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Defied Trope

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Defied Trope (trope)
Arcee is certainly not doing that kind of Technology Porn, thank you very much.

Ira Kane: [pointing at one of the aliens] Snag it and put it in the bucket.
Harry Block: Uh-uh. I've seen this movie; the black dude dies first. You snag it.
Evolution defying Black Dude Dies First (while also simultaneously naming it)

A Defied Trope happens when a character knows, In-Universe, that a trope is about to happen, either due to being Genre Savvy or because someone is trying to invoke it, and then actively attempts to avert it, subvert it, or invert it. They might succeed or they might fail. The point is that the character is attempting to avoid a straight run of the trope, in-universe.

Contrast Invoked Trope, Exploited Trope, Discussed Trope.

Not to be confused with a simple Subverted Trope, which is not prompted by any characters.

noreallife

Subtropes:


Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 
  • In the Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth (2009) manga, Gumshoe defies Treachery Cover-Up, when it turns out that the murderer, Police Chief Chase Clink killed someone to prevent a secret that would seemingly do harm to the police department's credibility from coming to light, although unbeknownst to the killer, it actually would not have been relevant. Gumshoe says that even though he knows how people will react, the public needs to learn the truth.
  • In The Disastrous Life of Saiki K., Chiyo tries to make a romantic Crash-Into Hello meeting with Saiki happen by carrying a stack of books and "coincidentally" bumping into him. Saiki, aware of her plan and not interested in her scheme, uses his psychic powers to dodge her attempt and avoid having a conversation with her.
  • GaoGaiGar defies Destructive Savior early on by introducing the Dividing Driver as early as Episode 3. It creates a safe battlefield in any area by shifting the rest of the matter out of the way temporarily.
  • Girls und Panzer:
    • Kay defies Curb-Stomp Battle in the match between Saunders and Oarai. She chooses not to come at them with all their tanks despite outnumbering them two to one, because she believes it would be unfair, after hearing that one of her subordinates was eavesdropping on Oarai's radio transmissions without her knowledge or approval.
    • In "Motto Love Love Sakusen Desu", Dreaming of a White Christmas gets defied; because Oarai and all other schools are on ships, they can go anywhere for the colder months. As such, they end up just off the coast of Australia, where it's warm enough to wear bikinis and swimwear, much to Saori's chagrin, as she thinks a white Christmas is more romantic.
  • In a episode of Hozuki's Coolheadedness, King Enma try to set-up various romantic situations between Hozuki and Maki by creating Contrived Coincidences with the help of the gods. Hozuki successively defies each and every one of them. When he make it so that they so happen to run into each other while both in the human world, he keep his usual stricly professional attitude and stay focused on what he was doing. When she happen to feel dizzy from hunger and nearly collapse on him, before a bug appear to scare her so that she jump at him, he simply suggest that she get inside a café to rest. And when she is about to literally fall right into his arms from a stair, instead of catching her, he use one hand to deflect her fall so that she safely land sitting on the ground.
  • Kagome Higurashi from Inuyasha openly defies Unrequited Tragic Maiden and Love Makes You Evil. When she's told repeatedly by The Baby that her feelings for Inuyasha are completely one-sided and she's selfish for even thinking he can love her back, that he'll never love her like he loved Kikyou and that she must pull a Face–Heel Turn, she ultimately tells him that yes, she is jealous of Kikyou and she is aware that Kikyou will always be important to Inuyasha... but that said circumstances do NOT invalidate HER own feelings, and no one has right to tell her otherwise. And then she rejects the Baby's FHT offer.
  • Contrasting the invoked Bodyguard Crush in Kaze no Stigma, Kazuma goes out of his way to keep Ayano at a distance and offend her as much as possible so she doesn't get attached to him either. It doesn't really work.
  • In one of The King of Fighters manga, Kyo Kusanagi defies Smooch of Victory when he stops his just-released-from-a-Death Trap girlfriend Yuki from kissing him, because he believes that it's his fault she was kidnapped and emotionally broken.
