Time for Plan B: Difference between revisions
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* Late in its run, sprite comic ''[[Bob and George]]'' has a couple of alphabetical-contingency plans called by letter - namely "Q" and "R". |
* Late in its run, sprite comic ''[[Bob and George]]'' has a couple of alphabetical-contingency plans called by letter - namely "Q" and "R". |
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* ''[[The Whiteboard]]'': When surrounded by the other team at an "outlaw" paintball field,<ref>basically no real rules</ref> in [http://www.the-whiteboard.com/autotwb1262.html this strip], the team goes through their options, including [[Attack Pattern Alpha|Attack Plans B, Delta, and Zero]] (the last involving [[Noodle Implements|two zeppelins and a smoke machine]]). |
* ''[[The Whiteboard]]'': When surrounded by the other team at an "outlaw" paintball field,<ref>basically no real rules</ref> in [http://www.the-whiteboard.com/autotwb1262.html this strip], the team goes through their options, including [[Attack Pattern Alpha|Attack Plans B, Delta, and Zero]] (the last involving [[Noodle Implements|two zeppelins and a smoke machine]]). |
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* In ''[[The KAMics]]'' Gertrude & Brunhilda had a [http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/4782936/ Plan B], sadly we didn't see it in action. |
* In ''[[The KAMics]]'' Gertrude & Brunhilda had a [https://web.archive.org/web/20120607082023/http://www.drunkduck.com/The_KAMics/4782936/ Plan B], sadly we didn't see it in action. |
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* Fa'lina of ''[[Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures]]'' has an [http://www.missmab.com/Comics/Vol_424.php interesting] [http://www.missmab.com/Comics/Vol_426.php variant]. |
* Fa'lina of ''[[Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures]]'' has an [http://www.missmab.com/Comics/Vol_424.php interesting] [http://www.missmab.com/Comics/Vol_426.php variant]. |
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* Used in the ''[[Blade of Toshubi]]'' [http://www.drunkduck.com/Blade_of_Toshubi/4831842/ here.] |
* Used in the ''[[Blade of Toshubi]]'' [https://web.archive.org/web/20120630050342/http://www.drunkduck.com/Blade_of_Toshubi/4831842/ here.] |
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* ''[[Magpie House Design|Carry On]]'': [http://www.hirezfox.com/km/co/d/20100604.html "That ''was'' plan B."] |
* ''[[Magpie House Design|Carry On]]'': [http://www.hirezfox.com/km/co/d/20100604.html "That ''was'' plan B."] |
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* Rosemary [http://mansionofe.comicgenesis.com/d/20031208.html employs it] in an early installment of ''[[The Mansion of E]].'' |
* Rosemary [http://mansionofe.comicgenesis.com/d/20031208.html employs it] in an early installment of ''[[The Mansion of E]].'' |
Revision as of 11:21, 19 January 2022
"Next time, let's start with Plan B." —Lexi, Loonatics Unleashed
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A Stock Phrase, generally said in the middle of an action scene when things are going wrong. There are two common forms of plan B: Run like hell and Boom!
Hilarity Ensues if it loops all the way to Plan Z. Or if the letter doesn't actually have anything to do with the number of plans before it (e.g., it's called "plan B" because it involves a trip to Belgium).
See also Never Recycle Your Schemes.
Anime and Manga
- Dragon Ball: Dub-Goku, early into his fight with Kid Buu. "Okay, onto plan b...whatever that is." (This being DBZ, it seems like "try that much harder to blow him up.")
- In Mahou Sensei Negima: When Ala Alba's original plan to get out of the governor's ball without fighting fails, they switch to 'Escape Plan B'. Of course, not all goes to plan...
Comic Books
- Hex has: "Looks like a good time for Plan B. Sure do wish I had me a Plan B." Followed a few pages later by "Looks like I just found me a Plan B".
- Runaways gives us "We always use plan B. Why don't we just make it plan A?"
- There's this great exchange in an issue of Sonic: Universe, where Shadow the Hedgehog and his "Team Dark" attempt to get a Chaos Emerald from the God-Panda currently lording over them in the "Special Zone." After failing the mini-game, Omega turns to Shadow and asks if it's time for plan B. Shadow answers in the affirmative and Plan B basically comprises entirely of Omega unloading his entire arsenal, which makes up over half of his total mass, in the God-Panda's face.
Omega: "I like Plan B." |
- In the American Manga Vampire Cheerleaders, the leader is thwarted in using her bite to alter the mind of the boy who announced he will expose them.
Lori: Heh. A minor setback. Girls, it's time for Plan BC. |
- The Suicide Squad's "Plan B" was usually "have Lawton shoot our way out."
