Does This Remind You of Anything?/Live-Action TV: Difference between revisions

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*** And in Dawn's diary / internal monologue in "Real Me":
{{quote|"Willow's the awesomest person. She's the only one I know who likes school as much as me. Even her friends are cool! Like Tara. She and Willow are both witches. They do spells and stuff, which is so much cooler than slaying. I told Mom one time I wish they'd teach me some of the things they do together. ''(beat)'' A-and then she got really quiet and made me go upstairs. Huh. I guess her generation isn't cool with witchcraft."}}
*** When Angel bites Buffy in season 3, we see her crushing a helmet with one hand, as well as hearing her panting -- anotherpanting—another example of "biting as sex" within the Buffyverse.
*** Another "biting as sex" example in the Buffyverse is during the Season 5 premiere, when Dracula shapeshifts himself into Buffy's room by turning into mist that floats in through her window (like a secret lover sneaking in), remarking on Buffy's scar from where Angel bit her, and then biting her on the other side, after which he tells her to take a taste of him. The next day, she ''really'' doesn't want anyone, especially Riley, to see her scar, like it's evidence of a shameful one-night stand.
** In the season six episode "Wrecked" Willow get addicted to visiting an extremely powerful wizard by the name of Rack. He's referred to as "dealing" and Willow's experiences are more than a little trippy. The people in the lobby are all strung-out and when Willow leaves with Dawn, her eyes are dark and she's a little "off." To make matters worse, Willow treats the demon as a hallucination.
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{{quote|'''Alex:''' There you go, there's the fight I was looking for! ''(pause)'' Now you feel better? ''(she hugs him)''
'''Justin:''' ''(annoyed)'' Hm... Fine. ''(he tightens the hug)''
'''Alex:''' Ow... Justin... ''[[Innocent Innuendo|You're hurting me]]''.<br />
'''Justin:''' Hmmm... Yeah... ''(he releases her)'' [[Double Entendre|I do feel better now, thank you.]] }}
** And she ''smiles'' after that.
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** This may be a legitimate interpretation given that Geoffrey was always portrayed as resenting everything the family makes him put up with, and, more generally, American culture has always tended to feel that using a household servant comes uncomfortably close to using a slave.
** Also consider that Geoffrey is working for his citizenship, which Will and Carlton hid and denied him, the show alludes to not only slavery but indentured servants, who often worked for the right to live in the United States (one way to raise the funds needed for your passage was to agree to a period of indentured servitude in exchange).
* In ''[[The Tick (animationtelevision)|The Tick]]'' episode "Arthur, Interrupted", coming out as a superhero is described the same way as homosexuality, and later as a drug addiction. They even stage an intervention.
* In ''[[3rd Rock from the Sun]]'':
** One episode treated Dick's obsession with collecting a brand of plush animals curiously similar to Beanie Babies as a drinking addiction, culminating with an "intervention" from the other characters. Subverted at the end of the episode where Dick explains that he's given up on the collecting and taken up drinking instead.
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** Later in the season, we see Anna on the phone with someone. "What do you mean you have to play with it?... Well, when will you be able to get it up again?... Is there anything I can do to help?" She's talking to tech support about the theatre festival's local area network.
* In ''[[Black Books]]'', Bernard and Manny have a falling out, and Manny goes to work at the bookshop next door. This is treated by both parties as if it were the break-up of a romantic relationship, with Bernard in particular reacting as if Manny had been unfaithful to him ("Go to him! Go to your fancy man! I don't need you anymore!"). Then again, there's more than a little [[Ho Yay]] between Bernard and Manny.
** There was also a first season episode where Manny gets fed up with Bernard's abuse and moves out. Fran and Bernard react like parents to a child running away from home, each blaming the other--Bernardother—Bernard accusing Fran of spoiling him and Fran accusing Bernard of driving him away by being mean to him. Then they go to the police to report him missing, who assume he's their son--rightson—right up until they start describing his appearance and they mention his goatee:
{{quote|'''Police Officer:''' Just how old is your son?}}
* On a slightly more serious note, ''[[Farscape]]'''s treatment of wormholes, usable as both a rapid long-distance travel method... and a weapon of ''horrific'' destruction. The obvious allegory is probably made most blatant in the second half of season 3's two-part episode "Into The Lion's Den"/"Wolf In Sheep's Clothing".
