Creator's Pet/Western Animation: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
Examples of [[{{TOPLEVELPAGE}}]]s in [[{{SUBPAGENAME}}]] include:
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* Many fans of ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'' think Elmyra is one of the most annoying animated characters ever created. Her capturing [[Ensemble Darkhorse|Fifi LaFume]] didn't exactly help, either. Too bad the executives at Warner Bros loved her, and kept trying to get her her own show. Eventually, they had her co-star in a ''[[Pinky and The Brain]]'' spinoff, ''[[Pinky, Elmyra and& Thethe Brain]]'', which earned her the wrath of ''more'' angry fans. It's even [[Lampshade Hanging|Lampshaded]] by the theme song: [[Biting the Hand Humour|"It's what the network wants, why bother to complain?"]] Even the writers hated her.
** Making this even more bewildering is the fact that Elmyra's ''entire joke as a character'' is that she's unbearably obnoxious.
* Dulcy the Dragon in ''[[Sonic Sat AM|Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' (the "''SatAM''" version). Apart from [[Remember the New Guy?|just being there in season two without a proper introduction]], getting a [[Spotlight-Stealing Squad|bigger part than most of the other freedom fighters]], the writers try and squeeze her into as many scenes as possible, thus [[Out of Focus|reducing Bunnie and Rotor to minor characters]], and she gets the whole 'magic powers in a techno environment' deal (though that aspect was first established by the evil wizard Lazzar). There's also the questionable logic of [[Team Mom|Princess]] [[Teen Genius|Sally]] trusting her safety (not to mention the safety of any other passengers) to riding a dragon who can't land without crashing, and falls asleep during flight.
** Princess Sally herself also qualifies to a varied amount of the fanbase, due to her overwhelming utility in most missions (it was arguably her that rendered Rotor redundant due to her increased tech skills) and sometimes exaggerated use as a [[Foil]] and [[Romantic Interest]] for Sonic that rendered other characters needless extras (eg. Tails who in other portrayals was often Sonic's closest friend and ally). In the second season, aside from Dulcy and Antoine as comic relief, the show was near entirely revolved around Sonic and Sally's chemistry. Granted there is [[Base Breaker|a lot more positive reception of Sally than Dulcy at times]] but she has rubbed off a lot of fans the wrong way. Sally and Dulcy were both stated to be favorites of Ben Hurst, who wrote the majority of Season Two.
*** Sally's much more of an obvious Creator's Pet in [[Sonic the Hedgehog (comics)|the comics]]. Read the first few pages of [http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=11&ved=0CDYQtwIwADgK&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DNaqxgT64JZU&ei=ulQ0T8asNs_RiAL-nMjKCg&usg=AFQjCNG48eTae4C1OJBZ43cJHHhay3NF8g&sig2=iuTMMfkGR0J2JS6cc8silg this], and try to ''NOT'' feel the [[Mary Sue]] vibes.
* ''[[The Venture Brothers]]'': Doc Hammer and Jackson Publick have stated that they will be intentionally invoking this trope by giving the widely-despised Murderous Moppets more screentime in the next season to spite the fans who hate them. Considering they're writing a [[Sadist Show]], this could potentially [[Rescued Fromfrom the Scrappy Heap|redeem them as entertaining characters.]]
** Dr. Girlfriend gave the Moppets a bit of a [[Take That, Scrappy!]] dismissal in the season four episode "''Pinstripes Versus Poltergeists''", mentioning that [[Lampshade Hanging|she found them increasingly annoying]]. The Monarch was [[Fetish Fuel|extremely aroused]] by this display of hate...
** Even before that, the Weslification of the Moppets paid off when they tried to threaten The Monarch due to orders from Dr. Mrs. The Monarch to keep him from leaving. It was ''very'' satisfying for him to remind them that, no matter how many henchmen they have crapping their pants, they have no business trying to intimidate a guy who picks fights with the likes of Phantom Limb and '''Brock Freakin' Samson''' as a form of entertainment.
*** What's really strange is that Doc Hammer hated the Moppets too, because he kept forgetting to write them into scripts. He only vowed to keep using the characters when he found out people hated them.
* Herbert the elderly gay pedophile from ''[[Family Guy]]''. He's a one-joke character (we get it, he wants to have sex with little boys) and is openly hated by much of the fanbase, yet he still gets to appear in a lot of episodes, and sometimes even get a really long musical number.
** He also has one of the most annoying voices ever conceived on television.
** Herbert even appears regularly in ''[[The Cleveland Show]]''. It's specially bad when such a bad character appears in not one but ''two'' shows.
** Brian Griffin also goes in this direction, thanks to his being a perceived [[Author Avatar]] who [[Author Tract|preaches at length]] about his liberal views and the show's universe often bends to accommodate his beliefs, as seen in one episode where Jesus Christ himself calls all religions "pretty much crap", prompting an off-screen Brian to say "Thank you!". This isn't helped by his obliviousness to his own flaws (such as the fact that if he gets a hard-on for a woman he'll say or do anything to bed her). However, the writers seem to have recognized this, and more recent episodes portray Brian as a pathetic figure whose only real friend is Stewie, the creator's other favored character.
