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* All of [[Hayao Miyazaki]]'s films have at least one scene depicting characters at great heights or on the edges of precipitious drops: most of his films also feature at least one fantastic flying machine. Many of his films feature flight as a prominent theme.
** And pigs. Don't forget the pigs.
* This is part of the reason why ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'' fans love the series. The person in charge of it is a self-admitted fan of ''[[Super Robot Wars]]'', so he inserted ''a lot'' of [[Humongous Mecha]] tropes and references into the anime. [[Mix and Match|The resulting fusion]] of [[Magical Girl]]s and [[Humongous Mecha]] is [[Rule of Cool|very cool indeed]].
** Of course, the series has taken a considerable amount of flak from critics recently{{when}} for, you know, [[Genre Shift|not actually being a magical girl show anymore]]. Which is silly, considering that the franchise re-invented itself with every new instalment.
* [[Naoki Urasawa]] is a noted Germanophile, which is very noticeable giving the settings of his work: Large parts of ''[[Monster (manga)|Monster]]'', ''[[Master Keaton]]'', and ''[[Pluto]]'' are set in Germany.
* [[Antique Bakery|Yoshinaga Fumi's]] works are very well regarded for their nuanced and fully realized characters. Yet for some reason all of these characters, no matter their profession or past, share the ability to speak for paragraphs about all the little details behind the [[Food Porn|delicious, mouthwatering dishes]] that always pop up.
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** Also there seems to be a tendency towards aircraft and anything in the air, and perhaps the military.
* Keiichi Sigsawa, author of ''[[Kino's Journey]]'' and ''[[Allison and Lillia]]'', goes out of his way to profile in entirely unnecessary detail every weapon and vehicle that comes up, regardless of whether it is important to the plot. And as if that weren't enough, even his ''pen name'' is based on [https://web.archive.org/web/20080205094632/http://www.sigsauer.com/Default.aspx a gun brand].
* [[Shirow Masamune|Masamune Shirow]] loves drawing sexy, scantily clad women, but that hardly sets him apart; what ''does'' is his [[Technology Porn|obsessive attention to detail regarding near-future/sci-fi weaponry and machines]]. The [[Other Wiki]] even hashad (until 2019) [[wikipedia:Seburo|a page about Seburo]], which is Shirow's ''recurring futuristic small arms manufacturer''.
* If you couldn't tell from the series itself, Hiroyuki Imaishi, the director of ''[[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann]]'' said in an interview that he liked [[This Is a Drill|drills]] and wanted a show where they were the main character's weapon. This becomes either hilarious or creepy when you see his previous work, ''[[Dead Leaves]]'', where one guy has a giant drill (that's drawn just like the ones in TTGL because he's also the character designer for both) ''for a penis''.
* Most of the [[Viewers Are Geniuses|ridiculously hard to understand]] math and physics found around ''[[Suzumiya Haruhi]]'' (including an important in one of the later novels that is even ''illustrated'') stem from Nagaru Tanigawa (the author of the novels) being a math/physics buff.
** See ''[[Alice in Wonderland]]'' for something similar.
* Wataru Yoshizumi, the mangaka behind ''[[Marmalade Boy]]'', ''[[Ultra Maniac]]'', ''[[Mint Na Bokura|Mint na Bokura]]'' and many others, likes her tennis. She tends to have at least one of her characters in each of her series be a member of their school tennis club.
* Aside of uniforms and girls with hair decs, [[Hidekaz Himaruya]] loves bunnies.
* Shamelessly lampshaded by Ai Yazawa in her manga ''[[Gokinjo Monogatari]]'', about an arts high school populated by eccentric teens. "''In the Yazawa High School students have an unspoken agreement to dress in the most outrageous way possible. Why? Principal Ai Yazawa just loves outlandish clothes!''". Before becoming a mangaka, she wanted to be a fashion designer, and she's a hardcore fan of Vivienne Westwood. She also loves rock and punk music. It becomes glaringly obvious since ''all'' of her mangas feature [[Paradise Kiss|fashion designers]], [[Unlimited Wardrobe|massive amounts of different outfits]], designs lifted from Westwood, [[Nana|aspiring musicians and punk rockers]].
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** Kubo is also a huge fashion fan and takes every opportunity to sketch his characters in many different fashion styles from Japanese garb to punk outfits, tracksuits and boxing gear. Even here, he often finds a way to insert music.
