The Aggressive Drug Dealer: Difference between revisions

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{{examples}}
== [[Advertising ]] ==
 
== Advertising ==
 
* Noted as a trope that is ''not'' [[Truth in Television]] in an educational video hosted by Kirk Cameron, possibly made in response to paranoid children who took [[Scare'Em Straight]] tactics too much to heart. The video tried to explain that politely turning down a drug dealer is good enough, as they will not hire their bully friends to pin you to the ground and stab you with needles full of drugs that will give you horrifying hallucinations and make the world change all the wrong colors. The kicker was that they felt the need to animate that part of the film (and two others discussing other incorrect depictions of drugs) as "What will not actually happen to you", so it still gave everyone nightmares anyway.
* Subverted in a few years old public service announcement. The aggressive drug dealer turns out to be a trusted adult who was role playing with the kid.
* How about this [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSIZQRi4M6c "Snake" PSA] from 1986/87? The aggressive (and not particularly subtle) drug dealer's transformation to a literal snake was definitely scary.
 
== [[Comic Books ]] ==
 
== Comic Books ==
* [[Archie Comics]] would occasionally have anti-drug mini comics in the books. One specific example has two children accosted by drug dealers, complete with the girl crying "Oh, Jimmy, I'm scared!" They are saved by two generic super heroes.
* This strange species of drug dealer turns up in the ''[[Teen Titans (Comic Book)|Teen Titans]]'' anti-drug specials (produced as part of the "Just Say No" initative).
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* One bizarre example pops up in a [[Captain America (comics)]] anti-drug comic where Cap has to fight this type of drug dealer. {{spoiler|Who also happen to be a race of aliens who seek to subjugate humanity by using drug addiction to weaken humans.}}
 
== [[Film ]] ==
 
== Film ==
 
* Frankie Lideo, the villain of ''[[Moonwalker]]'''s "Smooth Criminal" segment. It's a particularly egregious example since, unlike your average Aggressive Drug Dealer who's in it to get kids hooked so as to keep a healthy flow of customers, he appeared to be in it for the sheer malicious joy of getting kids hooked on drugs.
* This was the Evil Scheme in the movie ''[[Live and Let Die (film)|Live and Let Die]]'' - Mr. Big intends to flood the US with free heroin, driving the Mob out of the market, then cornering it at a highly inflated price to the multitudes of new addicts.
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* Chris-R, the ruthless drug dealer from ''[[The Room]]'', who is willing to sneak into Johnny's apartment while he and ''three other people'' (Lisa, Mark, and Claudette) are inside, and then work his way up to the roof and force Denny at gunpoint to give him the money, but [[Cluster F-Bomb|can't wait five minutes for it to arrive]].
 
== [[Literature ]] ==
 
* Mocked, as early as 1967, in ''[[From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler]]''. A small boy finds a chocolate bar on the ground and his twelve-year-old sister tells him that it was probably put there by a drug dealer and full of "dope" to get him hooked. Even allowing that it was a more innocent time, it was partly used to illustrate the character of the sister as someone less worldly-wise than she thought, and extremely prone to pointless worrying.
* Parodied in the [[Discworld]] novel, ''[[Discworld/Feet of Clay (novel)|Feet of Clay]]'', where dealers try to sell the drug 'slab' to troll-children. The troll watchman Detritus runs his own version of the 'Drugs - Just say no' posters, aimed at the ''dealers'': "Slab: Just say AarrghaarrghpleasennononoUGH". Considering the reputation of Detritus and his [[BFG|converted siege-crossbow]] 'The Piece-Maker', it's probably one of the more effective methods of [[Scare'Em Straight|Scaring 'em straight]].
* In Hal Clement's novel ''[[Iceworld]]'', the protagonist is sent to infiltrate a criminal syndicate which has discovered a drug vapor that addicts those who inhale it with one dose. {{spoiler|The story takes place among aliens who live at very high temperatures, and the drug is tobacco, acquired via robot probe from a human who has no idea why the aliens are willing to trade gold for cigarettes.}}
* The ''[[Doctor Who]]'' [[Eighth Doctor Adventures]] novel ''The Eight Doctors'' has a [[Very Special Episode|Very Special Subplot]] involving one of these. Justified—maybe—by the fact that the drug dealer is a schoolkid whose classmate intends to tell on him, and he hopes that by forcing her to take crack, he'll get her addicted and she won't want to tell on him any more. However, the fact that a teacher claims that, "One single rock is cheap enough. Some dealers even give the first one away. It's a good way to make new customers, especially young ones," is about when you start to realize that you are reading a book propelled solely by [[Narm Charm]].
* In [[Glen Cook]]'s ''[[Garrett P.I.]]'' series, the crime syndicate has been known to use drug addiction as a method of recruiting and controlling underage prostitutes. [[Knight in Sour Armor|Garrett]] is not happy about this.
* [[Justified Trope|Justified]] in Harry Turtledove's [[Worldwar]] series, as the drug in question is [[Alien Catnip|ginger]]; ginger is a) much cheaper than street narcotics; b) completely legal (until the Race tries to ban it); and c) kickstarts the Race's mating instincts causing them to spontaneously create prostitution and (sadly) rape.
 
