GTA Radio: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Mass update links)
m (Mass update links)
Line 2: Line 2:
{{quote| "You're listening to ''Chatterbox'', hosted by me, Lazlow, because I got kicked off the rock station."}}
{{quote| "You're listening to ''Chatterbox'', hosted by me, Lazlow, because I got kicked off the rock station."}}


''[[GTA Radio]]'' is an extensive [[Show Within a Show]] within the ''[[Grand Theft Auto]]'' universe. Although an [[Early Bird Cameo|early form]] existed in ''[[Grand Theft Auto II]],'' it started when radio personality Lazlow Jones was hired to produce the radio shows for the series. Starting with ''[[Grand Theft Auto III (Video Game)|Grand Theft Auto III]]'', he created a whole series of fake stations, with the only thing real being the music (either originally produced for the games or licensed). Otherwise, the commercials, DJs, and shows are spoofs of those on actual radio (including where he spoofs ''himself'').
''[[GTA Radio]]'' is an extensive [[Show Within a Show]] within the ''[[Grand Theft Auto]]'' universe. Although an [[Early-Bird Cameo|early form]] existed in ''[[Grand Theft Auto II]],'' it started when radio personality Lazlow Jones was hired to produce the radio shows for the series. Starting with ''[[Grand Theft Auto III (Video Game)|Grand Theft Auto III]]'', he created a whole series of fake stations, with the only thing real being the music (either originally produced for the games or licensed). Otherwise, the commercials, DJs, and shows are spoofs of those on actual radio (including where he spoofs ''himself'').