  • In the Magic Knight Rayearth II anime, Ferio busts into Fuu's in-progress escape from Fahren's ship, being her Love Interest and all. When she starts casting a spell to assist as though she's half of a Battle Couple, Ferio stops her—he wants to do a Rescue Romance instead. He does live up to the Battle Couple trope a few episodes later, when they both fight monsters summoned by Debonair.
  • Rei Kiriyama from March Comes in Like a Lion defies both attempts by his adopted sister Kyoko to manipulate him into losing his professional shogi matches on purpose.
  • Maria no Danzai: Screw This, I'm Outta Here! is defied by Mari Nagare/Maria Akeboshi, who explicitly targets Kowase and Shikimi first because she knows that, unlike the rest of the gang, the two would try to run away the second they realized someone was after them. And Maria has no intention of letting any of them escape her wrath.
  • Monthly Girls' Nozaki-kun defies Fake Relationship in one issue. Mikoshiba explains to Sakura that he needs a fake girlfriend in order to ward off a suitor. Both of them are very familiar with romance stories, and thus independently realize that the flow of the conversation will lead to them fake-dating (either by Sakura offering or Mikoshiba asking), which neither of them want to do, so they both trail off...and get offended that the other didn't offer/ask. Mikoshiba winds up bringing Seo, who is more or less convincing.
  • In My Hero Academia, the League of Villains attempt to invoke the Rival Turned Evil trope with Bakugo, kidnapping him in order to turn him to their side. They have good reason for thinking this would work, as Bakugo initially seems to be a perfect candidate to corrupt, being a childhood friend-turned-bully of Izuku Midoriya, and having grown resentful of Midoriya's recent progress as a hero. Not to mention that Bakugo is seen as such a violent, ill-tempered Jerkass that even the other heroes have doubts that he will remain on their side. However, Bakugo ultimately refuses to join the League, and even accepts his classmates' help in his rescue despite his Inferiority Superiority Complex and Don't You Dare Pity Me! attitude.
  • One Piece defies Shoo Out the Clowns because according to Word of God, he specifically gave Luffy Rubber Man powers to show that no matter how serious things got, there would be at least one "silly" element.
  • The second season of Princess Tutu is all about the characters defying the roles assigned to them by the writer of the story.
  • In Sengoku Youko, the Tribe of the Void, who made their nation prosper for years by finding a way to artificially manipulate fate, thinks they can Screw Destiny by using time travel and a massive amount of spirit energy to undo the meteor crash that annihilated their nation. However, the seer tells them that the meteor is the universe's way of punishing them for abusing the power of fate, so even if they kill Senya and stop its fall, other cataclysmic natural disasters will strike them until they're all wiped out.
  • Summer Time Rendering defies Cassandra Truth when Shinpei, who is aware that looping back to the past after an evil clone of Mio killed him twice is an outlandish claim, decides to avoid being labeled a crazy person by filming evidence of Shadow Mio and using it to successfully convince Mio and Sou of the existence of the shadows. He decides to leave out the time travel part until later loops when he has Shadow Ushio to back up his story.
  • At the end of Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, A God Am I is deliberately shot down by the potential god-figure himself, who in response to his potential use of power and leadership simply states that he is "just Simon the Digger." And if that trope had not been defied, the Bad Ending from the beginning of the show would have happened.
  • In the second Tiger & Bunny drama CD, Karina assures Barnaby that she has no intention of letting their animosity towards each other become Belligerent Sexual Tension. So far she's proven successful: not only is any attraction between them still absent, they're now competing with each other for Kotetsu's attention.
    Karina: You know those situations where people hate each other's guts at first, but then developing feeling for each other?
    Barnaby: Yeah?
    Karina: That's not going to happen. I'll rip down those Event Flags myself if I have to.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! GX:
    • Judai says he realizes it's pointless to give a Kirk Summation to Yubel.
    • When Asuka is encouraged to become an Idol Singer, she actively refuses to become one.

