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{{quote|''"To take a blank piece of paper and draw characters that people love and worry about is extremely satisfying. It really does not matter what you are called, or where your work is placed, as long as it brings some kind of joy to some person some place."''|'''Charles M. Schulz'''}}
|'''Charles M. Schulz'''}}
 
Charles M. Schulz, the only child of a St. Paul, Minnesota barber, wrote and drew ''Peanuts'' for [[Print Long Runners|49 years, 3 months and 1 day]] (1950-2000). The stars of the strip are Charlie Brown, whom Schulz named for a fellow instructor at the Art School of Minneapolis, and his dog Snoopy.
 
The strip originated as ''Li'l Folks'', a feature Schulz drew for his hometown newspaper. The strip's cast grew as time went on - well, sort of; consensus is their age topped out at about 6 (Linus and Sally) to 8 (Charlie Brown, Lucy et al.) - but adults were always conspicuous by their absence, famously represented by unintelligible offscreen 'wah-whah' noises in the TV specials. (This was due to the editor's restrictions on the strip: to fit the kids in at a decent size in the small panels, he put the "camera" at their height and did away with anyone taller.)
 
When the kids aren't in school, they're usually playing baseball or having conversations while leaning on a brick wall. Over the years, the strip became famous for its psychological realism, bordering on an all-out satire of more typically sentimental kiddie comics, though it arguably took a turn away from the philosophical toward more direct comedy relatively early in its run (around 1970). Charlie Brown developed from a standard 'lovable loser' into a sensitive and intelligent Everyman, whose relentless track record of failure meant he struggled perpetually with the Really Big Questions. Alternately aiding and exasperating him in his quest were his best friend Linus, a philosopher who sucked his thumb and carried a [[The Woobie|security blanket]], and Linus' big sister Lucy, a bossy, brassy self-described 'fussbudget' who already knew what the universe's problem was: It never asked ''her'' what to do.
 
Supporting cast included Charlie's little sister Sally, a [[Dumb Blonde|ditz-in-embryo]] whose literal streak was only equalled by her crush on an appalled Linus; Schroeder, a handsome neighbor boy who - much to Lucy's chagrin - lived only to play [[Ludwig Van Beethoven|Beethoven]] on his toy piano (with painted-on black keys), and Franklin, the smart black kid who quietly integrated the strip in the late 1960s. 'Peppermint' Patty, the tough [[Tomboy]] from across town, and Marcie, her meek bespectacled acolyte, were frequent visitors.
 
One unique character, The Little Red-Haired Girl, was never seen and never heard (except in certain TV specials, but [[Word of God|as Schulz made very clear]], [[Canon Dis ContinuityDiscontinuity|those don't count]]). She was Charlie Brown's Ideal, and thus in a sense everyone's, so Schulz wisely let each of those readers envision her for themselves.
 
Then there was Snoopy, beagle extraordinaire. Nominally Charlie Brown's pet, he actually lived in an incredibly rich world of his own imagination, acknowledging the existence of 'that round-headed kid' only when hungry. Over the years Snoopy would invent literally dozens of alternate personae, the most famous of which is the [[Ace Pilot|WWI Flying Ace]], perpetually locked in combat with the [[Red Baron]]. Attending and often abetting Snoopy in his fantasies was his little yellow bird buddy Woodstock, who took to hanging out at the doghouse while he failed to get the knack of the whole 'migrating' deal.
 
The strip spawned about 50 animated TV specials over 40 years (starting with ''[[A Charlie Brown Christmas]]'' and continuing through installments such as ''[[It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown]]''; ''He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown''; ''It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown''; and so on, ending with ''He's a Bully, Charlie Brown''), as well as four feature films (''[[A Boy Named Charlie Brown]]''; ''[[Snoopy Come Home]]''; ''[[Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown]]''; and ''[[Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown|Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (And Don't Come Back!)]]''), a [[Saturday Morning Cartoon]] series (''The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show''), not one but two stage [[The Musical|musicals]] (''You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown'' and ''Snoopy!!!''), a few direct-to-video movies, and an eight-episode [[Miniseries]] (''This Is America, Charlie Brown''). The ''Peanuts'' characters also appeared in TV commercials for the Ford Motor Company, Cheerios and Chex cereals, Dolly Madison snack cakes, a few regional brands of bread and Met Life Insurance, and believe it or not, [[No Problem With Licensed Games (Sugar Wiki)|a]] [[Video Game]] [[Snoopy Flying Ace|series]]. Since Schulz's death ([[Retirony|the night before his final strip was published]]), the comic has kept a place in many newspapers by way of reruns. Specials occasionally keep being produced, such as a series of Flash shorts in 2009, the hand-drawn ''Happiness Is A Warm Blanket, Charlie Brown'' in 2011, and ana upcoming[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1FNL_iIp5c animefeature-length adaptationCGI bymovie] released in 2015. Japanese animation studio [[Madhouse]] [http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-news/2012/02/18-1/studio-madhouse-makes-charlie-brown-anime announced in 2012] that it had acquired the rights to make ''Peanuts'' anime shorts, but despite their claims that at least one such film is "out there" (at [http://www.snoopy.co.jp/ http://www.snoopy.co.jp/] or in the [https://web.archive.org/web/20181001095323/http://www.snoopymuseum.tokyo/en/ Snoopy Museum], perhaps?), there is no evidence that anyone has ever seen it.
 
See also the [http://www.peanuts.com/ official Peanuts web site].
----
{{tropenamer}}
* [[Aluminum Christmas Trees]]
* [[Charlie Brown Baldness]]
* [[Don't Call Me "Sir"!]]
* [[I Got a Rock]]
* [[The Pig Pen]]
* [[Through a Face Full of Fur]]
* [[Security Blanket]]
* You Are a Tree Charlie Brown, now renamed as [[Playing a Tree]]
----
=== Frequent {{tropelist|''Peanuts'' Tropes:has ===its own internal tropes:}}
* Snoopy's imagined personae: [[World War OneI]] flying ace, novelist, Beagle Scout leader, 'Mad Punter', streaker, vulture, Flashbeagle, Joe Cool, etc. etc.
** Leading Charlie Brown to ask, "Why can't I have a [[I Just Want to Be Normal|normal dog]] like everyone else?"
** Also, Snoopy's fights against the cat next door (represented by her swipes through his doghouse ceiling) and his tennis playing against the garage door.
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* [[Failure Is the Only Option|Charlie Brown trying to kick the football and Lucy yanking the ball away.]] (Schulz briefly toyed with the idea of having him ''finally'' kick the football, but realized that the entire 'football' gag was about Charlie Brown's unending sense of optimism, rather than Lucy simply being mean).
** During the arc in which Charlie is seriously ill in the hospital (see under [[Littlest Cancer Patient]] below), Lucy vows that if he recovers she'll let him kick the ball for real. Come time to make good, she indeed doesn't pull the football away... but in true Charlie Brown fashion, he ''kicks her arm instead''.
** In the very last football strip, Lucy is called in for lunch and entrusts the ball to Rerun, who goes outside and enacts the ritual off-stage. When Lucy later asked him whether he pulled it away, the answer is: "You'll never know..."
** Also, Snoopy never shoots down the Red Baron, Linus never sees the Great Pumpkin rise from the pumpkin patch, all the love is unrequited, etc...
* Lucy and her "[[The Shrink|Psychiatric Help]] 5 Cents" booth (a parody of a lemonade stand). Charlie Brown went through a ''lot'' of nickels.
{{quote| '''Franklin:''' Are you a real psychiatrist?<br />
'''Lucy:''' Was the lemonade ever any good? }}
* Charlie Brown's unrequited admiration of the Little Red-Haired Girl...well, not exactly unrequited, as on no recorded occasion did he get himself under enough control to speak to her in the first place. <ref> In the 1967 TV special ''You're In Love, Charlie Brown'', Charlie Brown accidentally confesses his love for her -- in front of his entire class. Later, he finds a note pinned on him from the Little Red-Haired Girl herself, where she confesses she also likes him a lot. However, as noted above, Charles Schulz considered this [[Canon Dis ContinuityDiscontinuity]]. In the 2015 movie, they actually speak to each other -- in front of the rest of the gang, yet -- in the moments before she takes a bus to camp, and she admits having, if not affection, admiration for his kindness, perseverance and optimism.</ref>
* Various attempts to separate Linus and his blanket, by either Lucy or his "blanket-hating grandmother."
** Or a certain beagle.
* Sally's...creative...school reports: "Butterflies are free. What does this mean? This means you can have as many of them as you want."
{{quote| '''Sally:''' So much for higher thought.}}
* Lucy leaning on Schroeder's piano, trying to get his attention. Or sometimes Snoopy and/or Woodstock playing around with the notes coming from the piano.
* Peppermint Patty in class, [[Book Dumb|trying and failing hopelessly]] to figure out what's going on. This sometimes extends to her misunderstanding some concept so ''completely'', and ignoring all rational warnings from Marcie, that she would find herself publicly humiliated.
** For a long time, she didn't realize that Snoopy's was a dog...
* Marcie [[They Call Me Mister Tibbs|calling Peppermint Patty "sir"]], over [[Don't Call Me "Sir"!|the latter's objections]]. Conversely, Patty was the only one who called Charlie Brown "Chuck" on a regular basis (although Marcie also did at first, but later switched to calling him "Charles").
** At first Peppermint Patty's standard reply was: "Stop calling me sir," but eventually she just gave up. Marcie is also the only one who calls Charlie Brown "Charles".
*** In later strips, a girl Charlie Brown meets at camp calls him "Brownie Charles", because when they met, he was so nervous that he flubbed up his own name.
 
See also the [http://www.peanuts.com/ official Peanuts web site].
----
=== ''[[Peanuts]]'' is the [[Trope Namer]] for: ===
* [[Aluminum Christmas Trees]]
* [[Charlie Brown Baldness]]
* [[Don't Call Me "Sir"!]]
* [[I Got a Rock]]
* [[The Pig Pen]]
* [[Through a Face Full of Fur]]
* [[Security Blanket]]
* [[You Are a Tree Charlie Brown]], now renamed as [[Playing a Tree]]
----
{{tropelist}}
=== Other tropes used include: ===
== A-E ==
* [[Aborted Arc]]: Frieda's cat Faron only appeared for a few strips before Schulz realized that since Snoopy didn't speak in words, the only way to have him interact with Faron would be to have them ''think'' at each other. (Also, by his own admission, Schulz looked at his drawings of Faron and realized uncomfortably that he couldn't draw cats very well.)
** What had been intended as a lengthy -- possiblylengthy—possibly months-long -- arclong—arc with Linus and Lucy's family moving away came to a very sudden end because fans objected.
