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Beam Me Up, Scotty!
- 149 statements
- 25 feature instances
- 112 referencing feature instances
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Lines that people associate with something or someone by way of Pop-Cultural Osmosis, despite having never been uttered by them, or only rarely. Usually a misquotation or a slight paraphrase of something that actually was said or done, or a combination of several common or famous lines. The misquote provides context necessary to recognize or appreciate the reference, as in "Luke, I Am Your Father", or fills in parts of the sentence that are orphaned from the interesting bit, as in "Hell [has no] fury like a woman scorned." Sometimes the trailer shortened the quote to save time, and its version became better known. This is all well and good, but we here at TV Tropes think people should at least know what the line they're paraphrasing is meant to be. Sometimes it's not even more than a word or two off, so pointing it out may come across as nitpicking. Other times, the record really has to be set straight because the line got really corrupted over time like a bad game of telephone. The Trope Namer, "Beam me up, Scotty", was never actually uttered in Star Trek: The Original Series. One of the films got pretty close, but even then, it was phrased: "Scotty, beam me up." Contrary to popular belief, it is not even said in Star Trek: The Animated Series — though that's where they come closest: "Beam us up, Scotty". The actual phrase comes from a famous Star Trek bumper sticker — "Beam me up, Scotty, there's no intelligent life on this planet." It finally made an appearance in the franchise (though non-canon) when William Shatner himself said it in the audiobook version of his 1995 novel The Ashes of Eden. * Another example from Shatner is in his autobiography Up Till Now, which comes in audiobook form. More often, Kirk said "Four to beam up," and he was talking to whomever happened to be at the Transporter console. Very rarely was this Scotty himself, who was the chief engineer, meaning no version of the command was said to him with any regularity. Subtrope of Common Knowledge. See also Dead Unicorn Trope, Cowboy BeBop at His Computer, Mondegreen Gag, Viewer Name Confusion, God Never Said That, and Wrongfully Attributed. If the misassociated line is eventually co-opted into the source as a sort of Shout-Out to the confusion, it becomes an Ascended Meme. If the line is correct but lack of context changes the meaning, or if the line is chopped up to change its meaning, it is a Quote Mine. If the quote and the misquote both occur in the same medium, there is an Unreliable Narrator or possibly a Flip-Flop of God. If the quote becomes the only thing associated with a person it's a case of Never Live It Down (if an Audience Reaction) or Once Done, Never Forgotten (if In-Universe). This can be extended to Iconic Items the character never actually had, such as Holmes' deerstalker. For tropes actually about beaming characters up, see Teleportation Tropes. This trivia may be part of the infamous Mandela Effect. |
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Watchmen: One of Rorschach's most popular and repeated lines "Possible homosexual? Must investigate further.", in reference to Adrian Veidt, actually reads as "Possibly homosexual? Must remember to investigate further." This is likely because the former seems to fit in more with his Beige Prose speaking pattern. In-universe example: Dr. Milton Glass, a scientist who was present when Dr. Manhattan gained his powers, is quoted by the media as saying "The superman exists, and he's American". Dr. Glass' actual statement was "God exists, and he's American", and the sentiment behind it was more along the lines of awe and terror than the celebratory tone in which it is usually (mis)quoted. It is implied that the statement was deliberately misquoted by the media to make it less alarming or offensive to the public. |
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Watchmen (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Shawn Michaels didn't lose his smile, but was rather "looking for the smile that [I] lost." | |
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While JonTron's signature"Ech!" appeared on Game Grumps, he's only used it once in his own show (as a spoof of the MGM logo). | |
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Beam Me Up, Scotty! / int_31a8701b | comment |
The Flash: Eobard Thawne is popularly associated with the line "It was me, Barry!", used to memetically illustrate his sheer levels of pettiness. However, Thawne has never actually said the line verbatim — it's a paraphrase of a longer monologue. | |
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Beam Me Up, Scotty! / int_400469e | comment |