    Comic Books 

    Fan Works 

    Films — Animation 

    Films — Live-Action 

    Literature 

    Live-Action TV 
  • There's an LJ icon with "Spy Daddy" from Alias that reads, "I am five steps ahead of you. I kill you in step four."
  • In the first episode of Season 5, Buffy stakes Dracula again when he reforms from dust, and then reminds him she's still there when he starts reforming again, prompting him to blow away back to Transylvania.
    • Then in the last episode of Season 5, Giles tries to invoke The Needs of the Many in making the case that it may come to a point where killing Buffy's not-really-sister Dawn is the only way to save the world (failure of which would lead to Dawn's death regardless, as well as everyone else's). Buffy defies the trope, forcing its aversion, by threatening that she would kill anyone who attempted to kill Dawn.
    • Much earlier, in Season 3, Faith expects Willow to try to appeal to her better nature and get her to pull a Heel–Face Turn, clearly intending to pull a Redemption Rejection. She's taken aback when Willow instead gives her a "The Reason You Suck" Speech, telling her point-blank that it's too late for her and she's now nothing but "a big, selfish, worthless waste."
  • Community: Abed's short story in "Horror Fiction in Seven Spooky Steps" is a truly bizarre example: he creates a Rational Fic in which the protagonists, a couple that are being stalked by an escaped Serial Killer, defy every single thing that would make them Slasher Film victims: they were already reluctant to have sex even before hearing about the escaped killer, they instantly call the police from their fully charged cell phones, the police promptly answers the call, and then they arm themselves and then go stand back-to-back in the most defensible part of the cabin to wait for the cops to arrive. The reason why this is a bizarre example is because it's a deconstruction of rationalist fiction — Abed got so focused in defying tropes for logic's sake that he didn't make the story entertaining to anybody but himself (notably, the protagonists never encounter any obstacles, like the killer the story takes a long time to set up).
  • Daredevil (2015) defies We Have to Get the Bullet Out!. Matt brings up to Claire when asking for help in patching up Vladimir's bullet wound. Claire tells him this is what he should do if he wants to kill the guy.
  • Doctor Who:
    • "Utopia":
      The Master: "Now then, Doctor! Ooh! New voice! ... Anyway, why don't we stop and have a nice little chat where I tell you all my plans and you can work out a way to stop me — I don't think!"
    • "The Armageddon Factor": The Fourth Doctor has just assembled the Key to Time, granting him absolute power over all of creation. He launches into an "A God Am I" speech, but drops the act immediately and reassures Romana that he's perfectly fine and has no delusions of deity.
  • Firefly
    • After being defeated, The Dragon declares We Will Meet Again. Mal promptly kicks him into an engine intake.
    • When Mal and Wash are captured by Niska, Zoe goes to rescue them, but Niska is in the mood for a Sadistic Choice. Which is promptly short-circuited when Zoe, before Niska can even finish his offer, immediately chooses Wash.
    • When Mal fought Niska's new Dragon, Zoe tells the crew to stand back because This Is Something He's Got to Do Himself. Mal, who's very badly injured and exhausted (and even died during torture at one point), knowing what poor shape he's in and how much he's struggling, immediately yells that it really isn't, allowing the gang to open fire on his opponent, taking him down and saving Mal's life.
    • When Mal and Zoe are being held for questioning by local authorities, Jayne makes a bid for power, knowing the rest of the gang don't really have the ability to control him without Mal and Zoe there. However, prior to his take-over bid, he was ranting about leaving those idiots behind instead of rescuing them while Simon was patching up his injuries. Guessing that Jayne was serious about taking over, that no-one would be able to control him and that he wouldn't want to rescue Mal and Zoe, Simon pre-empts Jayne's Appeal to Force moment by secretly injecting him with a general anaesthetic instead of a painkiller. When Jayne attempts to take control of the ship, he keels over unconscious instead. The rest of the crew (including Mal and Zoe when they learn what happened) are immensely relieved by Simon's foresight.
  • Hannah Montana: Miley is Genre Savvy enough to check for feet under the stalls before talking about her Secret Identity with Lilly in the ladies' room.
  • The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: Durin relates to Elrond about his people's tradition of having secret names they reveal only to close family, such as wives, parents and siblings. Durin gets quickly emotional at the thought of losing his best friend forever and wants to reveal his secret name to Elrond, only to be stopped before saying a single word. Elrond just simple considers they should save this moment for better times in the future.
