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Karmic Misfire
- 184 statements
- 34 feature instances
- 25 referencing feature instances
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A Karmic Misfire occurs when a guilty character escapes with a Karma Houdini and has at least one Karmic Butt-Monkey punished in his or her place. Usually, the character subjected to Karmic Misfire is completely innocent of wrongdoing and just had the bad luck to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Sometimes Karmic Misfire can also hit characters who were involved in the real guilty party's actions albeit unknowingly, reluctantly, or to a significantly lesser degree. In any case, the common factor in all these instances is that the person who is primarily responsible karmically gets off lightly or scot-free while someone else who was slightly involved or uninvolved gets hammered. And, to make matters worse, the punishment inflicted on the poor undeserving sap can be far greater than the crime the actual guilty party committed. When employed on a cosmic scale, Karmic Misfire can be used to demonstrate that the universe is basically an unfair place. If any supreme authority or authorities exist, they are either indifferent at best or sadistic at worst in how they parcel out justice. Other times, a creator will use Karmic Misfire for no other reason other than to be funny. This will often happen in a Black Comedy, Kafka Komedy, or Sadist Show. In these cases, the Karmic Misfire will sometimes be the result of incompetence on a cosmic level. It's also common for this trope to be Played for Laughs on a milder scale; e.g. the culprit commits an ultimately harmless infraction, like a prank, and the misplaced punishment is little more than a Dope Slap. The Cosmic Plaything is often someone who's the target of Karmic Misfire. Also see the Misplaced Retribution, Bewildering Punishment, Can't Get Away with Nuthin', No Good Deed Goes Unpunished, Selective Enforcement, Fall Guy, The Scapegoat, and Rerouted from Heaven tropes. Compare with the Guilt by Association Gag, in which the guilty party is deservedly punished along with people who clearly don't deserve to be, and Sins of Our Fathers, where the punishment continues to be passed down to the original wrongdoer's descendants regardless of whether they did anything to deserve it. Contrast Laser-Guided Karma. |
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Karmic Misfire / int_1123fc2 | type |
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A Loud Among Demons: Mr. Stillman murders Lincoln Loud and several other students, trapping their souls in Hell in exchange for eternal youth. Even Blitzo recognizes that this is patently unfair. | |
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One episode of The Penguins of Madagascar features a variation of this: there is a photographer visiting the zoo, and Private, being THE animal to always get put on the covers due to being irresistibly adorable, wants to pose for the pictures as usual. However, his thunder is stolen by Mort, who proves more interesting to the photographer this time. Private gets jealous and tries everything to get the photographer's attention back. At some point, the local gorillas approach Private and offer to "take care" of Mort for him. Due to Poor Communication Kills, this results in Private thinking that they actually killed Mort. The rest of the episode is about the cast searching for Mort while Private is feeling guilty about the situation and is even being haunted by Mort's "ghost". The episode ends with it being revealed that the gorillas simply took Mort somewhere out of sight (and were even feeding him) so that Private could take the spotlight again, and the "ghost" was merely a figment of Private's imagination (which is even lampshaded by the ghost itself). | |
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In Pact, due to Sins of Our Fathers being in effect, otherwise good or at least decent people can have bad things happen to them as a result of their ancestors' actions. This is the case for the main protagonist, Blake Thorburn, who suffers greatly as a result of the large amount of bad karma amassed by his diabolist (demon summoners) ancestors making it so that his fellow practitioners have issues seeing past his karma to judge him on his own merits. | |
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Karmic Misfire / int_1f72b18d | type |
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In some of the Tom and Jerry shorts, one of the leads starts the feud and yet still ends up the victor while the other victimized character faces a slapstick penalty. Contrary to popular belief, these weren't always in Jerry's favor, since Tom manages to come out on top in a few odd shorts despite being the blatant villain. | |
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In Ariel (1988), Kasurinen confronts the man who robbed him, whereupon the man pulls a knife on him. Kasurinen disarms him and starts beating him, and is promptly arrested and sentenced to two years in prison for assault, attempted robbery, possession of a weapon, and resisting arrest. | |
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Inspector Clouseau in the original The Pink Panther ends up in prison after being framed for stealing the eponymous diamond while the actual culprits - Sir Charles Lytton, his nephew, and Clouseau's adulterous soon-to-be-ex wife - get to drive off into the sunset, laughing. And the reason the innocent Clouseau gets nailed while they get off scot-free? The princess who owns the Pink Panther knows that Lytton tried to steal it, but she doesn't want him to go to jail, so she herself frames Clouseau at the last possible moment! What makes this ending a bit more tolerable, apart from the minor fact that Clouseau takes it pretty well, is mostly the fact that Sir Charles Lytton will be back to his thieving ways very soon, making it just a matter of time for Clouseau to be proven innocent. | |
