Criminal Minds: Difference between revisions

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* [[Abusive Parents]]: Show up often, and aren't limited only to UnSubs.
* [[Accidental Aiming Skills]]: Subverted (deconstructed? averted?) in "L.D.S.K." when Reid claims, after shooting an UnSub in the head, that he was "aiming for his leg." Reid recently failed his gun test, so it would be easy to believe this explanation...except that Reid was lying just a few feet away from the UnSub at the time, and it had been previously established that anything less than a [[Boom! Headshot!|headshot]] would probably result in the deaths of half the people in the room. Reid was making his first joke of the series, and fittingly, it was a morbid and obscure one.
** The joke is also a call back to the opening of the episode when Reid was practicing with Hotch for the not yet failed test and aims for the target's head but hits the groin.
* [[Actor Allusion]]: Reid finding Morgan and Rossi watching ''[[The Young and The Restless]]'' in his hotel room is an allusion to Shemar Moore's tenure on the show.
* [[Added Alliterative AppealAlliteration]]: Jennifer Jareau. Lampshaded by her preferred nickname of JJ.
* [[Adult Fear]]: Let's just add "take a shot every time a child is abducted/abused/assaulted/threatened" to the Criminal Minds drinking games.
** Notable episodes include "Risky Business", "Cradle to Grave", "Seven Seconds", and others.
* [[Adventures in Coma Land]]: After {{spoiler|Elle}} is shot by the [[Serial Killer]] of the week she is left unconscious and bleeding to death. Throughout the remainder of the episode while emergency workers attempt to resuscitate her, she is in {{spoiler|a dream version of the BAU jet, where she is visited by her police officer father who died when she was a child. During their conversation, Elle's father tells her that the decisions she makes in the plane will make the difference as to whether she lives or dies in real life}}.
* [[Affectionate Nickname]]: Morgan and Garcia have dozens of these for each other.
** JJ is also the only person (in the world, apparently), who calls Reid "Spence."
* [[Alone with the Psycho]]: Numerous times. This is a show about serial killers after all.
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{{quote|'''Defense Attorney''': The fact is, behavioral analysis is just intellectual guesswork. You probably can't even tell me the color of the socks I'm wearing with no greater accuracy than a carnival psychic.
'''Hotchner''': Charcoal gray. You match them to the color of your suit to appear taller. ... You also wear lifts and you've had the soles of your shoes replaced. One might think you're frugal, but you're having financial difficulties. You wear a fake Rolex because you pawned the real one to pay your debts, my guess is to a bookie. ... Your vice is horses. Your Blackberry's been buzzing on the table every twenty minutes, which happens to be the average time between posts from Colonial Downs. You're getting race results. And every time you do, it affects your mood in court, and you're not having a very good day. That's because you pick horses the same way you practice law - by always taking the long shot... }}
* [[Backdoor Pilot]]: The 18th episode of Season 5, "The Fight", featured another BAU team, which starred in a [[Spin-Off]], "Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior". Not really a [[Poorly-Disguised Pilot]]... the producers announced this intention right from the beginning. Didn't really pan out, as very little fandom interest plus poor writing got it canceled.
* [[The Bad Guy Wins]]:
** "North Mammon", essentially. The UnSub's entire plan pretty much went perfectly, and he obviously didn't care that he was caught in the end, and may have even wanted to get caught, since he likely could have gotten away with it if he had bothered to cover his face when letting the remaining two girls go.
** "Into The Woods", where Shane gets away. Whether he's gotten away for good, however...
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* [[Beneficial Disease]]: One of the abducted women "The Uncanny Valley" is diabetic, which somehow allows her to metabolize the paralytic drugs she was given at a faster than usual rate.
* [[Berserk Button]]: There was an episode where a guy who dealt really badly with a breakup went around getting women to "play along" with him as he raped them at gun or knifepoint, killing the boyfriends and then the women after he'd finished with them. When the team eventually tracks the UnSub to his latest victim, who he is kicking and punching, Prentiss [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|pushes him to the ground, points a gun at his temple, and basically tells him he is going to be raped in prison and there is nothing he can do about it, and then she tells him to "play along" for her when this eventually happens]]. Needless to say, Prentiss and sex abuse cases is like gasoline and fire.
* [[Beware the Nice Ones]]: JJ and Garcia, especially JJ's [[Boom! Headshot!]] through a plate-glass window to {{spoiler|Garcia's shooter}}. [[Played for Laughs]] with Reid who who takes pranking [[Up to Eleven]].
* [[Bilingual Bonus]]: Prentiss speaks several languages and some of her languages scenes aren't dubbed. However, "Catching Out" becomes an unintentionally funny episode when you hear Prentiss speak Spanish. To Spanish speakers it is blatantly obvious that her pronunciation is ''atrocious''.
* [[Blind and the Beast]]: "The Big Wheel" with the little blind boy and the UnSub of the week, but played with in that it's not anything about the man's appearance that's frightening, but the boy would see him as a monster if he could see, because he would recognise him as his mother's murderer.
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* [[Canada, Eh?]]: "To Hell..."/"... And Back"
* [[Cannot Spit It Out]]: Gideon deliberately provokes the stuttering Footpath Killer until he gets so angry that he can't talk.
* [[Captive Date]]:
** One episode focuses on a killer who treats his victims to a romantic evening complete with rose petals, though they're not tied down. He means no harm until they turn him down once they reach the bathtub part of the date. The rest fits to a T though.
** In another episode, a guy was stalking a woman and ended up kidnapping her. One scene shows them sitting at a table and talking, until the woman raises her hands and it's revealed that she's tied up.
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** "UnSub", short for "'''un'''known '''sub'''ject," a bit of [[Truth in Television|real-life FBI jargon]].
*** Amazing Fun Fact: ''UnSub'' was also the title of a short-lived series aired in 1989, which the Other Wiki tells us was [[wikipedia:Unsub (TV series)|"centered around an elite FBI forensic team that investigates serial murderers and other violent crimes."]]
** Reid: "Actually..."
** Garcia: "Off the grid" and other techie/gamer/Internet slang.
** UnSub Stanley Howard from "Scared To Death": "Is it worse than you thought?"
* [[Cat Scare]]: "The Angel Maker"; it even gets lampshaded when the soon-to-be victim actually finds her cat ("Geez Bo, you scared me half to death... such a cliche"). Also, in "Sense Memory", a paranoid Prentiss is startled when her new cat, Sergio, jumps in her lap.
* [[Censorship by Spelling]]: [[Played for Drama]] in "100". Hotch is on the phone with his wife Haley after learning that she and their son Jack are held in hostage by {{spoiler|George Foyet}} aka The Reaper.
{{quote|'''Hotch''': He's just trying to make you angry.
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* [[Contamination Situation]]: "Amplified," at the end of season four
* [[Continuity Nod]]:
** In the season five episode "Exit Wounds", Emily and J.J. are discussing the difficulty of maintaining relationships with their jobs. Emily starts to come around when J.J. says that she and Will make it work, but when they are called into work less than a minute later Emily dejectedly remarks that she should get a cat. In her Ian Doyle story arc in the sixth season, her new cat, Sergio, can be seen wandering around her apartment and even figures into the story a bit. Also, in an early seventh season episode, Hotch calls Emily out on lying to her therapist about Sergio, a wonderful guy she's become involved with. Emily states that he's the perfect man...his qualities include the fact that he doesn't hog the covers and poops in a box.
