Are You Pondering What I'm Pondering?
I think I know what you are all trying to say. I, um... I think we have to build a space helicopter. —Nathan Explosion, Metalocalypse
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Comedy, it has been noted several times, ain't pretty.
A character is facing a problem. He describes the problem and the reason that it is an impediment in such a way as to make the solution exceptionally obvious. And, of course, this is when a solution is conceived. Only the solution isn't the one to which the explanation was obviously leading. It's either patently ridiculous or a total non-sequitur. Most of the time, it's both.
Comes in single-character and two-character flavors. In the single-character version, the character who has explained the problem suddenly realizes the "solution" in a flash of inspiration that parodies a Eureka Moment:
What we need is some way to stay in contact over long distances. Some sort of communication or "telephonic" device which is "mobile"... Of course! That's it! We'll train messenger pigeons! |
Often, but not always, some other character will helpfully point out a more useful solution.
In the two character version, one character gives the explanation, often with the specific goal of leading the other character to make the obvious connection, then prompts the other character for the answer. The other character, who is usually holding the Idiot Ball, totally fails to make the connection.
Named for the exchange which takes place in every episode of Pinky and The Brain. After explaining the problem, and being shown an ideal solution to that problem, an exchange like this would occur:
Brain: Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering? |
(It should be noted that one of the few times Pinky is pondering what Brain is pondering, he decides that it's too stupid and doesn't say.)
A subtrope of Non Sequitur. See also: Comically Missing the Point
Advertising
- In an cinema advert: two Orange executives are trying to decide a name for their campaign which gives two tickets for one on a Wednesday. "We need a movie title. It's every Wednesday. Like Clockwork. And we're Orange. So we'll call it... Orange Wednesday."
Anime and Manga
- In the dub of the episode Jump for Joy! (AG 037) of the Pokémon anime, after an unfamiliar Pokemon (a Shiftry) knocks Team Rocket out of a tree, the following exchange occurs:
Jessie: "James, is that what I think it is?" |
- From an episode of Yu-Gi-Oh! GX (dub only); Jaden’s incredibly boring history teacher Professor Stein is leading him through a jungle with the (stated) intent to bring him to Professor Viper. Jaden is not quite as oblivious to Stein’s actual goal as Stein might think, so he tries to make small talk:
Jaden: So, uh, give any good history lectures lately? |
Fan Works
- In the Worm/Dungeons & Dragons fic Scaling Up by "Kryslin", Leet and Uber have this brief exchange shortly after spotting Taylor in her half-dragon form for the first time:
[Kevin] logged out of PHO, turning to look at his partner. “Are you thinking what I’m thinking?” |
- In "mp3.1415player"'s Great Grand-Uncle Schimmelhorn's Toolbox, a crossover between Worm and the Golden Age of SF "Papa Schimmelhorn" stories by Reginald Brentnor, there is this moment between Lisa and Taylor after Lisa gets access to all of Coil's financial information:
“Are you thinking what I’m thinking, Agent Gimme?” |
Film
- From Mirror Mask:
Helena: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
Max: (After crashing the car into a sign for a fish shop) Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Would you like to hear an example from the movie Airplane!!?
- From Airplane!!? What is it?
- It's this film the Zucker Brothers made in the early 80s, but that's not important right now.
- Surely you're not serious!
- I am serious. And don't call me Shirley.
- From Airplane!!? What is it?
- Young Frankenstein: "Give him a said-a-give!"
- "SED-A-GIVE?!"
- Happens a lot with charades, in various programs and films.
- Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead question and question tennis. "No non-sequiturs!!!"
- Also from Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, this exchange(Guildenstern's pretending to be Hamlet):
Rosencrantz: To sum up: your father, whom you love, dies. You are his heir. You come back to find that hardly was the corpse cold before his young brother pops onto his throne and into his sheets, thereby offending both legal and natural practice. Now... why exactly are you behaving in this extraordinary manner? |
- Coraline, in a deleted scene, blurts out a pretty amusing Non Sequitur in the midst of the Eureka Moment when she realizes the Cute Ghost Girl she's been talking to might actually be her friend Wybie's grandmother's long-lost sister.
