Self-Deprecation: Difference between revisions

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Note that this isn't about whether other people are allowed to make fun of you. Those would be different tropes (related to [[N-Word Privileges]]). Nor is it [[Heroic Self-Deprecation]], which is actually putting yourself down for real.
 
'''Self-Deprecation''' can devolve into [[Compliment Fishing]]. Remember that the dividing line between the two [[Death of the Author|is up to the listener, not the speaker.]]
 
A [[Super-Trope]] to [[Our Product Sucks]].
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{{examples}}
== [[Advertising]] ==
* The original ads for the Volkswagen Beetle constantly mocked the car for its small size. Allegedly this violated one of the unwritten rules of advertising, "Don't mock the product." The ad campaign was a smash success.
** This was the famous "[[wikipedia:Think Small|Think Small]]" ad campaign of 1959. This, and its successor of 1960 ("Lemon") started the so-called "Creative Revolution" in advertising: put the creative guys in charge of selling the ad. This ad series gets a [[Shout-Out]] in ''[[Mad Men]]'': in Season 1, set in 1960, which Don Draper does not approve (talking derisively about its creator, [[wikipedia:Julian Koenig|Julian Koenig]]). By Season 4 (starting in November 1964), his ads are more or less in the same vein.
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** They may have taken inspiration from Marmite's famous "[[Love It or Hate It]]" campaign.
* Some years ago, a Dutch brand of condiments had a special offer where their products would come with free napkin-rings with funny limericks written on them. In the commercial, a lady was shown reading the napkin-ring with an increasingly obvious lack of interest, then ''throwing it in the trash.''
* The official slogan of [https://web.archive.org/web/20121125235538/http://www.buckleys.com/index.html Buckley's cough medicine] is: "It tastes awful. And it works."
* [[Stan Freberg]] created a memorable series of ads for the Sunsweet prune company, emphasizing what people dislike most about the dried fruit: the wrinkles and the pits. They boasted that they'd gotten rid of the pits; the wrinkles were another matter.
* Vince Offer, previous commercial pitchman for the Sham Wow!, also made commercials for a product called the Schticky. At one point in the commercial, he said, "Use it during moments you'd like to forget!" as a mugshot is taken of him, referencing his earlier arrest for assaulting a prostitute.
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* Former Chicago Bears fullback William "the Refrigerator" Perry (who got got his nickname because he was ''huge'', standing 6'2" (188 cm) and weighing over 300lbs through most of his career) would often mock his own weight, as he did in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLagFBUKzmI this commercial] for McDonalds in 1985. Emphasized, in fact, as it premiered on December 2nd during a game between the Bears and Miami Dolphins.
 
== [[Art]] ==
* Edvard Munch's 1893 painting ''[[media:Edvard Munch, 1893, The Scream, oil, tempera and pastel on cardboard, 91 x 73 cm, National Gallery of Norway.jpg|The Scream]]'' has an inscription literally pencilled onto the corner of the image: "can only have been painted by a madman". [https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/munch-scream-madman-1.5922732 It has been confirmed that the note is in Edvard Munch's own handwriting.]
 
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* Done often in ''[[Sayonara, Zetsubou-sensei]]'' - for example, listing "great failures in a man's life", which was a short biography of the author, the last point being "Creating the ''[[Sayonara, Zetsubou-sensei]]'' anime".
** The second OVA for season 3 is a never ending string of jokes at [[Studio Shaft]] poking fun at themselves and their own series. Such as thanking viewers who "came across the opening and didn't change the channel".
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** During the Yusei dueled three men, and rather than use the catchphrase he usually uses in the dub (that would be, "Let's rev it up!), he used Judai Yukai's catchphrase ("Get your game on") from [[Yu-Gi-Oh! GX| the previous series in the franchise]], a very common target of a [[Take That]] from fans. Or, possibly, it may have been intended to lighten the [[Darker and Edgier]] nature of the Crashtown arc, which is considered unusually dark even for that series, which was itself rather dark when compared to the others in the franchise.
** This exchange between Amon and Manjoume during their duel in Season Three of Yu-Gi-Oh! GX.
{{quote|'''Amon:''' "I activate my Trap Cards!"
'''Manjoume:''' "How can you do that?"
'''Amon''' ''(in [[Sarcasm Mode]])'': "I call out their names dramatically and they lift up, how long have you been playing this game?"}}
*:* This exchange between Pegasus and Napolean in Season Two of GX (keep in mind that Pegasus did always have a weird sense of humor in both versions):
{{quote|'''Pegasus:''' "But only on the condition that you both can defeat me."
'''Napolean:''' "You mean in a duel?"
'''Pegasus:''' "Well, I certainly don't mean a bake-off!"}}
*:* Another example where the show wanted to make light of how annoying fans found the [[Catch Phrase]]s:
{{quote|'''Syrus:''' "Aw, man!"
'''Bastion:''' "Great Scott! "
'''Hassleberry:''' "Sam Hill! "
'''Alexis:''' "Why don't I have a catchphrase?"}}
*:* The whole idea of [[Recycled IN SPACE!| "Card Games on Motorcycles!"]] always struck fans as kind of... unorthodox. However, in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V]]'', Zuzu reacts far more realistically than anyone in 5Ds when she realizes Yugo is dueling while driving a motorcycle at high speed - she ''screams''.
* In ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! SEVENS]]'', Luke is a duelist who uses Dragons; in the episode where [[Arc Villain]] Asana Mutsuba first duels, she uses Wyrms. When Luke sees this, he claims a Wyrm monster "looks like a Dragon and smells like a Dragon, but it is ''not'' a Dragon", and when asked what the actual difference is, he says, "Not a clue." This tongue-in-cheek confusion as to why the game has Monster Type that has no visible difference from the Dragon Type is something many fans have brought up.
 
== Audiobooks ==
* In the audiobook version of [[Jon Stewart]]'s ''[[America (The Book)]]'', there are these gems: "[[Stephen Colbert]] is the Arthur Schlesinger Professor of American Studies at Harvard University. He is personally unpleasant." and "Stephen Colbert has received the Werner Heisenberg Prize for Excellence in Theoretical Mathematics seven consecutive years, yet can barely feed himself." Guess who narrates these parts.
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
 