* [[Couldn't Find a Lighter]]: In "Natural Born Killer," Morgan and Gideon imagine the killer lighting a cigarette with a blowtorch before using it on his victim.
* [[Courtroom Episode]]: "Tabula Rasa"
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** More than that: {{spoiler|he has his entire season five arc with Hotch planned out to the last, down to the details of getting members of the BAU interviewing Karl Arnold}}. It's a [[Batman Gambit]] with a heavy reliance on [[Flaw Exploitation]], taken to a power of ten.
** How Frank gets away in "No Way Out".
* [[Criminal Mind Games]]: Done a number of times.
** In "The Fisher King", by the UnSub of the same name, who mostly just wanted to send them on a quest. Some of the team worked on it like a normal case, some of the team followed the breadcrumbs. The trail of breadcrumbs solved the case, and not following the rules nearly got one of the BAU killed.
** In "Masterpiece" by Professor Rothschild/{{spoiler|Henry Grace}}, who {{spoiler|used clues and a "live video feed" of torture to lead the team into a trap}}. Luckily, Reid's [[Good with Numbers]] combined with Rossi's [[Out Gambit]] turned the UnSub's severe OCD around to figure that out.
** And then there's {{spoiler|George Foyet}}/The Reaper, who {{spoiler|stalked the cop who called him off, tried to guilt Hotch into taking the same deal, tortured Hotch, got his family taken away, stalked him for months, and sent the team clues through Karl Arnold, knowing that they would go to him when he got mail about a new string of crimes}}.
** Before all those there was "Unfinished Business". The BAU teams up with a retired profiler to track down The Keystone Killer, a serial killer who had started killing again after almost twenty years and whose signature was sending complicated word puzzles to the authorities.
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* [[Daddy Had a Good Reason For Abandoning You]]: Reid, as well as {{spoiler|Jack Hotchner}} in season five.
** Reid would disagree. Despite promising to forgive his father in exchange for help on a case, Reid remains (rightfully) unappeased. In "Public Enemy", in response to a case related statement, "There are lots of ways that sons defeat their fathers," he quips bitterly, "I just kept getting Ph.D.s."
** You could even call [[Team Dad|Gideon's]] departure from the team this.
* [[Damsel Fight-and-Flight Response]]: The UnSubs' target during most of "Open Season" starts looking promising at fighting back until she decides two stabs in the back and running away, not taking his weapon either, is enough to stop a serial killer she's already aggravated. For the record, ''Criminal Minds'' is good at keeping moments of stupidity from feeling [[Contrived Stupidity Tropes|contrived]], and it's justifiable in that a few of her screws seemed out of place by the end of the episode.
** "Reflection of Desire" had a victim break the UnSub's nose and immediately flee for a door...only to discover it's locked. Later in a second escape attempt, she finds out she wouldn't have wanted to go in there anyway.
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* [[Dead Guy on Display]]: The "Art of Dying" chapter from the upcoming PC game.
* [[Deal with the Devil]]: Essentially what keeps the Reaper at bay for ten years.
* [[Death by Childbirth]]:
** {{spoiler|1=The second UnSub (the first UnSub's lover)}} in "A Thousand Words".
** Played with in "Cradle to Grave", where {{spoiler|1=the UnSub and his wife}} are killing the girls ''after'' they give birth, if it's a baby girl.
*** They were allowed to live if they gave birth to a girl, on the rationale that if they'd produced a full-term, healthy baby of the wrong gender, the next one might be a boy; it was the girls who miscarried who were killed.
* [[Death by Irony]]: End of "Paradise", and what happens to the main UnSub in "Minimal Loss."
* [[Deceptive Disciple]]: "Amplification".
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** "The Slave of Duty" {{spoiler|deals in part with Hotch's decision to return to the BAU after the Boston Reaper killed Haley; the title is both a description of Hotch's personality and the alternate title of [[Gilbert and Sullivan|"The Pirates of Penzance."]] Hotch met Haley when they were both in a high school production of "Pirates."}}
** "Risky Business" refers to and darkly twists certain plot elements of the [[Tom Cruise]] movie of the same name - {{spoiler|privileged, apparently straight-edge kids get into trouble behind their parents' backs, to hilarity in the film's case and to their deaths in the episode}} - as well as echoing the notion of a victim being high or low risk, which is brought up several times over the course of the series.
** "Compromising Positions" refers to the sex the UnSub forces his victims to have before killing them, as well as the swinger's parties he's finding them at. It also refers to Garcia "compromising" {{spoiler|both her usual role as technical analyst and taking on JJ's former job as media liaison, and finding it impossible to do both to an acceptable standard}}.
** "Safe Haven" refers to what the families who are killed are trying to give the unsub not knowing what he's planning for them {{spoiler|as well as being the name of the law that the teenaged unsub was given up by his mother under, precipitating his descent into murder.}} On top of all that, you also have {{spoiler|little Ellie Spicer from "Our Darkest Hour" and "The Longest Night" looking for a safe haven away from her neglectful foster family in California by running away to Virginia to see Morgan.}}
** "Profiling 101" refers to both the undergraduate class the team walks through the case in the episode and {{spoiler|the unsub's whopping 101 victims}}.
* [[Double Standard Rape (Female on Male)]]/[[Double Standard Rape (Female on Female)|Female on Female]]: No, it is ''[[Averted Trope|not okay.]]'' Both either occur or are a concern in "I Love You Tommy Brown", and its treated with as much horror as it deserves.
* [[Downer Ending]]:
** "100" most notably, since it's where {{spoiler|Hotch crosses the [[Despair Event Horizon]]}}.
** "North Mammon" is also pretty bad, since {{spoiler|they don't find the three missing girls before they make the [[Sadistic Choice]] offered to them by their kidnapper - kill one and the other two go free}}.
** "The Fox". {{spoiler|Sure, Karl Arnold is caught and tricked into a confession, but then Hotch finds a little box in which the unsub keeps the wedding rings of the men he kills. There are eight rings, which mean Karl has killed much more people without raising any suspect before being caught.}}
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** "The Big Wheel" is a pretty huge downer, although there is some goodness in the fact that {{spoiler|the unsub actually did have a breakthrough that enabled him to finally clasp the hand of his friend.}}
** "Into the Woods" ("He got away...")
** "What Happens at Home", because {{spoiler|the killer murdered his own wife, while his own daughter begs him to stop. Later he attacks Hotchner, who has no choice except to shoot him, though not before the murderer apologizes to his daughter, leaving her alone}}.
** "Lauren" {{spoiler|Subverted: Although there are wrenching hospital and funeral scenes, and the team suffers a terrible loss, Prentiss is shown to be alive at the very end.}}
** "True Night" {{spoiler|"Hey, this is Vicky! I can't come to the phone right now because I'm out living my life!"}}
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* [[Drop the Hammer]]: "The Angel Maker" and "To Hell and Back".
* [[Dueling Hackers]]: How Garcia and Kevin meet.
* [[Dysfunction Junction]]: Let's count them off, shall we?
** Morgan {{spoiler|was sexually molested from childhood through adolescence by an authority figure}}, and his father was killed in front of him when he was very young.