Calvin and Hobbes never had Calvin say, "God put me on this earth to accomplish a certain number of things. Right now I am so far behind that I will never die." There's also a bootleg T-shirt of Calvin scowling and saying: "Every day, I'm forced to add another name to the list of people who piss me off." Obviously, this quote has never appeared in the strip. And of course, he was never depicted urinating on anything. However, the animated Garfield (voiced by Lorenzo Music) did say "Big, fat hairy deal!" |
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Sesame Street: There was one scandal involving an Elmo toy that apparently said, "Kill James". After some investigation, it turned out that it actually said, "Tell James". One book that came with sound buttons caused outrage among parents who thought it said, "Who wants to die?", while others tried to reassure them because they thought it actually said, "Who wants to go?" or "Who wets the bed?". It actually said, "Who has to go?". One toy said, "Be like Elmo", but due to a glitch in the sound box, people thought it said, "Beat up Elmo". |
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Vince Russo didn't exactly say "If you want Lucha Librenote essentially Mexican style of professional wrestling, go to Japan!" during his infamous NWA:TNA interview with Mike Tenay. The full quote would be: "You want Lucha Libres (sic!), whatever you called them, go to...go to Japan, go to Mexico, you get all the Lucha Libres you want". However, putting the whole interview in perspective, one could argue the whole thing was Russo's brand "worked shoot", familiar to everyone who ever watched WCW, where he was supposed to play the bad guy for wrestling nerds. Is there a better way to make a nerd's blood boil than implying "lucha libres" originated from Japan? Also, as the leader of wrestling faction standing against wrestling tradition, it seems logical for an evil guy to insult Lucha Libre as part of the tradition. Naturally Russo succeeded beyond his wildest dreams, and the quote, usually incomplete with exclamation mark after Japan and without context, is guaranteed to pop up every time the word "Russo" is ushered near "smart" wrestling audience as proof of his total incompetence. Granted, it wasn't Russo's only controversy in wrestling world... | |
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The "I'm stuff" meme spread up as an ironic parody of one spectacularly unfunny Marvel Cinematic Universe fancomic, and it's usually associated with a greyscale image◊ of Robert Downey Jr. Said image is nowhere in the comic, and appears to have crosspollinated from a different meme involving RDJ—and in the original comic◊, MJ says the line, not Tony. | |
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The classic Dungeons & Dragons complainy forum post is "My hate of d02 know no limit". Not "my hat of d02 know no limit". | |
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"The Nature Boy" Buddy Rogers is credited with popularizing the catchphrase "It couldn't have happened to a nicer guy!" back in the 1940s. Problem was, what he actually said was: "To a nicer guy, it couldn't happen." The Yiddish sentence structure isn't a show business gag: Rogers really was Jewish. | |
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Despicable Me once licensed Minion toys that said, "Para la bukay" (a nonsense phrase) or "Ha ha ha!", which were misheard as "Well, I'll be damned" or "What the fuck?". | |
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Barbie: Teen Talk (released 1992) was preloaded with 4 of 270 possible phrases, one of which was "Math class is tough!", not "Math is hard" or "Math is too hard, let's go shopping!" Only 1.5% of the dolls even said the phrase. The Talkin' Barbie says, "Off the hook!", not "What the fuck?" as one woman thought. While most people are aware this is wrong, the notion of how much it sounds like "What the fuck?" (both in that instance and in related movie scenes) went viral quickly. |
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The Buzz Lightyear page on the Pixar Wiki for a while stated that his "there appears to be no sign of intelligent life anywhere" line was a quote from Star Trek. The item was obviously wrong, as it attributed the "quote" to "Admiral" Kirk (a rank Kirk never held in the series), and was finally tracked down to a fanon bumper sticker. | |
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Look a Vlog: Many people can't quite say "And now Will makes a one sentence comment about the topic from the bathtub, starring Will." | |
