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Police Code for Everything
- 351 statements
- 67 feature instances
- 37 referencing feature instances
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Police Code for Everything | comment |
We've got a 20-26, someone's trying to describe Police Code For Everything here! The Monster of the Week has grown to the size of a skyscraper, and is currently rampaging through New York, carrying a load of Noodle Implements. He's even kidnapped the Designated Victim. A police officer on scene calmly pulls out his radio and announces "We've got a 10-340". No matter how obscure, improbable, or downright weird an event is, the Crazy-Prepared department has a code for it. Furthermore, everyone will have the code memorized and are expected to know instantly what the code means - they might have even trained for its eventual use. (Although there's the frequent exception, or just a non-cop who happens to be involved, leading them to question what it is, and for the meaning to be revealed.) It may be that their beat is a Quirky Town or the City of Adventure, so they come to expect giant apes once again fighting among the stampeding warthogs. More often than not, this Trope can go hand-in-hand with the Police Are Useless Trope, because having the code just means they know what is happening, not that they know how (or are sufficiently equipped) to deal with it. Sub-Trope of Crazy-Prepared. Sister Trope to Code Emergency, where a pre-arranged code is used for clandestine communication. See also Hash House Lingo for another profession where everything has its own code which the employees have memorized. |
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Police Code for Everything | isPartOf |
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Police Code for Everything / int_18c02ba0 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_18c02ba0 | comment |
A couple of cops in Mirrors 2 discuss the ghoulish scene of a disemboweling with this exchange: | |
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Mirrors (2008) | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_23130a6 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_23130a6 | comment |
Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle: an illegal chinchilla ranch on the premises is an 11-350. | |
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Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_261c8d3f | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_261c8d3f | comment |
The Simpsons: Used in "Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder": In "Realty Bites", Wiggum reports "a 318 - Waking a Police Officer". In "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show" Wiggum refers to code 8 after a beer explosion, prompting Lou to report "we need pretzels, repeat, pretzels!" A non-police variant for truckers CB codes occurred in "Maximum Homerdrive". |
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Police Code for Everything / int_261c8d3f | featureApplicability |
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The Simpsons | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_263d5756 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_263d5756 | comment |
In Live Free or Die Hard, John McClane ferrets out the fake "police dispatcher" by subverting it: using the wrong police 10-code to describe his situation. When the dispatcher smoothly claims that all units have been dispatched to his code, | |
Police Code for Everything / int_263d5756 | featureApplicability |
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Live Free or Die Hard | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_2675c915 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_2675c915 | comment |
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.. S.H.I.E.L.D. uses the code 084 to refer to an "object of unknown origin". Fitz later clarifies that even if they don't know what an object is, if they know where it came from it doesn't qualify as an 084. It alludes to the box label for the original object that S.H.I.E.L.D.'s predecessor, the SSR, acquired that fit that category. | |
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Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_2675c915 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_2ba48a26 | type |
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Police Code for Everything / int_2ba48a26 | comment |
Referenced in Castle. In the episode "Undead Again", a murder suspect, dressed as a zombie, has been found dead in his home. In the morgue, the medical examiner sticks a needle into the man's arm - only for the so-called corpse to jerk upright and bolt for the door. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_2ba48a26 | featureApplicability |
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Castle (2009) | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_3535924d | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_3535924d | comment |
The Amazing Worldof Gumball: In the episode "The Prisoner", as Donut Sheriff is chasing down Frankie and Gumball, we get this exchange: | |
Police Code for Everything / int_3535924d | featureApplicability |
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Police Code for Everything / int_3535924d | featureConfidence |
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The Amazing World of Gumball | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_3535924d | |
Police Code for Everything / int_35d98631 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_35d98631 | comment |
Taz-Mania: In "To Catch a Taz", Wendal arrests Thickley on "a 219; a fashion faux pas". | |
Police Code for Everything / int_35d98631 | featureApplicability |
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Police Code for Everything / int_35d98631 | featureConfidence |
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Taz-Mania | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_35d98631 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_39832c9 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_39832c9 | comment |
In Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer, a family dispute about to the existence of Santa Claus is a 12-25. When Jake insists that he saw Santa run over Grandma, the officers put it down as "sleighicular hit-and-run", which is a 12-24. (One officer lampshades the date there.) | |
Police Code for Everything / int_39832c9 | featureApplicability |
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Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_39832c9 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_3defe34c | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_3defe34c | comment |