** Prentiss had a neglectful mother and {{spoiler|had an abortion at age 15. One should note that the abortion itself is never played for angst, rather the consequences of it - her isolation from the baby's father and the guilt heaped on her by her Catholic upbringing - is.}} She also {{spoiler|went under deep cover to catch Doyle, to the point of feigning a relationship with him. We see that Doyle fell for her, but whether she did or didn't have some feelings for Doyle is unclear. In any case, they wind up trying to kill each other.}}
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** J.J. had {{spoiler|an older sister who committed suicide}} and grew up in a stifling small-town environment.
** Reid? Schizophrenic mother, a dad who walked out on them, drug addiction and social isolation. And his father figure up and left without even saying goodbye in person.
** Both Gideon and Elle were so messed up by the job - Gideon by the serial killer {{spoiler|who killed his girlfriend in his own home}} (after he'd already had to get over the trauma of losing his previous team to a [[Mad Bomber]]); Elle by {{spoiler|the serial rapist she went [[Vigilante Execution|vigilante executioner]]}} on - that they up and left the team. Gideon didn't even resign in person, he just left a letter behind for Reid and took off.
** Seaver's {{spoiler|father was a serial killer}}.
* [[Electric Torture]]: "Charm and Harm", "Limelight", "Remembrance of Things Past", and a variation in "Lauren".
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* [[Evil Versus Evil]]: Okay, maybe not ''evil'', but the Guantanamo guards detaining the [[Big Bad]] in "Lessons Learned" are portrayed as little more than [[Smash Mook|brainless, brutish thugs]] themselves. This was likely partly due to [[Hellhole Prison|the perception of the facility in the public eye]] and partly to contrast them with the protagonists.
* [[Executive Meddling]]: JJ was written out and Prentiss' screen time was reduced for season six, due to budget cuts, leaving Garcia as the only regular female cast member. Naturally, the fans were not pleased. Especially the female fans. And neither is the entire cast and crew, as expressed with, among other things, pointed double-meaning lines in "JJ". It was made worse by bringing in [[Suspiciously Similar Substitute|a new female lead]] to replace JJ (though she doesn't have the same job). Thanks to the fans, they were brought back as regulars for season seven and the [[Replacement Scrappy]] went bye-bye.
** In light of the producer's comments about always intending to bring JJ and Prentiss back, an alternative explanation from industry workers has appeared on several sites. That explanation being that the producers wanted to more heavily focus on Prentiss for at least part of the season and explore her mysterious past. As part of this they needed someone to have the access that JJ's new job gave her for story reasons. However, experts in union contracts say that AJ Cook was cut as a regular because keeping her at that rank would mean paying her for all episodes of the season even if she was not in them, at a huge expense. Same with cutting back Paget Brewster's contracted number of episodes given that they knew she would be missing from several. But they had always left open a way to bring back Emily at any time both in story and contract.
* [[Expanded Universe]]: A trilogy of books (all of which take place mid-Season Three) and an upcoming computer game.
* [[Extra Y, Extra Violent]]: Played with; one killer claims that he's XYY, and that's why he kills. However, Rossi replies that the study linking that condition to criminal behaviour was debunked years ago.
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** The episode "Supply & Demand" had a lot of cute brunette women in their underwear.
** On the male side we have,[[Adorkable|Reid.]] [[Mr. Fanservice|Reid.]] [[Nerds Are Sexy|Reid.]] [[Dude in Distress|Reid.]]
** [[Mr. Fanservice|Also]], [[Dark and Troubled Past|Morgan]].
** Hoo boy, yes, Morgan. Most especially {{spoiler|: coming out of the shower wearing only a towel in seventh season episode Snake Eyes, with every inch of him showing a sheen of water droplets. A moment that caused many a remote control to wear out and smoke as it was constantly brought back up to the screen...}}
** Hello? [[Hot Dad|We're]] [[Iron Woobie|forgetting]] [[Mr. Fanservice|Hotch.]]
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*** Reid even jokes, in "Nameless, Faceless," that "kicking down doors is Morgan's job."
** [[The Chick]]: Prentiss, Seaver, and JJ. Though this should not be taken as a bad thing, since all play other roles at times (Prentiss is the other BAU member [[Action Girl|who seems to come face-to-face with the Unsub a lot]]). But in the sense of the [[Five-Man Band]], this is the role they play most often.
*** Reid has some Chickish qualities, too, especially with his tendency to get in trouble (aka getting kidnapped).
* [[Foot-Dragging Divorcee]]: Hotch hesitates for several episodes to sign the papers that divorce him from Haley.
* [[Foot Focus]]: A lot of kidnapped females end up barefoot. Apparently a lot of criminals on this show have a foot fetish.
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* [[Hot Mom]]: JJ, Haley, Fran Morgan, Sarah Jacobs, assorted victims like Maggie from "Legacy"... really, it'd be easier to list the mothers that ''don't'' fit.
* [[Hunting the Most Dangerous Game]]: "Open Season", "Rite of Passage" (though to a far lesser extent), "Exit Wounds".
* [[Hypocritical Humor]]: In "The Internet Is Forever" Rossi makes fun of social networking sites like Twitter. Almost every single member of the cast has a prolific Twitter presence.
 
 
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** The one female victim in "Our Darkest Hour" seems to have gotten an entire season's worth of [[Idiot Ball|Idiot Balls]] - she arrives home in the middle of a blackout, on a night when every news media in the city has been publicizing a home invader, to an open front door and only her young child for company. She ''takes her child into the home anyway''.
*** Three words: [[Rule of Scary]].
** One could argue that the second-part episodes of "Revelations" and "Penelope" are the results of Reid and Garcia (of all people!) making stupid mistakes in the first parts ("The Big Game" and "Lucky" respectively). In the "The Big Game," {{spoiler|while in the midst of chasing Tobias Hankel, Reid decides in the heat of the moment to split up from JJ in order to cover more ground to capture Hankel (which JJ didn't think was a good idea in the first place) and it backfires on Reid as he ends up being kidnapped instead.}} For "Lucky," since Garcia is the Techno Goddness, you would think that she would have done a background check on her {{spoiler|would-be shooter before going out with him?}} Then again, for Rule of Drama, if Reid and Garcia didn't make the choices they did, those two episodes would never have happened or impacted their Character Development (they do regret them later).
*** And you'd think that after everything that had happened with Hankel, Reid would have learned his lesson about splitting off from the rest of the team on an impulse, but no. He does it again in "Amplification." And again in "Corazon." It's understandable in-character, because Reid, for all of his smarts, does tend to get caught up in the emotion/excitement of it all more than most of the other team members, but still, come on, Reid!
*** If Garcia did a background check on her date, all she would have found (assuming she penetrated the false name he gave her) was that he was a decorated cop. Yes, she might have caught him in the lie of being an attorney (which he didn't bring up until they were already out to dinner) and, of course, the fake name, but she would have already been on the date and in danger. She's not a profiler... his Chronic First Responder Syndrome would not have raised any red flags for her.
** In "Roadkill," the first victim tried to OUTRUN a truck, when she could moved out of the way or something of the sort.
*** While definitely not the smartest option to take, it seems unlikely that any of her options would have worked out; where could she go that that truck couldn't have followed? The driver was willing to ram it into ''steel elevator doors'' when in hot pursuit, and it didn't damage anything but the bumper! It was pretty clearly modded for what he intended to do with it.
** "Sense Memory". Prentiss, when you know a dangerous international criminal is after you, and you know he's going to want revenge, and you think he's broken into your apartment, you do NOT take the mysterious package he's left inside. Even if it IS only a flower, you ''call the bomb squad and leave it there''.
