Being Watched



""Hey... did ya ever get da feelin' you was bein' watched?""

- Bugs Bunny, Hair-Raising Hare

Don't look around, pretend we're talking about Cool Cars or something.

We're being watched.

Guy behind us. Behind us, right? Right behind y-- don't look!

Make to go to the bathroom and then slip out the back. I'll go to pay at the front; they won't see us if we sneak out the restroom window.

How do I know? I'm a Badass swordsman who knows Gun Kata, the camera went Eyedscreen, and my Spider Sense is tingling. Telepathy. Is that what you want to hear? Now get moving before They realize we're onto them.

Advertising

 * GEICO's newest campaign involves a wad of money with big old bulging eyes. Its Leitmotif? A remix of Somebody's Watching Me.

Anime & Manga
"Rena: Someone is quietly spying on you from afar. Someone is constantly shadowing you. Someone is always right behind you, looking at you. Eventually the footsteps will be a little offbeat from yours, and you'll hear one extra. And then, when you turn off the light and climb into your futon, it will stare down at you from the base of your pillow. Silently, patiently, waiting until you've accepted your sins."
 * In Monster, Johann Liebert himself is very good at knowing when he's being watched. Case in point is when he made it clear to Tenma that he knew he was sniping him by making eye contact—from hundreds of yards away, mind you—and giving one of his trademark panic-inducing smiles.
 * A vengeful doll spirit Showing Off the New Body in Ranma ½ picks up a stick to bash Ranma with. He grabs the stick, but not because he's on to her intentions: he thinks she's giving him a stick to hit his dad who's hiding in the bushes watching.
 * In Higurashi no Naku Koro ni, the first warning that you're about to fall victim to the Curse of Oyashiro-sama is the sensation of being watched.


 * In the OVA of To Aru Kagaku no Railgun, Misaka experiences the phenomenon known as "Someone's watching." At random points throughout the episode she get's the feeling that someone is indeed watching her and this understandably leads to paranoia.
 * Pretty much the main plot point of Chaos;Head. Almost every time something weird happens, someone or something will say or read "Sono me dare no me?", which roughly translates to "Whose eyes are those eyes?"
 * It's revealed in Full Metal Panic! TSR that this was actually a reason for a good number of Sōsuke's more paranoid moments while undercover at school. Apparently his "backup" from the Intelligence Division would aim at him with a sniper rifle's laser pointer for kicks, setting off his battlefield-honed instincts.
 * In the director's cut of Neon Genesis Evangelion, Misato is spying on Kaworu from several miles away with binoculars... then Kaworu turns and looks her directly in the eye. Cue Misato going You Can See Me?
 * Conan always knows when Kaitou KID is watching him. Always. Haibara always knows when she is being watched by a member of the Black Organization.
 * This is 's specialty in the Fullmetal Alchemist manga,
 * THE iDOLM@STER - Takane feels the presence of the Paparazzi following her.
 * In Axis Powers Hetalia, during one of the Allies' meetings, six of the seven members of the group get the unnerving sense that an unseen presence is watching them. Theories as to what it is ranges from it being the ghosts of one of Russia's czars to a video tape that has a lot of static.

Comics

 * It's implied that the elves of Elf Quest can sense whenever they're being watched, which comes in useful when they're trying to avoid enemies. Also when someone finds them attractive.
 * Channon Yarrow in Transmetropolitan can tell people are watching when her neck itches.
 * Anatidaephobia - The fear, that somewhere, somehow, a duck is watching you...

Films -- Live Action
"Luke: I feel like... I don't know... Yoda: Feel like what? Luke: (whirls around and whips out his blaster) Like we're being watched!"
 * Star Wars V: The Empire Strikes Back

"Bill: You ever get that feeling when you know you're being watched?"
 * Somewhat justified in that the Force does grant a bit of extra awareness.
 * Blue Collar Comedy Tour: The Movie

"Ellie: There's the shed. We can make it if we run. Muldoon: Well, we can't. Ellie: Why not? Muldoon: We're being hunted. A velociraptor, in the bushes straight ahead."
 * Jurassic Park




 * The Bourne Ultimatum: Impressive for making an entire sequence based around this, with Jason Bourne able to see the line of sight for at least a dozen cameras and avoid them all himself while instructing a journalist on how to avoid them.
 * An inversion of sorts takes place in The Warriors when Mercy tells the gang that she's noticed being watched. She's then informed that the gang knew all along and thanks to her, their enemies now know they've been spotted.

