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The popular way of doing this is the "true" crossover, in which a storyline will begin in one series and ''cross over'' into the next one, encouraging viewers to tune into a show that may be thematically similar but which they do not usually watch.
For example ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'' had a handful of episodes where the characters would head off at the end, only to turn up in ''[[Angel]]'' straight after. This also worked the other way, with an amulet in ''[[Angel]]'' turning out to be vitally important for the last-ever episode of ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer|Buffy]]''. (This also highlights one of the dangers of '''
Alternatively, a single popular character can cross over from one show into the other for a brief guest appearance; this has the effect of attracting that character's fans from the other show without requiring the writing teams to sync up or creating DVD- and arc-unfriendly episodes. This is very common in comic books, in which most characters are part of a larger universe, such as the [[Marvel Universe]] or [[The DCU]]. It happens less often in TV and movie properties based on comic books, since they are often made by different production companies.
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* [[The View Askewniverse]] movies are all connected, mostly by [[Jay and Silent Bob]] appearing in every movie. Aside from that, there are numerous events, elements, and secondary characters that intertwine throughout all six films. It also helps that the movies take place in the [[New Jersey|same state.]]
* There is an old film, ''Hercules, Samson and Ulysses'' which features the two strong men of the bronze age [[Cool vs. Awesome|coming to blows.]] It's also [[So Bad It's Good]].
== Literature ==
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* [[Barbara Hambly]]'s 1985 ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' [[Tie-in Novel]] ''[[Ishmael (Star Trek novel)|Ishmael]]'' is basically a crossover between ''TOS'' and the late-1960s [[ABC]] TV Show ''[[Here Come the Brides]]'', in which an amnesiac Spock is flung back in time to [[Seattle]] in the 1860s and is taken in by sawmill owner Aaron Stemple while he tries to discover his origins and purpose in coming to Seattle. [[Bonus Points]] for Stemple having been played in the series by Mark Lenard, who is far better known for playing Spock's father Sarek.
== Live
* The "Tommy Westphall Universe" (or, alternatively, "The John Munch Principle") ties dozens of television series from the 1970's to the present through the characters of Tommy Westphall from ''[[St. Elsewhere]]'' (who is revealed to have imagined the entire series in the final scene of the final episode) and [[John Munch]], the Baltimore detective who has made crossover appearances in many television series (including the ''[[Law
* Apparently among Mr. Roark's ''[[Fantasy Island]]'' magical, mystical abilities is the [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_g_4C7-2Dg power to crossover] with other [[Aaron Spelling]] series
* The episodes of ''[[Law
** Most of ''[[Law & Order: Trial by Jury]]'' was a continuation of a plot that happened earlier in the week from one of the other three series running at the time.
** ''[[Law
** ''[[Law & Order]]'' also crossed over with ''[[Homicide: Life on the Street|Homicide]]'' in what was originally a two-parter. While working together on a single case, the two squads had personality clashes, and normally-infallible characters faltered in unfamiliar settings. In a good move, when this episode is rerun TNT will show both the ''L&O'' and ''Homicide'' episodes back-to-back, even though they don't usually show ''Homicide'' at all.
*** This also happened when [[Channel Five]] in the UK - which didn't screen ''Homicide'' - ran that particular ''L&O'' episode... unfortunately this practice is the exception rather than the rule in Britain, meaning numerous crossovers of this ilk are either left hanging (like the ''[[Ally McBeal]]''/''[[The Practice]]'' crossover - or, more germanely to Channel Five, the ''[[Martial Law]]''/''[[Walker, Texas Ranger]]'' one<ref>Five screened Sammo's adventures, but not Cordell's</ref>) or shown waaaaaaay apart, like the ''[[Magnum, P.I.]]''/''[[Simon and Simon]]'' one.
** ''Law
* ''[[iCarly]]'' had the crossover episodes "iParty With [[Victorious]]" and "iMeet [[Fred]]."
* ''[[Community]]'' has a great one, involving ''[[Cougar Town]]''. Abed mentions that he was allowed on the set of ''Cougar Town'' as an extra, and that episode actually exists!
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* ''[[Casualty]]'' and its spin-off ''[[Holby City]]'' have had four crossovers titled ''Casualty@Holby City'' (although they were given a special title, they ran as two-parters in the usual slots): two [[Christmas Episode]]s, one [[Halloween Episode]], and a [[Very Special Episode]] Organ Donation Awareness Week episode. We have yet to see ''Casualty@Holby City With Holby Blue'', but doubtless it's coming...
** And it has: although it wasn't called ''Holby Blue@Holby City'', the first episode of Season Two of ''[[Holby Blue]]'' was a direct continuation of that week's ''[[Holby City]]'', both of which featured the medics and the cops.
* The various ''[[Star Trek]]'' series saw many of these, beginning with ''The Next Generation'', although events in one series rarely affected the others. The crossovers became more frequent in later years.
** The ''[[Star Trek: Strange New Worlds]]'' episode "Those Old Scientists" has the ''[[Star Trek: Lower Decks]]'' characters Mariner and Boimler end up in their past, where Captain Pike and the ''Enterprise'' have to return them to their own time. This is listed here because ''[[Star Trek: Strange New Worlds]]'' is a [[Live-Action TV]] show while ''[[Star Trek: Lower Decks]]'' is [[Western Animation]]; Tawny Newsome and Jack Quaid, the voice actors for Mariner and Boimler, played their characters in live action.