== [[Live -Action TV ]] ==
* In the [[Taiwanese Series]] ''[[Black & White (TV series)|Black & White]]'', Gao Yi sents a subway train full of hostages hurtling down a dead-end spur while simultaneously aerosolizing a potent narcotic so everyone on board is zoned and now hooked on it.
* Viciously mocked by [[Chris Rock]] on his HBO special ''Bring the Pain'':
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* Wayne Brady is on on the ''[[Chappelle's Show]]'' episode with him, with scenes right out of ''[[Training Day]]''. "This ain't no damn after-school special! SMOKE IT!"
 
== [[Music ]] ==
 
* [[Tom Lehrer]]'s tribute to a "lovable old character" who had "never been properly recognized in song", ''The Old Dope Peddler'':
{{quote|He gives the kids free samples, / Because he knows full well / That today's young innocent faces / Will be tomorrow's clientele.}}
** It should be added that, as the ''entire'' song portrays the Old Dope Peddler as if he was selling candy, not dope, it's [[Played for Laughs]]. Also, this song was recorded in [[Older Than They Think|1960]]
* Since it inspired an alt-title for this page, Steppenwolf did a song, "[[w:The Pusher|The Pusher]]", about the evils of drug-pushers. Recorded in 1968, and cannot possibly be taken as anything other than an example of this trope: "God Damn the Pusher Man".
 
 
== Tabletop RPG ==
 
== [[Tabletop RPG Games]] ==
* ''[[Paranoia]]'' adventure ''Send in the Clones''. When the [[PC]]s meet Hall-Y-Wud-5, he'll try to hook them on the drug he pushes, co-cola. He'll persuade them to try it with a sales pitch, and will offer them a free taste ("First hit is no charge.").
* In the post cyberpunk RPG "Fates Worse Than Death", the Drug Lords have recently managed (after years of hard work) to produce the "holy grail" of illegal street drugs: a drug that is dirt cheap to create, is instantly addictive, and has ''no effects whatsoever'' except for absolutely horrible withdrawal symptoms. No more of this tedious "convincing people to buy drugs" crap: [[Paranoia Fuel|their pushers just grab you while you walk down the street, give you one injection,]] [[Fate Worse Than Death|and from that point on you have to pay them ridiculous prices to avoid the withdrawal symptoms of doom.]]
 
== Theater [[Theatre]] ==
 
* Closely related - the Bad Idea Bears in ''[[Avenue Q]]'' exist solely to try to push other characters into having more sex and alcohol.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
* [[Kingdom of Loathing]] has A Suspicious Looking Guy, who gives you a free sample of [[G-Rated Drug|"Goofballs"]], which boost your stats for a while, but [[Drugs Are Bad|make your parents worry about you]]. If you don't keep taking them, you suffer Goofball Withdrawal, which is one of the worst (Non-) [[Standard Status Effects]] in the game. Each time you go back for more, the price goes up. Aside from getting you addicted, and then price-gouging you, he's not particularly aggressive.
** And spoofed roughly five times a year, when because it's "Halloween" and you knocked on his door looking for "sweet treats" he's giving out free "candy" (meaning "sugar" and "artificial flavors" to get you all "buzzed") all night! (They're Rock Pops, and perfectly fine for you if you don't follow up by drinking cola.)
* In ''[[Fallout 2]]'', Jet was specifically engineered to be extremely addictive (as well as produce a short high, so customers would need to buy more). However, the dealers aren't particularily pushy, since the client base in the three areas it can be found (New Reno, The Den and Redding) are well-established. However, if you take on the quest to solve the Jet-overdose murder of Chris Wright, his father will insist that the boy was forced to take the drug; he's vehemently anti-drugs, has made his stance clear to his whole family, and refuse to even consider the alternative of his son doing it voluntarily. It's never revealed how it played out, but since the Jet canister was intentionally poisoned to guarantee death, whoever provided it likely wouldn't have taken no for an answer.
 
