Rich Suitor, Poor Suitor/Playing With: Difference between revisions
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:PlayingWith.RichSuitorPoorSuitor 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:PlayingWith.RichSuitorPoorSuitor, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license) |
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* '''Defied''': Alice only dates men in her socioeconomic class. |
* '''Defied''': Alice only dates men in her socioeconomic class. |
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* '''Played For Laughs''': Alice appears to choose Charlie, but leaves him for Bob because Bob has money with which to wine and dine her. |
* '''Played For Laughs''': Alice appears to choose Charlie, but leaves him for Bob because Bob has money with which to wine and dine her. |
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* '''Played For Drama''': [[Good Adultery Bad Adultery|Alice is with Bob, but not happy, and falls for Charlie.]] |
* '''Played For Drama''': [[Good Adultery, Bad Adultery|Alice is with Bob, but not happy, and falls for Charlie.]] |
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Back to [[Rich Suitor Poor Suitor]] |
Back to [[Rich Suitor Poor Suitor]] |
Revision as of 05:11, 9 January 2014
- Basic Trope: A character must choose between two Love Interests of different economic backgrounds.
- Played Straight: Alice is involved in a Love Triangle between Bob (a billionaire) and Charlie (a waiter). Almost invariably, she chooses Charlie.
- Exaggerated: Alice must choose between King Bob the Nth and Charlie the Hobo. She still chooses Charlie.
- Justified: Alice picks her lovers based on their personality and looks, not socioeconomic class. These men just happen to be of different classes.
- Inverted: Dave must choose between Elizabeth the Hotel Heiress and Fiona the kindergarten teacher.
- Subverted: Alice must choose between Bob the Billionaire and Charlie the Waiter. She chooses Bob.
- Alice decides to Take a Third Option that she likes even better than either Bob or Charlie
- Alice must choose between Bob the Billionaire and Charlie the Plastic Surgeon.
- Alice must choose between Bob the Starving Artist and Charlie the Hobo.
- Double Subverted: Until she finds that money =/= happiness and leaves him for Charlie.
- Deconstructed: Alice has a tough choice to make, and she might be under pressure from family and friends to pick the richer guy.
- Reconstructed: Alice makes her choice based on how they treat her, not on how much money they have.
- Parodied: Alice either turns down (or deliberately chooses) someone by looking at his bank statements.
- Lampshaded:
- Averted: Alice's Love Interest is of the same socioeconomic class she is
- Alice has no Love Interests in-story
- Alice is caught between two love interests, but they are both of a higher (or lower) socioeconomic background.
- Enforced: Stock Aesops, Rags to Riches
- Invoked: Alice dates casually and narrows her choices down to two possible candidates (Bob the Billionaire and Charlie the Waiter) with whom she might get serious.
- Exploited: Alice is involved with Charlie the Waiter. Her mother wants her to marry rich, and introduces her to a rich man.
- Defied: Alice only dates men in her socioeconomic class.
- Played For Laughs: Alice appears to choose Charlie, but leaves him for Bob because Bob has money with which to wine and dine her.
- Played For Drama: Alice is with Bob, but not happy, and falls for Charlie.
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