Drop Dead Diva/YMMV

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • Designated Villain: Kim. Though she's not particularly villainous, she's set up as the bad guy to Jane the protagonist.
    • She recently seems to have moved on from her one-dimensional "Alpha Bitch grown up" role to a character with stories, flaws, and strengths in her own right, though when she and Jane face off as rivals Jane is still usually portrayed as being in the right.
  • Glurge: It certainly has its moments.
  • One True Pairing: The universe seems to think so in regards to Grayson and Deb!Jane. Unfortunately, the two of them don't realize it yet since they're doing the reasonable thing and trying to move on from Deb!Jane's death/Deb!Jane's resurrection.
  • Hollywood Homely: Brooke Elliott may be plus-sized, but she is not plain...
    • More like Big Beautiful Woman for this trope and quite a few others.
      • In fact, the show rarely, if ever, brings up Jane's size or appearance as an issue of any sort. Usually, it was more just Deb herself commenting on the differences (wondering why Jane picked clothing that didn't flatter her figure for instance) rather than making some sort of statement that Deb was unequivocally prettier than Jane. By the second season, the show has seemingly dropped this aspect too and the entire cast is treated as equally attractive. Deb herself comments that Jane has great teeth, hair, and skin.
    • Fred works as a male example. Deb!Jane mentions repeatedly that Fred and Stacey are in completely different leagues. It becomes a Wallbanger when, after he successfully romances her and she forgets (long story) that Jane still says he's not her type.
    • The inverse of Hollywood Homely is also, sorta, toyed with. Kim is slightly below average while Stacey would be the usual 'average' in a TV show. However, Kim is presented as just as attractive as Stacey.
    • Tony works as a male example. He's not quite the hollywood handsome that Greyson and Parker are.
  • Values Dissonance: In one episode, Deb!Jane jumps on to a case already assigned to Kim and takes the case away from Kim. The audience is suppose to sympathize with Jane but if the roles were reversed, the implication would be that Kim is just being an overly ambitious shark taking away from Jane. Kim in general is the target of this trope being the designated ' Acceptable Target ' of the show.
    • To a lesser extent, Grayson and Deb/Jane's relationship. Grayson is denied and depicted slightly negatively for moving on from Deb (who he believes to be dead) by dating, moving out of their house, etc while any gestures he makes to remember her (which are many) are given highly positive light (like celebrating her birthday). Even Jane herself can get clingy with Grayson and upset. And yet on the other hand, Jane ends up in a relationship and this is considered a good thing (comparatively to Grayson) because the heroine is happy. And Jane doesn't hestitate over the relationship or have any real qualms.
  • The Woobie: Fred probably qualifies. First Deb gets him demoted from Celestial Bureaucracy when she self-resurrects herself. Then he finds the girl of his dreams only to have any memories of his existence erased from everyone and he's forced back to heaven. He gives up heaven to become human only to have the girl start dating someone else.
    • Not to mention when he and dream girl finally date (as he becomes a guardian angel again, but with a different contract - he can date humans- and all seems to be going real well, dream girl cheats on him, they somewhat reconcile, and dream girl cheats again (to him, since it wasn't dream girl who kissed first but dream girl may have kissed back.)
      • And to boot, even telling her just the romance stuff seems to violates his contract with heaven and causes her to forget again.