Coraline: It used to look like this...pioneer girl! Then, Huck Finn Junior! Then it was this Little Rascals girl, with all these ribbons and braids and... (She stops, and makes an unmistakable Eureka Moment face.) ...your grandma's black, right? |
- I.Q. (with Meg Ryan, Tim Robbins, Walter Matthau) plays with it a bit:
Albert Einstein: Are you thinking what I am thinking? |
- In Robots, during the big fight sequence, Rodney and Big Weld see the other characters in danger, and Big Weld says, "Are you thinking what I'm thinking?" Rodney replies, "I sure am!" He then releases a gigantic sawblade, sending both of them flying with it, causing Big Weld to cry out, "This isn't what I was thinking at all!"
- This exchange from The Dark Knight:
Lucius Fox: It emits a high-frequency pulse for mapping an environment and records a response time. |
- In The Naked Gun 2 1/2, there is this exchange:
Lt. Frank Drebin: Have you noticed anything different about him? |
- Race to Witch Mountain had a variation with the main character and the psychic alien.
Are you hearing what I'm thinking? |
- Averted in Showtime in this exchange between the showy cop played by Eddie Murphy, who wants to look good on camera, and the serious cop played by Robert De Niro, who refuses to play along.
Trey Sellars: (dramatically) Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- They do end up thinking the same thing at the end, though.
- In Freddy Got Fingered: "You want me to get inside my animals???" Semi-subverted in that the other guy thought they were on the same page because he didn't know how literally a Cloudcuckoolander would take the statement.
- The Long Kiss Goodnight, with Geena Davis and Samuel L. Jackson (in what might be his funniest role to date) contains this exchange:
Charlie Baltimore: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
Literature
- A version of this is seen in one of Robert Asprin's Myth books. Don Bruce, a Mob boss, comes to see Skeeve, who has been quietly sabotaging Mob operations, and starts off by saying he knows Skeeve is the reason the Mob hasn't succeeded in moving into the dimension of Deva. He lists the evidence: Skeeve knows the territory, has connections on Deva, etc. His conclusion? They should have hired Skeeve to work for them in the first place. Don Bruce actually has no idea that Skeeve has been sabotaging him. (This echoes an earlier scene in which the Devan Merchants' Association hires Skeeve to defend them from the Mob, not knowing he was the one who originally brought the Mob to Deva.)
- This happens when Leonard of Quirm from Discworld tries to name things.
Leonard: Well, because it is submersed in a marine environment I've always called it the Going-Under-The-Water-Safely-Device. |
- The Pirates! in an Adventure with Scientists by Gideon Defoe, in which the titular pirates and Charles Darwin are trying to work out a way to get to the top of Big Ben very quickly. After much pondering, they remember the airship moored nearby:
Pirate Captain: We could steal the airship, pop it with my cutlass, and fashion a big rope from all the silk! |
- Waylander 2 by David Gemmell. The assassin Waylander and the gladiator Angel talk about Waylander's would-be-killers
Angel: Are you aware that you're outnumbered by at least 10 to 1 here? |
Live Action TV
- The two-character version was a favorite of Perfect Strangers.
- Married... with Children:
Al: Son, are you thinking about what I'm thinking about? |
- On The Daily Show, one of the correspondents creates, as he puts it, "a radar that detects levels of gayness" and then promptly names it the "homometer".
- With "GAY" and "RADAR" pasted on the bottom of the screen, moving ever so slowly together.
- When Colbert discussed Burger King advertising Windows 7, he said that Apple had to get in on this and they would need something "McDonalds Big... for Mac...". He decides on Carl Jr's.
- In the Doctor Who episode "Rose", the Doctor speculates as to where the Nestene Consciousness could have concealed a huge, metal, wheel-shaped transmitter in the middle of London. As he talks, his head is framed by the London Eye (a massive Ferris wheel). Rose notices it and smiles, and he says "What?" She gestures, and he turns round, then turns back "What??" He gets it eventually.
- Used as a Tear Jerker in "The Doctor's Wife":
The Doctor: Valley of half-eaten TARDISs. You thinking what I'm thinking? |
- In the Stargate Atlantis episode "Vengeance", the team is stuck on a planet with the bad guy and no way to leave. Two of them come across the bad guy's ship and the following exchange takes place:
Ronon: You thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Stargate SG-1 has Teal'c getting the idiom wrong by asking O'Neill "Are you considering the tactic I am considering?"