  • The X-Files: In the Myth Arc episode "Tunguska", Mulder travels to Russia and takes Russian American Alex Krycek with him, defying Language Barrier. Never mind that Krycek is his nemesis (especially in this episode). He's a former FBI agent who collaborated with the shady secret government organization, but his language skills proved quite useful. He later ratted Mulder out since Krycek had connections to every shady organization on the show.
  • The Vicar of Dibley: When David proposes to Geraldine she ultimately decides to turn him down, saying just because they're the Only Sane People in the village doesn't mean they should get married.
  • In A Different World, Whitley loved wearing furs, and when some tried to turn it from Pretty in Mink to Fur and Loathing, she would just throw it back at them, pointing out that many of their complaints were invalid or hypocritical (although once in a while it didn't work).
  • Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.:
    • On the season 1 finale, Big Bad cyborg John Garrett gets rebuilt and seems prepared for a season 2 comeback, when Phil Coulson promptly shoots him with a BFG.
    • In season 3, when Andrew fears he's about to become Lash permanently, he surrenders himself to S.H.I.E.L.D., defying Never Got to Say Goodbye. Coulson joins in, urging May (who was, in turn, trying to defy a Hope Spot) to talk to him.
    • After they have successfully captured Ward and he refuses to talk to anybody else but Skye, Coulson refuses because he knows Ward will try to Hannibal Lecture her and "fill her head with lies", and only agrees when Skye insists that she can deal with that herself. During the interrogation, every single time Ward tries to so much as say a syllable for anything that isn't an answer to her questions, Skye hits the "off" switch of the intercom and turns to walk away, forcing Ward to draw her attention again so he can continue to answer questions.
  • Della Street from Perry Mason had refused a number of marriage proposals by Perry, being aware that Demoted to Satellite Love Interest will likely follow.
  • Sex Education:
    • Bigger Is Better in Bed is defied when Kyle (who bases his advice off of porn) tells Dex that his girlfriend isn't orgasming because he might have a small penis. Otis and Maeve set Dex straight, telling him that penis size isn't the most important factor in satisfying sex.
    • Anwar (who is gay) defies the Tragic AIDS Story: he has seen too many movies where a gay character dies of AIDS, and thus never engages in unprotected sex. The nurse also clarifies that medications that will help HIV-positive people live normal lives now exist.
  • Schmigadoon!: Genre Savvy theater fan Melissa is dumped in the wilderness. When the lighting turns purple and a similarly dressed dancer approaches her, she realizes it's a Dream Ballet and shuts it down.
    Melissa: No no, we're not having a dream ballet. They're annoying and stupid and slow everything down. Nobody likes a dream ballet.
  • In the second episode of Superstore, the black, wheelchair-bound Garrett knows that the company magazine likes playing up Inspirationally Disadvantaged on its covers, so when a reporter drops by to do a story about the store, he spends the day avoiding her photographer to avoid being played as such.
  • Psych: Doing this is what got Mr. Yin (a Serial Killer with a penchant for choosing a detective and forcing him to go through overly-complicated Criminal Mind Games to hopefully prevent yet another death) caught. Shawn Spencer, after a while of getting dragged around by Yin's scheme, decided to quit and toss the cell phone Yin was using to deliver the clues into the ocean. It was a Batman Gambit to piss off Yin and force him (or rather her) to do something stupid. That "something stupid" ended up being her walking up to Shawn with a gun and angrily ranting that he ruined her game, while Shawn's friends hid nearby. When Mr. Yang (Yin's father and partner in crime) appears, Shawn attempts to defy the Criminal Mind Games trope again by asking Mr. Yin for help with information regarding Yang (and Yin is glad to help), but unfortunately Yin's information is all concealed behind elaborate puzzles. Shawn actually gets upset and tells Yin to just give him the damn info straight, but Yin's madness makes them unable to do it.
    Mr. Yin: [upset] That's not how my mind works.
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation: The episode "The Measure of a Man" defies Do Well, But Not Perfect. Riker is ordered to be the prosecutor in a hearing to determine whether or not Data will be considered Just a Machine by the Federation and taken away to be disassembled for study, and when Riker obviously hesitates about doing that because Data is his friend, he is told that if he refuses or accepts but the judge suspects that he is doing a sub-par performance because of said friendship, she will immediately pass the sentence that Data is a non-sentient machine.