* ''[[Spider-Man (Comic Book)|Spider-Man]]'':
== Comic Books ==
** [[Stan Lee]] once remarked that ''[[Spider-ManDa (Comic Book)Editor|Spider-Man]]'' regular J. Jonah Jameson]] was based off of how he imagined the fans viewed him: a cantankerous, money-hungry old man. Most comics fans saw (and still see) Lee as an affable grandfather figure, so in this case the Self-Deprecation didn't quite work.
** If you are a fan who didn't like [[The Clone Saga]], you are far from alone; no less than ''thirteen'' of Marvel's best writers contributed to a one-shot humor-oriented comic called ''[https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Spider-Man:_101_Ways_to_End_the_Clone_Saga_Vol_1_1#cite_ref-Only_Appearance_1-114 101 Ways to End the Clone Saga]''.
* In Marc Guggenheim's ''[[Civil War (Comic Book)|Civil War]]: Choosing Sides'', Mac Gargan is discussing selling his life story. He wants Guggenheim to do the movie, then says "No, the other Guggenheim, the one who wrote that hockey movie", simultaneously putting down Marc himself, and giving a [[Shout-Out]] to his brother Eric.
* [[Kurt Busiek]] and Erik Larsen's early-2000's resurrection of ''[[The Defenders]]''. In addition to portraying its principal characters as supreme [[Jerkass|Jerk Asses]] who eventually decide to take over the world so it won't ''need'' to be defended (and, more importantly, so they won't have to deal with one another), the series invoked [[Stylistic Suck]] via references to Marvel's incredibly goofy [[Silver Age]] giant monster comics, and one of its covers proudly boasted a Wizard Magazine quote proclaiming ''The Defenders'' to be "the worst comic ever produced."
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* In ''[[Ex Machina]]'', Hundred interviews Brian K. Vaughan and Tony Harris for the possibility of them making a graphic novel style biography of him...then decides to get Garth Ennis and Jim Lee instead.
* In the first issue of ''[[Young Justice (comics)|Young Justice]]'', the [[Power Trio]] have nightmares in which strange and irrational things happen to them ... things which strangely echo [[Peter David]]'s work on ''[[Aquaman]]'', ''[[Supergirl]]'' and ''[[The Incredible Hulk]]''.
* Given her ability to [[No Fourth Wall|ignore the fourth wall]], [[She-Hulk]] would often argue and insult the editor, writer, and/or artist of her own book. Meaning, ''they'' were doing so using her as proxy. (She even pointed ''that'' out to them at least once.) She even ''killed'' [[John Byrne]] after he wrote himself into ''Sensational She-Hulk #30'' (something he'd been known to do in his ''[[Fantastic Four]]'' run), meaning John was, in a sense, mocking his own work.
* One series of ''[[Dilbert]]'' strips had Dilbert go on a date under Dogbert's coaching—which means he spends the whole date grunting and agreeing. When his date compliments him, he uses another coached response -- "Gosh, I'm not good at anything."
** Another run of strips had Dogbert as the charismatic leader of the vegetarian lobby. Since this was clearly a bit of an [[Author Tract]] by the vegetarian Adams, he started off by establishing that the reason the vegetarians ''need'' a charismatic leader is that they're all "scrawny weaklings".
* ''[[Pearls Before Swine]]''
** The occasional Sunday strips featuring puns so awful that the final panel then shows Rat threatening the strip's creator Stephan Pastis with death.
** Pastis' has many [[Author Guest Spot|cameos]], where he's either portrayed as a pathetic loser, a [[Small Name, Big Ego]] type or both (one strip even had Rat beat him up with a baseball bat after Pastis had made a blatant plug of one of his strip compilations).
** Pastis goes so far as to draw himself smoking cigarettes ''despite the fact he never smokes'', not because it looks cool, but because he thinks it makes him look like a loser.
** During a brief arc of ''[[Get Fuzzy]]'' where Darby Conly was somehow getting his hands on advance copies of the next day's [[Pearls Before Swine]] and crudely taping in cutouts of his own characters, Darby did it too. The strip where Stephan called him to ask him to cease and desist depicting Stephan as neat, polite, and professional, while Darby himself was a rude, remorseless slob who couldn't even be bothered to remember Stephan's name.
** A later arc was built around the premise that the comic strip was so offensive that the American Government ordered the comic to be transformed into something akin to ''[[Family Circus]]''. Stephan Pastis ''fails'' and gets put on trial, ''with Rat as his lawyer''. {{spoiler|Rat actively sabotages Stephen's case.}}
* Given her ability to [[No Fourth Wall|ignore the fourth wall]], [[She-Hulk]] would often argue and insult the writer and artist of her own book. Meaning, ''they'' were doing so using her as proxy. She even ''killed'' [[John Byrne]] after he wrote himself into ''Sensational She-Hulk #30'' (something he'd been known to do in his ''[[Fantastic Four]]'' run, meaning John was, in a sense, mocking his own work.
* In one ''[[Bloom County]]'' strip, minor character Yaz Pistachio asks Opus to give her just one name worse than her own.
{{quote|'''Opus:''' ''(thinks for a moment)'' Berkeley Breathed.
'''Yaz:''' Okay, name ''two''. }}
** There was also the strip where Opus pitched the idea for ''[[Bloom County]]'' as a comic strip for his local paper. The editor's response?
{{quote|'''Milo:''' Needs work.}}
* The point of ''[[Captain America (comics)|Captain America]]: Who Won't Wield The Shield?'' - Forbush Man is turned into a [[Nineties Anti-Hero]] and goes after Marvel staff for [[Ruined FOREVER|ruining Marvel Comics]]. The whole thing is giant self-mockery. Just for example:
{{quote|'''[[Joe Quesada]]:''' Tim, Axel, do you guys still read the comics we publish?
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{{quote|'''Nighthawk:''' I don't get it! Clearly you guys are [[The Defenders]], but you're calling yourselves [[The Avengers (Comic Book)|The Avengers]]??? I mean, is it me? Am I the crazy one?}}
* [[Ben Templeton]] appears in the ''[[Wormwood Gentleman Corpse]]'' issue "Segue to Destruction" at the Dead Alley, where Wormwood describes him as "my biographer". ''None'' of the cast have any respect for him at all, and mock his defensively citing his three Eisner nominations: "No idea what those are, but he seems obsessed with them."
* The Black Bomber was likely one of [[DC Comics]]' worst ideas. This was a hero who was once a white man and a bigot, who would turn into a black man with super-powers under stress; with no memory of his other identity while in this state, he would fight crime as the Black Bomber. [[Sarcasm Mode| Great idea]], right? [[Dude, Not Funny| Uhm, wrong]], Comics historian Don Markstein later described the character as "an insult to practically everybody with any point of view at all.” The title was never released, but fortunately a lot of it inspired the creation of groundbreaking character [[Black Lightning]]. Still, DC has made light of this mistake at least once; as [[Dwayne McDuffie]] had a similar character - called the Brown Bomber - try to impress [[Vixen (comics)|Vixen]] in a ''[[Justice League]]'' comic. She wasn’t impressed, brushing him off as a lame joke.
* There was one ''[[Wonder Woman]]'' story in the 90s, where Diana lost the title to her rival Artemis, meaning she could no longer wear the iconic costume. Someone at DC got the idea to [https://static.dc.com/sites/default/files/imce/2020/10-OCT/ww-costume-biker-shorts_5f8e2e03c86a11.86753953.jpg have Diana dress like this]. It didn't go over well, but at very least, DC seems to have acknowledges the mistake in the ''[[Amalgam Comics]]'' one shot ''[http://www.multiversitycomics.com/reviews/remembering-amalgam-bullets-bracelets-1/ Bullets and Bracelets]'', a [[Self-Parody]] with a heroine who wore the costume.
 
== [[Fan Works]] ==
* Most of the more self-aware [[The Abridged Series|Abridged Series]] do this, occasionally with the creators guest-starring on ''other people's'' Abridged Series in order to make fun of themselves.
** [[Little Kuriboh]] of ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Series]]'' does this pretty consistently. In one extreme case the characters wondered where he had gone for four months. Another time, he parodied his own proposal video and had his characters wonder what kind of "sick, lonely person" would do such a thing. In a later video, Yugi and Yami complain about LK's incredibly boring voice.
 