- There is a beautiful example of this trope in an episode of Red Dwarf. The Cat and Lister are piloting Starbug away from a something and the following conversation ensues:
Lister: Cat, are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- In an episode of Father Ted, the main characters need to quickly earn some money to repair a leaking roof. One, the titular Ted, comes up with the idea of holding a raffle, and asks fellow priest Dougal if he's thinking what he's thinking. Although Dougal claims at first that he is, it soon becomes apparent that he isn't when his first question is "Where will we get the guns?"
- It's common in Father Ted to have his exchange where every idea Dougal has is stupid. The one time he has a good idea and Ted agrees, Dougal is quite insistent that it is a bad idea and that "you just haven't thought it through."
- In The Suite Life of Zack and Cody:
Cody: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- In Yes Minister:
Hacker: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Early nineties Dom Com Blossom had an episode which reenacted a World War II-era scenario, don't remember the context. Blossom's two elder brothers portrayed a buffoonish detective and a bartender with a massive Hitler-stache who called everyone "Herr" and "Fraulein". The detective eventually concluded that they have a spy in their midst—a Japanese spy.
- In just about every episode of Bananas in Pajamas:
B2: Are you thinking what I'm thinking B1? |
- Happens a lot with J.D. on Scrubs, though we usually see his pondering from his perspective. On the few occasions when we don't, this trope results.
J.D.: We're gonna need a whole lotta gnomes... |
- When deciding what to do about Kim's pregnancy, Kim mentions an option they haven't yet discussed, "the A Word":
JD: Appletinis. |
- Done in Kaamelott:
Karadoc: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- From an interview of Ricky Gervais on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross—they were talking about Ross's appearance on Extras, which had involved a scene of them wrestling:
Ricky: You're going to say, did I get an erection. |
- The Mentalist has the following exchange between two cops:
Rigsby: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- One time on Beakman's World, Beakman smashed a watermelon as part of a demonstration.
Beakman: So what does this prove? |
- Night Court once had a plotline where four pregnant women were stranded in the courthouse during a black-out and ended up in labor simultaneously. Judge Harry gave instructions to everyone else to calm the situation, and then said, "Any questions?"
Random extra: Why is the sky blue? |
- Adam Savage of the MythBusters did this in true Pinky and the Brain style when Jamie asked how they'd test the "cars falling off cliffs will explode" myth.
Jamie: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
Bret: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- In Get Smart we find the following lovely exchange:
Chief: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Maxwell Smart said "Are you thinking what I'm thinking" so many times that it amounted to a Catch Phrase.
- In a courtroom sketch on Monty Python's Flying Circus, the judge is responding to charade clues from the foreman of the jury. The last clue is that foreman miming drinking tea in an exaggerated manner, and pointing to the contents of the cup, and results in the judge finding the defendant Not Guil-Cup.
- Parodied on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine in the episode "Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang" between O'Brien and Bashir:
Bashir: Miles... You thinking what I'm thinking? |
- On How I Met Your Mother Ted thinks this with Barny, Robin, Lily, and Marshall. He assumes they're all wanting nacho's, when the rest are all thinking about how ridiculous his hair looks.
- Done very often between contestants on QI, to avoid the dreaded klaxon.
- In "A Bit of Fry and Laurie" there is this exchange:
Fry: You know what I'd like to know? |
- On an episode of Malcolm in the Middle, when Reese is playing with some food coloring as Malcolm and Stevie are working on a science project:
Reese: When you mix blue and yellow together, you get a totally new color! I shall call it... Blellow! |
Professional Wrestling
- From the WWF debut of Cactus Jack:
Dude Love: Are you thinking what I think you're thinking? |
- If you don't get it, Cactus Jack, Dude Love and Mandkind are all personalities of one guy.
Radio
- Youll Have Had Your Tea: The Doings of Hamish and Dougal gets it down to basics:
Dougal: Hamish, are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
Video Games
- In the "Milkman Conspiracy" level of Psychonauts, the main character Raz ponders how he can get a birds-eye view of the neighborhood (while a rather obvious helicopter repeatedly flies by in the background, through the window), and briefly contemplates using a pair of stilts (well, he is a Circus Brat).
