Cousin Oliver: Difference between revisions

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* Timothy Hearst in ''[[D.Gray-man]]''.
* Subverted in ''[[Digimon Adventure]]''. Despite Kari appearing much later than the other Digidestined there was already a younger child on the team with T.K.
 
 
== Comic Books ==
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*** At least they tried to be heroes; Chase tried to be holier-than-thou.
* Damian Wayne in the ''[[Batman]]'' Comics, made Robin at age 10, just as Tim Drake was growing out of the tights. Lampshaded in ''Red Robin'' #14, where the oldest and youngest of the first three Robins refer to each other as Marcia and Cindy, and lock Damian out of a file with the password "cousinoliver".
* Chris Kent when he was introduced in [[Superman|Superman's Comics]]. It didn't help that [[Superboy|Kon-El]] recently had been killed off recently. Following the trope to the letter, he eventually caught a case of [[Plot-Relevant Age-Up]].
* Subverted with [[Fan Nickname|Kid-Loki]] who is just the normal Loki reincarnated as his kid self (with only his childhood memories and powers). He has avoided being [[The Scrappy]] by being just so much fun to read about (getting the best lines in any current{{when}} Thor comic), and because he is perfectly aware that he's doing things most kids shouldn't do (but, being Loki, doesn't care because he wants [[Big Brother Worship|to save Thor's life from The Serpent]]. D'awww).
** Plus he somehow gets the two best parts of being a [[Kid Hero]]- he has the youthful idealism (as much as anyone is [[Crapsack World|is idealistic in Marvel, anyways]]), ''and'' the maturity to still actually get things done.
** Now{{when}} the book is considered on of the best, if not ''the'' best, Marvel's putting out. He might be the best-liked Cousin Oliver ever for that.
 
 
== Film ==
* The addition of [[Meaningful Name|Howard Phillips]] (Jason Barry) to the third film in the ''[[Re-Animator]]'' series, replacing the lead character of the last two films, Dan Cain (Bruce Abbott). Though not a kid, Phillips is significantly younger; producer/director Brian Yuzna admitted freely that Phillips' addition was due to Yuzna's desire not to make a film about "two middle-aged guys".
 
== Live -Action TV ==
 
== Live Action TV ==
* The [[Trope Namer]] -- played by Robbie Rist -- was added to ''[[The Brady Bunch]]'' toward the end and was the last gasp of the show. He's also cited as the definitive proof of the franchise having [[Jump the Shark|jumped the shark]].
** Robbie Rist became a Cousin Oliver again a couple of years later when he was Ted Baxter's adopted son in ''[[The Mary Tyler Moore Show]]''.
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* ''[[Little House on the Prairie (TV series)|Little House On the Prairie]]'''s final seasons featured a hilarious number of random "adorable" orphans shoehorned into the Little House after the original kids left home. Albert (adopted off the streets of the Big City), James and his sister Cassandra (parents killed in a wagon crash), Jenny (left on Laura's doorstep by her dying brother-in-law), etc. This is despite the show ''already'' having two younger Ingalls sisters in Carrie and Grace. Oddly enough, as more than one fan has remarked in alarm, Pa Ingalls never did build an addition onto his two-room shanty.
** Not to mention the Olesons' adoption of street urchin Nancy, [[Suspiciously Similar Substitute|who just happens to look and act a lot like Nellie]]. This is a mild subversion, in that Nancy is added to be the ''[[Alpha Bitch]]'' as opposed to a beacon of cuteness. Even more interesting, this is an invoked example—Harriett Oleson deliberately adopted the brattiest, most misbehaved child in the local orphanage to replace Nellie.
*** IncidentlyIncidentally, Jenny, introduced a year after Nancy, may have been made the age she was in order to have a little girl around Nancy's age to butt heads with.
* ''[[Married... with Children]]'' had Seven, who started as a Cousin Oliver (since both "children" were college-aged at that point). The character proved ''so'' unpopular with viewers that after one season he became asuffered [[Brother Chuck Cunningham Syndrome]] when he was removed with absolutely no explanation (though he had his [[Face on a Milk Carton]] for [[Lampshade Hanging]] effect).
* ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' sharply parodied the Trope with "Timmy Bobby Rusty", a lisping kid whom Dr. Forrester employed to help boost the show's sagging ratings. He lasted exactly one segment.
* In ''[[My Three Sons]]'' they formally adopted Chip's orphan friend Ernie. Justified, sort of, by the need to maintain the accuracy of the show's title after Mike was [[Brother Chuck Cunningham Syndrome|chucked from the show]].
* Justin on ''[[Power Rangers Turbo]]''.
** For some reason, the creators find it necessary to shoehorn young kids into their movies. The aforementioned Justin was introduced in the ''Turbo'' movie, but he has a predecessor in Fred from the ''[[Mighty Morphin Power Rangers]]'' movie, who got nearly the same amount of screentime as the Rangers themselves, doing next to nothing and being all around useless until the very end of the movie.
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* Riff in ''[[Barney and Friends]]''.
* Adric in ''[[Doctor Who]]'', although elements of the trope are averted in that the character was simply one of a long line of transient companions, and the series itself continued for a number of years afterwards. Plus Adric's final episode was one of the most dramatic send offs for a character in the history of the series.
* Sofi in ''[[Two Broke Girls]]''. While she doesn't adhere to the basic Cousin Oliver requirement - she's a 50-something post-cougar, rather than a kid or teenager - she otherwise fulfills a number of the other Cousin Oliver criteria; she upsets the dynamic between the two leads, and critics and fans have singled the character out for criticism. As this is written the series is still midway through its first season, so time will tell if Sofi catches [[Chuck Cunningham Syndrome]].{{verify}}
* Alex on ''[[One Day At a Time]]'' was the orphaned son of Ann's recently-deceased boyfriend whom she took in. Unlike most Olivers, his presence, while changing the show dynamic, didn't ruin it, and he lasted four years on the show -- almost half its run.
 