* ''[[The Wallflower]]'' author Tomoko Hayakawa practically admits in her author notes that she simply made a series full of stuff she likes: [[Bishonen]], J-rock performers, horror and gothic pop culture, and the [[Elegant Gothic Lolita]] style.
* Kouichi Mashimo of [[Bee Train|Kouichi Mashimo]] went to a Jesuit university, knows a lot about the Catholic Church, and likes to feature [[Enemy Within|some]] [[Hollywood Atheist|of]] [[Rousseau Was Right|Aquinas's]] [[The Church|and]] [[Redemption Quest|Augustine's]] [[Grey and Gray Morality|ideas]] in [[Noir (anime)|his]] [[Madlax|shows]]. He also has a non-sexual love for any [[Action Girl]] (especially [[Girls with Guns|with a gun]]), being a fairly well-known feminist in Japan.
* Tsutomu Nihei, author of ''[[Blame]]''!, has an obvious obsession with architecture, post-humanism and cyborgs. The latter occasionally verges on fetish territory, and the former is [[Memetic Mutation|something of a running joke amongst his fans]].
* Akira Toriyama of [[Dragon Ball]] fame has a thing for vehicles. Give the Dragonball manga a lookthrough and count how many of the chapter cover pages not directly related to the storyline feature some kind of detailed vehicle.
** [[Lampshaded]] in an [[Omake]] of his ''[[Doctor Slump]]'' manga, where Toriyama's editor calls him out for always drawing some sort of vehicle on the covers and asks him if the main character of the manga is a car.
* ''[[Ah! My Goddess]]'' scribe [[Kosuke Fujishima]] is a ''huge'' fan of exquisitely-detailed machinery, especially that surrounding vehicles, so it's no surprise that all his work features very in-depth discussion and imagery of the same.
** He's put [[w:Lotus Seven|Super 7s]] into not one, but two titles: ''[[You're Under Arrest]]'' and ''[[éX-Driver]]'' (the latter story had two 7s). He's only written five titles on his own so far.
* Eiichiro Oda of ''[[One Piece]]'' fame very clearly ''loves'' afros. Not only do several major ''One Piece'' characters sport afros, but the story draws attention or uses the afro for comedy in almost every case:
** Gaimon, who is mistaken for a shrub;
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** and Luffy wears an afro wig during his fight with Foxy, and everyone except [[Only Sane Man|Nami]] insists that the afro makes him stronger.
** [[Wild Take]]s and silly expressions in general are another favourite, even if the situation in the story is serious.
* [[Kozue Amano]], the creator of ''[[Aria (manga)|Aria]]'' and ''[[Amanchu!]]'', clearly has a thing for [[Scenery Porn]] [[Tropes Are Not Bad|Nobody complains,]] [[Doing It for the Art|for good reason.]]
* Mori [[Kaoru Mori]] is an Anglophile. It definitely shows in the immense attention to the details of upstairs-downstairs dynamics, costume details and setting of [[Victorian Romance Emma]].
** She highlighted in her''[[A recentBride's work [[OtoyomegatariStory]]'' that she is also fascinated by Central Asia costumes and setting. All her female and male characters have exquisitely detailed embroidered clothes.
* Isuna Hasekura, author of the ''[[Spice and Wolf]]'' novels, has a serious thing for economics. It features prominently in both of his works to date. In fact, he took the prize money he got for his first novel to the stock market and is currently writing a manga about day trading.
 
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* [[Mike Mignola]] has said in interviews that he created ''[[Hellboy (comics)|Hellboy]]'' because he loves drawing weird monsters, big gorillas and mad-science devices and wanted an excuse to get paid for it.
* [[Doug Ten Napel]]'s comics usually have a cat. Even when they aren't main characters or even important to the plot, there's usually at least one scene that prominently features one if not several.