* [[I Have Your Wife]]: {{spoiler|"Retaliation"}}
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** Happens to the Cop of the Week played by Eric Close in "Our Darkest Hour", though {{spoiler|it's more of a case of "I Have Your Sister and Daughter".}}
* [[I Love the Dead]]: "The Last Word", "Cold Comfort", and {{spoiler|"Reflection of Desire"}}.
* [[Impaled with Extreme Prejudice]]: Though this normally applies to villains, {{spoiler|Prentiss takes a wooden stake to the gut in her knock-down, drag-out fight with Doyle}}.
* [[Improbable Aiming Skills]]: With his handgun, Hotch once shot a perp who was on top of a moving train from a speeding car. Also, unsub Ian Doyle shot his henchman square on the wrist tattoo, conveniently obscuring it for the sake of plot tension.
* [[Improbable Age]]: Justified by Reid, as yes, he ''is'' that young and that accomplished, because he's a genius. Played straight by Hotch, who manages to have been a prosecutor for a while before joining the FBI, worked with the SWAT team and the Seattle field office, joined the BAU, trained under Rossi and Gideon and worked the Reaper case 10 years ago, but made Unit Chief in only 6 or 7 years. Probably a result of [[Writers Cannot Do Math]].
** As of "The Last Word", Hotch has been with the Bureau since Emily went off to college. Which means at least fourteen years (Emily's been with the Bureau almost ten years).
** Reid has also been with the Bureau for three years by season one (L.D.S.K.). So, since he graduated from high school at age twelve, he's earned three PhDs by the time he was 20.
** And there were two birth dates given for Morgan in "Profiler, Profiled."
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'''Suspect:''' It's what he deserved. }}
*** The victim, of course, had been stabbed in the head.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Subverted painfully on multiple occasions.
** Played straight in "Our Darkest Hour": {{spoiler|the unsub played by Tim Curry doesn't harm children. Well, not ''[[Harmful to Minors|physically]]''}}.
** Frank also mentioned he had absolutely no interest in harming children. ''Indirectly'' harming them, however...
* [[Insane Equals Violent]]: Several unsubs, but the unsub in "With Friends Like These..." stands out.
** Reid does everything but mention this trope by name in this episode, in fact. He gets quite upset at the implication that all schizophrenic people are violent, and goes to great lengths to point out what a varied condition schizophrenia is, and how peaceful most of the people who suffer from it are. Given that his mother is one of those people, and he himself might be one day, that's pretty understandable.
* [[Instant Marksman, Just Squeeze Trigger]]: In "L.D.S.K.", Reid is trying to pass his firearms qualification test, and Hotch gives him lessons, telling him "front sight, trigger press, follow through". Hotch also mentions the "squeeze, don't pull" advice.
* [[Intelligence Equals Isolation]]:
** Reid's school experience - "Being the smartest kid in class is like being the only kid in class."
** Prentiss, too-- she laments in "Fear and Loathing" that she is a nerd and the guys she dates always find out.
* [[Internal Affairs]]: Erin Strauss, though she's sympathetic to Hotch after {{spoiler|Haley dies.}}
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* [[Involuntary Battle to the Death]]: "The Fight"
** Also, Reid.
* [[Ironic Nursery Tune]]: A young boy hums "Pop Goes the Weasel" in "At Childhood's Hour", intercut with footage of his mother being stabbed to death.
* [[I Surrender, Suckers]]: Part of Gideon's backstory is a bomber taking out six of his agents this way.
** It nearly happens a separate time in the episode that reveals this. Two agent have cornered the supposed unsub in a storage room. He throws his gun to them and is about to come out, but then Gideon, in another building, puts all the pieces to the puzzle together, and realizes that the cornered guy is strapped with bombs. He tells the agents to get out, and they do so, right before the bombs strapped to the guy detonate and he becomes paint on the walls.
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* [[It's for a Book]]: Stated by a school principal when child porn is found on his computer in "P911".
* [[It's Personal]]: In addition to having hot-button issues, each agent has gotten a case which leads to this. Hotch has the Reaper arc; Gideon had Frank; Rossi in "Damaged", "Zoe's Reprise", and "Remembrance of Things Past"; Morgan in "Profiler, Profiled" and "Our Darkest Hour"; Prentiss in "Demonology" and in her Doyle arc; Reid in "Instincts" and "Memoriam"; Elle in "Aftermath"; JJ in "North Mammon" and "Risky Business"; and the entire team in "Penelope", "The Fisher King", "100", "Lauren", and "It Takes a Village".
* [[I Want You to Meet An Old Friend of Mine]]:
** In "Minimal Loss," the antagonistic Attorney General that Hotch gets into an argument with is Joel Murray, Thomas Gibson's old co-star from ''[[Dharma and Greg]]''. Gibson also runs into Mimi Kennedy (another ''Dharma and Greg'' co-star) in "Coda".
** In "JJ", the two UnSubs are played by Michael Welch and Chris Marquette, who played, respectively, Luke Girardi and Adam Rove opposite Joe Mantegna in ''[[Joan of Arcadia]]''.
* [[Jack the Ripoff]]:
** There's a serial killer who is specifically stated to be copying Jack the Ripper's ''modus operandi''. {{spoiler|Although, this one is a woman killing men.}}
*** This is actually one of the more out-there theories about the real Ripper's identity. Since he was never caught, we can never know.
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* [[Karma Houdini]]: Consistently averted, even when it initially seems [[Villain Exit Stage Left]] has occurred (i.e. "Reckoner"). The only two unsubs to successfully pull this off were Frank and The Reaper, the series' worst of the worst (and even they were eventually brought down in later episodes).
** Played straight in "Into the Woods", though, where the child killer manages to get away.
** The fate of the guy from "Secrets and Lies" is also left somewhat ambiguous.
** Nothing happens to {{spoiler|either of the two [[Papa Wolf|Papa Wolves]]}} from "3rd Life" (though they were, if not exactly sympathetic, certainly understandable), nor do we ever learn the fate of {{spoiler|the second killer family}} from "Bloodlines." None of these were the primary UnSub, though.
** "Dorado Falls" has another one, although it's not the unsub. It's the person who made the unsub the way he is.
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* [[Kick the Dog]]: [[Sympathetic Murderer|Sympathetic Murderers]] are sometimes given an instance of this, especially if the victims so far have been fairly faceless or [[Asshole Victim|assholish]]. Examples include Owen killing the elderly ranch owner in "Elephant's Memory" and Megan killing an executive who was a childless widower in "Pleasure is my Business".
** Morgan snapping at Garcia in "The Longest Night" because she doesn't have the answers he wants.
** "The executive branch" does this to the BAU team when it {{spoiler|puts forward the decision to transfer JJ out of the BAU, completely disregarding their family}}.
** "Reflection of Desire":
{{quote|'''Unsub:''' "No, I think you're an ugly little girl who has nothing to offer the world."}}
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* [[Last-Name Basis]]: Everyone but JJ, who is referred to by her nickname.
* [[Little Miss Badass]]: Ellie Spicer in "The Longest Night", who stands up to a serial killer who's just {{spoiler|murdered her father in front of her, left her aunt to die, and has been killing in ''every single state for twenty-six years''}}.
** [[Deconstructed Trope|Deconstructed]] in "Remembrance of Things Past," where we find out that the poor thing has developed PTSD and can't sleep without talking to Morgan first.