== [[Film]] ==
* [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]] enjoys making fun of himself.
** ''[[Last Action Hero]]'' can be seen as one very protracted example.
** ''[[Twins]]'' and ''[[Junior]]''. Very few actors besides him could have pulled ''Junior'' off, although he had a beautiful chemistry with gifted actors Danny DeVito and [[Emma Thompson]].
** There's also the [[Jackie Chan]]-starring versionremake of ''[[Around the World in Eighty Days]]'', in which [[Arnold Schwarzenegger|Schwarzenegger]] plays a self-obsessed sheikh. How self-obsessed? He has a statue of himself displayed on a pedestal in his hallway. When the plucky heroine is running away from his unwanted marriage proposal, she bumps into the pedestal, causing it to tilt dangerously. Arnold's reaction: "No! My statue of me!" The heroine then gets away from him by ''holding the statue hostage'' until he agrees to let her go.<ref>By this point, Arnold had already been elected Governor of California.</ref>
* ''[[The League of Gentlemen]]'' movie ''[[The Movie|Apocalypse]]'' is a [[Take That]] to the League themselves, displaying them as petty, spiteful and childish. Ironically, {{spoiler|the characters from the actual programme become more developed as they realiserealize their behaviour is based solely on the way they're written and not on themselves as people}}.
* Near the end of ''[[Scott Pilgrim vs. the World]]'', Comeau is heard in the background saying "The comic book is ''always'' better than the movie."
* In ''[[Steel (film)|Steel]]'', Shaq is tasked to throw an object into a small opening near the ceiling. His [[Fourth Wall]] breaking response? "I never make these!" He also fails to make an actual basket at the beginning of the film.
* In one of [[Uwe Boll]]'s better movies, ''[[Postal]]'', the German director has an appearance as himself in a theme park he created called "Lil Germany", which is full of Nazi themes. During an interview, he makes jokes at his own expense, such as funding his terrible movies with Nazi gold and being aroused by all of the little children around him. A little later, [[Vince Desi]], the creator of the ''Postal'' games, tackles Uwe Boll and attempts to strangle him for what he's done to his games.
** He also fails to make an actual basket at the beginning of the film.
* In one of [[Uwe Boll]]'s better movies, ''Postal'', the German director has an appearance as himself in a theme park he created called "Lil Germany", which is full of Nazi themes. During an interview, he makes jokes at his own expense, such as funding his terrible movies with Nazi gold and being aroused by all of the little children around him. A little later, Vince Desi, the creator of the ''Postal'' games, tackles Uwe Boll and attempts to strangle him for what he's done to his games.
* Every [[Mel Brooks]] movie. Ever. Usually featuring a caricature of a Jew played by Brooks (who is in fact Jewish) himself.
* In the ''[[Rocky and Bullwinkle]]'' movie, Karen Sympathy comments that Bullwinkle's jokes had gotten really corny. Bullwinkle's response? "No they haven't. They were ''always'' this bad. [[Nostalgia Filter|When you were a kid you didn't notice.]]"
* ''[[Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade]]''. A meta example. When Indy confronts Panama Hat and tells him that the Cross of Coronado "belongs in a museum", Panama Hat retorts with: "So do you!" He's saying this to a character in a movie from 1989, who's an obvious throwback to action heroes from the 1930s.
* In ''[[Roxanne]]'', C.D. is unimpressed by a heckler's insult of "big-nose" and one-ups him by delivering twenty superior insults, much like the protagonist does in [[Cyrano De Bergerac|the well-known play]] thzat the movie is an [[Affectionate Parody]] of.
* The [[BBC]] documentary ''Knuckle: Bare Fist Fighting'' shows Irish Travelers using self deprecation to insult each other. Each prospective boxer loudly insists that he's "no good" at boxing... but he'll ''still'' beat the tar out of the rival clan's champion.
* The 2005 [[So Bad It's Good]] remake of ''[[House of Wax]]'' was practically marketed as "slasher flick where [[Paris Hilton]] plays a ditzy airheaded bimbo who is brutally murdered", and it clearly delivered on that. Still, Hilton did read the script before she took the role, so...
* Used as an off-joke at the beginning of ''[[Tremors]]'':
{{quote|'''Rhonda:''' Hey, you must be Val and Earl. I've heard a lot about you.
'''Earl:''' Oh, we deny everything.}}
* A common criticism of [[Stephen King]]'s works is that the endings to his novels tend to have unsatisfactory endings, such as the ending to ''[[IT]]''. In the 2017 remake of ''IT'' (part 2) a [[Running Gag]] involves characters - including King himself, making a [[Creator Cameo]] - telling Bill that the ending of his book stinks. Obvious self-deprecating humor there on King's part.
* ''[[Barbie (film)|Barbie]]''; straight from the trailer, this movie promises, "If you love Barbie, this movie is for you; if you ''hate'' Barbie, this movie is for you!" Indeed, the movie does an ''excellent'' job of both celebrating and mocking the concept of Barbie at the same time. Plus, the bad guys in the movie (who want to keep Barbie sheltered and ignorant in her fantasy world) are of the [[Corrupt Corporate Executive]] type, the corporation in question being Mattel.
 
== [[Literature]] ==
* [[Jasper Fforde]]'s ''[[Nursery Crime|The Fourth Bear]]'' introduces the setup early in the book for a ridiculous tongue-twisting punchline much later. One character [[Breaking the Fourth Wall|comments on]] what an elaborate setup that was for such a lame joke and the other sadly agrees, "I don't know how he gets away with it.", which was a line from ''[[The Goon Show]]''.
* Fforde has nothing on [[Far Fetched Fiction|Robert Rankin]], who constantly [[Breaking the Fourth Wall|breaks the fourth wall]] to self-complain about [[Plot Hole]]s, stupid [[Running Gag]]s, and absolutely ridiculous plot devices (Elvis with a time-travelling sprout in his head has to kill the Antichrist! Yeah!). At one point he actually inserted himself, writing the novel in a bar, in the novel itself.
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* Robert Goldsborough wrote a number of ''[[Nero Wolfe]]'' novels after [[Author Existence Failure|series creator Rex Stout's death]]. The final one features a victim who had [[Continuation|been writing another author's character]]. At one point, Archie Goodwin slams the victim's writing. {{spoiler|The motive for the murder is that said victim plagiarised his last novel.}}
* ''I Am A Cat'', Natsume Soseki's social satire of late Meiji-era Japan, not only features a major character bearing more than a passing resemblance to the author who comes off about as well as any other character in the book (i.e. not at all), but has a passage in which this character and several others directly bash Soseki's other work. (Since none of these characters are at all likable, it may be that we're supposed to disagree with them, which would make this either a [[Take That]] at critics or a roundabout form of self-praise. It's hard to tell.)
* [[Robert A. Heinlein]] takes a shot at himself in ''[[The Number of the Beast]]''. At a point when the four main characters are polling each other on their favourite authors, one asks about Heinlein. Another promptly snorts and admits to having read ''[[Stranger in Aa Strange Land]]''. "My God, the things some writers will do for money!"
* [[Edward Lear]] engages in a few pot-shots directed at himself in his nonsense-filled poetry. At least one of his poems is a spot of Self-Deprecation.
* The loser protagonist of [[A Confederacy of Dunces]] is, when you know his life story, very very clearly based on the author, John Kennedy Toole.
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* As first-person narrator of ''[[Jeeves and Wooster]]'', Bertie often cheerfully [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshades]] his [[Upper Class Twit]] status. He may be stupid, but at least he's self-aware.
 
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
 
* As he did in [[Real Life]] interviews, [[George Burns]] always credited his wife as the talented half of ''[[The Burns and Allen Show]]''.
== Live Action TV ==
{{quote|'''George Burns''' Twenty years ago I made an investment of $2.00 that has paid off a million times over in the years since. I bought a marriage license.}}
* As he did in [[Real Life]] interviews, [[George Burns]] always credits his wife as the talented half of ''[[The Burns and Allen Show]]''.
{{quote|'''George Burns''' 20 years ago I made an investment of $2.00 that has paid off a million times over in the years since. I bought a marriage license.}}
* Played with in ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'' when Faith (in Buffy's body) attacks Buffy (who is in Faith's body) - Faith has issues, but here she is literally beating ''herself'' crying out that she is sick and disgusting.
** Oz is modest to a fault about his musical talent - Xander asks if it's hard to play the guitar, he shrugs "Not the way I play it." When bandmate Devon suggests they need roadies since other bands have them, Oz replies "Other bands know more than three chords."
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{{Quote|'''Kirk''': You have to be either an obsessive crackpot who's escaped from his keeper or Samuel T. Cogley, attorney-at-law.
'''Cogley''' (cheerfully): Right on both counts.}}
* ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' funnyman [[Chris Farley]], anther comedian who pretty much made a career out of physical routines that involved making himself look dumb.
 
== [[Music]] ==
 
== Music ==
* Ska band [[Reel Big Fish]] used to sell T-Shirts proclaiming "I Hate Reel Big Fish." And their most popular track was called [[It's Popular, Now It Sucks|"Sell Out"]].
** They also titled an EP ''Keep Your Receipt''.
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** One of the more visible/notable examples of this is when the members of [[Pearl Jam]] appeared in the 1994 movie ''Singles'' as the other members of Matt Dillon's character's band. Their appearance was nothing but one giant pisstake at their (Pearl Jam's) expense.
* Bloc Party's vocalist has said that he wrote "Helicopter" as a jab at himself. He's not nearly as much of a [[Small Name, Big Ego]] as the song makes him sound.
* Micky Dolenz of [[The Monkees (band)|The Monkees]] put out an album of lullabies in the early 1990's titled, ''Micky Dolenz Puts You To Sleep''.
* The inner fold of [[Deep Purple]]'s ''Who Do We Think We Are'' LP consisted of a collection of print reviews from around the world, panning the band. [[Uriah Heep]] also did this, in the gatefold of their double-live album. In the early 1970s, most critics' attitudes toward any [[Heavy Metal]] band not named [[Blue Öyster Cult]] ranged from indifference to contempt, so the two bands probably couldn't have scraped together enough positive press between them to fill an album cover.
* [[Steely Dan]] frequently poke fun at themselves through written material posted on [https://web.archive.org/web/20130509131626/http://www.steelydan.com/inprint.html their website].
* An advertising campaign for 1980s San Francisco New Wave band Flipper: "Flipper suffered for their music. Now it's your turn".
* [[The Presets]] ' video for "Are You The One" includes this subtitle exchange at a concert- "Man, this band sucks. I wish I was listening to The Presets." "Why? They suck even more."
* 10cc wrote "The Worst Band in the World", although it could be argued that it's written from the point of view of another, fictional band.
* The song "Redneck" by [[Lamb of God]] was written about their lead singer Randy Blythe. It's one long [["The Reason You Suck" Speech|Reason He Sucks Speech]].
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* The Spinto Band promoted their shows at the SXSW festival with a take-off on the "Shit (insert group of people here) Say" [[YouTube]] meme called [http://youtu.be/SKDBpul1FhA "Shit People At SXSW DON'T Say"] - one such line is "Man, the line for the Spinto Band showcase is four blocks long!".
 
== [[Newspaper Comics]] ==
* ''[[Bloom County]]'', given the characters' [[Medium Awareness]], [[No Fourth Wall]], and [[Interactive Narrator]], does this a lot:
** In one strip, minor character Yaz Pistachio asks Opus to give her just one name worse than her own.
{{quote|'''Opus:''' ''(thinks for a moment)'' Berkeley Breathed.
'''Yaz:''' Okay, name ''two''. }}
:* There was also the strip where Opus pitched the idea for ''[[Bloom County]]'' as a comic strip for his local paper. The editor's response?
{{quote|'''Milo:''' Needs work.}}
* ''[[Dilbert]]'':
** One series of strips had Dilbert go on a date under Dogbert's coaching—which means he spends the whole date grunting and agreeing. When his date compliments him, he uses another coached response -- "Gosh, I'm not good at anything."
** Another run of strips had Dogbert as the charismatic leader of the vegetarian lobby. Since this was clearly a bit of an [[Author Tract]] by the vegetarian Adams, he started off by establishing that the reason the vegetarians ''need'' a charismatic leader is that they're all "scrawny weaklings".
* ''[[Pearls Before Swine]]'':
** The occasional Sunday strips featuring puns so awful that the final panel then shows Rat threatening the strip's creator Stephan Pastis with death.
** Pastis' has many [[Author Guest Spot|cameos]], where he's either portrayed as a pathetic loser, a [[Small Name, Big Ego]] type or both (one strip even had Rat beat him up with a baseball bat after Pastis had made a blatant plug of one of his strip compilations).
** Pastis goes so far as to draw himself smoking cigarettes ''despite the fact he never smokes'', not because it looks cool, but because he thinks it makes him look like a loser.
** During a brief arc of ''[[Get Fuzzy]]'' where Darby Conly was somehow getting his hands on advance copies of the next day's [[Pearls Before Swine]] and crudely taping in cutouts of his own characters, Darby did it too. The strip where Stephan called him to ask him to cease and desist depicting Stephan as neat, polite, and professional, while Darby himself was a rude, remorseless slob who couldn't even be bothered to remember Stephan's name.
** A later arc was built around the premise that the comic strip was so offensive that the American Government ordered the comic to be transformed into something akin to ''[[Family Circus]]''. Stephan Pastis ''fails'' and gets put on trial, ''with Rat as his lawyer''. {{spoiler|Rat actively sabotages Stephen's case.}}
 
== [[Print Media]] ==
* ''[[Mad]]'' is infamous for this, regularly referring to its writers and artists as "The Usual Gang Of Idiots" and insulting its readership by claiming that only [[Too Dumb to Live]] [[Yiddish as a Second Language|schmucks]] would be caught reading their magazine. Plus, almost every artist has an [[Author Avatar]] created specifically for this purpose. It's all meant in jest though, and given [[Take That| the general humor of the magazine]], it helps to show that you can take it as well as you can dish it out.
 