* Legendary comic book artist George Perez has a non-sexual fetish of redesigning characters' costumes to be much more detailed than the average artist is willing to draw. It gets sexual because whenever he draws [[The Avengers (Comic Book)|Wanda Maximoff, AKA the Scarlet Witch]] (whom he has singled out as his [[Perverse Sexual Lust|favorite character to draw]]), he draws her in [https://web.archive.org/web/20160407021740/http://sarcasm-hime.net/wanda-ref.jpg this costume], which references her Roma heritage. Furthermore, this outfit is designed to indicate that Wanda ''does not wear panties'' (note that the two sections of fabric over her hips are connected by gold loops that rest over bare skin). When asked to provide [[Word of God]] information that nobody else could give, Perez stated that Wanda prefers to go commando and dared readers to find an instance in which she is proven to be wearing underwear. He even found other ways to subtly convey this sexual trivia - such as showing her wearing a very long t-shirt to bed. It is worth noting that no other artist draws this costume if they can avoid it, although that is likely because of the prohibitive level of detail rather than the designer's fetish appeal.
** Perez just has a fetish for costume design in general. His second-favorite Marvel girl to play with is the Wasp, because he can design any-and-as-many costumes as he damn well pleases for her with no one batting an eye about it. Hilariously enough, though, even with the ''dozens'' of outfits he's given her, ''none'' of the rare [[Stripperific]] costumes she's had were of his design.
*** Not that he couldn't. His design for ''[[The New Teen Titans]]'' ' [https://web.archive.org/web/20120127021411/http://league.jmkprime.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/starfire-326x600.jpg Starfire]
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== Fan Works ==
* Dahne, the author of ''[[Stray (fanfic)|Stray]]'', ''loaded'' the story with [[Shout-Out]]s, and seems to have a particular interest in ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]'' (justifiable in-story, as one of the protagonists is a mecha anime [[Otaku]]), ''[[Planescape: Torment]]'' (which provides the [[Arc Words]]), and [[Norse Mythology]].
* [[Ri2]]'s most well known fics are [[Darker and Edgier]] continuations of works like ''[[Kingdom Hearts]]'' or ''[[Latias' Journey|Pokemon]]'' that tend to [[Going Cosmic|Go Cosmic]] near the end. Also, a character named "Mewgle" that tends to show up for a cameo appearance or some sort of sub-plot.
* [[Doghead Thirteen|Calum "Doghead Thirteen" Wallace]]: In his ''[[Harry Potter]]'' fics, you will frequently see House-elves speaking hilariously over-mangled English (and who don't think ''anything'' like a human), Harry-Hermione shipping (sometimes with a touch of playful [[BDSM]]), and a Harry (or, less often, a Hermione) who is mechanically inclined at a level anywhere from handyman-tinkerer to self-taught aerospace engineer.
* [[Jared Ornstead]]. Look for dimension-hopping, [[Fixer Sue]] [[Self-Insert Fic|Self-Insert]] [[Author Avatar]]s, who in more recent stories are "blessed" with a [[Protagonist-Centered Morality]] which allows them to get away with endless atrocities because they're the "good guys". Women will be easily won over by the hero with either material possessions or simple courtesies, to the point of completely abandoning their previous moral and ethical beliefs to embrace the hero's own. [[Author Tract]]s and [[Author Filibuster]]s will litter the stories, along with [[Dear Negative Reader]] over the most trivial and benign comments. His 1990s vintage fics tend to be fun romps, often with epic plots; his later stories are often no less epic, but veer strongly into [[Hate Fic]] territory. Either way, they usually [[Jump the Shark|run off the rails]] at some point, and often end up [[Dead Fic]]s.
 
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* In the days of silent films, studios used to hide their names in the set to guard against other studios stealing the scenes for their own films (and to defend against accusations thereof).
* [[Alfred Hitchcock]] would [[Creator Cameo|appear]] as a bystander in all of his films. When he found out that people would watch the films for his cameo, and get distracted from the story, he started making his appearance in the first few minutes.
* Similarly, [[Stan Lee]] appearsappeared in every movie based on one of his [[Superhero|Super Heroes]]es made before his death in 2019.
* [[Sam Raimi]]'s [father's?] old Oldsmobile, dubbed "The Classic", is in many of his films. For example, it was Uncle Ben's car in ''[[Spider-Man (film)|Spider-Man]]''.
* [[Frank Capra]] and that crow.
* [[Martin Scorsese]]'s films often feature Catholic imagery, guilt-ridden protagonists, and the Madonna-Whore complex in regards to love interests.