** And played straight again in "Safe Haven" when she hijacks her foster mom's credit card, flies cross-country, lies her way past airport security, and talks her way into the BAU to see Morgan (and because {{spoiler|her foster brother is perving on her in the shower and no one's taking her seriously}}). Impressive, for a nine-year-old.
* [[Living Doll Collector]]: "The Uncanny Valley"
* [[Loony Fan]]: "Somebody's Watching" and "The Performer".
* [[Lost in the Maize]]: "Middle Man", and the end of "The Big Game".
* [[Lying to the Perp]]:
** Rossi is slick like an oil spill. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_W8_X3F-tc There's a reason why he teaches interrogation at Quantico].
*** Particularly impressive in "Reckoner" when he has not only the UnSub believing he'd slept with the UnSub's wife multiple times, but ''the entire team'' believing it, too.
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** Lampshaded by Gideon in "Compulsion":
{{quote|'''Gideon''': No badges. I don’t want to satisfy the unsub’s need for attention by letting him know the FBI is here. Try not to look official. ''(looks at the team)'' Try to look less official.}}
* [[Mind Screw]]: For a show about crazy serial killers, Criminal Minds is fairly light on the mindscrew.
** A minor bit is tossed at you in "Normal" but it's foreshadowed, appears internally consistent, and may not even register as such.
** The opening of "Reflection of Desire", however, is a masterpiece of television mindscrew. And even when you think it's over, it isn't. {{spoiler|In fact, they've been mindscrewing you the entire episode. The unsub's mom is dead, despite the fact she seems to appear in public.}} Of course, if you know what [[Psycho|homage the episode is making]], you'll have spotted it.
* [[Missing White Woman Syndrome]]: Lampshaded in "The Last Word" and in "Legacy". Also in "Fear and Loathing"; several black girls are killed and the murders look like hate crimes and, when the BAU gets involved with the investigation, a local preacher claims its only because the latest victim's ex-boyfriend, who was white, was killed alongside her.
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* [[Murder.Com]]: "Revelations" and "The Internet is Forever".
* [[Murder-Suicide]]: A number of killers do this rather than be caught.
* [[My Card]]: Hotchner in "Poison", giving his ABA card to the Unsub of the Week. Also by other BAU members, when persons of interest in the Case o' the Week are being squirrely.
** Used in hilarious fashion by JJ, Garcia and Prentiss to some guy in a bar claiming to be a Bond-esque FBI agent.
** Used by Reid in "Sex, Birth, Death" when he gives his card to Nathan Harris. {{spoiler|At the end of the episode, Harris attempts suicide and leaves the card on the table as a "suicide note". The prostitute he's with uses it to call Reid, saving Harris's life.}}
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== O-P ==
* [[The Obi-Wan]]: Gideon, who acted as Reid's father and mentor-figure for a couple of seasons before leaving under mysterious circumstances to a place where Reid can never contact him again.
* [[Obstructive Bureaucrat]]: Erin Strauss.
** Subverted in "100" where she {{spoiler|doesn't even try to punish Hotch for killing the Reaper. After spending almost the entire episode playing the [[Obstructive Bureaucrat]] role in trying to get all the facts from the team, she actually almost tears up as Hotch finishes his report}}.
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* [[Old Master]]: Jason Gideon. To ''everyone'' - (although more specifically, he's [[The Obi-Wan]] to Reid).
* [[Ominous Mundanity]]: Some episode titles, like "Mosley Lane", "Hanley Waters" and so on.
* [[Ominous Music Box Tune]]: "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pn3uOQGBdcA The Fox]" and "The Uncanny Valley".
** The music in the former is, unfortunately, replaced by a much more generic piece on the DVD release, making a number of scenes far less disturbing and creepy.
** Strangely, that same music, which is [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w1DKy1uqGpE&playnext_from=TL&videos=nfYRu15M0Co "Illabye" from Tipper] came back in "Mosley Lane".
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** Hotch, in ". . . And Back" and "Nameless, Faceless".
** Prentiss in "Lauren"; Hotch even goes so far as to {{spoiler|1=declare Prentiss the victim and her abductor, Doyle, the UnSub}}.
* [[One of Us]]: In-universe, Rossi is a hardcore gamer.
* [[One Steve Limit]]: Averted, logically - there have been how many UnSubs called Vincent, again? And how many victims named Katie/Katy? There have also been at least two blonde boys called Michael, and a baby.
** Uh, is this troper the only one in the entire fandom who notices '''Aaron''' Hotchner and '''Erin''' Strauss? Although, he was called Eric for a time (probably for this reason), but he seems to have swtiched back to Aaron. Even though the male form ''can'' be pronounced "ay-rin", Hotch himself would pronounce it "eh-rin". In short, Hotch and Strauss [[Depending on the Writer|(used to)]] have the same name.
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* [[Power Born of Madness]]: "True Night". The guys from "The Big Wheel" and "Reflection of Desire" also had an extremely high tolerance to pain.
* [[Power Walk]]: The team doesn't get as many of these as you might think, but special mention has to go to Hotch, Rossi, and Prentiss's in "Hopeless".
* [[Precision F-Strike]]: A few time but the most notable would be Reid In "Painless" yelling "Son of a bitch!" when his phone's been ringing off the hook for the past two days when Morgan pranks him.
* [[Pregnant Hostage]]: "Derailed", though she was actually on her way to get an abortion when the train was hijacked.
* [[Prison Rape]]: Prentiss openly implies this will happen to the unsub in "Slave of Duty."
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* [[Psycho Lesbian]]: {{spoiler|unsub Maggie Lowe in the episode "Somebody's Watching." She stalked Lila Archer for years after falling in love with her in college. She killed people who were either in Lila's way or were competing for her attention.}}
* [[Psychopathic Manchild]]: The perpetrator of the brutal murder that haunted Rossi for twenty years - built up to an extent as a ruthless, brilliant, homicidal maniac - turned out to be {{spoiler|a frightened, mentally ill man who never meant to kill anyone (he followed a little girl he liked from his carnival workplace, broke into the house, and panicked when the parents discovered him and the father, quite understandably not knowing what was going on, attacked the 'intruder' with an axe and fought back with tragic results) and cries helplessly for his daddy when he's arrested. He felt so bad about the murder that he had been sending fluffy toys as presents every year on the anniversary as an apology.}}
** The unsub in "To Hell..."/"And Back" was revealed to be {{spoiler|an overgrown manchild who was being manipulated into stealing the stem cells of homeless people by his quadriplegic mad scientist older brother.}}.
** The unsub from "The Uncanny Valley" is probably an example of this as well, as {{spoiler|she has the mind of a young child, due to verbal and sexual abuse she suffered from her ''father''. She just wants a pretty set of dolls, the perfect set, to play with.}}
** The unsub from "Proof" is an extremely dark one. {{spoiler|As a teen he got Seven Minutes in Heaven with the popular girl, only to have her taken by his brother. Many years later, he hears they're having marital problems and starts brutally torturing and killing women after she rejects him again. He ends up kidnapping his niece when she bleaches her hair to look like her mom on prom night and when kidnapped himself he explained what he did in glee. Oh, and he taped every murder.}}
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== Q-S ==
* [[The Quisling]]: "Bloodline".
* [[Rape as Backstory]]: and not just for the unsubs.
* [[Reality Subtext]]: "JJ". So much it practically bleeds into the context.
