The Grim Reaper: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:the-death.jpg|frame|[[I Have Many Names|The Stealer of Souls, Defeater of Empires, Swallower of Oceans, The Ultimate Reality, Harvester of Mankind,]] atop [[Discworld|atop his mighty steed, Binky]]]]
 
{{quote|When the first living thing existed, I was there, waiting. When the last living thing dies, my job will be finished. I'll put the chairs on tables, turn out the lights and lock the universe behind me when I leave.|'''Death''', ''[[The Sandman]]''}}
|'''Death''', ''[[The Sandman]]''}}
 
The mascot of death. The nature and purpose of the Grim Reaper actually varies between two different versions: one version describes him as a simple guide, the being who takes you to the next world after you die (the fancy word for this is ''[[Psychopomp]]''); the other sees him as the actual entity of death—you die when he touches you. Either way, he is generally seen as a tall skeletal spectre in a black [[In the Hood|hooded]] [[Black Cloak|robe]], who wields a [[Sinister Scythe]] when he visits commoners and a sword when he visits royalty, though the scythe is the most common of his symbols. He is also often shown with an [[Death's Hourglass|hourglass]] as a symbol of elapsing life. These dual accouterments are [[Older Than Steam]], but both were drawn from the ancient Greco-Roman god Χρόνος (Chronos). This god (not a god of death), in turn, was drawn from the [[Ur Example]] of the Sassanid sect's Zoastrian god Zurvan Akarana. He is sometimes described as mute, and in some accounts you can [[Chess with Death|challenge him to a game of chess for the right to stay alive]]. Often he picks up the characteristics of Charon, the boatman of the river Styx in Greek theology. But even these characteristics are filtered through a [[Hijacked by Jesus|Christian veil]].
 
[[The Grim Reaper]], in his days as a frequent figure of folk tales, was originally used as a menacing, sombre symbol of the inevitability of death. He first appeared in Western art and folklore with the outbreak of the mid-fourteenth century plague epidemic (known to us as the Black Death).
 
As with most folklorish characters, he is no longer taken seriously and may even come across as [[Don't Fear the Reaper|benign]], or played for laughs as a [[Punch Clock Villain|bored civil servant type]]. Even when he's still treated as a menacing figure, there will be humor involved. Still other representations of death forgo the neutral and buffoonish guise entirely and make Death a [[God of Evil]] that [[Enemies with Death|must be fought]].
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A frequent modern variation is the notion that instead of ''the'' Grim Reaper, you can be ''a'' [[God Job|Grim Reaper]] - that it's a position offered to certain people after they die.
 
When this concept was imported to Japan in the 19th century, they translated the name as ''[[Shinigami]]'' (literally ''spirit of death'', often mistranslated asor '''''god''' of death''<ref>"shi": death; "ni": of; "gami" (Hepburn romanization for "kami" following an N): god or spirit</ref>). Japanese media then proceeded to play with the character to the point that many shinigami no longer have anything in common with the Grim Reaper, aside from the name. ''Shinigami'' are more typically spirits associated with death, rather than being the singular [[Anthropomorphic Personification]] thereof. Thus, the concept of being able to defeat or kill Death in combat (''[[Castlevania]]'') or Grim-Reaper figures themselves being able to die (''[[Death Note]]'') can seem absurd to Western viewers.
 
A subtrope of [[Psychopomp]]. Compare to [[Horsemen of the Apocalypse]] for when the rest of the [[Five-Man Band|Four Man Band]] show up, and [[Afterlife Express]], when the Grim Reaper is or rides on a vehicle, especially a train. See also [[Enemies with Death]] and [[The Problem with Fighting Death]]. As with most public services, expect [[Hilarity Ensues|hilarity to ensue]] if [[Death Takes a Holiday]]. A more kinder interpretation may portray him as [[The Sacred Darkness]].
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* Meroko of ''[[Full Moon o Sagashite]]'' is probably the cutest shinigami of all time complete with [[You Gotta Have Blue Hair|Pink]] [[Rapunzel Hair]] [[Unusual Ears|Bunny Ears]] tiny [[Winged Humanoid|Angel Wings]] and a costume that's little more than a skirt with a bikini top and [[Zettai Ryouiki|thighhigh socks]]. In universe her looks are explained as being necessary to stop the crying of children since she's a shinigami specializing in children.
** Takuto is also a shinigami but he's still in training so his ears and wings aren't real.
 