* [[Christopher Nolan]]'s films would be a third shorter if he left out all the [[Scenery Porn|birds-eye view cityscapes]]. Also, at least one of the main characters will carry a small, innocent-looking object around (such as a [[The Dark Knight|a playing card, a coin]], a [[The Prestige|a bouncing ball]], or a [[Inception|spinning top]] ) which we are treated to many close-up shots of. And if [[Cillian Murphy]] is in the movie, at some point he will have a bag over his head.
* Film producer Jon Peters appears to really like [[Giant Spider]]s, as noted in our article on [[Executive Meddling]].
* [[Tim Burton]] has a few:
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** [[Monster Clown|Scary clowns]], dark woods, tile floors...
** And Burton seems to have a thing for dogs, as there are some dropped into every one of his movies at some point.
** And that's the subtle stuff, we'll not even get into his main character is nearly always a sensitive outsider shunned by the masses. That defines himself prior to achieving the fame... [[Pandering to the Base|and]] his [[Emo Teen|his target audience]].
* [[Kevin Smith]] always stuffs his films with his favorite things: [[Star Wars]], Jaws, hockey and comic book references, and talks about "unnatural" sex acts. He has a thing for [[Meganekko|girls with glasses]], brought on by his wife. There are also ''Degrassi'' references.
* As a boy, [[Wes Craven]] was bullied by a kid named [[A Nightmare on Elm Street|Fred Krueger]]. Before this name became attached to Craven's most iconic baddie, his earlier film ''[[The Last House Onon Thethe Left]]'' contains a villainous rapist named Krug.
* Screenwriter/director Richard Curtis seems to have a thing for Americans. Aside from the ''[[Bridget Jones (film series)|Bridget Jones]]'' films, which were adapted from another medium and was a collaboration with several other writers, every theatrically released film he's ever written has been a British comedy featuring at least one American character, though that maybe due to the UK cinematic convention of having an inexplicable American in the cast to coax the US market.
** Ironically in ''[[Love Actually]]'' he has the British prime minister played by Hugh Grant give an epic [["The Reason You Suck" Speech]] to the American President played by Billy Bob Thornton.
* The films of [[Guillermo del Toro]] always include slime, aspects of clock punk (or at least, clocks), things in jars (often [[People Jars]]), and references to Roman Catholicism. The supernatural is extremely common, and he's also greatly interested in the [[Spanish Civil War]].
* [[Robert Zemeckis]] likes [[Historical In-Joke|Historical In Jokes]]s as well as putting real people in his films, either by getting the real person or by combining [[Fake Shemp|editing tricks]] with [[Stock Footage]].
** In a documentary made for the 2002 ''[[Back to Thethe Future (film)|Back to the Future]]'' DVD, Zemeckis said he always felt the best [[Time Travel]] stories were ''[[The Time Machine]]'' and ''[[A Christmas Carol]]''. Seven years later, he came out with his own version of the latter.
** Which brings us to [[Motion Capture]].
** Casting actors, often the lead, [[Acting for Two|in multiple parts]] (Michael J. Fox in ''[[Back to Thethe Future (film)|Back to the Future]] Part II]]'', Tom Hanks in ''[[The Polar Express]]'', Jim Carrey and Gary Oldman in ''A Christmas Carol'') and having them interact with each other.
* [[Dario Argento]]'s films usually have protagonists who are involved in the arts or some creative profession, and are foreigners.
** Jessica Harper in ''Suspiria'' and Jennifer Connelly in ''Phenomena'' are based on Disney's Snow White.
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* ''[[Star Wars]]'' sound tech Ben Burtt is the driving force of the resurgent popularity of the [[Wilhelm Scream]].
* Most films directed by [[John Landis]] (with the notable exception of ''[[Animal House]]'') feature the phrase "See You Next Wednesday." Even the [[Michael Jackson]] "Thriller" video incorporates it in background dialogue.
* All of John Glen's ''[[James Bond (film)|James Bond]]'' movies feature [[Disturbed Doves]].
* [[John Woo]] is also fond of the doves, and since ''[[The Killer]]'', they've shown up in pretty much all his work.
* Stephen Sommers ''loves'' scenes with people getting swallowed up by quicksand and the ilk (see ''[[The Jungle Book (film)|The Jungle Book]]'', ''[[The Mummy Trilogy|The Mummy 1999]]'', ''[[The Mummy Trilogy|The Mummy Returns]]'' and the Sommers-produced ''[[The Scorpion King]]'').
* [[James Cameron]] has [[Foot Focus]] and many a [[Action Girl]] in his films.
