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Adventure aquarium shark bridge dare to cross logo
Adventure aquarium shark bridge dare to cross logo





  1. ADVENTURE AQUARIUM SHARK BRIDGE DARE TO CROSS LOGO UPDATE
  2. ADVENTURE AQUARIUM SHARK BRIDGE DARE TO CROSS LOGO SERIES
  3. ADVENTURE AQUARIUM SHARK BRIDGE DARE TO CROSS LOGO TV

It's especially likely to alienate the audience if the method of removal seems unsatisfying or mean-spirited. It happens often enough that it can lead to The Firefly Effect on a character level - viewers don't want to get emotionally invested in characters they like in case they get written out later. The idea is to extract cheap Emotional Torque by making everyone sad that such a great character has left.

  • A popular character is removed from the show or even killed off.
  • ADVENTURE AQUARIUM SHARK BRIDGE DARE TO CROSS LOGO TV

    note TV Tropes does not consider "Nuking the Fridge" a separate or well-defined concept from "Jumping the Shark" - in fact, "Nuking the Fridge" as a separate trope and as a redirect to this trope is a member of the Permanent Red Link Club because people kept trying to add it without being able to define it. Complicating matters is the term "nuking the fridge", named after an infamous scene in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, whose definition seems to drift around even more than "jumping the shark" but basically amounts to "jumping the shark but for movies" it seems to have been borne out of a generation who never experienced Happy Days now having their own experience with how frustrating this is. The term "jumping the shark" was also rather nebulously defined because it could either mean the point at which the show started sliding (which is what happened with Happy Days) or the point of the show's final collapse. Many have tried to define a catch-all moment when a show jumps the shark, and many have failed. Notably, it was only after Happy Days ended that anyone truly realised what they had just seen it's difficult to diagnose a shark-jump immediately after it happens. The term was originally coined in the mid-1980s by writer Jon Hein. So by jumping the shark, Fonzie has forgotten an important lesson, and the show is now backtracking on what made it compelling, in an effort to stay fresh.Īfter this, "jumping the shark" entered TV parlance to refer to the moment when the show irreparably changed for the worse. In fact, it betrayed Fonzie's character development in an earlier landmark episode, Fonzie is seriously injured while jumping his motorcycle over fourteen barrels in a televised stunt, and he admits that it was stupid of him to have done something so dangerous just to prove his courage. But while people liked Fonzie, this didn't make the show better. And it didn't get better Fonzie, at that point an Ensemble Dark Horse, quickly became Flanderized into an increasingly superhuman character who was the very essence of "cool" itself, and overtook the existing protagonists to become the focus of the entire show. Over-the-top and not in keeping with the show's existing tone, it became the point where viewers started panicking that the show was going to change on them, and not for the better. The expression comes from the episode of Happy Days in which Fonzie, dressed in his trademark leather jacket, literally jumps over a shark on water skis. It's reached its peak, it'll never be the same again, and it's all downhill from here. But it usually has the opposite effect - the viewers can see through it and realize that the show has finally run out of ideas.

    ADVENTURE AQUARIUM SHARK BRIDGE DARE TO CROSS LOGO UPDATE

    The point is that the show feels like it has to update in order to stay fresh. This can range from something relatively small, like the introduction of a new gimmick, to something that totally changes the show, like a Genre Shift.

    ADVENTURE AQUARIUM SHARK BRIDGE DARE TO CROSS LOGO SERIES

    Jumping the Shark is the moment when an established Long Runner series changes in a significant manner.







    Adventure aquarium shark bridge dare to cross logo