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In The Parallax View, the protagonist Frady (Warren Beatty) not only fails to publicly unmask the true nature of the Parallax Corporation and prevent their assassination of a senator but is also killed at the scene and ends up being blamed for the assassination by the official investigation committee. Meanwhile, the Parallax Corporation is able to continue its murderous operations unscathed. | |
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One episode of King of the Hill has Hank and Bobby accidentally destroying a garden gnome that Peggy liked, and Hank taking full responsibility. Peggy is able to discern that Hank is covering for Bobby, but unfortunately, she ends up believing that Bobby only is to blame and punishes him severely. Later in the episode, Hank buys a new gnome as an apology to Bobby, and this time Peggy assumes it to be a sign that she has been too rough on Bobby and so she stops. | |
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In the Discworld, there is a god of Strong Drink and Partying, Bibulous, who is continually drunk and who has a wonderful time with lots of very appreciative nymphs and handmaidens. He never ever throws up or has a hangover, the usual consequence for mere humans who party too hard. The unfortunate deity who gets the karmic feedback that would rightly belong to Bibulous is called Bilious, the Oh, God! of the Morning After. Everything on the Discworld has its equal and opposite quality. It is the fate of Bilious to get all the negative stuff connected with drinking heavily so that Bibulous does not have to. He is described as thin and pale, in a stained toga, with a laurel wreath too large for him and somewhat tatty, which has slipped over one ear. He is frequently ill, suffers from splitting headaches, cannot stand bright light, and lives in a sense of existential dread that he will remember some excruciatingly embarrassing or ill-advised thing he did on some unspecified Last Night that got him into this state in the first place. No, it isn't fair. But nothing on the Discworld is "fair". Sort of. The misfire is redirected when the Unseen University wizards concoct an extremely potent Hideous Hangover Cure that would give even the divine unspecified, humorous yet horrifying side effects and give it to Bilious, who suffers no ill effect and is instantly cured. Then they scry on Bibulous out of curiosity of where those ill effects went, and sure enough, they strike him instead. | |
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Mortadelo y Filemón: From time to time, Mortadelo gets away with things because some misunderstanding results in someone else — most often Filemón — being blamed. For instance, when Filemón sees him smoking a cigar and Mortadelo offers him one, he quickly goes to the cigar box to take it. Cue the Super appearing out of nowhere to catch Filemón red-handed and grab him by the neck, saying "At last I've found the jerk who steals my cigars!" | |
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The premise of The Karma of Lies is that Adrien's refusal to act against Lila results in him being hit by her karmic backlash on top of his own after Hawkmoth is defeated, as she flees Paris and leaves him holding the bag. Unusually, Adrien is not portrayed sympathetically here; it's repeatedly emphasized that Adrien believes he benefits from Protagonist-Centered Morality, and that he refuses to do anything about Lila because he assumes HE won't be hurt by any of her schemes. He even defends Lila and supports several of her lies, which bites him in the butt once she sets him up to take the fall. A key element of the story is that all the negative karma built up by selfish and villainous actions has to go somewhere. Had Hawkmoth and Lila won, it's established that Marinette would have been hit by the full force of the karmic backlash, losing everything she ever cared about while being blamed for all that went wrong. By managing to defeat Hawkmoth despite Adrien being less than helpful, she earns a Karmic Jackpot instead. Recursive Fanfiction Karma Overbalance plays it straighter, treating Adrien as a tragic victim of misplaced karmic overkill who ultimately murders Lila, believing that he'd be better off spending the rest of his life in jail. Another Recursive Fanwork, Karma's a Bitch, has Lila suffer the Laser-Guided Karma she's due. However, Adrien and most of the class still suffer from some karmic misfires in the process (though their lives aren't ruined to the extent they are in the original) due to being victimized by Lila and Zoe, with Zoe taking Lila's place as the one who gets away with her crimes. |
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Popeye: In 1946's "Service With a Guile", after the admiral's car gets wrecked, Popeye opens up a can of spinach and quickly reassembles it in a matter of seconds. Just as the admiral is about to arrive, Bluto shoves Popeye aside, taking credit for the fix-up job as if he had done it himself. This backfires horribly when the admiral's car (which Popeye had reassembled) turns into a heap of disassembled scrap auto parts. Bluto gets assigned to scraping barnacles from the navy ships, while Popeye gets off the hook scot-free, even though he hastily reassembled the admiral's car. In 1951's "Double Cross Country Race", Popeye and Count Noah Count are participating in an auto race across the country. Noah Count resorts to setting up numerous traps to slow Popeye down; later, Popeye and his car consume spinach, allowing Popeye to knock Noah Count out of the race. Popeye eventually wins the race and crosses the finish line. As soon as he receives the trophy, a traffic cop emerges, issuing Popeye a ton of traffic tickets, including some other miscellaneous offenses unconnected to the race, while Noah Count gets off scot-free in spite of the dirty tricks he pulled on Popeye. |
