Soap Wheel

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Most soaps fall under two categories: Loads and Loads of Characters and Long Runners.

Over this long period, they have perfected the method of keeping the stories moving and the characters changing: The A-B-C soap opera plot wheel - or just the Soap Wheel.

Plot A -- one of the teenagers is pregnant. Halfway through this Story Arc, Plot B will kick in - someone has amnesia. By the time Plot A is finished and the teenager has undergone a heartwarming transformation, the main character in Plot B is in a hospital bed and has just remembered that his wife was the one who tried to kill him. Then in another part of the cast, a long-running character's never-before-seen daughter has started taking drugs - Plot C starts. When their parents find out, Plot B's wife is in jail and he is happily settled in his new life. Meanwhile Plot A's baby is now a toddler due to Soap Opera Rapid Aging Syndrome, and is being stalked by her real father and the mother is going slowly mad.

By starting a new story about half way through another, there is a constant rotation of new plots. The drama keeps flowing, and these people never receive a moment's rest. This is the Soap Wheel, the time-tested way to turn Loads and Loads of Characters into a nonstop cavalcade of drama.

For a similar trope that happens in a single episode of a series, see Two Lines, No Waiting. For the "episodic" version of this trope, see Four Lines, All Waiting.

Examples of Soap Wheel include:

Anime and Manga

  • Happens in the Kyoto Animation version of Kanon.

Comic Books

  • Superhero comic books that have strong supporting casts often do this as well. Though the practice dwindled once Writing for the Trade became popular, it has been making a comeback lately.
    • For example, see the early issues of John Byrne's run on West Coast Avengers. During the "Vision Disassembled" arc, hints are dropped about the Great Lakes Avengers. When the GLA take the main stage, you start seeing subplots about the Scarlet Witch's potential abduction. During all of this, the Witch's "imaginary children" plotline is given a few panels each issue.

Live-Action TV

Music

  • Done musically by Dream Theater. The fourth through eight albums were composed in a way that turned them into one continuous album if listened from start to finish, but in the second album of the series, they introduced a multi-part song that would not be finished until the tenth album.

Professional Wrestling

Tabletop Games

Web Comics

  • Rumors of War makes use of a variant of the Soap Wheel (by combining Rotating Protagonists with Time Skips) to create a Cast-Go-Round. The plot keeps the moving even though tons of significant action takes place off-screen. Even the characters are left but to comment on what's happened and prepare for the next.