Memetic Bystander

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
And now she's an official character!

All shows need to have extras. Whether they're the Faceless Masses or a Cast of Snowflakes, everything needs to have some way to show the main characters are not the only people existing in the world (unless, of course, that's the point). But every now and then, someone will stand out... and all of a sudden they become incredibly popular for whatever reason. They may be endowed with a Fan Nickname, and a whole Backstory and personality may be extrapolated... from just one character, with few or no lines and highly limited appearances.

The fandom may latch onto these characters because they are either a Recurring Extra or a One-Scene Wonder. If the creators of the work get wind of this phenomenon, the character may become an Ascended Extra. Compare the Ensemble Darkhorse, who is a popular minor character instead of a background character. Can overlap with Memetic Badass, but not all the time.

Examples of Memetic Bystander include:

Anime and Manga

Film

  • Figwit, from The Lord of the Rings films. As a result of the "Frodo Is Gre— WHO IS THAT?!" meme, this originally nameless background elf played by Bret McKenzie of Flight of the Conchords fame, who was given a name and backstory, courtesy of the fans, and Peter Jackson brought him back with dialogue and a proper name for the following movies.
  • The belching frog thing in one of the scene transitions in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi.
    • A few ewoks. One ewok that's staring blankly, as if he's stoned. There's another ewok carrying one of his wounded brethren out of the fray during the Endor ambush.
    • Nearly every single background character appearing for more than a few seconds has, at the very least, a name and a backstory. The Expanded Universe novels Tales of the Bounty Hunters, Tales From the Mos Eisley Cantina and Tales From Jabba's Palace are based solely on this trope, consisting of short stories featuring characters that often didn't have a single line (and Boba Fett).
    • Corpsey and One-Arm are a few of the more primitive bystanders that became popular.
    • In The Empire Strikes Back, during the evacuation of Cloud City, you can see a guy in an orange jumpsuit carrying what looks like an ice cream maker. Since then, he's been dubbed "Ice Cream Maker Guy" and has attracted a huge fanbase, to the point where, when the Expanded Universe stated that he was actually carrying a computer memory core, people cried They Changed It, Now It Sucks. He even got an official action figure!
  • "Propeller Guy" from Titanic. During the climactic scene when the stern of the ship is pulled out of the water, one CGI character falls and smacks off the exposed propeller with a loud CLANG. He gets a lot of sympathy for this.
  • Four for you Glen Coco! You go Glen Coco!

Live-Action TV

  • Morn from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine is an invoked in-universe example, he personally doesn't do anything, but the other characters commonly reference his attributes. His most commonly referenced attribute is that he's a big talker.
    • Morn eventually gets an entire episode devoted to him, but he still manages to stay off camera for most of it, does very little while on camera, and is even prevented from speaking when he attempts to do so.
  • Balding Asian Guy from Stargate Universe had some popularity from appearing in crowd scenes in one episode.
  • The extremely hot guy standing behind Carrie when she gets splashed in the Sex and the City opening had quite a following in certain circles.
  • The Observer in Fringe is an in-universe example—though he is significant to the plot, he and his kind have an oath of non-interference (which is only mostly adhered to), but were noticed by the characters because of their habit of turning up at significant events throughout history.
    • So... he's a Watcher?
  • The Glee fandom loves Brad the accompanist, despite him having never spoken. Not to mention he doesn't do anything other than accompany the kids on the piano.
  • Degrassi the Next Generation gives us Towerz, a tall black guy who never says anything.

Music

  • In Rebecca Black's Friday video, a girl in pink dancing awkwardly next to Black in one scene exploded in popularity from an already highly memetic song.
  • In Sound Horizon's Märchen, there is a character called Idolfried Ehrenberg (aka. "Ido") who is only heard faintly in the background of a single song and has all of two lines, neither of which have anything to do with either the album or the song proper. Naturally, fans have created a detailed backstory for him (which, given Revo's MO, may have been exactly what was intended) and draw nearly as much fanart for him as they do for the title character.

