Clarissa Explains It All: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (trope=>work)
m (Mass update links)
Line 22: Line 22:
* [[Aside Comment]]: How she Explains It All.
* [[Aside Comment]]: How she Explains It All.
* [[Balloonacy]]: Clarissa attempts to do away with Ferguson by hooking him up to a straitjacket attached to balloons(!). Hapless Sam falls victim to the trap instead.
* [[Balloonacy]]: Clarissa attempts to do away with Ferguson by hooking him up to a straitjacket attached to balloons(!). Hapless Sam falls victim to the trap instead.
* [[Better As Friends]]: Sam develops a crush on Clarissa at one point, and she reluctantly agrees to go on a date with him. It turns out that, as close as they are, they have absolutely zero chemistry and agree that they are... well, this trope.
* [[Better as Friends]]: Sam develops a crush on Clarissa at one point, and she reluctantly agrees to go on a date with him. It turns out that, as close as they are, they have absolutely zero chemistry and agree that they are... well, this trope.
* [[Big Eater]]: Clifford. Eating an entire pizza ''just makes him hungrier''.
* [[Big Eater]]: Clifford. Eating an entire pizza ''just makes him hungrier''.
* [[Black Best Friend]]: Olivia, though she doesn't appear as frequently as Sam.
* [[Black Best Friend]]: Olivia, though she doesn't appear as frequently as Sam.
* [[Butt Monkey]]: Sam.
* [[Butt Monkey]]: Sam.
* [[Cannot Tell a Joke]]: Ferguson was generally a straight-laced, snobby know it all. Later in the series, he spent an entire episode practicing the delivery of a cliche joke (A homeless man walks up to me on the street and says he hasn't had a bite in...) for some event that he was participating in. The humor came not from the joke itself, but from the ludicrous attempts at telling it, which eventually started including ridiculous stresses on random words of the punchline, a la "I bit '''him'''. '''I''' bit him. I '''bit''' him."
* [[Cannot Tell a Joke]]: Ferguson was generally a straight-laced, snobby know it all. Later in the series, he spent an entire episode practicing the delivery of a cliche joke (A homeless man walks up to me on the street and says he hasn't had a bite in...) for some event that he was participating in. The humor came not from the joke itself, but from the ludicrous attempts at telling it, which eventually started including ridiculous stresses on random words of the punchline, a la "I bit '''him'''. '''I''' bit him. I '''bit''' him."
** Oddly enough he could qualify as a competent [[Deadpan Snarker]] [[Depending On the Writer|most of the time.]]
** Oddly enough he could qualify as a competent [[Deadpan Snarker]] [[Depending on the Writer|most of the time.]]
* [[Chain Letter]]: Marshall got one.
* [[Chain Letter]]: Marshall got one.
* [[Cigarette of Anxiety]]: Clarissa has a dream sequence where she finds her mother smoking like a chimney. The mother explains that she used to smoke and had quit, but that recent stress had caused her to pick up the habit again.
* [[Cigarette of Anxiety]]: Clarissa has a dream sequence where she finds her mother smoking like a chimney. The mother explains that she used to smoke and had quit, but that recent stress had caused her to pick up the habit again.
* [[Conflict Ball]]: The source of some of the drama being the unjustified parental veto.
* [[Conflict Ball]]: The source of some of the drama being the unjustified parental veto.
* [[Consolation World Record]]: In one episode.
* [[Consolation World Record]]: In one episode.
* [[A Day in The Limelight]]: "Ferguson Explains it All".
* [[A Day in the Limelight]]: "Ferguson Explains it All".
* [[Dogged Nice Guy]]: Well, closer to Dogged [[Jerk With a Heart of Gold]], but the Clarissa/Clifford dynamic starts off by following this to the letter, with Clarissa being irritated by his relentless serenading (you read that right) her until he stops, at which point she realizes she misses him.
* [[Dogged Nice Guy]]: Well, closer to Dogged [[Jerk with a Heart of Gold]], but the Clarissa/Clifford dynamic starts off by following this to the letter, with Clarissa being irritated by his relentless serenading (you read that right) her until he stops, at which point she realizes she misses him.
* [[Drop in Character]]: Hi Sam! *dissonant guitar chord*
* [[Drop in Character]]: Hi Sam! *dissonant guitar chord*