* [[Abhorrent Admirer]]: Sally to Linus, Lucy to Schroeder, ''possibly'' even Peppermint Patty to Charlie Brown. In a weird, deranged way, [[And Call Him George|Clara to Snoopy]], [[Snoopy Come Home|too]].
* [[The Ace]]: Peppermint Patty was introduced as baseball phenom who manages five home runs in her first game, after offering her services to Charlie Brown's team. But she quickly became a [[Small Name, Big Ego]] with subsequent appearances.
* [[Acid Reflux Nightmare]]: The special ''What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown'' is all about one of these suffered by Snoopy.
* [[Actually Pretty Funny]]:
** Joe Gargiola has spoken highly of the comic and wrote the forward to at least one collection of strips, despite frequent pot-shots taken at him by the characters, [https://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1976/03/09 like this one.]
** Two years after Schulz's death,[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christo_and_Jeanne-Claude Christo Vladimirov Javacheff] built a model of Snoopy's doghouse wrapped up the way it is [https://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1978/11/20 in this strip] and donated it to the Schulz Museum.
* [[Adaptational Jerkass]]: Some of the ''Peanuts'' characters are a little meaner in the animated specials than they are in the comics, which is saying something.
** Peppermint Patty can be a little abrasive, but she's generally not that demanding on holidays. ''A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving'' is about her inviting herself to Charlie Brown's Thanksgiving plans, as well as Franklin and Marcie. When Linus suggests explaining that the Browns are going out of town, Charlie Brown points out that Peppermint Patty doesn't let you get a word in and talks over you. Then she proceeds to complain about the snacks that Charlie Brown, Linus, and Snoopy prepare for the afternoon meal, asking "Chuck" if he knows anything about Thanksgiving dinners. Marcie has to point out that it was rather rude of Peppermint Patty to act this entitled.
** Snoopy has his moments. In the comics, he and Charlie Brown have an understanding where Charlie Brown tolerates his dog's imaginings, and Snoopy is happy to greet his human. During a brief falling-out where Charlie Brown accidentally cost Snoopy a world record during a baseball game, they agreed to a truce when Charlie Brown offered to make Snoopy the team manager. Some of the cartoons have moments where Snoopy is more disparaging of Charlie Brown and less than emotionally supportive. Charlie Brown also offered Snoopy the manager position when the latter was upset about another baseball game lost, making the grievance pettier.
* [[Adults Are Useless]]: "Useless"? Try [[Invisible Parents|non-existent]].
** There was ''one'' animated special, ''Snoopy's Reunion'', where there are not only adults seen, they can be heard. It's the one where Charlie Brown gets Snoopy for the first time. We see the puppy farm owner and he even talks.
** ''Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown!'' had a couple of adult characters who appeared on camera and spoke normally: the cab driver who took Snoopy to Wimbledon, and the teacher at the French school.
*** There is also a London waiter who speaks in a thick Cockney accent that the kids can't comprehend, and VioletteViolet's uncle, "The Baron," who speaks normally but [[The Faceless|appears only in silhouette]].
** And more background adults (or possibly teenagers) at the club in ''Flashbeagle''.
** Adults are heard, but not seen, in ''She's a Good Skate, Charlie Brown'', but that's due to the storyline ''requiring'' intelligible adults for once (most notably, the rink announcer).
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* [[Anxiety Dreams]]: Snoopy blames his on eating pizza before bed.
* [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking]]: In the revival version of ''[[The Musical|You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown]]'' ("Beethoven Day"):
{{quote| '''Lucy:''' I got it! We'll demand full-page ads in every newspaper!<br />
'''Linus:''' We'll start a chain of Beethoven superstores!<br />
'''Sally:''' We'll build a Beethoven theme park!<br />
'''Charlie Brown:''' We can have a ''BAKE SALE!'' }}
* [[Art Evolution]]: The earliest strips have much cleaner, more three dimensional artwork...which admittedly, looks really weird compared to the later strips we've all grown up with.
** And then in the final years, the art became scratchy and squiggly due to Schulz's decreasing motor skills.
* [[Artistic License History]]: An in-universe example occurs in ''Snoopy!!! The Musical'', in the song "Edgar Allan Poe". Everything Charlie Brown says about Poe is utterly incorrect. Linus gets ''almost'' everything right, only he inexplicably spells the man's middle name wrong-- itwrong—it's "Allan", with two As.
** Numerous school reports by Peppermint Patty and Sally. Here are some of them:
{{quote| '''Peppermint Patty''': This is my report on Washington, D.C. "D.C." stands for Doctor. Dr. Washington was an ophthalmologist. His best friend was named Bunker Hill. One day on the battlefield Dr. Washington looked at Bunker Hill and said, "There's something wrong with the whites of your eyes!" As a reward for saving his friend's vision, the people voted to make Dr. Washington their coach.<br />
'''Sally''': Britain was invaded in the year 43 by Roman Numerals.<br />
'''Sally''': Abraham Lincoln was our sixteenth king and he was the father of Lot's wife.<br />
'''Sally''': This is my report on Columbus Day. Columbus Day was a very brave man. He wanted to sail around the world. "I can give you three ships, Mr. Day," said the Queen. }}
* [[Aside Glance]]: Occasionally a character will give one of these to the reader.
* [[Asleep in Class]]: Peppermint Patty is always falling asleep in class. Marcie, who sits behind her, will either try to wake her up or play tricks on her while Peppermint Patty is asleep.
** Marcie herself has fallen asleep in class on a few occasions. In one instance, she had to get up early to be at her school patrol post on time, but fell asleep at her classroom desk.
* [[Ass in a Lion Skin]]: Snoopy has a penchant for pretending to be various other kinds of animals -- includinganimals—including an alligator, an anteater, a [[Big Badass Bird of Prey|bald eagle]], a [[Bat Out of Hell|bat]], a beaver, a songbird, a [[Everything's Better with Cows|cow]], a cricket, a [[Everything's Better with Dinosaurs|dinosaur]], an elephant, a giraffe, a [[Extreme Omni Goat|goat]], a [[Everything's Better with Monkeys|gorilla]], a [[Boxing Kangaroo|kangaroo]], a [[King of Beasts|lion]], a moose, a mountain lion, a [[Stubborn Mule|mule]], an [[The Owl-Knowing One|owl]], a partridge (in a pear tree), a pelican, a [[Everything's Better with Penguins|penguin]], a [[Piranha Problem|piranha]], a [[Everything's Worse with Bears|polar bear]], a prairie dog, a [[Everythings Better With Bunnies|rabbit]], a [[Rhino Rampage|rhinoceros]], a [[Sea Monster]], a [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks|shark]], a [[Counting Sheep|sheep]], a [[Panthera Awesome|tiger]], a vulture, and a [[Big Badass Wolf|wolf]].
* [[As the Good Book Says...]]: Linus is frequently given to quoting Scripture. Sometimes other characters also do it.
** In one strip Sally asks Charlie what all the "John 3:16" signs people are holding up at a football game mean. When he tells her about the reference she says, "Oh. I always thought it was a reference to John Madden."
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* [[Aw, Look -- They Really Do Love Each Other]]: Linus and Lucy are practically the sibling [[Trope Codifier]], as perhaps best illustrated in the strip where Linus encourages a gloomy Lucy to count her blessings. When she demands to know what blessings he thinks she has, he replies, "Well, for one thing, you have a little brother who loves you." She stares at him for a [[Beat]] panel, then bursts into tears.
** This goes for the whole gang. If something happens to Charlie Brown, Lucy's a nervous wreck. If something happens to Lucy, it's Schroeder who suffers. And, though Snoopy drives the kids up the wall, ''everyone'' is sad when he's not around. Schulz himself probably said it best:
{{quote| "I think all the characters in the strip are really very fond of each other, but they are also very hard on each other."}}
* [[Badass]]: Linus, when sufficiently provoked, is capable of moves with his blanket that approach Action Hero territory.
* [[Beleaguered Assistant]]: Woodstock is sometimes one of these to Snoopy.
* [[Berserk Button]]: Linus, upon being referred to as Sally's '"Sweet Babboo'". Also, when a bully makes fun of a bald girl after he takes her hat (she has leukemia), he flips out and whips the bully into submission with his blanket.
* [[Big Man on Campus]]: Snoopy's "Joe Cool" persona.
* [[Bigger on the Inside]]: Snoopy's doghouse. Its interior was never shown (except in the cartoon where it appears to be an [[Elaborate Underground Base]]), but we know it contains a Van Gogh painting (later replaced with an Andrew Wyeth after the doghouse burned down and was rebuilt), a pool table, a bridge room, a swimming pool, a postage meter, etc...
* [[Bigger on the Inside]]: Snoopy's doghouse. Its interior was never shown (except in the cartoon where it appears to be an [[Elaborate Underground Base]]), but we know it contains a Van Gogh painting (later replaced with an Andrew Wyeth after the doghouse burned down and was rebuilt), a pool table, a bridge room, a swimming pool, a postage meter, at least one staircase with a complicated turn in it, etc...
* [[Black Bead Eyes]]
* [[Black Comedy]]: No, there's no death, but laughing at the pathetic tragedy of Charlie's life is still Black Comedy.
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* [[Bootstrapped Theme]]: "Linus and Lucy" is possibly the most famous example.
** Made even more confusing when there actually is a song called "Charlie Brown Theme" out there, and a few of the specials actually used it. "Linus and Lucy"'s [[Ear Worm]] powers are so mighty that they can just usurp the name.
* [[Boring Failure Hero]]: Charlie Brown is this trope incarnate.
* [[Brainy Brunette]]: Marcie. Inverted with Peppermint Patty, who is brunette, but dumb.
* [[Brick Joke]]: The first strip about kicking the football had Violet (not Lucy) moving the ball because she was afraid Charlie would kick her arm. ''Decades'' later, Lucy promises to let Charlie kick the football if he got out of the hospital. When he does, he misses and kicks Lucy's arm.
* [[Breakout Character]]: Snoopy, in the mid-'60s. There's a reason the official name of theirthe ''Peanuts'' website is "snoopy.com" (and the Japanese one is "snoopy.co.jp").
* [[Break the Cutie]]: Poor Charlie Brown can barely go a day without being miserable.
* [[Break the Haughty]]: Sometimes Charlie Brown will get a few small victories, making him cocky, only to fail due to his overconfidence.
* [[Bubble Pipe]]: Snoopy uses one of these in a special where he's playing a detective trying to find Woodstock's nest.
* [[Butt Monkey]]: Charlie Brown is the unequivocal epitome of this trope, with a goodly amount of [[The Chew Toy]] and [[The Woobie|Woobie]] thrown in for good measure.