 
== [[Puppet Shows]] ==
* ''[[The Funday Pawpet Show]]'' used filmed opening segments of people saying "Hi, I'm ________, and you're wasting your time watching the Funday Pawpet Show!".
* ''[[The Muppet Show]]'' often engaged in this. For example in one ''Veterinarian's Hospital'' sketch, when discussing the things that might happen to herald the end of the world, such as "Dr Bob actually curing a patient", Nurse Piggy suggests "One honest laugh". And then there's [[Statler and Waldorf]].
** Speaking of which, one of their gags combined this with [[Medium Awareness]]:
{{quote|'''Statler:''' I don't care for puppets much, I don't find them believable.
'''Waldorf:''' I don't believe you!
'''Both:''' Doh-ho-ho-ho-ho!}}
:* And of course, simply [[Sesame Street Cred| appearing on the show as a guest star]] can be considered this. It says a ''lot'' when someone as renowned as [[Milton Berle]] appears in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAfcHR2GDu0 an act like this one.]
 
== [[Radio]] ==
 
== Radio ==
* [[Howard Stern]] lives this trope on the show. While he savages other celebrities, rival radio hosts and his own crew, he also spends a lot of time making fun of his small penis (though later he found out he's actually fairly normal, he's just really tall and it looks small on him), his big nose, his neuroses, etc.
* ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]'' lived and breathed this trope, with the late Chairman Humph being baffled that anyone was listening to this rubbish. Chairman Jack continues this tradition.
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{{quote|'''Director-General of the BBC''': ''I'm Sorry I Haven't A Script'', that was you lot, wasn't it? Call that a [[Panel Game]]? Don't make me laugh.
'''Bill Oddie''': We didn't. }}
*:* The competitors also engaged in it themselves, on occasion—in the "Broadcasting Ball" episode, the contestants were to identify a sound or bit of music. A quick, monkeyesque 'ooo ooo ooo' played for Tim, to which he responded with this.
{{quote|'''Tim:''' Well, that'd be three geriatrics called ''[[Actor Allusion|The Goodies]]'' attempting to sing.
''(the clip is played again, slightly longer this time, with audience cheers in the background)''
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* The radio show ''Hello Cheeky'' starred performers Tim Brooke-Taylor, Barry Cryer and John Junkin, who also wrote the scripts. Thus, the leads wrote jokes against themselves. It's frequently mentioned that the show only has one listener ("Hello, Eric"), and episodes with guest stars generally focus on the guest star trying to comprehend the rubbish they get away with.
{{quote|'''John:''' ''(reading a letter)'' Dear John Junkin -- quit comedy and stick to straight acting. Yours, ''Tim Brooke-Taylor and Barry Cryer?!'' Here, fellas, I want a word with you!}}
*:* Also, in later seasons, a section of the show was reserved for the fictional post they received. No insults were spared.
{{quote|''Dear Hello Cheeky, I was wondering if you could help me. On second thought, if I'm writing to you, I must be beyond help.''}}
 
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
 
== Tabletop Games ==
* It's tradition in game rulebooks to include a page or so showing how the game is played. In the "Obligatory Example of Play" (yep, that's what they called it) in [[Hero System|''Lucha Libre Hero'']], one of the players, "Steve", is clearly not getting the point of the game. His character, ''El Heraldo de Justicia'', is described as a "dark-clad avenger of the night", and "Steve" spends most of his actions trying to get his hands on a gun despite the fact that a ''luchador'' can do more damage in this game with his wrestling moves. Steve Long, part-owner of Hero Games, and incidentally the guy who edited ''Lucha Libre Hero'', got his start as a game designer with the book ''Dark Champions'', which focused on gritty Punisher-style vigilante action. The flagship character for ''Dark Champions'' and Steve's very own player character is the Harbinger of Justice. (The section wraps up with "Editor's Note: I do ''so'' have a gun.")
* The ''[[Werewolf: The Apocalypse]]'' supplement ''Pentex: Subsidiaries'' describes some of the companies under the umbrella of the titular evil [[Mega Corp]]. The last one listed is "Black Dog Game Factory", a fictionalized version of the real Black Dog Game Factory—an actual subsidiary of ''Werewolf''{{'}}s own publisher [[White Wolf]] (which published their mature-themed game books). The company's fictional games all feature White Wolf's signature traits ([[Darker and Edgier]] settings, etc.) taken [[Up to Eleven]], and the employees are all unflattering parodies of real White Wolf writers, including the writers of the supplement itself.
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* When the ''[[Shadowrun]]'' Verse's metaplot called for a nuke to be set off to destroy a massive bug-spirit infestation, then-publishers FASA situated both the spirit-hive and ground zero for the nuclear blast in their own Chicago office.
 
== [[Theatre]] ==
 
== Theater ==
* In ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'', [[Gilbert and Sullivan]] deprecated their previous hit by having the Major-General boast in his [[List Song]] that he can "whistle all the airs from that infernal nonsense ''Pinafore''."
** For very good reason -- ''HMS Pinafore'' was a satire of the British upper crust, which Queen Victoria is said to have particularly disliked. ''Penzance'' was an attempt to get back on the Queen's good side by mocking their earlier work, and by sucking up shamelessly at the end. (The pirates immediately surrender when ordered in the name of Queen Victoria, because they're good English boys despite being pirates and all.)
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'''[[Little Miss Snarker|Little Sally]]''': How about bad subject matter? Or a bad title even, that could kill a show pretty good! }}
* ''[[Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark]]'' spoofed its own [[Troubled Production]] with Green Goblin singing "I'm a Sixty-Five Million Dollar<ref>Its final price tag</ref> Circus Tragedy" in his [[Villain Song]] "A Freak Like Me Needs Company."
* Arguably the [[Most Triumphant Example]] in theater is the title character's monologue in ''[[Cyrano De Bergerac]]''. After a nobleman makes a rather lame attempt to mock Cyrano's large nose, the protagonist launches into a rant of clever - and hilarious - insults he ''could'' have used, going so far as to lampoon the myth of ''[[Pyramus and Thisbe]]''.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
 