- Astonishing X Men: Cyclops's Plan B for being fired upon by Breakworld ships was "we all die now". His actual plan was to get sucked into space where the Breakworld troops would capture him, revive him and torture him for the location of the ultimate weapon that the X-Men lied about having. Once he'd been there long enough for the rest of the team, who crash landed on the surface of the breakworld, to also get captured, Cyclops would re-activate his psychically suppressed optic blasts to break the team out.
- From Uncanny X-Men 541:
Mayor Sinclair: So--Plan B? |
- "Looks like Gordon's about to call in plan B. B as in Batman."
Fan Works
- In the Neon Genesis Evangelion Fanfic Nobody Dies, Misato Katsuragi says "I love those Plan B's. It's the sort of plans I see through my eyelids." after watching a particularly annoying (and terrifying) Angel die in the brightest, most spectacular, and most explosive way possible.
- Don't forget Rei's famous scream of "I love Plan B! It's always so much better than Plan A!"
- In the Glee fanfic Hunting the Unicorn, the Warblers have a list of Zany Schemes to keep Kurt from transferring back to McKinley High. The first two plans shown are Plans A and B, but the third is Plan M.
- In the Harry Potter/Sailor Moon/Ranma ½ fanfic The Girl Who Loved, Mary Riddle can't figure out a "Plan A" for getting into Harry and Usagi's heavily-protected wedding, and is stuck with several Plans B and C, none of which she likes.
Film -- Animated
- Lampshaded in Wizards, when Mook 1, having seen that Plan A (machine gunning hostages) doesn't work, announces "Now for Plan B!" "What's Plan B?" asks Mook 2. "You'll see." And he blows up the temple. But they forgot to go outside first.
Film -- Live Action
- Hudson Hawk. The title character apparently kills Tommy Five-Tone, so the Mayflowers can't use Tommy to convince him to work for them. Minerva Mayflower turns to her operative George Kaplan:
Minerva: Plan B, George. |
- From Star Trek V, there's: "Prepare for Emergency Landing Plan B." "B, as in barricade!"
- Bad Boys II has one of these toward the end where the thoroughly improvised plan B consisted of driving what looks like a Humvee through the house, but definitely did not involve a bigass gun.
Marcus: What the hell does the B stand for? Bullshit! |
- The Lost Boys. When their first encounter with the vampires doesn't go according to plan, Sam and the Frog brothers have to go to Plan B. They don't have a Plan B yet and have only two and a half hours to come up with one.
- Used in Star Wars Episode III. Plan B sucks, since it was Anakin's idea.
- Condorman. The hero Woody overhears his CIA friend Harry telling his boss that if Woody's plan fails, they can always go to Plan B. Woody gets captured and is being hauled off to prison by a detective.
Woody: (despairingly) So much for Plan B. |
- Plan 9 from Outer Space was executed because Plans One through Eight failed.
- The Dukes of Hazzard film gave us the line: "Plan B's jes' a fancy way of sayin' 'drivin' by the seat o' yer pants'."
- Face Off: "Okay. Plan B. Let's just kill each other."
- The Tagline for the movie version of The A-Team: "There is no Plan B."
- Naturally mentioned frequently in the movie Plan B. A woman is forced by the mafia to kill various mob leaders, but decides to think of an increasingly complicated way of getting out of this.
- And then there's the other movie titled Plan B, which revolves around a man's various plans to win his ex-girlfriend back. Plan A involved him befriending his ex's new boyfriend and encouraging him to set his sights on another woman. Plan B? Seducing said boyfriend who's allegedly bisexual.
Literature
- In the Star Trek Expanded Universe novel How Much for Just the Planet?, by John M. Ford, the Diredei plan to stop the Federation and/or Klingons from exploiting their dilithium is called "Plan C". There was no Plan A or B; C stands for the keystone of the plan: "Comedy".
- In one Sonic the Hedgehog novel, they eventually have to resort to Plan D, which Sonic hadn't actually got as far as thinking up. Fortunately, a Contrived Coincidence intervenes.
- One of the book titles in the Liaden Universe is "Plan B." Plan B being the emergency "clan is under attack, everyone bug out, get weapons, and maintain radio silence" plan. It's pretty telling that Clan Korval has had this plan in reserve pretty much since they landed on the home planet. Word of God is that the title of the book was actually decided upon for them by fans during the long gap between their publisher rejecting further books in the series after the third (in which the name "Plan B" was first mentioned) and the authors learning they had an unexpected Internet fan movement. Fans kept asking them when Plan B was coming out, and they chose to take advantage of the name recognition when they found a publisher for future books in the series.