* [[Canon Dis ContinuityDiscontinuity]]: Provoked by the appearance of the Little Red-Haired Girl, Schulz firmly insisted that the animated specials "don't count."
** The bulk of content from the animated specials and movies '''did''' contain material found in the strip anyway, but this also allowed for the inclusion of adults in the animated specials.
** Similarly, the existence of Charlotte Braun was pretty much denied until the '00s, when Schulz's estate FINALLY agreed to reprint the strips in which the character appeared.
** Similarly, the existence of Charlotte Braun was pretty much denied until the '00s, when Schulz's estate ''finally'' agreed to reprint the strips in which the character appeared.
* [[Cash Cow Franchise]]
* [[Cash Cow Franchise]]
* [[Cash Lure]]: According to a strip from 1985, this is Spike's favorite [[April Fools' Day]] joke, with a purse on a string. Because he's in the desert, however, no victims come by.
{{quote| '''Spike''': I'll wait for ten more hours, but then that's it.}}
* [[Catch Phrase]]: "Good grief!" "You blockhead!" "AUUGHH!" "I just can't stand it!" "Rats!" "I don't even know what's going on!" "Stop calling me 'Sir'!" and Snoopy's intro to each new fantasy: "Here's the World-Famous [insert persona here]..."
** *Sigh* ...
Line 142 ⟶ 154:
** One series of summer-camp strips has Charlie Brown attempting to befriend a kid who's always depicted with [[The Faceless|his face turned toward the wall]], and who literally never says ''anything'' other than, "Shut up and leave me alone!"
** "You're weird, Sir."
** "Why me, Lord?...DontAnswerThat [[Don't Answer That]]."
** ".... My stomach hurts."
** Snoopy's "Here's the [[World War OneI]] flying ace zooming through the air on his Sopwith Camel searching for the Red Baron!", "What courage! What fortitude!" and "CURSE YOU, RED BARON!"
** Snoopy also had the [[Mad Libs Catchphrase]] "Here's the world-famous X doing Y".
* [[Cats Are Mean]]: The cat who lives next door, known as "[[World War Two]]", has been known to slice vast chunks out of Snoopy's doghouse and beat up Snoopy and Peppermint Patty simultaneously - always off-panel. Though to be fair, a lot of the time Snoopy provokes the cat.
Line 155 ⟶ 167:
* [[Children Are Innocent]]: Subverted, averted and played straight at various points throughout the strip.
* [[Chuck Cunningham Syndrome]]: Many. Shermy, Charlotte Braun, Frieda, Eudora, and 5, to name a few. And there's also Violet and Patty, who were both there from the first year, but were [[Demoted to Extra]] sometime in the '70s, only appearing in crowd scenes or as generic kids. Schulz admitted himself that many of these were [[Invoked Trope|deliberate]]; he'd just run out of interesting material for some of the kids.
** To an extent, Rerun would also qualify for this, if not having been [[Demoted to Extra]] right from the start. His appearances prior to 1995 were severely limited and mainly focused on riding in the back of his mother's bicycle. Occasional interactions with Linus and Lucy would also take place, but not that much with the rest of the characters. In part, it was because [[Word of God|Schulz himself admitted]] that introducing Rerun was a mistake because he was effectively redundant. It wasn't until Schulz became a grandfather that story lines started to open up for Rerun, aided by a change in appearance (a bowl haircut and overalls) that distinguished him from Linus.
* [[Clingy Jealous Girl]]: Lucy to Schroeder and Sally to Linus.
* [[Clown Car Base]]: Snoopy's doghouse.
* [[Clumsy Copyright Censorship]]: There were a few [[Product Placement|product placements]] for Coca-Cola in ''A Charlie Brown Christmas''. While a scene where the kids throw snowballs at Coca-Cola cans was subsequently reanimated to have non-descript cans instead, [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SqPMepx_3T8 the credits end right before the kids finish singing "Hark, the Herald Angels Sing"] because an announcer chimed in at that point to plug the soda, and the opening ends up getting a case of [[What Happened to the Mouse?]] as [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zo1PstQ1Yg8 Linus landed on a Coca-Cola sign] after being flung along with Charlie Brown by Snoopy.
** This also took place in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8RArIy_SNgM ''It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown''] and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5H9CNxbMUY ''Charlie Brown's All Stars''], and the jump cuts that stripped out the Coca-Cola and Dolly Madison placements are '''very''' noticeable. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11y35JvbC9E Especially at the end.]
* [[The Coconut Effect]]: The characters were originally voiced in the animated specials by ''actual kids'' - young kids who couldn't even read well and so had to learn their lines phonetically and recite them one line at a time, giving their readings a curiously stilted quality. This unique style became part of the ''Peanuts'' tradition, and continued even as the voice actors grew older (and were eventually replaced by a new set of kids).
* [[Collectible Cloney Babies]]:
* [[Collective Groan|Collective AUGGH!!!]]: From Linus' campaign team, Charlie Brown & Lucy. He is ''almost'' about to be elected Class President, when the day before the election, he addresses the student body...
** Charlie Brown in the 1950s got into a variant, a Davy Crockett phase thanks to the Disney miniseries of the same name. He got a hat, records, and the lot. In the end, he gave it up, asking when the fad would end.
{{quote| '''Linus:''' ...Now I'd like to take a moment to talk to you about the Great Pumpkin...}}
** It's revealed in a later arc that Charlie Brown has a huge collection of comic books. He sells them all to buy a nice pair of gloves for Peggy Jean... just as she encounters him in the store and reveals a pair that she got as a gift. Charlie Brown can't return the gloves, so he gives them to Snoopy instead for Christmas.
* [[Collective Groan|Collective AUGGH!!!]]: From Linus' campaign team, Charlie Brown and Lucy. He is ''almost'' about to be elected Class President, when the day before the election, he addresses the student body...
{{quote|'''Linus:''' ...Now I'd like to take a moment to talk to you about the Great Pumpkin...}}
** Then in ''A Boy Named Charlie Brown'', Charlie Brown loses the big spelling bee when he misspells "beagle," Snoopy's breed. Even Charlie reacts, instantly realizing he misspelled it.
* [[Comedic Sociopathy]]: Lucy, occasionally Peppermint Patty, earlier characters Patty and Violet, and just about every adult in the strip's world. In order for Charlie Brown to get a bag full of rocks on Halloween, there has to be a town full of adults who would ''give'' a child a rock.
* [[Comic Book Time]]: As mentioned, characters grow up, but reach a certain [[Cap]]. Schroeder, Lucy, Linus, and then Sally and Rerun are all introduced as babies, growing up and eventually becoming closer to Charlie Brown's age.
** The strip makes fifty years worth of contemporary cultural references, running the gamut from Patti Page in [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1953/05/26 1953] to ''[[Harry Potter (novel)|Harry Potter]]'' in [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1999/11/08 1999], all without anyone reaching their ninth birthday.
** The strip eventually stopped mentioning specific years, but this went on long enough that it started to get weird: for example, in the late sixties Lucy is still referring back to events in 1954 and naming the year, yet the characters clearly haven't aged in time with it.
* [[Companion Cube]]: The school building that Sally chats with.
* [[Comically Missing the Point]]: Lucy takes this to an extreme in ''Why, Charlie Brown, Why?'' in which the plot involves Linus's friend, [[Littlest Cancer Patient|Janice]], being diagnosed with leukemia. Linus tells Lucy who at first doesn't care, then becomes afraid that she will catch cancer from Linus because he was in contact with her. After Linus points out her ignorance, she suggests Janice "probably got cancer because she's a creepy kid." Even after Linus continues to explain otherwise, she still doesn't get it and demands that he takes back the glass of milk she asked him to get, only to have Linus verbally own her: "I don't want to catch your crabbiness!"
** Those arguments sounds suspiciously like people's initial reactions to AIDS in the 1980s. Consider that the special came out in 1990.
** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zaWV-4LmBeg This video] pretty much breaks down the whole scene and explains why Lucy can be forgiven for her remarks.
* [[Confused Question Mark]]: Pop in speech bubbles sometimes.
* [[Crapsack World]]: It's hard not to conclude that the characters, and Charlie Brown in particular, inhabit a [[Lighter and Softer]] one of these. Everything seems to fail, but they're all okay...
** For Charlie Brown it's pretty much a Crapsack Universe.
* [[Creator Breakdown]]: Averted, content-wise. Played completely straight in an artistic sense, however, as Schulz's artwork began to noticeably deteriorate in the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s, attributed to a slight tremor in his hands that proceeded to get worse over time. Which makes the fact that Schulz drew, lettered, and inked all of his comics by himself (only the last two daily strips had to be completed with digitalized lettering) even more remarkable.
* [[Daddy's Girl]]: Peppermint Patty has a close relationship with her father. Her mother is rarely mentioned - a Mother's Day strip has her state she doesn't have one, and she wants to give a Mother's Day gift to her dad instead.
* [[Darker and Edgier]]: [[Seinfeld Is Unfunny|It's nothing special today]], but when you consider the types of comics that were around when ''Peanuts'' first starting being published in the early 1950s, a little boy reflecting on how depressed he is about his life was ''unheard of''.
** The first strip's punchline literally set the tone when Shermy stated out loud, "Good ol' Charlie Brown... how I hate him!"
* [[Dark Horse Victory]]: In ''You're in the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown'', [[Girl of the Week|Melody-Melody]] ends up literally coming out of the '''stands''' to beat Linus in the Punt, Pass & Kick competition. In the process she wins a bike and [[Super Bowl]] tickets.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Lucy, Linus, SchroderSchroeder (usually to Lucy's attempts to flirt with him), but Snoopy most of all.
* [[Decided by One Vote]]: The class election in ''You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown''.
* [[Defictionalization]]: As of the late 2010s, it has become possible to buy an artificial "Charlie Brown Christmas tree", complete with single ornament and blue felt "blanket" to wrap around its base of crossed wooden boards.
* [[Determinator]]: No matter how many times he loses, Charlie Brown simply refuses to give up.
** Which is basically [[An Aesop|the Aesop for the entire run of the comic.]]
** Or possibly a [[Broken Aesop]]. "Keep trying, because you will never succeed at anything, and the universe enjoys kicking you while you're down and wants to keep doing it."