* [[Enter Stage Window]]: It's debatable whether Sam's even aware the Darlings' house has a door. At one point he was downstairs in the kitchen, and instead of leaving through the back door he climbed out through that window!
* [[Enter Stage Window]]: It's debatable whether Sam's even aware the Darlings' house has a door. At one point he was downstairs in the kitchen, and instead of leaving through the back door he climbed out through that window!
Line 57: Line 57:
* [[Loves My Alter Ego]]: Clarissa once attended a costume party while dressing and acting like a punk named, "Jade", and caught the attention of an older boy.
* [[Loves My Alter Ego]]: Clarissa once attended a costume party while dressing and acting like a punk named, "Jade", and caught the attention of an older boy.
* [[No Fourth Wall]]
* [[No Fourth Wall]]
* [[No Sparks]]: The reason Clarissa and Sam decide they're [[Better As Friends]].
* [[No Sparks]]: The reason Clarissa and Sam decide they're [[Better as Friends]].
* [[Of Corsets Sexy]]: Clarissa tries on a bustier and accidentally leaves the store wearing it under her clothes. May count as [[She Is All Grown Up]].
* [[Of Corsets Sexy]]: Clarissa tries on a bustier and accidentally leaves the store wearing it under her clothes. May count as [[She Is All Grown Up]].
* [[Offscreen Moment of Awesome]]: Sometimes we see Clarissa come up with a solution and only hear what happened after she carried it out.
* [[Offscreen Moment of Awesome]]: Sometimes we see Clarissa come up with a solution and only hear what happened after she carried it out.
Line 73: Line 73:
* [[Unintentional Period Piece]]
* [[Unintentional Period Piece]]
* [[What Could Have Been]]: In 1995, a spin-off called ''Clarissa Now'' was [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6is-eKWSRgg pitched] to [[CBS]]. It would have shown Clarissa as a college student in New York, working as an intern for a newspaper.
* [[What Could Have Been]]: In 1995, a spin-off called ''Clarissa Now'' was [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6is-eKWSRgg pitched] to [[CBS]]. It would have shown Clarissa as a college student in New York, working as an intern for a newspaper.
** Interestingly, that was almost the exact same career path that Melissa Joan Hart's next character, [[Sabrina the Teenage Witch (TV)|Sabrina]], did follow after high school. This has led to more than a few people joking that they didn't know it was two separate shows, and just assumed that ''Clarissa'' woke up and discovered she was a witch.
** Interestingly, that was almost the exact same career path that Melissa Joan Hart's next character, [[Sabrina the Teenage Witch (TV series)|Sabrina]], did follow after high school. This has led to more than a few people joking that they didn't know it was two separate shows, and just assumed that ''Clarissa'' woke up and discovered she was a witch.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 09:05, 8 April 2014

This may be the greatest show ever filmed.
"If you're so smart explain THIS, Clarissa!"

Na na na na-na!

One of the earliest original sitcoms on Nickelodeon, about a teenage girl named Clarissa Darling, her geeky, conniving, conservative brother Ferguson, and her wacky hippie parents. Usually featured Clarissa commenting on the plot directly to the camera, imitating a newscaster.

Despite its seemingly innocent reputation, in retrospect, Clarissa probably pushed a few boundaries at the time, as the show had a habit of making subtle references to sex and teen partying, albeit in a light-hearted, contemporary fashion. Also one of the few shows on the channel that could skate by with using and at times spelling out words like "hell" and "sex" onscreen.

Also noteworthy for being one of the first shows to feature a female lead and be gender-neutral. Before this show, the only shows with a female lead (as few as they were) were intended for girls only. It also helped to tear down a long standing belief that shows with female leads wouldn't be able to gain a significant male audience.

The show ran from 1991 to 1994, ending just before the introduction of cartoon programming that would come to dominate the channel in The Nineties. Is also notable for being one of the roles Melissa Joan Hart is known for.

In July 2011, it became one of the four inaugural shows of Teen Nick's "The 90s Are All That" lineup.


Provides Examples Of: