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History Bites
- 234 statements
- 45 feature instances
- 12 referencing feature instances
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History Bites | |
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History Bites | comment |
What if television had been around for the last five thousand years?Such is the premise of History Bites, a Canadian Sketch Comedy series (1998-2003) created by Rick Green (of The Red Green Show and Prisoners of Gravity) to explore and satirize history through the lens of current pop culture. Each episode opened with Rick explaining the topic and dramatically pushing a button on his remote control, "changing the channel" to begin the meat of the program.The show proper is presented as what a bored channel surfer sees as he flips through programs like the news, Martha Stewart Living, Jeopardy! and Seinfeld against the backdrop of historical events like the assassination of Julius Caesar, the popularity of the plays of William Shakespeare, the revenge of The Forty Seven Ronin, the rise of Christianity, the invention of agriculture, and the shootout at Fly's Photographic Studio (better known as the gunfight at the OK Corral).After the series ended, the show did five one-hour specials that removed the channel-surfing idea. Reruns of the series are shown on the Comedy Network and History Television.The show avoided the Nostalgia Filter: Rick ended each episode claiming that injustice is connected to prejudice and ignorance, that advances in science and medicine make life today so much better than any point in history, and that History... Bites. *click*A growing number of episodes may be viewed for free on the series' website. | |
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2023-10-07T06:45:59Z | |
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Dropped link to Jeopardy: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
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History Bites / int_1c6a9289 | type |
Bishōnen | |
History Bites / int_1c6a9289 | comment |
Bishōnen: Peter Oldring's characters, especially Alexander the Great. | |
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History Bites / int_259d5879 | type |
Anachronism Stew | |
History Bites / int_259d5879 | comment |
An episode set in the 9th century has a sketch where a cartoon goat describes the type of chevauchee tactics more strongly associated with The Hundred Years War. Rick Green has since owned up to this mistake. | |
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History Bites / int_2727c89a | type |
Pride Before a Fall | |
History Bites / int_2727c89a | comment |
Pride Before a Fall: Leonard the Jeopardy! contestant always responded with a smug grin and condescension in his voice, which evaporated quickly when the host rejected his response. | |
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History Bites / int_2937826d | type |
Hurricane of Puns | |
History Bites / int_2937826d | comment |
Hurricane of Puns: The priest of Pan making an infomercial for lesser-known Greek gods. | |
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History Bites / int_3104d34 | type |
Suicide as Comedy | |
History Bites / int_3104d34 | comment |
Suicide as Comedy: "Love and Death" takes place in 1780 and focuses on the Werther fandom, which is treated like the Star Trek fandom. "Live long... posthumously." | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_3104d34 | |
History Bites / int_3ac583f4 | type |
SlidingScaleOfIdealismVsCynicism | |
History Bites / int_3ac583f4 | comment |
Sliding Scale of Idealism vs. Cynicism: Definitely on the cynical side. | |
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History Bites / int_401d4116 | type |
Broken Aesop | |
History Bites / int_401d4116 | comment |
Broken Aesop: The episode "Xena's Evil Sister" was meant to use the story of Boudica to address violence against women. The trouble is Boudicca's revolt is a textbook example of The Revolution Will Not Be Civilized. She and her daughter admit that they killed Roman women by cutting off their breasts and sewing them to their mouths! | |
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History Bites / int_41c08e5 | type |
Establishing Series Moment | |
History Bites / int_41c08e5 | comment |
Establishing Series Moment: So, you want to do a show about TV shows in days of yore, except you don't have a very high opinion of days of yore. What do you do your first episode on? Why, The Black Death, of course! | |
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History Bites / int_42866088 | type |
Old-Timey Ankle Taboo | |
History Bites / int_42866088 | comment |
Old-Timey Ankle Taboo: In one episode, Mary Queen of Scots shows off her bare ankles, complete with the TV blurring out her ankles and the audience calling her an "ankle-whore." | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_42866088 | |
History Bites / int_42c9a131 | type |
Appeal to Worse Problems | |
History Bites / int_42c9a131 | comment |
Appeal to Worse Problems: The entire show is guilty of this trope, most notably in the "Neolithic Park" episode, where Rick Green essentially glosses over modern problems such as climate change in favor of stating that we should be grateful that we still have books, eyeglasses, and modern medicine, compared to the people in the past who endured the likes of famine and plagues. Makes one wonder if he really believes that the Black Death is really the only other option to climate-change-induced heat waves. | |
History Bites / int_42c9a131 | featureApplicability |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_44990492 | type |