- In World of Warcraft, one of the joke quotes for the Draenei female is "Are you thinking what I'm thinking? Good. Bring ample supply of butter and goblin jumper cables."
- NOTE: Goblin Jumper Cables are used to bring people BACK TO LIFE, and the Draenei Jokes were mostly cut since they were TOO sexual.
- Also worth noting-To put the saddle part of the joke into further context, Draenei have hooves and are referred to as 'space goats' often.
- In the Megazeux game "Funky Chunky Monkey", the protagonist, Melvin Garfunkel (AKA "Funky Chunky Monkey") has an Evil Twin who was banished to the Arctic after his last evil scheme fell flat. Near the end of the game, Funky learns that the Big Bad who kidnapped his sidekick is a character known as THEM (The Hideously Evil Monkey), looks just like Funky, and is currently living in an alternate dimension in Funky's refrigerator. He connects the dots like so...
Funky: Let's see... looks just like me... lives in a very cold place... hideously evil... I've got it! THEM must be... Robert DeNiro! Wait, that can't be right... I've got it! THEM must be... my evil twin brother Marvin! |
- In Dawn of War: Winter Assault, the evil chaos lord Crull has spent most of the shared ork/chaos campaign desiring a powerful Humongous Mecha he plans to reclaim and use to Take Over the World (of course). If you decide to side with the orks for the final level, Warboss Gorgutz is in the process of outlining his plan to force Crull into open battle so Gorgutz can kill him (namely, threaten to destroy the mecha) when he decides to phrase the how of it as a rhetorical question.
Gorgutz: And you know how I'm gettin' him ta come after me? |
- I Am an Insane Rogue AI: "Are you pondering what I'm pondering? Probably not, because I am smarter than you."
Web Comics
- In 8-Bit Theater, Fighter is told by Swordopolis to go to the Castle of Ordeals. However, Fighter then immediately forgets what tower he's supposed to go to. He wanders around the airship hearing all sorts of homophones for "Ordeal" before finally "realizing" that it's supposed to be... Radio Castle!
- Early Goblins joke. Just see it for yourself.
- Adventures In Ninja Cookery had this exchange:
Larry: How is the road, Mr. Ninja? |
- Turn Signals on a Land Raider used it here, probably in tribute to Pinky and The Brain.
- A variation in Captain SNES of the single-character variety in this comic:
Alex's Narration: I'd finally broken out of the endless battle loop and though I'd been victorious, I was still badly shaken. It was like being trapped in that Bill Murray movie where the same thing happened over again... god how I hated Ghostbusters II. |
- Darths and Droids, a web comic about a group of roleplayers going through a Star Wars campaign, provides a few examples through the player Jim. In one strip, Jim (playing Padme) announces that he'll put a hairpin in his mouth while he's being marched to a pillar he'll be chained up to. When another player compliments him on his idea to pick the lock, his response is "Oh! That's an even better idea! I was going to fake a medical emergency."
- Also, Yoda's name for the Clone Wars in strip 407.
- Questionable Content has possibly the greatest non sequitur in history.
- An xkcd bonus comic has another example of this.
- When Knuckles asks this in Final Fantasy Sonic:
Sonic: I think so, Knuckles, but shouldn't dancing always be fun? |
- In CRFH, when Roger finally decides for a name for his pet rock.
Roger: Well, it's a rock and it's my fella, so... |
- Two Guys and Guy gives us, "I don't know why I thought we had the same idea. Let's do your thing."
- Housepets has Sasha's deep thoughts.
Web Original
- Happened in a special Yu-Gi-Oh the Abridged Series episode where Rex and Weevil watch the Silent Hill movie:
Rex: This fog reminds me of that John Carpenter movie with all the fog. I think it was called... Halloween. |
- In Space Tree episode Slave Grave http://www.spacetree.com/spacetree31.html:
Space Tree: Are you thinking what I'm thinking, Commander? |
- The entire focus of the short "A Slice of the Action."
- Harry Partridge's "Michael The Terrible Boyfriend" animation. In all likelihood, you're not.
- Spoofed in the Uncyclopedia article for Narf, complete with a Take That to Ann Coulter.
