Plot Hole: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Bob and George]]'' [http://bobandgeorge.com/archives/index.php?date=011019 gleefully] [[Lampshades]] its plot holes, at one point doing a ''[http://bobandgeorge.com/archives/index.php?date=010815 literal]'' [[Hand Wave]]. On at least one case it went back and [http://bobandgeorge.com/archives/index.php?date=060202 filled] a plot hole ''years'' after it was made. As an extension of the running joke "There are no plot holes", ''[[Bob and George]]'''s forums automatically replaced the words 'plot hole' with 'spoon', since [[The Matrix|There is no spoon.]]
* In the webcomic "[[Real Life]]", a Plot Hole appears as a sort of space-time anomaly which functions as a portal into a blank dimension in which the protagonist has to resolve the current hole in the plot of the [[Story Arc]] before they can escape back into "reality". Thus far, the mechanism has only been used once. Said plot hole was eventually tricked into manifesting in a different dimension entirely, with tragic consequences.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20130526134716/http://www.badlydrawnkitties.com/OldComics/20020617_gif_view.htm This strip] of ''[[Badly Drawn Kitties]]'' explains a plot hole rather succinctly. In fact, you could say it explains ''all'' plot holes rather succinctly.
* [http://lunarandkirk.comicgenesis.com/d/20051005.html This strip] of "The Wacky Adventures of Lunar and Kirk" is the first of a series involving a literal hole in the world caused by a plot hole, which will swallow and destroy anyone or anything that enters it.
* The ship in [[I Was Kidnapped by Lesbian Pirates from Outer Space]] veers dangerously near to a Plot Hole, before they are saved by a hasty (offpage) explanation.