** One of the foreword authors for [[In-Universe|the Fantagraphics collections (1975-76)]] [[Alternative Character Interpretation|thinks that "Charlie Brown is a Determinator" is backwards]]:
{{quote| Charlie Brown didn't keep trying to kick Lucy's football out of some inner strength and Horatio Alger resolve we were supposed to admire. He did it because he was weak. He was flawed, and he couldn't help himself. But that's exactly why we love him.}}
* [[Digging Yourself Deeper]]: Peppermint Patty giving an account of her vacation to her class at school:
{{quote| '''Peppermint Patty:''' I spent a week on my grandfather's ranch...well, it isn't exactly a ranch...he lives sort of in the country...kind of on the edge of town...actually, he has an apartment over a drugstore. }}
* [[Don't Call Me "Sir"!]]: Peppermint Patty (though more commonly the exact line was "Stop calling me 'sir'!"
* [[Do They Know It's Christmas Time?]]
Line 192 ⟶ 212:
* [[Early-Bird Cameo]]: Inverted. Frieda appeared in ''The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show'' (and even got name-checked in its opening theme song) despite having [[Brother Chuck|disappeared from the strip]] at least ten years prior. Similarly, Violet, who was [[Demoted to Extra]] in the '70s, got an appearance in the 2006 TV special ''He's a Bully, Charlie Brown''.
* [[Early Installment Weirdness]]: In the early years, the art was different, Charlie Brown was a lot more confident and aggressive, Snoopy was a normal dog, and Schroeder, Linus and Lucy were babies.
** The first pulling-the-football-away strip had Violet instead of Lucy, and she pulled it away from Charlie Brown out of fear he'd kick her hand rather than malice.
* [[Easter Egg]]: [[mediaMedia:tglob_threefourTglob threefour.jpg|95472]] was Schulz's ZIP code.
** Another [[Easter Egg]] was when Snoopy was dictating to Woodstock, who snickered, and Snoopy said "Never dictate a love letter". The shorthand that appeared in the first panel read "To my dearest darling precious sweetie."
* [[Epic Fail]]: Charlie Brown's curse.
* [[Hair Decorations]]: The original Patty wore a bow in her hair. So did Sally early in the strip.
* [[Everything's Better with Princesses]]: Lucy ''almost'' believes this trope, except she's aiming for the higher title of ''[[God Save Us From the Queen|queen]]''.
* [[Everything's Better with Rainbows]]: Linus uses this to assure Lucy that the world won't flood -- soundflood—sound theology does tend to put your mind at rest.
* [[Everybody Do the Endless Loop]]: The famous dance sequence in the Christmas special.
 
== F-J ==
* [[F Minus Minus]]: Frequently invoked. Peppermint Patty frequently received Z's for a time in the mid-1970s strips, and the teacher sarcastically admitted her to the "D Minus Hall of Fame" in 2000. After Sally rehearsed her report on [[Abraham Lincoln]]:
{{quote| '''Sally:''' Do you think I'll get an "A"?<br />
'''Charlie Brown:''' Do they give out Z's? }}
* [[Failure Is the Only Option]]: ...when you're Charlie Brown and Lucy's holding the football for you to kick.
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* [[Four-Girl Ensemble]]: While the four main female characters aren't really that much of an ensemble, they still fit this trope with Sally (the sweet, naive one), Peppermint Patty (the mannish one), Marcie (the smart one) and Lucy (the glamorous, bossy one... kind of).
** They weren't an ensemble in the strip itself, but merchandising sometimes paints them as such, probably due to this trope.
* [[Free Prize At the Bottom]]: One [[Story Arc]] concerned getting one free marble in a box of Snicker-Snacks cereal. In [https://web.archive.org/web/20111209081600/http://www.comicscommunity.com/boards/tony/?frames=n;read=227734&expand=1 one strip] Charlie Brown found that the packing center made an error - there were 400 marbles and one Snicker-Snack.
* [[Free-Range Children]]
* [[Freudian Excuse]]: Lucy's mistreatment of Charlie Brown suddenly makes a lot more sense when you look at the [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1952/10/30/ early strips.]
Line 220 ⟶ 241:
* [[Girl Posse]]: Lucy, Patty, Violet, and occasionally Frieda.
* [[Girlish Pigtails]]: In the early '50s strips, Violet often wore her hair in pigtails - and the pigtails made a return in Violet's cameo appearance in one 1989 strip.
* [[Gretzky Has the Ball]]:
** Marcie is prone to this. For example:{{Quote|'''Marcie:''' What if I get put in the penalty box?
'''Peppermint Patty:''' There's no penalty box in baseball.
'''Marcie:''' I forgot to ask if we're playing nine holes or eighteen.}}
:* Rerun too. In the arc where he plays for Charlie Brown's sandlot team, he wonders if they're playing for the Stanley Cup. Justified as he's still a toddler.
:* Even Peppermint Patty, the sports prodigy, has goofed at least once. When she and Marcie become golf caddies: {{Quote|'''Marcie:''' I can't tell a par from a birdie, sir.
'''Peppermint Patty:''' Those are bowling terms, Marcie. Don't embarrass me.}}
* [[Hair Decorations]]: The original Patty wore a bow in her hair. So did Sally early in the strip.
* [[Hair Flip]]: Done by Frieda, whenever she needed to show off her "naturally curly hair". And no, she doesn't have [[Princess Curls]].
* [[He Who Must Not Be Seen|He/She Who Must Not Be Seen]]: The adult characters, plus The Little Red-Haired Girl (in the strip, although she did appear onscreen -- muchonscreen—much to Schulz' vocal dismay -- indismay—in the special ''It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown'').
** Snoopy's nemesis World War II, ''aka'' "that stupid cat next door."
** Charlie Brown's pen/pencil pal.
** Sally wasn't seen until about three months after her birth.
* [[Head Desk]]: Charlie Brown does this in ''You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown'', during the song "Little Known Facts".
* [[Heroes Want Redheads]]
* [[Heterosexual Life Partners]]: Marcie and Peppermint Patty. Not too surprisingly, comedians and wiseacres like to inflate this to [[Les Yay]], (even though they both have a crush on Charlie Brown).
* [[Hidden Badass]]: Linus, of all people. This troper remembers when Charlie Brown was crying that a bully was attacking The Little Red-Haired Girl, then we see Linus using his blanket as a whip in the air, he goes off-panel and we see the same sound effect of the blanket-whip. Poor bully...
* [[Honorable Enemy Ace]]: "CURSE YOU, RED BARON!" Snoopy as the World War I Flying Ace respects the [[Red Baron]], as much as he hates the guy for shooting down his doghouse on a regular basis. While shaking his fist in the air, occasionally he accepts his crash landings with grace.
* [[Hurricane of Excuses]]: Lucy, after [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1962/04/27 striking out] for Charlie Brown's baseball team.
* [[Hypocritical Humor]]: All the time.
* [[I Am Not Weasel]]: For a long time, Peppermint Patty thought that Snoopy was a human, and called him the "Funny-looking kid with the big nose."
* [["I Am" Song]] / [["I Want" Song]]: A few have cropped up over the years. "You're a Good Man Charlie Brown" gives Charlie Brown the title song, which is both, Lucy has an "I Want" song ("Schroeder"), and Snoopy gets one of each ("Snoopy" and "Suppertime"). ''It's Flashbeagle, Charlie Brown'' has "Lucy Says", which serves both purposes for Lucy, and ''Someday You'll Find Her, Charlie Brown'' has the [[Tear Jerker|heartbreaking]] "Alone", an "I Want" song for Charlie Brown (although he doesn't sing it, it plays in the background and obviously represents his perspective).
* [[I Know You Know I Know]]: Employed for [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1962/09/30 this] "Lucy and the football" strip.
* [[Idiosyncratic Episode Naming|Idiosyncratic Special Naming]]: Schulz always hated the name "Peanuts," so virtually every single TV special ever made has the name "Charlie Brown" in its title somewhere, as do three of the four films. Extra points if it looks something like this: "(insert-thing-here), Charlie Brown".
Line 241 ⟶ 271:
** She actually took over Charlie Brown's room on a number of occasions when he was away at camp or in the hospital.
* [[I Just Write the Thing]]: Schulz often spoke about his characters as if they were real people.
* [[Improbable Weapon User]]: In the comic, Linus has used his [[Security Blanket|blanket]] as a whip to break off a tree branch and beat up bullies.
* [[Improbably Predictable]]: In one [[Sunday Strip]], Linus and Lucy drew pictures for their grandmother. Linus had Lucy take the drawings and ask which one Grandma liked better. He successfully predicted that Grandma would like both drawings equally.
* [[Incredibly Lame Pun]]: Schulz wasn't above making these now and then. Sally would often use her school presentations to set up a punchline, but she was by no means the only one to make puns that other characters disapproved of.
Line 251 ⟶ 281:
* [[Intellectual Animal]]: Snoopy.
* [[Invisible Parents]]
* [[It Was a Dark and Stormy Night]]: The eternal opening line of World-Famous Author Snoopy's 'various attempts at a novel', which waswere all entirely strung together out of banal literary cliches.
* [[It Was His Sled]]: Lucy invokes this literally in [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1973/12/09 this 1973 strip].
** A similar scenario happens in [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1995/10/08 this 1995 strip].
Line 258 ⟶ 288:
** Lucy also has a good relationship with her youngest brother Rerun. Charles M. Schulz himself commented on how this came as a surprise to him.
** In ''It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown'', Lucy wakes up in the middle of the night, and - finding that Linus hasn't come home - puts on a coat over her nightgown, goes out to the pumpkin patch, brings her exhausted and shivering brother back to the house, takes off his shoes and socks, and carefully tucks him into bed.
 
* [[Kafka Komedy]]: Oh boy howdy.
== K-O ==
* [[Kafka Komedy]]: Oh boy howdy.{{context}}
* [[Karma Houdini]]: Lucy, in ''It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown''. Pulling the football away from Charlie Brown is one thing. Causing their football team to lose the game because of it, then managing to convince everyone it was Charlie Brown's fault, is another.
* [[Know-Nothing Know-It-All]]: Lucy often makes wild, ridiculous claims and then laughs Charlie Brown to scorn for talking sense. This bothers him to the point of feeling terribly ill.
** The song "Little Known Facts" from "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown" just about covers how seemingly uneducated Lucy is.
* [[Large Ham]]: Sally Brown. Why doesn't she have an entry in this trope page yet? SHE'S BEEN ROBBED!! SHE'S BEEN CHEATED!! CALL HER LAWYER!! SHE DEMANDS THAT WE ACKNOWLEDGE HER HAMMINESS!!
* [[Let's See You Do Better]]: During the animation process of one of the animated specials, Charles Schulz oversaw Bill Melendez's animation process and constantly objected to his decisions. After Melendez handed a pen to him and said this phrase, Schulz never interfered with the animators again.
** Schulz did get his way on one thing that stays constant in the specials. Just like in the strip, the audience never sees any of the characters' faces or bodies at an angle.
* [[Lighter and Softer]]: Surprisingly, Lucy resorted less to physical violence and became more self-conscious in the later strips. She's still snarky and crabby, though.
