You Called Me "X" - It Must Be Serious: Difference between revisions

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* If she's his boss, he'll call her "Jefe," or "Boss" or "Mein Frau" or "Slave Driver" or any number of variations.
* If she's a relative, he'll call her "Sis" or "Goober" or "Pinhead".
* If Alice [[Do Not Call Me "Paul"|prefers to be called Cindy]], he'll call her Alice. Every time, and reveling in it when it makes her scream in aggravation.
 
Unless something serious has come up. Then he'll drop the nicknames and call her by the name she wants to be called by.
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* An impostor Bob could call Alice "Alice" in an instance where Alice knows for certain sure Bob would never do so, which would tip her off to the reality that ''[[Did Not Do the Research|that's not Bob]].''
 
Related to [[First Name Ultimatum]] and [[Full Name Ultimatum]] -- except it's not generally played for comedy.
 
[[Honorifics]] also merit mention seeing as anime characters in this situation will likely start using more affectionate terms for each other. One of the many complaints of western fandom is that important moments lose their impact because of the limitations of the English language in translation.
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And the inverse is true as well. Bob may call Alice "Alice" all the time, but refer to her by an old nickname he has normally avoided using to underscore a serious or intense situation.
 
Compare against [[My Name Is Not Durwood]], [[OOCOut-of-Character Isis Serious Business]].
 
{{examples}}
 
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* A heartbreaking example in ''[[Puella Magi Madoka Magica]]'' episode 10, wherein Homura calls Madoka by her real name {{spoiler|in a previous timeline, right after Madoka asks her for a mercy kill. Her last words in that timeline are "You finally called me by my real name." Homura is unable to respond to this at all, and merely wails as she shoots Madoka's soul gem.}}
** Also invoked on other occasions. In the {{spoiler|current timeline}} Homura tells Madoka to address her by her first name, {{spoiler|as is fitting for best friends to do}}
** Up until Episode 8, Kyouko is too much of a [[Jerkass]] to call anyone by their name. {{spoiler|As she watches Sayaka turn into a witch, Kyouko yells out [[Say My Name|"SAYAKAAAAAAA!!"]], a sign of her [[Character Development]].}}
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* In ''[[Pokémon Special]]'', Pearl usually calls his best friend 'Dia', but when serious calls him by his full name, Diamond.
* Riza Hawkeye from ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist (manga)|Fullmetal Alchemist]]'' uses this trope to trick the shapeshifting Envy, masquerading as her boss, Roy Mustang. Envy, disguised as Roy, meets up with Riza and calls her by her title, "Lieutenant", as he always does. She responds by pulling out her gun and telling him that Roy always calls her by her first name when they're alone. Here's the kicker: this ''isn't true''; [[Bluff the Impostor|she just said that to trick Envy into reacting and revealing himself.]] And then she proceeds to pwn his ass.
* In ''[[Tokyo Mew Mew]]'', Masaya refers to Ichigo by her last name, in one episode however, when he is chasing her, he refers to her by her first, causing her to stop. In the "[[Macekre|dub]]", he just said her first name but louder.
* In ''[[Tsubasa Chronicles]]'', Kurogane and Fai normally don't use each other's names - the former uses variations of "mage" or "idiot", while the latter uses pet names such as "Kuro-puu", to Kurogane's unending annoyance. After the [[Cerebus Syndrome|Tokyo arc]], Fai finally starts calling him simply "Kurogane" all the time... to put distance between them, [[Be Careful What You Wish For|which Kurogane isn't all too happy about]]. By the end of the series, they've settled their issues and Fai seems to favor the slightly respectful but still affectionate "Kuro-sama". Also to a lesser extent between Sakura and Syaoran, who normally refer to each other "Syaoran-kun" and "Sakura-hime" with a couple notable exceptions. (Rather annoyingly, official published translations rarely pay attention to this.)
* Hestia in ''[[Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon?]]'' is quite able to pronounce Ais Wallenstein's name correctly, but usually calls her "Wallen-whats-it" because Hestia is the jealous sort. [[Once a Season]], when things are serious, Hestia calls Ais by her full name.
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
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* In ''[[Batman]]'', the Al-Ghul family has this with the Dark Knight. Ra's Al-Ghul refers to Batman as "Detective". If he ever uses anything else, it's a sign something's seriously wrong. Talia tends to refer to Batman as "Beloved", and likewise, it's serious, if she ever refers to him otherwise.
** When Ra's died and Talia took up the title of Ra's Al Ghul, she started calling him ''Detective''.
* In Uncanny ''[[X-Men (Comic Book)|Uncanny X-Men]]'' #183, Colossus started calling Kitty Pryde "Kitty" instead of the [[Russian Naming Convention|pet-name "Katya"]] when he broke up with her. More recently, when they got back together in [[Joss Whedon]]'s run on Astonishing X-Men, he went back to calling her "Katya".
* In ''[[Archie Comics Sonic the Hedgehog|Sonic the Hedgehog]]'', Robotnik calls [[The Starscream|Snively]] by his real name, Colin. This it what clues him in that his boss is suffering from a [[Villainous Breakdown]].
* When the [[Fantastic Four|Human Torch]] stays in the negative zone to hold off [[Bolivian Army Ending|the entire horde of Annihilus]], The Thing, who almost always treats him like a kid and uses the name Johnny (or matchstick), calls him John.
* ''[[Kingdom Come]]''. Bruce calls Superman "Clark", knowing it completely annoyed him, since Supes had fully rejected his humanity and only answered to "Kal". In the final scene, Superman once again re-adopts the name Clark, and ''prefers'' it, finally rejoining the rest of the world.
 