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Even TV Tropes isn't immune to this: Often, a quote for a trope entry or a page quote will be listed incorrectly, especially if it's on multiple pages. Many quotes will be presented in "This! Is! Sparta!" format, when it wasn't said like that. Partly why it was renamed to Punctuated! For! Emphasis!. Beam Me Up, Scotty! itself is named after a misquote. Short Run in Peru was "a brief run in Peru" in Garth Marenghis Darkplace. Luke, I Am Your Father was "no, I am your father" in The Empire Strikes Back. With This Herring was "with a herring!" in Monty Python and the Holy Grail. I Just Shot Marvin in the Face was "Oh man, I shot Marvin in the face." (no "just") in Pulp Fiction. |
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In The Cadanceverse, the oft-misquoted line from Congreve's The Mourning Bride is referenced. Vinyl Scratch, Element of Magic, mentions that "music soothes the savage beast." Octavia Philharmonica, Element of Honesty (and the most culturally-aware pony there) points out that the last word should be "breast". Life in Manehattan (AKA "the Manehattenverse") used to reference the same line, but it was removed in an update. | |
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Spider-Man: The oft-quoted line "With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility" is commonly attributed to Uncle Ben. However, the first appearance of the line was in fact just in a closing caption to the first story in Amazing Fantasy #15, not said by any actual character. And even then, it was actually phrased "...with great power there must also come great responsibility!". In later retcons of Spider-Man's origin, and in retellings such as that of Sam Raimi's first movie, the line is shortened and attributed to Uncle Ben, so while that is what is now in-continuity, the line was not originally his. The original line is finally adapted into the big screen in Spider-Man: No Way Home, but since Uncle Ben is already deceased by this time in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the line is instead said by Aunt May just before her death. An in-universe example, during a space adventure, Spider-Man quoted “Warp Factor 5, Mr. Spock!� He was then informed, by Dr. Doom, of all people, that Sulu set their speed. |
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The cry/chant of the Khorne worshipping Chaos Marines in Warhammer 40,000 is not "Kill! Maim! Burn!" Only Kharn (who, by the by, is crazy even by their standards, and will readily murder his allies) says it. The rest prefer "Blood for the Blood God!" Further muddied by the Chaos Marine squad in Dawn of War having "Maim! Kill! Burn!" as one of their quotes. | |
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Vince McMahon's reveal as the Higher Power of the Corporate Ministry is often quoted simply as "IT'S ME, AUSTIN! IT WAS ME ALL ALONG!" The more accurate quote is "IT'S ME, AUSTIN! IT'S ME, AUSTIN! IT WAS ME ALL ALONG, AUSTIN!" | |
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The Sandman (1989): Death's famous line "You get what anybody gets. You get a lifetime." comes from an official t-shirt, not the comic; the line she says in the comic is the very similar "You lived what anybody gets. You got a lifetime.". Additionally, while a lot of fans remember her saying it to the baby in "The Sound of Her Wings" (and were baffled she didn't say it in the Netflix adaptation), she actually says it much later, when she comes for Bernie Capax in Brief Lives. (This also dramatically changes the context; she's not responding to someone complaining about how quickly their life was over, but bragging over how long he managed to avoid her.) | |
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Damien Sandow has only used the phrase "Thank you for your irrelevant opinion" once in his career, but it seems the phrase has taken a life of its own among his fans. | |
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Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Raphael doesn't say "Cowabummer!" when Batman shows him the alley where his parents died—that was a parody fan edit which was widely circulated online. In the original comic, Raph is silent for that panel. | |
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The popular phrase referring to a need for a speedy escape is "Time to get the hell out of Dodge!" — a reference to the long-running radio (and later TV) series Gunsmoke, which took place in Dodge City. Trouble is no one ever actually says those words over the course of the series. Occasionally, Marshal Dillon would instruct some bad guys to "get out of Dodge", but the phrase is never used as a suggestion among said bad guys themselves. | |
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The Yu-Gi-Oh! card game enforces this with a card called "Question". The opponent is asked to name the monster at the bottom of your Graveyard: if they do not state the exact name written on the card, you can Special Summon it from the Graveyard. | |
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In-universe example in To the Stars. This fictional quote is given at the beginning of Chapter 69: | |
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