The stations cover a huge variety, ranging from talk, rock, techno, rap, country, and others. The DJs are just as colorful.
The stations cover a huge variety, ranging from talk, rock, techno, rap, country, and others. The DJs are just as colorful.
Line 34: Line 34:
''(WCTR News #04):'' "Next up, it's sensationalist propaganda. I mean, the news."<br />
''(WCTR News #04):'' "Next up, it's sensationalist propaganda. I mean, the news."<br />
''(WCTR News #06):'' "Is the world ending? We hope so -- we need the ratings. The news is next!" }}
''(WCTR News #06):'' "Is the world ending? We hope so -- we need the ratings. The news is next!" }}
* [[Defictionalization]]: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazlow Lazlow], radio scriptwriter for most GTA games from ''III'' onwards, has an actual XM radio show, in large part because of his resurgent popularity stemming from his involvement with the series, including, but not limited to, hosting a radio show in each game. He directly references it in IV, when he uses lines about remembering a time "when 16-year-olds could drink, smoke at bars, listen to heavy metal, and get into high-speed accidents" which was lifted directly from the opening to his show.
* [[Defictionalization]]: [[wikipedia:Lazlow|Lazlow]], radio scriptwriter for most GTA games from ''III'' onwards, has an actual XM radio show, in large part because of his resurgent popularity stemming from his involvement with the series, including, but not limited to, hosting a radio show in each game. He directly references it in IV, when he uses lines about remembering a time "when 16-year-olds could drink, smoke at bars, listen to heavy metal, and get into high-speed accidents" which was lifted directly from the opening to his show.
* [[Distracted By the Luxury]]: ''San Andreas's'' DeKoch Diamonds commercial claims that diamonds can "chill that bitch out".
* [[Distracted By the Luxury]]: ''San Andreas's'' DeKoch Diamonds commercial claims that diamonds can "chill that bitch out".
* [[The Ditz]]: Amy Sheckenhausen from ''Vice City's'' K-Chat fits this trope perfectly, flirting with her famous or attractive guests and, until the end of an interview, being completely oblivious to the fact that one of her guests was promoting {{spoiler|[[But You Screw One Goat!|bestiality]]}}.
* [[The Ditz]]: Amy Sheckenhausen from ''Vice City's'' K-Chat fits this trope perfectly, flirting with her famous or attractive guests and, until the end of an interview, being completely oblivious to the fact that one of her guests was promoting {{spoiler|[[But You Screw One Goat!|bestiality]]}}.
Line 49: Line 49:
* [[Hanging Judge]]: Judge Grady, host of the court show parody "Just or Unjust" segment of right-wing radio station ''We Know the Truth (WKTT)'' in ''IV''. The show's introduction has him fining a man a million dollars for "wasting the court's time," and he uses [[Duel to The Death|duels]] and [[Blood Sport|gladiatorial combat]] between plaintiff and defendant as a means of settling disputes.
* [[Hanging Judge]]: Judge Grady, host of the court show parody "Just or Unjust" segment of right-wing radio station ''We Know the Truth (WKTT)'' in ''IV''. The show's introduction has him fining a man a million dollars for "wasting the court's time," and he uses [[Duel to The Death|duels]] and [[Blood Sport|gladiatorial combat]] between plaintiff and defendant as a means of settling disputes.
* [[Hates the Job, Loves The Limelight]]
* [[Hates the Job, Loves The Limelight]]
* [[Hey It's That Voice]]: ''Tons''. The series has featured such people as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funkmaster_Flex Funkmaster Flex], [[Iggy Pop]], [[Juliette Lewis]], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daddy_Yankee Daddy Yankee], [[Saturday Night Live|Jason Sudeikis, Bill Hader]], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luther_Campbell Luther Campbell (of 2 Live Crew fame)], [[Guns N' Roses (Music)|Axl Rose]], [[George Clinton]], [[Public Enemy|Chuck D]], [[Wil Wheaton]], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sly_and_Robbie Sly and Robbie], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mister_Cee Mister Cee], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DJ_Premier DJ Premier (of Gang Starr fame, whose song "B.Y.S." was featured on ''San Andreas'')], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruslana Ruslana (2004 Eurovision Song Contest winner)], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julio_G Julio G] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Dick Andy Dick] playing DJs, talk show hosts, guests, and newscasters. There are also cameos by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Mitnick Kevin Mitnick], once the most wanted computer hacker in America (who even made a [[Shout Out]] to his former activity), and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opie_and_Anthony Opie and Anthony] among others.