* [[Limited Wardrobe]]: Most of the characters have these, with Charlie Brown's yellow-and-black zig-zag sweater, in particular, becoming iconic. Although the wardrobes used to be much ''more'' limited; Linus became famous in a red-and-black striped tee, Peppermint Patty in a green one (plus flip-flops), and the other girls in color-coded dresses with puffed sleeves and a bow sash. As shown by the picture above, Schulz dropped this 'girls in dresses, boys/tomboys in shorts or pants' meme somewhere around the '80s.
** Actually, Sally started wearing a T-shirt and pants as early as 1969. There was also an incident where Peppermint Patty's school forced her to wear a dress to comply with the [[Dress Code]] but apparently that didn't last long as she was back to wearing the shirt, shorts and sandals within a year.
** Enforced almost absurdly in ''It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown''. The kids are in their default outfits during the football game; the only concessions to football are the helmets, puffier shoulders suggesting pads, and cleats. Then again, this school obviously couldn't afford other football luxuries, like coaches, or any officials ... or a team doctor ... and apparently a band member called in sick ... there's a cheerleader missing, too ...
* [[Little-Known Facts]]: When Linus was younger, a running gag was for Lucy to fill him up with her "knowledge", which was invariably of the "Artistic License" variety.
{{quote| '''Lucy''': ''(showing Linus leaves falling off a tree in the autumn)'' See these leaves, Linus? They're flying south for the winter. ''(She then proceeded to justify this to Charlie Brown, who had witnessed the exchange, by saying, "When you look at a map, north is up and south is down, isn't it?")''}}
** There's actually a song called "Little Known Facts" in ''You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown''.
** Linus has done this himself to Sally on at least one occasion, when he tricked her into delivering a lecture about the dangers of "rock snakes" in class.
Line 287 ⟶ 319:
* [[Malaproper]]: Several characters did this, especially in the fifties (after all, they were little kids), but later on Sally became the main Malaproper. [http://www.fivecentsplease.org/dpb/sally.html A compilation of the many ways she's fractured the English language.]
* [[Meaningful Name]]: Rerun is, well, a rerun of the naive Linus before he became an [[Innocent Prodigy]].
** Woodstock was named for the [[Woodstock]] music festival, which was going on when Schulz created the character.
* [[Medium Awareness]]: In one strip's story about Linus warning everyone not to look directly into an upcoming eclipse, Lucy tells Charlie Brown that she's going to heed her brother's advice and not do so to protect her "beautiful eyes". She then asks CB what he thinks of her eyes.
{{quote| '''Lucy''': Do you think my eyes are beautiful, Charlie Brown?<br />
'''Charlie Brown''': Yes, they look like little round dots of India ink! }}
** Also, in one very early strip, when Schroeder ran to Charlie Brown excited that he had "perfect pitch," and Charlie Brown replied, "You mean ''a'' perfect pitch. Besides, who cares? The baseball season is over!"
{{quote| '''Schroeder''': Sometimes I think I should put in for a transfer to a new comic strip!}}
** From a 1962 strip:
{{quote| '''Linus:''' [[Wall of Text|Of course, I realize that there will always be criticism...All mediums of entertainment go through this...Even our higher art forms have their detractors...The theatre seems especially vulnerable...And goodness knows how much criticism is leveled at our television programming...One sometimes wonders if it is possible ever to please the vast majority of people...The most recent criticism is that there is too little action and far too much talking in the modern-day comic strip...What do you think about this?]]<br />
'''Charlie Brown:''' Ridiculous! }}
** Every so often, Snoopy and Woodstock will end up interacting with the musical notation resulting from Scrhoeder's piano playing. Once [[Handwaved]] as a [[Dream Sequence]], but not always.
Line 304 ⟶ 337:
* [[Mr. Imagination]]: Snoopy, a large part of the time.
* [[Murder the Hypotenuse|Throw the Hypotenuse Into a Tree]]: Lucy, wanting Schroeder's attention, once threw his toy piano into a tree. That she happened to [[It Got Worse|throw it into one of the neighborhood's many kite-eating trees]] was complete coincidence on her part. After a period of mourning, he ordered a new piano.
{{quote| '''Schroeder:''' How do you explain to an insurance company that your piano was eaten by a tree?}}
* [[Musical Episode|Musical Special]]: The mid-1980s specials (which coincided with [[Black Eyed Peas|Stacy Ferguson's]] tenure as Sally).
** Also, the first movie, ''A Boy Named Charlie Brown''. The later movies also had insert songs, but they weren't performed by the kids themselves. Not to mention, of course, the animated version of ''You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown''.
* [[My Dad Can Beat Up Your Dad]]: Violet was very prone to bragging about her father, and got shot out of the saddle for it just as frequently.
* [[My Name Is Not Durwood]]: "Stop calling me 'sir'!"
** "I am not your 'sweet baboo'!"
* [[Mythology Gag]]: The iPhone game "Snoopy's Street Fair" reintroduces Faron (Frieda has a cat-petting booth), depicts Lydia running a "Guess the Name" game, and shows Emily selling dance supplies and Shermy selling root beer [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1950/10/18 as in this extremely early strip]. All of these jokes probably won't be picked up on by casual Snoopy fans.
* [[Neologism]]: The term "security blanket", which is now listed in Webster's Dictionary.
** Also "fussbudget," which Schulz inserted into the strip after one of his daughters described herself this way.
* [[Nerd Glasses]]: Marcie.
* [[Never My Fault]]: In ''It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown'', during an important football game Lucy pulls the ball from Charlie's kick -- losingkick—losing the game. She proceeds to blame ''him'' - and—and the others go along with her.
** Peppermint Patty also tends to dominate her conversations with Charlie Brown, never letting him get a word in edgewise as he attempts to object to or correct her. Then she yells at him when things don't live up to her expectations (though Marcie usually tries to talk her down). "I hate talking to you, Chuck!"
*** Patty will also shift the blame onto Charlie Brown for things that are really her fault - suchfault—such as failing a test because she talked with him on the phone instead of studying, when ''she's'' the one who called ''him''. In a 1984 strip, she tries to blame him for her being sent to the principal's office for attacking a classmate, and her rationale is, "You're my friend, right, Chuck? You should have been a better influence on me!"
* [[New YearsYear's Resolution]]
* [[Nice Hat]]: Minor characters Roy (a friend of Peppermint Patty's) and Eudora (a friend of Sally's) are always depicted wearing hats. Linus occasionally wore a cowboy hat in the 1950s strips.
* [[No Antagonist]]: Since even Lucy's bullying is offset by her usual good intentions, there isn't really a villain ''per se'' for most of the time, and the ones that exist are all mental. The Red Baron is an antagonist in Snoopy's imagination, the kite-eating tree seems to be how Charlie Brown's mind is able to accept so much bad luck with kites (although Schroeder has had his own run-in with it), and that was it for a number of years. The animated special ''Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown!'' broke tradition and added a team of no-good bullies from parts unknown to torment the gang.
* [[No Ending]]: The last true strip (the actual last strip is just a letter from Schulz to his fans accompanied by recycled artwork) has Charlie Brown explaining his vast knowledge of love letters to Sally; when she notes his expertise, the punchline has him saying "If I ever got one, I don't know what I'd do." A very poignant kind of [[No Ending]].
* [[No Indoor Voice]]: Charlotte Braun exists practically for this trope.
* [[No Matter How Much I Beg]]: Linus enlists Snoopy in this trope to kick his blanket habit (Snoopy eventually resorts to having it made into sport coats for himself and Woodstock).
** Several years earlier he tried the same thing with Charlie Brown. The first time he asked to have the blanket back Charlie Brown promptly obliged. (Linus, in disgust: "You're weaker than ''I'' am!")
* [[No Name Given]]: Unnamed characters incude the Little Red-Haired Girl (though in one or two specials she was given the name Heather), Charlie Brown's pencil-pal, all the parents, and "Pig-Pen" (though [[Dog Sees God|one play version]] names him Matt). Most characters are referred to as one name, except for Charlie and Sally Brown; Linus, Lucy and "Rerun" van Pelt; Violet Gray; Patricia "Peppermint Patty" Reichardt; Charlotte Braun; and 555 95472. The state and town they live in is never named, nor is their school or baseball team.
** In ''A Boy Named Charlie Brown'', they take a bus trip to New York City, which suggests that they possibly reside in the mid-Atlantic region, or perhaps the lower reaches of New England.
* [[Noodle People]]: Spike [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1975/08/13 in his earlier appearances]. As the [[Art Evolution]] grew, Spike appeared less thinner, but still thinner than Snoopy.
* [[Not Allowed to Grow Up]]: Slightly averted, mostly played-straight. Most characters started out really young, gradually grew up to a certain age, and then remained that age for the remainder of the strip. For example, Charlie Brown was originally 4, then gradually became older, eventually stopping at the age of 8. Alternatively, they might well have been introduced as 8-9 year olds and simply not aged at all (Peppermint Patty, for instance).
* [[Number One Dime]]: Linus' blanket
* [[Oblivious to Love]]: See ''All Love Is Unrequited'', above.
* [[One-Note Cook]]: "All I can make is cold cereal and maybe toast." - Charlie—Charlie Brown
** In a Chex cereal commercial from the early '90s Charlie Brown admits that "I can't even make toast."
** A similar joke was made about Lucy, after Schroeder told her that Beethoven loved macaroni and cheese and the girl he married would have to be able to make good macaroni and cheese:
{{quote| "How did Beethoven feel about cold cereal?"}}
* [[One Steve Limit]]: Averted with Patty and ''Peppermint'' Patty.
** To be fair, by the time Peppermint Patty was introduced, Patty's character was already in decline...
* [[Only Known by Their Nickname]]: "Pig-Pen" (for his messiness) and "Rerun" (after Lucy compared having a second little brother to watching television repeats - though it's actually ''Linus'' that made the nickname stick)
* [[Only Six Faces]]: All the human characters have almost identical faces and the exact same body shape. This also resulted in a bit of [[Generic Cuteness]], as in a few strips, Peppermint Patty worries about how she has a "big nose" and is "plain looking", but she doesn't really look too different from anyone else.
* [[Opaque Lenses]]: Marcie. She sometimes [[Glasses Pull|Glasses Pulled]]ed to indicate that she was rolling her eyes, perhaps as a subtle [[Lampshade Hanging]] of this trope.
* [[Out of Focus]]: This started to happen to Schroeder sometime in the '80s. Also, Sally and Linus fell victim of this trope in the '90s, when Rerun gained more prominence.
