Enforced Trope: Difference between revisions

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*Our magnanimous sponsor [[Trope Co]]® requires us to display this word.|The "Enforced" box of the image on [[Playing with a Trope]]}}
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Our magnanimous sponsor [[Trope Co]]® requires us to display this word.|The "Enforced" box of the image on [[Playing with a Trope]]}}


Tropes that are there because the writer had to include them - especially when a sharp-eyed viewer can tell the creator would have preferred to leave them out.
Tropes that are there because the writer had to include them - especially when a sharp-eyed viewer can tell the creator would have preferred to leave them out.
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{{examples|General examples}}
{{examples|General examples}}
* [[555]]: Fictional phone numbers and addresses may need to avoid corresponding to ones in [[Real Life]].
* [[Censorship Tropes]]. You can't ignore the censors without consequences.
* The [[Audible Sharpness]] in ''[[The Lord of the Rings (film)|The Lord of the Rings]]'' was going to be averted, until [[The Coconut Effect|test audiences had trouble accepting the absence of the trope]].
* [[Avoid the Dreaded G Rating]]. It's presumed that any work that ''can'' be seen without moral qualms by anyone, regardless of age, is not worth seeing by adults ("children will watch ''[[Viewers are Morons|anything]]''"). Since this would cut into profits by scaring off parts of the potential audience, it needs to be avoided.
* Being forced to [[Bowdlerise]] a work. The enforcers could be [[Moral Guardians]], government requirements, or [[Executive Meddling]].
* Being forced to [[Bowdlerise]] a work. The enforcers could be [[Moral Guardians]], government requirements, or [[Executive Meddling]].
* [[Censorship Tropes]]. You can't ignore the censors without consequences.
* [[The Coconut Effect]], because [[Reality Is Unrealistic]].
* [[Coconut Superpowers]], because of budgetary problems during production.
* [[Dawson Casting]] can sometimes be necessary for legal reasons. One example is the film adaptation of ''[[The Reader]]''. Michael Kross legally couldn't shoot his sex scenes with [[Kate Winslet]] until he had turned 18.
* [[Did Not Do the Research]]: Any medium that relies on a small amount of people on a hectic time table will occasionally not be able to do the research correctly, and make some mistakes. Especially if they're on a contract.
* [[Merchandise-Driven]]: Any work that exists to promote or sell a product (such as a line of toys) will be constrained by product availability, turnover, popularity and gimmicks. ''[[Transformers]]'' is probably the most successful example.
* [[No Budget]]: When the creators are limited by budget constraints.
* [[Our Lawyers Advised This Trope]]: Legal disclaimers are necessary to stave off attacks from overzealous lawyers.
* [[Pac-Man Fever]]. Using a modern game would involve licensing or [[Product Placement]] agreements. Generic 80s arcade sounds do not.
* [[Rated "M" for Money]] is often caused by [[Executive Meddling]].
* When fiction deals with the history of some region, it may sometimes need [[Rose-Tinted Narrative]] to get mainstream success in that region. In worse cases, [[Rose-Tinted Narrative]] will be required for [[Banned in China|publication.]]
* When fiction deals with the history of some region, it may sometimes need [[Rose-Tinted Narrative]] to get mainstream success in that region. In worse cases, [[Rose-Tinted Narrative]] will be required for [[Banned in China|publication.]]
** The [[Deep South]] in the first several decades of film got a lot of rose-tinting.
** The [[Deep South]] in the first several decades of film got a lot of rose-tinting.
** Also happens with other works that require the authorization of their subjects - authorized biographies, for instance.
** Also happens with other works that require the authorization of their subjects - authorized biographies, for instance.
* A [[Spiritual Successor]] may be created because a legal dispute renders a true sequel impossible.
* [[Avoid the Dreaded G Rating]]. It's presumed that any work that ''can'' be seen without moral qualms by anyone, regardless of age, is not worth seeing by adults ("children will watch ''[[Viewers are Morons|anything]]''"). Since this would cut into profits by scaring off parts of the potential audience, it needs to be avoided.
* [[White Male Lead]] is usually employed because the entertainment industry knows that any female or non-white lead will be called racist or sexist for the portrayal no matter what they do, prohibiting character flaws required to make an interesting character.
* [[Your Princess Is in Another Castle]] is all but unavoidable in TV series if they run long enough.
* [[Your Princess Is in Another Castle]] is all but unavoidable in TV series if they run long enough.
** [[Left Hanging]] can easily be forced on a TV series if it gets [[Screwed by the Network]].
** [[Left Hanging]] can easily be forced on a TV series if it gets [[Screwed by the Network]].
* [[Rated "M" for Money]] is often caused by [[Executive Meddling]].
* [[The Coconut Effect]], because [[Reality Is Unrealistic]].
* [[Coconut Superpowers]], because of budgetary problems during production.
* A [[Spiritual Successor]] may be created because a legal dispute renders a true sequel impossible.
* Any medium that relies on a small amount of people on a hectic time table will occasionally [[Did Not Do the Research|not be able to do the research correctly]], and make some mistakes. Especially if they're on a contract.
* Any work that exists to promote or sell a product (such as a line of toys) will be constrained by product availability, turnover, popularity and gimmicks. [[Transformers]] is probably the most successful example.
* The [[Audible Sharpness]] in ''[[The Lord of the Rings (film)|The Lord of the Rings]]'' was going to be averted, until [[The Coconut Effect|test audiences had trouble accepting the absence of the trope]].
* [[Dawson Casting]] can sometimes be necessary for legal reasons. One example is the film adaptation of ''[[The Reader]]''. Michael Kross legally couldn't shoot his sex scenes with [[Kate Winslet]] until he had turned 18.
* [[Pac-Man Fever]]. Using a modern game would involve licensing or [[Product Placement]] agreements. Generic 80s arcade sounds do not.
* [[Our Lawyers Advised This Trope]]: Legal disclaimers are necessary to stave off attacks from overzealous lawyers.
* [[555]]: Fictional phone numbers and addresses may need to avoid corresponding to ones in [[Real Life]].
* [[No Budget]]: When the creators are limited by budget constraints.
* [[White Male Lead]] is usually employed because the entertainment industry feels (rightly or wrongly) that in order to appeal to whites, they need a white lead because white people won't relate to a minority.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Trope Tropes]]
[[Category:Trope Tropes]]
[[Category:Enforced Trope]]
[[Category:Playing with a Trope]]

Latest revision as of 20:32, 6 September 2023

TROPE*


*Our magnanimous sponsor Trope Co® requires us to display this word.
—The "Enforced" box of the image on Playing with a Trope

Tropes that are there because the writer had to include them - especially when a sharp-eyed viewer can tell the creator would have preferred to leave them out.

It happens for a number of reasons:

May lead to Writer Revolt in extreme cases. Clever writers may attempt Getting Crap Past the Radar.

Contrast Subverted Trope, Averted Trope, Defied Trope.


General examples