- In Mr. Plinkett's review of Revenge of the Sith, he suggests that the very title of the movie indicated it it was going to suck, since rearranging the letters in the word "sith" got you... "tsih", Chinese for "disappointed in the cooking of the duck meat".
- Issue 8 of Teen Girl Squad opens with the girls listening to the opening announcements, which mentions that the day's lunch is "a breadtangle of pizza", Tompkins is being called to the principal's office, and there's a Battle of the Bands coming up.
Cheerleader: You hear that, girls? |
Western Animation
- Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers has this happen a lot with Dale, nearly always resulting in Chip giving him a bop on the head. For example, from the episode "Fake Me to Your Leader":
Chip: This flying saucer is made out of rubber! Do you know what that means? |
- The exchanges between Pinky and The Brain, of course.
Brain: Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering? |
- This trope appeared outside of the usual exchange in another episode:
Brain: Pinky, what rhymes with June? |
- And in another episode, it happened within the usual exchange, but with Brain providing the final example. After Pinky suggests that they package their trading cards with something pink and chewy that everyone likes so that people will buy them, Brain sees the obvious answer—include sausages. Of course, they were in Germany, and the episode took place just after the printing press was created.
- In one instance, they even lampshade the whole bit.
Brain: Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering? |
- It was played around with once on the show - as it gave us a look inside Pinky's thought processes. The Brain was explaining his latest plan, and quickly devolved into Blah Blah Blah, blahblah blah blahblah as Pinky pondered how Brain's head looked like a hippo's. This started a chain of thought, ending with the hippo on a beach, and wondering what the hippo WOULD wear on a beach. At this point Brain interrupted with the Trope name. Pinky's reply?
I think so, Brain, but what if the hippo doesn't want to wear the beach thong? |
- Inverted at least once.
Pinky: Well, I think so, Brain, but... no, it's too stupid. |
- On one occasion, Pinky took the Brain role with his own reflection.
Pinky: (talking to his reflection in the mirror) Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering? |
- Rob Paulsen (voice of Pinky) gave this answer at Comic-Con:
Fan: Are you pondering what I'm pondering? |
- The other variation on the gag would be a non-sequitur from Pinky, which actually distracts Brain because he ends up agreeing with it.
Brain: Are you pondering what I'm pondering, Sancho Pinky? |
- Pinky, Elmyra and the Brain featured a variation on this running gag in the form of Brain asking if Pinky has "Any questions?", with Pinky responding by asking a completely irrelevant question. Then, at the end of the episode, Brain gives Pinky the answer to his question. Example:
Brain: Any questions? |
- And lest we forget, the marvelous moment from the episode where Brain manages to boost Pinky's intelligence to unprecedented levels...
Brain: Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering? |
- Naturally, this was referenced and lampooned quite a bit, such as in the animated spin off of Casper:
Stretch: Say... Fatso, you thinkin' what I'm thinkin'? |
- The one-character version often came up in Futurama.
- Family Guy also had a good example in the episode where Peter found out he was mentally retarded. The judge says:
Judge: If it were up to me, I would send you to a place far away. A place where you were locked up with other dangerous people for a time determined by the degree of your crime. Unfortunately, as far as I know, no such place exists, so I have to let you go free. |
- This is actually a two-person version, as after the judge bangs his gavel, Peter jumps in.
Peter: Oh and it was prison you were thinking of. |
- Another Family Guy example:
Lois: You should spend some time with our kids Peter, and with me. |
- "I was gonna suggest we eat the kids. You know, jokingly at first, but then I was gonna gauge your reaction, and if you were cool with it, we'd go from there. But this is a much better idea!"
- Darkwing Duck, episode "Getting Antsy":
(the Hamburger Hippo disappears after Launchpad returns to retrieve his "lucky" scarf) |
- In The Simpsons Movie, Homer needs to get on top of the dome over Springfield. He looks in a military bunker and races excitedly towards a jet pack... whereupon he takes the tube of superglue next to it.
- And in the series:
Kent Brockman: Another local peasant has been found dead - drained of his blood with two teeth marks on his throat. This black cape was found on the scene. Police are baffled. |
- And another one:
Homer: I learned this from a movie I saw about a bus that has to speed around the city, keeping its speed above 50, and if its speed dropped, it would explode. I think it was called The Bus That Couldn't Slow Down. |
- A similar example happened when Bart and Milhouse were on a bus that couldn't slow down.
