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Major League

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Major League
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A 1989 sports comedy film, written and directed by David S. Ward, about a Ragtag Bunch of Misfits.In this case, the misfits in question are the Cleveland Indians,note  now the Cleveland Guardians a Major League Baseball team that hasn't made a postseason appearance in over three decades and is indisputably the most moribund franchise in the sport. (Which was Truth in Television at the time). After the team's elderly owner suddenly expires, ownership passes to his much younger, ex-showgirl Trophy Wife Rachel Phelps (Margaret Whitton), who's a Rich Bitch and Corrupt Corporate Executive. Despising both the dreary city of Cleveland and the terrible reputation of the team, Phelps dreams of moving the Indians to a sunnier, more glamorous location – and it turns out that she can make this dream come true, as a clause in team's contract with the city states that if attendance falls below 800,000 for the season, she will have the right to unilaterally relocate the team.To accomplish this goal, she assembles the sorriest bunch of ballplayers she can find to ensure that the fans won't come out to see the games. This includes aging, past their best veterans like catcher Jake Taylor (Tom Berenger) whose knees and career are hanging by a thread, former star Roger Dorn (Corbin Bernsen), who now pays much more attention to managing his investments than to baseball, and Eddie Harris (Chelcie Ross), a pitcher whose arm is worn out but makes up for it with cunning and various thoroughly illegal tricks and substances which he uses to give a little extra juice to his pitches. The veterans are joined by off-the-street rookies with no experience or reputation, like hot-headed, ex-con pitcher Rick Vaughn (Charlie Sheen), who's got serious control issues with both his pitches and his personal life, and the voodoo-practicing slugger Pedro Cerrano (Dennis Haysbert), who can't hit a curveball to save his life. Lastly there's the brash and fast Willie Mays Hayes (Wesley Snipes), who just sort of shows up at the team's training camp despite not being invited and wows the staff enough to earn a spot. All of the above players wind up under the gruff but caring guidance of new manager Lou Brown (James Gammon), who's spent his entire career with the minor league Toledo Mud Hens note a real-life AAA farm team for the Detroit Tigers and has never managed a game at the big-league level.With the local fans in Cleveland disgusted by the inept team who they don't know and have no connection to, Phelps seems to be well on her way to succeeding with her plan. However, as the team spends the season navigating personal issues, in-house rivalries, and the (sometimes glaring) holes in their game, they begin to slowly come together and start outperforming expectations. And when the team finds out about Rachel Phelps's scheme, they can think of no better way to spite their boss than to do the unthinkable and win the pennant no matter how many obstacles she throws in their way.The film was a critical and commercial success, with many of its memorable quotes worming its way into the baseball lexicon ("Juuuust a bit outside!"). Longtime baseball man Bob Uecker, an announcer for the Milwaukee Brewers who was also a comedic actor and played the Indians' snarky play-by-play man Harry Doyle, became a truly iconic, humorous figure within the sport thanks in large part to this movie. The Indians' fanbase (along with the rest of Major League Baseball) embraced the film as the best thing to happen to the franchise in decades, and it served as an unintentional precursor to the team's real-life winning ways in the 1990s, even popularizing Rick Vaughn's climactic stride out of the bullpen into a now-common practice in MLB.The success spawned a Lighter and Softer sequel in 1994, Major League II, which brought back most of the cast in one capacity or another, sans now-a-superstar Snipes, with Omar Epps replacing him in the role. Several new characters – naive farmboy Rube Baker, Japanese import Isuro "Taka" Tanaka, and arrogant superstar Jack Parkman (who is briefly a teammate but swiftly gets traded and becomes a bitter rival to the Indians) – entered the fold, while the plot deals with the team letting the success of the previous year go to their heads and having to find their way back to their winning ways once more and take care of unfinished business.Major League II faltered with critics and at the box office, but another sequel, Major League: Back to the Minors, was released in 1998. Minors switches the franchise from the Indians to the Minnesota Twins and follows their (fictional) AAA team, the South Carolina Buzz. The main character of the film is player-turned-manager Gus Cantrell (Scott Bakula), who tries to fix the various issues within his team while settling an old score with the manager of the Twins, Leonard Huff (Ted McGinley, thereby signifying that the series was Jumping the Shark). Some old faces also returned in Cerrano, Baker, Taka, Dorn (now the Twins' owner), and Harry Doyle, but the movie was a massive Box Office Bomb, setting a then-record for the worst opening weekend ever for a film opening in over 2,000 screens. A fourth film has languished in Development Hell ever since, but the original movie is still regarded as a sports-comedy classic in most circles.Now has a Character Sheet.
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Look Behind You
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Look Behind You: Hayes himself does this in the second movie: after hitting a high pop fly, he runs the bases, gets behind the 2nd baseman, then yells "I GOT IT!", causing him to drop the ball. note  This is a big "bush league" no-no in real-life baseball and is a certain way to get a fastball at your head next time up, not to mention losing the respect of your peers.
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No Celebrities Were Harmed
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No Celebrities Were Harmed: Harris, the old pitcher who uses an assortment of hidden greases and gels (and occasionally his own snot) to load the ball, is clearly based on famed spitballer Gaylord Perry.
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Blind Without 'Em
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Blind Without 'Em: Not truly blind, but Lou eventually realizes the problem with Rick's control: he needs glasses.
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Tempting Fate
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Tempting Fate: In the third movie, when Gus Cantrell asks God for a good player or just strike him dead right there, he's knocked unconscious by a line drive. Of course, he wakes up to Cerrano's smiling face in the dugout.
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Unreliable Narrator
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Unreliable Narrator: To punch up the radio calls for the tepid Indians games, Doyle tends to comedically embellish the action, such as reporting Hayes's check-swing dribbler as a scorching grounder that the second baseman had to knock down. During Vaughn's streak of 12 consecutive balls: "How can these guys lay off pitches that close?" His description of opposing players is equally as colorful. His description of the Yankee's closer: And of their power hitter:
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A Father to His Men
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A Father to His Men: Gus Cantrell, though he can be harsh at times (and, in fact, for the first half of the movie, the hot hitting prospect hates how he's so hard on him), gets the best out of every one of his players.
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Overly Narrow Superlative
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Overly Narrow Superlative: In the intro to the second film, Vaughn is described as setting a record for strike-outs in one season by an ex-con.
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The Quiet One
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The Quiet One: Harry Doyle's commentating partner, Monty, who rarely speaks, even on-air.
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I Need a Freaking Drink
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I Need a Freaking Drink: In the second movie Bob Uecker (Harry Doyle) starts opening day drinking Avian water, but switches to beer when the Indians lose, piling up empty bottles and moving on to hard liquor as the season progresses and things get worse and worse. Eventually, he passes out wearing a wifebeater, leaving the announcing to his hapless partner Monty. Fortunately, he improves when the team does.