Video Games

  • In Street Fighter II, there's a background character in the Las Vegas stage (Balrog's) that always loses a bet no matter who wins. He sobs on his forearm once a round is over.
    • Right next to him there's another BG chara who has a top hat. Once the round is over, he takes off his top hat to celebrate.
    • In Ken's stage from II (a yacht docked at what is believed to be the San Francisco bay), there's a mysterious man on the boat who heavily resembles Q from Street Fighter III. Cue fan rumors. Notably, the guy thought to be Q is absent in HD Remix, which raised more than a few eyebrows from fans.
  • While several NPCs in Kane and Lynch 2: Dog Days just kind of stand and stare blankly at the protagonists (despite how many guns they're packing and/or how many bullet wounds they're covered in), one middle-aged man in the chapter "Laying Low" has received some attention for getting up off of his stoop and staring fearlessly at Lynch when he's walked past.
  • The Turian Groundskeeper's cut lines and the Alliance Drill Instructor's awesome speech in Mass Effect 2 have elevated both to this state.
  • Mega Man X2 has the Green Biker Dude, a Reploid who appears at the beginning of the intro stage and whose only purpose is to pop a wheelie and die.
  • Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn has the 3-13 Archer.
  • Final Fantasy IV: The After Years has Monk C (known by many in the fandom as "Monk Coleman", though that's of course not an official name). In the PSP remake, Final Fantasy IV: The Complete Collection, Monk C even has a slightly different color scheme from Monks A and B.
  • Pokémon Gold and Silver has the Rattata-obsessed Youngster Joey, the very first trainer the player battles after the rival.
  • The first Pidget in level 1-2 of Super Mario Bros. 2 was dubbed "Bill the Extra Guy" by Neglected Mario Characters and given his own bio and backstory. It seems to have caught on within some parts of the Mario fandom.
  • Occurs so often in Touhou fandom that they could form their own independent cast. Daiyousei, Koakuma (not even having names originally until ZUN caught on), Lily White, Momiji, Shizuha, Kisume (more dialogue-less midbosses), Youki (mentioned only) and probably others.
  • One of the stages of BlazBlue: Continuum Shift contains a big fluffy dog that barks repeatedly. Hype Dog swiftly became beloved by the fans.
  • Mortal Kombat 9 features the "Lady in Purple", a random slave girl in a purple skirt who appears in a story mode cutscene briefly and never comes up again. She was raised to this status after a topic sprung up on a fansite message board written by someone who wanted her to be playable because they liked her design. To a lesser extent, there's also "Steam", a grey Palette Swap of the Mortal Kombat 3 female ninja model who appears in a lineup of fighters entering the tournament who fans have declared to be the Distaff Counterpart of Smoke, and the "Lady in Green", a mysterious goddess who possesses Jade in her ending.
  • In Katawa Shoujo, a number of the background characters from Hisao's overview of the class have gone one to become very popular, particularly Molly, an Ambiguously Brown girl with dark brown plaits. One of them, Miki, went on to become an actual, if minor, character.

Web Comics

  • The Order of the Stick gives us That Guy With A Halberd, a nameless Azurite soldier armed with (you guessed it) a halberd who appeared briefly during the battle for Azure City. A thread devoted to him on the OOTS forums reached 28 pages.
  • Homestuck has Ms. Paint, a Prospitian woman who carries a bucket of paint and seems to be a part of the White Queen's retinue. Fan reaction lead to a cameo in one of the comic's many fourth wall breaking segments, during which she became Andrew Hussie's love interest.
    • There's also Fedorafreak, who is a Memetic Badass despite only communicating in text.
    • And in an out-of-universe example: Lemy Telya (short for "Let Me Tell You About Homestuck"), a nameless security guard who can be seen in the background of this photograph apparently scowling at a group of cosplayers at a convention being incredibly silly. It goes deeper, he's inspired fanart, cosplay, and fanart OF the cosplay. It's safe to say that, knowing Homestuck, it's only a matter of time before it hits full recursion and the guard appears in the comic itself. And to top it all off? He's not the only Memetic Bystander to have arisen from the background of a cosplay photo, though he was the first. Another is a similarly unnamed waitress at an IHOP seen in the background of a photo openly mocking some cosplayers.
  • Adventurers! has that guy who says "There are many guards in the castle", while RPG World had The "Times are Tough" Guy.
  • Collar 6 has "Epic Hat and Moustache Guy", an exceedingly manly man in Victorian (or as close as the Rule Of Fetish setting can get to it) attire who appears in a mere single frame as part of a crowd, giving a thumbs up to the reader.
  • The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob does not believe in Faceless Masses, and these background extras tend to reappear later with actual personalities. Floyd Fitznewski, Heywood J. Lookathat, Ms. Hatbrim, and Herb Gardner all first appeared as background extras in crowd shots. The strip's character page even lists "Random Woman From Crowd Scene on Aug. 14, 2007: The only figure in that scene who has never reappeared."

Web Original

  • The Epic Beard Man viral video, featuring a fistfight on a bus between two men, mysteriously spawned a popular sub-meme around a disinterested bystander who was listening to music. She became known as "Amber Lamps", after one of the men's mangled cry for an ambulance.
  • Tiribomba, an exceptionally generic-looking Ta-Matoran lava farmer who does nothing in the Bionicle Flash game, Mata Nui Online Game II, but has a memorably funky name.