    Theme Parks 
  • Walt Disney built Walt Disney World with the intent of avoiding the Gone Horribly Right scenario Disneyland fell victim to: his company purchased large tracts of cheap land in a quiet but economically viable part of Florida, keeping the project a secret to avoid a burst of land speculation. This was ultimately successful: they acquired enough space for four different theme parks, two water parks, and numerous other attractions.

    Video Games 

    Webcomics 

    Web Animation 

    Web Original 

    Western Animation 
  • In one Sonic Says segment of Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog, Tails is about to slam his computer in frustration when Sonic restrains him before delivering An Aesop about learning how to use computers.
  • The Amazing World of Gumball:
    Gumball: R-Really? B-But, Anais is this true?
    Anais: I'm gonna have to go with Dad on this one. You're kind of a loser, Gumball.
    Richard: Exactly.
    Anais: Sorry.
    • Defies Cue the Flying Pigs in "The Apology", Miss Simian becomes obsessed with proving Gumball and Darwin are troublemakers, but all her attempts end up failing. So when confronted by Principal Brown, he demands of her to apologize to the kids, but Miss Simian says she'll apologize "when fish start to walk". Darwin starts to point out himself, but Gumball, knowing that would just make things worse, keeps him quiet.
  • American Dad!:
    • Defies the Mood Whiplash in "Stan’s Best Friend". Stan reveals the reason he doesn’t allow dogs in the house becuase of a horrible event in his childhood. Stan once had a dog of his own named Freddy, but after his father left, his mom told him to shoot down Freddy, as he was diagnosed with Air Bud Disease. Once Stan killed him, he found out that Freddy wasn’t sick at all, his mom lied to him becuase the apartment they were moving to, didn’t allow pets. Stan was so heartbroken by that story, he refused to undercut it with a joke, and leaves the flashback on a sad note.
    Francine: [sobbing] Are you sure you don’t want to come up with some joke to end that?
    Stan: Nope. Keeping it sad.
    • Defies the Convenient Character Replacement, in the B-Plot of "Top of the Steve", the Smiths are saddened when Steve runs away from home (with Roger tagging along) and ends up in an all-girls school thata designed like a Poorly Disguised Pilot for a Spin-Off, especially Stan, then a girl named Spunky Rooster suddenly shows up, and decides to live with the family. Stan was very ‘noyed with her, so he shipped her to St. Paul. Then, Stan's long-lost, never-before-mentioned cousin, John Michael Heaton suddenly comes to live with the family. Only for him to annoy Stan even more, so he kicks him out, as he really misses Steve. But when Steve comes back, he instantly welcomes him in full arms.
  • Amphibia:
    Hop Pop: [sighs] She was a fierce woman.
    • Defies the Overly Long Gag in "The Plantars Check In", Sprig goes on a shopping spree with the Royal Credit Card, but then he drops it off from a floor balcony, so he rushes to the elevator to retrieve it, only to be joined by an elderly couple. They ask him to take them to the 19th floor to the casino. But once they get there, they correct themselves to go to the 18th floor, but they were mistaken again.
    Elderly Newt 1: Nope. This isn't the casino either. Looks like we'll have to go to every floor until we find the right one.
  • In the Ben 10: Ultimate Alien finale, Vilgax defies the Demoted to Dragon trope by faking submission to Diagon, taking advantage on him to get rid of the third member of the Big Bad Ensemble and then out-gambit his "master" by consuming him, thus remaining the final villain.
  • In Bob's Burgers episode "The Equestranauts", Bob Belcher defies All for Nothing. When Tina's favorite horse doll is stolen, Bob goes undercover at a convention as a fan of the show the doll is from to get it back. After being caught and almost given an embarrassing tattoo (while getting a small part of it on his rear) he gets the doll back. Tina then decides she's too old to play with dolls and puts it away. Not pleased with her decision after everything he went through, Bob quietly, then shouting, orders Tina to continue playing with it which she does. The same episode also defies Only Smart People May Pass when the man who stole the doll places it in his room's safe as a final act of defiance and says that the code is an incredibly obscure piece of trivia of the show (Bob had to study a lot of it to infiltrate the convention). Bob just calls hotel security and explains what happened, and they open the vault for him.