Discussed in Overly Sarcastic Productions' "Wild Hunt" episode, where Red jokes that the Stith Thompson Index of Folkloric Classification sounds like an urban fantasy version of this. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_3defe34c | featureApplicability |
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Discussed Trope | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_3defe34c | |
Police Code for Everything / int_3eacc2fd | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_3eacc2fd | comment |
Corner Gas plays it straight in one episode and plays with it in another. For the former, Lacey calls the police when experiencing car trouble while Hank is accompanying them on a police ride-along program. Of course, since there is little to no crime in Dog River, they probably would have police code for the things people actually call them about. For the latter, Davis finds what appears to be an alien Crop Circle and gives a police code, but it turns out to be a mundane one that he is using creatively. |
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Police Code for Everything / int_3eacc2fd | featureApplicability |
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Corner Gas | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_3eacc2fd | |
Police Code for Everything / int_42c05590 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_42c05590 | comment |
In the Rocko's Modern Life episode "Uniform Behavior" Heffer takes a job as a security guard. The stress of the position causes him to have a Shining-style mental breakdown and flee into the streets tearing off his clothes. He catches the attention of a police officer who notes 10-41, naked cow in public. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_42c05590 | featureApplicability |
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Rocko's Modern Life | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_42c05590 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_456a342a | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_456a342a | comment |
Parodied in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. The security guards on the set for the Bluntman and Chronic movie continually mix up the codes for intruders in the lot and removing a dead hooker from Ben Affleck's trailer. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_456a342a | featureApplicability |
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Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_45a5beb2 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_45a5beb2 | comment |
WordGirl has around 1000 "emergency plans", usually using one or more per episode. She apparently has done them all at least once before, since Tobey and Dr. Two-Brains both have complete records of what each plan does. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_45a5beb2 | featureApplicability |
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WordGirl | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_45a5beb2 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_468bebb0 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_468bebb0 | comment |
In Discworld: The Diary for the Ankh-Morpork City Watch includes a list of pigeon codes, including one which means "The previous pigeon was eaten by a gargoyle officer, please resend". In Feet of Clay, a "no. 23" is "Running Screaming At People While Drunk And Trying To Cut Their Knees Off". |
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Police Code for Everything / int_468bebb0 | featureApplicability |
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Discworld | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_480ec6f0 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_480ec6f0 | comment |
When Bonkers was wearing a beanie that was making him fly out of control, Miranda calls it in. | |
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Bonkers | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_4a485518 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_4a485518 | comment |
Invasion: Earth. When the protagonist first shows up to deal with an alien spacecraft that's crashed in Central Park, he tells the NYPD captain that they'll be following a specific plan. The surprised captain asks if the government has anticipated a UFO landing. He explains that no, not exactly, but the plan covers a wide range of extreme situations. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_4a485518 | featureApplicability |
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Invasion: Earth | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_4a485518 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_4c300a8c | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_4c300a8c | comment |
Lilo & Stitch: The Series: 'Swapper'. The police have 304. Blue dog loose in store. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_4c300a8c | featureApplicability |
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Lilo & Stitch: The Series | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_4c300a8c | |
Police Code for Everything / int_4e45b093 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_4e45b093 | comment |
The Big Bang Theory: Gloriously subverted when Howard has to visit the hospital for an embarrassing injury. The scene sets up this trope when: Crazy fans trespassing on Skywalker Ranch in an attempt to meet George Lucas is common enough that the private security stationed there have code "AA23" for alerts. |
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Police Code for Everything / int_4e45b093 | featureApplicability |
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The Big Bang Theory | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_4e45b093 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_59801fd1 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_59801fd1 | comment |
In an episode of Homicide Hunter, Detective Kenda is investigating a woman's murder when he notices the notation "JDLR" on the original missing persons report taken. This stands for "just doesn't look right". When Kenda questions the cop who took the report from the woman's husband, he tells him that he wrote that because he was disturbed by the man's Incriminating Indifference, something highly unlikely for a concerned spouse.note Yes, he was the killer. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_59801fd1 | featureApplicability |
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Homicide Hunter | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_59801fd1 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5b6bf864 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5b6bf864 | comment |
Uncanny X-Men Issue 366, providing the former page quote for Crazy-Prepared: | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5b6bf864 | featureApplicability |
