So, Yeah: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
m (Looney Toons moved page So Yeah to So, Yeah: adding proper punctuation)
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1:
{{trope}}
[[File:Beach guy speechless.jpg|link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|frame]]
I'm leaving this sentence or thought incomplete, but you should already get the point I'm trying to make, so... yeah.
 
Line 5 ⟶ 6:
[[Too Dumb to Live|those with an IQ of broccoli]] won't get why it's bad for him to succeed, and what would happen if he does.
 
It's also common for So, Yeah to be used when it's assumed that nothing more can be said to adequately explain what's happening, or when the user just feels lazy or embarrassed about what's being said. In other words, "I've explained all I can about this, so you'll have to [[Figure It Out Yourself]]". In a media setting, it is usually done to add drama to the scene, letting the audience figure out the rest along with the other character and shuddering when they do get it, but in real life, it just comes off as a half-assed, lazy response.
 
Unix geeks have been know to refer to this kind of expression as "tab completion".
Line 21 ⟶ 22:
* Walter of ''[[Breaking Bad]]'' has times when his "Yeah" of approval becomes a "So... Yeah".
 
== Recorded and Stand-Up Comedy ==
* [[Two Words: Obvious Trope|Eighteen Words (Count'em):]] [[Eddie Izzard]]. I know that we're supposed to put the newest examples at the end, but come on.
 
== Web Comics ==
* In ''[[Schlock Mercenary]]'', this is Kevyn and Doctor Bunnigus' response to seeing Xinchub naked. Well, Kevyn's goes a little further (iei.e., on a bender).
 
== Western Animation ==
Line 35 ⟶ 36:
 
----
... [[Self-Demonstrating Article|So, yeah]].
 
{{reflist}}