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Dare to Be Badass
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Dare to Be Badass: Taylor, to Vaughn, when he’s called to pitch to Haywood: “This guy’s the out you’ve been waiting your whole life for.�
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The Prima Donna
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The Prima Donna: Dorn is one, spending most of the film as an arrogant jerkass who thinks he's entitled to special treatment and refuses to do anything that might potentially cause him to suffer an injury. This lasts until Dorn blows off a play that should have been routine and Taylor gives him a "The Reason You Suck" Speech to snap him out of it.
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Poor, Predictable Rock
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Poor, Predictable Rock: Hog Ellis in the third movie is a pitcher who can throw a dizzying fastball and that's it. He learns a decent curveball in in the last third or so of the movie, but that's still a very limited repertoire for a star pitcher (which is, of course, why he's still in the minors in the first place.)
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Losing the Team Spirit
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Losing the Team Spirit: The second movie opens like this, with members of the team either getting a swelled head from their success (Hayes, Vaughn), losing their competitive fire (Cerrano), realizing their age is catching up with them (Taylor) or retiring (Dorn).
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Ironic Echo
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Ironic Echo: In the first film, Vaughn's first major-league inning, he throws 12 straight balls. In the second film, his first inning Vaughn strikes out the side on nine straight strikes. Of course, things quickly go downhill from there. Second movie, before Cerrano's last at-bat: After Cerrano hits a homer to give the Tribe the lead:
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Brutal Honesty
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Brutal Honesty: When Gus starts giving Pops a "best for the team" speech when moving him from the outfield to first base, Pops asks for brutal honesty.
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Fire-Forged Friends
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Fire-Forged Friends: After butting heads over religious differences Harris and Cerrano celebrate together at the end of the first, as do Dorn and Vaughn; Dorn slugs him for sleeping with his wife (which even Vaughn knows he had coming to him), but picks him up and hugs him again.
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Post-Victory Collapse
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Post-Victory Collapse: Played with. Taylor, who has bad knees that could potentially end his athletic career at any moment if he injures them again, has to run fast enough to beat out a ground ball in the film's final play. Taylor pushes his aging body and aching knees as hard as he can running to first base and immediately collapses face first after reaching it, raising a fear with viewers that Taylor may have in fact injured himself. Taylor is up again pretty quickly though and apparently fine as Hayes scores the winning run.
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Captain Ersatz
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Captain Ersatz: Averted quite refreshingly, thanks to MLB's relaxed practices of letting films use its images and logos, even for R-rated films such as this and The Fan.
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Hollywood Heart Attack
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Hollywood Heart Attack: Averted with Lou's. One, he doesn't actually die from it; two, no one actually knows he's having one because he's in the middle of chewing out his players at the time. He also doesn't do any of the "stereotypical" heart attack mannerisms, like clutching his chest.
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Speak of the Devil
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Speak of the Devil: When Lou is fed up with the "nickel-and-dime" equipment and resources in the clubhouse, he says aloud that he's "gonna get that bitch on the phone"; the camera pan reveals Rachel Phelps already there, firing back, "You wanted to talk to the bitch?"
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Flipping the Bird
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Flipping the Bird: While Rachel isn't looking at them, the entire team gives her a simultaneous bras d'honneur, then simultaneously drop their arms when she turns around. Also Hayes, after he's trying to slide into second, but skids up short. The opposing player mockingly motions him to come closer so he can be properly tagged out, and Hayes flips him off.
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I Read It for the Articles
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I Read It for the Articles: Rube actually does read Playboy for the articles... which Taylor uses to help him overcome his throwing problems. When those problems suddenly return at the end of the movie, Taylor gives him a Frederick's of Hollywood catalog.
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Five-Second Foreshadowing
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Five-Second Foreshadowing: When Cerrano puts on a light show during his first batting practice, Lou is flummoxed how he fell into their laps.
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Foreign Cuss Word
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Foreign Cussword: When Rachel Phelps buys back the team in the sequel and taunts her way through the locker, Tanaka is able to toss some vicious insults at Phelps in his native Japanese. Since he does it with a polite smile and bow, Phelps thinks he's complimenting her.
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Zeerust
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Zeerust: An unexpected source at times. Vaughn's velocity is clocked at 96 at the start and Lou was impressed. Today, that's just expected for a late innings reliever or a #1 or 2 starter. (Although the 101 and 102 he clocks as the last pitch he throws of each movie are still truly impressive.)
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Recurring Extra
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Recurring Extra: A few players on the team get seen (or at least their name mentioned by Harry Doyle) without getting any speaking lines or doing much to interact with the main cast in any way. The most prominent case is Tomlinson, the third starting outfielder (the other two being Hayes and Cerrano), who is mentioned several times by Doyle while playing defense and also just misses hitting a home run in the ninth inning of the last game against the Yankees.
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Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon
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Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon: After Dorn refuses to dive for a ground ball that nearly costs them a win, Taylor tells him that if he ever lollygags in the field again: "I'm gonna cut your nuts off and stuff them down your fucking throat!"
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Strictly Formula
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Strictly Formula: The movie could not be more clichéd (misfit team pulls together to win, with players like the catcher with bad knees, the slugger who can't connect, a runner who can't get on base, a pitcher with no control, etc.). It gets away with this by doing the old (ancient!) formula really well, which sometimes counts for more than being original, as well as putting a twist on Down to the Last Play. Tropes Are Not Bad indeed.
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Woman Scorned
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Woman Scorned: Suzanne Dorn, wife of Roger. After catching her husband in the background heading upstairs with a random woman on a news report at a hotel loaded with Indians fans, she immediately shuts off the television and hits the town in a very skimpy red dress, zeroing in on the first Indians player she finds, who happens to be Rick Vaughn, and bedding him, not disclosing who she is until the morning after. Next time she sees her husband, she absolutely delights in the fact she has something to tell him.
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Malaproper
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Malaproper: With Taka's first scene in Back to the Minors: In fact, in his challenge to Cerrano in the 2nd movie, he has to consult a Japanese-to-English dictionary in the midst of his rage to find the words, and the best he can come up with is "You have no marbles!"
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Mysterious Past
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Mysterious Past: It's never stated where Hayes came from or how he showed up to the Indians' spring training. Touched on by Doyle, who remarks that "we don't know where Hayes played last year."
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Parody Commercial
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Parody Commercial: Right Guard in the second movie ("Anything less would be uncivilized... upside down!")
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Not This One, That One
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Not This One, That One: Played straight, when the team is about to board their plane after the Cleveland Indians' Rich Bitch owner seeks to make them finish dead last.