  • At the end of an episode of Darkwing Duck, he's forced to work with Quackerjack, one of the regular villains, to stop a greater villain. When the greater villain is stopped, Quackerjack asks if this is where they show the greater villain love and kindness, and he vows to mend his evil ways. Neither Quackerjack, nor Darkwing think so. They just beat him down further.
  • DuckTales (2017) defies Ominous Message from the Future in "Last Christmas!". Dewey travels back in time to meet his tween-age mother Della and uncle Donald. Towards the end of the episode, when the twins deduce that Dewey is a relative from the future, he immediately attempts to warn them that a reckless adventure will leave Della lost in space and presumed dead. Before he can get a word out, the twins shut his mouth before he could say a word.
    Young Donald: NO! Keep your mouth shut!
    Young Della: You can't warn us about our future. You'll disrupt the time stream!
    Young Donald: Haven't you ever seen any movie?
    Dewey: Oh yeah.
  • The Earthworm Jim episode "Hyper Psy-Crow" almost ends with a "Here We Go Again!" ending (actually called that) after a Reset Button of the episode's events. Jim won't stand for it, and just drops a cow on Psy-Crow before he can enact his scheme again.
  • Family Guy: In Road To Germany, during a time travel adventure to WW2-era Germany to rescue a time-lost Mort, Brian and Stewie are captured by Hitler and threatened with execution... unless they can perform an elaborate musical number (all three previous ''Road To...'' episodes contained one). Brian and Stewie quickly grab a pair of top hats and cane and prepare to burst into song, only for Mort, who's had more than enough at this point, to interrupt them.
    Brian/Stewie: Wheeeneeever-
    [The two rush to Mort on the warp pad, and teleport back to the present]
  • Gravity Falls: The episode Irrational Treasure defies The Greatest Story Never Told and Success as Revenge. After the search for the hidden meaning of Pioneer Day leads to Dipper and Mabel Pines discovering that the government of the United States changed the founder of Gravity Falls from disgraced ex-President Quentin Trembley to Nathaniel Northwest (the town's fool and manure shoveler) to maintain Trembley's Un-person status, Mabel (who began this mess to find something to make Pacifica Northwest upset) decides to keep quiet and find happiness in being weird (because she and Trembley were two of a pod). Dipper, still upset about Pacifica’s bullying of Mabel, says he "didn't learned anything", gives Pacifica the government's files, and walks back to Mabel with a big smile on his face as Pacifica reads them and gets upset.
    Dipper: Man, revenge is underrated! That felt awesome!
  • Hazbin Hotel: It's Charlie Morningstar's goal to defy Beyond Redemption with the hotel. She believes that no demon is truly beyond help, and that anyone can be redeemed to Heaven if they put in the effort. Trouble is, very few people think she can succeed. Alastor is hanging around the hotel specifically because he thinks she'll fail, and it'll be fun to watch her squirm. Meanwhile, Adam (and all of Heaven, from the way he tells it) think demons are irredeemable monsters who they kill for sport, with Adam outright telling Charlie that her dream is impossible. Even though she is right that sinners like Angel Dust can change for the better, it doesn't get him into Heaven since not even Heaven's leadership knows what it actually takes to get there in the first place. Ironically Adam is more irredeemable than the sinners he purges and ends up dying completely unrepentant, but even then, Charlie made a point to spare him and wasn't happy to see him killed.
  • Kim Possible: In "Rappin' Drakken", Dr. Drakken launches his Hypertronic Devastator Drone without giving Kim a chance to stop it before the Magic Countdown concludes:
    Kim: Wait, no countdown?
    Shego: No. No, he's actually learning.
    Drakken: During the time it takes the computer voice to count backwards from ten, you always manage to defeat me. Not anymore!
  • King of the Hill