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* Every once in a while an example comes along that defies the precedent, that's exactly what happened in ''[[Coming Up Violet]]''. As many readers know, the primary schick with ''[[Fur Will Fly]]'' was that Brad was the only human living a world filled with furries. ({{spoiler|Well, at least until Brad sets a whole mess of pandimensional aliens [like himself] free from a detention facility, but that's neither here nor there}}.) The comic's sequel changes this dynamic by introducing Dawn, a young—incredibly normal—teenaged girl to the mix. However, rather then being resigned to the Scrappy Heap, the fans love her and she adds quite a bit of character to the cast—indeed, being an even bigger [[Fish Out of Water]] than Brad ever was. (May overlap with the [[Suspiciously Similar Substitute]].)
** This is surprisingly similar to ''[[Futurama]]'', where Fry was originally a [[Fish Out of Water]] who got used to the future relatively fast due to being a [[Cloudcuckoolander]]. In a later episode another human from his time was unfrozen and she couldn't cope with anything due to being more down-to-earth.
 
 
== Web Original ==
* Parodied by ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20100219121535/http://www.theonion.com/content/news/cousin_oliver_to_join_white_house The Onion]''
 
 
== Western Animation ==
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* ''[[Sam and Max Freelance Police (animation)|Sam and Max Freelance Police]]'' added a [[Gadgeteer Genius]] character, who was [[Girls Need Role Models|also a little girl]], due to [[Executive Meddling]] insisting that they added a recurring female character to the show. Steve Purcell liked her, but wanted her kept out of the series as much as possible due to fear of her messing up the dynamic between the two main characters, so while the fandom's feelings towards her are mixed, she's generally considered not to harm the show too much.
* Corporal Capeman from ''[[Inspector Gadget]]''. He added nothing to the series when he was added and his chemistry with the others is zilch.
* In ''[[Batman: The Brave And The Bold|Batman the Brave And The Bold]],'' Bat-Mite calls the trope by name when summoning Ace the Bat Hound during [[No Fourth Wall|his attempt to make the show]] [[Jump the Shark]] and get cancelled in favor of something [[Darker and Edgier]]. [[Ambush Bug]] tells him that Ace is an accepted part of the mythos, but then [[It Got Worse]]: ''Ace'''s new sidekick appears, and is basically Scrappy Doo.
* Bat-Mite himself in ''[[The New Adventures of Batman]]'', to the extent that he basically wrecks the series by spoiling the Batman/Robin dynamic and taking screen time away from the more worthy third wheel, Batgirl.