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Important Haircut
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Important Haircut: In the second movie, Vaughn adopts a "corporate" image thanks to his new girlfriend and publicist, Rebecca Flannery. This includes him wearing suits and doing a commercial for Right Guard Sport Stick at a country club. He also gets rid of his trademark haircut from the first film. This new persona lasts until the final scene, where we see him now sporting his infamous hairdo once again, thereby shedding his "corporate" image and returning to his "Wild Thing" persona. Everything Vaughn does in that scene shows that "Wild Thing" has returned. Just before he comes out, Vaughn, off screen, finally tells off the obnoxious Indians fan who had been pestering him and insulting him throughout the film. The fan sees that "Wild Thing" has returned before we do and immediately shuts his mouth. Afterwards, he comes out of the bullpen wearing his leather vest from the original. Once people notice that "Wild Thing" has returned, the song "Wild Thing" is played over the stadium's P.A. system as Vaughn walks to the mound, recreating a scene from the first film. Vaughn then pitches while wearing his skull and crossbones glasses that he hadn't worn in the second film up to that point. All of this leads to him showing that he's gotten his intensity back and now remembers how to throw a fastball after apparently having forgotten how to do so. Then, after the Indians win the pennant, he dumps Rebecca after telling her that she's much too good for him and gets back together with his ex-girlfriend, Nikki, the woman who helped him bring back "Wild Thing".
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Sleeves Are for Wimps
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Sleeves Are for Wimps: Vaughn has to be reminded by Brown that "we wear caps and sleeves at this level, son". During the American Express ad in the film, he's wearing a Tux with the sleeves torn off. When Taylor takes him out to dinner, he chooses a place that requires ties. So he wears a tie... over his usual outfit. Vaughn's first line in the restaurant? "I look like a banker in this."
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Big Game
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Big Game: An Enforced Trope in all three films.
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Check, Please!
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Check, Please!: Vaughn uses it when Dorn's wife seduces him.
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Rated M for Manly
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Rated M for Manly: It's baseball in The '80s, after all.
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Major League / int_4da6ac
 Major League / int_4efe80e1
type
Lazy Bum
 Major League / int_4efe80e1
comment
Lazy Bum: Dorn is apparently still a pretty good hitter (we don't really see that, but the coaches explicitly say as much). But he's terrible defensively because he's long past caring. He does have a reason (he took a ground ball in the eye the year before, and he's not willing to lose his sight playing for a terrible team), but neither Lou nor Jake are very sympathetic.
 Major League / int_4efe80e1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_4efe80e1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_4efe80e1
 Major League / int_50b05d30
type
Disproportionate Retribution
 Major League / int_50b05d30
comment
Disproportionate Retribution: Taylor threatens to literally neuter Dorn if he keeps up his lackadaisical play. When Jake, Willie, and Rick see Lynn on a date, Rick offers to "drag him out of here, kick the shit out of him".
 Major League / int_50b05d30
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_50b05d30
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_50b05d30
 Major League / int_51923571
type
Spinning Paper
 Major League / int_51923571
comment
Spinning Paper: Well, not spinning, but the worst-to-first montages captured shots from the wins in paper form; also used to give a quick backstory on the torturous Cleveland Indians history at the start of the movie.
 Major League / int_51923571
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_51923571
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_51923571
 Major League / int_52488c54
type
Drowning My Sorrows
 Major League / int_52488c54
comment
Drowning My Sorrows: Rick after learning Lou is selecting Harris to start the do-or-die game with the Yankees. Then a hot blonde walks up and hits on him, leading to a different kind of distraction altogether...
 Major League / int_52488c54
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_52488c54
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_52488c54
 Major League / int_5619ea34
type
Blowing a Raspberry
 Major League / int_5619ea34
comment
Blowing a Raspberry: Phelps gets a huge one from GM Charlie Donovan when she tells him to sit down instead of cheering when Cerrano hits the tying home run in the final game.
 Major League / int_5619ea34
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_5619ea34
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_5619ea34
 Major League / int_644eca71
type
Rich Bitch
 Major League / int_644eca71
comment
Rich Bitch: Rachel Phelps
 Major League / int_644eca71
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_644eca71
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_644eca71
 Major League / int_680f950
type
Gilligan Cut
 Major League / int_680f950
comment
Gilligan Cut: Cut to Vaughn sitting in the bullpen.
 Major League / int_680f950
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_680f950
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_680f950
 Major League / int_6feda19d
type
Skeleton Motif
 Major League / int_6feda19d
comment
Skeleton Motif: Rick "Wild Thing" Vaughn has a skull and crossbones on the nosepiece of the Nerd Glasses that he wears while pitching.
 Major League / int_6feda19d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_6feda19d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_6feda19d
 Major League / int_7040b6bc
type
Understatement
 Major League / int_7040b6bc
comment
Understatement: The aforementioned "Juuuuuuuuuuust a bit outside..."
 Major League / int_7040b6bc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_7040b6bc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_7040b6bc
 Major League / int_72cdfc33
type
Big Bad Ensemble
 Major League / int_72cdfc33
comment
Big Bad Ensemble: Rachel Phelps in the front office and the New York Yankees on the field.
 Major League / int_72cdfc33
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_72cdfc33
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_72cdfc33
 Major League / int_7d89315b
type
"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 Major League / int_7d89315b
comment
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: Jake Taylor gives one to Roger Dorn when the latter fails to put any effort in the game.
 Major League / int_7d89315b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_7d89315b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_7d89315b
 Major League / int_7e6c0522
type
Off with His Head!
 Major League / int_7e6c0522
comment
Off with His Head!: That plywood cutout of a batter vs. Vaughn's wild fastball. Vaughn's fastball won.
 Major League / int_7e6c0522
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_7e6c0522
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_7e6c0522
 Major League / int_7f0f19e5
type
I Coulda Been a Contender!
 Major League / int_7f0f19e5
comment
I Coulda Been a Contender!: Pops in the third movie is a career minor leaguer whose closest sniff of the bigs was a cancelled callup.
 Major League / int_7f0f19e5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_7f0f19e5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_7f0f19e5
 Major League / int_7f6f9cc7
type
Honking Arriving Car
 Major League / int_7f6f9cc7
comment
Honking Arriving Car: A variant in Major League II. A muted trumpet on the movie's musical score emulates the sound of a novelty car horn when Willie Mays Hayes reports to spring training in a six-wheeled limousine with an exceptionally large entourage.
 Major League / int_7f6f9cc7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_7f6f9cc7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_7f6f9cc7
 Major League / int_81bdc398
type
He's Back!
 Major League / int_81bdc398
comment
He's Back!: Vaughn ditches the new haircut and personality at the end of the sequel. Someone in the booth even recognizes the change and plays "Wild Thing" for him.
 Major League / int_81bdc398
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_81bdc398
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_81bdc398
 Major League / int_82518cf7
type
Motor Mouth
 Major League / int_82518cf7
comment
Motor Mouth: Jake is this behind the plate to get in the heads of the hitters. Truth in Television as baseball's slow pace allows for a lot of chatter amongst players.