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]]: ''Tons''. The series has featured such people as [[wikipedia:Funkmaster Flex|Funkmaster Flex]], [[Iggy Pop]], [[Juliette Lewis]], [[wikipedia:Daddy Yankee|Daddy Yankee]], [[Saturday Night Live|Jason Sudeikis, Bill Hader]], [[wikipedia:Luther Campbell|Luther Campbell (of 2 Live Crew fame)]], [[Guns N' Roses (Music)|Axl Rose]], [[George Clinton]], [[Public Enemy|Chuck D]], [[Wil Wheaton]], [[wikipedia:Sly and Robbie|Sly and Robbie]], [[wikipedia:Mister Cee|Mister Cee]], [[wikipedia:DJ Premier|DJ Premier (of Gang Starr fame, whose song "B.Y.S." was featured on ''San Andreas'')]], [[wikipedia:Ruslana|Ruslana (2004 Eurovision Song Contest winner)]], [[wikipedia:Julio G|Julio G]] and [[wikipedia:Andy Dick|Andy Dick]] playing DJs, talk show hosts, guests, and newscasters. There are also cameos by [[wikipedia:Kevin Mitnick|Kevin Mitnick]], once the most wanted computer hacker in America (who even made a [[Shout-Out]] to his former activity), and [[wikipedia:Opie and Anthony|Opie and Anthony]] among others.
* [[Hipster]]: Parodied in ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV (Video Game)|IV]]'''s Indie-[[Alternative Rock]] radio station, Radio Broker, complete with host [[Juliette Lewis]] letting off some [[Self-Deprecation|self-aware barbs]].
* [[Hipster]]: Parodied in ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV (Video Game)|IV]]'''s Indie-[[Alternative Rock]] radio station, Radio Broker, complete with host [[Juliette Lewis]] letting off some [[Self-Deprecation|self-aware barbs]].
* [[Hummer Dinger]]: Parodied with the Maibatsu Monstrosity.
* [[Hummer Dinger]]: Parodied with the Maibatsu Monstrosity.
* [[I Am Not Spock]]: ''Vice City's'' Claude Maginot, a [[Classically-Trained Extra|classically-trained actor]] who is incredibly peeved about how he is best known as the star of the [[Sit Com]] ''Just the Five of Us'', which he calls "commercial dross." In an interview on K-Chat, he tries to steer the subject toward his interpretive dance show, ''In the Future, There Will be Robots'', and breaks down into a rant when [[The Ditz|Amy]] keeps trying to push the subject toward his show.
* [[I Am Not Spock]]: ''Vice City's'' Claude Maginot, a [[Classically-Trained Extra|classically-trained actor]] who is incredibly peeved about how he is best known as the star of the [[Sit Com]] ''Just the Five of Us'', which he calls "commercial dross." In an interview on K-Chat, he tries to steer the subject toward his interpretive dance show, ''In the Future, There Will be Robots'', and breaks down into a rant when [[The Ditz|Amy]] keeps trying to push the subject toward his show.
* [[I Just Shot Marvin in The Face]]: In ''San Andreas'', [[The Ahnold|Jack Howitzer]] accidentally shoots interviewer Billy Dexter, first host of WCTR's ''Entertaining America'' segment (he was replaced by Lazlow after a long hiatus). It's implied that he was sentenced to death after doing this. ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV the Ballad of Gay Tony|The Ballad of Gay Tony]]'' reveals that he was eventually paroled.
* [[I Just Shot Marvin in The Face]]: In ''San Andreas'', [[The Ahnold|Jack Howitzer]] accidentally shoots interviewer Billy Dexter, first host of WCTR's ''Entertaining America'' segment (he was replaced by Lazlow after a long hiatus). It's implied that he was sentenced to death after doing this. ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV the Ballad of Gay Tony|The Ballad of Gay Tony]]'' reveals that he was eventually paroled.
* [[In Game TV]]: Starting with ''IV''. In past games, there were also ads for various TV shows, although you couldn't watch them.
* [[In-Game TV]]: Starting with ''IV''. In past games, there were also ads for various TV shows, although you couldn't watch them.
* [[Kent Brockman News]]: Particularly in ''San Andreas''. Also, ''GTA IV'''s Weazel News
* [[Kent Brockman News]]: Particularly in ''San Andreas''. Also, ''GTA IV'''s Weazel News
* [[The Last DJ]]: Cousin Ed, host of ''Vice City Stories''' V-Rock. Later on, Lazlow starts to believe himself to be this.
* [[The Last DJ]]: Cousin Ed, host of ''Vice City Stories''' V-Rock. Later on, Lazlow starts to believe himself to be this.
Line 78: Line 78:
{{quote| '''Nurse Bob''': "Now, remember what my daddy said: 'Don't you tell nobody about me coming in here at night!'"}}
{{quote| '''Nurse Bob''': "Now, remember what my daddy said: 'Don't you tell nobody about me coming in here at night!'"}}
* [[Police Procedural]]: Parodied in ''IV'' with ''The Science of Crime'' ("It's forensically boring!"), complete with an obvious [[CSI: Miami|Horatio Caine]] parody dropping [[Quip to Black|bad one-liners]] and noting how "my acting sucks ass", as well as the [[The Jimmy Hart Version]] of the [[Big Yes]] in [[The Who]]'s ''Won't Get Fooled Again''. It has fifteen spinoffs, including ones in [[Grand Theft Auto Vice City|Vice City]], [[Grand Theft Auto San Andreas|Las Venturas]], Ohio, Djibouti, Fairbanks, Panama City and Santiago.
* [[Police Procedural]]: Parodied in ''IV'' with ''The Science of Crime'' ("It's forensically boring!"), complete with an obvious [[CSI: Miami|Horatio Caine]] parody dropping [[Quip to Black|bad one-liners]] and noting how "my acting sucks ass", as well as the [[The Jimmy Hart Version]] of the [[Big Yes]] in [[The Who]]'s ''Won't Get Fooled Again''. It has fifteen spinoffs, including ones in [[Grand Theft Auto Vice City|Vice City]], [[Grand Theft Auto San Andreas|Las Venturas]], Ohio, Djibouti, Fairbanks, Panama City and Santiago.
* [[Rated M for Manly]]: The TV show ''The Men's Room'' in ''IV'', featuring [[Sensitive Guy and Manly Man|MMA fighter Bas Rutten (as himself) and his metrosexual co-host, Jeremy St. Ives]].
* [[Rated "M" for Manly]]: The TV show ''The Men's Room'' in ''IV'', featuring [[Sensitive Guy and Manly Man|MMA fighter Bas Rutten (as himself) and his metrosexual co-host, Jeremy St. Ives]].