== Video Games ==
* The release of a trailer for the MMORPG ''Perfect World'' was criticised for, among other things, having [https://web.archive.org/web/20131121111200/http://kotaku.com/5038379/trashing-trailers too much lens flare]. Their response? [http://kotaku.com/5038870/a-new-perfect-world-international-trailer A new trailer... "Now with more lens flare."]
* ''[[Homestar Runner|Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People]]'': "Say it with me now, The Cheat: [[The Problem with Licensed Games|licensed games are never good!]]" [[Licensed Game|Guess what the game itself is.]] And it's ''good''.
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** "Bear put these on vehicle so float. If not enough, vehicle sink, like this game at market." -- Mumbo
** In fact, almost all of the humor in the game is derived from how much the game sucks, gaming has left Rare behind, etc. Is it just a show of typical sardonic Brit humor, or did the company truly have no confidence in their own product whatsoever?
* In ''[[Punch Out]]'',: King Hippo sometimes mocks his own weight:
** King Hippo sometimes mocks his own weight:
{{quote|'''King Hippo:''' Do you like my new trunks? They are size XXX Large! Ha, ha, ha!}}
:* Bear Hugger from the Wii version is a meta example. Providing the current page image for [[Canada, Eh?]], he's a [[Mighty Lumberjack]] and [[Mountain Man]] who drinks maple syrup, loves hockey as both a spectator and player, has a ''lot'' of chest hair, calls his opponents "hosers", and occassionally says "Eh?" when his punch misses. This fits the Trope when you realize Next Level Games (who made the Wii version) is a Canadian company.
* ''[[Ace Attorney|Ace Attorney Investigations]]'' features Miles Edgeworth as protagonist instead of Phoenix Wright. This is used to make fun of some of the weirder things that happened in previous games. For example, upon examining a fire extinguisher Edgeworth muses how silly it would be to get hit on the head with it and lose your memory. {{spoiler|This is the framing device for the first case tutorial of ''Justice For All''.}}
** ''[[Apollo Justice]]: [[Ace Attorney]]'' constantly makes fun of the series cliches. For example, Apollo gets told of off for shouting out "HOLD IT!" to loud in court. Phoenix also reminisces on the times when he used to present evidence to people through the present button and how he would shout out "hold it" for no apparent reason just to scare people.
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{{quote|"'''Postal'' has vehicles now!' Thanks a lot, ''assholes.''"}}
* In ''[[Super Smash Bros Ultimate]]'', many characters seem to be mocking Nintendo itself with some of their dialogue. For example, questioning why ''[[Metroid]]'' isn't named after Samus, or why ''[[The Legend of Zelda]]'' doesn't star Zelda. They also seem to point out how Daisy seems to be a [[Captain Ersatz]] of Peach in all but name.
* In ''[[Saints Row 2]]'' one radio ad is for Bling Bling, a shop for "street" jewelry (gaudy gold chains ectetc.), and is filled with [[Totally Radical]] gangster speak and proclaims "Market research said our name was cool!". A funny joke, but funnier if you're aware that Bling Bling was a very early placeholder name for the original ''Saints Row''.
* An optional area in ''[[Epic Battle Fantasy]] 5'' lets you fight monsters from earlier games in the series as a bonus challenge. As expected, monsters from games that were made years earlier look dated and somewhat primitive in design, and the main characters make scathing comments about them during battle. NoLegs' very simplistic early design, eyeball monsters barely having moving parts at all and the Beholder's infamous tentacle rape attack get the most criticism.
* One of the most notoriously bad cases of box art in video game history was what they came up with for the original ''[[Mega Man (Video Game)|Mega Man]]''; the guy on the cover looked more like someone's drunk grandfather in an ill-fitting jumpsuit than the cute robot protagonist, and had a [[Ray Gun]] rather than Mega Man's now-famous [[Arm Cannon]]. (The art was reportedly a rush job for the American release.) Eventually, Capcom would make light of this eyesore by introducing a [[Joke Character]] modeled after it in ''[[Street Fighter X Tekken]]'', calling him [https://megaman.fandom.com/wiki/Bad_Box_Art_Mega_Man Bad Box Art Mega Man]. Unfortunately, this wound up releasing ''after'' Capcom canceled several ''Mega Man'' projects, making his inclusion come off as more spiteful than funny for a lot of the franchise's fanbase.
* In one part of ''[[Dead Rising]]'' there is a store in the background called Jill's Sandwiches; seen as both this game and ''[[Resident Evil]]'' are both produced by [[Capcom]], it seems this is a small bit of humor regarding the infamous meme.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* [http://sluggy.com/daily.php?date=980203 This] ''[[Sluggy Freelance]]'' strip joked that a (fictional) wrongful hiring scandal had drastically hurt the strip's viewership. "Two people used to read ''Sluggy Freelance''. Now only one does. In percentage terms, this is devastating for the comic."
* In [http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0541.html this strip] of ''[[The Order of the Stick]]'', one of the demon roaches says, "They'll let any old hack write a sourcebook these days" in reference to the strip's acid-breathing shark. The acidborn template, with the specific example of the acidborn shark, appears in the ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' sourcebook ''Dungeonscape'', co-written by OotS author Rich Burlew.
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{{quote|'''[http://www.somethingpositive.net/sp03012009.shtml Choo-Choo Bear]:''' Alas, dear readers, you know when you see me Randy is planning something "special." It'll be over quickly, I promise ... And if you hate it, don't worry. It's not like this will be the project Mr. "I swear I'll update ''Midnight Macabre''" [[Attention Deficit Creator Disorder|will actually finish]]."}}
** In another strip, Milholland gives a nod to the [[Fourth Wall]] when PeeJee asks, "Why does everything around here revolve around sex?" and Davan, who's reading a book, mutters, "Bad writing." When glanced at in curiosity, he says, "I'm reading a [[John Grisham]] book, worst writing I've ever seen." Milholland also draws filler strips with himself in them, usually self-deprecating in some way. This version of his [[Author Avatar]] even has a razor blade with hands and feet as his muse, who constantly says/does whatever he can think of to make Milholland miserable or want to kill himself.
** And then there's [httphttps://wwwweb.archive.org/web/20140109073655/http://somethingpositive.net/sp02112004.shtml this] strip. Technically, Milholland did subvert a little of what the character predicted. A little.
* ''[http://www.jaydenandcrusader.com Jayden and Crusader]'' ''embodied'' this trope for much of its early stages. Later the self-deprecation slackened a little, but it's still there.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20140921222700/http://www.dominic-deegan.com/view.php?date=2009-05-01 This] ''[[Dominic Deegan]]'' strip has Mookie poking fun at his own inability to draw noticeably different faces.
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* When [https://web.archive.org/web/20131106203110/http://tangcomic.com/ Tang Ho] needs someone to function as a [[Butt Monkey]], his first choice is generally his own [[Author Avatar]].
* Tom Siddell, the author of ''[[Gunnerkrigg Court]]''. Not so much in the comic itself (Tom doesn't write himself into the comic and promises that he never will) but in talking with his fans: If you ask him about the art, he'll probably tell you that he thinks it's bad [[Art Evolution|and that it used to be worse]]. If you ask him about the hollow-eyed cartoon self-portraits he uses to represent himself online, he'll tell you that they're more handsome than he is.
* ''[[8-Bit Theater|Eight Bit Theater]]'': there's [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshading]] the metric buttloads of [[Filler]], and then there's his footnoted clarification of a point about "most consistent work you've ever seen online."
{{quote|''Terrible work is still consistent work.''}}
** Strip 1,000 was called "I can’t believe someone was asshole enough to make 1,000 sprite comics." Strip 1,001 was called "I can’t believe someone was asshole enough to make more than 1,000 sprite comics."
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* ''[[Questionable Content]]'' creator Jeph Jacques introduced the character of Yelling Bird into the comic, whose sole purpose is to [http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=1140 berate him] when he is unable to get the comic up on time for various reasons. Yelling Bird doesn't [http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=1456 stop there], though.
* A slightly more subtle version appears in ''[[Spinnerette]]''. Protagonist Super Heroine Heather admits to [http://krakowstudios.com/spinnerette/2011/08/10/08102011/ hating mangna style comics.] Odd considering the [http://krakowstudios.com/spinnerette/2011/03/14/03142011/ general art style of the comic.]
* During chapter 58 of ''[[Welcome to the Convenience Store]]'' one character is showing off short (yet true) stories that have happened. At the end the manager says that the artist/writer was just being incredibly lazy.
* In ''[[Sinfest]]'', one character reads ''Sinfest''. [https://web.archive.org/web/20140209190245/http://sinfest.net/archive_page.php?comicID=4143 Tomey reacts badly.]
* ''[[Penny Arcade]]:'' "Cartoonists are [http://penny-arcade.com/comic/2005/06/17 society's waste products]."
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* David Morgan-Mar, author of ''[[Irregular Webcomic]]'', periodically mocks his own drawing skills and penchant for awful, awful puns. He even once convinced Jane Goodall to pretend to slap him for how he portrayed her LEGO alter-ego. (Well, actually, he asked her to pretend to punch him - she convinced him a monkey-slap would be more in-character for her!)
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
* ''[http://www.youtube.com/user/ebolaworld The Ebolaworld Channel]'' on [[YouTube]] love this trope. E.G.:
** "You're watching the Ebolaworld Channel. Why are you doing that?"
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** Similarly, [http://www.digg.com Diggers] make similar jokes, since one cannot have sex on the internet.
** The ''[[Something Awful]]'' Forum Goons are pretty fond of this as well, but then again they don't take much seriously in the first place.
* Most of the more self-aware [[The Abridged Series|Abridged Series]] do this, occasionally with the creators guest-starring on ''other people's'' Abridged Series in order to make fun of themselves.
** [[Little Kuriboh]] of ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Series]]'' does this pretty consistently. In one extreme case the characters wondered where he had gone for four months. Another time, he parodied his own proposal video and had his characters wonder what kind of "sick, lonely person" would do such a thing. In a later video, Yugi and Yami complain about LK's incredibly boring voice.
* [[Brows Held High|Oancitizen]] does this quite a lot.
* Zero of the [http://testzerosblog.blogspot.com/search/label/Video-Game-Bunker The Video Game Bunker] does this a lot:
** "Anyone can shoot a review show out of their basement. While I personally find this a little bit pathetic..."
** "...covering their face so you can't even recognize them. What kind of a d*****bag dresses like that?"
* ''[[Commentary! The Musical]]'', the [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|musical commentary]] to ''[[DoctorDr. HorriblesHorrible's Sing -Along Blog]]'', is composed largely of songs in which the cast and crew make fun of themselves.
* ''[[Survival of the Fittest]]'': Milo Taylor's handler has [[Word of God|confirmed]] that the character was created to make fun of [[Old Shame|Carson]] [[The Scrappy|Baye]], a character he had previously created, and his old writing style in general.
* In ''[[Journey Quest]]'', at the end of episode 7, Wren the bard is trying to figure out what to name her epic (which is about the series' events). She comes up with "Journey Quest", then discards the title.
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* Yahtzee of ''[[Zero Punctuation]]'' repeatedly points out his own hypocrisy during his rant about gaming webcomics, as he himself is in the "insult games for amusement" business, and also describes himself as a social and sexual failure very often.
* ''[[Key of Awesome]]''{{'}}s "Moves Like Jagger" parody illustrates the apparent difficulty of imitating [[Maroon 5|Adam Levine]] by having Mark sing about being too fat to perform the parody, and Todd about being too weak. They end the song by calling themselves "attention whores" who will "do-o-o-o-o-o anything for laughter."
* [[Brows Held High|Oancitizen]] does this quite a lot.
* [[WatchMojo]] is a popular site that posts Top 10 Lists; in December 2022, they posted [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhmZzfq5vL8 Top 10 Times WatchMojo Got It WRONG in 2022]
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
 