 Major League / int_82518cf7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_82518cf7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_82518cf7
 Major League / int_84249fbc
type
Nerd Glasses
 Major League / int_84249fbc
comment
Nerd Glasses: Rick Vaughn was fitted with them in the first movie; Lynn also has a similar pair of giant horn-rimmed glasses when she works at the library.
 Major League / int_84249fbc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_84249fbc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_84249fbc
 Major League / int_857744e7
type
Chew-Out Fake-Out
 Major League / int_857744e7
comment
Chew-Out Fake-Out: Dorn storms up to Vaughn on the mound before the latter is set to face Haywood in a big spot in the 9th, after Vaughn unwittingly slept with Dorn's wife earlier. Everyone on the team braces for a confrontation or a fight, but instead we get the following:
 Major League / int_857744e7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_857744e7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_857744e7
 Major League / int_86b21114
type
Badass Boast
 Major League / int_86b21114
comment
Badass Boast: Hayes tells Haywood that he bought 100 pairs of batting gloves for the season, "one for every base I'm gonna steal." He promptly gets picked off, but during the Indians' late-season Miracle Rally, he's seen nailing more and more pairs of battling gloves to his wall.
 Major League / int_86b21114
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_86b21114
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_86b21114
 Major League / int_875615dd
type
Truth in Television
 Major League / int_875615dd
comment
This is, of course, was Truth in Television at the time for die-hard Cleveland Indians fans (as well as Atlanta Braves fans, Washington Redskins fans, and Florida State Seminoles fans.) It is slowly becoming less so as teams like Washington and Cleveland abandon Native American mascotsnote although the Braves have significantly toned their Native chants from the 90's, 2000's down (such as the Native American inspired costumes and the foam tomahawks), though their controversial Tomahawk Chop chant remains intact. Only the Seminoles are left intact due to the grandfather clause by having their fanbase right next to the local Seminole tribe who have supported the University for decades.
 Major League / int_875615dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_875615dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_875615dd
 Major League / int_8ad43dc9
type
Ragtag Bunch of Misfits
 Major League / int_8ad43dc9
comment
Ragtag Bunch of Misfits: The team was literally built to lose. Dang, huh?
 Major League / int_8ad43dc9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_8ad43dc9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_8ad43dc9
 Major League / int_8f00b02a
type
Always Identical Twins
 Major League / int_8f00b02a
comment
Always Identical Twins: In Back to the Minors, the Buzz's second baseman and shortstop are (and played by) identical twins, whom Gus Cantrell labels "Juan One" and "Juan Two" to tell them apart.
 Major League / int_8f00b02a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_8f00b02a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_8f00b02a
 Major League / int_8f9f71a8
type
Crazy Enough to Work
 Major League / int_8f9f71a8
comment
Crazy Enough to Work: Taylor signaling to Brown for what amounts to a squeeze play with Hayes on second. Brown notes that it's "a hell of an idea" and relays it to Coach Temple and Hayes. Truth in Television, it's been pulled off before, as seen here. Taylor's is more impressive, as it's with two outs in the inning, so he has to beat out the throw for Hayes to have a chance to score, and he is an old catcher with two bad knees. Speaking of Hayes, his way of making the team in the first place is all this. He simply reports to the Indian's training camp uninvited and manages to impress Brown enough to get a roster shot, even though security had just tossed him off the property.
 Major League / int_8f9f71a8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_8f9f71a8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_8f9f71a8
 Major League / int_900d51a0
type
One-Liner, Name... One-Liner
 Major League / int_900d51a0
comment
One-Liner, Name... One-Liner: After manager Lou Brown sees his Ragtag Bunch of Misfits arrive at spring training and is amused:
 Major League / int_900d51a0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_900d51a0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_900d51a0
 Major League / int_90e31482
type
Laser-Guided Karma
 Major League / int_90e31482
comment
Laser-Guided Karma: After Harris finds himself alone in the the locker room, he notices the rum that Cerrano has poured out for Jobu and, despite an earlier warning that it is very bad to steal Jobu's rum, takes it, toasts Jobu with an insult and then downs it. Upon walking onto the field and mockingly telling Cerrano that Jobu needs a refill, Harris is hit in the back of the head by an accidentally-thrown bat and goes down on impact.
 Major League / int_90e31482
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_90e31482
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_90e31482
 Major League / int_933576c8
type
Mighty Glacier
 Major League / int_933576c8
comment
Hayes also does this to Parkman. Right before drawing a walk, he tells him he'll be around to score, and that he's not going to slide. Parkman, a large catcher, is amused at the implication that the much smaller leadoff man is going to try to run over Parkman at home plate. Sure enough, when a hit brings Hayes around to home, Parkman crouches low and braces himself for a collision... only for Hayes to jump over and past Parkman to score. Hayes even yells "SUCKER!" as he's soaring over him.
 Major League / int_933576c8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_933576c8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_933576c8
 Major League / int_950bbfa7
type
Take a Third Option
 Major League / int_950bbfa7
comment
Take a Third Option: When Lou reveals the Springtime for Hitler scheme to the team, he lets them know that if they didn't finish last to the point where Phelps could move them, she would dump the whole team and try it again. Jake prefers a third option since they'll be out of jobs soon: "Win the whole fucking thing." The team agrees.
 Major League / int_950bbfa7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_950bbfa7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_950bbfa7
 Major League / int_987ff653
type
Promotional Consideration
 Major League / int_987ff653
comment
Promotional Consideration: Parodied when Doyle can't find who the sponsors are for the post-game show. "Christ, I can't find it. To hell with it!"
 Major League / int_987ff653
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_987ff653
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_987ff653
 Major League / int_9aaf8eca
type
Crippling Overspecialization
 Major League / int_9aaf8eca
comment
Crippling Overspecialization: Downtown Anderson in Back to the Minors is a gifted hitter, but is exclusively a dead-pull hitter — primarily hitting balls to the same side of the field that he bats from — which makes it extremely difficult to do any damage to balls thrown on the opposite side of the plate. When Gus warns Anderson he's not major-league ready because of this, Anderson scoffs at the notion, but is immediately overmatched by major league pitching exploiting this weakness. Once demoted back to the minors, a humbled Anderson tells Gus he's ready to be coached up and is soon hitting the ball to all fields with authority as a complete hitter.
 Major League / int_9aaf8eca
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_9aaf8eca
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_9aaf8eca
 Major League / int_9ae42b50
type
I Have Just One Thing to Say
 Major League / int_9ae42b50
comment
I Have Just One Thing to Say: "Strike this motherfucker out!"