 
== Comic Books ==
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== Fan Works ==
* In the ''[[Harry Potter]]'' fanfic ''[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/10136172/1/Core-Threads Core Threads]'' by theaceoffire, a young godlike!Harry creates several internal aspects (effectively [[Split Personality|split personalities]]) to handle his power and manage his extensive and complicated mindscape. One of them, "Wrath", turns out to actually be Death itself, just pretending to be one of Harry's personalities.
* Played with in the ''[[Worm]]/[[Luna Varga]]'' crossover ''[[Taylor Varga]]'': The first time the Family meets Vista, who to hide her identity is wearing the cloak that will shortly become her alternate hero persona, Saurial creates and hands her a scythe then insists she's Death -- for a little while, at least. And after Cloak follows the Family tradition of [[troll]]ing Max Anders in his penthouse, Anders subsequently refers to her as a "tiny Death" every time he thinks about her.
 
 
== Film ==
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* The Swedish silent movie ''Körkarlen'' (from 1921, ''The Phantom Carriage'' in English) involves the soul of dying man following Death's coachman around picking up the dead - and seeing the consequences of his own bad life. Here, the driver of the "phantom carriage" is the last man to die each year.
* Appears briefly in ''[[Metropolis]]''.
 
 
== Folklore & Religion ==
* Charon, the ferryman who takes the dead to the underworld in greek mythology, is probably the [[Trope Creator]]. He is often represented in a skeletal figure dressed in dark robes with a long pole by which he steers his barge.
** In Greek mythology, death itself - ''Thanatos'' - is a minor deity but he looks like a handsome bearded man with large wings.
* [[wikipedia:Ankou|Ankou]], from the folklore of Brittany, [https://web.archive.org/web/20140225124440/http://www.ph-ludwigsburg.de/html/2b-frnz-s-01/overmann/baf4/bretagne/le_char_de_l_ankou%5B1%5D.jpg shares many traits with the Reaper], and may have been an inspiration.
* The Mexican cult of [[wikipedia:Santa Muerte|Santa Muerte]].
* In ''[[The Bible]]'' death it/himself is referred to a number of times, although it's a bit unclear whether these should be interpreted as describing the concept of death or Death as an actual entity. He's definitely identified in Revelation as one of the [[Horsemen of the Apocalypse]] however, and in fact the only one to be explicitly named.
** What part of "an angel who is either associated with Jesus, or Jesus himself(son of man) [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John+5%3A25-27&version=NIV\], '''wielding a scythe''' ready to '''reap''' the grapes of wrath,[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation%2014:%2014-20&version=KJV\] symbolizing the killing all of the earth dwellers who martyred of all of the Christians" [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation+6%3A9-11&version=NIV\] do you not understand?
** Also, in Roman Catholicism [[Archangel Michael]] and Archangel Samael are respectively considered to be the good and the bad Angel of Death.
* In Islamic mythology Azrael is considered the Archangel of Death.
* Death is the narrator of "[http://www.k-state.edu/english/baker/english320/Maugham-AS.htm Appointment in Samarra]", a story retold by W. Somerset Maugham in 1933, itself based on an old Middle Eastern story.
* Averted by anthropomorphic personifications of death that look nothing like the Grim Reaper:
 