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Police Code for Everything / int_5b6bf864 | featureConfidence |
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Uncanny X-Men (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_5b6bf864 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5bf54361 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5bf54361 | comment |
In Carnival Magic, the rural police apparently use cutesy names as code, rather than numbers. The sheriff thinks he sees a runaway car with no driver, so he radios that he's "chasing a Ghost Car." The deputy catches up and sees that there's actually a chimpanzee driving, and a woman in the back seat. So he radios back: | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5bf54361 | featureApplicability |
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Carnival Magic | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_5bf54361 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5d354f8 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5d354f8 | comment |
A variant in Red Dwarf, where Rimmer constantly says the latest wacky situation is in violation of a specific "Space Corps directive", and robot butler Kryten chimes in with the actual, ridiculous directive ("No officer above the rank of Mess Sergeant is permitted to go into combat with pierced nipples?"). Even the serious directives are extremely specific. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_5d354f8 | featureApplicability |
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Red Dwarf | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_5d354f8 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6276800c | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6276800c | comment |
In The Nostalgia Critic and The Angry Video Game Nerd's review of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014): | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6276800c | featureApplicability |
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The Nostalgia Critic (Web Video) | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_6276800c | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6bd0cf78 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6bd0cf78 | comment |
Monsters, Inc. A 23-19 call goes out whenever there's contact between monsters and a human object, even something as innocuous as a sock. When Monstropolis appears in Kingdom Hearts III, we get other CDA examples; 8-35 is an indicator that a human has come through the door network, while 72-16 is a warning of unidentified life-forms. |
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Police Code for Everything / int_6bd0cf78 | featureApplicability |
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Monsters, Inc. | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_6bd0cf78 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6cc1ef0b | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6cc1ef0b | comment |
Alaska State Troopers real life example, if you listen closely to the background radio dispatcher, they have a 10-code for Moose stuck in greenhouse! | |
Police Code for Everything / int_6cc1ef0b | featureApplicability |
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AlaskaStateTroopers | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_6cc1ef0b | |
Police Code for Everything / int_761a48d7 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_761a48d7 | comment |
Iron Fist (2017). Unsurprisingly with all the metahumans running around, the NYPD has the appropriate a police code. In "Heart of the Dragon", Misty Knight responds to a 616, which she explains is "possible suspect with abilities" after someone steals the power of the Iron Fist off Danny Rand and uses it to kill several Triad members. 616 is the universe number of the main Marvel Universe in the comics, so it's also a Mythology Gag. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_761a48d7 | featureApplicability |
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Iron Fist (2017) | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_761a48d7 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_7b8a465f | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_7b8a465f | comment |
Lampshaded in Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series episode "Jurassic Puck": | |
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Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_7c038c18 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_7c038c18 | comment |
In Phineas and Ferb, a 10-91-P is a missing platypus that looks like a girl. (For context, Perry and Candace had an accidental "Freaky Friday" Flip due to a teleportation flaw.) | |
Police Code for Everything / int_7c038c18 | featureApplicability |
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Phineas and Ferb | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_7cf5a07 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_7cf5a07 | comment |
An early episode of The Flash (2014) has a brief gag of Cisco messing up police codes while trying to direct Barry to a crime. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_7cf5a07 | featureApplicability |
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The Flash (2014) | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_7d985ff1 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_7d985ff1 | comment |
In Epithet Erased's fourth episode, Indus the strong and good-natured but also somewhat dim-witted bodyguard of the first Arc Villain is trying to capture the main character during their museum heist, while holding the skull of a dinosaur. He then comes across the police, who are here to stop the robbery... | |
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Epithet Erased (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_7ff3216c | type |
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Police Code for Everything / int_7ff3216c | comment |
Garfield and Friends: In one short: Also, the episode "Binky Goes Bad" has this: A non-police variant occurred in one of the U.S. Acres segments, with one of Roy's attempts at placing the most ridiculously Byzantine and unfulfillable order he can dream up at Orson's new dinernote if Orson can't fulfill the order, Roy eats for free. Wade actually has a large file folder system containing code numbers for every possible fear that he could have. |
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Garfield and Friends | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_885e1bec | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_885e1bec | comment |
In Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality, one of the codes Amelia Bones has set up for Magical Law Enforcement is code RJ-L20: "Guard requires relief because prisoner is attempting psychological warfare and is succeeding". The psychological warfare that gets this code invoked is humming. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_885e1bec | featureApplicability |
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Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality / Fan Fic | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_8f36f969 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_8f36f969 | comment |
A running gag in The Loud House is for Lincoln to call Clyde on their walkie talkies and give an emergency code, for example "Code Aquamarine." Clyde will respond by clarifying what that code means, which is always for something very specific, in this case, trying to do twelve loads of laundry at once in order to make time to go to an amusement park and breaking the washing machine. | |
Police Code for Everything / int_8f36f969 | featureApplicability |
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The Loud House | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_9068877a | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_9068877a | comment |
Non police code version in Red vs. Blue when Simmons discovers from a computer that the Red and Blues are just training scenarios for testing members of Project Freelancer. | |
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Red vs. Blue (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_90a3a7f4 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_90a3a7f4 | comment |
A military variant shows up in the Kim Possible episode "Rufus vs. Commodore Puddles". The initial attack by Drakken's now-gigantic poodle is described as "a 41/5S-type scenario". They even have special equipment ready, trucks loaded with huge dog whistles. When Rufus (also grown to giant size) arrives to help, this development is "a 49/EZ scenario". | |
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Kim Possible | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_90a3a7f4 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_976efc02 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_976efc02 | comment |
Mystery Science Theater 3000: In Carnival Magic, their experiment that episode features cutesy police code names, so Tom Servo and Crow decide to turn it into an Overly Long Gag: | |
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Mystery Science Theater 3000 | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_995d37c6 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_995d37c6 | comment |
SCOOB!: While Scooby and Shaggy are being chased by Dastardly's robots at the Takamoto Bowl, their friends listen to a police radio and hear a report of a 40-15 in progress. | |
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SCOOB! | hasFeature |
Police Code for Everything / int_995d37c6 | |
Police Code for Everything / int_9aac12df | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_9aac12df | comment |
A non-police variant occurred in one of the U.S. Acres segments, with one of Roy's attempts at placing the most ridiculously Byzantine and unfulfillable order he can dream up at Orson's new dinernote if Orson can't fulfill the order, Roy eats for free. | |
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U.S. Acres (Comic Strip) | hasFeature |
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Police Code for Everything / int_9e876c22 | type |
Police Code for Everything | |
Police Code for Everything / int_9e876c22 | comment |
There's a naval variation in Good Omens: after trying to find the way to communicate that he's found a sunken city of pyramids, he looks through "international codes" and sends "XXXV QVVX" which means "Have found the lost city of Atlantis. High Priest has just won the Quoits contest." | |
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In Toy Story 2, a Buzz Lightyear action figure at Al's Toy Barn (who thinks he's a real space ranger) is completely baffled at the behavior of the other toys, who are trying to rescue Woody. Andy's Buzz (who realizes he's a toy) tells the deluded Buzz, "It's alright, Space Ranger. It's a code 5-46." Deluded Buzz gasps and bows before Woody, saying, "Your Majesty!" And from that point on, while he still believes himself to be a real space ranger, this Buzz takes the situation entirely in stride and works with the remaining toys, although he ends up in combat against an Emperor Zurg action figure, believing it to be real. | |
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In Legend of the Five Rings, the Crab Clan have "battle-language" to describe common scenarios. For example, "Kannishiki!" means "The creature we are fighting can only be harmed by jade weapons!". "Tsuta" means "The staff of this restaurant or geisha house are actually shapeshifted Shadowlands creatures. Fetch your weapons discreetly and meet me at the door." If that fails, "Yasha!" means "The jig is up. Fight your way out however you can." | |
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In the world of Get Smart, CONTROL has codes for just about every possible scenario, up to and including alien invasion. Just make sure you've memorized the right codes, and don't accidentally call in that code when you want something else, like Max did in one episode. | |
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Two non-police examples from Questionable Content: When Bubbles comes into the café somewhat distraught after abruptly realizing her feelings for Faye, Dora springs into action and mobilizes her girlfriend Tai by phoning her to report a "Code 3." Sam finds a random metal part on the floor of Union Robotics and asks Faye about it. Faye feigns horror and Bubbles, without missing a beat, pretends to call in a "Code Fuchsia" directly to the President, with the missiles targeted on her location. Once Sam has had sufficient opportunity to confront her own mortality, they clarify that they were kidding, and "Code Fuchsia," though apparently real, is quite a bit more benign than it sounded. |
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In Feet of Clay, a "no. 23" is "Running Screaming At People While Drunk And Trying To Cut Their Knees Off". | |
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Dispatch radio in Ted 2: "All units, we have a 3-17 on Maple Drive. Area units please respond." | |
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Green Lantern shows that this trope is in effect for Space Police, too. 1011, for example, is Deicide. Rebirth gives us 1963: "suspect escaped into an extra-dimensional vortex". | |
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In a Robot Chicken sketch based on Beauty and the Beast Belle calls the cops to report her kidnapping. When they arrive the Beast defends himself and the cops call in a "Code 4-5-9: Giant hamster throwing household items." | |