{{quote|'''Kokura:''' To stabilize a wormhole -- to tame it, to tame its ''power'' -- would have been the greatest scientific discovery anyone could imagine!
'''Crichton:''' It is ''[[ThisPunctuated! IsFor! SpartaEmphasis!|not! Just! Science!]]'' It is ''never'' just science! It's a ''weapon''! It ''kills''! }}
* Aaaand on a more humorous note, in ''[[Farscape]]'' we have the large amount of torture, leather and sex... where you get lines like this:
{{quote|'''Bad Guy for the week (season 4)''': I like interrogations... long, ''hard'' interrogations}}
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'''John''': ''Naughty'' mist... }}
* One episode of ''[[Malcolm in the Middle]]'' concerned Hal feeling out-of-place in a poker game because he was the only ''non-professional'' person there, and all the ''professional'' people were banding together and discriminating against him with their unique slang and culture. (They were also all {{spoiler|black}}.)
* Two torture sessions with a water theme or metaphor. A tiny nation invaded by a vast empire for uncertain reasons fights back with suicide bombers. And oh yeah, a surprise attack on an unsuspecting country that changes their entire political and cultural outlook. Watch ''[[Battlestar Galactica Reimagined(2004 TV series)|Battlestar Galactica]]'' long enough and it will remind you of something in contemporary American politics.
* The HBO series ''[[True Blood]]'' contains so much subtext about vampire rights that some might find the not-so-subtle parallels a bit tiresome. "God Hates Fangs"? Even vampire puns are still [[A Worldwide Punomenon|bad puns]]. Besides, everyone knows that [[Harry Potter (novel)|werewolves]] [[Fanon|are actually gay]], while our favorite bloodsuckers prefer beautiful women.
** Not to mention every feeding being a very obvious allusion to sex, cluminating in one very particular episode. Both Bill and Eric were burned and needed healing. Follow, a frame of Sookie sitting between them, with a very meaningful expression on her face, while each vampire is sucking at a different wrist of hers. Fans had a lot to think about that night.
* [http://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=185177&title=daily/colbert-just-a-quickie This] clip from ''[[The Daily Show]]'', as if there wasn't enough Jon/Stephen [[Ho Yay]] already.
* Very much dramatic rather than comedic, but in season 3 of ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'' {{spoiler|Sylar breaks into Claire's house and succeeds in stealing her [[Healing Factor|power]], but does it without killing her unlike his previous victims. The experience visibly shakes Claire and she describes Sylar as "taking something that was hers." She then wants to learn how to fight so she can "help people", but after her biological mother Meredith puts her through [[Training Fromfrom Hell]], Claire finally breaks and admits she doesn't want to fight so she can help people, but to find Sylar and "hurt him for hurting me!" The whole thing plays out as if Claire was a rape victim instead of somebody who had her superpower stolen (or copied, whatever).}}
** After a truly [[Nightmare Fuel|nightmarish]] chase through the house with doors slamming in her face by themselves, being {{spoiler|immobilized on a table while a creepy guy sticks his fingers into squishy places is about as thinly-veiled as the metaphor can get without him doing his thing while on top of her.}}
*** "Stealing a woman's power" took on a whole new meaning.
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** The Spirit of Jazz has huge amounts of this trope when talking about how he plans to possess Howard. Repeatedly growling about how he's going to "Get inside him" and "Wear him like a glove". Howard even lampshades it by telling him to stop using terms which are such huge innuendos. The Spirit of Jazz has no idea what he means, of course.
** Add to this the fact that when the Spirit of Jazz is trying to get inside Howard, the Spirit of Jazz is trapped in a hoover bag and is pointing the (rather phallic) nozzle at Howard's bottom.