* [[Real Life Relative]]: The victim the team is working to save in "3rd Life" is played by Gina Mantegna (who now credits herself as Gia Mantegna), Joe Mantegna's (Agent Rossi's) daughter in [[Real Life]].
** The two oldest Galen children from the episode "Damaged" are played by real-life twin brother and sister Nicholle Tom and David Tom.
* [[Real Life Writes the Plot]]:
** Actor Matthew Gray Gubler, who plays Reid, injured his knee just before production commenced on the show's fifth season, forcing him to get around on crutches. In the first episode of season five, "Nameless, Faceless", Reid is shot in the leg, and has to use crutches for the next few episodes.
** Likewise, AJ Cook's real-life pregnancy resulted in a pregnancy being written in for JJ, and the actor took maternity leave at the same time as her character.
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* [[Sanctuary of Solitude]]: Happens several times:
** At the end of "Lucky", Morgan, who's been dealing with a crisis of faith, goes to church for the first time in years. Ironically, at that very moment, {{spoiler|his [[Most Important Person|'baby girl']] Garcia is shot by her date for the evening, who Morgan had tried to warn her away from. The team can't get a hold of him to tell him because he's turned his phone off in the church. Morgan even [[Lampshade|lampshades]] it in the next episode by saying "What are the odds? The first time I step in a church in twenty years, she ends up on the table."}}
** Prentiss subverts the trope in "Demonology", when she walks home instead of leaving with the team when [[Sinister Minister|Silvano]] is finally captured. She ends up outside a church (which she hasn't been in since her {{spoiler|abortion at fifteen}}) and while she looks longingly at it, the last shot is of her deciding ''not'' to go in.
** Gideon ends up in a church at some point for himself, but he also follows a young girl into one in "The Popular Kids". She confesses what's really been going on with the murders the BAU is investigating and she blames herself, though Gideon tries to help.
* [[Sarcastic Clapping]]: Done by Morgan at the end of "25 to Life".
* [[Scarily Competent Tracker]]: John Blackwolf in "The Tribe" was able to (among other things) determine that Hotch carried a second gun by noticing that the right instep of his footprints was slightly deeper than the left "and since you don't appear to have a club-foot..."
* [[The Schizophrenia Conspiracy]]: Ted Bryar in "Derailed."
* [[Scooby-Doo Hoax]]: In "The Popular Kids" two bodies (one of them a skeleton) are found in the woods near some strange symbols, suggesting that some kind of Satanic cult may be responsible. A girl is also missing. It turns out {{spoiler|the skeleton belonged to a hiker who died when he fell and hit his head, and the other body belonged to a teenage runner; another teenager, who had a thing for the runner's girlfriend, killed the boyfriend to get rid of him as competition, but the girl was out jogging with him. To distract the cops, the kid made the homicide look like some kind of demented ritual killing, and essentially used the hiker skeleton as a prop.}}
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* [[Scream Discretion Shot]]
* [[Screwed by the Network]]: JJ and Prentiss leaving and coming back.
* [[Screw the Rules, I'm Doing What's Right]]: Happens a lot, usually culminating in the involvement of Strauss. Lampshaded in "It Takes a Village".
* [[Second Episode Introduction]]: J.J. is neither present nor even mentioned in the first episode.
* [[Self-Serving Memory]]: "Roadkill" has an unsub who believes the reckless driver of a red car was responsible for killing his wife and leaving him paralyzed. Near the end he realizes {{spoiler|there was no other driver and that he is responsible for the crash that cost him his legs and wife, as he had fallen asleep at the wheel}}. [[Driven to Suicide|He does not take this well at all.]]
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* [[Series Continuity Error]]: The inconsistencies between Rossi's story in "Birthright" (twenty years ago, three kids witnessed their parents get beaten to death on Christmas Eve) and what's shown in "Damaged" (nineteen years ago, three kids woke up one day in March to find their parents had been hacked up with an axe).
** In "P911", Garcia recognizes a scout uniform worn by the abducted boy because all four of her brothers were members of the same organization. In "Safe Haven", she mentions she is an only child.
** Subverted for Prentiss' backstory. In "Revelations", JJ and Hotch marvel at Prentiss' sang froid. Although this seems inconsistent with {{spoiler|the later discovery of Prentiss' background as a badass undercover agent,}} it is conceivable that the rest of the team could have been barred from that info (at least until they're cleared in "Lauren").
{{quote|'''JJ:''' How come none of this gets to you?
'''Prentiss:''' What do you mean?
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*** This does not, however, account for the discrepancy between Prentiss' original season 2 statement that she had then been with the Bureau for ten years and the revelation in "Lauren" that {{spoiler|a mere seven years earlier, she was instead working for Interpol and/or the CIA, apparently.}}
*** Well, the statement was just that, a statement. And since her previous assignment was kind of secretive, you don't blurt it out.
*** Particularly considering that the division of Interpol she was working for was technically non-official and highly classified, its understandable that she would have a mundane backstory backed to the hilt by paperwork. Then her entire approach in her introductory episodes become [[Fridge Brilliance]] where the reason she doesn't blink is because she's seen worse.
** When, exactly, did Hotch "liaise" with Kate Joyner? He married Haley right out of high school, and it would be incredibly out of character for him to cheat. It's not like the episode forgot about Haley, either, as Kate's similarity to her is remarked upon.
*** Nothing in that episode suggested that Hotch and Kate were more than just good friends.
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** Prentiss does it in "Lo-Fi".
* [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog Story]]: "No Way Out II" turns {{spoiler|"The Fisher King"}} into one of these, because {{spoiler|Frank kills the girl they saved in those episodes}}.
* [[Shout-Out]]:
** An episode involving a serial bomber takes place in [[CSI: Miami|Florida and is titled "Won't Get Fooled Again"]]
** The episode "In Heat," also set in Miami, starts with a [[Cold Opening]] that closely mimics a [[CSI: Miami]] [[Cold Opening]] in its cinematography and editing. At various crime scenes in the episode, several extras in the background are seen wearing "CSI" windbreakers.
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*** Night also looks very similar to an Organization XIII member (particularly Roxas), with his [[Badass Longcoat]], a hood covering his face, black gloves, black boots and [[Dual-Wielding]] swords. Some of the poses can be seen in the Deep Dive video too (although from slightly different angles).
*** Aside from that, the whole storyline is a wee bit familiar: [[The Crow|A psychotic and creative young man whose fiancee is raped and killed by gang bangers adopts a dark and intimidating superhero-esque persona in order to get revenge on those who wronged him.]]
** The kidnapping we saw in "The Uncanny Valley" was strangely similar to the one done by [[The Silence of the Lambs|another famous fictional serial killer who also predated young girls.]] Also, the entire plot is suspiciously similar to that of Dollhouse episode "Belle Chose", though the unsub is portrayed far more sympathetically than Terry Karrens is.
*** They are actually both based on Ted Bundy. He used that ruse.
*** Speaking of [[The Silence of the Lambs]] series, even in context of Shout Outs, ''an evil quadriplegic heir to a pig farm named "Mason"'' was pushing it.
** The family in the beginning of "Children of the Dark" have an awkward conversation in their house's entryway with two strangers, who admire their lifestyle and golf clubs before torturing and killing them. [[Funny Games|Sounds familiar, in a funny sort of way.]]
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** In "Devil's Night", Garcia calls Kaman, the UnSub, "the [[Big Bad]]".
