"Weird Al" Effect: Difference between revisions

BOT: Replaced link(s) to "The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy" with link(s) to "The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy"
(BOT: Replaced link(s) to "The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy" with link(s) to "The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy")
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 7:
 
Related to the concept of a [[Forgotten Trope]], except it is not tropes but works or personalities that have been forgotten. Could be an extreme expression of [[Rule of Funny]] (The music may not have had much staying power, but at least the parody is funny). See also [[Adaptation Displacement]], [[Popcultural Osmosis]], [[Older Than They Think]], [[Coconut Effect]], [[Covered Up]] and [[Revival by Commercialization]].
 
Not to be confused with some people's tendency to attribute all parody songs to "Weird Al", which is [[Misattributed Song]].
 
{{examples}}
Line 156 ⟶ 158:
** Actually, when Elizabeth Taylor first walks into the house, and her character spontaneously says "What a dump," her delivery is just like Bette Davis's. It's only after she asks her husband where the line is from, and repeats it several times that she exaggerates it. She escalates both her nagging and her delivery, and in fact, isn't really attempting to accurately imitate Bette Davis in the first place.
*** Taylor and Richard Burton have a long and meaningless discussion where they try to remember the name of the movie. They remember every other detail, including plot minutiae, the stars, Bette Davis and Joseph Cotten, quotes from the movie, but not the title. They even remember that it was a Warner Bros. picture. ''[[Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?]]'' is also a Warner Bros. film.
* Many of the movies and cultural references mentioned in ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]''{{'}}s opening song "Science Fiction Double Feature" (as well as references throughout) are completely lost on the younger fans of RHPSthe film.
* ''[[Full Metal Jacket]]'': Mention the name "Gomer Pyle" to someone. A younger person will probably think of " {{spoiler|the fat Marine recruit who blows his brains out}}" instead of "the gas station worker from ''[[The Andy Griffith Show]]'' who got a spin off sitcom where he was in the Marines" (Which is where the name came from and why Gunny Hartman gives it to him).
* How many people remember "I Can't Turn You Loose" or the ''[[Peter Gunn]]'' Theme as anything other than the wacky chase music and walking around music (respectively) from ''[[The Blues Brothers]]''?
** Moreover, people tend to recognize the latter from the classic arcade game ''[[Spy Hunter]]'' then from the show itself.
*** Sopranos fans recognize it as a song mixed with "Every Breath You Take".
* The dialog between Han and Leia in "''[[The Empire Strikes Back"]]'' that includes the line "I happen to like nice men" matches similar dialog from "''[[Gone With the Wind"]]'' almost exactly:
{{quote|"Scarlett, you do like me, don't you?"
That was more like what she was expecting.
Line 175 ⟶ 177:
** Unless he's an anime fan, in which case he'll think of ''[[The Big O]]''.
* [[I Can See My House From Here]] most likely didn't originate from [[Hot Shots]]. But, good luck finding someone who knows where it '''did''' come from...
* The afterburners on the airship from ''[[The Mummy Trilogy|The Mummy Returns]]'' are a [[Call Back]] to the turbos from ''[[Airwolf]]'', which in turn are a [[Call Back]] to ''[[Battlestar Galactica Classic]](1978 TV series)|the original ''Battlestar Galactica'']].
* Everybody knows [[Die Hard|John McClane]]'s catchphrase "Yippie[[Yippee Ki-KaiYay!|Yippee-Ki-Yay]], [[Precision F-Strike|motherfucker]]!", but few now remember that the line (or at least the "YippieYippee-KaiKi-Yay" part) was derived from the western song "Git Along, Little Dogies".
 