== [[Western Animation ]] ==
 
* A huge [[Massive Multiplayer Crossover]] inspirational film ''[[Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue]]'' including [[Garfield]], the ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]'', ''[[The Smurfs]]'', [[ALF]], [[Winnie the Pooh]], Slimer from ''[[The Real Ghostbusters]]'', [[Looney Tunes|Bugs Bunny]], ''[[DuckTales (1987)]],'' ''[[Alvin and The Chipmunks]],'' and ''[[Muppet Babies]]'' was create to combat this enemy, which included a foreword from [[George H. W. Bush]]. It's always fun when a sitting president has to talk about a show featuring Smurfs, especially one that clearly didn't know what a Smurf was five minutes before they turned the camera on.
== Western Animation ==
 
* A huge [[Massive Multiplayer Crossover]] inspirational film ''[[Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue]]'' including [[Garfield]], the ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]'', ''[[The Smurfs]]'', [[ALF]], [[Winnie the Pooh]], Slimer from ''[[The Real Ghostbusters]]'', [[Looney Tunes|Bugs Bunny]], ''[[DuckTales]],'' ''[[Alvin and The Chipmunks]],'' and ''[[Muppet Babies]]'' was create to combat this enemy, which included a foreword from [[George H. W. Bush]]. It's always fun when a sitting president has to talk about a show featuring Smurfs, especially one that clearly didn't know what a Smurf was five minutes before they turned the camera on.
* Avoided in the ''[[Jem and The Holograms]]'' episode "Alone Again", with Bobby Braddock, a sweet-talking drug dealer.
* The public service announcements for the ''[[G.I. Joe]]'' cartoon had aggressive criminals. Two kids home alone, revealing over the phone that they are home alone. A stranger's car drives up to the house...and drives off when noticing the Joe soldier Roadblock, a tall bald black man in a skimpy top, standing on the lawn. [[Fridge Logic]] kicked in years later.
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*** Then there was the [[Very Special Episode]] two-parter that had the Joes and Cobras team up in an [[Enemy Mine]] scenario against an eeevilll drug dealer known as the Headman, who dressed like the Hamburglar and had gotten family members of both Joes and Cobras hooked on his stuff. Apparently, drugs are so bad that even an organization committed to genocidal acts of terrorism and once created a clone made from the DNA of Genghis Khan and Hitler will gladly embark on a crusade to stop them.
* Spoofed, skewered, and danced on in the ''[[Clone High]]'' episode "Raisin the Stakes: A Rock Opera in Three Acts". The eeeevil "Pusher" causes the entire student body to get addicted to (wait for it) ...''smoking raisins''.
** '''[[ThisPunctuated! IsFor! SpartaEmphasis!|I CAN TASTE THE SUN!!!]]'''
* In an episode of ''[[Captain Planet]]'', the villain Verminous Skumm was a dealer of a highly addictive drug called "bliss", had some people resort to stealing to get the drug, and he encouraged them to take it and wouldn't accept no for an answer. Eventually, {{spoiler|the drug leads to the death of Linka's cousin}}.
 
== [[Real Life ]] ==
 
* A few of these have shown up on various ''World's Wildest Police Videos'' specials, with one infamously latching on to the undercover cop's car as she drove away. These dealers are usually extremely amped up on their own product. Notice that they get caught.
* A common mistake for undercover cops trying to make a sale for an arrest, both from seeing this trope in the media and for the same reason the more stupid actual dealers do it - lack of an existing social network that would facilitate more discreet and less aggressive sales tactics, and confusion of aggression and pestering with salesmanship.
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Characters As Device]]
[[Category:This Is Your Index On Drugs]]
[[Category:Criminals]]
[[Category:Villains]]
[[Category:The Aggressive Drug Dealer]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Aggressive Drug Dealer, The}}