 
== Literature ==
* [[Terry Pratchett]]'s ''[[Discworld]]'' novels take this even further: Death is a character in his own right, with thoughts, feelings (sort of), and a genuine personality. He's the central figure of several books in the series, and has appeared in every book (even if only for a line or two) except for ''[[Discworld/The Wee Free Men|The Wee Free Men]]''. Oh, and he {{smallcaps|Always speaks in small caps}}, how the author depicts "a voice like lead slabs falling on a marble floor." In a subversion of the reaper's traditional portrayal, Death is one of the most likable and sympathetic characters in the series, to the extent that [[Daydream Believer|Pratchett fans due to meet the real one soon have expressed their hopes that he's like the one in the novels.]] For {{smallcaps|"What can the harvest hope for, if not for the care of the [[Discworld/Reaper Man|Reaper Man]]?"}}
** Although Death is largely a nice person, you ''really'' [[Beware the Nice Ones|don't want to get him mad]]. The Auditors of Reality have discovered this several times over, and a good guy like the titular protagonist of ''[[Discworld/Mort|Mort]]'' can get on his wrong side with near-fatal results.
** Though Death performs his duty for every living thing on the Disc, from humans to tube worms, his brief retirement in ''[[Discworld/Reaper Man|Reaper Man]]'' left a void that was filled with a separate Death for every creature: Death of Rats ({{smallcaps|Squeak}}), Death of Mayflies (a trout), Death of Trees (a chopping sound), and so on, to say nothing of the malevolent, [[The Lord of the Rings|Witch King-like]] replacement Death of Humans. When he returned, Death recalled all of them... except for Death of Rats.<ref>and the Death of Fleas</ref> It's a lonely, eternal job, and it's nice to have someone to share it with.
** Death's boss is Azrael, the Death of Universes, a being so colossal that galaxies appear as twinkles in his eye, and it takes a whole page to contain a single-word reply to a question. Also, he has a clock -- ''the'' clock—which tells Time what ''it'' is.
* Pratchett also used another more [[True Neutral]] version of Death in ''[[Nation]]'', called Locaha. [[Unreliable Narrator|Who may or may not exist.]]
* The Pratchett/[[Neil Gaiman]] novel ''[[Good Omens]]'' concerns Armageddon, so Death features as one of the Four Horsemen (or motorbikers) of the Apocalypse. He doesn't get as much page time as the others because he's always busy, but shares the Death of Discworld's {{smallcaps|accent}} and occasional sense of humor.
** Towards the climax he reveals that, in spite of his position with the Four Horsemen, he is not like the others. Whereas his three companions are more or less manifestations of inherent facets of humanity, Death is the Angel of Death, with wings of darkest blackness.
* In [[Piers Anthony]]'s ''[[Incarnations of Immortality|On a Pale Horse]]'', the office of Death passes from one holder to the next when [[You Kill It, You Bought It|the new Death kills his predecessor.]]
* [[Robert Burns]]'s poem ''Death and Dr Hornbook'' features a non-skeletal (albeit cloaked) Grim Reaper of the disgruntled civil servant mould, who is apparently ''a'' Grim Reaper specifically responsible for southwestern Scotland. This ingenious double subversion is similar to modern unorthodox portrayals of Death.
* In [[Paul Robinson]]'s book ''[[Instrument of God]]'', the person who is in charge of the Recycling Department (where people who have died decide to go back to earth to be reborn as a baby) is ''The Death Traffic Manager'' but is colloquially known as ''Grim'' or ''The Grim Reaper''.
* ''[[The Book Thief]]'' is narrated by Death (and makes him a sympathetic character to boot!)
{{quote|I do not carry a sickle or scythe
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* The Black Rabbit of Inle from ''[[Watership Down]]'' is involved in the death of every rabbit, but if a rabbit dies without his permission, he will avenge the deed. In rabbit mythology, this explains why ''elil'' (the rabbit word for enemies, including humans) hunt and kill each other.