== [[Literature]] ==
Line 355 ⟶ 357:
* When hearing Bill Haley and the Comets music to "Rock Around the Clock," do you expect to hear: "Sunday, Monday, [[Happy Days]]"?
* There was once a Russian musical piece called "Days of our life". They had to stop playing it because whenever they did, ''everyone was laughing at remembering the parody''. Today, the music is recognizable, and most people at least remember the first lines of the parody ("''A large crocodile lady was walking on the streets''").
* In Brazil, a certain child's song ("Criança feliz, feliz a cantar. Alegre a embalar seu sonho infantil."<ref>Happy child, happy and singing. Joyful in going through its juvenile dream.</ref>) is overshadowed by its parody version ("Criança feliz, quebrou o nariz, foi pro hospital, tomar Sonrisal...".<ref>Happy child, broke his nose, went to the hospital, to drink Sonrisal... (BTW, Sonrisal is [[You Fail Pharmacology Forever|an effervescent antacid]])</ref> A line of the latter was even used in a popular [[Pato Fu]] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KH6253M8sMs song].
* Even though he had a long solo career, wrote ''entire albums'' for Frank Sinatra and The 4 Seasons, and became a prolific ad jingle writer, Jake Holmes is mainly remembered now because [[Led Zeppelin]] (ahem) [[Plagiarism|"borrowed"]] his song "Dazed and Confused".
* Fans of [[The Dead Milkmen]] might think the joke of "Watching Scotty Die" is just the fact that it's [[Lyrical Dissonance|a peaceful-sounding]], country-esque ballad about a young boy dying from exposure to poisonous chemicals... In fact it's a parody of the significantly [[Tastes Like Diabetes|sappier]] "Watching Scotty Grow", a Bobby Goldsboro hit released more than 15 years earlier.
Line 370 ⟶ 372:
 
== [[Professional Wrestling]] ==
* [[World Wrestling Entertainment|WWE]] fans in the 1990s probably thought that the "monster" wrestlers ([[Mick Foley|Mankind]], [[Kane (wrestling)|Kane]], and so forth) were highly original gimmicks. They might be disappointed to learn that Gorilla Monsoon had been wrestling under the same basic shtick more than a generation earlier.
 
 
Line 441 ⟶ 443:
*** To be fair, [[Tom and Jerry|at least one]] of the cartoons that they parodied is still very well known.
** ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' themselves started out as a parody/response to Disney's ''[[Silly Symphonies]]''. Nowadays, ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' are considered perhaps the most famous cartoon shorts of time.
** Few modern viewers would even know about ''[[The Scarlet Pimpernel]]'' were it not for the Daffy Duck short ''[[The Scarlet Pumpernickel]]''.
* ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'', ''[[Futurama]]'', ''[[Family Guy]]'', ''[[American Dad]]'', ''[[South Park]]'', ''[[Robot Chicken]]'', [[DreamWorks]],... all suffer from this. All these series parody many aspects of pop culture like TV series, film, politics,... that are misinterpreted or not recognized by everyone, especially people who are younger than the creators of these shows.
* This is simultaneously Parodied and [[Lampshaded]] in ''[[Animaniacs]]'' when the Warners meet Rasputin. They toss him into a dentist's chair and announce that they need to give him some "Anastasia." A girl in a tiara and a poofy dress then hit Rasputin on the head with a hammer. Dot [[Breaking the Fourth Wall|turns to the camera]] and deadpans, "Obscure joke. Talk to your parents." This episode predates ''[[Anastasia|the Don Bluth movie]]'' by several years, so the joke may have lost its obscurity on some kids after the movie came out.
Line 466 ⟶ 469:
*** Another musical relation in ''The Simpsons'' shows Homer singing modified lyrics to [[Covered Up|Frank Sinatra's]] "It Was A Very Good Year" (when he was remembering the time he bought his first six-pack at a liquor store with an obviously fake ID -- [[Fridge Logic|It's best not to think about how he got away with it]]). Anyone thinking of the song nowadays is likely to think of Homer's rendition.
* [[Richard Nixon]] is nowadays better remembered by children as the head in a jar in Futurama than an actual US president from the 1960s-1970s.
* ''[[The Grim Adventures of Billy and& Mandy]]'' has Dracula, a dead-on impersonation of Fred Sanford from ''[[Sanford and Son]]'', complete with a penchant for calling people "Dummy".
** He's also drawn to look like an older version of Blacula, complete with early 70's sideburns and mustache.
** Its parody of the [[H.P. Lovecraft]] mythos, "The Crank Call of Cthulhu", must go over the heads of most young viewers as well.