    • Defies A Lesson Learned Too Well. In "Rich Hank, Poor Hank", Bobby mistakenly thinks that his father is rich when he overhears Hank telling Peggy about his $1,000 annual bonus from work and mistakenly gets the idea that Hank makes that much per day. At first, Bobby tries to get his father to spend his money, which backfires when Hank tries to teach Bobby the value of a dollar by showing how much money Bobby spent and suggests Bobby could make money by taking littered cans to the recycling center; but this only reinforces Bobby's misjudgment that Hank is being stingy. Bobby steals Hank's emergency credit card and goes to the mall. After Bobby is caught and he tells Hank he knows he's rich, Hank clarifies Bobby's earlier misconceptions — the $1,000 check was an annual bonus and the strongbox of oil receipts was a collection of receipts what Hank has spent on the truck, such as oil changes. They return all of the items which Bobby had purchased, save for a nonrefundable jet ski. Bobby, feeling bad for the trouble he caused and learning of his family's real income, works hard at his punishment and adopting Hank's attitude towards the value of a hard day's work and an honest dollar. At first, Hank is happy and proud of Bobby, but when they try to sell the jet ski to a rich father buying it for his spoiled son Eric, Hank becomes uncomfortable when he sees that Bobby is too eager to please Eric, who treats him like garbage. This prompts Hank to decide not to sell the jet ski to Eric's father. As Hank and Bobby ride the jet ski to test it, he tells Bobby they're not selling the jet ski, they will sell it in a year and carry it on his credit card until then. The episode ends with Hank and Bobby talking about a responsible way to use a credit card and Hank happy that Bobby learned his lesson about earnest work and not behaving like that spoiled brat.
    • Defies Ungrateful Bastard. After Dale offers to help John Redcorn get some of his tribe's land returned to him, John ends his affair with Nancy realizing that it would be an awful way to repay a man he now considers to be a friend.
  • Asami Sato from The Legend of Korra defies Clingy Jealous Girl and Green-Eyed Monster, as she never clings to her boyfriend Mako to spite Korra, and when she finds out about the kiss incident between Korra and Mako, she mostly keeps her feelings to herself. Until it's time for her to confront Mako on it, and as she does so she makes a point of not hating Korra herself. She also defies Daddy's Little Villain. To the point that when her evil father Hiroshi offered her a shock glove, she took it...and used it on him.
  • The Loud House episode "No Spoilers" defies Birthday Party Goes Wrong. The kids (except Leni — because they think she'll spoil the surprise — and Lily) are making a surprise birthday party for their mother Rita. However, things don't work out: Lana uses toilet paper, gum, and brown balloons (which Lynn thinks look like poop) as decorations, Lynn's subs she provides are covered in Blazing Inferno Hellfire Sauce, Lola's cake is too sweet, Luan's jokes are all about Rita being old, Luna can't think of a song Rita would like, and Lisa has invited three men Rita doesn't like. However, this all happens before Rita gets home and when they realize things are going south, they get Leni over, who throws a successful party for Rita, because only she knows what decorations and food Rita likes, and what kind of people Rita wants to be at her party.
  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic:
    • In "The Best Night Ever", the ponies are running away from the chaos they've caused at the Grand Galloping Gala and Rarity drops her glass slipper. Pinkie Pie lampshades the trope of The Girl Who Fits This Slipper and Rarity, who has no interest in meeting Prince Blueblood ever again, screams and crushes the slipper into shards.
    • In "Just for Sidekicks", Spike, the pets of the Mane Six and the Cutie Mark Crusaders have to hide from the Mane Six when they step into their train car. Spike's Growling Gut threatens to expose them, setting up the trope of Laser-Guided Karma for Spike, but Angel defies it by retrieving his last gem which he uses to quiet his stomach.
    • Occurs to a musical number in "Somepony to Watch Over Me," which comes to a screeching mid-word halt when Apple Bloom is reminded that her big sister is en route to her room.
      Apple Bloom: We're gonna make my sister see