* [[Trademark Favorite Food|Coffee?]] [[Coleman Francis]] [[The Skydivers|loves coffee!]]
 
== Game Books ==
* Ian Livingstone, co-creator of the ''[[Fighting Fantasy]]'' gamebook series, seems to enjoy sailboat racing, given how he's snuck [[Author Avatar]]s of himself and his teammates as minor characters in some of the gamebooks he's written. He appears as one of the crew members who can ferry the hero to Kaad in ''Return To Firetop Mountain'', and the rest of the crew have real-life names that are spelled phonetically ("Eeyun" instead of Ian, "Ndroo" instead of Drew, etc.), and also appears as an innkeeper who reminisces about his sailing days to the hero in ''Armies of Death''.
 
== Literature ==
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*** Not exactly survivalists and not, for the most part, off the grid. They're people with unusual skills and interests who, often, live in remote areas; and those -have- to be the bulk of survivors, given the initial premise. Exactly what chance would a professor of post-colonial studies in the Bay Area have if all high-energy technology stopped working? The only 'survivalists' proper in the Emberverse series are the Aryan Brotherhood types who appear early in "Dies the Fire", and they don't do too well. The survivors center around an itinerant musician and a bush pilot, for example.
*** CUT also started as a survivalist cult in the Emberverse.
** He also seems to be very fond of the concept of the country squire, whether in the form of a [[The Draka|Draka]] landholder, a Prime of one of the Thirty Families of New Virginia (from his novel Conquistador), a Commander of post-change Britain in the [[Emberverse]], a zamindar of the [[The Peshawar Lancers|Angrezi Raj]], or a Hereditary Supervisor of the [[The General (series)|Civil Government]].
** However, his real thumbprint is his [[Food Porn]]. It occurs in all his books, from the fifth millenium to the Emberverse.
* Speaking of Piers Anthony... Sure, the Xanth books are filled with puns, but they lurk in other books too, not to mention the [[Meaningful Name]]s. And he loves logic puzzles; more than once has the climax of a book hinged on the protagonist figuring out a logic puzzle. (Off the top of my head: ''Golem in the Gears'', the Prisoners' Dilemma; ''With a Tangled Skein'', the [[Twelve Coins Puzzle]].)
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* [[Peter David]] has a number of these. Many of his ''[[Star Trek]]'' books at least once mention Alexander the Great, for instance.
 
== Live -Action TV ==
* British comedian [[Rik Mayall]] seems to like politics. Various references to the subject pop up in pretty much every episode of ''[[The Young Ones]]'', ''[[Filthy Rich & Catflap]]'' and ''[[Bottom]]''. So playing the lead role in ''[[The New Statesman]]'' must have been a dream come true for him.
* Jerry [[Seinfeld]]—both the actor and character—likes [[Superman]]. [[Seinfeld|It]] [[Once an Episode|shows]].
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== Multi-MediaMultimedia ==
* Jhonen Vasquez (''[[Invader Zim]]'' and ''[[Johnny the Homicidal Maniac]]'') gives frequent homages to ''[[Alien]]'', ''[[The Fly (1958 film)|The Fly]]'' (both the original and [[David Cronenberg]]'s version), ''[[Scanners]]'', and video games in his comics/ TV show. He's also a fan of [[Humongous Mecha|giant robots]], space in general, [[Nightmare Fuel]], [[Body Horror]], and certain words, most notably: ''[[Doomy Dooms of Doom|doom]]'', ''cheese'', ''piggies'', ''tacos'', ''[[Everything's Better with Monkeys|monkeys]]'', ''moose'', ''noodles'', ''dooky'', ''nachos'', and ''bunnies''. He even stated at [[Comic Con]] '07 that he's fascinated with plotlines of people who are "controlled and used" by others (Johnny and the Doughboys, Devi and Sickness), and that he also hates dogs and little kids (sans [[Johnny the Homicidal Maniac|Squee]]).
* [[Nick Cave]] loves flowers, violence, [[Nightmare Fuel]], poetry, and religious debate. He also enjoys portraying the [[Deep South]], although it would be a stretch to say that he loved it.
* Glenn Danzig enjoys singing about death, Satan, and demons.