* In ''[[The Lion King]]'', when Zazu is asked by Scar to sing a more upbeat song while imprisoned, he sings the first few words of "[[Ear Worm|It's A Small World]]" to which Scar vehemently shouts "No! No! Anything but that!" [[Insistent Terminology|Cast Members]] at [[Disney Theme Parks]] also love taking pot shots at "It's A Small World" in general.
== Western Animation ==
** In the broadway musical version, he instead sings [[Beauty and the Beast (1991 film)|"Be Our Guest"]] and gets the same reaction from Scar. This doubles as a [[Mythology Gag]], since ''Beauty and the Beast'', was the first Disney animated film that became a musical and paved the way for the Broadway version of ''The Lion King''. When ''Beauty and the Beast'' closed, it got replaced with [[Mary Poppins|"Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious"]], and at least one performance has him sing [[Frozen (Disney film)|"Let It Go."]]
* In ''[[The Lion King]]'', when Zazu is asked by Scar to sing a more upbeat song while imprisoned, he sings the first few words of "[[Ear Worm|It's A Small World]]" to which Scar vehemently shouts "No! No! Anything but that!"
* ''[[Wreck-It Ralph]]'' - and the sequel, ''[[Ralph Wrecks the Internet]]'' - is full of this, most of the humor being lighthearted pot-shots at Disney's vast collection of properties.
** [[Insistent Terminology|Cast Members]] at [[Disney Theme Parks]] also love taking pot shots at "It's A Small World" in general.
* ''[[Wreck-It Ralph]]'' - and the sequel, ''Ralph Wrecks the Internet'' - is full of this, most of the humor being lighthearted pot-shots at Disney's vast collection of properties.
* ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'' takes a few shots at itself in "[[Who Would Want to Watch Us?|The Ember Island Players]]", where the Gaang goes to see play done in tremendous detail about everything that happened to them since Aang's awakening. In an early episode ("The Great Divide"), the group stopped at a canyon and wound up trying to resolve the differences between two feuding clans. Many fans felt it was the worst episode in the series. In the play when the actors playing them spot the canyon they point out its existence... [[Discontinuity Nod|and then decide not to stop and just keep going]]. There's also Sokka saying that {{spoiler|whether or not Jet died wasn't very clear}}.
** Though the last one was more of a [[Take That]] at the execs not letting them actually say that Jet was dead; Combustion Man's death also gets this treatment despite being a bit more clear.
* ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'': Matt Groening has occasionally taken shots at himself, including having his ''Life in Hell'' comics have coffee deflected onto them from a superior comic, showing himself willing to sign anything at a comic convention, and having Homer insult his work being in an art gallery.
** His cameo in ''The Simpsons Game'' takes it even further with a scene where it is revealed even he doesn't know whether his name is pronounced "Groan-ing" or "Grain-ing" and another where he introduces himself as "animation's greatest luminary" only for Bart and Homer to blurt out [[Family Guy|"Seth McFarlane?"]]
{{quote|'''Troy McClure:''' Yes, the Simpsons have come a long way since an old alcoholic made humans out of his rabbit characters to pay off his gambling debts.}}
*:* The Comic Book Guy is also lightly based on Groening; specifically how he believed he would be perceived by fans.
*:* And at the start of [[The Movie]], we have Homer chastising viewers for watching in a cinema something they could watch for free at home.
*:* In the Meta-episode, "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular", an impromptu interview with Mr. Groening has the camera barge into his office, to find an old, shriveled man with one eye doing tequila shots, who promptly picks up a gun and shoots the camera man.
{{quote|'''"Groening":''' Get outta mah office! *BANG* *BANG* }}
*:* In the episode written by and guest starring Ricky Gervais, Gervais takes a swipe at himself, as Homer dismisses his schtick as "You take forever to say nothing!"
*:* The series frequently makes fun of the fact it's animated overseas in Korea. Once they recruited [[Banksy]] to help them.
*:* Rupert Murdoch appears as himself in "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" and refers to himself as "the billionaire tyrant." He also sends his goons after Homer and the others for breaking into his sky box.
:* A famous meme with Milhouse that first appears in "I Am Furious (Yellow)":
* ''[[South Park]]'''s "Cartoon Wars", a two episode-long Take That towards ''[[Family Guy]]'', takes a couple jabs at itself when a stranger drops Kyle off to save ''Family Guy'', "I know the show is just joke after joke with no structure, but I kinda like that. At least it's not all preachy and up its own ass with messages, you know?"
{{quote|'''Milhouse:''' I'm not a nerd, Bart. Nerds are smart.}}
* ''[[South Park]]'':
** "Cartoon Wars", a two episode-long Take That towards ''[[Family Guy]]'', takes a couple jabs at itself when a stranger drops Kyle off to save ''Family Guy'', "I know the show is just joke after joke with no structure, but I kinda like that. At least it's not all preachy and up its own ass with messages, you know?"
** Then ''Family Guy'' DID become preachy and up its own ass with messages. Either that's a [[Funny Aneurysm Moment]] or [[Hilarious in Hindsight]].
** In the episode where Stan and Kenny go to Mel Gibson to get their money back for ''[[The Passion of the Christ]]'', Stan says "This is just like when we got our money back for ''[[Baseketball]]''," a film starring Matt Stone and Trey Parker.
** An in-universe example: Several times Cartman actually helps out with the jokes directed towards him, saying a large structure compared to his ass is nowhere close to rivaling him. That might be due to Cartman [[Comically Missing the Point]] combined with his [[PunA Worldwide Punomenon|massive]] ego.
** In the episode where Randy is going for the "Biggest Crap" Record along with a few jabs at Bono they would occasionally flash the words "Emmy Award Winning Series" on the bottom of the screen during the moments where the episode was reaching absurd levels of stupidity.
** [[The Movie]] features the kids going to see in-universe TV show Terrence And Philip's own [[The Movie]]. At the end they complain about the film's lame animation, and then have an especially badly-animated walk away from the theater.
** The show's tongue in cheek disclaimer probably counts too:
{{quote|All characters and events on this show - even those based on real people - are entirely fictional. All celebrity voices are impersonated…poorly. The following program contains course language and due to its content it should not be viewed by anyone.}}
* Find a ''[[Drawn Together]]'' episode in seasons 2 and 3 that doesn't do this. Try.
* ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'' frequently takes shots at its own writers. In addition to all the examples listed on [[Who Writes This Crap?]], there are the lyrics for the theme song to the ''[[Wonderful Life]]'' Christmas special: "Our writers aren't gifted!/ [[Stock Parodies|The story has been lifted]]..."
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'''Rocky:''' I didn't think that was very funny.
'''Bullwinkle:''' (''looking at us'') Neither did they, apparently. }}
* ''[[Codename: Kids Next Door]]'' usually avoids any fourth-wall breaking, but in the episode "Operation: S.A.F.E.T.Y.", a Senator proposes a law that bans cartoons that make fun of adults. Which is the whole idea of ''this'' cartoon.
* The producers of ''[[Harley Quinn (TV series)|Harley Quinn]]'' got a lot of flack from viewers for the abundance of Jewish stereotype humor with the [[Ambiguously Jewish]] characters, including Sy Borgman, the Penguin, Harley's parents, and Harley herself, which the cartoon does seem to have in abundance... Until you pay close attention to the end credits and see that ''a lot'' of the credited writers have Jewish names.
 