Films -- Animated
"Mayor of Who-Ville: Hey, hon, did you ever get the feeling that you were being watched, and that maybe that thing watching you is... ehhh, a giant elephant?"
 * Horton Hears a Who!

Literature

 * Roland does this when he's in Eddie's head in The Drawing of the Three, pointing out all the airport feds who are watching the suspected drug mule while Eddie's out shopping.
 * In the forth Dark Tower novel, Wizard and Glass, Roland's love Susan can sense when the witch Rhea is watching them through the eponymous glass.
 * In the YA novel The Dancing Meteorite, misfit Kira tries to tell her less-experienced fellow students that someone is watching them... and they think she's crazy and ignore her. Needless to say, it turns out they should have listened.
 * In Dan Abnett's Warhammer 40,000: Gaunt's Ghosts novel Sabbat Martyr, Baen says this to Varl. . In Traitor General, the scouts on Gereon know they're being tracked just before the Nihtgane show themselves. In The Armour of Contempt Mkoll and Eszrah recognise that there's someone out there watching them, while Vadim and Caffran have a similar sentiment at their part of Gereon.
 * In one of the Warhammer 40,000 Eisenhorn short stories by Dan Abnett, a veteran soldier twice has this feeling, which is good enough to make the titular Inquisitor ready weapons and get into cover. Good job really, as they get fired on almost immediately.
 * In The Wheel of Time, characters in the World of Dreams have a constant feeling of being watched. Often, possibly always, they're right.
 * They get similar feelings in the city of Shadar Logoth, because the city itself is aware.
 * In John C. Wright's Chronicles of Chaos, this is a magic ability. Unless magically blocked, absolutely reliable, and capable of detecting even magical viewing, from a distance, and often capable of figuring out the intent of those watching.
 * This ability can also detect electronic surveillance devices, but only if there is someone monitoring them and consciously watching/listening. If no one on the other end is paying attention to the data being transmitted, then this ability will not pick up on the devices.
 * In the Discworld book Monstrous Regiment, it is mentioned that vampires have a highly developed sense of this. As The Igor says, "In timeth of thtrethth a vampireth perthonal thpace can extend theveral mileth". "Threth-th?"
 * In The Lord of the Rings, Gandalf calls Sam out for eavesdropping on him when he is explaining the properties of the One Ring to Frodo.
 * In Warbreaker, Breath gives you this ability, called "lifesense". With only one Breath (which everyone is born with), it manifests as this trope.
 * In Shibumi, the protagonist Nikolai Hel is capable of sensing when someone is watching him. It is not really telepathy and he isn't wholly sure how he gained that ability but he speculates it is a result of his senses being sharpened to cope with the lack of external stimulus after spending several years in solitary confinement. Considering he has several other Charles Atlas Superpowers, it's probably not as strange for him.
 * Herald Mage Vanyel Ashkeveron convinced a type of elusive and generally harmless minor spirit to watch any non-Herald that used "true" magic in Valdemar until a he or another Herald Mage told them to stop. Given that Ashkeveron was the Last Herald Mage for several centuries and the spirits were nearly impossible to ignore, block out, drive off, or even properly locate... most mages either fled or cracked within a week or two of crossing the border.

Live Action TV
"Karen Hall: That's why I had that horrible feeling I was being watched."
 * The Rockford Files


 * Xena: Warrior Princess: Xena always knows when a god is watching her. Usually Ares.
 * In the Highlander series, Immortals always know when another Immortal is nearby. They can sense each other's Quickening.
 * Ziva David of NCIS can always tell when someone is watching her. Tony lampshades this in most instances, calling her on her "spidey-sense".
 * And the first time she doesn't notice, it will be the end of her.
 * In Babylon 5, Lyta Alexander can tell if someone is watching her through a security camera after her psychic upgrade.
 * Rule number one of The X-Files: Someone is always watching.
 * At one point in the original-series Star Trek episode "Devil In The Dark", Spock is able to tell when the Horta is watching him and Kirk.

Music

 * "Returning Empty Handed" by Underoath.
 * "Somebody's Watching Me" by Rockwell.

Tabletop Games

 * Dungeons & Dragons, surprisingly, omitted it... until Dark Sun Sourcebook The Will and the Way introduced "Sensitivity to Observation" power.
 * Not entirely accurate: The rules for the Scrying spells allow the person being observed to notice the scrying sensor. This has been around ever since the Scrying spells existed.
 * Paranoia has security cameras (with integrated laser guns) all over the place. (Rumors of security camera malfunctions are treasonous. Report all rumors.) Oh, and spies planted by Internal Security, secret societies, other service groups jealously guarding their spheres of influence... you get the idea. The XP edition introduces a standard game mechanic for just how closely any given area is being monitored.