== [[FanficFan Works]] ==
* Some authors use this in ''[[Mass Effect]]'' fanfiction. In the games, Commander Shepard is never referred to by a first name, since the player can chose it. Many authors will stick with this, because it seems out of character for others to refer to Shepard as anything but "Shepard." This can go as far as audience expectations; many readers will be thrown off if a character refers to Shepard by a first name, some even prefer that not even the narration uses it. Clever authors will invoke this trope using their Shepard's first name in the same way as a [[Precision F-Strike]], where otherwise sticking to the expectation but but having a single use of Shepard's first name will add a tremendous amount of weight to a scene.
* This is used a lot in ''[[Bleach]]'' Shunsui/Nanao fanfictions, with him dropping the -chan on her name if the situation is serious.
* In ''[[Weekend at Hisao's|Weekend At Hisaos]]'', when Misha calls up Hisao to yell at him for upsetting Shizune during their argument and force him to open up about his problem with seeing his old friends again, she uses a [[Full Name Ultimatum]], which is also one of the few times she doesn't call him "Hicchan".
 
== [[Film]] ==
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* In [[The Flintstones]] movie, Barney tries to get BamBam to call him "Dada" all through the movie. He finally does during a death-defying rescue... which overjoys Barney so much that he doesn't notice the beam about to hit him in the head.
* In the American remake of [[The Ring|The Ring 2]], Rachel's son Aidan insists on calling his mother by her first name. So when {{spoiler|Samara [[Demonic Possession|takes over Aidan's body]] and subsequently [[Something They Would Never Say|starts calling her "mom",]]}} she realizes something's up.
** At the end, Aidan calls her "mom" again. She tells him to call her Rachel.
 
== [[Literature]] ==
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* Maya Angelou in ''I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings'' recalls a conversation with her mother when she was afraid she was turning into a lesbian. She fears the worst when her mother calls her "Marguerite" instead of one of her many nicknames. When her mother calls her "Ritie", she knows it's nothing serious.
* In Linnea Sinclair's ''Games of Command'', Admiral Kel-Paten only calls his flag ship captain by her surname, Sebastian, as is professional. But when she suddenly falls ill, he addresses her as Tasha, revealing that his feelings for her are less than professional. After her condition has stabilized, he reverts to calling her Sebastian.
* In the ''[[Fever Series]]'' by Karen Marie Moning, Jericho only refers to Mac by her first name when she's been brutalized or badly injured -- otherwiseinjured—otherwise it's Ms. Lane in a somewhat derisive tone.
* In ''[[Black London]]'' once learning Pete's full name, Jack uses it to prove he's being sincere rather than wily and dodgy.
* Mother considers [[Matthew Reilly|the Scarecrow]] far too badass to be called 'Shane', until {{spoiler|he's [[Heroic BSOD|about to commit suicide]]}}.
* In ''[[The Bartimaeus Trilogy]],'' magicians never use their birth names, because [[I Know Your True Name|those have magical power over them]]. The djinni Bartimaeus thus ''always'' calls Nathaniel by his real name, until the end of the second book when he finally calls him by his pseudonym. Bartimaeus says it's because he's just like all the other magicians now. Nathaniel takes it as a compliment. [[Comically Missing the Point|It wasn't suppose to be]].
* In ''[[Hawksong]]'' by [[Amelia Atwater Rhodes]], Danica is walking with her bodyguard, Andreios. As the Avians (Danica included) are very stiff and formal, she knows that Andreios is very serious when he calls her "Dani" in public. In turn, she uses Andreios' full name, instead of his nickname "Rei" to let him know that ''she's'' serious.
* In the [[Amelia Peabody]] mysteries, Amelia and her husband scrap all the time, but she knows he's really angry at her when he calls her "Amelia" rather than the usual "Peabody."
* Mr. D (Dionysus) never calls [[Percy Jackson]] by his real name, usually "forgetting" it and saying something like "Peter Johnson" instead. Except for once, at the end of the last book, after Percy manages to save all of the gods and the entire world. When called out on it, he immediately pretends to have done nothing of the kind, but it's obvious that he really is proud of Percy.
* Used in ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' with Jaime and Brienne; from their first meeting on, they snipe at each other constantly, and the only terms of address used are "Kingslayer" and "wench". When Jaime wants to convince Brienne that following the Kingsroad is a really bad idea, he finally calls her by name.
 