** "Reflections of Desire" is basically {{spoiler|''[[Psycho]]'' and ''[[Sunset Boulevard]]''}} thrown in a blender.
** In "What Happens At Home", we first meet FBI cadet Ashley Seaver when Rossi goes to see her [[Silence of the Lambs|on the FBI academy training course]].
** At the end of "Amplification", the shot of the virus being sealed in a gigantic virus vault refers back to ''[[Raiders of the Lost Ark]]".
** One of two murdered convenience store clerks on Garcia's computer is [[The Simpsons|Apu N.]].
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* [[Sinister Minister]]: "Demonology"
* [[Slasher Smile]]: The [[Big Bad]] in "Lessons Learned" cracks an ''incredibly'' creepy one at the thought of Islamic extremists brutally murdering all ''four billion'' non-Muslims in the world.
* [[Smart People Play Chess]]: Simultaneously subverted and played straight: Reid is the designated genius of the team, but while good at chess, he isn't exactly world-class, almost invariably losing to Gideon and apparently being out-thought by Prentiss.
** Played straight in "Compulsion" when his ability at chess is presented as an index of his ability to "think outside the box."
** And played straight again with Reid in "Uncanny Valley", where Reid says that after Gideon left, he went through every possible chess maneuver (an exponentially high number) as an attempt to figure out a way to beat the system. He's then shown at the end of the episode playing a lightning-fast game of chess with a young chess prodigy.
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* [[Stalker with a Crush]]: Morgan's cousin Cindi fled Chicago over hers and was never seen again. {{spoiler|Too bad she had ''two'' stalkers, and one of them was more determined and sadistic than the other.}}
* [[Snuff Film]]: A number of Unsubs ("Hopeless", notably) have a habit of recording their murders, sometimes for... [[A Date with Rosie Palms|later use]]. In the book ''Jump Cut'', the unsubs planned on making "the best horror film ever" by using real murders, and were insane enough to believe it will make them rich and famous once they show it at film festivals and the like.
* [[Soundtrack Dissonance]]: In "Mosley Lane" we can hear ''Illabye'' as [[Evil Matriarch|Anita Roycewood]] carefully puts a sleeping boy in a cardboard box, smiles to him, hums a lullaby... {{spoiler|and then proceeds to burn the boy in a crematorium}}.
** "Ashes and Dust" gives us one of the most powerful examples of all time, as Enya's "Boadicea" plays over {{spoiler|a family trying to escape their burning house in vain, as the arsonist watches.}} You can watch it [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=steKWtFkZ4g right over here].
* [[South of the Border]]: "Machismo"
* [[Spear Carrier]]: Agent Anderson and Tech Gina Sharp, who have made a number of appearances, but never really do anything that noteworthy. Anderson hasn't even been given a first name.
* [[Spiritual Successor]]: To ''The Inside'', a [[Too Good to Last|short-lived Fox series]] which also revolved around a unit within the FBI tasked with pursuing serial killers (see [[Expy]]).
* [[Spin-Off]]: The show, itself, is not a spin-off, but, rather, has a type 3 spin-off, ''[[Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior]]''. They met the team that is in the spin-off in "The Fight" (season 5, episode 18).
* [[Split Personality]]: Two unsubs. {{spoiler|Raphael/Tobias Hankel/Tobias' father in "Revelations,"}} and {{spoiler|Adam/Amanda in "Conflicted."}}
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** Prentiss' history with IRA terrorist Ian Doyle, which spreads across "The Thirteenth Step", "Sense Memory", "Today I Do", "Coda", "Valhalla"/"Lauren", and finally "It Takes a Village".
*** Many of these can also be considered examples of [[Character Development]].
* [[Strictly Formula]]: Most of the episodes have a highly predictable structure - the team talks about the UNSUB of the week, the team investigates the last murder scene, the team rings up Garcia to get her to hack into a database, the team describe the UNSUB's personality to the police, the team chases the UNSUB, end of episode. [[Tropes Are Tools|However]], this actually works for the show - the formula establishes the fact that the team are professionals who know what they're doing, and the UNSUB's stories are always different and unpredictable.
* [[Self -Harm]]: In one episode, on a campus that the team has been investigating a spate of murders, one of the girls there is shown cutting and deliberatly trying to get herself killed by the murderer (like a suicide attempt).
* [[Storyboard Body]]: The {{spoiler|first}} UnSub in "A Thousand Words".
* [[Subject 101]]: The season seven episode where the BAU speaks to a college class about profiling is called "Profiling 101".
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** The unsub in "Lo-Fi" forces Emily into this, too, as part of the plot to make it look like the shooter was dead.
** The UnSub in "What Happens At Home" pulls this with Hotch.
** The UnSub in "Penelope" walks into the BAU and, when he realizes they know who he is, intends to go down that way taking as many of them as he can. {{spoiler|JJ shoots him from behind before he gets a chance.}}
** Under the circumstances, the older unsub's refusal to back down when surrounded at gunpoint in "Open Season" comes across as one part [[Suicide by Cop]] and another part [[The Determinator|being hellbent on taking down the week's damsel in distress]]. He failed at the latter, but was wildly successful at the former.
* [[Suicide Is Painless]]: Averted by "Risky Business" and the "choking game". The kids think it's a big contest until {{spoiler|1=the UnSub, a paramedic who has also been egging them on via a website, collects them from their houses and makes sure they've succeeded in killing themselves.}}
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== T-Z ==
* [[Take Me Instead!]]: Prentiss does this for Reid in "Minimal Loss".
* [[Take Our Word for It]]: The more grusome activities the unsubs partake in and their effects on the victims are often only shown through the horrified or disgusted looks on the team's faces.
* [[Take That]]:
** Upon arriving at a crime scene [[CSI|in Las Vegas]], this exchange between Rossi and Prentiss in "The Instincts": "Not exactly a well-preserved crime scene." "It's the crime scene investigators. They all want to play cop instead of being scientists and they end up trampling on everything."
** "JJ" is an episode-long [[Take That]]. {{spoiler|JJ's voiceover during the "goodbye montage" makes it quite clear that she, the actress portraying her, and the rest of the cast and crew don't want her to leave, but "people above her pay grade" (the studio) are forcing it.}}
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* [[Talking the Monster to Death]]: In some standoff situations, the BAU manage to talk the unsubs into surrendering. Also occurs literally in one instance where the detective working with the BAU accidentally prompts the unsub to kill himself by breaking his delusion. And at the end of "The 13th Step" the team defuse a hostage situation by pushing the unsub's buttons so that he ends up killing his partner then committing suicide by cop.
* [[Tattooed Crook]]: "A Thousand Words", given attention in "Honor Among Thieves", "Valhalla", and "Lauren".
* [[Teacher-Student Romance]]: in "I love you Tommy Brown" which also brutally Deconstructs the idea that it's okay if its a teenage boy with an attractive woman.
* [[Team Pet]]: Reid.
* [[Tear Your Face Off]]: The victim in "About Face" is killed this way.
* [[Television Geography]]: Often.
** "Normal" begins with an aerial shot of [[Nerdgasm|the Civil Engineer's wet dream]] that is the [http://members.cox.net/mkpl/interchange/4lvl_mg.jpg Four-Level Interchange], subtitled "Orange County, CA". The Four-Level Interchange is not in Orange County though... it's 20 miles away in Los Angeles. Orange County's freeway interchanges are not nearly as pretty from the air. They look a lot more like a [http://www.ptank.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/I-5ca22ca57.png Freeway Full of Crazy].