 Major League / int_9ae42b50
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_9ae42b50
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_9ae42b50
 Major League / int_9c4a7090
type
Springtime for Hitler
 Major League / int_9c4a7090
comment
Springtime for Hitler: Rachel's scheme to move the Indians to Miami in the first movie involves putting together a team so bad, it drives away fans and causes attendance at the stadium to plummet so much she'll invoke an escape clause to get the team out of its lease with the city of Cleveland. Of course, the team she creates ends up becoming so popular that it drives attendance through the roof.
 Major League / int_9c4a7090
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_9c4a7090
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_9c4a7090
 Major League / int_9c89a71a
type
Tribal Face Paint
 Major League / int_9c89a71a
comment
Before the final game, Harry Doyle puts out a bunch of verbal Tribal Face Paint:
 Major League / int_9c89a71a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_9c89a71a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_9c89a71a
 Major League / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 Major League / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: Inside the empty stadium, Taylor imagines himself calling his shot a la Babe Ruth and hitting a home run. He tries this ploy in the climactic game, although he subverts it by making the shot call a fakeout - he's tricking the fielders into backing up slightly in preparation for a big hit, so that they're unprepared when he bunts. Cerrano sternly warns Harris that taking Jobu's rum will have consequences. Not only does this foreshadow Harris tempting fate, but after Harris swipes the rum and mocks Cerrano, Jobu's theme begins playing.
 Major League / int_9d12bbc1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_9d12bbc1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_9d12bbc1
 Major League / int_9f6fb586
type
Leitmotif
 Major League / int_9f6fb586
comment
Leitmotif: Several characters in each movie have their own.
 Major League / int_9f6fb586
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_9f6fb586
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_9f6fb586
 Major League / int_9fdcad7f
type
Bald Head of Toughness
 Major League / int_9fdcad7f
comment
Bald Head of Toughness: Cerrano, who is the biggest, strongest, and most intimidating member of the team, shaves his head regularly. We even see him shaving for the coolness... using a big-ass knife. As for how tough he is, while Cerrano is a fairly laid-back and jovial guy, nobody dares to challenge him to his face about anything (except for Harris, who as a hardcore Christian occasionally gets upset by Cerrano's use of voodoo), and when a pitcher from another team nearly hits a teammate with a pitch Cerrano tells the other pitcher to try doing that with him and see what happens.
 Major League / int_9fdcad7f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_9fdcad7f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_9fdcad7f
 Major League / int_a1fc97c7
type
Calling Your Shots
 Major League / int_a1fc97c7
comment
Calling Your Shots: Subverted in the second movie. Willie Mays Hays, having shot a feature film with Jesse Ventura in the offseason, decides to call his shot in his very first at bat of the season...but only has warning track power. And then, just to hit home how inflated his ego was, he tries it again (and fails again) in his second at bat of the season.
 Major League / int_a1fc97c7
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Major League / int_a1fc97c7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_a1fc97c7
 Major League / int_a201dad2
type
Passive-Aggressive Kombat
 Major League / int_a201dad2
comment
Passive-Aggressive Kombat: Jake and Lynn's fiancee Tom engage in a mutual round of this in front of her and a guest party, much to her embarrassment. Finally, when they're out of earshot from everyone, the passivity stops:
 Major League / int_a201dad2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_a201dad2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_a201dad2
 Major League / int_a56e3cba
type
Language Barrier
 Major League / int_a56e3cba
comment
Language Barrier: Tanaka hits this a few times. Perfect example is his confrontation with Cerrano in the second film: The words for "marbles" in Spanish can also be used for "balls" in any context. But the common slang word for testicles in Spanish is usually the word for eggs. Hence, the word Cerrano used for his realization.
 Major League / int_a56e3cba
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_a56e3cba
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_a56e3cba
 Major League / int_a6cda066
type
Rule of Three
 Major League / int_a6cda066
comment
Rule of Three: It takes Vaughn a third attempt at Clu Haywood to get the better of him, and Cerrano's third at-bat in the climactic game to finally hit a curveball, hitting the game-tying homer.
 Major League / int_a6cda066
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_a6cda066
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_a6cda066
 Major League / int_a6e8221e
type
Status Quo Is God
 Major League / int_a6e8221e
comment
Status Quo Is God: With regards to the players in the sequel. Any player who tries to add a new dynamic to his game or life is punished for it, and the message is that these guys need to play to their strengths and leave their other ambitions behind. Hayes needs to ditch the film career and the attempt to add power to his game, while Vaughn needs to ditch his off-speed stuff and stop trying to flee his Wild Thing persona.
 Major League / int_a6e8221e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_a6e8221e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_a6e8221e
 Major League / int_a7cd0d71
type
My Fist Forgives You
 Major League / int_a7cd0d71
comment
My Fist Forgives You: Dorn to Vaughn during the celebration at the end of the first movie.
 Major League / int_a7cd0d71
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_a7cd0d71
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_a7cd0d71
 Major League / int_aaece264
type
Rousing Speech
 Major League / int_aaece264
comment
Inverted with Rachel Phelps in the 2nd movie: After they win the first three games of the series, she gives a Rousing Speech designed to make them choke... and they lose the next three games.
 Major League / int_aaece264
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_aaece264
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_aaece264
 Major League / int_ab1064b3
type
Modesty Towel
 Major League / int_ab1064b3
comment
Modesty Towel: Averted with an angry Lou (during the Speak of the Devil scene below); she sees him full frontal (thankfully, we don't):
 Major League / int_ab1064b3
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Major League / int_ab1064b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
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Major League / int_ab1064b3
 Major League / int_ac308495
type
Personal Arcade
 Major League / int_ac308495
comment
Personal Arcade: In the second movie, one of Rick Vaughn's new possessions is a Judge Dredd pinball machine for his apartment.
 Major League / int_ac308495
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_ac308495
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_ac308495
 Major League / int_ad1db87c
type
Oh, Crap!
 Major League / int_ad1db87c
comment
Oh, Crap!: Rick's reaction to finding out his latest lay is Dorn's wife. At the climax, the Yankees third baseman when he realizes that Taylor had bunted. He shouts "Shit!" before making a charge at the grounder.
 Major League / int_ad1db87c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_ad1db87c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_ad1db87c
 Major League / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 Major League / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker Gus Cantrell in the third film. While watching his aging outfielder try to track down a fly ball. Then when he gives Pops a "gift" to signal a change in position. Also, Haywood of the Yankees, who has some snarky exchanges with Hayes and Taylor.
 Major League / int_ae3d6438
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_ae3d6438
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
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Major League / int_ae3d6438
 Major League / int_aea21604
type
Even the Subtitler Is Stumped
 Major League / int_aea21604
comment
Even the Subtitler Is Stumped: With Taka several times in the third movie. (It also translates Cantrell's English to Japanese.)