- In a way, Plan B was the authors' "Plan B", since they had not ever expected to be able to continue the series when the first publisher didn't want it. Word of God is also that "Plan B" was a working draft term for the real name of the plan, intended to be replaced in the edit process when they could come up with suitable Liaden nomenclature, but it somehow stuck.
- From Good Omens, after Crowley has successfully killed one Duke of Hell, but failed to bluff the surviving one:
Plan A had worked. Plan B had failed. Everything depended on Plan C, and there was only one drawback to this: he had only ever planned as far as B. |
- The Good, The Bad, and the Undead by Kim Harrison has:
"Grab the fish and run like hell." |
- This is the subject of a magnificent call back in a later book when Plan A fails again.
Live-Action TV
- MythBusters is this trope. You'd be hard pressed to find one time when Plan A worked without a hitch. On the off chance that Plan A does work, they generally go to Plan B! anyway.
- When the build team tried busting their first myth, they didn't have a plan B, causing Adam to comment that they usually only get it right on plan D.
- Which is why they always say "Failure is always an option".
- When the build team tried busting their first myth, they didn't have a plan B, causing Adam to comment that they usually only get it right on plan D.
- Each episode of Blackadder Goes Forth (in which Blackadder tries a different method to escape the trenches) is given a letter in the opening credits.
- Colonel O'Neill of Stargate SG-1 is well-known for saying this line and then poking fun at it. One memorable exchange (from "Orpheus"):
O'Neill:"It's time for plan B." |
- From episode "Evolution Part 1":
O'Neill: "Reynolds, I want flanking positions set up on either side of the clearing. Rig the perimeter with C4." |
O'Neill: So I guess that "frozen replicator" plan didn't pan out for ya? |
- Even that wasn't the real plan at all. It was a diversion that McKay wanted the Replicators to learn about when they mind probed their prisoners, so they wouldn't go looking for the real plan.
- 24 has a few examples:
Andre Drazen: When Plan A fails, you should have a Plan B, not Plan A recycled. |
- From the Alias episode "Hourglass":
Michael Vaughn: Okay, what's Plan B 'cause that's not going to happen. |
- From Andromeda:
Seamus Harper: We needed a Plan B. You always have a Plan B. |
- From the Doctor Who serial "Battlefield":
The Doctor: Ace... I think it's time for Plan B. |
- Leverage uses this a few times.
- In the pilot, to show off how Crazy Prepared Nate is:
Nate: Now get to the elevator and head down. We're going to the burn scam. |
- "The Queens Gambit Job" contains this reference to plan M:
Sophie: So the salt was plan B? |
- "The Boiler Room Job" inverts the trope. Hardison gets caught hacking into the mark's finances to steal his money, and the team invents a reason to cover up his presence that leads to an elaborate con. At the end of the episode, it turns out that the con was itself a cover... to distract the mark, allowing Hardison to hack into his finances and steal all his money, which Nate refers to as "going back to plan A".
- In "The Gold Job" Nate reveals that when he plans out a con, he starts with Plan G as the worst case scenario plan where they still succeed in their mission. He then works his way to Plan A as the most elegant way to beat the mark. It is implied that plans after G are desperation plans where they are pretty much just trying to get away with their lives. Since Hardison was in charge of Plan A in that episode, Nate was implementing Plan G behind his back just in case Plan A backfired.
- In "The Lost Heir Job", Parker and Eliot are rushing to the courtroom, pursued by cops, Nate (pretending to be a lawyer) is running out of time and the opposite side's lawyer just showed up.
Hardison: I hope you have a Plan B, or F, something from the first half of the alphabet. |
- Though he never says the exact phrase, Burn Notice's Michael Westin never has a Plan A work. Ever.
- Mocked gently in Puppets Who Kill, which a sex-crazed teddy bear who always has a plan B.
"...and if that doesn't work, I go to plan B." |
- An episode of The Big Bang Theory had the characters try to get a crashed Mars Rover functioning again, but when it wouldn't work, they moved to plan B; erase all the data and run away. One of the characters remarks, "Why wasn't that Plan A?"
- And don't forget House. The first theory is nearly always a fail. He gets it right somewhere around "Plan J"
- Really, House gets to plan J, and then realizes plan C was the right one all along. (Plan "L" was a frequent stop early on, if you catch this troper's drift.)
- A running gag on Get Smart had Max in a fix - he'd declare "I have a plan" and explains it - 99 (usually) would point out the very obvious flaw - Max would declare "I have an alternate plan."