*** He gets a [[Take That, Scrappy!]] [["The Reason You Suck" Speech]] from Quagmire (ALSO voiced by [[Seth MacFarlane]]) in what many consider a [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]].
* Owen from the ''[[Total Drama]]'' series has become an increasingly blatant example, with a lot of focus put on him, his fart humor, and [[Annoying Laugh]] throughout all three seasons. He wound up {{spoiler|winning the first season}} despite having won few challenges and being up against the very competent and fan favourite [[Perky Goth|Gwen]]. In ''[[Total Drama Action]]'', he was conveniently brought back onto the show after being eliminated halfway through, to the joy of all the other "good" characters, and even after that he is in the third season and made it to the merge, getting [[Spotlight-Stealing Squad|an unhealthy amount of focus]] before. On the whole, fans have not been pleased.
** [[Your Mileage May Vary|Some fans]] felt he was [[Rescued Fromfrom the Scrappy Heap|better]] in the third season, where he was given an [[Odd Friendship]] with [[Ensemble Darkhorse]] Noah; the latter is a major [[Deadpan Snarker]], so they made good foils for each other. He also got an [[Alas, Poor Scrappy]] moment when [[Cloudcuckoolander|Izzy]] broke up with him.
* Cheese and Goo from ''[[Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends]]'' ended up becoming this for much of the [[Periphery Demographic|older fans.]] They both eventually [[Out of Focus|faded into the background]] however.
* In ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'', Lisa Simpson is considered this by some fans, primarily because as the rest of the cast falls into [[Flanderization]], she remains the only consistently intelligent person in all of Springfield and gets to lecture everyone as to why her views are right and theirs are wrong with annoying frequency. By the tenth season or so, the writers seem to have picked up on how obnoxious she could be to the fans, however, and played up her hardcore activism for comedy.
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* But [[Pluto the Pup|Pluto]] was a Creator's Pet, too. [[Mickey Mouse]] may not have been the ''funniest'' Disney star, but he's still unmatched as a star of funny ''adventure'' cartoons—which makes it disconcerting that from about 1934, numerous "Mickey" shorts shunt him aside to give Pluto the spotlight. The most amazing thing is that from 1937, Pluto ''had his own series'', yet he was still allowed to dominate Mickey's, too. It's gotten better nowadays, with Pluto and Mickey being kept more separate in their adventures (y'know, since there's more of an effort to ''give'' Mickey adventures these days?)
* [[Mickey Mouse]] became a Creator's Pet to the Disney animation studio after Walt Disney decided to make the character his [[Author Avatar]]. At Walt's instructions, all the faults that made Mickey popular were removed, and his positive attributes were played up. The writers had very little freedom to do anything with the character, so they turned him into a [[Straight Man]] and paired him with [[Donald Duck|other]], [[Goofy|funnier]] characters. (who at times push Mickey [[Out of Focus]])
* In ''[[King of the Hill]]'' we have Elroy, a.k.a. "Lucky". Lucky is a stereotypically ugly, middle-aged hill-billy with a drolling monotonous voice and no high-school education. His main source of income is filing lawsuits (regardless of their justification), as he practically refuses to get a job. He started off as a one shot character, but returns a season later, only this time he's become a ''regular character'' after Luanne falls in love with him. And he's still a homely, unemployed hillbilly who ends up [[The Thing That Would Not Leave|living with the Hill family]]. There are times when the show [[Lampshade Hanging|hangs lampshades]] on his obnoxiousness, but, in general, the main cast just puts up with him (and the audience is expected to as well, since he ends up marrying Luanne).
* Midway through Season Two, ''[[Drawn Together]]'' essentially became The Captain Hero Show. Practically every episode focused on him or featured him heavily, to the point where fans of other characters were sick to death of him. The writers admitted that they liked to give him stories, their justification being that the guy was so messed up that he would do absolutely anything. The more likely explanation is that the fact that he'd do anything made him ridiculously ''easy'' to write for, since it required no thought, effort, or consistency to just have him do whatever gag came to mind. Laziness is thus as likely an explanation as adoration.
* Mr. Krabs of ''[[SpongeBob SquarePants]]'', despite arguably being an [[Ensemble Darkhorse]] early in the show's run, is slowly grating on fans of the show, due to his Flanderization into [[Faux Affably Evil|an even bigger jerk]] than his [[Designated Villain|"evil" rival Plankton]].
** It helps if you just imagine his behavior as an [[Actor Allusion]], as his voice actor ([[Clancy Brown]])'s most famous role was as [[Highlander|The Kurgan]], meaning the rivalry between the two restaurants becomes an analogue to the fight between the Kurgan and Macleod. In other words, the hatred may be justified.
*** On the other hand his [[Jerkass]] behavior is not just limited [[Knight Templar|to Plankton]]; he now mistreats or shows a severe [[Lack of Empathy]] to most of the other, usually less-deserving cast members as well, such as Spongebob and Pearl, who were originally his [[Morality Pet|Morality Pets]] in earlier episodes.
* Ahsoka Tano didn't start off as one, but she'd go on to have a ''very'' complicated relationship with this trope.