 
* [[Painting the Medium]]: In one late '80s strip, Lucy, frustrated over Schroeder's lack of interest in her, grabbed the musical notation, crumpled it up into a ball, and threw it on the ground before storming away. Schroeder un-crumpled the notation and placed it back in its proper place. Charlie Brown then commented as he was listening to Schroeder play, "Maybe it's none of my business, but your music sounds kind of wrinkled."
== P-T ==
* [[Painting the Medium]]: In one late '80s strip, Lucy, frustrated over Schroeder's lack of interest in her, grabbed the musical notation, crumpled it up into a ball, and threw it on the ground before storming away. Schroeder un-crumpled the notation and placed it back in its proper place. Charlie Brown then commented as he was listening to Schroeder play, "Maybe it's none of my business, but your music sounds kind of wrinkled."
* [[Panty Shot]]: Lucy, Violet and Patty in early strips; Peppermint Patty(!) in ''She's A Good Skate, Charlie Brown.''
* [[Perfectly Cromulent Word]]: Fairly often, mostly from Lucy, always [[Lampshaded]].
* [[Person as Verb]]: Charlie Brown, though more usually as an adjective.
{{quote| '''Linus:''' Poor Charlie Brown. [[Shaped Like Itself|Of all the Charlie Browns in the world, he's the Charlie Browniest]].}}
* [[Pet the Dog]]: Lucy's protective attitude toward Linus.
* [[The Piano Player]]: Schroeder fits this trope to a tee, except for the fact the the characters aren't in a bar.
* [[The Pratfall]]: The famous sequence where Lucy would pull away the football at the last second always resulted in Charlie Brown landing on his backside.
* [[Precocious Crush]]: Linus had one on his teacher, Miss Othmar.
* [[Prehensile Hair|Prehensile Blanket]]: Linus, of course, as required by either the [[Rule of Cool]] or the [[Rule of Funny]].
* [[Product Placement]]: Reversed - the characters appeared in Ford Falcon ads and showroom brochures from [http://www.oldcarbrochures.com/main.php?g2_itemId=43051 1961] through [http://www.oldcarbrochures.com/main.php?g2_itemId=43548 1965].
* [[Product Placement]]: Reversed - the characters appeared in Ford Falcon ads and showroom brochures from [http://www.oldcarbrochures.com/main.php?g2_itemId=43051 1961]{{Dead link}} through [http://www.oldcarbrochures.com/main.php?g2_itemId=43548 1965]{{Dead link}}.
** The first couple animated specials had product placement for Coca-Cola, forcing certain scenes to be excised after the initial network airings.
** Snoopy also seems to be a mascot for [[Met Life]]MetLife insurance, to the point of being in their commercials and much of their merchandise.
*** [[Met Life]]MetLife is one of the few companies that sponsor blimps that provide aerial cameras for sporting events. Their blimp's name: Snoopy-1.
* [[Publisher Chosen Title]]: Mentioned elsewhere.
* [[Puni Plush]]: Well, as close as you can get with American comics, anyway.
* [[Raw Eggs Make You Stronger]]: In one strip, Charlie Brown adds a raw egg to Snoopy's dog food to give him a shiny coat. Snoopy doesn't like this.
{{quote| '''Snoopy:''' BLAH!! So much for suppertime!}}
* [[Readings Blew Up the Scale]]: In one strip, Snoopy adds the number of pizzas he and Woodstock ate before midnight to the number of pizzas they ate after midnight. The result blows up his pocket calculator.
* [[Real Life Writes the Plot]]: For a man who preferred his privacy, Schulz put much of his personal life subtly in the script. For one thing, the mean, restless Lucy is based on his first wife, and after their divorce (represented in the strip as Lucy getting kicked off the baseball team), Lucy became [[Lighter and Softer]] to reflect Schulz's happier second marriage. He even revealed his affair with another woman during his first marriage, through Snoopy falling in love with another beagle and sending love notes and getting scolded for making long-distance phone calls.
** A 1966 storyline, involving Snoopy's doghouse catching fire and burning to the ground, was inspired by a fire at Schulz's studio in Sebastopol, CA earlier that year.
** One of Snoopy's brothers, a shaggy terrier named Andy, was based off of a rescue dog ''also'' named Andy that Schulz and his second wife adopted. After the real-life Andy passed away, Schulz drew a series where Snoopy was in the hospital for several weeks, and introduced Andy into the strip.
** The Little Red-Haired Girl was based off of a failed courtship by Schulz over a red-haired colleague at an art instruction school who rejected Schulz' proposal for marriage... and married a fireman instead. The proposal took place just as he sold ''Peanuts'' for national syndication.
* [["The Reason You Suck" Speech]]: A story arc from July 1969 has the Little Red-Haired Girl moving away with her parents. Linus urges Charlie Brown to talk to her while he still has the chance, but when the moment comes he, as usual, freezes in panic. After she's gone for good, Linus flips out and tears into Charlie Brown for his wishy-washiness:
{{quote| '''Linus''': She's gone! You didn't do anything! You just stood there! You ''never'' do anything! All you ever do is just ''stand'' there! You drive everybody crazy, Charlie Brown! I'm so mad I could scream! I ''AM'' screaming!!! (to Lucy) And don't ''YOU'' give me any trouble!!!!}}
** The special ''Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown'' has an amusing subversion of this. On the morning after Valentine's Day, Charlie Brown's female classmates approach him, explain that they feel bad he didn't get a single valentine card, and offer him one of their own cards with the original name scratched off and his penciled in. Seeing this, an outraged Schroeder tears into them for their hypocritical gesture:
{{quote| '''Schroeder''': Hold on there! What do you think you're doing? Who do you think you are? Where were you yesterday, when everyone else was giving out valentines? Is kindness and thoughtfulness something you can make retroactive? Don't you think he has any feelings? You and your friends are the most thoughtless bunch I've ever known! You don't care anything about Charlie Brown, you just hate to feel guilty! And now you have the nerve to come around one day later and offer him a used valentine, just to ease your conscience! Well, let me tell you something! Charlie Brown doesn't need your...<br />
'''Charlie Brown''' (shoving him aside): Don't listen to him! I'll take it! }}
* [[Refrain From Assuming]]: The iconic instrumental theme song isn't called "Peanuts" or "Charlie Brown". It's actually called "Linus and Lucy".
* [[Retirony]]: Schulz died the day the strip announcing his retirement was released.
** Schulz even predicted this. He said years before that he would continue drawing ''Peanuts'' as long as he was able. He had also predicted that the strip would outlive him, specifically citing the several-weeks delay from finished strip to newspaper.
** On that same day, many comic strips featured shout-outs to both Peanuts and Schulz, ranging from the subtle to the overt, to run alongside his final strip as an industry-wide tribute, which he also never lived to see.
* [[Repeating So the Audience Can Hear]]: Used in the characters' conversations with adults.
* [[Ridiculously Cute Critter]]: Snoopy and Woodstock.
* [[Ripped from the Headlines]]: A lot of the strips, especially the earlier ones, were very topical — becausetopical—because of this, they have often not been reprinted until recently. Some examples:
** Charlie Brown being obsessed with Davy Crockett merchandise in the 1950s. Schroeder's Beethoven obsession was originally intended as a parody of this (i.e. why is it normal for one historical character to be a famous institution popular with kids and yet absurd for another one from the same era to be?). Ironically, Schroeder's Beethoven fandom became so iconic that it survived as a joke long after the Davy Crockett craze was forgotten.
** The kids going space crazy after the Sputnik launch in 1957.
** Snoopy landing on the moon in the 1960s. (In a case of [[Defictionalization]], the Apollo 10 Command and Landing modules were named Charlie Brown and Snoopy, and the black and white balaclavas worn by space shuttle crew are known as 'Snoopy hats.')
** Snoopy wanting to compete in figure skating at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble.
** Snoopy being beaned by a supper dish while trying to give a 4 July speech at the Daisy Hill Puppy Farm, thus instigating an anti-Vietnam riot in 1970, at the same time demonstrations and riots took place at college campuses around the country.
** Rerun being suspended for flirting with a girl was ripped from the headlines of crazy school rules about sexual harassment and zero tolerance policies.
** Peppermint Patty protesting, with Snoopy's assistance as an attorney, a [[Dress Code|dress code]] at her school. {{spoiler|She lost the case, but only complied for about a year.}}
** Snoopy's doghouse was threatened with demolition back in 1960 due to construction of the Interstate Highway System; after Snoopy stood atop his doghouse in defiance for nearly a week, {{spoiler|Charlie Brown notified him that construction wasn't to begin until 1967}}.
** Rerun being suspended for flirting with a girl was ripped from the headlines of crazy school rules about sexual harassment and zero tolerance policies.
** Linus and Lucy's experiment with "Stereophonic Fussing" in the late 1950s, at a time when stereophonic sound was just becoming common for record albums.
** Snoopy going in for his dog license renewal. In the process he ends up with a fishing and driving license from mixups, but is told he doesn't need a license for 'that'. Cue {{spoiler|assault rifle}}.
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* [[Running Gag]]: Charlie Brown and Lucy's football. Could it get any more classic?
** Snoopy and his imaginary fantasies, especially the accursed dogfights with the Red Baron.
** Charlie Brown's baseball teams losing by absurdly lopsided scores, usually by several hundred runs or more. And almost always were shut out.
** Peppermint Patty habitually falling asleep in class and receiving D-minuses on tests.
* [[Sadist Show]]: Very subjective. There are some folks out there who think the whole world is just too cruel to Charlie Brown, and to a lesser extent, everybody else.
* [[Sadist Teacher]]: Charlie Brown's teacher makes him read ''[[War and Peace]]'' over the Christmas break in the New Year's special. For those of you currently blank-faced, this is a novel of old Russia that's ''over a thousand pages long'' in most editions. And good ol' Charlie Brown is ''8''.
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*** In one strip from 1988, Patty's teacher assigns the class to read the first 35 chapters of ''Anna Karenina'' by the end of the week. However, all it takes is Patty yelling, "What? WHAT? WHAT?!" progressively louder to make the teacher change her mind.
** Sally was once asked to factor a pretty scary math problem that shouldn't show up until Algebra I in 1974.
* [[Saw Star Wars 27 Times]]: A [[Sunday Strip]] from the early 1970s saw Snoopy (as Joe Cool) remark, "I see they're showing ''[[Citizen Kane]]'' again…again... I've only seen it 23 times."
** It later became something of a [[Running Gag]] to have a character keeping track of how many times he/she had seen ''Citizen Kane''. And then there was Schroeder's response to Lucy asking him if his grandfather had fought in World War I - "No, but he's seen ''Victory At Sea'' twelve times!"
* [[Scout Out]]: Snoopy's "Beagle Scout" troop.