* [[Refuge in Vulgarity]]: Some of the ads and shows.
* [[Refuge in Vulgarity]]: Some of the ads and shows.
* [[Self-Deprecation]]: You would ''think'' Lazlow would make himself into a Canon Stu, being the producer of the radio shows in the series in [[Real Life]], but even in ''III'', when he had the most virtual air time, the best he could do was snark about his situation. By ''IV'', he has turned his character into a deluded, [[Small Name, Big Ego|egotistical]] [[Jerkass]] who believes himself to be [[The Last DJ]], and is genuinely surprised and offended when people call him out on it. Plus, he gave some of his [[Real Life]] buddies roles on the shows.
* [[Self-Deprecation]]: You would ''think'' Lazlow would make himself into a Canon Stu, being the producer of the radio shows in the series in [[Real Life]], but even in ''III'', when he had the most virtual air time, the best he could do was snark about his situation. By ''IV'', he has turned his character into a deluded, [[Small Name, Big Ego|egotistical]] [[Jerkass]] who believes himself to be [[The Last DJ]], and is genuinely surprised and offended when people call him out on it. Plus, he gave some of his [[Real Life]] buddies roles on the shows.
Line 110: Line 110:
'''Herr Gruber''': "Haf you not read ze book? Strength good, veakness bad, ''badbadbad!'' }}
'''Herr Gruber''': "Haf you not read ze book? Strength good, veakness bad, ''badbadbad!'' }}
* [[Trash Can Band]]/[[Everything Is an Instrument]]: ''IV'''s Banging Trash Can Lids For an Hour.
* [[Trash Can Band]]/[[Everything Is an Instrument]]: ''IV'''s Banging Trash Can Lids For an Hour.
* [[Values Resonance]]: Invoked [[In Universe]] by the "Moorehead Rides Again" radio drama from [[Grand Theft Auto Vice City Stories|Vice City Stories']] Vice City Public Radio (VCPR), a parody of hard-boiled [[Private Detective|Private Detectives]] such as ''[[Mike Hammer]]''. While the show was said to have originally aired near the end of [[World War Two]], back when [[Red Scare|fear of communism creeping into America]] is slowly giving way to the [[Witch Hunt|social nightmare that was McCarthyism]], it resonates with American sentiments around forty years later (i.e., 1984, the setting of the game), in light of intensifying tensions between America and the Soviet Union (one that began with the latter's invasion of Afghanistan in 1979), long before [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] came in and [[The Great Politics Mess Up|the USSR dissolved]].
* [[Values Resonance]]: Invoked [[In Universe]] by the "Moorehead Rides Again" radio drama from [[Grand Theft Auto Vice City Stories|Vice City Stories']] Vice City Public Radio (VCPR), a parody of hard-boiled [[Private Detective|Private Detectives]] such as ''[[Mike Hammer]]''. While the show was said to have originally aired near the end of [[World War Two]], back when [[Red Scare|fear of communism creeping into America]] is slowly giving way to the [[Witch Hunt|social nightmare that was McCarthyism]], it resonates with American sentiments around forty years later (i.e., 1984, the setting of the game), in light of intensifying tensions between America and the Soviet Union (one that began with the latter's invasion of Afghanistan in 1979), long before [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] came in and [[The Great Politics Mess-Up|the USSR dissolved]].
{{quote| '''Moorehead:''' Before she was tragically killed, the daughter said her father was unarmed and never wore a gun. You know what that means?<br />
{{quote| '''Moorehead:''' Before she was tragically killed, the daughter said her father was unarmed and never wore a gun. You know what that means?<br />
'''Molly:''' Yes!<br />
'''Molly:''' Yes!<br />
Line 123: Line 123:
{{quote| "For those of you just coming to consciousness next to an ugly chick in a strange bed with beer cans and underwear across the floor, run the hell out and get to the clinic."}}
{{quote| "For those of you just coming to consciousness next to an ugly chick in a strange bed with beer cans and underwear across the floor, run the hell out and get to the clinic."}}
** And one of the promos on Bounce FM.
** And one of the promos on Bounce FM.
* [[What the Fu Are You Doing]]: A "Dragon Stance" cannot turn a desk into "two half-desks".
* [[What the Fu Are You Doing?]]: A "Dragon Stance" cannot turn a desk into "two half-desks".
* [[Who Writes This Crap?]]: Parodied in ''[[Grand Theft Auto Vice City Stories|Vice City Stories']]'' "Bait and Switch" segment of Vice City Public Radio (VCPR).
* [[Who Writes This Crap?]]: Parodied in ''[[Grand Theft Auto Vice City Stories|Vice City Stories']]'' "Bait and Switch" segment of Vice City Public Radio (VCPR).
{{quote| '''Announcer:''' "''Bait and Switch'' -- Vice City's only radio show devoted to water sports, power boats, water skiing, free flounder fishing [[Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick|and dialectical materialism]]. Oh, wrong script. Who wrote this shit?!"<br />
{{quote| '''Announcer:''' "''Bait and Switch'' -- Vice City's only radio show devoted to water sports, power boats, water skiing, free flounder fishing [[Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick|and dialectical materialism]]. Oh, wrong script. Who wrote this shit?!"<br />
Line 131: Line 131:
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:GTA Radio]]
[[Category:GTA Radio]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Revision as of 15:37, 25 January 2014