Video Games
""Hey! You there! Peeping at my thoughts, huh? I know you are! Well, if you think you can mind-control me or something, you're sorely mistaken!""
 * In The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, one of the standard voice files for the Dark Elves, if they nearly detected the player, was: "Someone's watching me. I can tell."
 * Alma is fucking made of this trope.
 * When you read people's minds in The World Ends With You, you might come across that one person who thinks,


 * Since you're being chased by ninja, everybody in Yo-Jin-Bo gets this feeling all the time. And if you spy on Muneshige and Mon-Mon in the hot spring, they'll say this about you.
 * GLaDOS's cameras are everywhere in Portal, and the walls in the some of the hidden rooms have crude drawings of said cameras with "SHE'S WATCHING YOU" scribbled on the wall.
 * The surveillance in Mirrors Edge is extensive, however, the protagonist specializes in escaping the authorities despite them knowing exactly where she is.
 * In web-game Dragonstone, the genre-savvy innkeeper uses this phrase to warn you about the upcoming new enemy type.
 * Two words: Ceiling Peon.
 * Apparently, Gabe Newell is watching you!!
 * In Oblivion and Fallout3 you can tell if you are being watched. Also most games with a stealth system.

Visual Novels

 * Subverted in Higurashi no Naku Koro ni. Characters who have come under "Oyashiro-sama's curse" tend to say that it's like a shadow constantly on their backs, like they're always being watched..
 * In a Double Subversion, it turns out that
 * The group suspects they are being watched by "Zero" in Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors and thus decide to give themselves aliases, lest he/she find out and come after their families..

Web Comics

 * One of Nanase's spells in El Goonish Shive has more or less this effect.
 * At one point in Dominic Deegan, Quilt attempts to scry for Stunt. He screws it up and ends up looking straight up someone's skirt... Cue Pamela asking, "Does anyone else feel like they're being watched?"
 * Gunnerkrigg Court does not track Zimmy even though she's a bit unsafe to be around. Because she feels even the staring of a robot's camera and it annoys the hell out of her.
 * Based on Real Life events, This Scandinavia and The World comic.

Web Original

 * Everyone in Marble Hornets.
 * LOLcats:
 * Ceiling Cat is watching you masturbate.
 * I see what you did there.
 * The cast of Sevenshot Kid.

Western Animation
"Bugs Bunny: Listen, Dracula... Have you ever had the feeling you were being watched? Like the eyes of strange things are upon you? Look, out there in the audience..."
 * Hair-Raising Hare

"SpongeBob: (while being followed) It feels like... someone... wants to sell me something!"
 * SpongeBob SquarePants: Patchy the pirate and Polly the parrot are arguing about SpongeBob. Cut to SpongeBob in the Krusty Krab, saying, "I just have this strange feeling that a pirate and a parrot are arguing about me... and the parrot is winning!"
 * Also parodied and subverted with:

"Edd: Ed, please! Someone may be watching..."
 * In The Penguins of Madagascar the entire episode "Tangled in the Web" is a "being watched" moment. (There are webcams everywhere.)
 * The same episode starts with a close up of Skipper (the leader penguin) saying something to the effect of "Ever get the feelings someone is watching your every move?" The camera zooms out to show the other three penguins standing very close to him in circle, all staring at him.
 * In The Simpsons episode "In Marge We Trust", Bart, having discovered a Japanese advertising mascot in Homer's likeness, suggests that the family is being spied on. Marge insists that "no one is watching us", and the family resume eating dinner, glancing around uneasily as they do.
 * Jonny Quest TOS episode "The Fraudulent Volcano". While taking Jonny and Hadji to rescue Dr. Quest and Race Bannon, the sergeant says that he has a feeling they're being watched.
 * Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy, episode "Fa, La, La, La, Ed":
 * Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy, episode "Fa, La, La, La, Ed":


 * The Venture Brothers pilot in the image above, played for laughs of course.

Real Life

 * The inexplicable sensation that someone is staring at you is a real phenomenon that people experience in everyday life. There are even scientific studies corroborating it. Evidence tends to support that the ability to sense directed attention from other people is a real sense and it's surpisingly accurate, being correct more often than not.

Now, time to give them a good poke in the eye.