Milhouse: This is just like Speed 2, except with a bus instead of a boat! |
- In the Stampy the elephant episode, kids keep knocking at Homer's door, and as he turns them back, Milhouse offers him money to see it. Homer goes "That gives me an idea!" and he proceeds to plant a sign on his front lawn that reads "Go away"
- In a similar scene in another episode, he's offered a dollar to see the "angel skeleton" in his garage. He responds "A buck, eh?". Cut to Homer greeting a queue of people, charging them fifty cents each.
- Chief Wiggum again, in a Treehouse of Horror sketch where dolphins attempt to take over:
Police Chief Wiggum: Hmm. Bottlenose bruises, blowhole burns, flipper prints...this looks like the work of rowdy teens. Lou, cancel the prom. |
- Again Homer, who has to find Lisa in a busy street. He runs up to a balloon merchant, buys all his balloons, exclaims "I hope this works!", and offers a crane operator said balloons if he can borrow the crane for a while. It works.
- Another example: Homer and Marge are worried about something, when Marge has an idea.
Marge: Homer, are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Principal Skinner and the idea for his great American novel.
- Apu tears him apart for this though.
- The Simpsons is full of these. In another episode, Homer is trying to think of a way to sneak him and his buddies past the security guard at the back entrance into the Superbowl. Bart points out a rack of Halftime Show Costumes. He uses the rack to knock over the security guard and they all run in!
- After Kent Brockman reports on Burns' missing bear Maggie holds up the bear infront of the TV (which happens to be showing a picture of the bear) leading Homer to yell:
Homer: Maggie get that moldy old bear out of the way! Moldly?! Old?! I'm gonna get something to eat! |
- Then there's the time Homer is in jail for stealing Moe's car. Hans Moleman comes by with a book cart, offering him some reading material. Homer picks up "How to Tunnel Out of Prison", thinks that it might be useful - then knocks Moleman out with it and escapes.
- SpongeBob SquarePants, episode "New Student Starfish": SpongeBob asks Patrick to get get a lightbulb from the closet, and Patrick runs in to find a huge mountain of lightbulbs on the floor. He exclaims "Lightbulb!" then races up to the mountain. "But why does it have to be so far away?" (glancing up past the mountain to the lightbulb hanging from the ceiling) He then proceeds to climb the mountain of lightbulbs to reach the one on the ceiling.
- Also in 'The Great Snail Race':
Spongebob: (to Patrick) Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Kim Possible has a scene like this in "Emotion Sickness" when Drakken and Shego are on a "date".
Shego: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- An episode of Justice League, where four of Flash's enemies, Mirror Master, Captain Cold, Captain Boomerang, and the Trickster are discussing teaming up against their common foe.
Mirror Master: Here we are, the hardest men in town and we all have something in common. |
- A running gag on Bromwell High, where Natella asks Keisha this.
- In American Dad, Stan brainwashes Haylee. Her mom notices something's wrong and says something like(can't remember): "Something's wrong with Haylee. It's like she's not herself. It's as if...her mind has been put through a cleaning, scrubbed or rubbed vigorously with soap and water...brainpolished...mindscoured..." She looks at Stan, who just shrugs.
- JFK on Clone High has the 1-person variant as one of his trademark shticks:
"What if we take a sample of a song that already exists, and you rap over that sample? I call it... 'song-taking.'" |
- In a Robot Chicken sketch parodying G-Force two of the other team members help Tiny lose weight and get in shape. As he buffs up, he single-handedly saves the day, getting the glory and the girls. The two helpful team members are not too happy about this and glance at each other saying, 'Are you thinking what I'm thinking?' When one comes into the room with a huge banana sundae to find the other has slaughtered their friend with a chainsaw he realizes they weren't thinking the same thing at all.
- In one episode of Fosters Home for Imaginary Friends, this exchange occurs.