== [[Real Life]] ==
* [[Halle Berry]], as depicted in the page image, is one of the few actors to have won both an [[Academy Award]] (''[[Monsters Ball]]'') and a [[Golden Raspberry Award]] (''[[Catwoman (film)|Catwoman]]''). For the latter, she donned the dress she wore accepting her Oscar, and went to the Razzies to accept the award personally. She even held both her Oscar and her Razzie up at the same time in her acceptance speech.
* [[Woody Allen]] uses this throughout his work, most often against himself but occasionally against Jews or New Yorkers generally. For instance, from ''[[Annie Hall]]'':
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* John Oliver does this a lot, most notably in his Comedy Central special.
{{quote|''What I wanted to be, when I was growing up, was an athlete. [...] Really? An athlete, John? And the word athlete means the same in Britain as it does here, does it? [...] What sport was it in Britain that rewards a concave chest?! Did you, perhaps, plan on becoming a sail?''}}
* A huge part of the Canadian identity, [[Canada, Eh?|according to the rest of the world]], is lumberjacks, Mounties, helmetheads, polar bears, maple syrup, beer chilled on the back step, hard liquor that tastes like gasoline and unfailing politeness. According to any Canadian, the keystone of the Canadian identity is managing to both mock and cherish those stereotypes at the same time.
* [[Daniel Radcliffe]] seems to be this way, especially in this conversation about how he needs help getting dressed:
{{quote|'''Interviewer:''' You can't tie your shoelaces?
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* [[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue|Barry Cryer]] tends to engage in this a lot, joking about his lack of talent, inflating his reputation for heavy drinking, and claiming that people who come to see his gigs have confused him with Barry Took. He's stated in several interviews that this can be traced back to [[Oop North|Yorkshire tradition]].
{{quote|I've just sung to you! I don't know why, you've never done anything to me...}}
* Up-and-coming writer for television adaptation ''[[Game of Thrones]]'', George R. R. Martin, mentioned on his blog that he was working on "one bitch of an adaptation" because the original writer made the "damn battle" he was trying to adapt for the screen "way too big and too expensive". He would earlier have choice words about said original writer's lack of sense of scale in making the [[Great Wall|gigantic wall]] separating Westeros from [[Grim Up North|the north]] "way too high"; even when they cut its height in half it still looked unnaturally gigantic. Said original writer is, apparently, one "George R. R. Martin".
* Actor [[Victor Mature]] famously said, "I'm not an actor — and I've got 64 films to prove it!" and later, "I never was an actor. Ask anybody, particularly the critics."
* After controversial British Prime Minister [https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Boris_Johnson Boris Johnson] announced his resignation, a report stated that the previous night "Johnson joked to staff he’d acted like a Japanese soldier fighting in the woods after the end of World War II by trying to cling to power last night".<ref>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-07-07/defeated-johnson-jokes-to-staff-about-his-doomed-bid-to-cling-on?sref=yMmXm5Iy</ref>
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Abridged Series Tropes]]
[[Category:Comedy Tropes]]
[[Category:Insult Tropes]]
[[Category:Self-Deprecation]]
[[Category:Self-Referential Humor]]