Parody Commercial | |
History Bites / int_44990492 | comment |
Parody Commercial: Given the premise, commercials showcasing music albums, medicine, and commemorative items are a constant. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_49d5f48f | type |
Of Corpse He's Alive | |
History Bites / int_49d5f48f | comment |
Of Corpse He's Alive: Qin Shi Huangdi's advisers tried to fool the media with this ploy, covering his head with a burlap sack with a face drawn on it and (historically) covering up the smell of his decomposition with rotting fish. It looked like it worked. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_49d5f48f | |
History Bites / int_4e4fa32c | type |
The Ahnold | |
History Bites / int_4e4fa32c | comment |
The Ahnold: Charlemagne is presented in this manner. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_4e4fa32c | |
History Bites / int_4f6bd2da | type |
Nature Is Not Nice | |
History Bites / int_4f6bd2da | comment |
Nature Is Not Nice: The episode about the invention of farming shows that Rick Green himself believes in this trope, and he claims that most early humans either got old or died by age thirty to try to prove it.note Ironically, most of what he describes at the end of that episode (famines, epidemics, bad teeth, etc.) actually occurred after the Neolithic Revolution. | |
History Bites / int_4f6bd2da | featureApplicability |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_55ec42d7 | type |
Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe | |
History Bites / int_55ec42d7 | comment |
Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe: Rick Green at the end of the episode about Shakespeare: "History... verily... doth bite." | |
History Bites / int_55ec42d7 | featureApplicability |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_56515a39 | type |
Artistic License – History | |
History Bites / int_56515a39 | comment |
Artistic License – History: As a series that leans heavily towards The Dung Ages trope, the writers will occasionally exaggerate for comedic effect. In the episode about Charlemagne, the Martha Stewart Expy claims that spices will make rotten meat taste better. By that point it was common knowledge that eating rotten meat was a good way to give yourself food poisoning. Furthermore, in the Middle Ages, only the rich could afford spices, and they were keen on eating the best-quality meat. In the episode centering around the Exodus, Rick Green claims that Hebrew slaves built the pyramids at Giza. They did not. In fact, the pyramids were built by free peasant laborers and craftsmen around 2560 BC, more than a thousand years before the Exodus is usually dated to (and it's no longer acknowledged as fact by modern secular historians). One episode set in Roman times has the anchormen claim Emperor Claudius has syphilis. Considering syphilis is a New World disease and therefore did not come into Europe until the last decade of the 15th century, it's highly unlikely that Claudius was even exposed to syphilis, much less suffered from it. An episode set in the 9th century has a sketch where a cartoon goat describes the type of chevauchee tactics more strongly associated with The Hundred Years War. Rick Green has since owned up to this mistake. The episode on the French Revolution, set in 1794, has a priest character say that a man can divorce a woman for any old reason like lack of cleanliness while a woman has to prove that her husband was insane or abusive to a priest and several witnesses. This may have been the case during the Ancien Régime, but beginning in 1792, the Loi autorisant le divorce en France legalized no-fault divorces, thus acknowledging that a marriage can break down through no fault of either spouse. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_56515a39 | |
History Bites / int_597d7dad | type |
Onion Tears | |
History Bites / int_597d7dad | comment |
Onion Tears: | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_597d7dad | |
History Bites / int_6d7026fa | type |
Punny Name | |
History Bites / int_6d7026fa | comment |
Punny Name: The Zamboni family cleaned the Colosseum's arena floor between bouts in one episode; puns were rare among episode titles, but there were some, like "Bjarney & Friends" (Norse settlers in North America), "Cleo Can Kiss My Asp" (Cleopatra/Marc Antony/Octavian triangle), and "My Pharaoh Lady" (Pharaoh Hatshepsut). In the episode on the Donner Party, a recently-deceased wagon driver is named Berger. Which naturally leads to his on-camera eulogy being a long string of food puns. | |
History Bites / int_6d7026fa | featureApplicability |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_7897f4af | type |
Hospital Gurney Scene | |
History Bites / int_7897f4af | comment |
Hospital Gurney Scene: The agriculture episode featured a medical drama. Teresa Pavlinek's doctor character ordered a trepanning for every patient, no matter what the diagnosis. | |
History Bites / int_7897f4af | featureApplicability |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_7fff034b | type |
Kent Brockman News | |
History Bites / int_7fff034b | comment |
Kent Brockman News: The first two seasons have episodes centered around news broadcasts of various important historical events. Much of it blatantly falls into Strawman News Media. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_7fff034b | |
History Bites / int_83445b04 | type |
Pun | |
History Bites / int_83445b04 | comment |
Pun: The TV Guide listings during the show. | |
History Bites / int_83445b04 | featureApplicability |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_83445b04 | |
History Bites / int_87c7f99d | type |
Sidetracked by the Analogy | |