      I don't need her watchin' over me...
      Scootaloo: STOP! No time for a song! (Listens carefully to some hoofsteps approaching from outside Apple Bloom's door) Applejack's coming!
  • The Owl House episode "King's Tide" defies Plot-Mandated Friendship Failure. At the start of the episode while the kids are on their way to the Head to save Luz, Hunter and Alador get into a shouting match over the latter's ability to pilot the airship. Gus proceeds to yell at Hunter for distracting the pilot, and Amity, wanting to get to Luz as fast as possible, joins them all in shouting over each other. Their Palismen interrupt the fight by dragging over a crate of food, and everyone decides to just eat something instead of bickering over nothing.
    Amity: Look... We're all exhausted and terrified. Let's focus our energy on helping Luz instead of fighting each other.
  • In Recess, in the Season 2 episode "The Breakup" Theodore Jasper "T.J." Detweiler defies Friendship Favoritism. Ms. Grotke asks the class to write about their best friends. This causes problems for T.J., however: he can't choose a best friend. And while this strains his friendship with his friends and causes the gang to break up, he still can't choose a friend. In the end, T.J. writes a report about how all five of his friends are his bests friends, and how special they all are. This ends up reconciling the group.
  • The Simpsons:
  • South Park:
    • Attempted, but failed in "Two Days Before The Day After Tomorrow". Stan wants to just confess what they did to avoid the usual antics, and it doesn't work, instead turning into an I Am Spartacus moment.
    • Done successfully in "Krazy Kripples". The main characters agree that they don't want to have any part in the episode's plot. They actually don't (letting secondary characters run the episode), and agree at the end that they're glad that they didn't get involved.
    • In "Woodland Critter Christmas", Stan tries to defy a Gilligan Cut by arguing with the narrator. He fails.
    • In "Pandemic" and "Pandemic 2: The Startling", Craig is dragged along on the boy's adventure, and gets stranded with them in Peru. They find ancient ruins depicting Craig in some kind of prophecy, but he says he doesn't care, and the boys spend the next several minutes in a montage walking with Craig as he just declares over and over that he wants nothing to do with it. Ultimately subverted when he again tries to walk away from the villain, and steps on a panel that causes him to shoot Eye Beams at it while he does nothing but comment in a deadpan tone.
  • Teen Titans:
    • In "Fear Itself", Beast Boy, being as Genre Savvy as he is, defies Let's Split Up, Gang! when the team face horror movies brought to reality:
      Beast Boy: Split up? SPLIT UP?! Did you not see the movie? When you split up, the monster hunts you down one at a time, starting with the good-looking comic relief guy - ME!
    • Raven is aware of the Bad Powers, Bad People trope, and despite the fact that her powers come from her demon father, she does her best to be a good gal. Jinx eventually does the same.
  • Young Justice (2010): The episode "Home Fires" defies Targeted to Hurt the Hero. The episode reveals that the Light has knowledge of every single person near and dear to members of the Justice League and if the Light wanted to assassinate them and strike a deep psychological blow to the League, they could do it. But they will not, because they know that the next thing the Justice League would do is to go all in on destroying the Light by any means necessary to avenge their loved ones (at absolute best, the Light considers this plan a Nuclear Option). So when Ocean Master (out of pettiness and a few loose marbles) steals the dossier and decides to set off a bomb in a gathering of said family members, the Light kills him to stop it.

 
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Alternative Title(s): Defied

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You're in Love, Charlie Brown

Charlie Brown picks a flower apart to see if the Little Red-Haired Girl loves him, but before picking the last petal, Linus stops him, believing that tearing apart a flower is unlikely to cause anything to happen.

How well does it match the trope?

5 (9 votes)

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Main / LovesMeNot

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