Western Animation

  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic has an unbelievable amount of these:
    • Derpy Hooves, a grey, cock-eyed pony spotted in episode one, is almost as popular as the mane cast, and the one with the most solidified fan-made traits (No Sense of Direction, a master of Achievements in Ignorance, loves her daughter, et cetera), to the point where Lauren Faust herself said "She can be Derpy if everyone likes." One of her fanon traits (works as a deliverypony) was canonized in the episode "Feeling Pinkie Keen", which also showed she's not that good at it. Fanon has also given her a unicorn daughter named Dinky (as well as a speech impediment known as logorrhea, though this was quickly dropped after her first speaking role).
      • She has been hidden in nearly every episode to date, almost challenging viewers to find her in a way similar to the Where's Waldo game.
      • Considered even more awesome when considering that the moment in the episode that "created" Derpy was an illustrator mistake or intentional goof to give her "derp" eyes (for all of one scene). Though she's seen through the first half of the first season with regular eyes, all subsequent appearances after the fandom notice include her with derp eyes.
      • The episode "The Last Roundup" officially canonized the name "Derpy" and gave her lines, fully promoting her from "background pony" to "actual character". Sadly, this ended up causing controversy when her voice and klutzy mannerisms made some fans think they were making fun of the mentally handicapped. This got bad enough that she was removed from the iTunes and Netflix versions of the episode. This, of course, ended up causing even more arguments.
    • A brown pony with hair resembling the Tenth Doctor and an hourglass cutie mark was swiftly branded Doctor Whoof/Whooves. Cue hundreds of crossovers.
      • And as with Derpy, the animators joined the fray by adding no less than four new ponies with that same hourglass mark in Sweet and Elite...at least three of which markedly resemble one doctor or another (Third, fifth and eleventh)
    • Lyra (the go to Pony for a Funny Background Event) and Bon Bon (who is often seen with her, and made her own fame with a ridiculous voice) are about equal in popularity, and loop on each other's popularity by being romantically paired together more consistently than any other pairing.
    • Octavia, a cello-playing pony with an incredible resemblance to Pinkie Pie's sister, who generally smolders gracefully whenever she's on screen.
    • Vinyl Scratch/DJ PON-3, a white DJ pony with purple glasses and a blue/cyan mane appeared for all of six seconds in "Suited For Success" and has gained a lot of popularity, appearing in fanfics, fan art and tons of fan music. Later she appeared at the very end of the season 2 finale. She's even going to get an official toy from Hasbro.
    • A background pony seen in a few episodes set in Canterlot is known as Bruce Mane.
  • Avatar: The Last Airbender has Foaming Mouth Guy. His first appearance was only for a few seconds in Season 1 as a background character, but he became such a fan favourite he reappeared again in Season 2 (still in the background, but with a lot more screen time). And then was featured as one of the possible shipped characters at a panel held by the creators. Apparently, he once dated Suki, and she's embarrassed about the whole thing.
    • Also, Aunt Wu's male assistant from the episode "The Fortuneteller", who never gets any lines but still managed to leave an impression due to his striking appearance.
  • In Daria, there's a blonde kid in an army jacket that's always in Daria's classes or in the hallway. He seems to have a lot of fanart dedicated to him.
    • Most of the background characters have recieved this treatment, even to the point of having entire fanfiction series dedicated to exploring a backgrounder that had no lines in the show.
  • The "Unidentified Rodian with Jacket" from an episode of Star Wars: Clone Wars.
  • Out of the consistent Recurring Extras at Kim Possible‍'‍s school, fans latched onto a freckled brunette who always wore shades of blue, and so was dubbed the "Girl in Blue". But the really memetic one was a tall, short-haired girl in a red top and cargo pants, who fit the stereotypical image of a Butch Lesbian and was named "Alex Sapphic" by a fanartist. This identity became Fanon, and she still appears in Fan Fiction with this name.
  • Several from SpongeBob SquarePants: the "MY LEG!" (or, if you're going by The Movie, "MY EYES!") guy from several episodes and the "DEUUEAUGH" fish from "Something Smells". Both have gained significant popularity, mostly through YouTube Poop.

Real Life

  • Cigar Guy from a famous Tiger Woods photo is a man wearing a strange wig and fake moustache, smoking a rather large cigar.
  • Frowning Flower Girl appeared at the Royal Wedding, looking rather disgruntled and covering her ears right next to the happy couple about to kiss.
  • Time-Traveling Hipster, a man in surprisingly modern clothing who was spotted in a photograph taken in 1940.
  • Kilroy, who apparently showed up all over the place in World War Two according to widespread graffiti.
  • A Ridiculously Photogenic Guy who appeared in the background of a marathon photo.