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A mechanic in Skool Daze. If a teacher gets knocked over with a catapult attack, they'll blame the nearest (named) pupil rather than the actual culprit and make them write lines. | |
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Ultra Fast Pony: In "Bummer in the City", Rarity creates a new line of High Fashion clothing, with a completely new fabric she invented. It's made from baby skin from babies she murdered herself. Her rival, Suri Polomare, steals the fabric and takes credit for inventing it. So Suri winds up also getting arrested for all those unsolved baby murders. | |
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In a Very Special Episode of Static Shock, "Jimmy". The titular character of the episode, Jimmy Osgood, becomes fed up with being bullied by classmate Nick Connor that he eventually snaps and brings his father's gun to school with the full intent of murdering him. Virgil noted there should've been a recount when Nick got voted "Best Personality", and he was proven right with the ongoing bullying. When Jimmy brings the gun over, Nick realizes he pushed him to his breaking point, especially after Jimmy rightfully rejected his apology. Although Jimmy is talked down from the murder attempt, shortly after Nick's two friends tackle him, Richie is accidentally shot. Although it is downplayed since the school has now been made aware of Nick's true colors, while Richie will recover from the bullet. | |
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In the Clarence episode "The Interrogation", Mr. Reese's car has been smeared with marinara sauce. At the end of the titular interrogation, Reese, with no conclusive evidence, punishes Belson. The end reveals it was Ms. Shoop. | |
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In one Little Princess book, the Princess gets blamed for various misdeeds that were actually done by the prince next door. | |
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In "The Tycoon" episode from The Flintstones, Fred trades places with Identical Stranger J.L. Gotrocks, a rich tycoon businessman who ditches a business meeting and infuriates Wilma, Barney, and Betty when he treats them as total strangers. By the time Fred gets back to his old job, Wilma and the Rubbles chew him out because Gotrocks acted like a snobbish jerkass to them, while Gotrocks' punishment is seemingly less harsh than Fred's. | |
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Pick pretty much any episode of Drake & Josh in which the two titular heroes try to get Megan punished for something she did wrong. Chances are, the parents will not believe their true story, and instead believe Megan's lies and punish them while Megan gets off scot-free. | |
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The main character of Arlington Road, Michael Faraday (Jeff Bridges), tries to prevent his right-wing terrorist neighbor from bombing the FBI headquarters but he ends up dying and being blamed for it as a result of the orchestrations of the neighbor. | |
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In an Israeli joke, a religious man decides he wants to experience secular hedonism for once. He takes off his yarmulke and heads out to a nightclub, but a car runs him over on the way. When he gets to Heaven and meets God, he calls him out for this Disproportionate Retribution, and God answers, "Oh, sorry, I didn't recognize you." | |
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This is discussed in Percy Jackson and the Olympians. The gods, by their nature, cannot be punished (more accurately, no mortal has the power to do so) and so the penalty for their misdeeds often falls upon their children. This is the source of a great deal of bitterness among demigods, and part of the reason so many followed Luke. | |
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In the first season of The Good Place, there's the "Real Eleanor" who got mixed up with Eleanor and sent to Hell in her place. Subverted upon The Reveal that Eleanor was actually in Hell all along, and that the Real Eleanor was a demon sent to guilt-trip her. | |
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Futurama: On two occasions, Bender has escaped consequences because another bending unit was mistaken for him. First, Flexo caught the rap for him stealing the tiara from an intergalactic beauty pageant and spent several years in prison as a result. Later, Bender entered a witness protection program to escape the ire of the Robot Mafia, who eventually killed an innocent Lunar farmer, believing it to be him in disguise. Both times the show leaned heavily on Protagonist-Centered Morality for comedic effect. | |
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In Chick Tracts, the unintended message is that God will send even good people to hell for not expressly accepting a very specific set of Independent Baptist teachings while people who unapologetically live their entire lives in a manner that's destructive to themselves and others will get off with no punishment or consequences of any kind if they accept Jesus by saying the correct magic words right before death. | |