== [[Live Action TV]] ==
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** New series, the Doctor has occasionally called companion Amy by her real first name, Amelia, when she's about to do something silly.
*** This is a holdover from the first time they met. Amelia was seven and introduced herself to the Doctor with her full name. About an hour later, she was 19 and preferred to be called Amy. He preferred Amelia, although most of the time he just calls her "Pond."
** "[[Doctor Who/NS/Recap/S3 E1S29/E01 Smith and Jones|You called me 'Doctor'!]]"
* In the ''[[CSI]]'' episode "Grave Danger", it took Grissom calling Nick by his family nickname (Pancho) to break Nick out of his panic.
* In every ''[[Star Trek]]'' series ever, calling someone by their first name instead of their rank or last name indicates something very serious is going on.
** This goes all the way back to ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]''. Spock usually referred to Kirk as "[[The Captain|Captain]]"; he only called him "Jim" when his emotional state was affected, for good or bad. A good example is in "The Doomsday Machine", when he calls him "Captain" and then "Jim" in the same conversation:
{{quote|'''Spock:''' Captain, you're getting dangerously close to the planet killer.
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** See Tom Paris and B'elanna Torres' [[Now or Never Kiss|now or never almost kiss]] for another example.
* In ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'', Buffy always calls Spike by that name, until she breaks up with him "for real" and calls him William.
* Sort of inverted on ''[[Joan of Arcadia]]'' -- when—when Joan's classmate Adam keeps calling her "Jane," she gets used to it because Adam's clearly the show's [[Cloudcuckoolander]]. But then they become a couple, and ''then'' when they break up, he starts calling her "Joan." It's a sign that the rift has healed when he goes back to "Jane."
** This is also how Joan usually identifies the random strangers who are God speaking to her -- byher—by their calling her by her first name. (Which inevitably leads to a scene where Joan flips out on a stranger who knows her name... who just happened to read it off her name tag.)
* At the end of season 3 of ''[[Lost]]'', Sawyer's in a funk after finally killing Cooper. Sawyer repeatedly addresses Kate by her name instead of "Freckles" or another nickname when she confronts him about what's wrong:
{{quote|'''Kate:''' Ever since you got that tape from Locke it's like you've been sleepwalking. You don't care about our friends, fine, but it's like you don't care about anything anymore. And since when did you start calling me Kate?}}
** It's a sign that things are getting really serious when almost ''everyone'' begins referring to Sawyer and Hurley by their given names (James and Hugo, respectively) instead of their nicknames.
* Aside from his wife the First Lady, only five people in seven seasons of [[The West Wing]] ever called President Bartlet "Jed" to his face -- andface—and only Leo has done it twice.
{{quote|'''Bartlet:''' "You haven't called me Jed since I was elected."}}
* On ''[[Burn Notice]]'', Sam has called Michael by his first name (as opposed to "Mike" or "Mikey") exactly once, when he found confirmation that a crazy conspiracy theorist who'd been trying to enlist their help was right about a plot to kill several American spies.
** Sam combines this with [[Something They Would Never Say]] in the season two finale. He's been tasked with getting Michael's mother, Madeline, out of town to keep her safe from the bad guys, but she refuses to run. She jokes around with Sam, offering him a beer - something Sam would never turn down. He slams his hand on the counter and says "I don't want a beer, Madeline!"; refusing the beer and his calling her Madeline (instead of "Maddie") tells her he's dead serious.
* On ''[[The X-Files]]'', the only time we ever really hear Mulder called Scully "Dana" is when things get deadly serious and extremely dangerous. The favor isn't really returned, since [[Embarrassing First Name|Mulder doesn't like his first name]].