* Death of Fritz Leiber's ''[[Lankhmar]]'' series is a bald figure in dark clothing, who has a quota of deaths every hour (by profession) and has never missed it.
* The description of the Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come in [[Charles Dickens]]'s ''[[A Christmas Carol]]'' is a clear reference to the Grim Reaper.
* Death is worshipped in many forms in the world of ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'', from the Black Goat of Qohor to the Stranger from the Faith of the sevenSeven. However, a cult of assassins known as the Faceless Men believe all of these to be the same being, the Many-Faced God.
* Invoked in [[Dan Abnett]]'s [[Gaunt's Ghosts]] novel ''[[Only In Death]]''. Wes Maggs is haunted by a figure of an old woman with a malformed face and a black lace gown. He is convinced that she is Death, come to take Ghosts. In some, dangerous situations, other Ghosts see her as well. When resolving to fight as hard as he could, Maggs defies her. {{spoiler|She proves to be Soric's [[Evil Cripple|handler]] from [[Fate Worse Than Death|the Black Ships]], projected by him. The reason she appeared more when they were in danger was that Soric sensed it, and his desperate desire to help them caused more of his psychic activity to reach them.}}
* The classic Spanish novel ''[[La Dama del Alba]]'' (The Lady of the Dawn), has Death as a beautiful woman who envies the living, as she can never know love because of her role.
* In [[One Hundred Years of Solitude]], Death is a quiet woman clad in an old blue dress who orders {{spoiler|Amaranta [[Buend Ã]]&shy;a}} to sew her own death shroud, promising that she will died peacefully and painlessly at the end of the day she's done.
* Death is a fairly important figure in ''[[Paradise Lost]]'' and is part of the "evil trinity" along with Satan, his father, and Sin, his mother. Satan is also [[Squick|Sin's father]].
* In [[Amber Benson]]'s ''[[Calliope Reaper-Jones]]'' series, Calliope is the daughter of the current Grim Reaper, a man who has held that post since about 1900. Having been in life a businessman during the latter part of the Industrial Revolution, he used those approaches to manage his reaping duties, by forming the afterlife company Death, Inc.
* ''[[Final Destination]]'' spin-off ''Dead Reckoning'' has a [[Eldritch Abomination|Lovecraft -inspired]] version of the usual stereotypical depiction of the Grim Reaper appear in a dream sequence.
* ''[[Death: A Life]]'' by [[George Pendle]] is a humorous look at Death's existence up to the present time. The main story focuses on Death being fascinated with the idea of living after meeting a soul by the name of Maud, whom he falls in love with. [[Hilarity Ensues]].
* Yambe-Akka to witches in ''[[His Dark Materials]]''. At one point it reveals that every person has an individual death, ("Well, Lyra, if you ask, sooner or later they will show.)", and they can hide very well to take on [[A Form You Are More Comfortable With]].
* [[Harry Potter]] doesn't have Death himself appear in-story (though so many have died), but in The Tale of the Three Brothers, [http://harrypotter.wikia.com/wiki/Death_(The_Tale_of_the_Three_Brothers) Death] did appear to the three Peverell Brothers. He is portrayed here as cunning and disliking to be on the losing side of anything. He was, in the story, the creator of the [[Plot Device|Deathly Hallows]].
* ''[[Silicon Wolfpack]]'' has a traditionally-garbed reaper who seems to merely be one of many, and has a [[Plucky Comic Relief|sense of humor]].
* [[The Demonata]], after several books, reveal that {{spoiler|Death was the main-villain all along.}}
* In the ''[[Heralds of Valdemar]]'' series, Death is described poetically as the Shadow-Lover - an attractive member of one's gender of preference - and "embracing the Shadow-Lover" is a metaphor for dying.
* In the [[Stephen King]] novel ''[[The Long Walk]]'', an unnamed dark figure appears at the very end who is theorized to be Death, ushering {{spoiler|Garraty}} into the afterlife.
 