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== Professional Wrestling ==
* [[Vince Russo]] loves pole matches. If you see a pole match in a [[World Wrestling Entertainment|WWE]], [[World Championship Wrestling|WCW]], or [[Total Nonstop Action Wrestling|TNA]] show, Russo's booking this match.
** Not just pole matches, pole matches for the craziest things. These include a rat, a bottle of Viagra, Judy Bagwell (they needed to use a forklift), a pinata, and the keys to Mick Foley's office, among other things.
 
 
== Tabletop Games ==
== = Game Books ===
* Ian Livingstone, co-creator of the ''[[Fighting Fantasy]]'' gamebook series, seems to enjoy sailboat racing, given how he's snuck [[Author Avatar]]s of himself and his teammates as minor characters in some of the gamebooks he's written. He appears as one of the crew members who can ferry the hero to Kaad in ''Return To Firetop Mountain'', and the rest of the crew have real-life names that are spelled phonetically ("Eeyun" instead of Ian, "Ndroo" instead of Drew, etc.), and also appears as an innkeeper who reminisces about his sailing days to the hero in ''Armies of Death''.
 
=== Tabletop RPG ===
* Gary Gygax, co-creator of ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]''.
** Mushrooms
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** Anagrams or puns on his own name (Xagyg, Zagyg, etc).
*** This one became fairly popular - Jim Ward got character Drawmij (in ''[[Greyhawk]]'') and ship named '''Ward'''en (in ''Metamorphosis Alpha''), Collins has Snilloc (in ''[[Forgotten Realms]]'').
* [[White Wolf]], the writers of the ''[[World of Warcraft]]'' RPG, made it very obvious they preferred Humans, Elves, and Dwarves over the other races (especially [[Demoted to Extra|the trolls]] and the entirely absent [[Canon Discontinuity|draenei]]) in the series. Even in the Horde Player's guide, they'd go on about elves, dwarves, and humans.
 
 
== TheaterTheatre ==
* [[Shakespeare]] loves comparing things to gardening, falconry, and hunting with dogs. He also loves crossdressing characters, but that was a fairly common schtick at the time. When he was writing, women were not permitted to be actors, and as such [[Recursive Crossdressing|all of the female characters ''were'' men]], and he thought it would be funny to make jokes based on that.
** Not to mention his continual description of rebellion and social breakdown in terms of cannibalism/self-consumption. Although perhaps this belongs in the 'Miscellaneous Paraphilia' section.
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* The creator of web-based MMORPG ''[[Kingdom of Loathing]]'' is a huge fan of [[They Might Be Giants (band)|They Might Be Giants]]; and references abound throughout the game.
* [[Rare]]. Keys. ''Enormous'' keys, bigger and heavier than the characters, the most famous being the infamous ice key from ''[[Banjo-Kazooie]]'' / ''Banjo Tooie''. Both ''[[Diddy Kong Racing]]'' and ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]'' feature gigantic gold keys as [[Plot Coupon|plot coupons]]; finding or using a key is always a momentous occasion.
* The Rom Hacker Tatsu loves referencing the [[Dragon Quest]] and [[Kunio-Kun]] series in his rom hacks. ''[[Rockman 6: Unique Harassment]]'' has plenty of them in store:
** The title screen uses a Dragon Quest-like font.
** Napalm Man and Mr. X Stage 4 use tiles that alter Mega Man's controls.
** Napalm Man's level is called Mega Quest. It even uses Fighting Spirit from [[Dragon Quest VII]].
** Mr. X Stage 1 uses the USSR theme and Mr. X Stage 4 uses Team Shadow's theme from [[Super Dodge Ball]].
** Estark is the boss of Mr. X Stage 3, complete with special commands in message box and boss music.
 
== WebcomicsWeb Comics ==
 
== Webcomics ==
* ''[[Shortpacked]]'', a rare hobby-based and clean-subtexted example, takes this trope to a really fun extreme. Toys, especially [[Transformers]], had managed to sneak into the earlier webcomics of David Willis, and this is a Webcomic set in a toy store, written by a toy collector. Do the math. He parodied the sexual form trope with one panel where his girlfriend, in-universe, appeared to be wearing a skimpy [[Transformers Armada|Hot Shot]] costume.
* ''[[Fans]]!'' is a little too vehement in its defense of fanboys. Claim that they're valuable, intelligent and worthwhile human beings, fine. Claim that fanboys have the specific combination of strengths that makes them the only ones capable of defending Earth, and that the biggest, geekiest fanboys alive will be revered by future generations as heroes who made all of society possible... that's taking things a bit too far.