* Either used or inverted in ''[[Battlestar Galactica Reimagined(2004 TV series)|Battlestar Galactica]]'' when Billy, in an early season, is attempting to get through to Dee, who is in shock. At Roslin's suggestion, he calls her by her full name and rank, which snaps her out of it at least enough to notice them. Referring to her by her affectionate nickname doesn't work.
* ''[[Eureka]]'': Sheriff Jack Carter and several friends become trapped inside his house by its sentient AI. When his deputy Jo Lupo shows up to check on him, Carter wants to let her know what's going on, but, of course, the house is listening. So he tells Lupo that everything is fine, but addresses her as Josefina (which no one ever does) as a way to alert her that something isn't right.
* On ''[[Law and Order: Criminal Intent|Law & Order: Criminal Intent]]'', on those rare occasions when Eames referred to Goren as "Bobby," it was never, ever a good sign. And when ''he'' calls ''her'' "Alex", you know the shit is about to ''really'' hit the fan.
* Similarly, when ''[[Law and Order Special Victims Unit]]'' Detectives Benson and Stabler stop the "El" and "Liv" and use "Elliot" and "Olivia", it's a bad sign.
* ''[[Starsky and Hutch (TV series)|Starsky and Hutch]]'': Captain Dobey calls Starsky "Dave" when he's been poisoned and has less than 24 hours to live. Starsky and Hutch crack jokes about the lengths required to get a first name out of him.
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* Played with in the ''JAG'' episode "Full Engagement." Harm always calls Sarah MacKenzie by her nickname "Mac." During an emergency landing in Harm's Stearman, Harm mutters, "Come on, Sarah." Mac later says she knew the situation was serious because Harm called her Sarah. Harm explains that Sarah is his plane's name; he named it after his grandmother.
* In ''[[Ashes to Ashes]]'' Ray almost never refers to [[Fair Cop|Alex]] by name, and then only as [[Last-Name Basis|Drake]], but when they all get a bit of [[Character Development]] in series three and he begins to respect her skills despite her gender he refers to her as [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming|"ma'am"]]. Also in a similar vein, when Gene's in a good mood he calls her Bolly, Bollykegs, Bolly-knickers, Bolls or Mrs-lady-woman over there, when he's angry he calls her Drake and when it's serious, Alex.
* [[Inverted Trope|Inverted]] in ''[[Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide]]'', [[Only Known by Their Nickname|Moze]] spends an entire episode trying to get her friends to refer to her by her real name, Jennifer. Ned is the most reluctant, but when he finally relents, she's almost ran over because she only responds to him when he says Moze out of habit.
* In the ''[[Sherlock Holmes]]'' stories, Holmes and Watson only refer to each other by last name unless the situation is deadly serious. (In the Granada TV Series, this happens in "The Devil's Foot" when Holmes is under the influence of a psychotropic drug, and Watson is trying desperately to snap him out of it.)
** Subverted in the new series of [[Sherlock]], which has a modern setting, in that they call each other 'John' and 'Sherlock'.
* When [[Stargate SG-1|Colonel O'Neill]] [[Last-Name Basis|and Captain Carter]] start calling each other "Jack" and "Sam", it is ''literally'' a life-or-death situation.
* [[Person of Interest|Finch and Reese]] are usually very formal and only call each other by their last names unless they're really worried the other is in a really bad situation or are really serious about something they're going to say (though occsionally Reese uses Finch's first name when he wants to be especially irritating to his very formal and very private boss).
* ''[[El Chavo Deldel Ocho]]'': When Dona Florinda gets angry at her son, (yes, she does get angry at him at times) she shows him by calling him "Frederico" instead of "Quico" or any sweet nickname she usually calls him.
 