* One episode of ''[[The Big Bang Theory]]'' ends with a breakup between one of the main characters and a physicist he was falling in love with. They had already begun discussing having kids and everything, only it turns out that the breaking point was... one of them believes in string theory and the other in Loop Quantum Gravity, both different theories that attempt to solve the major modern problems in physics. To him, it doesn't seem like such a big deal, but to her, it was "How would we raise the children?!" The entire scene was played as of a strong religious disjoint between the couple that could not be reconciled. This parodies many real physicists' attitudes regarding String Theory -- whichTheory—which makes absolutely no testable predictions and is so mathematically complex and diverse that it takes decades to be able to contribute -- andcontribute—and any competitors.
** A later episode involves an "intervention", staged to convince Sheldon that he needs to learn to drive.
* In most episodes where Leonard and Penny fight Sheldon is often portrayed like the child of a dysfunctional family, with the previous two fulfilling the roles of argumentative parents.
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*** Which is specifically a reference to a scene in [[Pulp Fiction]].
** Then there's the time they find out Lily's fellow teacher Gillian is a [[Ambiguously Jewish|"Woo!" girl]].
* In an episode of ''[[The King of Queens]]'', Spence's wish to see [[The Film of the Book]] of one of his favorite fantasy novels is portrayed as similar to a drug addiction or alcoholism or some other social vice, something to be avoided. Either that or Doug and Deacon are just really big [[Fan Hater|Fan Haters]]s.
** Yep, they're [[Fan Hater|Fan Haters]]s all right, because [[Men Are Uncultured]]. And let's not forget the number of [[Crunchtastic|argusations]] Spence and Danny had that made them sound like a married couple. It seemed like the writers were addicted to this idea.
* ''[[Chuck]] vs. The Fat Lady''. Chuck accidentally gets stuck trying to go through an air vent. During this part, his iPhone accidentally turns on... and speed dials his ex. To her, it sounds more like Chuck is doing... that.
** It doesn't help that Chuck and Sarah are undercover as a business man and a hooker getting it on in a hotel, so the first thing the ex hears is something along the lines of "So long do you think it'll take for us to have sex?" "I don't know, maybe an hour or so." Followed by a bunch of stuff like "Move your hips forward" and "Bend the other way" when he gets stuck in the vents.
*** "Chuck vs. Phase 3" begins with him dreaming about Sarah getting turned off because he can't flash. Lester even lampshades it.
{{quote|''You know, they make pills for what you have.''}}
* In a Season 1 episode of ''[[Supernatural (TV series)|Supernatural]]'', "Something Wicked", the [[Monster of the Week]] -- a—a shtriga, a witch from Albanian folklore that feeds off of human "life forces", especially those of children -- ischildren—is presented like a pedophile. The kids fall into comas and no one can explain why, and the shtriga is disguised as a male doctor that is supposed to be treating the children, which is similar to how many pedophiles try to position themselves so that the children's parents trust them. It should also be noted that the shtriga works its way through families, either from oldest child to youngest or vice versa.
** In a Season 3 episode, "Fresh Blood", a lonely male vampire who wants to build a new nest of vamps lurks around nightclubs and picks out pretty blondes and tries to interest them in a new (thick, red, liquid) recreational drug (in ''[[Supernatural (TV series)|Supernatural]]'' [[Our Vampires Are Different|either digestion or direct blood contact turns a person into a vampire]]). They wake up back in his basement lair and have no idea where they are or what happened to them, not unlike rape victims who were given "roofies" like rohypnol, which cause blackouts.
** Speaking of rape subtext in ''[[Supernatural (TV series)|Supernatural]]'', [[Our Angels Are Different|Michael]] in the Season 5 episode "The Song Remains the Same" attempts to justify his possession of John and his intent to possess Dean as if he were a date-rapist, including claiming that his intention to avoid causing unnecessary damage while inside Dean and John makes him morally superior to Raphael who left his victim catatonic.
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* ''Seacht'' has had Pete and Decko describing a guitar in terms more suited for a beautiful woman.