- When the lawyers of The Practice were defending a client, and it wasn't going so well, they would explicitly switch to "Plan B", namely accusing someone else, usually a grieving relative of the victim, of committing the crime. Used as a transitive verb, e.g., "We're going to Plan B the brother."
- The phrase was used so often many Genre Savvy witnesses were aware of Plan B and would anticipate it. As well as the firm was sued for doing it.
- By contrast Plan A 'Establishing the State did not meet their burden of proof' was only described once (when they were being sued for Plan B).
- In the Farscape episode "We're So Screwed", they end up going with "plan E... for elevator".
- Part 3 of the "Liars, Guns, and Money" trilogy is called "Plan B", which is pretty funny considering that they end up playing Xanatos Speed Chess as everything imaginable goes wrong. By that episode they're WAY past Plan B.
- Warehouse 13 has:
Myka: Okay, what do we do now? |
- After Pete actually comes up with a Plan B, this is quickly followed by:
Myka: I think we should go with Plan C. |
- On Gossip Girl Blair always has a Plan B and usually a Plan C. Chuck tends to have backup plans also.
- At the conclusion of Torchwood: Miracle Day an agent of the Three Families reveals that even though the Miracle was undone, they had a Plan B prepared...
Newspaper Comics
- The Wizard of Id. The King asks his knight Rodney why the battle plan is called Plan B instead of Plan A. Rodney replies that they always end up having to go to Plan B anyway.
Video Games
- Supreme Commander had a little fun with this; the Cybran nuclear missile submarine is called Plan B.
- Fallout has "Plan C" which adds up to killing everything in the vicinity.
- In Modern Warfare 2, Plan B always involves C4. No exceptions.
- In Skylanders: Spyro's Adventure, after Kaos' army is driven back by the Skylanders, his goblin sidekick suggests Plan B. Kaos decides to skip all the way to Plan Z, and summon a giant monster to pretty much nuke Skylanders HQ and the Core Of Light. To his credit, it's very effective.
- In Alpha Protocol, you get a perk called "Plan B: Kill It with Fire" for setting 25 enemies on fire with incendiary grenades.
Web Comics
- Adventurers! subverts it in this strip because Plan B is just failure.
- Belkar has a tendency to comment on this trope in The Order of the Stick; in one strip he said "Run like hell" had always struck him as plan A, and later he spent a series of strips announcing the letter of every new plan his teammates came up with.
Belkar: Didn't we go through this already? We're on like plan Q. ... And plan R starts to take form. |
- Gets mentioned a lot on Schlock Mercenary. Usually whenever anyone suggests a plan along the lines of "and we run in, shoot everyone, blow some things up, and run away" (whatever the actual mission), the response will be "Well, we've got a Plan B".
- Here is where we find the shortest amount of time it takes to go from Plan B to Plan C.
- Another honorable mention is having to jump from Plan A straight to Plan E. Which then immediately becomes screwed up and the whole thing turns into an Indy Ploy.
- In Freefall here.
Sam: So much for plan A. No worries. Plan B's are more fun anyhow! |
- And it is.
- Chasing the Sunset has Plan B presenting itself. As in,
Dwarf King: In that case... Guards! Arrest these troublemakers! |
- This strip subverts it, however: Plan A succeeds.
- This 8-Bit Theater strip is fairly indicative of how most of Red Mage's plans work. Which is to say, they don't.
Red Mage: Okay. Plan B. Do we have one? |
- Then there are the other names they use for plans, including "Plan Suck" and "Plan Stupid, in honor of its creator, Mr. Stupid".
- Late in its run, sprite comic Bob and George has a couple of alphabetical-contingency plans called by letter - namely "Q" and "R".
- The Whiteboard: When surrounded by the other team at an "outlaw" paintball field,[1] in this strip, the team goes through their options, including Attack Plans B, Delta, and Zero (the last involving two zeppelins and a smoke machine).
- In The KAMics Gertrude & Brunhilda had a Plan B, sadly we didn't see it in action.
- Fa'lina of Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures has an interesting variant.
- Used in the Blade of Toshubi here.
- Carry On: "That was plan B."
- Rosemary employs it in an early installment of The Mansion of E.
Web Original
- Alternate History: The Series: On one of the occasions when the AH.commers and CF.netters work together, after failing to open a door the AH.commers are ordered to blast it open, upon which the CF.netters comment that "Your Plan B is our Plan A".
- The 1250 Things Mr. Welch Is No Longer Allowed to Do In An RPG gave us the masterstroke of logic, "Plan B is not automatically twice as much gunpowder as plan A."