* Ahsoka Tano on ''[[The Clone Wars]]'' full stop in the first season. The second season [[Rescued From the Scrappy Heap|started to rectify this]] ...only to risk fan wrath with the third season, which started off with several Ahsoka-centric episodes.
** Her debut in ''[[Star Wars: The Clone Wars]]'' had her pegged as a [[Scrappy]] almost immediately due to her bratty behavior and the potential [[Continuity Snarl]] her existence posed as the previously unmentioned padawan of Anakin Skywalker. However, it quickly became clear that her bratty behavior was intentional and throughout the course of the show, she went through a lot of growth as a character thanks to being shaped by her experiences during the Clone Wars, and it turned out that whether it gelled with previously-established continuity or not, she and Anakin played off each other well and learned a lot from each other. As a result, she went from a [[Scrappy]] to one of the franchise's biggest [[Ensemble Darkhorse|Ensemble Darkhorses]] to the point that when it turned out that she'd return in ''[[Star Wars Rebels]]'', [[And the Fandom Rejoiced|there was much rejoicing from the fandom]].
** Does she even qualify as this trope anymore? Between the last two seasons of Clone Wars and her performance on season 2 of 'Rebels', pretty much the only emotion the general fanbase is feeling is regret that her life sucked so hard towards the end and sorrow that she's gone.
** Her role in ''Rebels'' was very well-received thanks to the maturity she shows as an [[Older and Wiser]] ally to the Ghost's crew, and {{spoiler|her duel to the death against Darth Vader in the Season 2 finale was considered a fitting end to the character}}... Except it would turn out that {{spoiler|she didn't quite die. In fact, her life was saved due to ''[[Ass Pull|time travel]]'', a concept that up until this point didn't even ''exist'' in ''Star Wars'' canon and is generally so poorly executed that it's widely believed to have only been introduced [[Only the Author Can Save Them Now|because showrunner Dave Filoni had grown too attached to her, and there was no other way she could believably survive a fight to the finish against Vader.]]}}
** Fans didn't like this. ''At all.'' But while they believed this to be a severe disservice to the character they were willing to put up with it due to the goodwill they felt towards both Ahsoka herself and Dave Filoni, to the point that Ahsoka was often put up on a pedestal and held up as a proper example of a strong female character in comparison to the far more controversial Rey (who herself counts as an example of this trope to many people) who is often considered a poorly-written [[Mary Sue]], while Filoni himself would be subject to tons of gushing [[Creator Worship]] at the expense of the likes of Kathleen Kennedy, J.J. Abrams, and Rian Johnson.
** However, it wasn't meant to last. Ahsoka would start constantly showing up in spinoff materials to the point of getting her own show, and has often found herself characterized as an overly wise and serene Jedi who many feel doesn't resemble the character they fell in love with and comes off as too detached and even arrogant for her own good. Not helping matters is the fact that {{spoiler|she adheres strictly to the old Jedi code while interacting with [[The Mandalorian|Grogu]], which many found out of character given how badly her relationship with the Jedi Order ended in ''The Clone Wars'', and how she conducted herself as being unlike a traditional Jedi in the final seasons of the show and in ''Rebels''}}. This was ultimately the straw that broke the camel's back for a lot of people, leading to Ahsoka's reputation souring in the eyes of many, with some even feeling that she's no better than the much-maligned Rey. Dave Filoni, likewise, [[Fallen Creator|had his reputation take several heavy hits thanks to the backlash against ''Star Wars'' shows he's helmed for various reasons]], but that's a story for another time.
** To make a long story short, Ahsoka went from being [[Rescued From the Scrappy Heap]] only to fall back into it (albeit in more of a [[Base Breaker]] sort of way) thanks to overexposure, questionable writing, and her creator being unwilling to put a decisive end to her story long after she's served her narrative purpose.
* Taffy the babysitter from ''[[Rugrats]]'' was praised by all the characters in the show, but not so much love from the fans as she clearly existed so Amanda Bynes could star in another [[Nickelodeon]] show.
** Really, most characters introduced in the second movie and onward are Creator's Pets. Kimi joined the group of babies that had mostly stayed constant throughout the series, and practically took control of the group, taking over Tommy's role of taking them on adventures and being the leader. Fans never really warmed up to her, but she pretty much became the most prominent baby on the show.
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** He does have a ''huge'' fanbase though.
** Reginald The Koala. He's annoying, very few fans tolerate him, and yet he got an ''entire'' [[Story Arc]] (in a show which tries its hardest to avoid these) where he tried to hook up with Hayley.
* Some fans of ''[[Archer]]'' absolutely hate the characters of Cheryl and Pam. The two are constantly brought into episodes and situations where they don't belong and really serve no purpose other than to make jokes that Archer could have made on his own.
** The latest season even ups the ante by making [[Kavorka Man|Pam]] [[Guilty Pleasure|apparently so incredible in bed that Archer smuggled her onboard a space station just as go-to pussy]] ...and Cheryl's just there to tagalong and be [[Cloudcuckoolander|herself]] so even an ''Aliens''-esque space episode comes off like just another day at the office.
 
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[[Category:Creator's Pet]]