having a second cup of (and perhaps is thinking of dumping her for the hot blonde party-thrower with the superior coffee-making skills—she'd better go buy some Yuban now for the sake of her marriage!).

Literature

 * Played with early in the Belgariad, before Garion gets his big reveal. Garion and Ce'Nedra are talking about the girl Garion probably would have married had things gone another way, and Garion says it's for the best because she's not someone you can ask to sleep on the ground. Ce'Nedra points out that the group had never hesitated to ask her to sleep on the ground.
 * For the record, his answer is perfect: "I guess you're stronger."

Live Action TV
"Cordelia: "There you go, off to save the great Buffy again... I bet you'd never do that for me...""
 * Buffy the Vampire Slayer: While Xander and Cordelia's relationship was still a secret to the rest of the scoobies, Cordelia protested as Xander declared that he was off to help Buffy out of yet another sticky situation.

"Janeway: *mock indignant* You never brought ME tea!"
 * which is quasi-ironic, since things threatening Buffy in Sunnydale routinely would have become huge problems for everyone else really quickly. So Xander was, in fact, saving Cordelia at the same time as Buffy.
 * Played for Laughs in an episode of Star Trek: Voyager where Janeway, upon learning that her best friend Tuvok used to make tea for then-Captain Sulu, jokingly complains that he never made her any tea.

"Q: "You hit me! Picard never hit me!""
 * Also Played for Laughs in an episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine:


 * In the episode of Monk where Sharona and Natalie meet, Sharona finds out that Monk pays Natalie a lot more than he paid her. Thus she complains that Monk never paid her that much.
 * In How I Met Your Mother, in the episode where Barney puts together the super-date in order to bang J-Lo, Robin laments that he never went to similar lengths for her, even though they had been in a relationship together. When Barney meets his
 * Though the exact stock phrase isn't used, the concept appears several times in Coupling. Jane's reaction to this trope feeds her story arc in the "Inferno" episode.
 * Subverted in the episode "The Cupboard of Patrick's Love" when Steve is watching what he believes to be Patrick's sex tape with Susan. It turns out to not be her.
 * In Get Smart, 99 tells a man her name, inciting her ignorant partner Max's jealousy. She matter-of-factly replies, "You never asked me."
 * In an episode of Two and A Half Men, Charlie spends most of the episode teaching Jake how to behave at his first "boy-girl party". Eventually, Alan complains about how Charlie never taught him anything, and basically left him on his own, and suffered socially for it. Charlie does seem remorseful for this, but mentions how he was just a stupid teenager at the time, and didn't want to hang out with his little brother.
 * The first season of Boardwalk Empire has an example. Jimmy is like a son to Villain Protagonist and Corrupt Politician Nucky Thompson. When Jimmy gets in trouble with the law in a way that could potentially blow Nucky's interest in the illegal alcohol trade, Nucky doesn't directly help Jimmy but he doesn't cut him loose either, instead offering Jimmy a little cash and a chance to jump town. After Jimmy leaves, Nucky's brother/Dragon Eli rhetorically wonders if he would get the same slack.
 * Played With on Roseanne: Jackie divorces Fred for never wanting to try new things or do anything exciting, and afterward he starts taking up hobbies like skydiving. There's no other woman involved (that this viewer recalls, anyway), but it still irks her.

Manga
"Akane: He never does anything that nice for me!"
 * Ranma ½: When Ranma offers to give Ukyo a piggyback ride, Akane becomes jealous and irritable.

Mythology & Religion

 * The Bible: Happens at the end of the parable of The Prodigal Son, where the brother who didn't leave home and waste all his money wonders why he doesn't get a fatted calf, etc., etc.
 * The actual end of the parable is the father answering with the next stock phrase, "You never asked".
 * The brother doesn't exactly get hosed, though; the father will still bequeath everything he owns to the loyal son, but for now he's just rejoicing that the prodigal son came home.