History Bites / int_87c7f99d | comment |
Sidetracked by the Analogy: A journalist interviewing an early Christian misinterprets the metaphors in play and concludes that Christianity is a cannibal cult. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_87c7f99d | |
History Bites / int_9830549e | type |
He-Man Woman Hater | |
History Bites / int_9830549e | comment |
He-Man Woman Hater: There are a few characters of this type, given the nature of the series, but the one that takes the cake is Rick Green's Grumpy Old Man character (in the episode about King David), who argues that All Women Are Lustful, "even the ugly ones!" | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_9830549e | |
History Bites / int_a188ac4b | type |
Overly Long Gag | |
History Bites / int_a188ac4b | comment |
Overly-Long Gag: The episode about Isaac Newton involves Dr. Phil giving many synonyms for prostitute when one of his clients declares that she doesn't want her sister to become a prostitute. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_a188ac4b | |
History Bites / int_a27c0c2c | type |
Artistic License – Religion | |
History Bites / int_a27c0c2c | comment |
Artistic License – Religion: At least two episodes claim that medieval monks and peasants claimed that random bones belonged to Jesus. This never happened because Christian teaching states that Christ ascended into heaven corporeally. In an episode set in Spain in the year 1492, there is a Jeopardy!-esque game show where one of the contestants answers one of the questions with "Protestantism". Not only is this answer stated to be incorrect in-universe, but in real life, Protestantism did not get its start until 1517, twenty-five years after the episode takes place. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_a65288e2 | type |
Ascended Extra | |
History Bites / int_a65288e2 | comment |
Ascended Extra: The show's extremely low budget meant that the writers were often pressed into duty as extras, or as bit part players. Writer Danny DiTata (the diminutive, wild-eyed and usually-bearded redheaded guy) turned out to be pretty funny in a variety of small one-shot roles, and slowly, the roles started to get bigger. By the end of the series run, the now usually-shaven DiTata was often getting nearly as much screen time as the series regulars — and he pretty much runs away with the French Revolution episode, thanks to his killer George Constanza impersonation. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_a849183f | type |
Toilet Seat Divorce | |
History Bites / int_a849183f | comment |
The episode on the French Revolution, set in 1794, has a priest character say that a man can divorce a woman for any old reason like lack of cleanliness while a woman has to prove that her husband was insane or abusive to a priest and several witnesses. This may have been the case during the Ancien Régime, but beginning in 1792, the Loi autorisant le divorce en France legalized no-fault divorces, thus acknowledging that a marriage can break down through no fault of either spouse. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
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History Bites / int_aabe2fb | type |
Deliberate Values Dissonance | |
History Bites / int_aabe2fb | comment |
Deliberate Values Dissonance / The Dung Ages: A major theme of the series is playing both tropes for Black Comedy. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_aabe2fb | |
History Bites / int_b53077b3 | type |
Take That! | |
History Bites / int_b53077b3 | comment |
Take That!: "And the number one easiest foe of Odysseus: The Toronto Maple Leafs." | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_b53077b3 | |
History Bites / int_c007c53 | type |
Cool and Unusual Punishment | |
History Bites / int_c007c53 | comment |
Cool and Unusual Punishment: When Rollo and his men start attacking France, the French king, Charles the Simple, decides to punish the Vikings by arranging for them to occupy Normandy, essentially forcing them to fight off attacks from their own people. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_c007c53 | |
History Bites / int_d076824c | type |
Every Episode Ending | |
History Bites / int_d076824c | comment |
Every Episode Ending: Rick comes back to talk about the subject matter and how it influenced history, and history bites. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_d076824c | |
History Bites / int_d1affec1 | type |
That Came Out Wrong | |
History Bites / int_d1affec1 | comment |
That Came Out Wrong: From David Letterman's Top 10 Rejected Brand Names for Roasted Dormice: And when Larry King is interviewing an Egyptian architect on pyramids and mastabas: | |
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History Bites / int_dd26fd14 | type |
Man of a Thousand Voices | |
History Bites / int_dd26fd14 | comment |
Man of a Thousand Voices: Ron Pardo. Close your eyes and you'd swear that that's really Don Cherry or Dennis Miller. Pardo credits his skills to watching too much television as a child. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_dd26fd14 | |
History Bites / int_dd45df38 | type |
Unfortunate Names | |
History Bites / int_dd45df38 | comment |
Unfortunate Names: Bob Bainborough's anchorman characters tended to these, such as "Intellectus Minimus". | |
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History Bites / int_de15a322 | type |
Tangled Family Tree | |
History Bites / int_de15a322 | comment |
Tangled Family Tree: In "The Filthy Stinking Rich", the penchant of the Rothschild family for marrying within the family throughout the 1800s to keep their wealth from being scattered among countless sons-in-law and daughters-in-law is depicted in a sketch in which Charlotte Rothschild shows her family album to her fiance and first cousin Anselm Rothschild - while he rolls his eyes and repeatedly points out that they're also his family. | |