== [[Professional Wrestling]] ==
* Any time a wrestler is called by his real first name (e.g. Mark for [[The Undertaker]] not [[Mark Henry| Henry]] , Paul for either [[Triple H]] or [[The Big Show]] and not Heyman, or Phil for [[CM Punk]] and so on), you know things just got serious. Especially in real life, since wrestlers usually call each other by their ring names outside the ring.
** And when it's done blatantly on-air to the point of Lampshading, one can usually count on an audience reaction somewhere between maniacal cheering and awed silence. Or both at the same time, from different sections.
{{quote|'''[[CM Punk]]:''' So let me ask you this, is this little conversation between [[CM Punk]] and [[Triple H]]? Or is it between Phil Brooks and [[Do Not Call Me "Paul"|Paul Lavesque]]?}}
* During their feud, [[Jeff Hardy]] called Edge and Lita, '''Adam''' and '''Amy''' respectfully due to [[Real Life Writes the Plot| the love triangle]] among them outside of the ring.
 
== [[Video Game]] ==
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* In ''[[The Order of the Stick]]'', the Monster in the Darkness finally calls O-Chul by his real name when {{spoiler|he breaks out of his cage to try to kill Xykon}}.
** Played [[Tear Jerker|another way]] in the prequel, "Start Of Darkness": {{spoiler|Redcloak and his brother, Right-Eye, have a conversation where they promise to call each other "big brother" and "little brother" instead of the names they've adopted for Xykon's convenience. At the end of the book, after Redcloak has mortally wounded Right-Eye, their last words to each other are "Goodbye, little brother." "Goodbye...''Redcloak''."}}
** Another instance, when Belkar decides being left behind is an elaborate prank:
{{quote|'''Belkar''' OK, elf, enough with the jokes. You got me, fair enough, now bring the ship back. [[Beat Panel|...]] Vaarsuvius?}}
* ''[[Scary Go Round]]'': [http://scarygoround.com/?date=20090901 "Oh, Eustace"]
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* In the 1985 ''[[Pound Puppies]]'' TV special, Cooler spends the entire time calling Violet 'Sam,' until she's in the path of an out-of-control car. Her reaction to him calling her by name to warn her: "Cooler, you called me Violet!"
* In the ''[[Magic School Bus]]'' episode about weather, when everyone buys into the idea that Ralphie is the superhero Weatherman except [[Only Sane Man|Keisha]]. At the end, when Ralphie has been disillusioned by his inability to stop the thunderstorm he made, but they need his knowledge to get out of it, Keisha urges him, "Come on, Weatherman, think!"
* In ''[[Hey Arnold!]]!'', Arnold's grandfather used to call him "Short ManShortman", though Arnold didn't mind thewhat nicknamehas been confirmed by [[Word of God]] to be [[Last-Name Basis]]. But when his grandfather referred to him by given name, Arnold knew it was important.
** Likewise, Helga had a number of rude epithets for him, including "Football Head", but in private, she could indulge her romantic feelings for him and only then did she call him Arnold.
* In ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]'', Shayera abandons her Hawkgirl moniker after her part in the Thanagarian invasion. For the most part, that's respected. But when the Hawkgirl name comes up again, it is ''always'' for serious reasons:
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* On ''[[The Secret Saturdays]]'', Van Rook's first name is used when circumstances become dire for him. {{spoiler|Like moments before he dies after a [[Heroic Sacrifice]] }}
* In ''[[Codename: Kids Next Door]]'', when one operative refers to another operative by name instead of number, it means either A. They're particularly close or B. Something serious is happening or about to happen.
* Episode 11 of ''[[Scooby Doo Mystery Inc]]'' had a pissed-off Velma call Shaggy, who chose Scooby over her, Norville to express her hostile reaction to losing out to a dog.
* MIB - Kay calls Jay "Jay" - compared to how he's ranked Jay from Tiger (competent streak) to Slick (regular) to Sparky (did something REALLY stupid) - when Jay gets REALLY intuitive against heat-loving (to the point of psychopathy) aliens. Too bad Jay's not good enough (at golf) to hold it.
* [[Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines|Dick Dastardly]] insists on being called "chief" by his Vulture Squadron charges, but Zilly will usually call him "D.D." out of a nervous tic. And Muttley will invoke his name during a grumble ("Sanfrassin' razzaffrazzin Rick Rastary!") after getting cheated out of a medal.