** [[Truth in Television]].
* ''[[Doctor Who]]'' has had this over the years, but the best --andbest—and most horrifying-- examplehorrifying—example comes from "Turn Left", in which the UK government collapses and [[Putting on the Reich|puts on the Reich]]. Including the internment of foreign nationals. When one of Donna's housemates and friends is interned, Donna is oblivious to the parallel. Wilfred isn't, and he's absolutely horrified by it. And, coupled with Bernard Cribbins' emotive acting, it's enough to [[Tear Jerker|make the viewer cry]].
** Incidentally, [[The Master (trope)|The Master]] ''likes it'' when the Doctor [[Foe Yay|uses his name]].
*** And the Doctor's jaw drops when he sees the Master with a wife. And later refers to her as [[The Beard|his beard.]]
** Try taking "dances" out of "The Doctor Dances."
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* ''[[Spaced]]'': "What now?" "I think we should descale the teapot." "You filthy ''bitch''." "You ''love it''."
* An episode of ''[[The Nanny]]'' has Fran and Maxwell play a rather, ''spirited'', game of table tennis.
* In ''[[Criminal Minds]]'', the knife scene between The Reaper and Hotch. It might actually have extended to out-and-out rape. Either way, the dialogue is highly sexualized. The Reaper strips off his shirt, goes up ''very'' close to Hotch on top of him, and slowly cuts him with a knife. Eventually, he tells Hotch that he's horribly wrong about how [[Serial Killer|Serial Killers]]s who use knives are impotent, and is going to change the way Hotch profiles. Cue The Reaper slowly moving his hand further down on Hotch's body, and Hotch moaning in pain. At the very least, it was pseudo-rape.
* ''[[Being Human (UK)]]'' has another less than comedic example, wherein {{spoiler|Tully}}'s interactions with {{spoiler|George}} near the end of {{spoiler|Series 1, Episode 2}} has the feel of a rape scene. The fact that {{spoiler|Tully}} had sexually assaulted {{spoiler|Annie}} earlier that episode did ''not'' help.
* An episode of ''[[The IT Crowd]]'' revolves around Jen taking up smoking and being forced to smoke outside, where the smoking area keeps getting moved further and further away from the office, eventually forcing the smokers to walk across a motorway and bleak, wind-swept terrain. The whole thing gets treated like the smokers are a bunch of Soviet dissidents being forced into a Stalinist gulag in Siberia.
* The ''[[Star Trek: TOSThe Original Series]]'' episode "Metamorphosis" features Zefram Cochrane being looked after by a powerful energy being. When he realises that the energy being wants a physical relationship with him, he's repulsed, but Kirk, Spock and McCoy don't see what the problem is. Given Cochrane's actual words, the episode can be read as a metaphor against homophobia, or, given the time period, possibly against opposition to interracial relationships.
{{quote|'''Cochrane:''' Is this what the future holds? Men who have no notion of decency or morality? Maybe I'm a hundred and fifty years out of style, but I'm not going to be fodder for any inhuman monster. (He leaves in disgust.)
'''Spock:''' Fascinating. A totally parochial attitude. }}
** ''Star Trek'' has a lot; ''Enterprise'' has one in particular that paints religious people as bigoted homophobic monsters.I
* In the ad episode of ''[[The Office]]'', Michael says Andy's jogging scene is the pivotal moment. And if they don't nail it, they "will lose the whole triumph of the moment; [[Those Wacky Nazis|the triumph of the will.]]"
* In experiment 703 "Deathstalker and the Warriors from Hell" on ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'', a character is shown with snow matted in his beard and a doofy expression on his face. Servo's response? "[[The Stoner|GUESS WHAT I'VE BEEN DOING!]]"
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* "The Tale Of The Renegade Virus" on ''[[Are You Afraid of the Dark?]]'' features a virus with a serial port connector for a hand that tries to plug it into Simon's serial port in his hand. He's laughing all the while and Simons is screaming [[Big No]]. The scene is uncomfortably reminiscent of [[Attempted Rape]].
 
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