Everything Is Big in Texas: Difference between revisions

Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.8.6
m (copyedits)
(Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.8.6)
(4 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{quote|''"You have heard the saying that everything is bigger in the Lone Star state, and it is true that the cats are the size of dogs and the dogs are the size of European cars. But Texans themselves are of normal proportions, with normal-sized dreams and loves, who just happen to own cars that are the size of twenty-five European cars."''
|'''John Hodgman''', |''[[The Areas of My Expertise]]''}}
 
In real life, Texas is a diverse state in terms of geography and culture. It can easily be divided into five different regions culturally, with climates ranging from the near desert like conditions of the panhandle to the humid coastal subtropics along the shoreline. [[DFW Metroplex|Dallas]], [[Greater Houston|Houston]] and San Antonio count as three of the US's top ten most populous cities, with the state capital of Austin and the cities of Fort Worth and El Paso rounding off the list of cities that can be described as ''big.'' The state itself is ''huge'', being [httphttps://wwwtexasalmanac.k5rcd.orgcom/TEXAS%20EUROPE20SIZE%20COMPARISON%20MAPindex.jpgphp?q=topics/facts-profile 268,820596 sq. miles]{{Dead link}} with a population of about 24.3 million. This makes it roughly half the size of Alaska with sixty times the population - and several times larger than many entire countries. For example, it is approximately three times as large as the ''entire United Kingdom put together''.<ref>Mind you, it's only slightly larger than Manitoba, two-thirds as large as Ontario, and less than half as large as Quebec, all of which are provinces in [[Canada]]. But, hey, [[Canada Does Not Exist]], right?</ref>
 
In terms of culture Texas plays host to some of the largest Hispanic and Asian American communities in the South Eastern United States. The state's ranks of professionals, business leaders and politicians draw from all racial and religious groups who can produce people with the ability, which basically means each and every one of them. Many government institutions retain their form from the days of the Republic of Texas and Reconstruction Era. Politics is personality based as much as anything else from the state's history of being in the Solid South, leading to such politicians as [[Kinky Friedman]], a self described Jewish Cowboy and entertainer whose campaign slogan was "Why the hell not?", popping up from time to time.
Line 43:
* New Texas in [[Saber Marionette J]].
* Osaka in the dub of ''[[Azumanga Daioh]]'' is given a Texas accent, Houston in particular, because both Texans and Osakans share the stereotype of being loud, obnoxious country hicks. (Osaka herself, of course, is the complete opposite.)<ref>Worth noting, the English-dub voice actress, Kira Vincent-Davis, is a native of Houston, where the anime was dubbed, so at least you know the accent is legit.</ref>
** A similar approach was taken with ''[[Abenobashi Mahou Shoutengai]]/Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi]]'', which is set in Osaka.
 
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
Line 77 ⟶ 76:
* ''[[Whip It]]'' takes place in [[Where the Hell Is Springfield?|Bodeen, Texas]] and Austin. Amusingly it was mostly filmed in Michigan.
 
== [[Live -Action TV]] ==
 
== [[Live Action TV]] ==
* One of the many pilots who passed through the Stalag 13 underground was a large and enthusiastic Texan. He wore a cowboy hat (yes, while flying his plane), used many Texan colloquialisms and was very amused by meeting actual foreigners such as the British Newkirk and French LeBeau.
* Gordon Bullit in the fourth season of ''[[The OC]]'' is a walking, talking Texan stereotype.
Line 96 ⟶ 94:
* ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'' has the evil front for Primatech Paper here in Volume 1, though it becomes less significant when the Bennetts move to California in Volume 2.
* ''GCB'' is set in Texas, and is about as stereotypical as it can get.
 
 
== [[Literature]] ==
Line 106 ⟶ 103:
* ''For Texas and Zed''
* ''[[The Ayes]] of Texas'' and it's sequels in which Texas becomes an independent nation.
 
 
== [[Music]] ==
* [[The Austin Lounge Lizards]]' ''Stupid Texas Song'' is one long indulgence of this trope.
 
 
== [[Theatre]] ==
* In ''[[The Most Happy Fella]]'', the [[Beta Couple]] sing a number about how everything is big in Dallas, where they're from, "but the rest of Texas looks a mess."
 
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
Line 120 ⟶ 114:
* ''[[Battle Fantasia]]'' Takes place in a fantasy world with your typical western European fantasy kingdom, a steampunk Dwarf kingdom, Magic talkin rabbits... and a masked gunslinger from Texas... Right.
* [[Team Fortress 2|The Engineer]] Comes from Bee Cave, Texas. While he has the typical southern drawl and has a lot of wild west themed unlocks, he's also probably the smartest member of the team.
 
 
== Web Comics ==
Line 137 ⟶ 130:
1008. Texans do not get revolvers as a racial weapon proficiency. }}
* About one half of [[Survival of the Fittest|SOTF-TV]]'s characters (the other half being from a [[Sucky School]] in [[Motor City|Detroit]]) are from a wealthy private school in Bryan, Texas. While the stereotype hasn't come up as much as you'd expect, it has received [[Lampshade Hanging]] both in and out of character.
 
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* The [[Affably Evil]] oil tycoon [[Meaningful Name|Rich Texan]] in ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'' acts as a stereotypical [[Exactly What It Says Onon the Tin|rich Texan]], complete with the accent, white cowboy boots, and white ten-gallon hat. He's also very trigger-happy with his [[Guns Akimbo|double pistols]].
* ''[[King of the Hill]]'' dips in and out of this stereotype with every other episode, sometimes portraying Texas and Texans more realistically and other times portraying them as naive, conservative throwbacks who only care about hunting, beer and football. The landscape of Texas in the show also seems to include nothing but suburbia, desert and empty fields. Given that [[Mike Judge]] is actually a Texan, and has portrayed a much less stereotypical Texas in ''[[Beavis and Butthead]]'' and ''[[Office Space]]'' (yes, both of those took place in Texas), this is more a case of [[Affectionate Parody]] than [[Did Not Do the Research]]. In addition, the Hills live in the suburbs of a somewhat small town, which generally are much closer to the stereotyped depictions seen in the show than the big cities like [[DFW Metroplex|Dallas]] and [[Houston]] are.
** One episode had Hank pandering to a visiting New England investor to use Strickland as its propane supplier. The investor expected this trope and kept pestering Hank about cowboy hats and boots and used words like "russlin'" and "twisters". The investor eventually went with Strickland's competitor Thatherton because he acted the stereotype.
Line 185 ⟶ 177:
* Rick Perry, former 2012 Republican candidate for President, takes this trope to [[Proud Warrior Race Guy]] levels. Another example is another former President, [[Lyndon B. Johnson]].
* The Texas State Capitol building is 11 feet taller than the US Capitol building. Don't tell me size doesn't matter!
* Molly Ivins talks about her state in [https://web.archive.org/web/20141016093833/http://www.thenation.com/article/texas-america?page=full "Is Texas America?"], an article for ''The Nation magazine.
** Ivins practically built her career on talking smack about Texas, and made no secret of her belief that she was one of the only intelligent people from there.
* Inverted with [[Audie Murphy]], at only 5'5".
Line 192 ⟶ 184:
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Truth in Television{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Bigger Is Better]]
[[Category:Truth in Television]]
[[Category:Everything Is Big in Texas]]
[[Category:Indexed States of America]]
[[Category:Truth in Television]]