 Major League / int_aea21604
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_aea21604
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_aea21604
 Major League / int_b475abfb
type
Gut Feeling
 Major League / int_b475abfb
comment
Gut Feeling: Lou summons Vaughn to face Haywood in the ninth inning, in a tie game with runners on. Taylor questions it (Haywood had "homered the only two times he's faced Vaughn"), but Lou coolly says, "I got a hunch he's due." Ricky proves him right.
 Major League / int_b475abfb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_b475abfb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
hasFeature
Major League / int_b475abfb
 Major League / int_b6caa5b4
type
Operation: Jealousy
 Major League / int_b6caa5b4
comment
Operation: Jealousy: Dorn is caught in the background of a news broadcast taking a girl up to his hotel room. His wife is watching the news at the time and retaliates by sleeping with Vaughn (who has no idea who she is).
 Major League / int_b6caa5b4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_b6caa5b4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
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Major League / int_b6caa5b4
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Hypocritical Humor
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comment
Hypocritical Humor: Hayes.
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1.0
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Major League / int_b707726f
 Major League / int_b8e3f20a
type
Demoted to Extra
 Major League / int_b8e3f20a
comment
Demoted to Extra: Lynn Wells, Jake Taylor's Love Interest in the first movie, gets one scene in the sequel and is never even mentioned again; Rene Russo reprised the role uncredited. The same can be said for Taylor himself, who is the main character of first movie, has a much smaller role in the second, and doesn't appear at all in the third.
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1.0
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Major League / int_b8e3f20a
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Precision F-Strike
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comment
Precision F-Strike: Dorn approaches Vaughn on the mound when he comes in to pitch to Haywood in the final game, and Vaughn is expecting to get his ass kicked for sleeping with Dorn’s wife. Instead, we get this gem: As well as Phelps' reaction to the playing of "Wild Thing" as Vaughn comes in to face Haywood: Cerrano gets fed up with Jobu:
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1.0
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Major League / int_bc00493f
 Major League / int_bd7fc87
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Save Our Team
 Major League / int_bd7fc87
comment
Save Our Team: With 40 games to go in the regular season, Charlie reveals Rachel's plan to Lou, telling him that Rachel intentionally built this year's team to fail, so she can move the team to Miami and fire everyone for better personnel in Miami OR to build an even worse team next year in Cleveland. After Lou relays this information to the clubhouse, Taylor remarks that the only thing left for the team to do is "win the whole fucking thing".
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Major League / int_bd7fc87
 Major League / int_bef9ad0
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Trophy Room
 Major League / int_bef9ad0
comment
Trophy Room: Hayes nails a pair of batting gloves on his wall for every base he steals. It fills up quite a bit during the Miracle Rally up the standings.
 Major League / int_bef9ad0
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1.0
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Major League / int_bef9ad0
 Major League / int_c0c5d08b
type
Large-Ham Announcer
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comment
Large-Ham Announcer: Harry Doyle combines elements of both this and Cuckoolander Commentator.
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1.0
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Major League / int_c0c5d08b
 Major League / int_c5d50cb0
type
Opposing Sports Team
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comment
Opposing Sports Team: The New York Yankees in the first movie, the Chicago White Sox in the second, and the Minnesota Twins in the third.
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1.0
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Major League / int_c5d50cb0
 Major League / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 Major League / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: One of the sponsors Dorn gets for the Indians is "Emilio's Repo Service", a likely reference to Repo Man which Sheen's brother, Emilio Estevez, starred in.
 Major League / int_c75df49a
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1.0
 Major League / int_c75df49a
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1.0
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Major League / int_c75df49a
 Major League / int_ca9c252f
type
This Is Something He's Got to Do Himself
 Major League / int_ca9c252f
comment
This Is Something He's Got to Do Himself: After relying on his god all his life to bring him luck, Pedro finally decides, at his last at bat, he has to do it on his own. And he does.
 Major League / int_ca9c252f
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1.0
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Major League / int_ca9c252f
 Major League / int_cbd2bfa3
type
Glory Days
 Major League / int_cbd2bfa3
comment
Glory Days: Jake Taylor is a former All-Star whose skills have deteriorated thanks to age and chronic knee injuries. He has some trouble letting go of his past glories, and is painfully aware that the opportunity to play in the majors again in the first film is almost certainly his last chance to do so.
 Major League / int_cbd2bfa3
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1.0
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Major League / int_cbd2bfa3
 Major League / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 Major League / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: The PG-rated Major League 2 was this to the R-rated original, which featured much more adult content and was significantly darker in tone.
 Major League / int_ce6555f0
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1.0
 Major League / int_ce6555f0
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1.0
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Major League / int_ce6555f0
 Major League / int_cfdb9e17
type
Cerebus Syndrome
 Major League / int_cfdb9e17
comment
Cerebus Syndrome: The climactic game is played as straight as can be with minimal attempts at humor.
 Major League / int_cfdb9e17
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1.0
 Major League / int_cfdb9e17
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Major League / int_cfdb9e17
 Major League / int_d0b60f23
type
GoshDangItToHeck
 Major League / int_d0b60f23
comment
Gosh Dang It to Heck!: Rube expresses his frustration with every minced oath in the book. You can tell he's getting serious when he starts using real cuss words.
 Major League / int_d0b60f23
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1.0
 Major League / int_d0b60f23
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1.0
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Major League / int_d0b60f23
 Major League / int_d19469d
type
Character’s Most Hated Song
 Major League / int_d19469d
comment
Character’s Most Hated Song: Rachel Phelps, the corrupt owner of the Cleveland Indians, cannot stand "Wild Thing", Rick Vaughn's entrance theme.
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1.0
 Major League / int_d19469d
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Major League / int_d19469d
 Major League / int_d2c0e2ed
type
Schmuck Bait
 Major League / int_d2c0e2ed
comment
Schmuck Bait: Cerrano's last at bat in the 2nd movie. Parkman just called a fastball that Pedro missed by a mile. Cerrano, pretending to still be a blissed out hippie/Buddhist, comments that the pitch was beautiful. Parkman calls the same pitch... and Cerrano crushes it. Hayes also does this to Parkman. Right before drawing a walk, he tells him he'll be around to score, and that he's not going to slide. Parkman, a large catcher, is amused at the implication that the much smaller leadoff man is going to try to run over Parkman at home plate. Sure enough, when a hit brings Hayes around to home, Parkman crouches low and braces himself for a collision... only for Hayes to jump over and past Parkman to score. Hayes even yells "SUCKER!" as he's soaring over him.
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Major League / int_d2c0e2ed
 Major League / int_d308cbb0
type
Character Catchphrase
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comment
Character Catchphrase: Willie Mays Hayes attempts to create one introducing himself as "I play like (baseball immortal Willie) Mays and I run like (Olympic medal sprinter and football star) Robert Lee Hayes." After a few at bats, Lou replies that he runs like Hayes, but hits like shit. (Or, in the censored version, "like my sister.")