 "You're listening to Chatterbox, hosted by me, Lazlow, because I got kicked off the rock station."

GTA Radio is an extensive Show Within a Show within the Grand Theft Auto universe. Although an early form existed in Grand Theft Auto II, it started when radio personality Lazlow Jones was hired to produce the radio shows for the series. Starting with Grand Theft Auto III, he created a whole series of fake stations, with the only thing real being the music (either originally produced for the games or licensed). Otherwise, the commercials, DJs, and shows are spoofs of those on actual radio (including where he spoofs himself).

The stations cover a huge variety, ranging from talk, rock, techno, rap, country, and others. The DJs are just as colorful.

In Grand Theft Auto IV, this even expanded to full TV shows and the Internet.


This Show in a Show provides examples of:

 Max Cavalera: "Fuck you, Jimmy [Gestapo], you left puke all over the studio last night!"

  • Celebrity Paradox: Axl Rose voices Tommy "The Nightmare" Smith in San Andreas's classic rock station K-DST, yet Guns N' Roses clearly exists in the game's continuity, since the song "Welcome to the Jungle" plays on modern rock station Radio X. Adding to the humor, Sage, the station's host whom Tommy publicly dislikes, claims to have slept with the entire band before Appetite for Destruction was released.
  • Cluster F-Bomb: Jimmy Gestapo, DJ of IV's LCHC (Liberty City Hardcore). Luke (voiced by the man of the same name from 2 Live Crew) on Vice City Stories' Fresh 105 FM is this as well, as is Iggy Pop of IV's Liberty Rock Radio.
  • Conspiracy Theorist: Marvin Trill, host of the Area 53 segment of West Coast Talk Radio (WCTR) in San Andreas, a parody of Coast to Coast AM.
  • Contractual Purity: In Universe -- come San Andreas, Jimmy, the precocious young star of Vice City's Just the Five of Us, has become a drunken mess.
  • Deadly Game: Liberty City Survivor, advertised in III. The ad, complemented with fan footage from IV, can be listened to here.
  • Deadpan Snarker: The female station announcer of San Andreas's WCTR seems to be this, particularly in WCTR News intros.