 
== Live-Action TV ==
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* In an episode of ''[[Scrubs]]'', J.D. [[Imagine Spot|images]] Death hanging around the hospital due to all the deaths that happen there. Death among other things has a daughter selling girl scout cookies, and [[Chess with Death|plays a game of Connect Four with J.D. over a patient's life]].
* The rare version of the Reaper wielding a sword when coming to claim royalty is highlighted on the final episode of ''The Tudors'' when {{spoiler|a Reaper on horseback approaches Henry(who, after three seasons of subtle aging, is back as he was in Season 1); [[Ironic Echo|aiming the sword at the king's neck]]. It's a dream sequence, however.}}
 
 
== Music ==
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* The [[Scary Black Man]] from the Bone Thugz 'N Harmony video for "Crossroads", until the end when he takes off his coat and hat revealing he has angel wings.
 
== Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends ==
* Charon, the ferryman who takes the dead to the underworld in greek mythology, is probably the [[Trope Creator]]. He is often represented in a skeletal figure dressed in dark robes with a long pole by which he steers his barge.
** In Greek mythology, death itself - ''Thanatos'' - is a minor deity but he looks like a handsome bearded man with large wings.
* [[wikipedia:Ankou|Ankou]], from the folklore of Brittany, [https://web.archive.org/web/20140225124440/http://www.ph-ludwigsburg.de/html/2b-frnz-s-01/overmann/baf4/bretagne/le_char_de_l_ankou%5B1%5D.jpg shares many traits with the Reaper], and may have been an inspiration.
* The Mexican cult of [[wikipedia:Santa Muerte|Santa Muerte]].
* In ''[[The Bible]]'' death it/himself is referred to a number of times, although it's a bit unclear whether these should be interpreted as describing the concept of death or Death as an actual entity. He's definitely identified in Revelation as one of the [[Horsemen of the Apocalypse]] however, and in fact the only one to be explicitly named.
** What part of "an angel who is either associated with Jesus, or Jesus himself(son of man) [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John+5%3A25-27&version=NIV\], '''wielding a scythe''' ready to '''reap''' the grapes of wrath,[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation%2014:%2014-20&version=KJV\] symbolizing the killing all of the earth dwellers who martyred of all of the Christians" [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation+6%3A9-11&version=NIV\] do you not understand?
** Also, in Roman Catholicism [[Archangel Michael]] and Archangel Samael are respectively considered to be the good and the bad Angel of Death.
* In Islamic mythology Azrael is considered the Archangel of Death.
* Death is the narrator of "[http://www.k-state.edu/english/baker/english320/Maugham-AS.htm Appointment in Samarra]", a story retold by W. Somerset Maugham in 1933, itself based on an old Middle Eastern story.
* Averted by anthropomorphic personifications of death that look nothing like the Grim Reaper:
 
== MusicalsTabletop Games ==
* The personification of Death is a central character in the German musical ''[[Elisabeth]]''. He's not much of a traditional Grim Reaper type, though, as he's not hooded, scythe-wielding, or skeletal (in fact, he's usually rather handsome, although it depends on who's playing him). He's referred to as "Der Tod" ("Death", in German); his duets with Elisabeth are seen as long-life flirtations, and the single duet with her son Rudolf can be ''very'' easily seen as [[Ho Yay]].
 
 
== Tabletop RPG ==
* The ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]'' C'tan god known as the Nightbringer [[Mind Rape|MindRaped]] proto-life so comprehensively he gave all living creatures (except Orks) the fear of death, and although he can take any shape usually styles himself as a giant floating reaper, complete with thirty-foot-long-scythe. Partially as a consequence of this, the Eldar formed a sect of warriors called the Dark Reapers, although instead of scythes, they use [[Macross Missile Massacre|rapid-fire micro-missile launchers]]. The ''first'' Dark Reaper, the Phoenix Lord Maugan Ra, instead uses a shuriken cannon (yes, a [[BFG]] that fires shuriken) with a scythe blade on the end of the barrel.
* ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' has had several gods of death over its history, and several Grim Reaper analogues:
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* The darkly humorous ''HOL: Human Occupied Landfill'' actually gave stats for "Death Himself (Mortus). It also uses the civil servant interpretation, saying that due to the immense workload he has to do in the game's highly volatile and [[Crapsack World|dangerous setting]], he realized the need to hire subcontractors to assist in the workload and open his first branch office. One example given was a man named "Gordo" who, due to death's vanity concerning his [[Sinister Scythe]], is forced to collect souls using a weed whacker.
 
== Theatre ==
* The personification of Death is a central character in the German musical ''[[Elisabeth]]''. He's not much of a traditional Grim Reaper type, though, as he's not hooded, scythe-wielding, or skeletal (in fact, he's usually rather handsome, although it depends on who's playing him). He's referred to as "Der Tod" ("Death", in German); his duets with Elisabeth are seen as long-life flirtations, and the single duet with her son Rudolf can be ''very'' easily seen as [[Ho Yay]].
 
== Video Games ==
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* Gravelord Nito from ''[[Dark Souls]]'' is effectively the god of death and the Grim Reaper. He even has a skeletal theme, only Nito is ''made'' of a mountain of skeletons.
 