Mac (to Bloo): Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Parodied on Phineas and Ferb in "Phineas and Ferb's Christmas Vacation" where the following exchange occurs (though it turns out that Phineas is just looking at the blueprints upside down):
Phineas: Ferb! Are you thinking what I'm thinking? (Ferb hands over some blueprints) As usual we're- (looks at blueprints and is immediately disgusted) Oh ugh! Man! No! That's not at all what I was thinking! OH, DUDE! (Ferb flips blueprints upside) Oh, yeah. That's it! |
- "Don't Even Blink" has Doofenshmirtz build an invisibility Ray, explaining that he plans to use it to deal with Fireside Girls who knock on his door and spot him through the window, preventing him from pretending that he isn't home. His plan? Fire the gun at the Fireside Girls so he won't have to look at them. The irony of this situation is that the buildup to this statement implies that he will use the ray on himself to become invisible to the Fireside Girls, i.e. the more sensible approach. Obviously, this thought somehow never dawns on him.
- In "Make Play", Candace commiserates with her doppelganger Princess Baldegrunde:
Baldegrunde: I never get to do anything for myself. |
- In the South Park episode "World Wide Recorder Concert," after Cartman demonstrates the brown noise:
Stan: Dude, are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- In another episode, Kyle declares they have to do something about the homeless problem. Cartman agrees, and says he knows exactly what Kyle is thinking. He then sets up a ramp and skateboards over a homeless guy Evel Knievel-style. Later, everyone keeps crediting Kyle with the idea to build ramps over the homeless people.
- In one episode of Chowder after finding vermin who like to eat his food...
Chowder: It's almost like I need to start my own catering company... THAT'S IT! I'll open a store for plus-size ladies' fashion! No, wait... |
- In the episode of The Penguins of Madagascar "Tagged," the penguins get fit with electronic tracking devices. An exchange follows:
Skipper: Rico! Hacksaw! |
Fred: I know what you're gonna ask - where are we gonna get ten times that much [money]? |
- In the Ed, Edd n Eddy episode "If It Smells Like an Ed", the Eds try to track down whoever it was that framed them for sabotage, and eventually stumble across a Bound and Gagged Johnny, with gummy candies stuck all over him.
Edd: This can only point to one thing! |
- In the Care Bears To The Rescue Movie, Cheer's pet gobblebug has just eaten most of Share's garden, and is likely to eat most of the foliage in Care-a-Lot.
Share: Too bad he can't have his own garden somewhere. |
- This exchange from the My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic episode "Boast Busters" between Snips and Snails:
Spike: Look, unless an Ursa Major comes waltzing up the street for Trixie to vanquish, I am not going to believe a word she says, and neither should you! |
- In The Teaser for "Ponyville Confidential", Apple Bloom suggests that the school newspaper may help the Cutie Mark Crusaders in their cutie-mark hunt. Scootaloo and Sweetie Belle proceed to use copies of the newspaper in every way they can think of (packing fragile items, lining birds' nests, and making paper boats and paper hats) before finding out that Apple Bloom meant they should try writing for the school newspaper.
Andy: Are you thinking what I'm thinking? |
- Invoked in Aqua Teen Hunger Force, when Master Shake declares that Frylock's time machine is the key to curing Frylock's cancer. Because they can set fire to the time machine, and smoke the cancer out. Bonus points for actually trying to follow through on the idea.
- Happens in The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack episode "Low Tidings", although K'nuckles response to the question ("That Scoops Pennington is a hack?") does at least follow logically from what had gone before. Flapjack was actually suggesting that they take the place of the two sick actors in the Low Tide Day pageant.
- The Pinky And Perky Show: After hearing the title characters discussing a haunted television studio:
Vera: Are you thinking what I'm thinking, Eric? |
- Stoked!:
Broseph: So Johnny has the keys to the whale bus. And Johnny totally has the hots for Emma. Are you thinking what I'm thinking, bro? |
- In the Time Travel episode of Totally Spies!, the girls try to rescue their adult counterparts, only to be caught and thrown in a cellblock with them. While thinking of a solution:
Teenage Sam: You thinking what I'm thinking? |
Real Life
- Charlie Rose is a great interviewer in many ways, but take a drink every time he asks his guest an elaborate yes-or-no question that fully incorporates the answer he'd like them to give, and they reply, "...Not really."
You know, we should put something at the bottom of this page, a little sting of humor to get the reader when they're not expecting it. And we can call it The Last Little Unexpected Joke!
- Go on then.