* [[Self-Deprecation]]: The strip of January 1, 1974 has Lucy watching the Rose Parade. When Linus comes in and asks if the Grand Marshal has gone by yet, Lucy replies, "Yeah, you missed him... but he wasn't anyone you ever heard of!" (That's right, the Grand Marshal that year was Charles Schulz.)
* [[Serious Business]]: The kids' baseball games, spelling bees, school elections, etc.
** One series of strips involved the kids' wintertime snowman-building efforts being organized by parents into actual ''leagues'' with championship trophies, referees, sponsors, and so forth.
** Linus' annual vigils for the Great Pumpkin.
** Beethoven's birthday, for Schroeder. In the rare years he forgot about it, he was beside himself with guilt.
** Snoopy's assignments from the "Head Beagle," and the arc in which Frieda reported him to said Head Beagle for refusing to chase rabbits.
** Lucy has been shown to have many trophies, including one bigger than her, for being a "fussbudget."
*** And these are all justified. Snoopy's Serious Businesses are justified because, well... he's Snoopy, and the others are because the strip is from the viewpoint of kids who are about six or seven years old. At that age, those things ''are'' Serious Business.
* [[Shallow Love Interest]]: The Little Red Haired Girl, for Charlie Brown.
** Schroeder also falls somewhat into this trope, considering that 90% of his personality is based off his sarcastic replies to Lucy's attempts to flirt with him. The other 10% is his obsession with Beethoven and his piano.
* [[She's a Man In Japan]]: In the Norwegian translation, Woodstock is a girl named Fredrikke (a female name over there).
* [[She Is Not My Girlfriend]]: Linus denies it when Sally calls him her sweet babboo.
** Interestingly, this trope was flipped with Sally herself rejecting several possible suitors, including Harold Angel and, later on, a minor character named Cormac. ("Forget it, Cormac... my heart belongs to my Sweet Babboo.")
* [[Shipper on Deck]]: Sally, to Charlie Brown and Marcie. Alhough she does it with her usual lack of grace and sensitivity:
{{quote| "KISS HER, YOU BLOCKHEAD!"}}
** Linus ships Charlie Brown and the Little Red-Haired Girl, resulting in him having an utter [[Freak-Out]] at Charlie Brown for not having the courage to speak to her before she moves away. However, [[Matchmaker Crush|his own penchant for the Red-Haired Girl]] has occasionally caused him to sabotage his own ship.
** Peppermint Patty shipped Snoopy/Marcie for a while, sincewhen she thought Snoopy was a human being.
** Marcie used to ship Charlie Brown/Peppermint Patty. It was later revealed that [[Matchmaker Crush|she liked Charlie Brown herself]], but figured he'd never go for her because she wore glasses.
** In the TV special "You're In Love, Charlie Brown," Peppermint Patty tried to set Charlie Brown and Lucy up on a blind date. Charlie Brown assumed Patty was trying to get him together with the Little Red-Haired Girl; we don't know for sure but we could assume Lucy assumed Patty was setting her up with Schroeder. When Charlie Brown and Lucy saw each other, they immediately shouted in unison, "YOU??? BLECCHHH!!!"
* [[Shoo Out the New Guy]]: Charlotte Braun in the 1950s, and one actually called Poochie (although not the [[Former Trope Namer]]) in the 1970s.
* [[Shout-Out]]: VeryEnough manyfor [[Peanuts/Shout Out|their own page]], including a couple to Andrew Wyeth.
** Yes, Woodstock ''was'' named after the 1969 music festival.
** One strip featured a shout out to ''[[Mad Magazine|MAD]]'' magazine and Alfred E. Neuman.
*** In turn, MAD had done a bit about the Peanuts gang as teens and adults. Schulz wrote in and said "why don't I retire and let you guys take over?" It was signed with a sketch of Snoopy saying "What, me worry?"
** A 1961 strip has Linus filling out a personal information card for school. When asked for the name of his family physician, he doesn't know so he puts down [[Dr. Seuss]].
** The 1984 special ''It's Flashbeagle, Charlie Brown'' contains a sequence during the otherwise original song, "I'm in Shape", where Peppermint Patty sings a bridge that clearly is a spoof of Toni Basil's hit "Mickey".
*** That whole special is a shoutout to various elements of '80s pop culture. The "Flashbeagle" theme song itself obviously spoofs "Maniac" by Michael Sembello.
** 1950s songbird Joni James is mentioned in one strip as one of Snoopy's favorite singers (he tells the Cat Next Door not to bother asking to borrow any of his Joni James albums ever again), and in a Sunday strip in 1989 in which Linus is unable to use the telephone for a phone-in contest in which the prize is four tickets to a Joni James concert - because Lucy is hogging the phone.
** A fairly obscure one is Charlie Brown's favorite breakfast cereal, "[[Jabberwocky|Snicker Snacks]]".
** Quite a few to Billie Jean King. In one strip, Sally draws a picture of George Washington and Betsy Ross playing a mixed double against Harry S Truman and Billie Jean King for Independence Day. Her brother comments that Harry and Billie would have won in straight sets.
** One Sunday comic in the mid-90's shows Snoopy about to participate in a hockey game with Woodstock and several other birds, and was surprised to find out that before every game, they do [[Anyone Remember Pogs|the Macarena]].
** Here's one from a 1980 strip involving comic books. The character isn't much of a surprise, receiving shout-outs all the time from one place or another...
{{quote| '''Marcie:''' Did you ever read this one, sir? It's where [[Spider-Man|Spiderperson]] [[The Night Gwen Stacy Died|is on this bridge, and...]]}}
* [[Shown Their Work]]: The music notation that appeared when Schroeder played was always accurate.
** Parodied with the Snoopy as WWI Flying Ace strips, in which on two occasions Snoopy himself (after describing in great detail the operation of a Sopwith Camel) comments on how good his research is.
* [[Show Within a Show]]: In the animated specials, at least, Snoopy was a fan of ''The Bunnies'', apparently a series of children's books about the comedic adventures of a family of hyperactive rabbits that were also adapted into animated shorts.
** In the strip the book series is called 'The Six Bunnie-Wunnies', and is written by Miss Helen Sweetstory. Snoopy develops a raging crush on her at one point, until he learns she's a cat person.
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* [[Slapstick Knows No Gender]]: More for pratfalls than actual punches, but the girls take their lumps too. And note that brawling is not completely exempted..
* [[Slice of Life]]
* [[Small Name, Big Ego]]: Lucy, oh so very much. To a lesser degree, Peppermint Patty.
* [[Snowball Fight]]
* [[Soap Opera Rapid Aging Syndrome]]: In the first decade, some characters aged far more rapidly than others. Notably:
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* [[Squee]]: Snoopy's usual reaction, in both the strip and the animated tales, to ''The Six Bunnie-Wunnies''.
* [[Stock Footage]]: Present in several of the animated specials.
** ''What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown'', a tribute to the D-Day invasion of Normandy and the Second Battle of Ypres, had Linus rotoscoped into archival film footage of the D-Day invasion. (The characters camped out for the night on Omaha Beach.)
* [[The Stoic]]: Schroeder, who can seem rather emotionless, even when playing his piano. [[Berserk Button|Well, at least until you insult Beethoven... ]]
* [[The Stoic]]: Schroeder, who can seem rather emotionless, even when playing his piano. [[Berserk Button|Well, at least until you insult Beethoven...]]
* [[Straw Feminist]]: Peppermint Patty occasionally shows a mild straw feminist streak. Lucy and Sally sometimes do, too.
** In the early '70s, Lucy went so far as to withdraw from Charlie Brown's baseball team because she felt baseball was degrading to women as a male-dominated game. Also an example of [[Ripped from the Headlines]].
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* [[Straw Misogynist]]: In TV special #2 (''Charlie Brown's All-Stars'', 1966), a local businessman offers to sponsor the team and give them uniforms and everything. The kids are excited and start practicing really hard, making great plays. Charlie calls off the deal - because the businessman wanted him to cut Snoopy and the girls from the team and have only boy players.
* [[Strip Archive]]: [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/ Here].
** Remarkably, for a comic strip with a long life span (and with a significant portion of strips from the early years withheld from any reprinting because of Schulz's discretion) the strip archive is pretty much complete. ''The Complete Peanuts'' book series managed to locate what would otherwise have been 'lost strips' via microfilm archives of the newspapers that carried the strip; only a handful had to be retouched so as to be legible for printing. Only two Sunday strips from 1955 are partially missing as the 'throwaway' top tier of panels were cropped out from the only sources available, and had to be 'completed' with archival artwork.
* [[Strong Family Resemblance]]: Having half-circles around their eyes all the time seems to be a common trait in the Van Pelt family.
** This was an artifact from Lucy's original character design, which featured her with literal googly eyes in stark contrast to the rest of the cast.
* [[Suddenly Voiced]]: In most of the animated specials and films, Snoopy was [[The Speechless]] (though his thoughts could be read in the comic strip). However, in the adaptations of the two Broadway musicals and during some segments of ''The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show'', he actually gained a voice for his internal monologues. This, however, had a blacklash effect to fans who felt it didn't fit him. Thus subsequent animated adaptions left Snoopy voiceless once again.
* [[Suddenly Voiced]]: In most of the animated specials and films, Snoopy was [[The Speechless]] (though his thoughts could be read in the comic strip). However, in the adaptations of the two Broadway musicals and during some segments of ''The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show'', he actually gained a voice for his internal monologues. This, however, had a blacklash effect to fans who felt it didn't fit him. Thus subsequent animated adaptions left Snoopy voiceless once again.
* [[Summer Campy]]: Used in numerous storylines in the strip, as well as the TV special ''It Was a Short Summer, Charlie Brown'' and the feature film ''[[Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown]]''.
* [[Surprise Jump]]: Charlie Brown and Sally are walking to school. While waiting for the bus, Charlie Brown tells Lucy that Sally is so scared about her first day of kindergarten that if someone even mentions kindergarten while she's around, she'd jump 30 feet in the air. Putting this theory to the test, Lucy says "Kindergarten" to Sally, who then promptly jumps up into the air in fear. Lucy then muses, "Only 10 feet. I knew you were exaggerating."
* [["Take That!" Kiss]]: Snoopy uses this fairly frequently.