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* [[Dominic Deegan|Mookie]] will be the first to tell you that a) he was a nerd, b) he loves heavy metal and [[Comic Books]], and c) "Lots of things I love are green!".
** Apparently among those green things are [[She Hulk]] and [[Hot Amazon|women built like her.]]
* ''[[Penny Arcade (Webcomic)|Penny Arcade]]'' is all about things the authors like, but also seems to feature a lot of [[Nightmare Fuel]]-ish [[Starfish Aliens|aliens]] and [[Eldritch Abomination|strange creatures]] for little reason.
** Jerry Holkins (Tycho) is a massive Cthulhu nerd. Really, what else can you expect from a mind that writes things like [http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2006/04/10/ this?]
* ''[[Girly]]'' features a lot of kitties. The creator has mentioned that he loves cats.
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* There's an unclickable "Joy of Painting" toon on ''[[Homestar Runner]]'' that shows Marzipan dressed as Bob Ross painting a picture of a mountain landscape. Matt and Mike Chapman, creators of ''Homestar Runner'', admitted that they only did this because they thought showing [[Granola Girl]] Marzipan with a beard would be funny.
** A lot of the stuff at ''Homestar Runner'' is based on the creators' childhood. Note the frequent appearance of breakfast cereals and [[Merchandise-Driven]] Saturday morning cartoons, the sibling rivalry between Strong Bad and his brother Strong Sad, the characters' [[Vague Age]], and in-universe [[Nightmare Fuel]].
* How else do you explain the contortion scenes in ''[[Sapphire (web serial)|Sapphire]] Episode III''?
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100822135108/http://www.asstr.org/files/Authors/SD40ka/ SD40ka] ([[NSFW]] porn-hosting site): His stories (and it's definitely a "he") often enough star a male computer programmer, who marries/is married to a genius woman, and either or both of them recently served America ''proudly'' in Iraq thank-you-very-much. The characters are ''always'' staunch political conservatives, often actively reshaping the fictional universe into a Republican Paradise. He plugs that his (genius!) characters love the [[wikipedia:Cato Institute|Cato Institute]] and [[wikipedia:Townhall.com|Townhall.com,]] just in passing. There's even the occasional [[Easy Evangelism]] of a [[Strawman Political|merely misguided (rather than Evil) liberal]]. And everyone accepts Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Savior, without whom there was a great big hole in their hearts. In fact, it's a lot like [[Jack Chick]], only with lots of monogamous sex with [[Biggus Dickus|big penises]].
* [[Doug Walker]] ''really'' has a thing for broken, insane jerks who'll never get what they want but they'll keep on trying. [[The Nostalgia Critic]] is a perfect example of this, and [[Ask That Guy With The Glasses]] is getting there (as a more depraved version) with the amount of [[Sanity Slippage]] he's been put through.
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** The also clearly have a thing for progressive rock. Especially David Bowie.
*** Doc Hammer also enjoys painting, which sometimes works it's way into the plot. Jackson poked fun at him for this in the commentary for O.R.B.
* One writer on ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'' is a big Preston Sturgis fan and has an accompanying interest in [[Hobos]], leading to a number of hobo jokes throughout the series.
** That would be [[wikipedia:John Swartzwelder|John Swartzwelder]], who still holds the record for writing the most Simpsons episodes at 59.
** Additionally, many characters throughout Matt Groening productions have the middle initial "J." (Homer Jay Simpson, Bartholomew J. Simpson, Mona J. Simpson, [[Futurama|Philip J. Fry, and Hubert J. Farnsworth]]) as a reference to the creator of [[Rocky and Bullwinkle|Bullwinkle J. Moose]]
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** Not to mention main characters who logically shouldn't be able to talk but do. Like Stewie, Klaus, and Tim the bear.
* Brad Bird works the number A113—a reference to a room at CalArts used by animation and graphic design students—into all of his projects: ''Family Dog'', ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|Simpsons]]'' episodes, ''[[The Iron Giant]]'', ''[[The Incredibles]]'', ''[[Ratatouille]]''. This has since become a widespread animation in-joke.
* One [[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic|My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic]] writer has a disproportionate number of mental breakdown episodes.
 
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