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In Doctor Who and its spinoff Torchwood, a "code 9" signifies that the Doctor has been seen in the area. | |
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That's So Raven: "Five-Finger Discount" shows Corey hanging out with the wrong crowd and being goaded into shoplifting. When Cory puts the stress-toy monkey he stole back where he found it, Raven has a vision of him being caught by mall security for this offense again, and when he meets up with the gang of bullies again, she disguises herself as a security guard to stop him. The vision comes true, because Raven herself was the security guard who caught Cory shoplifting. Played straight when Cory and Raven try to leave the store, only for them and the bullies to be confronted by a real security guard, who demands to know what sort of situation is going on, and Raven says it's a Code 903, which means a swarm of bees, making everyone freak out. It is then subverted when Raven asks the guard the one for shoplifting, to which she responds there is none and they just call it that. After the shoplifting bullies are caught, it is parodied when Raven tries to put her borrowed mustache back, which hurts when she rips it off and makes her scream "1027 for mustache burn!". | |
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Star Wars Rebels: The Empire uses an emergency code system that it took over from the Grand Army of the Republic. In "Stealth Strike", Kanan and Rex have to infiltrate an Imperial Interdictor. Rex uses his knowledge of the emergency code system (which he helped invent) to convince the crew to let them board in a stolen unscheduled shuttle. The codes are not explained any further than that a 157 is something that can occur on a shuttle and may develop into a 3376, which is not something you want to happen on your starboard side, even if you're sitting in an experimental cruiser inside a restricted 675 testzone. Later in the episode, Kanan and Rex accidentally start a conversation with an Imperial officer in an Uncomfortable Elevator Moment. The officer snidely comments that Rex's armor looks tight on him and Rex mutters an insult under his breath, but Kanan covers him by saying that he has hyper-sickness and that he's taking him to the, uh, 257 — which is the commissary. The officer snarks that the commissary is the last place he'd want to take him before leaving. |
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In Takamachi Nanoha of 2814, a 16887 means "Illegal disposal of a disposable pre-packaged beverage vessel by attempted forced ingestion into an endangered species of carnivorous luminescent crystal fungus" in the Green Lantern Handbook. Nanoha appears to have memorized all the codes - and is strongly implied to be the only Lantern presently in the Corps to have read the thing cover to cover. | |
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The Nut Job 2: Nutty by Nature: Code 7 means a donut shop selling donuts for half their usual price. When Liberty Land is closed, a cop seizes a donut cart and says it's a code 7. The other cops there approve it. | |
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On World's Dumbest..., Kevin McCaffrey comments on how the police have a code for a guy who drunk-drives himself to jail. | |
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Similarly, on ER, Kerry Weaver tries to implement a code system for people's injuries and illnesses so that they don't have to be embarrassed by having the gory or gross details posted on the admission board. Unfortunately, everyone whines and complains and can't be bothered to learn the various codes, forcing the idea to be abandoned in less than a day. | |
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Snooper and Blabber frequently talk in police code when they have a case on their hands. Take this example from "Person to Prison", when Blab gave Snoop the wrong code. | |
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On Baywatch, as Stephanie is taken hostage by an escaped criminal, she receives a call from her supervisor. She starts to respond by saying that she's "dealing with a code—", but the man cuts her off, knowing that she could be giving him a code that alerts him to her situation. Luckily her supervisor figures out she's in trouble anyway as she the tells him that she's driving a lost child around to find his parents, something that's a violation of policy. | |
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From a Buick 8 plays with this trope; the officers of Troop D don't standardly have a code for referring to incidents involving a supernatural car, but as a security measure to keep the Buick a secret they come up with "Code D" for when it's necessary to talk about the Buick over the radio. | |
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When Monstropolis appears in Kingdom Hearts III, we get other CDA examples; 8-35 is an indicator that a human has come through the door network, while 72-16 is a warning of unidentified life-forms. | |
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The Secret Return of Alex Mack: Paradise Valley PD refers to superpowered incidents as "10-9000". Justified, given they've been dealing with GC-161 metas for years. | |
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On Third Watch, the cops realize that they've caught the criminals who have been Impersonating an Officer in order to attack women by asking them a question in cop lingo, which of course, they don't understand, not being real cops. | |
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Parodied at the end of the Zero Punctuation review of Astral Chain, on the notion that the feeling of routine that he got from the gameplay makes sense in the context of its setting as a police game. | |
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In Void Dogs the Fickle Finger's security has a code for "exiled royalty has detonated a bottle". They also have one for "exiled royalty has detonated a turtle". | |
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Kid Cosmic: After Tuna Sandwich attempts to hijack a truck's direction to get to a crashed spaceship, the truck's driver announces on his radio that there's a 22-10 operating out near the local diner. | |
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Not Always Working: A story features a theater worker who must indicate that there is a dog loose. He asks for "Technician Scooby" over the radio. | |
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Gravity Falls has this gag in the episode "Headhunters": | |
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Night Court: The Wheelers are brought in on a 509b violation. | |
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