And 99 Cents: Difference between revisions

m
→‎Western Animation: formatting fix
No edit summary
m (→‎Western Animation: formatting fix)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 72:
** "It's absolutely nothing!"
** {{spoiler|bucket not included}}
** More generally "NINETY-NINE NINETY-NINE '''NINETY-NINE!!!'''''" is Mike's [[Catch Phrase]] during his first few episode. On his first appearance he utters it twice in a minute.
* A non-financial example appears in ''[[Garfield and Friends]]'', where Wade, after [[Mattress Tag Gag|ripping the a tag off the bottom of a couch and learning that it's against the law]], imagines himself being sentenced to "9,999 years in prison". Wade is relieved: "At least I didn't get life."
 
Line 133:
* 99 Cents Only stores in Southern California and a few other places run on this trope. Every price(before tax) will end in a 9 and the most expensive items they sell will cost $99.99. The company also celebrates the 99th birthday of public figures and names 99 year old individuals as honorary spokespersons. Lastly, they say they're open 9 days a week, one store held a wedding on 09/09/2009 costing 99 cents, and their trucks say that, instead of no cash, the driver only has 99 cents.
* Doubly Subverted in Century Theatres. Concessions sell snacks that usually only have a multiple of 25 cents (and most people have a few extra quarters in their pockets). These prices however, already calculate sales tax. The real cost of a large popcorn isn't $6.50, but around $5.96 with 9% tax.
** The real cost is $6.50 because thatsthat's what you pay. Who cares if the cinema or the state gets what money ? Especially since, judging from the examples on this page, the USA is the only place where people even had the idea of listing the price BEFORE''before'' taxes.
* 99 cent stores love this trope, of course. In fact, there's a common joke that goes "My family was really rich. We went to the dollar store."
** However, some dollar stores have mostly flat-dollar prices. When every item isn't a single dollar, that is.
Line 140:
* Political example: The 9-9-9 tax plan proposed by Herman Cain.
** Bunk now he's gone, 2012 primaries.
* The phasing out of the one-cent coin in 2012 in [[Canada]] hasn't stopped the use of this trope there, thanks to the prevalence of paying with credit cards and debit cards.
 
=== South America ===