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1.0
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Major League / int_d308cbb0
 Major League / int_d7472e4f
type
Kicked Upstairs
 Major League / int_d7472e4f
comment
Kicked Upstairs: In the sequel, Jake gets cut after they bring in All-Star Jack Parkman and rookie Rube Baker. Lou softens it by hiring Jake to be one of his assistant coaches, telling him he's the smartest player he's ever managed and he'll make a great coach.
 Major League / int_d7472e4f
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1.0
 Major League / int_d7472e4f
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1.0
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Major League / int_d7472e4f
 Major League / int_d959d421
type
Rotating Protagonist
 Major League / int_d959d421
comment
Rotating Protagonist: In the first movie, the closest thing the film got to a protagonist was Berenger's Jake Taylor. In the second movie, he's Kicked Upstairs to bench coach (and eventually interim manager), while the protagonist becomes Sheen's Rick Vaughn. The third movie, only tangentially related to the first two, focuses on Scott Bakula's manager character, Gus Cantrell.
 Major League / int_d959d421
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1.0
 Major League / int_d959d421
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Major League / int_d959d421
 Major League / int_db212ca9
type
Did I Just Say That Out Loud?
 Major League / int_db212ca9
comment
Did I Just Say That Out Loud?: A quiet argument between Jake and Lynn in the library about an affair he had while they were dating escalates to where she screams, "WHAT A BUNCH OF BULLSHIT, I HAVE A MUCH BETTER BODY THAN SHE DOES!", causing the library patrons to take notice at the pair. Both are pretty sheepish about it, with Jake shrugging, "She's right."
 Major League / int_db212ca9
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1.0
 Major League / int_db212ca9
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1.0
 Major League
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Major League / int_db212ca9
 Major League / int_dca70c44
type
Reasonable Authority Figure
 Major League / int_dca70c44
comment
Reasonable Authority Figure: The Indians GM, Charlie, who is aghast at Phelps' plan and lets Lou in on the plot.
 Major League / int_dca70c44
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1.0
 Major League / int_dca70c44
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1.0
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Major League / int_dca70c44
 Major League / int_dec8bfbf
type
Trash Talk
 Major League / int_dec8bfbf
comment
Trash Talk: As perhaps should be expected for a bunch of macho jocks, the first film is overflowing with it. Everything from snarky comments to what are essentially challenges to fist fights flow back and forth between the various players. Perhaps the best case being a game where Jake Taylor gets into the head of the last batter by telling him how the guy will either be a hero or a choker based on what he does at that moment, then at the very last second distracts the guy by saying he saw the guy's wife dancing with another man and implying the two are having an affair. The batter (who hit a ball that Vaughn says "Still hasn't landed yet" during his prior at bat), hits a harmless pop fly and the Indians win the game.
 Major League / int_dec8bfbf
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1.0
 Major League / int_dec8bfbf
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1.0
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Major League / int_dec8bfbf
 Major League / int_e462893a
type
Artistic License – Sports
 Major League / int_e462893a
comment
Artistic License – Sports: In Back to the Minors, the AAA Buzz play at a tiny field and barebones clubhouse akin to a low class-A team (indeed, the film was shot at Charleston's College Park, home of the then-class-A River Dogs). In real life, AAA stadiums and teams are often crown jewels for cities who in most cases do not have pro teams of their own, and sport fields and facilities not too far off in quality from their big-league counterpart (after all, organizations want their up-and-coming players to be in the best shape when called up). This is CHS Field, the home venue of the Minnesota Twins' AAA club, the (St. Paul Saints◊, compared to where the Buzz played◊. CHS Field's capacity of 7,210 is the smallest AAA ballpark in the minors (normally, Mi LB parks' capacity tends to be between 10,000 and 14,000, but its facilities, architecture and fan amenities are comparable to other AAA parks. In the second movie, Cerrano kills a bird with a swing; he goes into the outfield to mourn the bird and has to be tagged out. In Major League Baseball rules, he's out once he abandons his effort to run to the next base.
 Major League / int_e462893a
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Major League / int_e462893a
 Major League / int_e4d079c1
type
Greek Chorus
 Major League / int_e4d079c1
comment
Greek Chorus: Harry Doyle and various fans.
 Major League / int_e4d079c1
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1.0
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Major League / int_e4d079c1
 Major League / int_e4d98039
type
Down to the Last Play
 Major League / int_e4d98039
comment
Down to the Last Play: The first movie has an inventive twist, but the other two play it pretty much dead straight.
 Major League / int_e4d98039
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1.0
 Major League / int_e4d98039
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Major League / int_e4d98039
 Major League / int_e83f211c
type
O.O.C. Is Serious Business
 Major League / int_e83f211c
comment
O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Level-headed team leader Taylor threatening to castrate Dorn if he ever lacks for hustle again. Dorn's prima-donna antics pretty much stop after that.
 Major League / int_e83f211c
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1.0
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Major League / int_e83f211c
 Major League / int_ea5c413d
type
Biting-the-Hand Humor
 Major League / int_ea5c413d
comment
Biting-the-Hand Humor: True to some extent in the first film, as its US distributor, Paramount, was owned by Gulf and Western at the time of the film's release, and Gulf and Western also owned the regional sports network that began televising Yankees games in 1989, MSG Network. The making of features are full of this, as things like electronic signs in the background mock the actors who're being interviewed or call out story cliches.
 Major League / int_ea5c413d
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Major League / int_ea5c413d
 Major League / int_eaf5a1ac
type
Groin Attack
 Major League / int_eaf5a1ac
comment
Groin Attack: Where Vaughn hits a cardboard pitching dummy during spring training. The dummy tips over in pain. Later on, he takes the much-battered dummy's head off. Taylor threatens to castrate Dorn if Dorn ever intentionally blows a play again.
 Major League / int_eaf5a1ac
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Major League / int_eaf5a1ac
 Major League / int_ed2bbf8a
type
You Are in Command Now
 Major League / int_ed2bbf8a
comment
You Are in Command Now: In the sequel, after Lou suffers a heart attack, Jake takes over as interim manager.
 Major League / int_ed2bbf8a
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Major League / int_ed2bbf8a
 Major League / int_eef90616
type
Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick
 Major League / int_eef90616
comment
Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: Taylor's ex explaining why she prefers her new boyfriend:
 Major League / int_eef90616
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1.0
 Major League / int_eef90616
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Major League / int_eef90616
 Major League / int_f06cdd2d
type
Sequel Reset
 Major League / int_f06cdd2d
comment
Sequel Reset/Sequel Escalation: They celebrated like they'd won the World Series in the first movie, only to lose the ALCS after (though it's kind of justified, as the Indians hadn't gotten even that far in years).
