American Title: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.AmericanTitle 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.AmericanTitle, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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Contrast [[Eagle Land]] - this trope refers to titles that try to induce that American idea...''in America''!
Contrast [[Eagle Land]] - this trope refers to titles that try to induce that American idea...''in America''!


Not to be confused with [[Market Based Title]].
Not to be confused with [[Market-Based Title]].
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=== American Examples ===
=== American Examples ===
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== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* ''America's Got Talent''
* ''America's Got Talent''
* ''[[Americas Next Top Model|America's Next Top Model]]''
* ''[[America's Next Top Model]]''
* ''[[American Gladiators]]'' (But both British series have managed to get away with just been entitled ''Gladiators'')
* ''[[American Gladiators]]'' (But both British series have managed to get away with just been entitled ''Gladiators'')
* ''[[Series/American Idol|American Idol]]'', to contrast with Britain's...''Pop Idol''
* ''[[Series/American Idol|American Idol]]'', to contrast with Britain's...''Pop Idol''

Revision as of 11:53, 9 January 2014

"I just wanna say one thing: God bless America."
Biff Tannen, Back to The Future

The United States is somewhat popular.

There is a certain hard-to-describe quality in the idea of something being "American". It means wholesome values, hard-working Protestantism, apple pies and soda shops. So, it's only natural that some American works will put "American" in their title as a way to signify what they are all about.

But, as some people would notice later, there are some Unfortunate Implications in including the word "American" as some sort of superlative. So, nowadays, it's more likely that you'll see an American Title in an ironic fashion than not, subverting the original meaning.

Of course, there's always the less popular American idea that the term "American" refers only to the place of origin of the described term, and is not related to a truckload of ideology, but thanks to Misaimed Fandom, it might be hard to convince others of this. It also raises the question of why no-one else does it.

Compare It Came From Beverly Hills

Contrast Eagle Land - this trope refers to titles that try to induce that American idea...in America!

Not to be confused with Market-Based Title.


American Examples

Of the straightforward variety

Film

Literature

Live-Action TV

  • The American Embassy (which was set in London - ironically, the series was never screened on British television)
  • The American Girls (about two correspondents for a newsmagazine called The American Report - this series aired in the UK as Have Girls, Will Travel)
  • Love, American Style

Music

  • American Beauty (the Grateful Dead album)
    • One presumes the pasta brand and the flower (a type of rose, and the ultimate namesake of all the others) are also intended to be interpreted in a straightforward fashion.
  • Don Mc Lean's "American Pie" (Song and LP)
  • American Spirit
  • American Recordings (Record label)
  • "American Secrets", a song off of the Parachute album The Way it Was
  • "American Girls", a single off of the Counting Crows album Hard Candy

Radio

Western Animation

Real Life

  • American Greetings

Of the subversive variety

Comic Books

Film

Literature

Live-Action TV

Music

Other

  • American Television
  • Americano (the implication of the name is that Americans can't handle espresso unless it's watered down)

Theatre

  • American Dream, play by George O'Neil

Video Games

Western Animation

Examples where the name only describes a nationality


Art

  • American Gothic, a painting named after the architectural style American Gothic, which is the style of the house featured.

Comic Books

  • American Virgin, in the later issues

Film

Literature

  • American Girl
  • American Gods
  • The Ugly American, in which the title character is physically unattractive but one of the nicest people (not to mention Americans) in the book

Live-Action TV

Video Games

Web Comics

Web Original

Western Animation