** In "Limelight", the UnSub is somehow able to get from police headquarters (which is in downtown Philadelphia) to a house where his next victim is (the design of which can only be found in parts of West Philadelphia), and then deposit her next to what is supposedly the Schuylkill Expressway near Conshohocken (which it's clearly not, considering the complete lack of a river nearby) in what has to be less than an hour. Any Philadelphia native will laugh at that above description. Repeatedly.
* [[Ten-Minute Retirement]]: {{spoiler|Hotch and Prentiss, in the beginning of season three. They don't even make it through the episode.}}
** Averted with {{spoiler|Elle and Gideon}}.
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* [[That One Case]]: Multiple ones, in this show:
** Gideon had Frank ("No Way Out" and "No Way Out II: The Evilution of Frank")
*** Not to mention the bomber in Boston, which led to his nervous breakdown. He caught the man, but lost 6 agents and a hostage immediately afterwards.
** Rossi had the Galen case ("Damaged") and the Butcher ("Remembrance of Things Past"). In the latter we briefly see the Butcher case is just one of several old cases he still hasn't solved.
** Hotch had the Reaper case ("Omnivore", "To Hell..."/"...And Back", "Nameless, Faceless", "100").
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** Numerous other unsubs: "Natural Born Killer," "True Night," and "Hopeless," for example.
** In "100," {{spoiler|Hotch does this to Foyet. With his ''bare hands.''}}
** Unintentionally done in "Normal" after Norman shoots the first victim her car crashes and flips over in an over dramatic way. {{spoiler|She still survives albeit in critical condition and paralyzed from the waist down.}}
* [[This Is Gonna Suck]]: Prentiss, word for word, in "52 Pickup."
* [[Thousand-Yard Stare]]: Hotch gets this a lot in early season five after Foyet's attack, especially in "Haunted."
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** The victims in "Roadkill". {{spoiler|The victim in the garage was especially stupid. He had ample opportunity to escape from the unsub by dodging behind columns or other cars, but instead he tries to outrun the truck. Becomes even more apparent when it is revealed the unsub had no legs and couldn't have caught his victims if they had got away}}
** The first thing Hotch tells Agent Seaver is to never go anywhere by herself. Granted, the person she went to see was a grieving father and his young daughter, {{spoiler|but he was also a [[Serial Killer]] like Seaver's own father. Fortunately the dad was distracted because he needed to know ''why'' Seaver mentioned apologizing in the killer's family's place, but she was still chewed out by Hotch}}
** An Unsub walking into a tornado in Season 7, as it tears sheds and vehicles off the ground.
** A victim in "Divining Rod" who fails to notice her full wine glass is now empty and her back door's open.
* [[Took a Level In Badass]]: JJ's at ''four'' and counting - shooting the dogs in "The Big Game"; shooting {{spoiler|Garcia's attacker}} in "Penelope"; bashing an UnSub upside the head with a shovel while just having been concussed in "The Performer", and {{spoiler|talking Billy Flynn down over the Emergency Broadcast System}} in "The Longest Night". Pretty damn good for the team's ''communications specialist''.
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* [[Trailers Always Lie]]: "Snake Eyes'" B-story says that Garcia and her boyfriend have a fight over her flirty friendship with Morgan. Actually {{spoiler|Garcia's afraid that she slept with Morgan while drunk. Not only did that not happen, but Garcia's boyfriend completely trusts Morgan (though the next episode has him state he "went through a lot of therapy to figure out their relationship")}}.
* [[Traumatic Haircut]]: Inverted in "Divining Rod": {{spoiler|A man kills four women in one day just to make the woman he loves a nice wig, which he lovingly places on her head. It wouldn't have been quite so bad if the last victim hadn't been ''scalped''.}}
* [[True Companions]]: The Team. Which makes JJ's and Prentiss' departures all the more heartbreaking. It's as though the BAU family is torn apart.
* [[Unexpected Genre Change]]: The comic-based scenes in True Night, featuring someone who looks like [[Assassin's Creed|Al'tair]] fighting werewolves. {{spoiler|They're actually a metaphorical representation of a comic artist killing gang members who killed his girlfriend; he's unknowingly drawing his crimes.}}
* [[Unflinching Walk]]: At the end of "Hopeless", where the unsubs decide to commit suicide by cop, and the policemen outside are so frustrated and angry they happily oblige. Knowing that they can do nothing to help, Hotchner, Rossi, and Prentiss walk away, while the hell breaks loose behind their backs.
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** In "Mayhem" as well... no one on the streets of New York gives much thought to guys dressed all in black with hoods completely covering their faces, even though the clothing worn by other civilians suggests it is not winter. Even after said Unsubs ''shoot strangers execution-style in broad daylight'', they still manage to get away undetected 6 out of 7 times. Because by the time they round a corner, and put the gun in their pocket, they're don't look all that out of place again.
* [[Unreliable Narrator]]: "Normal." Maybe you figured out before [[The Reveal]] that {{spoiler|there was no one else in the car}}, but did you see it coming that {{spoiler|''every interaction'' with his family in that episode was a delusion and that he'd killed them before the BAU had even arrived}}?
** That is actually a [[Call Back]] to the earlier on in the episode when the come to the inevitable conclusion that {{spoiler|he was going to kill his family eventually, after killing all those other victims, but they had no idea when. This is further proven when they go into the last room and you can see near-fresh blood stains on the bed sheet.}}
* [[Verbal Tic]]: Reid's preference for [[Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness|highbrow synonyms]]: "exceedingly" instead of "extremely", "consume" instead of "eat", etc. Also, his tendency to say "actually..." and then go on a long-winded explanation of something to correct someone.
* [[Very Special Episode]]: More than a few occasions.
* [[Vigilante Execution]]: "A Real Rain" and "Reckoner". Also played with in "True Night", where {{spoiler|the unsub is a vigilante getting revenge on gang members for his girlfriend's murder, only without knowing that he is doing so.}}
** There are also a few episodes where the unsubs ''themselves'' undergo these: "{{spoiler|Aftermath}}", "{{spoiler|Brothers In Arms}}", "{{spoiler|Ashes and Dust}}", and, ironically, "{{spoiler|Reckoner}}".
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** {{spoiler|"She never made it off the table." JJ breaks Prentiss' death to the team}}, in "Lauren"
*** And then, even more so, {{spoiler|"Good luck." "(Emily's voice) Thank you."}}
** From "Divining Rod":
{{quote|{{spoiler|Executed serial killer's wife}}: Have you ever read ''1001 Arabian Nights''?
{{spoiler|now imprisoned}} '''Copycat killer''': No, what's that? {{spoiler|Everyone thought a copycat sent letters quoting the book to the original killer, who died reciting the quote; turns out the letters were from the original's wife who has since decided to embrace her "ability" to amplify serial killing tendencies after the copycat fell in love with her.}} }}
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* [[You Have Outlived Your Usefulness]]: "Poison", "The Fisher King", "Honor Among Thieves" and "Middle Man".
* [[You Look Familiar]]: Jason Wiles played the unsub in "Psychodrama" and the abducted father in "The Fight".
* [[You Would Make a Great Model]]: This was the tactic of the killer in "Fear and Loathing." Although he doesn't rape his victims. He records their voices as trophies and kills them by drugging and strangling them.
* [[Your Princess Is in Another Castle]]