 Major League / int_f06cdd2d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_f06cdd2d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Major League
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Major League / int_f06cdd2d
 Major League / int_f11e5ede
type
Miracle Rally
 Major League / int_f11e5ede
comment
Miracle Rally: The team goes straight from Worst to First in all three movies.
 Major League / int_f11e5ede
featureApplicability
1.0
 Major League / int_f11e5ede
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1.0
 Major League
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Major League / int_f11e5ede
 Major League / int_f19e8a55
type
Bad "Bad Acting"
 Major League / int_f19e8a55
comment
Bad "Bad Acting": Dorn in the American Express commercial. He reads his lines with weird emphasis, then snaps his fingers a second too late.
 Major League / int_f19e8a55
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1.0
 Major League / int_f19e8a55
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 Major League
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Major League / int_f19e8a55
 Major League / int_f237981e
type
The Alleged Car
 Major League / int_f237981e
comment
The Alleged Car: Jake's 1972 Chevrolet Impala sedan; its body has seen better days and the engine sounds pretty worn down as well.
 Major League / int_f237981e
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1.0
 Major League / int_f237981e
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 Major League
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Major League / int_f237981e
 Major League / int_f511ea9b
type
Product Placement
 Major League / int_f511ea9b
comment
Product Placement: Averted in some places (see below), but also enforced elsewhere, like the team filming the commercial for American Express.
 Major League / int_f511ea9b
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 Major League / int_f511ea9b
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Major League / int_f511ea9b
 Major League / int_f6c1a6d1
type
Religious Russian Roulette
 Major League / int_f6c1a6d1
comment
Religious Russian Roulette: Pedro Cerrano in his last at-bat:
 Major League / int_f6c1a6d1
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 Major League / int_f6c1a6d1
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 Major League
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Major League / int_f6c1a6d1
 Major League / int_fabef10f
type
Don't Explain the Joke
 Major League / int_fabef10f
comment
The words for "marbles" in Spanish can also be used for "balls" in any context. But the common slang word for testicles in Spanish is usually the word for eggs. Hence, the word Cerrano used for his realization.
 Major League / int_fabef10f
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1.0
 Major League / int_fabef10f
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 Major League
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Major League / int_fabef10f
 Major League / int_fbd285b7
type
Comically Missing the Point
 Major League / int_fbd285b7
comment
Comically Missing the Point: In the opening scene Phelps hands out the list of spring training invitees. One of the board members points out that one of them is dead. Phelps sarcastically tells him to "Cross him off, then."
 Major League / int_fbd285b7
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1.0
 Major League / int_fbd285b7
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 Major League
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Major League / int_fbd285b7
 Major League / int_fdb355db
type
Fun with Subtitles
 Major League / int_fdb355db
comment
Fun with Subtitles: With Taka in the third movie.
 Major League / int_fdb355db
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1.0
 Major League / int_fdb355db
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1.0
 Major League
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Major League / int_fdb355db
 Major League / int_fe0330fb
type
Brick Joke
 Major League / int_fe0330fb
comment
Brick Joke: Pedro's "hats for bats" are being used by him in the on-deck circle in the last game. For about the first half of the movie, Harris doesn't take Jobu seriously. In the buildup for the last game, we see him warming up with a little Jobu icon on the mound with him.
 Major League / int_fe0330fb
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1.0
 Major League / int_fe0330fb
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 Major League
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Major League / int_fe0330fb
 Major League / int_fe5dda42
type
Talent Double
 Major League / int_fe5dda42
comment
Talent Double: Mostly averted. Virtually all the baseball scenes were done by the cast themselves; for instance, that really is Snipes making the sensational home-run-robbing catch during the finale. Anything they couldn't do well, the crew just filmed around it (with Snipes, he couldn't throw well nor run fast, so Hayes isn't seen throwing a ball and is why his running is usually in slow motion). The baseball sequences were actually shot with the actors playing ball trying to match the outcome needed to depict on film. The actors were enthusiastic about doing it, since they had to train and practice like real players, as well as living out playing major league ball in front of 25,000 people. The notable exception is Tom Berenger; former Dodger Steve Yeager (who also plays the Indians third-base coach Temple) does most of Jake Taylor's catching action. Charlie Sheen was a pitcher in high school, so he already had excellent pitching form, though speedwise he was of course nowhere close to Vaughn's high 90's. Although not for lack of taking steroids to help. During a montage of taking ground balls off his body, Corbin Bernsen was being hit with rubberized baseballs; however, those painful bruises he sees later are in fact real bruises he suffered.
 Major League / int_fe5dda42
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Major League / int_fe5dda42
 Major League / int_fea27091
type
Buffy Speak
 Major League / int_fea27091
comment
Buffy Speak: During his spot in the American Express ad, Rick Vaughn says the card helps them get into "hotels and restaurant-type places."
 Major League / int_fea27091
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Major League / int_fea27091
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ItemName
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Major League

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Major League
hasFeature
Accidental Hug / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Acting Out a Daydream / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Appropriated Appellation / int_f9d9198e
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Artistic License – Sports / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Bad "Bad Acting" / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Big Game / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Blind Without 'Em / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Bring It / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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California Doubling / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Calling Your Shots / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Character’s Most Hated Song / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Check, Please! / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Crisis Makes Perfect / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Dented Iron / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Divine Race Lift / int_f9d9198e
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Down to the Last Play / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Duct Tape for Everything / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Excrement Statement / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Flanderization / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Focus Group Ending / int_f9d9198e
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Fun with Subtitles / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Gambler's Fallacy / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Have You Seen My God? / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Hollywood Voodoo / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Honking Arriving Car / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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I Banged Your Mom / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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I Have Just One Thing to Say / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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I Read It for the Articles / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Language Barrier / int_f9d9198e
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Misfit Mobilization Moment / int_f9d9198e
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Mistaken for Prank Call / int_f9d9198e
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Music at Sporting Events / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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My Fist Forgives You / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Name One / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Nerd Glasses / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Not in My Contract / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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Not This One, That One / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
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One-Liner, Name... One-Liner / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Opposing Sports Team / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Parody Commercial / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Personal Arcade / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Religious Russian Roulette / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Rich Bitch / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Rousing Speech / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Skeleton Motif / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Stalking Is Love / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Talent Double / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
The Catchphrase Catches On / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
The Glasses Come Off / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Token Religious Teammate / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Tribal Face Paint / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Underdogs Never Lose / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Unskilled, but Strong / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Unwanted Glasses Plot / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Your Mom / int_f9d9198e
 majorleague
sameAs
Major League
 Major League
hasFeature
Improvised Training / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Miracle Rally / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Ordered to Cheat / int_f9d9198e
 Major League
hasFeature
Save Our Team / int_f9d9198e