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In The Fairly OddParents!, one episode "Dream Goat" has Timmy and his babysitter Vicky visit the town's mascot, Chompy the Goat. Timmy notices that Chompy seems sad in his cage, and while everyone is away, he wishes for goat mind-reading powers from his fairy godparents. He learns that Chompy wants to be free, and thus he decides to set him free. Then Vicky comes in and through a number of coincidences, she ends up being mistaken for a person who kidnapped the goat, while Timmy gets mistaken for a hero who caught her. For the majority of the episode, everyone keeps praising him and giving him all sorts of cool rewards, but soon, one of his fairy godparents remarks that this doesn't seem very fair. Eventually, Timmy starts feeling so guilty about Vicky that he has trouble sleeping, and starts wishing for nonsensical stuff while asleep, causing chaos. Ultimately, Timmy decides to reveal the truth to the town, and after they learn that the goat is much happier now, they let him go. He still gets grounded by his parents, though. Oh, and Vicky is still left in the stocks, completely forgotten about. | |
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This happens in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Justice For All if you win the final case. Usually, you defend innocent people from murderers who frame them to get away with their crimes, but this time the defendant is guilty, and the person who framed him is a victim of his abuse who decided to fight back against him. Winning results in your defendant getting off the hook and the person who framed him getting punished instead. Including in this case, which is not a good thing. However, you can bring proper justice if you break the culprit's blackmail on you. | |
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Foxtrot: Jason and Paige get into an argument that ends with Coke spilled onto the keyboard, crashing the computer. They get into another argument about whose fault it is until they see Walking Techbane Roger walk in ("We're dead"), sit down ("We're dead"), turn it on ("We're dead")... and then it crashes, he calls Andy over, saying he thinks he broke something ("Dead or reeeeeally slimy"). After Andy blows her stack at Roger (she lost an unsaved 800-word column), they let the week pass in escalatingly harsh punishments for Roger until they confess (as the arc ends there, we don't know how they were punished). | |
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SpongeBob SquarePants: In "The Smoking Peanut", SpongeBob throws a peanut at Clamu the giant clam at the zoo, causing it to cry. Eventually, he gets a visit from the police, and he starts to confess when it turns out they are looking for Patrick, whom they blame for making Clamu cry. SpongeBob feels so guilty he confesses to the angry mob that chained Patrick. Instead of letting him go, they demand that SpongeBob get chained up too, but then the real reason for Clamu's distress is revealed - Mr. Krabs having stolen its pearl, which is actually an egg. | |
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In Irréversible, Marcus's fiancé Alex is brutally raped by a sadistic pimp, Le Tenia, whom they track down to a gay nightclub. They attack someone whom they mistakenly believe to be Le Tenia and tries to rape Marcus. His friend Pierre bashes the man's head in with a fire extinguisher while the real Le Tenia looks on with a smile. | |
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In the first Diary of a Wimpy Kid book, Greg chases some preschoolers with a worm and due to borrowing his friend Rowley's coat, a woman nearby thinks Greg is Rowley and Rowley gets the blame. This is corrected when Greg makes the mistake of telling Rowley, who passes the information on and gets Greg punished. | |
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In the South Park episode "Toilet Paper", the four boys teepee an unpopular teacher's house. Kyle is left riddled in guilt over the ordeal until Butters dimwittedly confesses to the whole thing after Officer Barbrady convinces him he is guilty, leaving all of the boys guilt-ridden over the ordeal...except Cartman: | |
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The Bridge: The Dark Hunters, accidentally mistaking Princess Twilight for her human counterpart (who was guilty of stealing Sonata's gem), savagely attack her and her human friends. Flash's car ends up being severely damaged, her friends are either severely hurt or in pain, and Twilight ends up being their captive. This also applies to Sci-Twi. While she did hurt Sonata, she only did so due to being horribly manipulated by a trio of psychotic Windigoes. Yet Sci-Twi is the one who bears the brunt of Aria's No-Holds-Barred Beatdown. |
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In an episode of The Goldbergs, Beverley Goldberg discovers her home is being used as the mailing address for a scam of Columbia Music's "twelve LPs for a cent" marketing technique (you get the twelve LPs for a cent, but are ever after locked into having to buy one a month at full price). Lots and lots of packages of LPs have been arriving at the Goldbergs in quite a lot of obviously fake names, such as Optimus O'Prime. Beverley leaps to the conclusion that her daughter Erica is the culprit as she is the wayward teenager. It cannot be her sweet, innocent, adorable little boy Adam - can it? | |
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