* ''[[CSI]]'' has crossed over with two other shows within the [[CSI Verse]], ''[[CSI: Miami]]'' and ''[[Without a Trace]].'' Miami, meanwhile, has crossed over twice with ''[[CSI: NY]]'', and New York once did so with ''[[Cold Case]]'', and the three core CSI programs have recently crossed over with a three-part story featuring Ray Langston. All five are produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and air on CBS, so bringing them together is less complicated than most.
* ''[[All My Children]]'', ''[[One Life to Live]]'', and the defunct ''[[Loving]]'' were all created by Agnes Nixon and share a universe. Numerous crossovers have occurred over the years. In 2004, AMC and OLTL launched an ambitious crossover storyline in which a baby from ''[[All My Children]]'' was kidnapped to ''[[One Life to Live]]''. The story lasted several months.
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** An earlier [[Comic Relief]] had ''Have I Got ''[[A Question of Sport]]'' Fot You''.
**
* In ''[[The Man from U.N.C.L.E.]]''{{'}}s heyday an episode of ''[[Please Don't Eat
** There was also an episode featuring ''[[The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.]]'', April Dancer.
* ''[[Hercules: The Legendary Journeys]]'' and ''[[Xena: Warrior Princess]]''. You know ''Xena'' has [[Jumped the Shark]] when {{spoiler|the [[Big Bad]] is defeated ''in the other show''}}.
* Commercial example involving ''[[Monk]]''{{'}}s Adrian Monk and ''[[The Dead Zone]]''{{'}}s Johnny Smith. Three versions of the promos have them avoiding touching other people/things ([http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-lgJCtcAIA at a detectives association meeting]) and exhibiting their [[Blessed with Suck]]/[[Cursed with Awesome]] (Monk's OCD on [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f50yHDekFfg corn counting] and Smith's psychic ability with [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ac5x9NSkW0Y a punch bowl]). The [[USA Network]] aired both of their shows at the same time.
* [[Word of God]] says that if ''[[Psych]]'' hadn't made ''[[Leverage]]'' a fictional show within ''Psych''{{'}}s universe, ''Leverage''{{'}}s Eliot would have had an uncle named Henry.
* [[The WB]] once had a night dedicated to crossing over their shows. A character from one show would pop up in another, mostly for laughs and night contribute much to episode's plot. It was parodied in that night's episode of ''[[Unhappily Ever After]]'', wherein [[Sister, Sister|Jackee Harry]]
* ''[[Breakout Kings]]'' : In the third episode of the first season, ''[[Prison Break]]'''s T-Bag....breaks out from a prison. An unprecedented case of a character crossing over to a show on a completely different network but not so surprising considering both show have the same producers (and an obvious common theme).
* Kate Monday (or was it Pat Tuesday?) and George Frankly from ''[[Square One TV]]'''s Mathnet appeared on ''[[Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?]]''.
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* [[The Green Hornet]] and Kato appeared on three two-part ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'' episodes, the intent being to suppirt the Hornet's show, which sadly, didn't do the job.
== Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends ==
* [[Older Than Feudalism]] example: the classical tale of Jason and the Argonauts brought together many mythological heroes in a sort of Justice League Ancient Greece. "Hero" in [[Classical Mythology]] was an awfully vague term (as [[Cartoon History of the Universe|Larry Gonick]] put it, heroes aren't necessarily ''heroic'', just excessive), and since the mission was to ''steal'' an item (the Golden Fleece) "Justice League" isn't a terribly good name for them
* Maid Marian, the [[Arcadia|shepherdess]], featured in many pastoral plays popular at May festivities. Then there was a fad for [[Robin Hood]] plays. Then someone put the two characters together. It worked so well that Maid Marian is best known as a [[Robin Hood]] character, even though her independent existence predates him.
* Lancelot du Lac was the hero of a cycle of French stories before some canny balladeer decided to send him to Camelot to join up with [[King Arthur]]. The rest is... well, not quite ''history'', but you get the idea.
== Radio ==
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* Two episodes of ''[[The Goon Show]]'' featured guest appearances by Jack Train as Colonel Chinstrap from ''ITMA'', a popular comedy show from the previous decade.
* Batman and Robin made frequent appearances on ''[[The Adventures of Superman (radio)|The Adventures of Superman]]''.
== Tabletop Games ==
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* A [[Older Than Radio|19th-century example]] is the 1829 theatrical play ''Don Juan und Faust'' by Christian Dietrich Grabbe, a German dramatist. It is a crossover of the myth of [[Faust]] and of the tale of [[Don Juan]].
* Stephen Soundheim's ''[[Into the Woods]]'' features [[Cinderella (novel)|Cinderella]], [[Rapunzel]] and [[Jack and the Beanstalk]], with cameos by [[Sleeping Beauty]] and [[Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs (novel)|Snow White]].
== Video Games ==
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* An episode of ''[[The Zeta Project]]'' crossed over with ''[[Batman Beyond]]'', justified in this case as the former was a spinoff of the latter. (Due to Bob Kane's contractual billing being what it is, this is also the only episode where the opening titles omit the "Created by Robert Goodman" credit - the end credits specify Kane's being behind Batman, with Goodman being behind the characters for the spinoff.)
* [[Rankin/Bass Productions]] did it with ''Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July'', combining Rudolph with ''[[Frosty the Snowman]]'', ''Frosty's Winter Wonderland'', ''Rudolph's Shiny New Year'', and it appears that ''[[Santa Claus is Comin' to Town]]'' and ''[[The Year Without a Santa Claus]]'' may figure in, but mostly in dialogue references rather than character appearances. Strangely, there were never any crossovers with characters from the original ''[[Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer]]'' special—they only appeared again in ''Rudolph and the Island of Misfit Toys''.
* ''[[He
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