== Web Comics ==
 
== Webcomics ==
* ''[[Irregular Webcomic]]'' has a plethora of reapers, each assigned to collect souls from specific causes of death. ''Very'' specific causes of death, including Death of Insanely Overpowered Fireballs, Death of Being Wrestled to Death by Steve <s>Irwin</s>, Death of Inhaling Hat-Making Chemicals, etc. Death of Being Ground By A Mars Rover Rock Abrasion Tool had something of a long wait before his debut performance. Of late, {{spoiler|the author himself has become Death of Going Back in Time and Killing Yourself, after being on the receiving end but before any inkling of the giving end. One of the perks of the job is... The ability to travel in time.}}
* ''[[Gunnerkrigg Court]]'', which has [[Crossover Cosmology|numerous figures from different myths]] serving as Psychopomps, features a brief appearance by Ankou, who looks like The Reaper and carries a scythe.
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and with strange aeons even '''Death may die'''. }}
* Death is depicted as a goth girl (and one of the [[Powers That Be]]) in ''[[Finder's Keepers]]''.
* ''[[Nicht LustigNichtlustig]]'' has a [[Grim Reaper]], who keeps a poodle (''nothing against the Poodle of Death''), has his own <s>corn</s>death-flakes, takes a day of when depressed and is very much beloved by every lemming he happens upon.
* ''[[The KAMics]]'' has Hela from [[Norse Mythology]] as it's official Grim Reaper (although for a while it seemed to be Steve of ''[[Life and Death]]''). [https://web.archive.org/web/20130207011038/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/4789283/ She] [https://web.archive.org/web/20130207011043/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/5077713/ doesn't] [https://web.archive.org/web/20130207011048/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/5268279/ dress] [https://web.archive.org/web/20121226132237/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/5270141/ very] [https://web.archive.org/web/20130601211532/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/5294388/ traditional] [https://web.archive.org/web/20121226131827/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/5281093/ though]. (Fourth link is NSFW.) [https://web.archive.org/web/20130527185225/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/5305635/ She describes her job as a guide for the dead type.]
* ''[[Nosfera]]'' has [[Battle Butler]] Grimsworth.
* At the end of ''[[The Phoenix Requiem]]'', {{spoiler|Jonas}} appears in a dark cloak, and tells that some call him The Reaper "after some local nonsense folk tale".
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** ''Dangerously Chloe'' got Alchemy, a young reaper who seems to ''not'' have benefits of a comparable worldly education with side dish of "[[Seen It All]]" in the buffet before getting this job: whenever not completely alone, she is bouncing between panical insecurity and self-importance.
 
== Web OriginalsOriginal ==
* The Grim Reaper recounts his experiences in ''[http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/72146 The Grim Reaper Show]'', where's he portrayed as a sardonic wisecracker. There are five current installments.
 
 
== Western Animation ==
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** Death is portrayed as an okay guy who just kills people with a touch of his hand. He can time travel, see the the future, and yet can't find love. Oh, he also lives with his mother.
* In one ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'' [[Treehouse of Horror]], Homer Simpson kills the Grim Reaper, [[You Kill It, You Bought It|then becomes the Reaper himself]], and enjoys abusing his power—until he's asked to claim Marge. The segment ends with a car chase between Homer and [[God]], and Homer escapes with a ''[[Dukes of Hazzard]]'' jump across a railway track, just before the train.
* In ''[[The Grim Adventures of Billy and& Mandy]]'' the grim reaper is named "Grim" and, after [[Chess with Death|losing a limbo contest to Mandy]], is now the children's friend/slave until they decide to let him go. He also has an inexplicable (yet oddly fitting) Jamaican accent. During a brief [[Crossover]] gag, cheerfully innocent [[Genki Girl]] Kuki Sanban, [[Codename: Kids Next Door|aka Numbuh Three]], is recruited by the underworld as a temporary replacement reaper for Grim. Going from [[Cloudcuckoolander]] to [[Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant]] turns out to be just a short hop for Kuki...
{{quote|'''Numbuh Three:''' Thanks to you, in addition to my charity work and my love of Rainbow Monkeys, I can now also reap the immortal souls of grown-ups, collecting my ''dark harvest'' with a ''cold, iron'' blade! Yay, that'll be fun!}}
* Death appears in ''[[Chilly Beach]]'' to take away Dale, who opts to [[Chess with Death|challenge him]]. Then proceeds to annoy death by taking too long to pick what game they're going to play. Leading to this exchange:
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* The Reaper appears to have been following [[Gorillaz|Russel Hobbes]] around for most of his life. Russel insists he saw the Reaper during the drive-by shooting which killed all his friends, and actually has photographic evidence of Death looming over him. Rumour also has it that Murdoc's pet raven Cortez was "born in the folds of the Grim Reaper's cloak" - he picked it up in Mexico, a place where ravens don't naturally live in the wild, so there may in fact be something weird going on with it.
* ''[[Mary Shelley's Frankenhole]]'' has Death appear, trying his damnedest to stick it to the [[Immortality|immortal]] Frankenstein. He finally finds a way by episodes end. He vows to ''never'' reap Victor's annoying and elderly children (Victor never gave them the immortality serum), leaving Victor stuck with them forever.
* At the very beginning of [[Pluto the Pup|Pluto's]] nightmare in ''[[PlutosPluto's Judgement Day]]'', the demonic cat dressed as a policeman who comes to arrest Pluto in his sleep and take him to Hell where his trial will take place is presumably this character.
* In ''[[Rocko's Modern Life]]'', Rocko's car dies, and is escorted to Heaven by the Grim Tow Truck.
* The Grim Reaper in [[Regular Show]] is a recurring villain who lost an arm wrestling contest with Skips in order to keep Rigby's soul, tried stealing Mordecai, Rigby, Pops, and Benson's souls by winning at bowling, and blackmailed Mordecai and Rigby into babysitting his son by stealing Muscle Man's soul after he died. He also has a cockney accent, can revive people through loogie's, holds souls in bowling balls, one giant muscular arm that looks like a normal arm when he wears a jacket,and looks a lot like Lemmy from Motorhead.
 