 (WCTR News #01): "Next up on WCTR -- the news. We tried to make it interesting and not depressing."

(WCTR News #03): "Next up, we've got the news. This time, some of it's true! Who are we kidding?"

(WCTR News #04): "Next up, it's sensationalist propaganda. I mean, the news."

(WCTR News #06): "Is the world ending? We hope so -- we need the ratings. The news is next!"

  • Defictionalization: Lazlow, radio scriptwriter for most GTA games from III onwards, has an actual XM radio show, in large part because of his resurgent popularity stemming from his involvement with the series, including, but not limited to, hosting a radio show in each game. He directly references it in IV, when he uses lines about remembering a time "when 16-year-olds could drink, smoke at bars, listen to heavy metal, and get into high-speed accidents" which was lifted directly from the opening to his show.
  • Distracted By the Luxury: San Andreas's DeKoch Diamonds commercial claims that diamonds can "chill that bitch out".
  • The Ditz: Amy Sheckenhausen from Vice City's K-Chat fits this trope perfectly, flirting with her famous or attractive guests and, until the end of an interview, being completely oblivious to the fact that one of her guests was promoting bestiality.
  • The Dung Ages: The in-game TV documentary "A History of Liberty City" in IV sees this trope applied to the founding of America up to the early 20th century. Though to be fair, Liberty City hadn't progressed that much since then.
    • Anachronism Stew: While this doesn't apply to the game itself, the "documentary" makes mention of porno magazines, subways, roller coasters and convenience stores as being part of "American History" anywhere from 20 to hundreds of years before they became prolific.
  • Dumbass DJ: Most of 'em DJs count.
  • Fake Band: A staple in early GTA games, it was mostly dropped by the time III came around with all but two music stations (Head Radio and Lips 106) playing licensed music. In Vice City, Hair Metal parody band Love Fist had two original songs -- "Dangerous Bastard" and "Fist Fury" -- on V-Rock (the game's rock station), and Unaesta and Alpha Banditos had three on the Espantoso station, (Yo te mire by "Tres Apenas como eso" and "La vida es la un lenteja" by Unaesta and "The Bull Is Wrong" by Alpha Banditos). Liberty City Stories was the last game in the series to have original music.
  • Fictional Video Game: Vice City has commercials on its radio stations for the Degenetron game system, which features such titles as Defender of the Faith ("Destroy the blue dots with your powerful red square!"). In San Andreas, they appear on retro arcade machines. You can't play them, but you can play the "emulator" on the defictionalised Degenatron "fansite."
    • III also has ads for Pogo the Monkey, which is later referenced by a Pogo the Monkey arcade in the cab firm from Vice City.
  • Frivolous Lawsuit: In San Andreas, there is a news story of a man suing the Renaissance Fair because a replica catapult he purchased didn't have a label warning him not to fire it at his insurance agent's house, accidentally setting the entire neighborhood on fire.

 "I don't wanna work very hard so I've hired a lawyer. I'm gonna be rich!"

 Mary-Beth: "That's the difference. I don't have ex-husbands, I just have a lot of widowers. I own a LOT of black dresses. I LOVE funerals; I get shit-faced every time..."

 "I'm just a humble blacksmith with a Californian accent! How am I supposed to save the world and sell franchise rights to theme parks?"

  • Nothing but Hits: In Vice City, San Andreas and Vice City Stories.
  • Only Sane Man: VCPR's Maurice Chavez in Vice City and Vice City Stories'. Mostly.
    • Lazlow also serves as this in III.
  • Parental Incest: Played for laughs with Nurse Bob.

 Nurse Bob: "Now, remember what my daddy said: 'Don't you tell nobody about me coming in here at night!'"

 "Have you noticed how popular synthesizers are getting? It's not the same as a lonely man with a pony tail, singing of his love on a guitar. At the door of a fair maid's hacienda. But it is not far short."