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History Bites / int_e0904aa4 | type |
No Party Like a Donner Party | |
History Bites / int_e0904aa4 | comment |
In the episode on the Donner Party, a recently-deceased wagon driver is named Berger. Which naturally leads to his on-camera eulogy being a long string of food puns. | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_e0904aa4 | |
History Bites / int_e16217f8 | type |
Historical Villain Upgrade | |
History Bites / int_e16217f8 | comment |
Historical Villain Upgrade: This show, not surprisingly, does this to a number of Historical Domain Characters, most notably: In "Saladin's Last Stand", Frederick Barbarossa, known for being a shrewd political figure, is Flanderized as a bloodthirsty warrior who killed all the people of Crema after successfully besieging it. Never mind that most of the civilian victims had actually died of hunger and disease, and that some 20,000 survivors were allowed to leave with whatever they could carry before Crema was burnt to the ground. | |
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History Bites / int_e5e6640b | type |
Flanderization | |
History Bites / int_e5e6640b | comment |
In "Saladin's Last Stand", Frederick Barbarossa, known for being a shrewd political figure, is Flanderized as a bloodthirsty warrior who killed all the people of Crema after successfully besieging it. Never mind that most of the civilian victims had actually died of hunger and disease, and that some 20,000 survivors were allowed to leave with whatever they could carry before Crema was burnt to the ground. | |
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History Bites / int_e5e6640b | |
History Bites / int_e796ce97 | type |
Blackface | |
History Bites / int_e796ce97 | comment |
Blackface: An episode set in the United States in the 1880's features a Parody Commercial for a minstrel show starring Willy White in blackface (as minstrel shows were commonplace in America in the 1880's). | |
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History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_e796ce97 | |
History Bites / int_e91cc721 | type |
In the Style of | |
History Bites / int_e91cc721 | comment |
In the Style of: Some episodes had the "main plot" done in a specific style; for example, the investigation and prosecution of the murder of Thomas Beckett was presented as an episode of Law & Order, while Sir Isaac Newton's episode was done like A Beautiful Mind. | |
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History Bites / int_e91cc721 | |
History Bites / int_eef90616 | type |
Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick | |
History Bites / int_eef90616 | comment |
Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: "... and nookie." | |
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History Bites / int_f58d1622 | type |
Medieval Morons | |
History Bites / int_f58d1622 | comment |
Medieval Morons: Timmy the Jeopardy! contestant was a dirt-farming village idiot, but he got at least one right answer. | |
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History Bites / int_fdb6b8ad | type |
The Magnificent | |
History Bites / int_fdb6b8ad | comment |
The Magnificent: The episode about Leif Erickson has David Letterman list the Top 10 Worst Nicknames for a Viking Leader: | |
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History Bites / int_fdb6b8ad | |
History Bites / int_ff7b34f9 | type |
Strawman News Media | |
History Bites / int_ff7b34f9 | comment |
Strawman News Media: One notable example is the Black Death episode, where one of the anchormen claims that Jewish rabbis are spreading the plague by poisoning the wells. Terrible news reporting! If History Bites were real, medieval anchormen would never have been allowed to admit that they believe conspiracy theories about the Black Death, even if they did. | |
History Bites / int_ff7b34f9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
History Bites / int_ff7b34f9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_ff7b34f9 | |
History Bites / int_name | type |
ItemName | |
History Bites / int_name | comment |
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History Bites / int_name | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
History Bites / int_name | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
History Bites / int_name | |
History Bites / int_name | itemName |
History Bites |
The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.
History Bites | hasFeature |
Appeal to Worse Problems / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Happiness in Slavery / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | seeAlso |
History Bites | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Horny Vikings / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Mukokuseki / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Nature Is Not Nice / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Of Corpse He's Alive / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Orphaned Etymology / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Recursive Crossdressing / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
Rhetorical Request Blunder / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
The Dung Ages / int_3dd80ee | |
History Bites | hasFeature |
The Web Always Existed / int_3dd80ee |
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Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.