- The Decline of Videogaming Part 3 comments on the general superiority of the backup plan in all instances.
Dan: "Oh please...I really don't think that's going to happen." |
- To clarify: Plan A was some horribly complicated thing to kidnap the protagonists to force them onto a game show to be killed. Plan B was a tranquilizer gun.
- Whateley Academy has a hilarious version, where a villain has Plans A-Z, and goes over them exhaustively. Things pretty much work out without a hitch; he does NOT have to even go to Plan B! He was out-gambitted. The thing he was stealing was trapped, and he ended up in Ayla's pocket.
- In I'm a Marvel... and I'm a DC, Plan Q is invoked by the Joker at the end of Happy Hour #5. Plan Q blows.
- Plan Q was actually Plan A for a while, but was downgraded by Luthor when he realized how dangerous it was. It should tell how bad it was when it dropped that far down the plan list.
- The reviewers chosen to invade Molossia in Kickassia go to Plan B (using weapons) after Plan A (charging blindly at President Baugh while he stands outside armed with a machine gun) goes about as well as it could.
- Discussed in Chapter 35 of Pay Me, Bug!, where they mention that they hope Plan A works, because Grif's Plan Bs tend to suck.
Western Animation
- Gargoyles had a great time with this in their Halloween episode. Xanatos' Plan C to help Fox (having already burned through Plans A and B) was going to be basically tricking Goliath into doing the dirty work, but...
Goliath: (entering the scene) I don't suppose you have a Plan D? |
- Xanatos then caves and straight-up asks Goliath for help, prompting:
Elisa: Don't even think about it, Goliath! Can't you see? This is Plan D. If it fails, he'll move on to E or F. |
- One Hundred and One Dalmatians: The Series
Lucky: Lieutenant! Push the cage release button! |
- The Simpsons: Homer buries all Springfield's rubbish (and that of other cities) beneath the town. When it all starts to come back up, Mayor Quimby activates "the all-purpose Plan B": Move the whole town somewhere else.
- In The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, Plankton complains that he has gone through Plans A through Y in trying to get the Krabby Patty formula. Then his computer wife Karen reminds him that there's another letter after Y, and so Plan Z goes into effect.
- On one episode of Hercules: the Animated Series, Phil and Hercules go from Plan Alpha all the way to Plan Omega in trying to retrieve a secret weapon from Ares.
- The Real Ghostbusters had one of these (in a moment where the guys actually bothered to plan beyond "kick in the door, zap the ghost").
Egon: I have a plan. |
Tim: Anyone have a good plan B? |
- Titan A.E.: "Out of curiosity, was there a Plan B?"
- DuckTales (1987) had an episode where Huey, Dewey and Louie would repeatedly use "plan B": lie down on the floor and howl until Uncle Scrooge gives in.
- In The Penguins of Madagascar, when King Julien's blender won't work, he skips plans B through G for being far too dangerous and goes straight to plan H: have Mort fiddle with the underground electrical cables.
- The eponymous heroes of Loonatics Unleashed almost always have a Plan B. This trope is induced so may times that once, after Ace spouts the Trope Name, Lexi follows with "Next time, let's start with Plan B."
- Swat Kats: Plan Z involves T-Bone cutting the Turbokat's engines in mid-air. Razor hates Plan Z.
- As of season 2 of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, this is Twilight Sparkle's catchphrase.
- In one episode of Storm Hawks, Junko is hypnotized to become more aggressive to take part in a wrestling tournament. Unfortunately, Junko's new personality causes him to forget about his teammates, and when Aerrow is forced into the ring by Cyclonis, Finn has forgotten the words to undo the hypnosis.
Finn: Anybody got a plan B? |
Real Life
- Plan B is the name of an emergency contraceptive brand. Their advertising campaign says "If Plan A fails, go to Plan B..."
- WD-40, the all-purpose
lubricant/de-greaser/de-rusterwater displacer was so named because WDs 1 through 39 didn't work as well in testing. - On that note, a moment of silence please for the testers of Preparations A-G...
- Not to mention the testers of Compounds A-V...
- You gotta hand it to the guys that created Formula 409, they define dedication. Also according to a commercial, the world isn't ready for Formula 410.
- Likewise, the cocktail P2. P stands for project, and project 1 didn't measure up and was scrapped.
- Some Plan Bs even get their own Facebook pages: Croke park Plan B
- In the 2010 Copiapó mining accident the plan that actually succeeded in reaching the trapped miners was, you guessed it, Plan B.
- "First rule of combat: have a plan. Second rule: Have a backup plan because the first one probably isn't going to work."
- ↑ basically no real rules