== Multiple Media ==
* In the ''[[Doctor Who Expanded Universe]]'', Death is female with a bit of a sick attitude toward life. On at least one occasion she interacts with the Doctor and his companions, even making a deal with him that involves him murdering someone. According to [[Big Finish]], the Master is "Death's Champion".
** [[Word of God]] is that the Time Lord "gods" are just bored [[Sufficiently Advanced Aliens|Eternals]], which may mean she isn't ''actually'' The Grim Reaper. There's a [[Lawyer-Friendly Cameo]] by [[Neil Gaiman]]'s Death in the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novel ''Happy Endings'', who might be the real deal.
 
== Real Life ==
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* If you happen to see [[The Weather Channel]]'s Jim Cantore with a crew in your neighborhood [[Doomed Hometown|well... sorry for you loss.]]
** One [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48r4IQTB3NE&feature=relmfu commercial] has Cantore showing up at a beach on a nice summer day for vacation. Everyone there, knowing who he is, starts evacuating the beach as soon as they lay eyes on him.
 
 
== Multiple Media ==
* In the ''[[Doctor Who Expanded Universe]]'', Death is female with a bit of a sick attitude toward life. On at least one occasion she interacts with the Doctor and his companions, even making a deal with him that involves him murdering someone. According to [[Big Finish]], the Master is "Death's Champion".
** [[Word of God]] is that the Time Lord "gods" are just bored [[Sufficiently Advanced Aliens|Eternals]], which may mean she isn't ''actually'' The Grim Reaper. There's a [[Lawyer-Friendly Cameo]] by [[Neil Gaiman]]'s Death in the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novel ''Happy Endings'', who might be the real deal.
 
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{{quote|'''[[Statler and Waldorf|Statler:]]''' Someone should send the Grim Reaper to the writer of this script!
'''[[Discworld|Death:]]''' {{smallcaps| I visit the writer of ''every'' script.}}
'''Statler:''' Do-ho-ho... huh? }}
}}
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:God Tropes{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Afterlife Tropes]]
[[Category:Gothic HorrorAngelic Tropes]]
[[Category:The Grim ReaperCharacter]]
[[Category:Cosmic Entity]]
[[Category:Death Tropes]]
[[Category:AngelicGod Tropes]]
[[Category:Gothic Horror Tropes]]
[[Category:Older Than Print]]
[[Category:Afterlife Tropes]]
[[Category:The Grim Reaper]]
[[Category:God Tropes]]
[[Category:Public Domain Character]]
[[Category:Gothic Horror Tropes]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Grim Reaper, The}}