* [[Thanksgiving Episode|Thanksgiving Balloon]]: Snoopy most likely holds the record for number of individual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade Balloons -- from [https://web.archive.org/web/20191217021022/http://assets.nydailynews.com/img/2008/11/26/gal_balloon_1979_snoopy.jpg his original balloon in his aviators garb], to him [http://www.worldofstock.com/slides/PCT12351.jpg going ice skating with friend Woodstock]{{Dead link}} to him [http://www.caribill.com/files/Pb230252.jpg First ringing in the new millenium] and the next year being [http://blog.rounds.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/2000snoopy.jpg repurposed into celebrating the parade's 75th year in 2000], and finally coming full circle [https://web.archive.org/web/20161011030511/http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2375/2055373971_68c3b9f50d.jpg in an updated version of the aviator balloon] this time complete with 3-D goggles and field glasses. For a few years [https://web.archive.org/web/20191017230322/http://assets.nydailynews.com/img/2008/11/26/gal_balloon_2002_charliebrown.jpg Charlie Brown got a few moments in the limelight chasing his football]. And lest we forget [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiMf5cCDy1I this little bit of awesomeness...]
** In the movie ''[[Tower Heist]]'' (which took place on Thanksgiving Day), the characters rode on a large Snoopy balloon to reach the top of a building.
* [[That Cloud Looks Like...]]
* [[That Was the Last Entry]]: In a 1990s arc, Snoopy and Woodstock find a tiny book inside a dented cage. The book is a diary that supposedly belonged to Woodstock's grandfather.
{{quote| '''Snoopy''': (reading diary) "Once a week, they put my cage outside in the sun. Sooner or later they're going to leave that little door open. Anyway, this is a stupid life sitting here alone, waiting for that to ..." ''(turning to Woodstock)'' "And that's it! The diary ends right there! [Your grandfather] probably got out, and is sitting on a telephone wire right now looking down at us…us...}}
* [[Those Two Guys]]: Patty and Violet. Although they were originally the primary female characters in the strip, both of their personalities were fairly generic. Once Lucy arrived their role became limited to tormenting Charlie Brown (and occasionally others) for sport. The two were generally seen as a pair, and when seen apart, they were usually playing [[Straight Man]] to another character. Not much was seen of them after the 1970s.
** Patty ironically started out as part another "[[Those Two Guys]]" pair, as far as as Patty and Shermy being a couple in the first couple months of the strip.
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* [[Thought Bubble Speech]]
* [[Throw the Dog a Bone]]: People who complain about Charlie Brown always getting the short end of the stick and {{spoiler|never being able to kick the dang football}} probably never saw the 1980s TV special, ''It's Magic, Charlie Brown''.
* [[Through a Face Full of Fur]]: Snoopy is often shown blushing. In one 1950s strip, Charlie Brown wonders, "How can anyone blush through a face full of hair?" (thus becoming the [[Trope Namer]]).
* [[Token Minority]]: Franklin. Albeit Schulz, with his usual uncanny grace, forbore to make any more of a point of it than necessary; Franklin (and later Swedish-Mexican character José Peterson) speak the same amusingly hyper-correct English the white characters do.
** Schulz's depicting Peppermint Patty and Franklin in the same class got him some letters from readers who asked him to stop showing a black and a white child in the same class as school integration was still very much a sensitive issue in the early '70s. Schulz ignored these letters - good for him.
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* [[Book Dumb|Too Book]] [[Too Dumb to Live|Dumb to Live]]: Peppermint Patty, oh so very much.
** Also Sally, although arguably she is not so much stupid as mixed up, and she doesn't obsess about her poor grades as much as Patty does.
* [[Tree Cover]]: One story arc has Charlie Brown hiding behind a tree in front of the home of the Little Red-Haired Girl, trying to muster up enough courage to knock on her door and talk to her.
* [[True Meaning of Christmas]]: Linus reads off part of the Gospel of Luke in the Christmas special. Yes, folks, the ''original'' meaning gets used.
* [[Tsundere]]/[[Yandere]]: Lucy is sweet ("deredere") when it comes to Schroeder, her love interest, but she's mean and crabby ("tsuntsun") when it comes to everybody else. And when it comes to her "competition" for Schroeder (namely, his piano), then it's a [[Murder the Hypotenuse|completely different story]].
** Peppermint Patty is also a bit more ''tsuntsun'' towards Charlie Brown than she is towards anyone else. Then again, she isn't [[Comedic Sociopathy|too particularly nice to other people sometimes.]]
 
== U-Z ==
* [[Umpteenth Customer]]: In one Sunday strip, Charlie Brown goes to the movie theater because they're offering free candy bars to the first 500 children in line. He lets Lucy ahead of him, and she's the 500th child.
* [[Unintentional Period Piece]]: Many strips refer to real world events, but these were rarely reprinted (precisely because they were dated) until ''The Complete Peanuts''. Occasionally some slipped through when the reference was sufficiently obscure: for example, a series of strips in which Snoopy observes birds having furious (but unintelligible) political arguments while holding signs depicting different punctuation marks. This accompanied the bitter polarised political discourse in the US in the run-up to the 1964 election.
* [[The Unintelligible]]: Every adult, ever.
** An exception: ''Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (And Don't Come Back)'' had two intelligible adults, for plot reasons, but it was toyed with earlier in the movie when British people talking to the kids speak a language that is intelligible to the ''audience'' but ''not'' to the main characters.
** Also, ''You're in the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown'' has an intelligible announcer/narrator. As did ''She's a Good Skate, Charlie Brown.'' ''Snoopy's Reunion'' featured the appearance of the Daisy Hill Puppy Farm owner, and ''It's Flashbeagle, Charlie Brown'' had a number of teenagers/adults in the disco where Snoopy goes.
*** The [[Word of God|declaration by Schulz]] that the animated specials and movies were [[Canon Discontinuity]] allowed for these exceptions to happen, whereas they never could in the actual comic.
** Woodstock's chirpings are unintelligible to the reader/viewer, but apparently [[Intelligible Unintelligible|not to Snoopy]].
*** At least once, [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1977/02/03 February 3, 1977], Linus understood him too. It seems Woodstock piloted a helicopter in Vietnam.
* [[Unsound Effect]]: Linus jumps into a leaf pile, making the [[Written Sound Effect]] "Ker-leaf!" in the process. This gets lampshaded by Charlie Brown, who makes an [[Aside Glance]] and asks, "Ker-''leaf?!''"
** Also, the "polkas, schottisches and waltzes" strip mentioned above. Snoopy's accordion playing was ''literally'' captioned with those words.
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* [[What Do You Mean It's Not for Kids?]]: An in-universe example happens in [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1952/06/22 this early strip], in which the local drug store has tons of violent comic magazines neatly arranged in a section labelled "For the Kiddies".
* [[What Do You Mean It's Not Heinous?]]: A 1959 storyline has Charlie Brown losing a book from the library, leading to Lucy accusing him of having "stolen" it and Charlie Brown working himself up to a state of stark terror at the imagined consequences.
** Used a couple of times in later years with Sally.
*** In a 1967 storyline, Sally took a crayon home from school and broke it, and, afraid that her teacher would "give her a judo chop" if she confessed to the truth, lied to her teacher about it; Charlie Brown finally shamed her into feeling guilty about it by yelling "GEORGE WASHINGTON!!!!" at her.
*** And in a 1978 storyline, Sally borrowed a ruler from one of her classmates. After the ruler ended up broken when Sally tried to measure the width of the street in front of the school (with a 12-inch ruler), she again put off dealing with the issue (despite admitting she was afraid that the ruler's owner would retaliate). However, this time she did the right thing in the end and bought the kid a new ruler.
* [[When It Rains, It Pours]]: Rain in the comics is truly a black line-y torrential downpour.
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** If ''A Boy Named Charlie Brown'' is to be believed, the gang live about a day's bus drive from New York City.
* [[Who's on First?]]:
{{quote| '''Sally''': I'm practicing my Y's.<br />
'''Linus''': Why?<br />
'''Sally''': No, Y's! I did a whole row of them.<br />
'''Linus''': Oh.<br />
'''Sally''': Not O's, Y's!<br />
'''Linus''': I see.<br />
'''Sally''': I C? Who said anything about I's and C's? These are Y's! Don't you ever listen?<br />
'''Linus''': Gee!<br />
'''Sally''': Not G! Y's!! Now pay attention… these are U's…<br />
'''Linus''': They don't look like me at all…<br />
(''Sally throws papers at Linus'') }}
* [[William Telling]]: Charlie Brown does it to Snoopy in [http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1952/03/07/ this early strip].
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* [[Wouldn't Hit a Girl]]: Used (and even subverted) a few times in the early days of the strip. Explained more on the trope page.
* [[Writers Cannot Do Math]]: In one strip Peppermint Patty is asked to solve a (word) algebra problem involving relative ages. Peppermint Patty gives up without trying, but if you actually work out the problem, you'll discover that the father is only 12 years older than his daughter!
* [[X Must Not Win]]: Whenever Charlie Brown has any real chance of winning something, someone has to be around specifically to prevent him from achieving the victory, usually Snoopy.
** The most prominent case is in ''[[A Boy Named Charlie Brown]]'', where he is one of the two remaining contestants on a winner-takes-all national spelling bee. Charlie Brown screws up spelling "beagle" due to a combination of Snoopy (who is a beagle) following him along and worry over Linus getting angry at Charlie Brown for a trivial reason.
** In ''[[Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown]]'', Charlie Brown's team is set to win the river race, but the bullies sabotage his boat, allowing Woodstock to win.
* [[Yank the Dog's Chain]]: One cartoon had Charlie Brown's baseball team win their first game ever (with Charlie Brown, that is - with him absent they won a few)...then have to forfeit because Lucy's baby brother Rerun had broken a rule. Ironically, Rerun had also been the chief reason they had won the game in the first place.
** Even in the one time Charlie Brown ever directly won a baseball game by hitting a home run, the losing pitcher (who was under the impression she was a descendant of [[The Natural|Roy Hobbs]]) later admitted that she '''let''' Charlie hit the home run.
* [[You Are Number Six]]: 555 95472 ("5" for short) and his sisters 3 and 4 (and, presumably, parents 1 and 2); 5 explains that his father is commenting on the prevalence of numbers in our lives: not as a sign of protest, but of surrender.
** 95472 is the ZIP code of the kid's house. [[Creator Provincialism|It's also the ZIP code for Schulz' longtime residence of Sebastopol, California.]]
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{{reflist}}
{{Best in TV: The Greatest TV Shows of Our Time}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Prime Time Cartoon]]
[[Category:The Kiddie Ride]]
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[[Category:The Millennium Age of Animation]]
[[Category:Saturday Morning Cartoon]]
[[Category:Madhouse]]
[[Category:Print Long Runners]]
[[Category:Boom Kids]]
[[Category:The Fifties]]
[[Category:Trope Overdosed]]
[[Category:Peanuts]]
[[Category:Comic Strip]]
[[Category:Nickelodeon]]
[[Category:Kid Com]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1950s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1960s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1970s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1980s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 2000s]]