  • Sex, Drugs and Rock And Roll: Jimmy Gestapo, DJ of IV's punk station Liberty City Hardcore, rants at length about the extremely hard-drinking, hard-partying lifestyle that he feels punk should be. Also, Iggy Pop, DJ of IV's classic rock station Liberty Rock Radio, talks about how a lot of the best music was made on drugs, and bemoans the fact that fewer rockers nowadays use them.
    • Tommy "The Nightmare" Smith of San Andreas's classic rock station K-DST is fond of this trope as well. Hell, the station's identifications are all narcotic plays on its nickname of "The Dust".

 Station ID: "If the police can't stop you... (*police siren and gunshots*) you must be on... The Dust."

Station ID: "When all your drinking friends have gone to rehab, we encourage you to stay on... The Dust."

    • Sage of the modern rock station Radio X very much counts as well.

 Sage: "I smoke! I smoke cigarettes, I smoke cloves, I smoke anything that can go up in flames! I'm crazy! That was Danzig. Slept with the whole band."

  • Show Within a Show: One of the most elaborate ever made, stretching across every game in the series.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: Lazlow (the in-series character) has seemingly turned into this come IV.
  • Stealth Pun: "Fizz!", the celebrity gossip show from WKTT, the right-wing talk radio station in IV is hosted by Jane Labrador, who mentions field correspondent Susan Retriever by name. [1]
  • Stock Footage: Shots from San Andreas, Bully and Red Dead Redemption are used in the TV shows in IV when they have to represent places outside of Liberty City.
  • Strawman News Media: Portrayed as Types 3 and 4.
  • Strawman Political: Many times, directed against both sides.
    • Peyton (liberal) and Mary (conservative) Phillips, husband-and-wife hosts of the "I Say, You Say" segment of San Andreas's WCTR, are a No Celebrities Were Harmed version of James Carville and Mary Matalin, political consultants for Bill Clinton and George H. W. Bush, respectively, who started dating while working on their behalf during the 1992 Presidential elections.

 WCTR Announcer: "Boy, I can't imagine what those guys are like in the bedroom, but I'm sure it's a bit like the Bay of Pigs!"

 Jack: Oh, there's only one thing to do -- I gotta defend freedom! No time to cry, only time to die! <three gunshots> WELCOME TO THE LAND OF FREEDOM, BITCHES!!! YAAAAAAHHHHH!!! <starts firing his gun into the air; the station then goes static>

 Narrator: "After running residential facilities in Germany, Switzerland and then Brazil..."

Herr Gruber: "Haf you not read ze book? Strength good, veakness bad, badbadbad!

 Moorehead: Before she was tragically killed, the daughter said her father was unarmed and never wore a gun. You know what that means?

Molly: Yes!

Moorehead: That's right, Molly -- means he's a sissy. I imagine when he hears his daughter is dead he'll cry.

Molly: What kind of a man cries, Gordon?!

Moorehead: I don't know. One that loses wars, I think. Probably the kind of man who raises a $2 tramp for a daughter, Molly. A very sick individual... and probably a communist.

Molly: I don't like to express strong emotions, but I think I hate this fisherman, Gordon!

Moorehead: Don't hate him, Molly -- pity him. And help me kill him.

Molly: Oh, I shall!

  • Vapor Wear: Sage, host of San Andreas's Radio X, notes she has freed herself from the tyranny of society by not wearing underwear.
  • What Did I Do Last Night?: A between-song banter by Tommy Smith:

 "For those of you just coming to consciousness next to an ugly chick in a strange bed with beer cans and underwear across the floor, run the hell out and get to the clinic."

 Announcer: "Bait and Switch -- Vice City's only radio show devoted to water sports, power boats, water skiing, free flounder fishing and dialectical materialism. Oh, wrong script. Who wrote this shit?!"

Assistant: "Tits!"

Announcer: "Yeah, that's more like it. And tits!"

  1. To explain, both their names spell out "Labrador Retriever", a breed of dog, and considering they are both females...